14647 lines
798 KiB
Plaintext
14647 lines
798 KiB
Plaintext
The Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, 1995 Etext Anthology Memorial*
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The Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, 1995, Memorial Issue.
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January, 1995 [Etext #206]
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****The Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, 1995, Memorial Issue.*****
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The Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, 1995, Memorial Issue.
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Table of Contents
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-----------------
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Sojourner Truth, the Libyan Sibyl.............Harriet Beecher Stowe
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Reconstruction................................Frederick Douglass
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An Appeal to Congress for Impartial Suffrage..Frederick Douglas
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The Negro Exodus..............................James B. Runnion
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My Escape from Slavery........................Frederick Douglass
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The Goophered Grapevine.......................Charles W. Chesnutt
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Po' Sandy.....................................Charles W. Chesnutt
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Dave's Neckliss...............................Charles W. Chesnutt
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The Awakening of the Negro....................Booker T. Washington
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The Story of Uncle Tom's Cabin................Charles Dudley Warner
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Strivings of the Negro People.................W. E. Burghardt Du Bois
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The Wife of his Youth.........................Charles W. Chesnutt
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The Bouquet...................................Charles W. Chesnutt
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The Case of the Negro.........................Booker T. Washington
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Hot-Foot Hannibal.............................Charles W. Chesnutt
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A Negro Schoolmaster in the New South.........W. E. Burghardt Du Bois
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The Capture of a Slaver.......................J. Taylor Wood
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Mr. Charles W. Chesnutt's Stories.............W. D. Howells
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Paths of Hope for the Negro
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Practical Suggestions of a Southerner.........Jerome Dowd
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Signs of Progress Among the Negroes...........Booker T. Washington
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The March of Progress.........................Charles W. Chesnutt
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The Freedmen's Bureau.........................W. E. Burghardt Du Bois
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Of the Training of Black Men..................W. E. Burghardt Du Bois
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The Fruits of Industrial Training.............Booker T. Washington
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The Negro in the Regular Army.................Oswald Garrison Villard
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Baxter's Procrustes...........................Charles W. Chesnutt
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The Heart of the Race Problem.................Quincy Ewing
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Negro Suffrage in a Democracy.................Ray Stannard Baker
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Bibliography of Sources
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SOJOURNER TRUTH, THE LIBYAN SIBYL
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by Harriet Beecher Stowe
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Many years ago, the few readers of radical Abolitionist papers
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must often have seen the singular name of Sojourner Truth,
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announced as a frequent speaker at Anti-Slavery meetings, and as
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travelling on a sort of self-appointed agency through the country.
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I had myself often remarked the name, but never met the
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individual. On one occasion, when our house was filled with
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company, several eminent clergymen being our guests, notice was
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brought up to me that Sojourner Truth was below, and requested an
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interview. Knowing nothing of her but her singular name, I went
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down, prepared to make the interview short, as the pressure of
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many other engagements demanded.
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When I went into the room, a tall, spare form arose to meet me.
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She was evidently a full-blooded African, and though now aged and
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worn with many hardships, still gave the impression of a physical
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development which in early youth must have been as fine a specimen
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of the torrid zone as Cumberworth's celebrated statuette of the
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Negro Woman at the Fountain. Indeed, she so strongly reminded me
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of that figure, that, when I recall the events of her life, as she
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narrated them to me, I imagine her as a living, breathing
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impersonation of that work of art.
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I do not recollect ever to have been conversant with any one who
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had more of that silent and subtle power which we call personal
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presence than this woman. In the modern Spiritualistic
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phraseology, she would be described as having a strong sphere.
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Her tall form, as she rose up before me, is still vivid to my
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mind. She was dressed in some stout, grayish stuff, neat and
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clean, though dusty from travel. On her head, she wore a bright
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Madras handkerchief, arranged as a turban, after the manner of her
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race. She seemed perfectly self-possessed and at her ease,--in
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fact, there was almost an unconscious superiority, not unmixed
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with a solemn twinkle of humor, in the odd, composed manner in
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which she looked down on me. Her whole air had at times a gloomy
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sort of drollery which impressed one strangely.
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"So this is YOU," she said.
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"Yes," I answered.
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"Well, honey, de Lord bless ye! I jes' thought I'd like to come
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an' have a look at ye. You's heerd o' me, I reckon?" she added.
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"Yes, I think I have. You go about lecturing, do you not?"
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"Yes, honey, that's what I do. The Lord has made me a sign unto
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this nation, an' I go round a'testifyin', an' showin' on 'em their
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sins agin my people."
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So saying, she took a seat, and, stooping over and crossing her
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arms on her knees, she looked down on the floor, and appeared to
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fall into a sort of reverie. Her great gloomy eyes and her dark
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face seemed to work with some undercurrent of feeling; she sighed
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deeply, and occasionally broke out,--
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"O Lord! O Lord! Oh, the tears, an' the groans, an' the moans!
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O Lord!"
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I should have said that she was accompanied by a little grandson
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of ten years,--the fattest, jolliest woolly-headed little specimen
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of Africa that one can imagine. He was grinning and showing his
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glistening white teeth in a state of perpetual merriment, and at
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this moment broke out into an audible giggle, which disturbed the
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reverie into which his relative was falling.
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She looked at him with an indulgent sadness, and then at me.
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"Laws, Ma'am, HE don't know nothin' about it--HE don't. Why, I've
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seen them poor critters, beat an' 'bused an' hunted, brought in
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all torn,--ears hangin' all in rags, where the dogs been a'bitin'
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of 'em!"
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This set off our little African Puck into another giggle, in which
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he seemed perfectly convulsed.
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She surveyed him soberly, without the slightest irritation.
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"Well, you may bless the Lord you CAN laugh; but I tell you, 't
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wa'n't no laughin' matter."
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By this time I thought her manner so original that it might be
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worth while to call down my friends; and she seemed perfectly well
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pleased with the idea. An audience was what she wanted,--it
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mattered not whether high or low, learned or ignorant. She had
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things to say, and was ready to say them at all times, and to any
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one.
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I called down Dr. Beecher, Professor Allen, and two or three other
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clergymen, who, together with my husband and family, made a
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roomful. No princess could have received a drawing-room with more
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composed dignity than Sojourner her audience. She stood among
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them, calm and erect, as one of her own native palm-trees waving
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alone in the desert. I presented one after another to her, and at
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last said,--
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"Sojourner, this is Dr. Beecher. He is a very celebrated
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preacher."
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"IS he?" she said, offering her hand in a condescending manner,
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and looking down on his white head. "Ye dear lamb, I'm glad to
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see ye! De Lord bless ye! I loves preachers. I'm a kind o'
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preacher myself."
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"You are?" said Dr. Beecher. "Do you preach from the Bible?"
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"No, honey, can't preach from de Bible,--can't read a letter."
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"Why, Sojourner, what do you preach from, then?"
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Her answer was given with a solemn power of voice, peculiar to
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herself, that hushed every one in the room.
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"When I preaches, I has jest one text to preach from, an' I always
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preaches from this one. MY text is, 'WHEN I FOUND JESUS.'"
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"Well, you couldn't have a better one," said one of the ministers.
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She paid no attention to him, but stood and seemed swelling with
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her own thoughts, and then began this narration:--
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"Well, now, I'll jest have to go back, an' tell ye all about it.
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Ye see, we was all brought over from Africa, father an' mother an'
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I, an' a lot more of us; an' we was sold up an' down, an' hither
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an' yon; an' I can 'member, when I was a little thing, not bigger
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than this 'ere," pointing to her grandson, "how my ole mammy would
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sit out o' doors in the evenin', an' look up at the stars an'
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groan. She'd groan an' groan, an' says I to her,--
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"'Mammy, what makes you groan so?'
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"an' she'd say,--
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"'Matter enough, chile! I'm groanin' to think o' my poor
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children: they don't know where I be, an' I don't know where they
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be; they looks up at the stars, an' I looks up at the stars, but I
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can't tell where they be.
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"'Now,' she said, 'chile, when you're grown up, you may be sold
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away from your mother an' all your ole friends, an' have great
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troubles come on ye; an' when you has these troubles come on ye,
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ye jes' go to God, an' He'll help ye.'
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"An' says I to her,--
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"'Who is God, anyhow, mammy?'
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"An' says she,--
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"'Why, chile, you jes' look up DAR! It's Him that made all DEM!"
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"Well, I didn't mind much 'bout God in them days. I grew up
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pretty lively an' strong, an' could row a boat, or ride a horse,
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or work round, an' do 'most anything.
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"At last I got sold away to a real hard massa an' missis. Oh, I
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tell you, they WAS hard! 'Peared like I couldn't please 'em,
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nohow. An' then I thought o' what my old mammy told me about God;
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an' I thought I'd got into trouble, sure enough, an' I wanted to
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find God, an' I heerd some one tell a story about a man that met
|
|
God on a threshin'-floor, an' I thought, 'Well an' good, I'll have
|
|
a threshin'-floor, too.' So I went down in the lot, an' I
|
|
threshed down a place real hard, an' I used to go down there every
|
|
day, an' pray an' cry with all my might, a-prayin' to the Lord to
|
|
make my massa an' missis better, but it didn't seem to do no good;
|
|
an' so says I, one day,--
|
|
|
|
"'O God, I been a-askin' ye, an' askin' ye, an' askin' ye, for all
|
|
this long time, to make my massa an' missis better, an' you don't
|
|
do it, an' what CAN be the reason? Why, maybe you CAN'T. Well, I
|
|
shouldn't wonder ef you couldn't. Well, now, I tell you, I'll
|
|
make a bargain with you. Ef you'll help me to git away from my
|
|
massa an' missis, I'll agree to be good; but ef you don't help me,
|
|
I really don't think I can be. Now,' says I, 'I want to git away;
|
|
but the trouble's jest here: ef I try to git away in the night, I
|
|
can't see; an' ef I try to git away in the daytime, they'll see
|
|
me, an' be after me.'
|
|
|
|
"Then the Lord said to me, 'Git up two or three hours afore
|
|
daylight, an' start off.'
|
|
|
|
"An' says I, 'Thank 'ee, Lord! that's a good thought.'
|
|
|
|
"So up I got, about three o'clock in the mornin', an' I started
|
|
an' travelled pretty fast, till, when the sun rose, I was clear
|
|
away from our place an' our folks, an' out o' sight. An' then I
|
|
begun to think I didn't know nothin' where to go. So I kneeled
|
|
down, and says I,--
|
|
|
|
"'Well, Lord, you've started me out, an' now please to show me
|
|
where to go.'
|
|
|
|
"Then the Lord made a house appear to me, an' He said to me that I
|
|
was to walk on till I saw that house, an' then go in an' ask the
|
|
people to take me. An' I travelled all day, an' didn't come to
|
|
the house till late at night; but when I saw it, sure enough, I
|
|
went in, an' I told the folks that the Lord sent me; an' they was
|
|
Quakers, an' real kind they was to me. They jes' took me in, an'
|
|
did for me as kind as ef I'd been one of 'em; an' after they'd giv
|
|
me supper, they took me into a room where there was a great, tall,
|
|
white bed; an' they told me to sleep there. Well, honey, I was
|
|
kind o' skeered when they left me alone with that great white bed;
|
|
'cause I never had been in a bed in my life. It never came into
|
|
my mind they could mean me to sleep in it. An' so I jes' camped
|
|
down under it, on the floor, an' then I slep' pretty well. In the
|
|
mornin', when they came in, they asked me ef I hadn't been asleep;
|
|
an' I said, 'Yes, I never slep' better.' An' they said, 'Why, you
|
|
haven't been in the bed!' An' says I, 'Laws, you didn't think o'
|
|
such a thing as my sleepin' in dat 'ar' BED, did you? I never
|
|
heerd o' such a thing in my life.'
|
|
|
|
"Well, ye see, honey, I stayed an' lived with 'em. An' now jes'
|
|
look here: instead o' keepin' my promise an' bein' good, as I told
|
|
the Lord I would, jest as soon as everything got a'goin' easy, I
|
|
FORGOT ALL ABOUT GOD.
|
|
|
|
"Pretty well don't need no help; an' I gin up prayin.' I lived
|
|
there two or three years, an' then the slaves in New York were all
|
|
set free, an' ole massa came to our home to make a visit, an' he
|
|
asked me ef I didn't want to go back an' see the folks on the ole
|
|
place. An' I told him I did. So he said, ef I'd jes' git into
|
|
the wagon with him, he'd carry me over. Well, jest as I was goin'
|
|
out to git into the wagon, I MET GOD! an' says I, 'O God, I didn't
|
|
know as you was so great!' An' I turned right round an' come into
|
|
the house, an' set down in my room; for 't was God all around me.
|
|
I could feel it burnin', burnin', burnin' all around me, an' goin'
|
|
through me; an' I saw I was so wicked, it seemed as ef it would
|
|
burn me up. An' I said, 'O somebody, somebody, stand between God
|
|
an' me! for it burns me!' Then, honey, when I said so, I felt as
|
|
it were somethin' like an amberill [umbrella] that came between me
|
|
an' the light, an' I felt it was SOMEBODY,--somebody that stood
|
|
between me an' God; an' it felt cool, like a shade; an' says I,
|
|
'Who's this that stands between me an' God? Is it old Cato?' He
|
|
was a pious old preacher; but then I seemed to see Cato in the
|
|
light, an' he was all polluted an' vile, like me; an' I said, 'Is
|
|
it old Sally?' an' then I saw her, an' she seemed jes' so. An'
|
|
then says I, 'WHO is this?' An' then, honey, for a while it was
|
|
like the sun shinin' in a pail o' water, when it moves up an'
|
|
down; for I begun to feel 't was somebody that loved me; an' I
|
|
tried to know him. An' I said, 'I know you! I know you! I know
|
|
you!'--an' then I said, 'I don't know you! I don't know you! I
|
|
don't know you!' An' when I said, 'I know you, I know you,' the
|
|
light came; an' when I said, 'I don't know you, I don't know you,'
|
|
it went, jes' like the sun in a pail o' water. An' finally
|
|
somethin' spoke out in me an' said, 'THIS IS JESUS!' An' I spoke
|
|
out with all my might, an' says I, 'THIS IS JESUS! Glory be to
|
|
God!' An' then the whole world grew bright, an' the trees they
|
|
waved an' waved in glory, an' every little bit o' stone on the
|
|
ground shone like glass; an' I shouted an' said, 'Praise, praise,
|
|
praise to the Lord!' An' I begun to feel such a love in my soul
|
|
as I never felt before,--love to all creatures. An' then, all of
|
|
a sudden, it stopped, an' I said, 'Dar's de white folks, that have
|
|
abused you an' beat you an' abused your people,--think o' them!'
|
|
But then there came another rush of love through my soul, an' I
|
|
cried out loud,--'Lord, Lord, I can love EVEN DE WHITE FOLKS!'
|
|
|
|
"Honey, I jes' walked round an' round in a dream. Jesus loved me!
|
|
I knowed it,--I felt it. Jesus was my Jesus. Jesus would love me
|
|
always. I didn't dare tell nobody; 't was a great secret.
|
|
Everything had been got away from me that I ever had; an' I
|
|
thought that ef I let white folks know about this, maybe they'd
|
|
get HIM away,--so I said, 'I'll keep this close. I won't let any
|
|
one know.'"
|
|
|
|
"But, Sojourner, had you never been told about Jesus Christ?"
|
|
|
|
"No, honey. I hadn't heerd no preachin',--been to no meetin'.
|
|
Nobody hadn't told me. I'd kind o' heerd of Jesus, but thought he
|
|
was like Gineral Lafayette, or some o' them. But one night there
|
|
was a Methodist meetin' somewhere in our parts, an' I went; an'
|
|
they got up an' begun for to tell der 'speriences; an' de fust one
|
|
begun to speak. I started, 'cause he told about Jesus. 'Why,'
|
|
says I to myself, 'dat man's found him, too!' An' another got up
|
|
an' spoke, an I said, 'He's found him, too!' An' finally I said,
|
|
'Why, they all know him!' I was so happy! An' then they sung
|
|
this hymn": (Here Sojourner sang, in a strange, cracked voice, but
|
|
evidently with all her soul and might, mispronouncing the English,
|
|
but seeming to derive as much elevation and comfort from bad
|
|
English as from good):--
|
|
|
|
|
|
'There is a holy city,
|
|
A world of light above,
|
|
Above the stairs and regions,*
|
|
Built by the God of Love.
|
|
|
|
"An Everlasting temple,
|
|
And saints arrayed in white
|
|
There serve their great Redeemer
|
|
And dwell with him in light.
|
|
|
|
"The meanest child of glory
|
|
Outshines the radiant sun;
|
|
But who can speak the splendor
|
|
Of Jesus on his throne?
|
|
|
|
"Is this the man of sorrows
|
|
Who stood at Pilate's bar,
|
|
Condemned by haughty Herod
|
|
And by his men of war?
|
|
|
|
"He seems a mighty conqueror,
|
|
Who spoiled the powers below,
|
|
And ransomed many captives
|
|
From everlasting woe.
|
|
|
|
"The hosts of saints around him
|
|
Proclaim his work of grace,
|
|
The patriarchs and prophets,
|
|
And all the godly race,
|
|
|
|
"Who speak of fiery trials
|
|
And tortures on their way;
|
|
They came from tribulation
|
|
To everlasting day.
|
|
|
|
"And what shall be my journey,
|
|
How long I'll stay below,
|
|
Or what shall be my trials,
|
|
Are not for me to know.
|
|
|
|
"In every day of trouble
|
|
I'll raise my thoughts on high,
|
|
I'll think of that bright temple
|
|
And crowns above the sky."
|
|
|
|
* Starry regions.
|
|
|
|
|
|
I put in this whole hymn, because Sojourner, carried away with her
|
|
own feeling, sang it from beginning to end with a triumphant
|
|
energy that held the whole circle around her intently listening.
|
|
She sang with the strong barbaric accent of the native African,
|
|
and with those indescribable upward turns and those deep gutturals
|
|
which give such a wild, peculiar power to the negro singing,--but
|
|
above all, with such an overwhelming energy of personal
|
|
appropriation that the hymn seemed to be fused in the furnace of
|
|
her feelings and come out recrystallized as a production of her
|
|
own.
|
|
|
|
It is said that Rachel was wont to chant the "Marseillaise" in a
|
|
manner that made her seem, for the time, the very spirit and
|
|
impersonation of the gaunt, wild, hungry, avenging mob which rose
|
|
against aristocratic oppression; and in like manner, Sojourner,
|
|
singing this hymn, seemed to impersonate the fervor of Ethiopia,
|
|
wild, savage, hunted of all nations, but burning after God in her
|
|
tropic heart, and stretching her scarred hands towards the glory
|
|
to be revealed.
|
|
|
|
"Well, den ye see, after a while, I thought I'd go back an' see de
|
|
folks on de ole place. Well, you know, de law had passed dat de
|
|
culled folks was all free; an' my old missis, she had a daughter
|
|
married about dis time who went to live in Alabama,--an' what did
|
|
she do but give her my son, a boy about de age of dis yer, for her
|
|
to take down to Alabama? When I got back to de ole place, they
|
|
told me about it, an' I went right up to see ole missis, an' says
|
|
I,--
|
|
|
|
"'Missis, have you been an' sent my son away down to Alabama?'
|
|
|
|
"'Yes, I have,' says she; 'he's gone to live with your young
|
|
missis.'
|
|
|
|
"'Oh, Missis,' says I, 'how could you do it?'
|
|
|
|
"'Poh!' says she, 'what a fuss you make about a little nigger!
|
|
Got more of 'em now than you know what to do with.'
|
|
|
|
"I tell you, I stretched up. I felt as tall as the world!
|
|
|
|
"'Missis,' says I, 'I'LL HAVE MY SON BACK AGIN!'
|
|
|
|
"She laughed.
|
|
|
|
"'YOU will, you nigger? How you goin' to do it? You ha'n't got
|
|
no money."
|
|
|
|
"'No, Missis,--but GOD has,--an' you'll see He'll help me!'--an' I
|
|
turned round an' went out.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, but I WAS angry to have her speak to me so haughty an' so
|
|
scornful, as ef my chile wasn't worth anything. I said to God, 'O
|
|
Lord, render unto her double!' It was a dreadful prayer, an' I
|
|
didn't know how true it would come.
|
|
|
|
"Well, I didn't rightly know which way to turn; but I went to the
|
|
Lord, an' I said to Him, 'O Lord, ef I was as rich as you be, an'
|
|
you was as poor as I be, I'd help you,--you KNOW I would; and, oh,
|
|
do help me!' An' I felt sure then that He would.
|
|
|
|
"Well, I talked with people, an' they said I must git the case
|
|
before a grand jury. So I went into the town when they was
|
|
holdin' a court, to see ef I could find any grand jury. An' I
|
|
stood round the court-house, an' when they was a-comin' out, I
|
|
walked right up to the grandest-lookin' one I could see, an' says
|
|
I to him,--
|
|
|
|
"'Sir, be you a grand jury?'
|
|
|
|
"An' then he wanted to know why I asked, an' I told him all about
|
|
it; an' he asked me all sorts of questions, an' finally he says to
|
|
me,--
|
|
|
|
"'I think, ef you pay me ten dollars, that I'd agree to git your
|
|
son for you.' An' says he, pointin' to a house over the way, 'You
|
|
go 'long an' tell your story to the folks in that house, an' I
|
|
guess they'll give you the money.'
|
|
|
|
"Well, I went, an' I told them, an' they gave me twenty dollars;
|
|
an' then I thought to myself, 'Ef ten dollars will git him, twenty
|
|
dollars will git him SARTIN.' So I carried it to the man all out,
|
|
an' said,--
|
|
|
|
"'Take it all,--only be sure an' git him.'
|
|
|
|
"Well, finally they got the boy brought back; an' then they tried
|
|
to frighten him, an' to make him say that I wasn't his mammy, an'
|
|
that he didn't know me; but they couldn't make it out. They gave
|
|
him to me, an' I took him an' carried him home; an' when I came to
|
|
take off his clothes, there was his poor little back all covered
|
|
with scars an' hard lumps, where they'd flogged him.
|
|
|
|
"Well, you see, honey, I told you how I prayed the Lord to render
|
|
unto her double. Well, it came true; for I was up at ole missis'
|
|
house not long after, an' I heerd 'em readin' a letter to her how
|
|
her daughter's husband had murdered her,--how he'd thrown her down
|
|
an' stamped the life out of her, when he was in liquor; an' my ole
|
|
missis, she giv a screech, an' fell flat on the floor. Then says
|
|
I, 'O Lord, I didn't mean all that! You took me up too quick.'
|
|
|
|
"Well, I went in an' tended that poor critter all night. She was
|
|
out of her mind,--a-cryin', an' callin' for her daughter; an' I
|
|
held her poor ole head on my arm, an' watched for her as ef she'd
|
|
been my babby. An' I watched by her, an' took care on her all
|
|
through her sickness after that, an' she died in my arms, poor
|
|
thing!"
|
|
|
|
"Well, Sojourner, did you always go by this name?"
|
|
|
|
"No, 'deed! My name was Isabella; but when I left the house of
|
|
bondage, I left everything behind. I wa'n't goin' to keep nothin'
|
|
of Egypt on me, an' so I went to the Lord an' asked Him to give me
|
|
a new name. And the Lord gave me Sojourner, because I was to
|
|
travel up an' down the land, showin' the people their sins, an'
|
|
bein' a sign unto them. Afterwards I told the Lord I wanted
|
|
another name, 'cause everybody else had two names; and the Lord
|
|
gave me Truth, because I was to declare the truth to the people.
|
|
|
|
"Ye see some ladies have given me a white satin banner," she said,
|
|
pulling out of her pocket and unfolding a white banner, printed
|
|
with many texts, such as, "Proclaim liberty throughout all the
|
|
land unto all the inhabitants thereof," and others of like nature.
|
|
"Well," she said, "I journeys round to camp-meetins, an' wherever
|
|
folks is, an' I sets up my banner, an' then I sings, an' then
|
|
folks always comes up round me, an' then I preaches to 'em. I
|
|
tells 'em about Jesus, an' I tells 'em about the sins of this
|
|
people. A great many always comes to hear me; an' they're right
|
|
good to me, too, an' say they want to hear me agin."
|
|
|
|
We all thought it likely; and as the company left her, they shook
|
|
hands with her, and thanked her for her very original sermon; and
|
|
one of the ministers was overheard to say to another, "There's
|
|
more of the gospel in that story than in most sermons."
|
|
|
|
Sojourner stayed several days with us, a welcome guest. Her
|
|
conversation was so strong, simple, shrewd, and with such a droll
|
|
flavoring of humor, that the Professor was wont to say of an
|
|
evening, "Come, I am dull, can't you get Sojourner up here to talk
|
|
a little?" She would come up into the parlor, and sit among
|
|
pictures and ornaments, in her simple stuff gown, with her heavy
|
|
travelling-shoes, the central object of attention both to parents
|
|
and children, always ready to talk or to sing, and putting into
|
|
the common flow of conversation the keen edge of some shrewd
|
|
remark.
|
|
|
|
"Sojourner, what do you think of Women's Rights?"
|
|
|
|
"Well, honey, I's ben to der meetins, an' harked a good deal. Dey
|
|
wanted me for to speak. So I got up. Says I,--'Sisters, I a'n't
|
|
clear what you'd be after. Ef women want any rights more 'n dey's
|
|
got, why don't dey jes' TAKE 'EM, an' not be talkin' about it?'
|
|
Some on 'em came round me, an' asked why I didn't wear Bloomers.
|
|
An' I told 'em I had Bloomers enough when I was in bondage. You
|
|
see," she said, "dey used to weave what dey called nigger-cloth,
|
|
an' each one of us got jes' sech a strip, an' had to wear it
|
|
width-wise. Them that was short got along pretty well, but as for
|
|
me"--She gave an indescribably droll glance at her long limbs
|
|
and then at us, and added,--"Tell YOU, I had enough of Bloomers in
|
|
them days."
|
|
|
|
Sojourner then proceeded to give her views of the relative
|
|
capacity of the sexes, in her own way.
|
|
|
|
"S'pose a man's mind holds a quart, an' a woman's don't hold but a
|
|
pint; ef her pint is FULL, it's as good as his quart."
|
|
|
|
Sojourner was fond of singing an extraordinary lyric, commencing,--
|
|
|
|
|
|
"I'm on my way to Canada,
|
|
That cold, but happy land;
|
|
The dire effects of Slavery
|
|
I can no longer stand.
|
|
O righteous Father,
|
|
Do look down on me,
|
|
And help me on to Canada,
|
|
Where colored folks are free!"
|
|
|
|
|
|
The lyric ran on to state, that, when the fugitive crosses the
|
|
Canada line,
|
|
|
|
|
|
"The Queen comes down unto the shore,
|
|
With arms extended wide,
|
|
To welcome the poor fugitive
|
|
Safe onto Freedom's side."
|
|
|
|
|
|
In the truth thus set forth she seemed to have the most simple
|
|
faith.
|
|
|
|
But her chief delight was to talk of "glory," and to sing hymns
|
|
whose burden was,--
|
|
|
|
|
|
"O glory, glory, glory,
|
|
Won't you come along with me?"
|
|
|
|
and when left to herself, she would often hum these with great
|
|
delight, nodding her head.
|
|
|
|
On one occasion, I remember her sitting at a window singing and
|
|
fervently keeping time with her head, the little black Puck of a
|
|
grandson meanwhile amusing himself with ornamenting her red-and-
|
|
yellow turban with green dandelion-curls, which shook and trembled
|
|
with her emotions, causing him perfect convulsions of delight.
|
|
|
|
"Sojourner," said the Professor to her, one day, when he heard her
|
|
singing, "you seem to be very sure about heaven."
|
|
|
|
"Well, I be," she answered, triumphantly.
|
|
|
|
"What makes you so sure there is any heaven?"
|
|
|
|
"Well, 'cause I got such a hankerin' arter it in here," she said,--
|
|
giving a thump on her breast with her usual energy.
|
|
|
|
There was at the time an invalid in the house, and Sojourner, on
|
|
learning it, felt a mission to go and comfort her. It was curious
|
|
to see the tall, gaunt, dusky figure stalk up to the bed with such
|
|
an air of conscious authority, and take on herself the office of
|
|
consoler with such a mixture of authority and tenderness. She
|
|
talked as from above,--and at the same time, if a pillow needed
|
|
changing or any office to be rendered, she did it with a strength
|
|
and handiness that inspired trust. One felt as if the dark,
|
|
strange woman were quite able to take up the invalid in her bosom,
|
|
and bear her as a lamb, both physically and spiritually. There
|
|
was both power and sweetness in that great warm soul and that
|
|
vigorous frame.
|
|
|
|
At length, Sojourner, true to her name, departed. She had her
|
|
mission elsewhere. Where now she is I know not; but she left deep
|
|
memories behind her.
|
|
|
|
To these recollections of my own I will add one more anecdote,
|
|
related by Wendell Phillips.
|
|
|
|
Speaking of the power of Rachel to move and bear down a whole
|
|
audience by a few simple words, he said he never knew but one
|
|
other human being that had that power, and that other was
|
|
Sojourner Truth. He related a scene of which he was witness. It
|
|
was at a crowded public meeting in Faneuil Hall, where Frederick
|
|
Douglas was one of the chief speakers. Douglas had been
|
|
describing the wrongs of the black race, and as he proceeded, he
|
|
grew more and more excited, and finally ended by saying that they
|
|
had no hope of justice from the whites, no possible hope except in
|
|
their own right arms. It must come to blood; they must fight for
|
|
themselves, and redeem themselves, or it would never be done.
|
|
|
|
Sojourner was sitting, tall and dark, on the very front seat,
|
|
facing the platform; and in the hush of deep feeling, after
|
|
Douglas sat down, she spoke out in her deep, peculiar voice, heard
|
|
all over the house,--
|
|
|
|
"Frederick, IS GOD DEAD?"
|
|
|
|
The effect was perfectly electrical, and thrilled through the
|
|
whole house, changing as by a flash the whole feeling of the
|
|
audience. Not another word she said or needed to say; it was
|
|
enough.
|
|
|
|
It is with a sad feeling that one contemplates noble minds and
|
|
bodies, nobly and grandly formed human beings, that have come to
|
|
us cramped, scarred, maimed, out of the prison-house of bondage.
|
|
One longs to know what such beings might have become, if suffered
|
|
to unfold and expand under the kindly developing influences of
|
|
education.
|
|
|
|
It is the theory of some writers, that to the African is reserved,
|
|
in the later and palmier days of the earth, the full and
|
|
harmonious development of the religious element in man. The
|
|
African seems to seize on the tropical fervor and luxuriance of
|
|
Scripture imagery as something native; he appears to feel himself
|
|
to be of the same blood with those old burning, simple souls, the
|
|
patriarchs, prophets, and seers, whose impassioned words seem only
|
|
grafted as foreign plants on the cooler stock of the Occidental
|
|
mind.
|
|
|
|
I cannot but think that Sojourner with the same culture might have
|
|
spoken words as eloquent and undying as those of the African Saint
|
|
Augustine or Tertullian. How grand and queenly a woman she might
|
|
have been, with her wonderful physical vigor, her great heaving
|
|
sea of emotion, her power of spiritual conception, her quick
|
|
penetration, and her boundless energy! We might conceive an
|
|
African type of woman so largely made and moulded, so much fuller
|
|
in all the elements of life, physical and spiritual, that the dark
|
|
hue of the skin should seem only to add an appropriate charm,--as
|
|
Milton says of his Penseroso, whom he imagines
|
|
|
|
|
|
"Black, but such as in esteem
|
|
Prince Memnon's sister might beseem,
|
|
Or that starred Ethiop queen that strove
|
|
To set her beauty's praise above
|
|
The sea-nymph's."
|
|
|
|
|
|
But though Sojourner Truth has passed away from among us as a wave
|
|
of the sea, her memory still lives in one of the loftiest and most
|
|
original works of modern art, the Libyan Sibyl, by Mr. Story,
|
|
which attracted so much attention in the late World's Exhibition.
|
|
Some years ago, when visiting Rome, I related Sojourner's history
|
|
to Mr. Story at a breakfast at his house. Already had his mind
|
|
begun to turn to Egypt in search of a type of art which should
|
|
represent a larger and more vigorous development of nature than
|
|
the cold elegance of Greek lines. His glorious Cleopatra was then
|
|
in process of evolution, and his mind was working out the problem
|
|
of her broadly developed nature, of all that slumbering weight and
|
|
fulness of passion with which this statue seems charged, as a
|
|
heavy thunder-cloud is charged with electricity.
|
|
|
|
The history of Sojourner Truth worked in his mind and led him into
|
|
the deeper recesses of the African nature,--those unexplored
|
|
depths of being and feeling, mighty and dark as the gigantic
|
|
depths of tropical forests, mysterious as the hidden rivers and
|
|
mines of that burning continent whose life-history is yet to be.
|
|
A few days after, he told me that he had conceived the idea of a
|
|
statue which he should call the Libyan Sibyl. Two years
|
|
subsequently, I revisited Rome, and found the gorgeous Cleopatra
|
|
finished, a thing to marvel at, as the creation of a new style of
|
|
beauty, a new manner of art. Mr. Story requested me to come and
|
|
repeat to him the history of Sojourner Truth, saying that the
|
|
conception had never left him. I did so; and a day or two after,
|
|
he showed me the clay model of the Libyan Sibyl. I have never
|
|
seen the marble statue; but am told by those who have, that it was
|
|
by far the most impressive work of art at the Exhibition.
|
|
|
|
A notice of the two statues from the London "Athenaeum" must
|
|
supply a description which I cannot give.
|
|
|
|
|
|
"The Cleopatra and the Sibyl are seated, partly draped, with the
|
|
characteristic Egyptian gown, that gathers about the torso and
|
|
falls freely around the limbs; the first is covered to the bosom,
|
|
the second bare to the hips. Queenly Cleopatra rests back against
|
|
her chair in meditative ease, leaning her cheek against one hand,
|
|
whose elbow the rail of the seat sustains; the other is
|
|
outstretched upon her knee, nipping its forefinger upon the thumb
|
|
thoughtfully, as though some firm, wilful purpose filled her
|
|
brain, as it seems to set those luxurious features to a smile as
|
|
if the whole woman 'would.' Upon her head is the coif, bearing in
|
|
front the mystic uraeus, or twining basilisk of sovereignty, while
|
|
from its sides depend the wide Egyptian lappels, or wings, that
|
|
fall upon her shoulders. The Sibilla Libica has crossed her
|
|
knees,--an action universally held amongst the ancients as
|
|
indicative of reticence or secrecy, and of power to bind. A
|
|
secret-keeping looking dame she is, in the full-bloom proportions
|
|
of ripe womanhood, wherein choosing to place his figure the
|
|
sculptor has deftly gone between the disputed point whether these
|
|
women were blooming and wise in youth, or deeply furrowed with age
|
|
and burdened with the knowledge of centuries, as Virgil, Livy, and
|
|
Gellius say. Good artistic example might be quoted on both sides.
|
|
Her forward elbow is propped upon one knee; and to keep her
|
|
secrets close, for this Libyan woman is the closest of all the
|
|
Sibyls, she rests her shut mouth upon one closed palm, as if
|
|
holding the African mystery deep in the brooding brain that looks
|
|
out through mournful, warning eyes, seen under the wide shade of
|
|
the strange horned (ammonite) crest, that bears the mystery of the
|
|
Tetragrammaton upon its upturned front. Over her full bosom,
|
|
mother of myriads as she was, hangs the same symbol. Her face has
|
|
a Nubian cast, her hair wavy and plaited, as is meet."
|
|
|
|
|
|
We hope to see the day when copies both of the Cleopatra and the
|
|
Libyan Sibyl shall adorn the Capitol at Washington.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
RECONSTRUCTION
|
|
by Frederick Douglass
|
|
|
|
|
|
The assembling of the Second Session of the Thirty-ninth Congress
|
|
may very properly be made the occasion of a few earnest words on
|
|
the already much-worn topic of reconstruction.
|
|
|
|
Seldom has any legislative body been the subject of a solicitude
|
|
more intense, or of aspirations more sincere and ardent. There
|
|
are the best of reasons for this profound interest. Questions of
|
|
vast moment, left undecided by the last session of Congress, must
|
|
be manfully grappled with by this. No political skirmishing will
|
|
avail. The occasion demands statesmanship.
|
|
|
|
Whether the tremendous war so heroically fought and so
|
|
victoriously ended shall pass into history a miserable failure,
|
|
barren of permanent results,--a scandalous and shocking waste of
|
|
blood and treasure,--a strife for empire, as Earl Russell
|
|
characterized it, of no value to liberty or civilization,--an
|
|
attempt to re-establish a Union by force, which must be the merest
|
|
mockery of a Union,--an effort to bring under Federal authority
|
|
States into which no loyal man from the North may safely enter,
|
|
and to bring men into the national councils who deliberate with
|
|
daggers and vote with revolvers, and who do not even conceal their
|
|
deadly hate of the country that conquered them; or whether, on the
|
|
other hand, we shall, as the rightful reward of victory over
|
|
treason, have a solid nation, entirely delivered from all
|
|
contradictions and social antagonisms, based upon loyalty,
|
|
liberty, and equality, must be determined one way or the other by
|
|
the present session of Congress. The last session really did
|
|
nothing which can be considered final as to these questions. The
|
|
Civil Rights Bill and the Freedmen's Bureau Bill and the proposed
|
|
constitutional amendments, with the amendment already adopted and
|
|
recognized as the law of the land, do not reach the difficulty,
|
|
and cannot, unless the whole structure of the government is
|
|
changed from a government by States to something like a despotic
|
|
central government, with power to control even the municipal
|
|
regulations of States, and to make them conform to its own
|
|
despotic will. While there remains such an idea as the right of
|
|
each State to control its own local affairs,--an idea, by the way,
|
|
more deeply rooted in the minds of men of all sections of the
|
|
country than perhaps any one other political idea,--no general
|
|
assertion of human rights can be of any practical value. To
|
|
change the character of the government at this point is neither
|
|
possible nor desirable. All that is necessary to be done is to
|
|
make the government consistent with itself, and render the rights
|
|
of the States compatible with the sacred rights of human nature.
|
|
|
|
The arm of the Federal government is long, but it is far too short
|
|
to protect the rights of individuals in the interior of distant
|
|
States. They must have the power to protect themselves, or they
|
|
will go unprotected, spite of all the laws the Federal government
|
|
can put upon the national statute-book.
|
|
|
|
Slavery, like all other great systems of wrong, founded in the
|
|
depths of human selfishness, and existing for ages, has not
|
|
neglected its own conservation. It has steadily exerted an
|
|
influence upon all around it favorable to its own continuance.
|
|
And to-day it is so strong that it could exist, not only without
|
|
law, but even against law. Custom, manners, morals, religion, are
|
|
all on its side everywhere in the South; and when you add the
|
|
ignorance and servility of the ex-slave to the intelligence and
|
|
accustomed authority of the master, you have the conditions, not
|
|
out of which slavery will again grow, but under which it is
|
|
impossible for the Federal government to wholly destroy it, unless
|
|
the Federal government be armed with despotic power, to blot out
|
|
State authority, and to station a Federal officer at every cross-
|
|
road. This, of course, cannot be done, and ought not even if it
|
|
could. The true way and the easiest way is to make our government
|
|
entirely consistent with itself, and give to every loyal citizen
|
|
the elective franchise,--a right and power which will be ever
|
|
present, and will form a wall of fire for his protection.
|
|
|
|
One of the invaluable compensations of the late Rebellion is the
|
|
highly instructive disclosure it made of the true source of danger
|
|
to republican government. Whatever may be tolerated in
|
|
monarchical and despotic governments, no republic is safe that
|
|
tolerates a privileged class, or denies to any of its citizens
|
|
equal rights and equal means to maintain them. What was theory
|
|
before the war has been made fact by the war.
|
|
|
|
There is cause to be thankful even for rebellion. It is an
|
|
impressive teacher, though a stern and terrible one. In both
|
|
characters it has come to us, and it was perhaps needed in both.
|
|
It is an instructor never a day before its time, for it comes only
|
|
when all other means of progress and enlightenment have failed.
|
|
Whether the oppressed and despairing bondman, no longer able to
|
|
repress his deep yearnings for manhood, or the tyrant, in his
|
|
pride and impatience, takes the initiative, and strikes the blow
|
|
for a firmer hold and a longer lease of oppression, the result is
|
|
the same,--society is instructed, or may be.
|
|
|
|
Such are the limitations of the common mind, and so thoroughly
|
|
engrossing are the cares of common life, that only the few among
|
|
men can discern through the glitter and dazzle of present
|
|
prosperity the dark outlines of approaching disasters, even though
|
|
they may have come up to our very gates, and are already within
|
|
striking distance. The yawning seam and corroded bolt conceal
|
|
their defects from the mariner until the storm calls all hands to
|
|
the pumps. Prophets, indeed, were abundant before the war; but
|
|
who cares for prophets while their predictions remain unfulfilled,
|
|
and the calamities of which they tell are masked behind a blinding
|
|
blaze of national prosperity?
|
|
|
|
It is asked, said Henry Clay, on a memorable occasion, Will
|
|
slavery never come to an end? That question, said he, was asked
|
|
fifty years ago, and it has been answered by fifty years of
|
|
unprecedented prosperity. Spite of the eloquence of the earnest
|
|
Abolitionists,--poured out against slavery during thirty years,--
|
|
even they must confess, that, in all the probabilities of the
|
|
case, that system of barbarism would have continued its horrors
|
|
far beyond the limits of the nineteenth century but for the
|
|
Rebellion, and perhaps only have disappeared at last in a fiery
|
|
conflict, even more fierce and bloody than that which has now been
|
|
suppressed.
|
|
|
|
It is no disparagement to truth, that it can only prevail where
|
|
reason prevails. War begins where reason ends. The thing worse
|
|
than rebellion is the thing that causes rebellion. What that
|
|
thing is, we have been taught to our cost. It remains now to be
|
|
seen whether we have the needed courage to have that cause
|
|
entirely removed from the Republic. At any rate, to this grand
|
|
work of national regeneration and entire purification Congress
|
|
must now address Itself, with full purpose that the work shall
|
|
this time be thoroughly done. The deadly upas, root and branch,
|
|
leaf and fibre, body and sap, must be utterly destroyed. The
|
|
country is evidently not in a condition to listen patiently to
|
|
pleas for postponement, however plausible, nor will it permit the
|
|
responsibility to be shifted to other shoulders. Authority and
|
|
power are here commensurate with the duty imposed. There are no
|
|
cloud-flung shadows to obscure the way. Truth shines with
|
|
brighter light and intenser heat at every moment, and a country
|
|
torn and rent and bleeding implores relief from its distress and
|
|
agony.
|
|
|
|
If time was at first needed, Congress has now had time. All the
|
|
requisite materials from which to form an intelligent judgment are
|
|
now before it. Whether its members look at the origin, the
|
|
progress, the termination of the war, or at the mockery of a peace
|
|
now existing, they will find only one unbroken chain of argument
|
|
in favor of a radical policy of reconstruction. For the omissions
|
|
of the last session, some excuses may be allowed. A treacherous
|
|
President stood in the way; and it can be easily seen how
|
|
reluctant good men might be to admit an apostasy which involved so
|
|
much of baseness and ingratitude. It was natural that they should
|
|
seek to save him by bending to him even when he leaned to the side
|
|
of error. But all is changed now. Congress knows now that it
|
|
must go on without his aid, and even against his machinations.
|
|
The advantage of the present session over the last is immense.
|
|
Where that investigated, this has the facts. Where that walked by
|
|
faith, this may walk by sight. Where that halted, this must go
|
|
forward, and where that failed, this must succeed, giving the
|
|
country whole measures where that gave us half-measures, merely as
|
|
a means of saving the elections in a few doubtful districts. That
|
|
Congress saw what was right, but distrusted the enlightenment of
|
|
the loyal masses; but what was forborne in distrust of the people
|
|
must now be done with a full knowledge that the people expect and
|
|
require it. The members go to Washington fresh from the inspiring
|
|
presence of the people. In every considerable public meeting, and
|
|
in almost every conceivable way, whether at court-house, school-
|
|
house, or cross-roads, in doors and out, the subject has been
|
|
discussed, and the people have emphatically pronounced in favor of
|
|
a radical policy. Listening to the doctrines of expediency and
|
|
compromise with pity, impatience, and disgust, they have
|
|
everywhere broken into demonstrations of the wildest enthusiasm
|
|
when a brave word has been spoken in favor of equal rights and
|
|
impartial suffrage. Radicalism, so far from being odious, is not
|
|
the popular passport to power. The men most bitterly charged with
|
|
it go to Congress with the largest majorities, while the timid and
|
|
doubtful are sent by lean majorities, or else left at home. The
|
|
strange controversy between the President and the Congress, at one
|
|
time so threatening, is disposed of by the people. The high
|
|
reconstructive powers which he so confidently, ostentatiously, and
|
|
haughtily claimed, have been disallowed, denounced, and utterly
|
|
repudiated; while those claimed by Congress have been confirmed.
|
|
|
|
Of the spirit and magnitude of the canvass nothing need be said.
|
|
The appeal was to the people, and the verdict was worthy of the
|
|
tribunal. Upon an occasion of his own selection, with the advice
|
|
and approval of his astute Secretary, soon after the members of
|
|
the Congress had returned to their constituents, the President
|
|
quitted the executive mansion, sandwiched himself between two
|
|
recognized heroes,--men whom the whole country delighted to
|
|
honor,--and, with all the advantage which such company could give
|
|
him, stumped the country from the Atlantic to the Mississippi,
|
|
advocating everywhere his policy as against that of Congress. It
|
|
was a strange sight, and perhaps the most disgraceful exhibition
|
|
ever made by any President; but, as no evil is entirely unmixed,
|
|
good has come of this, as from many others. Ambitious,
|
|
unscrupulous, energetic, indefatigable, voluble, and plausible,--a
|
|
political gladiator, ready for a "set-to" in any crowd,--he is
|
|
beaten in his own chosen field, and stands to-day before the
|
|
country as a convicted usurper, a political criminal, guilty of a
|
|
bold and persistent attempt to possess himself of the legislative
|
|
powers solemnly secured to Congress by the Constitution. No
|
|
vindication could be more complete, no condemnation could be more
|
|
absolute and humiliating. Unless reopened by the sword, as
|
|
recklessly threatened in some circles, this question is now closed
|
|
for all time.
|
|
|
|
Without attempting to settle here the metaphysical and somewhat
|
|
theological question (about which so much has already been said
|
|
and written), whether once in the Union means always in the
|
|
Union,--agreeably to the formula, Once in grace always in grace,--
|
|
it is obvious to common sense that the rebellious States stand to-
|
|
day, in point of law, precisely where they stood when, exhausted,
|
|
beaten, conquered, they fell powerless at the feet of Federal
|
|
authority. Their State governments were overthrown, and the lives
|
|
and property of the leaders of the Rebellion were forfeited. In
|
|
reconstructing the institutions of these shattered and overthrown
|
|
States, Congress should begin with a clean slate, and make clean
|
|
work of it. Let there be no hesitation. It would be a cowardly
|
|
deference to a defeated and treacherous President, if any account
|
|
were made of the illegitimate, one-sided, sham governments hurried
|
|
into existence for a malign purpose in the absence of Congress.
|
|
These pretended governments, which were never submitted to the
|
|
people, and from participation in which four millions of the loyal
|
|
people were excluded by Presidential order, should now be treated
|
|
according to their true character, as shams and impositions, and
|
|
supplanted by true and legitimate governments, in the formation of
|
|
which loyal men, black and white, shall participate.
|
|
|
|
It is not, however, within the scope of this paper to point out
|
|
the precise steps to be taken, and the means to be employed. The
|
|
people are less concerned about these than the grand end to be
|
|
attained. They demand such a reconstruction as shall put an end
|
|
to the present anarchical state of things in the late rebellious
|
|
States,--where frightful murders and wholesale massacres are
|
|
perpetrated in the very presence of Federal soldiers. This
|
|
horrible business they require shall cease. They want a
|
|
reconstruction such as will protect loyal men, black and white, in
|
|
their persons and property; such a one as will cause Northern
|
|
industry, Northern capital, and Northern civilization to flow into
|
|
the South, and make a man from New England as much at home in
|
|
Carolina as elsewhere in the Republic. No Chinese wall can now be
|
|
tolerated. The South must be opened to the light of law and
|
|
liberty, and this session of Congress is relied upon to accomplish
|
|
this important work.
|
|
|
|
The plain, common-sense way of doing this work, as intimated at
|
|
the beginning, is simply to establish in the South one law, one
|
|
government, one administration of justice, one condition to the
|
|
exercise of the elective franchise, for men of all races and
|
|
colors alike. This great measure is sought as earnestly by loyal
|
|
white men as by loyal blacks, and is needed alike by both. Let
|
|
sound political prescience but take the place of an unreasoning
|
|
prejudice, and this will be done.
|
|
|
|
Men denounce the negro for his prominence in this discussion; but
|
|
it is no fault of his that in peace as in war, that in conquering
|
|
Rebel armies as in reconstructing the rebellious States, the right
|
|
of the negro is the true solution of our national troubles. The
|
|
stern logic of events, which goes directly to the point,
|
|
disdaining all concern for the color or features of men, has
|
|
determined the interests of the country as identical with and
|
|
inseparable from those of the negro.
|
|
|
|
The policy that emancipated and armed the negro--now seen to have
|
|
been wise and proper by the dullest--was not certainly more
|
|
sternly demanded than is now the policy of enfranchisement. If
|
|
with the negro was success in war, and without him failure, so in
|
|
peace it will be found that the nation must fall or flourish with
|
|
the negro.
|
|
|
|
Fortunately, the Constitution of the United States knows no
|
|
distinction between citizens on account of color. Neither does it
|
|
know any difference between a citizen of a State and a citizen of
|
|
the United States. Citizenship evidently includes all the rights
|
|
of citizens, whether State or national. If the Constitution knows
|
|
none, it is clearly no part of the duty of a Republican Congress
|
|
now to institute one. The mistake of the last session was the
|
|
attempt to do this very thing, by a renunciation of its power to
|
|
secure political rights to any class of citizens, with the obvious
|
|
purpose to allow the rebellious States to disfranchise, if they
|
|
should see fit, their colored citizens. This unfortunate blunder
|
|
must now be retrieved, and the emasculated citizenship given to
|
|
the negro supplanted by that contemplated in the Constitution of
|
|
the United States, which declares that the citizens of each State
|
|
shall enjoy all the rights and immunities of citizens of the
|
|
several States,--so that a legal voter in any State shall be a
|
|
legal voter in all the States.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
AN APPEAL TO CONGRESS FOR IMPARTIAL SUFFRAGE
|
|
by Frederick Douglas
|
|
|
|
|
|
A very limited statement of the argument for impartial suffrage,
|
|
and for including the negro in the body politic, would require
|
|
more space than can be reasonably asked here. It is supported by
|
|
reasons as broad as the nature of man, and as numerous as the
|
|
wants of society. Man is the only government-making animal in the
|
|
world. His right to a participation in the production and
|
|
operation of government is an inference from his nature, as direct
|
|
and self-evident as is his right to acquire property or education.
|
|
It is no less a crime against the manhood of a man, to declare
|
|
that he shall not share in the making and directing of the
|
|
government under which he lives, than to say that he shall not
|
|
acquire property and education. The fundamental and unanswerable
|
|
argument in favor of the enfranchisement of the negro is found in
|
|
the undisputed fact of his manhood. He is a man, and by every
|
|
fact and argument by which any man can sustain his right to vote,
|
|
the negro can sustain his right equally. It is plain that, if the
|
|
right belongs to any, it belongs to all. The doctrine that some
|
|
men have no rights that others are bound to respect, is a doctrine
|
|
which we must banish as we have banished slavery, from which it
|
|
emanated. If black men have no rights in the eyes of white men,
|
|
of course the whites can have none in the eyes of the blacks. The
|
|
result is a war of races, and the annihilation of all proper human
|
|
relations.
|
|
|
|
But suffrage for the negro, while easily sustained upon abstract
|
|
principles, demands consideration upon what are recognized as the
|
|
urgent necessities of the case. It is a measure of relief,--a
|
|
shield to break the force of a blow already descending with
|
|
violence, and render it harmless. The work of destruction has
|
|
already been set in motion all over the South. Peace to the
|
|
country has literally meant war to the loyal men of the South,
|
|
white and black; and negro suffrage is the measure to arrest and
|
|
put an end to that dreadful strife.
|
|
|
|
Something then, not by way of argument, (for that has been done by
|
|
Charles Sumner, Thaddeus Stevens, Wendell Phillips, Gerrit Smith,
|
|
and other able men,) but rather of statement and appeal.
|
|
|
|
For better or for worse, (as in some of the old marriage
|
|
ceremonies,) the negroes are evidently a permanent part of the
|
|
American population. They are too numerous and useful to be
|
|
colonized, and too enduring and self-perpetuating to disappear by
|
|
natural causes. Here they are, four millions of them, and, for
|
|
weal or for woe, here they must remain. Their history is parallel
|
|
to that of the country; but while the history of the latter has
|
|
been cheerful and bright with blessings, theirs has been heavy and
|
|
dark with agonies and curses. What O'Connell said of the history
|
|
of Ireland may with greater truth be said of the negro's. It may
|
|
be "traced like a wounded man through a crowd, by the blood." Yet
|
|
the negroes have marvellously survived all the exterminating
|
|
forces of slavery, and have emerged at the end of two hundred and
|
|
fifty years of bondage, not morose, misanthropic, and revengeful,
|
|
but cheerful, hopeful, and forgiving. They now stand before
|
|
Congress and the country, not complaining of the past, but simply
|
|
asking for a better future. The spectacle of these dusky millions
|
|
thus imploring, not demanding, is touching; and if American
|
|
statesmen could be moved by a simple appeal to the nobler elements
|
|
of human nature, if they had not fallen, seemingly, into the
|
|
incurable habit of weighing and measuring every proposition of
|
|
reform by some standard of profit and loss, doing wrong from
|
|
choice, and right only from necessity or some urgent demand of
|
|
human selfishness, it would be enough to plead for the negroes on
|
|
the score of past services and sufferings. But no such appeal
|
|
shall be relied on here. Hardships, services, sufferings, and
|
|
sacrifices are all waived. It is true that they came to the
|
|
relief of the country at the hour of its extremest need. It is
|
|
true that, in many of the rebellious States, they were almost the
|
|
only reliable friends the nation had throughout the whole
|
|
tremendous war. It is true that, notwithstanding their alleged
|
|
ignorance, they were wiser than their masters, and knew enough to
|
|
be loyal, while those masters only knew enough to be rebels and
|
|
traitors. It is true that they fought side by side in the loyal
|
|
cause with our gallant and patriotic white soldiers, and that, but
|
|
for their help,--divided as the loyal States were,--the Rebels
|
|
might have succeeded in breaking up the Union, thereby entailing
|
|
border wars and troubles of unknown duration and incalculable
|
|
calamity. All this and more is true of these loyal negroes. Many
|
|
daring exploits will be told to their credit. Impartial history
|
|
will paint them as men who deserved well of their country. It
|
|
will tell how they forded and swam rivers, with what consummate
|
|
address they evaded the sharp-eyed Rebel pickets, how they toiled
|
|
in the darkness of night through the tangled marshes of briers and
|
|
thorns, barefooted and weary, running the risk of losing their
|
|
lives, to warn our generals of Rebel schemes to surprise and
|
|
destroy our loyal army. It will tell how these poor people, whose
|
|
rights we still despised, behaved to our wounded soldiers, when
|
|
found cold, hungry, and bleeding on the deserted battle-field; how
|
|
they assisted our escaping prisoners from Andersonville, Belle
|
|
Isle, Castle Thunder, and elsewhere, sharing with them their
|
|
wretched crusts, and otherwise affording them aid and comfort; how
|
|
they promptly responded to the trumpet call for their services,
|
|
fighting against a foe that denied them the rights of civilized
|
|
warfare, and for a government which was without the courage to
|
|
assert those rights and avenge their violation in their behalf;
|
|
with what gallantry they flung themselves upon Rebel
|
|
fortifications, meeting death as fearlessly as any other troops in
|
|
the service. But upon none of these things is reliance placed.
|
|
These facts speak to the better dispositions of the human heart;
|
|
but they seem of little weight with the opponents of impartial
|
|
suffrage.
|
|
|
|
It is true that a strong plea for equal suffrage might be
|
|
addressed to the national sense of honor. Something, too, might
|
|
be said of national gratitude. A nation might well hesitate
|
|
before the temptation to betray its allies. There is something
|
|
immeasurably mean, to say nothing of the cruelty, in placing the
|
|
loyal negroes of the South under the political power of their
|
|
Rebel masters. To make peace with our enemies is all well enough;
|
|
but to prefer our enemies and sacrifice our friends,--to exalt our
|
|
enemies and cast down our friends,--to clothe our enemies, who
|
|
sought the destruction of the government, with all political
|
|
power, and leave our friends powerless in their hands,--is an act
|
|
which need not be characterized here. We asked the negroes to
|
|
espouse our cause, to be our friends, to fight for us, and against
|
|
their masters; and now, after they have done all that we asked
|
|
them to do,--helped us to conquer their masters, and thereby
|
|
directed toward themselves the furious hate of the vanquished,--it
|
|
is proposed in some quarters to turn them over to the political
|
|
control of the common enemy of the government and of the negro.
|
|
But of this let nothing be said in this place. Waiving humanity,
|
|
national honor, the claims of gratitude, the precious satisfaction
|
|
arising from deeds of charity and justice to the weak and
|
|
defenceless,--the appeal for impartial suffrage addresses itself
|
|
with great pertinency to the darkest, coldest, and flintiest side
|
|
of the human heart, and would wring righteousness from the
|
|
unfeeling calculations of human selfishness.
|
|
|
|
For in respect to this grand measure it is the good fortune of the
|
|
negro that enlightened selfishness, not less than justice, fights
|
|
on his side. National interest and national duty, if elsewhere
|
|
separated, are firmly united here. The American people can,
|
|
perhaps, afford to brave the censure of surrounding nations for
|
|
the manifest injustice and meanness of excluding its faithful
|
|
black soldiers from the ballot-box, but it cannot afford to allow
|
|
the moral and mental energies of rapidly increasing millions to be
|
|
consigned to hopeless degradation.
|
|
|
|
Strong as we are, we need the energy that slumbers in the black
|
|
man's arm to make us stronger. We want no longer any heavy-
|
|
footed, melancholy service from the negro. We want the cheerful
|
|
activity of the quickened manhood of these sable millions. Nor
|
|
can we afford to endure the moral blight which the existence of a
|
|
degraded and hated class must necessarily inflict upon any people
|
|
among whom such a class may exist. Exclude the negroes as a class
|
|
from political rights,--teach them that the high and manly
|
|
privilege of suffrage is to be enjoyed by white citizens only,--
|
|
that they may bear the burdens of the state, but that they are to
|
|
have no part in its direction or its honors,--and you at once
|
|
deprive them of one of the main incentives to manly character and
|
|
patriotic devotion to the interests of the government; in a word,
|
|
you stamp them as a degraded caste,--you teach them to despise
|
|
themselves, and all others to despise them. Men are so
|
|
constituted that they largely derive their ideas of their
|
|
abilities and their possibilities from the settled judgments of
|
|
their fellow-men, and especially from such as they read in the
|
|
institutions under which they live. If these bless them, they are
|
|
blest indeed; but if these blast them, they are blasted indeed.
|
|
Give the negro the elective franchise, and you give him at once a
|
|
powerful motive for all noble exertion, and make him a man among
|
|
men. A character is demanded of him, and here as elsewhere demand
|
|
favors supply. It is nothing against this reasoning that all men
|
|
who vote are not good men or good citizens. It is enough that the
|
|
possession and exercise of the elective franchise is in itself an
|
|
appeal to the nobler elements of manhood, and imposes education as
|
|
essential to the safety of society.
|
|
|
|
To appreciate the full force of this argument, it must be
|
|
observed, that disfranchisement in a republican government based
|
|
upon the idea of human equality and universal suffrage, is a very
|
|
different thing from disfranchisement in governments based upon
|
|
the idea of the divine right of kings, or the entire subjugation
|
|
of the masses. Masses of men can take care of themselves.
|
|
Besides, the disabilities imposed upon all are necessarily without
|
|
that bitter and stinging element of invidiousness which attaches
|
|
to disfranchisement in a republic. What is common to all works no
|
|
special sense of degradation to any. But in a country like ours,
|
|
where men of all nations, kindred, and tongues are freely
|
|
enfranchised, and allowed to vote, to say to the negro, You shall
|
|
not vote, is to deal his manhood a staggering blow, and to burn
|
|
into his soul a bitter and goading sense of wrong, or else work in
|
|
him a stupid indifference to all the elements of a manly
|
|
character. As a nation, we cannot afford to have amongst us
|
|
either this indifference and stupidity, or that burning sense of
|
|
wrong. These sable millions are too powerful to be allowed to
|
|
remain either indifferent or discontented. Enfranchise them, and
|
|
they become self-respecting and country-loving citizens.
|
|
Disfranchise them, and the mark of Cain is set upon them less
|
|
mercifully than upon the first murderer, for no man was to hurt
|
|
him. But this mark of inferiority--all the more palpable because
|
|
of a difference of color--not only dooms the negro to be a
|
|
vagabond, but makes him the prey of insult and outrage everywhere.
|
|
While nothing may be urged here as to the past services of the
|
|
negro, it is quite within the line of this appeal to remind the
|
|
nation of the possibility that a time may come when the services
|
|
of the negro may be a second time required. History is said to
|
|
repeat itself, and, if so, having wanted the negro once, we may
|
|
want him again. Can that statesmanship be wise which would leave
|
|
the negro good ground to hesitate, when the exigencies of the
|
|
country required his prompt assistance? Can that be sound
|
|
statesmanship which leaves millions of men in gloomy discontent,
|
|
and possibly in a state of alienation in the day of national
|
|
trouble? Was not the nation stronger when two hundred thousand
|
|
sable soldiers were hurled against the Rebel fortifications, than
|
|
it would have been without them? Arming the negro was an urgent
|
|
military necessity three years ago,--are we sure that another
|
|
quite as pressing may not await us? Casting aside all thought of
|
|
justice and magnanimity, is it wise to impose upon the negro all
|
|
the burdens involved in sustaining government against foes within
|
|
and foes without, to make him equal sharer in all sacrifices for
|
|
the public good, to tax him in peace and conscript him in war, and
|
|
then coldly exclude him from the ballot-box?
|
|
|
|
Look across the sea. Is Ireland, in her present condition,
|
|
fretful, discontented, compelled to support an establishment in
|
|
which she does not believe, and which the vast majority of her
|
|
people abhor, a source of power or of weakness to Great Britain?
|
|
Is not Austria wise in removing all ground of complaint against
|
|
her on the part of Hungary? And does not the Emperor of Russia
|
|
act wisely, as well as generously, when he not only breaks up the
|
|
bondage of the serf, but extends him all the advantages of Russian
|
|
citizenship? Is the present movement in England in favor of
|
|
manhood suffrage--for the purpose of bringing four millions of
|
|
British subjects into full sympathy and co-operation with the
|
|
British government--a wise and humane movement, or otherwise? Is
|
|
the existence of a rebellious element in our borders--which New
|
|
Orleans, Memphis, and Texas show to be only disarmed, but at heart
|
|
as malignant as ever, only waiting for an opportunity to reassert
|
|
itself with fire and sword--a reason for leaving four millions of
|
|
the nation's truest friends with just cause of complaint against
|
|
the Federal government? If the doctrine that taxation should go
|
|
hand in hand with representation can be appealed to in behalf of
|
|
recent traitors and rebels, may it not properly be asserted in
|
|
behalf of a people who have ever been loyal and faithful to the
|
|
government? The answers to these questions are too obvious to
|
|
require statement. Disguise it as we may, we are still a divided
|
|
nation. The Rebel States have still an anti-national policy.
|
|
Massachusetts and South Carolina may draw tears from the eyes of
|
|
our tender-hearted President by walking arm in arm into his
|
|
Philadelphia Convention, but a citizen of Massachusetts is still
|
|
an alien in the Palmetto State. There is that, all over the
|
|
South, which frightens Yankee industry, capital, and skill from
|
|
its borders. We have crushed the Rebellion, but not its hopes or
|
|
its malign purposes. The South fought for perfect and permanent
|
|
control over the Southern laborer. It was a war of the rich
|
|
against the poor. They who waged it had no objection to the
|
|
government, while they could use it as a means of confirming their
|
|
power over the laborer. They fought the government, not because
|
|
they hated the government as such, but because they found it, as
|
|
they thought, in the way between them and their one grand purpose
|
|
of rendering permanent and indestructible their authority and
|
|
power over the Southern laborer. Though the battle is for the
|
|
present lost, the hope of gaining this object still exists, and
|
|
pervades the whole South with a feverish excitement. We have thus
|
|
far only gained a Union without unity, marriage without love,
|
|
victory without peace. The hope of gaining by politics what they
|
|
lost by the sword, is the secret of all this Southern unrest; and
|
|
that hope must be extinguished before national ideas and objects
|
|
can take full possession of the Southern mind. There is but one
|
|
safe and constitutional way to banish that mischievous hope from
|
|
the South, and that is by lifting the laborer beyond the
|
|
unfriendly political designs of his former master. Give the negro
|
|
the elective franchise, and you at once destroy the purely
|
|
sectional policy, and wheel the Southern States into line with
|
|
national interests and national objects. The last and shrewdest
|
|
turn of Southern politics is a recognition of the necessity of
|
|
getting into Congress immediately, and at any price. The South
|
|
will comply with any conditions but suffrage for the negro. It
|
|
will swallow all the unconstitutional test oaths, repeal all the
|
|
ordinances of Secession, repudiate the Rebel debt, promise to pay
|
|
the debt incurred in conquering its people, pass all the
|
|
constitutional amendments, if only it can have the negro left
|
|
under its political control. The proposition is as modest as that
|
|
made on the mountain: "All these things will I give unto thee if
|
|
thou wilt fall down and worship me."
|
|
|
|
But why are the Southerners so willing to make these sacrifices?
|
|
The answer plainly is, they see in this policy the only hope of
|
|
saving something of their old sectional peculiarities and power.
|
|
Once firmly seated in Congress, their alliance with Northern
|
|
Democrats re-established, their States restored to their former
|
|
position inside the Union, they can easily find means of keeping
|
|
the Federal government entirely too busy with other important
|
|
matters to pay much attention to the local affairs of the Southern
|
|
States. Under the potent shield of State Rights, the game would
|
|
be in their own hands. Does any sane man doubt for a moment that
|
|
the men who followed Jefferson Davis through the late terrible
|
|
Rebellion, often marching barefooted and hungry, naked and
|
|
penniless, and who now only profess an enforced loyalty, would
|
|
plunge this country into a foreign war to-day, if they could
|
|
thereby gain their coveted independence, and their still more
|
|
coveted mastery over the negroes? Plainly enough, the peace not
|
|
less than the prosperity of this country is involved in the great
|
|
measure of impartial suffrage. King Cotton is deposed, but only
|
|
deposed, and is ready to-day to reassert all his ancient
|
|
pretensions upon the first favorable opportunity. Foreign
|
|
countries abound with his agents. They are able, vigilant,
|
|
devoted. The young men of the South burn with the desire to
|
|
regain what they call the lost cause; the women are noisily
|
|
malignant towards the Federal government. In fact, all the
|
|
elements of treason and rebellion are there under the thinnest
|
|
disguise which necessity can impose.
|
|
|
|
What, then, is the work before Congress? It is to save the people
|
|
of the South from themselves, and the nation from detriment on
|
|
their account. Congress must supplant the evident sectional
|
|
tendencies of the South by national dispositions and tendencies.
|
|
It must cause national ideas and objects to take the lead and
|
|
control the politics of those States. It must cease to recognize
|
|
the old slave-masters as the only competent persons to rule the
|
|
South. In a word, it must enfranchise the negro, and by means of
|
|
the loyal negroes and the loyal white men of the South build up a
|
|
national party there, and in time bridge the chasm between North
|
|
and South, so that our country may have a common liberty and a
|
|
common civilization. The new wine must be put into new bottles.
|
|
The lamb may not be trusted with the wolf. Loyalty is hardly safe
|
|
with traitors.
|
|
|
|
Statesmen of America! beware what you do. The ploughshare of
|
|
rebellion has gone through the land beam-deep. The soil is in
|
|
readiness, and the seed-time has come. Nations, not less than
|
|
individuals, reap as they sow. The dreadful calamities of the
|
|
past few years came not by accident, nor unbidden, from the
|
|
ground. You shudder to-day at the harvest of blood sown in the
|
|
spring-time of the Republic by your patriot fathers. The
|
|
principle of slavery, which they tolerated under the erroneous
|
|
impression that it would soon die out, became at last the dominant
|
|
principle and power at the South. It early mastered the
|
|
Constitution, became superior to the Union, and enthroned itself
|
|
above the law.
|
|
|
|
Freedom of speech and of the press it slowly but successfully
|
|
banished from the South, dictated its own code of honor and
|
|
manners to the nation, brandished the bludgeon and the bowie-knife
|
|
over Congressional debate, sapped the foundations of loyalty,
|
|
dried up the springs of patriotism, blotted out the testimonies of
|
|
the fathers against oppression, padlocked the pulpit, expelled
|
|
liberty from its literature, invented nonsensical theories about
|
|
master-races and slave-races of men, and in due season produced a
|
|
Rebellion fierce, foul, and bloody.
|
|
|
|
This evil principle again seeks admission into our body politic.
|
|
It comes now in shape of a denial of political rights to four
|
|
million loyal colored people. The South does not now ask for
|
|
slavery. It only asks for a large degraded caste, which shall
|
|
have no political rights. This ends the case. Statesmen, beware
|
|
what you do. The destiny of unborn and unnumbered generations is
|
|
in your hands. Will you repeat the mistake of your fathers, who
|
|
sinned ignorantly? or will you profit by the blood-bought wisdom
|
|
all round you, and forever expel every vestige of the old
|
|
abomination from our national borders? As you members of the
|
|
Thirty-ninth Congress decide, will the country be peaceful,
|
|
united, and happy, or troubled, divided, and miserable.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE NEGRO EXODUS
|
|
by James B. Runnion
|
|
|
|
|
|
A recent sojourn in the South for a few weeks, chiefly in
|
|
Louisiana and Mississippi, gave the writer an opportunity to
|
|
inquire into what has been so aptly called "the negro exodus."
|
|
The emigration of blacks to Kansas began early in the spring of
|
|
this year. For a time there was a stampede from two or three of
|
|
the river parishes in Louisiana and as many counties opposite in
|
|
Mississippi. Several thousand negroes (certainly not fewer than
|
|
five thousand, and variously estimated as high as ten thousand)
|
|
had left their cabins before the rush could be stayed or the
|
|
excitement lulled. Early in May most of the negroes who had quit
|
|
work for the purpose of emigrating, but had not succeeded in
|
|
getting off, were persuaded to return to the plantations, and from
|
|
that time on there have been only straggling families and groups
|
|
that have watched for and seized the first opportunity for
|
|
transportation to the North. There is no doubt, however, that
|
|
there is still a consuming desire among the negroes of the cotton
|
|
districts in these two States to seek new homes, and there are the
|
|
best reasons for believing that the exodus will take a new start
|
|
next spring, after the gathering and conversion of the growing
|
|
crop. Hundreds of negroes who returned from the river-banks for
|
|
lack of transportation, and thousands of others infected with the
|
|
ruling discontent, are working harder in the fields this summer,
|
|
and practicing more economy and self-denial than ever before, in
|
|
order to have the means next winter and spring to pay their way to
|
|
the "promised land."
|
|
|
|
"We've been working for fourteen long years," said an intelligent
|
|
negro, in reply to a question as to the cause of the prevailing
|
|
discontent, "and we ain't no better off than we was when we
|
|
commenced." This is the negro version of the trouble, which is
|
|
elaborated on occasion into a harrowing story of oppression and
|
|
plunder.
|
|
|
|
"I tell you it's all owing to the radical politicians at the
|
|
North," explained a representative of the type known as the
|
|
Bourbons; "they've had their emissaries down here, and deluded the
|
|
'niggers' into a very fever of emigration, with the purpose of
|
|
reducing our basis of representation in Congress and increasing
|
|
that of the Northern States."
|
|
|
|
These are the two extremes of opinion at the South. The first is
|
|
certainly the more reasonable and truthful, though it implies that
|
|
all the blame rests upon the whites, which is not the case; the
|
|
second, preposterous as it will appear to Northern readers, is
|
|
religiously believed by large numbers of the "unreconciled."
|
|
Between these two extremes there is an infinite variety of
|
|
theories, all more or less governed by the political faction to
|
|
which the various theorizers belong; there are at least a dozen of
|
|
these factions, such as the Bourbons, the conservatives, the
|
|
native white republicans, the carpet-bag republicans, the negro
|
|
republicans, etc. There is a political tinge in almost everything
|
|
in the extreme Southern States. The fact seems to be that the
|
|
emigration movement among the blacks was spontaneous to the extent
|
|
that they were ready and anxious to go. The immediate notion of
|
|
going may have been inculcated by such circulars, issued by
|
|
railroads and land companies, as are common enough at emigrant
|
|
centres in the North and West, and the exaggeration characteristic
|
|
of such literature may have stimulated the imagination of the
|
|
negroes far beyond anything they are likely to realize in their
|
|
new homes. Kansas was naturally the favorite goal of the negro
|
|
emigre, for it was associated in his mind with the names of Jim
|
|
Lane and John Brown, which are hallowed to him. The timid learned
|
|
that they could escape what they have come to regard as a second
|
|
bondage, and they flocked together to gain the moral support which
|
|
comes from numbers.
|
|
|
|
Diligent inquiry among representative men, of all classes and from
|
|
all parts of Louisiana, who were in attendance at the
|
|
constitutional convention in New Orleans, and careful observation
|
|
along the river among the land owners and field hands in both
|
|
Louisiana and Mississippi, left a vivid impression of some
|
|
material and political conditions which fully account for the
|
|
negro exodus. I have dropped the social conditions out of the
|
|
consideration, because I became convinced that the race troubles
|
|
at the South can be solved to the satisfaction of both whites and
|
|
blacks without cultivating any closer social relations than those
|
|
which now prevail. The material conditions which I have in mind
|
|
are less familiar than the political conditions; they are mainly
|
|
the land-tenure and credit systems, and mere modifications
|
|
(scarcely for the better) of the peculiar plantation system of
|
|
slavery days.
|
|
|
|
The cotton lands at the South are owned now, as they were before
|
|
the war, in large tracts. The land was about all that most of the
|
|
Southern whites had left to them after the war, and they kept it
|
|
when they could, at the first, in the hope that it would yield
|
|
them a living through the labor of the blacks; of late years they
|
|
have not been able to sell their plantations at any fair price, if
|
|
they desired to do so. The white men with capital who went to the
|
|
South from the North after the war seemed to acquire the true
|
|
Southern ambition to be large land owners and planters; and when
|
|
the ante-bellum owners lost their plantations the land usually
|
|
went in bulk to the city factors who had made them advances from
|
|
year to year, and had taken mortgages on their crops and broad
|
|
acres. As a consequence, the land has never been distributed
|
|
among the people who inhabit and cultivate it, and agricultural
|
|
labor in the Southern States approaches the condition of the
|
|
factory labor in England and the Eastern States more nearly than
|
|
it does the farm labor of the North and West. Nearly every
|
|
agricultural laborer north of Mason and Dixon's line, if not the
|
|
actual possessor of the land he plows, looks forward to owning a
|
|
farm some time; at the South such an ambition is rare, and small
|
|
ownership still more an exception. The practice of paying day
|
|
wages was first tried after the war; this practice is still in
|
|
vogue in the sugar and rice districts, where laborers are paid
|
|
from fifty to seventy cents per day, with quarters furnished and
|
|
living guaranteed them at nine or ten cents a day. In sections
|
|
where the wages system prevails, and where there have been no
|
|
political disturbances, the negroes seem to be perfectly
|
|
contented; at all events, the emigration fever has not spread
|
|
among them. But it was found impracticable to maintain the wage
|
|
system in the cotton districts. The negroes themselves fought
|
|
against it, because it reminded them too much of the slave-gang,
|
|
driven out at daybreak and home at sundown. In many cases the
|
|
planters were forced to abandon it, because they had not the means
|
|
to carry on such huge farming, and they could not secure the same
|
|
liberal advances from capitalists as when they were able to
|
|
mortgage a growing "crop of niggers." Then the system of working
|
|
on shares was tried. This was reasonably fair, and the negro
|
|
laborers were satisfied as long as it lasted. The owners of the
|
|
land, under this system, would furnish the indispensable mule and
|
|
the farming implements, and take one half the product. The
|
|
planters themselves relinquished this system. Some of them
|
|
contend that the laziness and indifference of the negro made the
|
|
partnership undesirable; many others admit that they were not able
|
|
to advance the negro tenant his supplies pending the growth of the
|
|
year's crop, as it was necessary they should do under the sharing
|
|
system. Now the renting system is almost universal. It yields
|
|
the land owner a certainty, endangered only by the death,
|
|
sickness, or desertion of the negro tenant; but it throws the
|
|
latter upon his own responsibility, and frequently makes him the
|
|
victim of his own ignorance and the rapacity of the white man.
|
|
The rent of land, on a money basis, varies from six to ten dollars
|
|
an acre per year, while the same land can be bought in large
|
|
quantities all the way from fifteen to thirty dollars per acre,
|
|
according to location, clearing, improvement, richness, etc. When
|
|
paid in product, the rent varies from eighty to one hundred pounds
|
|
of lint cotton per acre for land that produces from two hundred to
|
|
four hundred pounds of cotton per acre; the tenant undertakes to
|
|
pay from one quarter to one half--perhaps an average of one third--
|
|
of his crop for the use of the land, without stock, tools, or
|
|
assistance of any kind. The land owners usually claim that they
|
|
make no money even at these exorbitant figures. If they do not,
|
|
it is because only a portion of their vast possessions is under
|
|
cultivation, because they do no work themselves, and in some cases
|
|
because the negroes do not cultivate and gather as large a crop as
|
|
they could and ought to harvest. It is very certain that the
|
|
negro tenants, as a class, make no money; if they are out of debt
|
|
at the end of a season, they have reason to rejoice.
|
|
|
|
The credit system, which is as universal as the renting system, is
|
|
even more illogical and oppressive. The utter viciousness of both
|
|
systems in their mutual dependence is sufficiently illustrated by
|
|
the single fact that, after fourteen years of freedom and labor on
|
|
their own account, the great mass of the negroes depend for their
|
|
living on an advance of supplies (as they need food, clothing, or
|
|
tools during the year) upon the pledge of their growing crop.
|
|
This is a generic imitation of the white man's improvidence during
|
|
the slavery times; then the planters mortgaged their crops and
|
|
negroes, and where one used the advances to extend his plantation,
|
|
ten squandered the money. The negro's necessities have developed
|
|
an offensive race, called merchants by courtesy, who keep supply
|
|
stores at the cross-roads and steamboat landings, and live upon
|
|
extortion. These people would be called sharks, harpies, and
|
|
vampires in any Northwestern agricultural community, and they
|
|
would not survive more than one season. The country merchant
|
|
advances the negro tenant such supplies as the negro wants up to a
|
|
certain amount, previously fixed by contract, and charges the
|
|
negro at least double the value of every article sold to him.
|
|
There is no concealment about the extortion; every store-keeper
|
|
has his cash price and his credit price, and in nearly all cases
|
|
the latter is one hundred per cent. higher than the former. The
|
|
extortion is justified by those who practice it on the ground that
|
|
their losses by bad debts, though their advances are always
|
|
secured by mortgage on the growing crop, overbalance the profits;
|
|
this assertion is scarcely borne out by the comparative opulence
|
|
of the "merchant" and the pitiful poverty of the laborer. Some of
|
|
the largest and wealthiest planters have sought to protect their
|
|
tenants from the merciless clutches of the contrary merchant, who
|
|
is more frequently than not an Israelite, by advancing supplies of
|
|
necessary articles at reasonable prices. But the necessities of
|
|
the planter, if not his greed, often betray him into plundering
|
|
the negro. The planter himself is generally a victim to usury.
|
|
He still draws on the city factor to the extent of ten dollars a
|
|
bale upon his estimated crop. He pays this factor two and one
|
|
half per cent. commission for the advance, eight per cent.
|
|
interest for the money, two and one half per cent. more for
|
|
disposing of the crop when consigned to him, and sometimes still
|
|
another commission for the purchase of the supplies. The planter
|
|
who furnishes his tenants with supplies on credit is usually
|
|
paying an interest of fifteen to eighteen per cent. himself, and
|
|
necessarily takes some risk in advancing upon an uncertain crop
|
|
and to a laborer whom he believes to be neither scrupulous nor
|
|
industrious; these conditions necessitate more than the ordinary
|
|
profit, and in many cases suggest exorbitant and unreasonable
|
|
charges. But whether the negro deals with the merchant or the
|
|
land owner, his extravagance almost invariably exhausts his
|
|
credit, even if it be large. The negro is a sensuous creature,
|
|
and luxurious in his way. The male is an enormous consumer of
|
|
tobacco and whisky; the female has an inordinate love for
|
|
flummery; both are fond of sardines, potted meats, and canned
|
|
goods generally, and they indulge themselves without any other
|
|
restraint than the refusal of their merchant to sell to them. The
|
|
man who advances supplies watches his negro customers constantly;
|
|
if they are working well and their crop promises to be large, he
|
|
will permit and even encourage them to draw upon him liberally; it
|
|
is only a partial failure of the crop, or some intimation of the
|
|
negro's intention to shirk his obligations, that induces his
|
|
country factor to preach the virtue of self-restraint, or moralize
|
|
upon the advantages of economy.
|
|
|
|
The land owner's rent and the merchant's advances are both secured
|
|
by a chattel mortgage on the tenant's personal property, and by a
|
|
pledge of the growing crop. The hired laborer (for it is common
|
|
for negroes to work for wages for other negroes who rent lands)
|
|
has also a lien upon the growing crops second only to the land
|
|
owner's; but as the law requires that the liens shall be recorded,
|
|
which the ignorant laborer usually neglects and the shrewd
|
|
merchant never fails to do, the former is generally cheated of his
|
|
security. Among those who usually work for hire are the women,
|
|
who are expert cotton pickers, and the loss of wages which so many
|
|
of them have suffered by reason of the prior lien gained by
|
|
landlord and merchant has helped to make them earnest and
|
|
effective advocates of emigration. The Western farmer considers
|
|
it hard enough to struggle under one mortgage at a reasonable
|
|
interest; the negro tenant begins his season with three mortgages,
|
|
covering all he owns, his labor for the coming year, and all he
|
|
expects to acquire during that period. He pays one third his
|
|
product for the use of the land; he pays double the value of all
|
|
he consumes; he pays an exorbitant fee for recording the contract
|
|
by which he pledges his pound of flesh; he is charged two or three
|
|
times as much as he ought to pay for ginning his cotton; and,
|
|
finally, he turns over his crop to be eaten up in commissions, if
|
|
anything still be left to him. It is easy to understand why the
|
|
negro rarely gets ahead in the world. This mortgaging of future
|
|
services, which is practically what a pledge of the growing crop
|
|
amounts to, is in the nature of bondage. It has a tendency to
|
|
make the negro extravagant, reckless, and unscrupulous; he has
|
|
become convinced from previous experience that nothing will be
|
|
coming to him on the day of settlement, and he is frequently
|
|
actuated by the purpose of getting as much as possible and working
|
|
as little as possible. Cases are numerous in which the negro
|
|
abandons his own crop at picking time, because he knows that he
|
|
has already eaten up its full value; and so he goes to picking for
|
|
wages on some other plantation. In other cases, where negroes
|
|
have acquired mules and farming implements upon which a merchant
|
|
has secured a mortgage in the manner described, they are
|
|
practically bound to that merchant from year to year, in order to
|
|
retain their property; if he removes from one section to another,
|
|
they must follow him, and rent and cultivate lands in his
|
|
neighborhood. It is only the ignorance, the improvidence, and the
|
|
happy disposition of the negro, under the influence of the lazy,
|
|
drowsy climate, to which he is so well adapted physically, that
|
|
have enabled him to endure these hardships so long. And, though
|
|
the negro is the loser, the white man is not often the gainer,
|
|
from this false plantation and mercantile system. The incidental
|
|
risk may not be so large as the planter and merchant pretend, but
|
|
the condition of the people is an evidence that the extortion they
|
|
practice yields no better profit in the long run than would be
|
|
gained by competition in fair prices on a cash system; and in
|
|
leading up to a general emigration of the laboring population the
|
|
abuses described will eventually ruin and impoverish those who
|
|
have heretofore been the only beneficiaries thereof. The decay of
|
|
improvements inevitable under annual rentings, the lack of
|
|
sufficient labor to cultivate all the good land, and the universal
|
|
idleness of the rural whites have kept the land owners
|
|
comparatively poor; the partial failure of crops and the
|
|
unscrupulousness of the negro debtor, engendered by the infamous
|
|
exactions of his creditor, have prevented the merchants, as a
|
|
class, from prospering as much as might be supposed; and, finally,
|
|
the uniform injustice to the laborers induces them to fly to ills
|
|
they know not of, rather than bear those they have. It is a
|
|
blessing to the negro that the laws do not yet provide for a
|
|
detention of the person in the case of debt, or escape would be
|
|
shut off entirely; as it is, various influences and circumstances
|
|
appertaining to the system in vogue have been used to prevent the
|
|
easy flight of those who desire to go, and have detained thousands
|
|
of blacks for a time who are fretting to quit the country.
|
|
|
|
Political oppression has contributed largely to the discontent
|
|
which is the prime cause of the exodus. "Bulldozing" is the term
|
|
by which all forms of this oppression are known. The native
|
|
whites are generally indisposed to confess that the negroes are
|
|
quitting the country on account of political injustice and
|
|
persecution; even those who freely admit and fitly characterize
|
|
the abuses already described seek to deny, or at least belittle,
|
|
the political abuses. The fact that a large number of negroes
|
|
have emigrated from Madison Parish, Louisiana, where there has
|
|
never been any bulldozing, and where the negroes are in full and
|
|
undisputed political control, is cited as proof that political
|
|
disturbances cut no figure in the case. But the town of Delta, in
|
|
Madison Parish, is at once on the river and the terminus of a
|
|
railroad that runs back through the interior of the State; thus
|
|
Madison Parish would furnish the natural exit for the fugitives
|
|
from the adjoining counties, where there have been political
|
|
disturbances. It would be just as reasonable to contend that the
|
|
plundering of the negroes has had no influence in driving them
|
|
away, since many of those who have emigrated were among the most
|
|
prosperous of the blacks, as to deny the agency of political
|
|
persecution. Families that had been able to accumulate a certain
|
|
amount of personal property, in spite of the extortionate
|
|
practices, sold their mules, their implements, their cows, their
|
|
pigs, their sheep, and their household goods for anything they
|
|
would bring,--frequently as low as one sixth of their value,--in
|
|
order that they might improve an immediate opportunity to go away;
|
|
it is evident that there must have been some cause outside of
|
|
extortion in their case. There are candid native whites who do
|
|
not deny, but justify, the violent methods which have been
|
|
employed to disfranchise the negroes, or compel them to vote under
|
|
white dictation, in many parts of Louisiana and Mississippi, on
|
|
the ground that the men who pay the taxes should vote them and
|
|
control the disbursement of the public moneys. The gentlemen who
|
|
advance this argument seem to ignore the fact that the very
|
|
Northerner whom they are seeking to convert to "the Mississippi
|
|
plan" may himself be a taxpayer in some Northern city, where
|
|
public affairs are controlled by a class of voters in every way as
|
|
ignorant and irresponsible as the blacks, but where bulldozing has
|
|
never yet been suggested as a remedy. For the rest, the evidences
|
|
of political oppression are abundant and convincing. The
|
|
bulldozers as a class are more impecunious and irresponsible than
|
|
the negroes, and, unlike the negroes, they will not work. There
|
|
has been more of the "night-riding," the whippings, the mysterious
|
|
disappearances, the hangings, and the terrorism comprehended in
|
|
the term bulldozing than has been reported by those "abstracts and
|
|
brief chronicles of the time," the Southern newspapers, which are
|
|
now all of one party, and defer to the ruling sentiment among the
|
|
whites. The exodus has wrung from two or three of the more candid
|
|
and independent journals, however, a virtual confession of the
|
|
fiendish practices of bulldozing in their insistance that these
|
|
practices must be abandoned. The non-resident land owners and the
|
|
resident planters, the city factors and the country merchants of
|
|
means and respectability, have taken no personal part in the
|
|
terrorizing of the negro, but they have tolerated it, and
|
|
sometimes encouraged it, in order to gratify their preference for
|
|
"white government." The negroes have suffered the more because
|
|
they have not resisted and defended themselves; now they have
|
|
begun to convince those who have persecuted them that, if they
|
|
will not strike back, they can and will run away. No one who is
|
|
at all familiar with the freedman can doubt that the abridgment of
|
|
his political rights has been one of the main causes of the
|
|
exodus. Voting is widely regarded at the North as a disagreeable
|
|
duty, but the negro looks upon it as the highest privilege in
|
|
life; to be frightened out of the exercise of this privilege, or
|
|
compelled to exercise it in conflict with his convictions and
|
|
preferences, is to suffer from a cruel injustice, which the negro
|
|
will now try to escape, since he has learned that escape is
|
|
possible. The women, though free from personal assaults, suffer
|
|
from the terrorism that prevails in certain districts as much as
|
|
the men. "We might as well starve or freeze to death in Kansas,"
|
|
they say, "as to be shot-gunned here." If they talk to you in
|
|
confidence, they declare that the ruling purpose is to escape from
|
|
the "slaughter-pens" of the South. Political persecution, and
|
|
not the extortion they suffer, is the refrain of all the speakers
|
|
at negro meetings that are held in encouragement and aid of the
|
|
emigration. It is idle to deny that the varied injustice which
|
|
the negroes have suffered as voters is accountable for a large
|
|
part of their universal yearning for new homes, and it will be
|
|
folly for the responsible classes at the South to ignore this
|
|
fact.
|
|
|
|
As it is the negroes who are fleeing from the South, it is natural
|
|
to look among the dominant class for the injustice which is
|
|
driving them away; but it would be unfair to conclude that the
|
|
blame rests entirely upon the whites, and still more so to leave
|
|
the impression that there is no extenuation for the mistakes and
|
|
abuses for which the whites are responsible. Much of the
|
|
intimidation of the blacks has been tolerated, if not suggested,
|
|
by a fear of negro uprisings. The apprehension is a legacy from
|
|
the days of slavery, and is more unreasonable now than it was
|
|
then; but still it exists. This is not an excuse, but an
|
|
explanation. The Pharaohs of the time of Moses were in constant
|
|
dread lest the Hebrews under their rule should go over to their
|
|
enemies, and their dread doubtless increased the cruelty of the
|
|
Egyptians; but, while this dread was an extenuation in the eyes of
|
|
the persecutors, it did not prevent the Hebrews from fleeing the
|
|
persecution. So the blacks are going without regard to the
|
|
justification which the whites may set up for their treatment; the
|
|
only difference between the old and new exodus is that, as the
|
|
writer heard one negro speaker express it, "every black man is his
|
|
own Moses in this exodus." The negro may be lazy; it seems
|
|
impossible to be otherwise in the Southern climate. He may not be
|
|
willing to work on Saturdays, no matter how urgent the necessity;
|
|
the indulgence in holidays is said to be one of the chief
|
|
drawbacks to the advancement of the emancipated serfs of Russia.
|
|
The blacks are certainly extravagant in their way, though the word
|
|
seems to be almost misused in connection with a race who live
|
|
largely on pork and molasses, and rarely wear more than half a
|
|
dollar's worth of clothes at one time. They have not the instinct
|
|
of home as it prevails among the whites, but incline to a crude
|
|
and unsystematic communism; the negro quarters of the old
|
|
plantations are all huddled together in the centre, and, except
|
|
where the land owners have interfered to encourage a different
|
|
life, there is still too much promiscuousness in the relation of
|
|
the sexes. The negro, as a rule, has no ambition to become a land
|
|
owner; he prefers to invest his surplus money, when he has any, in
|
|
personal and movable property. In most cases where the blacks
|
|
have been given the opportunity of buying land on long time, and
|
|
paying yearly installments out of the proceeds of their annual
|
|
crops, they have tired of the bargain after a year or two, and
|
|
abandoned the contract. The negro politicians and preachers are
|
|
not all that reformers and moralists would have them; the
|
|
imitative faculty of the African has betrayed the black politician
|
|
into many of the vicious ways of the white politician, and the
|
|
colored preacher is frequently not above "the pomps and vanity of
|
|
this wicked world." All this is the more unfortunate, as the
|
|
blacks have a child-like confidence in their chosen leaders,
|
|
founded partly on their primitive character, and partly on their
|
|
distrust of the native whites. Both their politicians and their
|
|
preachers have given abundant evidence of their insincerity during
|
|
the excitement of emigration by blowing hot and blowing cold; by
|
|
talking to the negroes one way, and to the whites another; and
|
|
even to the extent, in some instances, of taking money to use
|
|
their influence for discouraging and impeding emigration. These
|
|
are some of the faults and misfortunes on the part of the blacks
|
|
which enter into the race troubles. The chief blame which
|
|
attaches to the whites is the failure to make a persistent effort,
|
|
by education and kind treatment, to overcome the distrust and cure
|
|
the faults of the negroes. The whites control, because they
|
|
constitute the "property and intelligence" of the South, to use
|
|
the words of a democratic statesman; this power should have been
|
|
used to gain the confidence of the blacks. Had such a course been
|
|
taken, there would not have been the fear of reenslavement, which
|
|
actually prevails to a considerable extent among the negroes. So
|
|
long as a portion of the whites entertain the conviction that the
|
|
war of the sections will be renewed within a few years, as is the
|
|
case, the negroes will suspect and dread the class who would treat
|
|
them as enemies in case the war should come, and will seek to
|
|
escape to a section of the country where they would not be so
|
|
treated. Perhaps, too, there would have been a voluntary
|
|
political division among the black voters, had the whites used
|
|
more pacific means to bring it about, and had they themselves set
|
|
the example. And last, but not least, in making up the sum of
|
|
blame that the whites must bear, is their own unwillingness to
|
|
labor, which gives the rural population too much time for mischief
|
|
and too little sympathy with the working classes.
|
|
|
|
As we have traced the causes that have led to the exodus, and
|
|
described the conditions which warrant the belief that there will
|
|
be a renewal of the emigration on a more extended scale next
|
|
spring, and endeavored to distribute the responsibility for the
|
|
troubles equitably among whites and blacks, remedies have
|
|
naturally suggested themselves to the reader; in fact, they are
|
|
more easily to be thought out than accomplished. A few general
|
|
reflections may be added, however, in order to indicate the
|
|
probable solution of the race troubles that have brought about the
|
|
exodus, if, indeed, the whites and blacks of the South are ever
|
|
going to live together in peace.
|
|
|
|
(1.) It is certain that negro labor is the best the South can
|
|
have, and equally certain that the climate and natural conditions
|
|
of the South are better suited to the negro than any others on
|
|
this continent. The alluvial lands, which many persons believe
|
|
the negroes alone can cultivate, on account of climatic
|
|
conditions, are so rich that it might literally be said it is only
|
|
necessary to tickle them with a hoe to make them laugh back a
|
|
harvest. The common prosperity of the country--the agricultural
|
|
interests of the South and the commercial interests of the North--
|
|
will be best served, therefore, by the continued residence and
|
|
labor of the blacks in the cotton States.
|
|
|
|
(2.) The fact stated in the foregoing paragraph is so well
|
|
understood at the North that the Southern people should dismiss
|
|
the idea that there is any scheming among the Northern people,
|
|
political or otherwise, to draw the black labor away from its
|
|
natural home. The same fact should also influence the people at
|
|
the North not to be misled by any professional philanthropists who
|
|
may have some self-interest in soliciting aid to facilitate negro
|
|
emigration from the South. The duty of the North in this matter
|
|
is simply to extend protection and assure safe-conduct to the
|
|
negroes, if the Southern whites attempt to impede voluntary
|
|
emigration by either law or violence. Any other course might be
|
|
cruel to the negro in encouraging him to enter on a new life in a
|
|
strange climate, as well as an injustice to the white land owners
|
|
of the South.
|
|
|
|
(3.) There is danger that the Southern whites will, as a rule,
|
|
misinterpret the meaning of the exodus. Many are inclined to
|
|
underrate its importance, and those who appreciate its
|
|
significance are apt to look for temporary and superficial
|
|
remedies. The vague promises made at the Vicksburg convention,
|
|
which was controlled by the whites, and called to consider the
|
|
emigration movement, have had no influence with the negroes,
|
|
because they have heard such promises before. Had the convention
|
|
adopted some definite plan of action, such as ex-Governor Foote,
|
|
of Mississippi, submitted, its session might not have been in
|
|
vain. This plan was to establish a committee in every county,
|
|
composed of men who have the confidence of both whites and blacks,
|
|
that should be auxiliary to the public authorities, listen to
|
|
complaints, and arbitrate, advise, conciliate, or prosecute, as
|
|
each case should demand. It is short-sighted for the Southern
|
|
people to make mere temporary concessions, such as have been made
|
|
in some cases this year, for that course would establish an annual
|
|
strike. It is folly for them to suppose they can stem the tide of
|
|
emigration by influencing the regular lines of steamboats not to
|
|
carry the refugees, for the people of the North will see that the
|
|
blacks shall not be detained in the South against their will. It
|
|
is unwise for them to devise schemes for importing Chinese, or
|
|
encouraging the immigration of white labor as a substitute for
|
|
negro labor, when they may much better bestir themselves to make
|
|
the present effective labor content.
|
|
|
|
(4.) Education will be the most useful agent to employ in the
|
|
permanent harmonizing of the two races, and the redemption of both
|
|
from the faults and follies which constitute their troubles. It
|
|
is not the education of the negro alone, whose ambition for
|
|
learning is increasing notably with every new generation, but the
|
|
education of the mass of the young whites, that is needed to
|
|
inculcate more tolerance of color and opinion, to give them an
|
|
aspiration beyond that of riding a horse and hanging a "nigger,"
|
|
and to enable them to set a better example to the imitative blacks
|
|
in the way of work and frugality. The blacks need the education
|
|
to protect them from designing white men; the whites need it to
|
|
teach them that their own interests will be best served by
|
|
abandoning bulldozing of all kinds.
|
|
|
|
(5.) Reform in the land tenure, by converting the plantation
|
|
monopolies into small holdings; abolition of the credit system, by
|
|
abandoning the laws which sustain it; a diversification of crops;
|
|
and attention to new manufacturing, maritime, and commercial
|
|
enterprises,--these are the material changes that are most needed.
|
|
They can be secured only through the active and earnest efforts of
|
|
the whites. The blacks will be found responsive.
|
|
|
|
(6.) The hope of the negro exodus at its present stage, or even
|
|
if it shall continue another season, is that the actual loss of
|
|
the valuable labor that has gone, and the prospective loss of more
|
|
labor that is anxious to go, will induce the intelligent and
|
|
responsible classes at the South to overcome their own prejudices,
|
|
and to compel the extremists, irreconcilables, and politicians
|
|
generally, of all parties, to abandon agitation, and give the
|
|
South equal peace and equal chance for black and white.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
MY ESCAPE FROM SLAVERY
|
|
by Frederick Douglass
|
|
|
|
|
|
In the first narrative of my experience in slavery, written nearly
|
|
forty years ago, and in various writings since, I have given the
|
|
public what I considered very good reasons for withholding the
|
|
manner of my escape. In substance these reasons were, first, that
|
|
such publication at any time during the existence of slavery might
|
|
be used by the master against the slave, and prevent the future
|
|
escape of any who might adopt the same means that I did. The
|
|
second reason was, if possible, still more binding to silence: the
|
|
publication of details would certainly have put in peril the
|
|
persons and property of those who assisted. Murder itself was not
|
|
more sternly and certainly punished in the State of Maryland than
|
|
that of aiding and abetting the escape of a slave. Many colored
|
|
men, for no other crime than that of giving aid to a fugitive
|
|
slave, have, like Charles T. Torrey, perished in prison. The
|
|
abolition of slavery in my native State and throughout the
|
|
country, and the lapse of time, render the caution hitherto
|
|
observed no longer necessary. But even since the abolition of
|
|
slavery, I have sometimes thought it well enough to baffle
|
|
curiosity by saying that while slavery existed there were good
|
|
reasons for not telling the manner of my escape, and since slavery
|
|
had ceased to exist, there was no reason for telling it. I shall
|
|
now, however, cease to avail myself of this formula, and, as far
|
|
as I can, endeavor to satisfy this very natural curiosity. I
|
|
should, perhaps, have yielded to that feeling sooner, had there
|
|
been anything very heroic or thrilling in the incidents connected
|
|
with my escape, for I am sorry to say I have nothing of that sort
|
|
to tell; and yet the courage that could risk betrayal and the
|
|
bravery which was ready to encounter death, if need be, in pursuit
|
|
of freedom, were essential features in the undertaking. My
|
|
success was due to address rather than courage, to good luck
|
|
rather than bravery. My means of escape were provided for me by
|
|
the very men who were making laws to hold and bind me more
|
|
securely in slavery.
|
|
|
|
It was the custom in the State of Maryland to require the free
|
|
colored people to have what were called free papers. These
|
|
instruments they were required to renew very often, and by
|
|
charging a fee for this writing, considerable sums from time to
|
|
time were collected by the State. In these papers the name, age,
|
|
color, height, and form of the freeman were described, together
|
|
with any scars or other marks upon his person which could assist
|
|
in his identification. This device in some measure defeated
|
|
itself--since more than one man could be found to answer the same
|
|
general description. Hence many slaves could escape by
|
|
personating the owner of one set of papers; and this was often
|
|
done as follows: A slave, nearly or sufficiently answering the
|
|
description set forth in the papers, would borrow or hire them
|
|
till by means of them he could escape to a free State, and then,
|
|
by mail or otherwise, would return them to the owner. The
|
|
operation was a hazardous one for the lender as well as for the
|
|
borrower. A failure on the part of the fugitive to send back the
|
|
papers would imperil his benefactor, and the discovery of the
|
|
papers in possession of the wrong man would imperil both the
|
|
fugitive and his friend. It was, therefore, an act of supreme
|
|
trust on the part of a freeman of color thus to put in jeopardy
|
|
his own liberty that another might be free. It was, however, not
|
|
unfrequently bravely done, and was seldom discovered. I was not
|
|
so fortunate as to resemble any of my free acquaintances
|
|
sufficiently to answer the description of their papers. But I had
|
|
a friend--a sailor--who owned a sailor's protection, which
|
|
answered somewhat the purpose of free papers--describing his
|
|
person, and certifying to the fact that he was a free American
|
|
sailor. The instrument had at its head the American eagle, which
|
|
gave it the appearance at once of an authorized document. This
|
|
protection, when in my hands, did not describe its bearer very
|
|
accurately. Indeed, it called for a man much darker than myself,
|
|
and close examination of it would have caused my arrest at the
|
|
start.
|
|
|
|
In order to avoid this fatal scrutiny on the part of railroad
|
|
officials, I arranged with Isaac Rolls, a Baltimore hackman, to
|
|
bring my baggage to the Philadelphia train just on the moment of
|
|
starting, and jumped upon the car myself when the train was in
|
|
motion. Had I gone into the station and offered to purchase a
|
|
ticket, I should have been instantly and carefully examined, and
|
|
undoubtedly arrested. In choosing this plan I considered the
|
|
jostle of the train, and the natural haste of the conductor, in a
|
|
train crowded with passengers, and relied upon my skill and
|
|
address in playing the sailor, as described in my protection, to
|
|
do the rest. One element in my favor was the kind feeling which
|
|
prevailed in Baltimore and other sea-ports at the time, toward
|
|
"those who go down to the sea in ships." "Free trade and sailors'
|
|
rights" just then expressed the sentiment of the country. In my
|
|
clothing I was rigged out in sailor style. I had on a red shirt
|
|
and a tarpaulin hat, and a black cravat tied in sailor fashion
|
|
carelessly and loosely about my neck. My knowledge of ships and
|
|
sailor's talk came much to my assistance, for I knew a ship from
|
|
stem to stern, and from keelson to cross-trees, and could talk
|
|
sailor like an "old salt." I was well on the way to Havre de
|
|
Grace before the conductor came into the negro car to collect
|
|
tickets and examine the papers of his black passengers. This was
|
|
a critical moment in the drama. My whole future depended upon the
|
|
decision of this conductor. Agitated though I was while this
|
|
ceremony was proceeding, still, externally, at least, I was
|
|
apparently calm and self-possessed. He went on with his duty--
|
|
examining several colored passengers before reaching me. He was
|
|
somewhat harsh in tome and peremptory in manner until he reached
|
|
me, when, strange enough, and to my surprise and relief, his whole
|
|
manner changed. Seeing that I did not readily produce my free
|
|
papers, as the other colored persons in the car had done, he said
|
|
to me, in friendly contrast with his bearing toward the others:
|
|
|
|
"I suppose you have your free papers?"
|
|
|
|
To which I answered:
|
|
|
|
"No sir; I never carry my free papers to sea with me."
|
|
|
|
"But you have something to show that you are a freeman, haven't
|
|
you?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, sir," I answered; "I have a paper with the American Eagle on
|
|
it, and that will carry me around the world."
|
|
|
|
With this I drew from my deep sailor's pocket my seaman's
|
|
protection, as before described. The merest glance at the paper
|
|
satisfied him, and he took my fare and went on about his business.
|
|
This moment of time was one of the most anxious I ever
|
|
experienced. Had the conductor looked closely at the paper, he
|
|
could not have failed to discover that it called for a very
|
|
different-looking person from myself, and in that case it would
|
|
have been his duty to arrest me on the instant, and send me back
|
|
to Baltimore from the first station. When he left me with the
|
|
assurance that I was all right, though much relieved, I realized
|
|
that I was still in great danger: I was still in Maryland, and
|
|
subject to arrest at any moment. I saw on the train several
|
|
persons who would have known me in any other clothes, and I feared
|
|
they might recognize me, even in my sailor "rig," and report me to
|
|
the conductor, who would then subject me to a closer examination,
|
|
which I knew well would be fatal to me.
|
|
|
|
Though I was not a murderer fleeing from justice, I felt perhaps
|
|
quite as miserable as such a criminal. The train was moving at a
|
|
very high rate of speed for that epoch of railroad travel, but to
|
|
my anxious mind it was moving far too slowly. Minutes were hours,
|
|
and hours were days during this part of my flight. After
|
|
Maryland, I was to pass through Delaware--another slave State,
|
|
where slave-catchers generally awaited their prey, for it was not
|
|
in the interior of the State, but on its borders, that these human
|
|
hounds were most vigilant and active. The border lines between
|
|
slavery and freedom were the dangerous ones for the fugitives.
|
|
The heart of no fox or deer, with hungry hounds on his trail in
|
|
full chase, could have beaten more anxiously or noisily than did
|
|
mine from the time I left Baltimore till I reached Philadelphia.
|
|
The passage of the Susquehanna River at Havre de Grace was at that
|
|
time made by ferry-boat, on board of which I met a young colored
|
|
man by the name of Nichols, who came very near betraying me. He
|
|
was a "hand" on the boat, but, instead of minding his business, he
|
|
insisted upon knowing me, and asking me dangerous questions as to
|
|
where I was going, when I was coming back, etc. I got away from
|
|
my old and inconvenient acquaintance as soon as I could decently
|
|
do so, and went to another part of the boat. Once across the
|
|
river, I encountered a new danger. Only a few days before, I had
|
|
been at work on a revenue cutter, in Mr. Price's ship-yard in
|
|
Baltimore, under the care of Captain McGowan. On the meeting at
|
|
this point of the two trains, the one going south stopped on the
|
|
track just opposite to the one going north, and it so happened
|
|
that this Captain McGowan sat at a window where he could see me
|
|
very distinctly, and would certainly have recognized me had he
|
|
looked at me but for a second. Fortunately, in the hurry of the
|
|
moment, he did not see me; and the trains soon passed each other
|
|
on their respective ways. But this was not my only hair-breadth
|
|
escape. A German blacksmith whom I knew well was on the train
|
|
with me, and looked at me very intently, as if he thought he had
|
|
seen me somewhere before in his travels. I really believe he knew
|
|
me, but had no heart to betray me. At any rate, he saw me
|
|
escaping and held his peace.
|
|
|
|
The last point of imminent danger, and the one I dreaded most, was
|
|
Wilmington. Here we left the train and took the steam-boat for
|
|
Philadelphia. In making the change here I again apprehended
|
|
arrest, but no one disturbed me, and I was soon on the broad and
|
|
beautiful Delaware, speeding away to the Quaker City. On reaching
|
|
Philadelphia in the afternoon, I inquired of a colored man how I
|
|
could get on to New York. He directed me to the William-street
|
|
depot, and thither I went, taking the train that night. I reached
|
|
New York Tuesday morning, having completed the journey in less
|
|
than twenty-four hours.
|
|
|
|
My free life began on the third of September, 1838. On the
|
|
morning of the fourth of that month, after an anxious and most
|
|
perilous but safe journey, I found myself in the big city of New
|
|
York, a FREE MAN--one more added to the mighty throng which, like
|
|
the confused waves of the troubled sea, surged to and fro between
|
|
the lofty walls of Broadway. Though dazzled with the wonders
|
|
which met me on every hand, my thoughts could not be much
|
|
withdrawn from my strange situation. For the moment, the dreams
|
|
of my youth and the hopes of my manhood were completely fulfilled.
|
|
The bonds that had held me to "old master" were broken. No man
|
|
now had a right to call me his slave or assert mastery over me. I
|
|
was in the rough and tumble of an outdoor world, to take my chance
|
|
with the rest of its busy number. I have often been asked how I
|
|
felt when first I found myself on free soil. There is scarcely
|
|
anything in my experience about which I could not give a more
|
|
satisfactory answer. A new world had opened upon me. If life is
|
|
more than breath and the "quick round of blood," I lived more in
|
|
that one day than in a year of my slave life. It was a time of
|
|
joyous excitement which words can but tamely describe. In a
|
|
letter written to a friend soon after reaching New York, I said:
|
|
"I felt as one might feel upon escape from a den of hungry lions."
|
|
Anguish and grief, like darkness and rain, may be depicted; but
|
|
gladness and joy, like the rainbow, defy the skill of pen or
|
|
pencil. During ten or fifteen years I had been, as it were,
|
|
dragging a heavy chain which no strength of mine could break; I
|
|
was not only a slave, but a slave for life. I might become a
|
|
husband, a father, an aged man, but through all, from birth to
|
|
death, from the cradle to the grave, I had felt myself doomed.
|
|
All efforts I had previously made to secure my freedom had not
|
|
only failed, but had seemed only to rivet my fetters the more
|
|
firmly, and to render my escape more difficult. Baffled,
|
|
entangled, and discouraged, I had at times asked myself the
|
|
question, May not my condition after all be God's work, and
|
|
ordered for a wise purpose, and if so, Is not submission my duty?
|
|
A contest had in fact been going on in my mind for a long time,
|
|
between the clear consciousness of right and the plausible make-
|
|
shifts of theology and superstition. The one held me an abject
|
|
slave--a prisoner for life, punished for some transgression in
|
|
which I had no lot nor part; and the other counseled me to manly
|
|
endeavor to secure my freedom. This contest was now ended; my
|
|
chains were broken, and the victory brought me unspeakable joy.
|
|
|
|
But my gladness was short-lived, for I was not yet out of the
|
|
reach and power of the slave-holders. I soon found that New York
|
|
was not quite so free or so safe a refuge as I had supposed, and a
|
|
sense of loneliness and insecurity again oppressed me most sadly.
|
|
I chanced to meet on the street, a few hours after my landing, a
|
|
fugitive slave whom I had once known well in slavery. The
|
|
information received from him alarmed me. The fugitive in
|
|
question was known in Baltimore as "Allender's Jake," but in New
|
|
York he wore the more respectable name of "William Dixon." Jake,
|
|
in law, was the property of Doctor Allender, and Tolly Allender,
|
|
the son of the doctor, had once made an effort to recapture MR.
|
|
DIXON, but had failed for want of evidence to support his claim.
|
|
Jake told me the circumstances of this attempt, and how narrowly
|
|
he escaped being sent back to slavery and torture. He told me
|
|
that New York was then full of Southerners returning from the
|
|
Northern watering-places; that the colored people of New York
|
|
were not to be trusted; that there were hired men of my own color
|
|
who would betray me for a few dollars; that there were hired men
|
|
ever on the lookout for fugitives; that I must trust no man with
|
|
my secret; that I must not think of going either upon the wharves
|
|
or into any colored boarding-house, for all such places were
|
|
closely watched; that he was himself unable to help me; and, in
|
|
fact, he seemed while speaking to me to fear lest I myself might
|
|
be a spy and a betrayer. Under this apprehension, as I suppose,
|
|
he showed signs of wishing to be rid of me, and with whitewash
|
|
brush in hand, in search of work, he soon disappeared.
|
|
|
|
This picture, given by poor "Jake," of New York, was a damper to
|
|
my enthusiasm. My little store of money would soon be exhausted,
|
|
and since it would be unsafe for me to go on the wharves for work,
|
|
and I had no introductions elsewhere, the prospect for me was far
|
|
from cheerful. I saw the wisdom of keeping away from the ship-
|
|
yards, for, if pursued, as I felt certain I should be, Mr. Auld,
|
|
my "master," would naturally seek me there among the calkers.
|
|
Every door seemed closed against me. I was in the midst of an
|
|
ocean of my fellow-men, and yet a perfect stranger to every one.
|
|
I was without home, without acquaintance, without money, without
|
|
credit, without work, and without any definite knowledge as to
|
|
what course to take, or where to look for succor. In such an
|
|
extremity, a man had something besides his new-born freedom to
|
|
think of. While wandering about the streets of New York, and
|
|
lodging at least one night among the barrels on one of the
|
|
wharves, I was indeed free--from slavery, but free from food and
|
|
shelter as well. I kept my secret to myself as long as I could,
|
|
but I was compelled at last to seek some one who would befriend me
|
|
without taking advantage of my destitution to betray me. Such a
|
|
person I found in a sailor named Stuart, a warm-hearted and
|
|
generous fellow, who, from his humble home on Centre street, saw
|
|
me standing on the opposite sidewalk, near the Tombs prison. As
|
|
he approached me, I ventured a remark to him which at once
|
|
enlisted his interest in me. He took me to his home to spend the
|
|
night, and in the morning went with me to Mr. David Ruggles, the
|
|
secretary of the New York Vigilance Committee, a co-worker with
|
|
Isaac T. Hopper, Lewis and Arthur Tappan, Theodore S. Wright,
|
|
Samuel Cornish, Thomas Downing, Philip A. Bell, and other true men
|
|
of their time. All these (save Mr. Bell, who still lives, and is
|
|
editor and publisher of a paper called the "Elevator," in San
|
|
Francisco) have finished their work on earth. Once in the hands
|
|
of these brave and wise men, I felt comparatively safe. With Mr.
|
|
Ruggles, on the corner of Lispenard and Church streets, I was
|
|
hidden several days, during which time my intended wife came on
|
|
from Baltimore at my call, to share the burdens of life with me.
|
|
She was a free woman, and came at once on getting the good news of
|
|
my safety. We were married by Rev. J. W. C. Pennington, then a
|
|
well-known and respected Presbyterian minister. I had no money
|
|
with which to pay the marriage fee, but he seemed well pleased
|
|
with our thanks.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Ruggles was the first officer on the "Underground Railroad"
|
|
whom I met after coming North, and was, indeed, the only one with
|
|
whom I had anything to do till I became such an officer myself.
|
|
Learning that my trade was that of a calker, he promptly decided
|
|
that the best place for me was in New Bedford, Mass. He told me
|
|
that many ships for whaling voyages were fitted out there, and
|
|
that I might there find work at my trade and make a good living.
|
|
So, on the day of the marriage ceremony, we took our little
|
|
luggage to the steamer JOHN W. RICHMOND, which, at that time, was
|
|
one of the line running between New York and Newport, R. I.
|
|
Forty-three years ago colored travelers were not permitted in the
|
|
cabin, nor allowed abaft the paddle-wheels of a steam vessel.
|
|
They were compelled, whatever the weather might be,--whether cold
|
|
or hot, wet or dry,--to spend the night on deck. Unjust as this
|
|
regulation was, it did not trouble us much; we had fared much
|
|
harder before. We arrived at Newport the next morning, and soon
|
|
after an old fashioned stage-coach, with "New Bedford" in large
|
|
yellow letters on its sides, came down to the wharf. I had not
|
|
money enough to pay our fare, and stood hesitating what to do.
|
|
Fortunately for us, there were two Quaker gentlemen who were about
|
|
to take passage on the stage,--Friends William C. Taber and Joseph
|
|
Ricketson,--who at once discerned our true situation, and, in a
|
|
peculiarly quiet way, addressing me, Mr. Taber said: "Thee get
|
|
in." I never obeyed an order with more alacrity, and we were soon
|
|
on our way to our new home. When we reached "Stone Bridge" the
|
|
passengers alighted for breakfast, and paid their fares to the
|
|
driver. We took no breakfast, and, when asked for our fares, I
|
|
told the driver I would make it right with him when we reached New
|
|
Bedford. I expected some objection to this on his part, but he
|
|
made none. When, however, we reached New Bedford, he took our
|
|
baggage, including three music-books,--two of them collections by
|
|
Dyer, and one by Shaw,--and held them until I was able to redeem
|
|
them by paying to him the amount due for our rides. This was soon
|
|
done, for Mr. Nathan Johnson not only received me kindly and
|
|
hospitably, but, on being informed about our baggage, at once
|
|
loaned me the two dollars with which to square accounts with the
|
|
stage-driver. Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Johnson reached a good old age,
|
|
and now rest from their labors. I am under many grateful
|
|
obligations to them. They not only "took me in when a stranger"
|
|
and "fed me when hungry," but taught me how to make an honest
|
|
living. Thus, in a fortnight after my flight from Maryland, I was
|
|
safe in New Bedford, a citizen of the grand old commonwealth of
|
|
Massachusetts.
|
|
|
|
Once initiated into my new life of freedom and assured by Mr.
|
|
Johnson that I need not fear recapture in that city, a
|
|
comparatively unimportant question arose as to the name by which I
|
|
should be known thereafter in my new relation as a free man. The
|
|
name given me by my dear mother was no less pretentious and long
|
|
than Frederick Augustus Washington Bailey. I had, however, while
|
|
living in Maryland, dispensed with the Augustus Washington, and
|
|
retained only Frederick Bailey. Between Baltimore and New
|
|
Bedford, the better to conceal myself from the slave-hunters, I
|
|
had parted with Bailey and called myself Johnson; but in New
|
|
Bedford I found that the Johnson family was already so numerous as
|
|
to cause some confusion in distinguishing them, hence a change in
|
|
this name seemed desirable. Nathan Johnson, mine host, placed
|
|
great emphasis upon this necessity, and wished me to allow him to
|
|
select a name for me. I consented, and he called me by my present
|
|
name--the one by which I have been known for three and forty
|
|
years--Frederick Douglass. Mr. Johnson had just been reading the
|
|
"Lady of the Lake," and so pleased was he with its great character
|
|
that he wished me to bear his name. Since reading that charming
|
|
poem myself, I have often thought that, considering the noble
|
|
hospitality and manly character of Nathan Johnson--black man
|
|
though he was--he, far more than I, illustrated the virtues of the
|
|
Douglas of Scotland. Sure am I that, if any slave-catcher had
|
|
entered his domicile with a view to my recapture, Johnson would
|
|
have shown himself like him of the "stalwart hand."
|
|
|
|
The reader may be surprised at the impressions I had in some way
|
|
conceived of the social and material condition of the people at
|
|
the North. I had no proper idea of the wealth, refinement,
|
|
enterprise, and high civilization of this section of the country.
|
|
My "Columbian Orator," almost my only book, had done nothing to
|
|
enlighten me concerning Northern society. I had been taught that
|
|
slavery was the bottom fact of all wealth. With this foundation
|
|
idea, I came naturally to the conclusion that poverty must be the
|
|
general condition of the people of the free States. In the
|
|
country from which I came, a white man holding no slaves was
|
|
usually an ignorant and poverty-stricken man, and men of this
|
|
class were contemptuously called "poor white trash." Hence I
|
|
supposed that, since the non-slave-holders at the South were
|
|
ignorant, poor, and degraded as a class, the non-slave-holders at
|
|
the North must be in a similar condition. I could have landed in
|
|
no part of the United States where I should have found a more
|
|
striking and gratifying contrast, not only to life generally in
|
|
the South, but in the condition of the colored people there, than
|
|
in New Bedford. I was amazed when Mr. Johnson told me that there
|
|
was nothing in the laws or constitution of Massachusetts that
|
|
would prevent a colored man from being governor of the State, if
|
|
the people should see fit to elect him. There, too, the black
|
|
man's children attended the public schools with the white man's
|
|
children, and apparently without objection from any quarter. To
|
|
impress me with my security from recapture and return to slavery,
|
|
Mr. Johnson assured me that no slave-holder could take a slave out
|
|
of New Bedford; that there were men there who would lay down their
|
|
lives to save me from such a fate.
|
|
|
|
The fifth day after my arrival, I put on the clothes of a common
|
|
laborer, and went upon the wharves in search of work. On my way
|
|
down Union street I saw a large pile of coal in front of the house
|
|
of Rev. Ephraim Peabody, the Unitarian minister. I went to the
|
|
kitchen door and asked the privilege of bringing in and putting
|
|
away this coal. "What will you charge?" said the lady. "I will
|
|
leave that to you, madam." "You may put it away," she said. I
|
|
was not long in accomplishing the job, when the dear lady put into
|
|
my hand TWO SILVER HALF-DOLLARS. To understand the emotion which
|
|
swelled my heart as I clasped this money, realizing that I had no
|
|
master who could take it from me,--THAT IT WAS MINE--THAT MY HANDS
|
|
WERE MY OWN, and could earn more of the precious coin,--one must
|
|
have been in some sense himself a slave. My next job was stowing
|
|
a sloop at Uncle Gid. Howland's wharf with a cargo of oil for New
|
|
York. I was not only a freeman, but a free working-man, and no
|
|
"master" stood ready at the end of the week to seize my hard
|
|
earnings.
|
|
|
|
The season was growing late and work was plenty. Ships were being
|
|
fitted out for whaling, and much wood was used in storing them.
|
|
The sawing this wood was considered a good job. With the help of
|
|
old Friend Johnson (blessings on his memory) I got a saw and
|
|
"buck," and went at it. When I went into a store to buy a cord
|
|
with which to brace up my saw in the frame, I asked for a "fip's"
|
|
worth of cord. The man behind the counter looked rather sharply
|
|
at me, and said with equal sharpness, "You don't belong about
|
|
here." I was alarmed, and thought I had betrayed myself. A fip
|
|
in Maryland was six and a quarter cents, called fourpence in
|
|
Massachusetts. But no harm came from the "fi'penny-bit" blunder,
|
|
and I confidently and cheerfully went to work with my saw and
|
|
buck. It was new business to me, but I never did better work, or
|
|
more of it, in the same space of time on the plantation for Covey,
|
|
the negro-breaker, than I did for myself in these earliest years
|
|
of my freedom.
|
|
|
|
Notwithstanding the just and humane sentiment of New Bedford three
|
|
and forty years ago, the place was not entirely free from race and
|
|
color prejudice. The good influence of the Roaches, Rodmans,
|
|
Arnolds, Grinnells, and Robesons did not pervade all classes of
|
|
its people. The test of the real civilization of the community
|
|
came when I applied for work at my trade, and then my repulse was
|
|
emphatic and decisive. It so happened that Mr. Rodney French, a
|
|
wealthy and enterprising citizen, distinguished as an anti-slavery
|
|
man, was fitting out a vessel for a whaling voyage, upon which
|
|
there was a heavy job of calking and coppering to be done. I had
|
|
some skill in both branches, and applied to Mr. French for work.
|
|
He, generous man that he was, told me he would employ me, and I
|
|
might go at once to the vessel. I obeyed him, but upon reaching
|
|
the float-stage, where others [sic] calkers were at work, I was
|
|
told that every white man would leave the ship, in her unfinished
|
|
condition, if I struck a blow at my trade upon her. This uncivil,
|
|
inhuman, and selfish treatment was not so shocking and scandalous
|
|
in my eyes at the time as it now appears to me. Slavery had
|
|
inured me to hardships that made ordinary trouble sit lightly upon
|
|
me. Could I have worked at my trade I could have earned two
|
|
dollars a day, but as a common laborer I received but one dollar.
|
|
The difference was of great importance to me, but if I could not
|
|
get two dollars, I was glad to get one; and so I went to work for
|
|
Mr. French as a common laborer. The consciousness that I was
|
|
free--no longer a slave--kept me cheerful under this, and many
|
|
similar proscriptions, which I was destined to meet in New Bedford
|
|
and elsewhere on the free soil of Massachusetts. For instance,
|
|
though colored children attended the schools, and were treated
|
|
kindly by their teachers, the New Bedford Lyceum refused, till
|
|
several years after my residence in that city, to allow any
|
|
colored person to attend the lectures delivered in its hall. Not
|
|
until such men as Charles Sumner, Theodore Parker, Ralph Waldo
|
|
Emerson, and Horace Mann refused to lecture in their course while
|
|
there was such a restriction, was it abandoned.
|
|
|
|
Becoming satisfied that I could not rely on my trade in New
|
|
Bedford to give me a living, I prepared myself to do any kind of
|
|
work that came to hand. I sawed wood, shoveled coal, dug cellars,
|
|
moved rubbish from back yards, worked on the wharves, loaded and
|
|
unloaded vessels, and scoured their cabins.
|
|
|
|
I afterward got steady work at the brass-foundry owned by Mr.
|
|
Richmond. My duty here was to blow the bellows, swing the crane,
|
|
and empty the flasks in which castings were made; and at times
|
|
this was hot and heavy work. The articles produced here were
|
|
mostly for ship work, and in the busy season the foundry was in
|
|
operation night and day. I have often worked two nights and every
|
|
working day of the week. My foreman, Mr. Cobb, was a good man,
|
|
and more than once protected me from abuse that one or more of the
|
|
hands was disposed to throw upon me. While in this situation I
|
|
had little time for mental improvement. Hard work, night and day,
|
|
over a furnace hot enough to keep the metal running like water,
|
|
was more favorable to action than thought; yet here I often nailed
|
|
a newspaper to the post near my bellows, and read while I was
|
|
performing the up and down motion of the heavy beam by which the
|
|
bellows was inflated and discharged. It was the pursuit of
|
|
knowledge under difficulties, and I look back to it now, after so
|
|
many years, with some complacency and a little wonder that I could
|
|
have been so earnest and persevering in any pursuit other than for
|
|
my daily bread. I certainly saw nothing in the conduct of those
|
|
around to inspire me with such interest: they were all devoted
|
|
exclusively to what their hands found to do. I am glad to be able
|
|
to say that, during my engagement in this foundry, no complaint
|
|
was ever made against me that I did not do my work, and do it
|
|
well. The bellows which I worked by main strength was, after I
|
|
left, moved by a steam-engine.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE GOOPHERED GRAPEVINE
|
|
by Charles W. Chesnutt
|
|
|
|
|
|
About ten years ago my wife was in poor health, and our family
|
|
doctor, in whose skill and honesty I had implicit confidence,
|
|
advised a change of climate. I was engaged in grape-culture in
|
|
northern Ohio, and decided to look for a locality suitable for
|
|
carrying on the same business in some Southern State. I wrote to
|
|
a cousin who had gone into the turpentine business in central
|
|
North Carolina, and he assured me that no better place could be
|
|
found in the South than the State and neighborhood in which he
|
|
lived: climate and soil were all that could be asked for, and land
|
|
could be bought for a mere song. A cordial invitation to visit
|
|
him while I looked into the matter was accepted. We found the
|
|
weather delightful at that season, the end of the summer, and were
|
|
most hospitably entertained. Our host placed a horse and buggy at
|
|
our disposal, and himself acted as guide until I got somewhat
|
|
familiar with the country.
|
|
|
|
I went several times to look at a place which I thought might suit
|
|
me. It had been at one time a thriving plantation, but shiftless
|
|
cultivation had well-night exhausted the soil. There had been a
|
|
vineyard of some extent on the place, but it had not been attended
|
|
to since the war, and had fallen into utter neglect. The vines--
|
|
here partly supported by decayed and broken-down arbors, there
|
|
twining themselves among the branches of the slender saplings
|
|
which had sprung up among them--grew in wild and unpruned
|
|
luxuriance, and the few scanty grapes which they bore were the
|
|
undisputed prey of the first comer. The site was admirably
|
|
adapted to grape-raising; the soil, with a little attention, could
|
|
not have been better; and with the native grape, the luscious
|
|
scuppernong, mainly to rely upon, I felt sure that I could
|
|
introduce and cultivate successfully a number of other varieties.
|
|
|
|
One day I went over with my wife, to show her the place. We drove
|
|
between the decayed gate-posts--the gate itself had long since
|
|
disappeared--and up the straight, sandy lane to the open space
|
|
where a dwelling-house had once stood. But the house had fallen a
|
|
victim to the fortunes of war, and nothing remained of it except
|
|
the brick pillars upon which the sills had rested. We alighted,
|
|
and walked about the place for a while; but on Annie's complaining
|
|
of weariness I led the way back to the yard, where a pine log,
|
|
lying under a spreading elm, formed a shady though somewhat hard
|
|
seat. One end of the log was already occupied by a venerable-
|
|
looking colored man. He held on his knees a hat full of grapes,
|
|
over which he was smacking his lips with great gusto, and a pile
|
|
of grape-skins near him indicated that the performance was no new
|
|
thing. He respectfully rose as we approached, and was moving
|
|
away, when I begged him to keep his seat.
|
|
|
|
"Don't let us disturb you," I said. "There's plenty of room for
|
|
us all."
|
|
|
|
He resumed his seat with somewhat of embarrassment.
|
|
|
|
"Do you live around here?" I asked, anxious to put him at his
|
|
ease.
|
|
|
|
"Yas, suh. I lives des ober yander, behine de nex' san'-hill, on
|
|
de Lumberton plank-road."
|
|
|
|
"Do you know anything about the time when this vineyard was
|
|
cultivated?"
|
|
|
|
"Lawd bless yer, suh, I knows all about it. Dey ain' na'er a man
|
|
in dis settlement w'at won' tell yer ole Julius McAdoo 'uz bawn
|
|
an' raise' on dis yer same plantation. Is you de Norv'n gemman
|
|
w'at's gwine ter buy de ole vimya'd?"
|
|
|
|
"I am looking at it," I replied; "but I don't know that I shall
|
|
care to buy unless I can be reasonably sure of making something
|
|
out of it."
|
|
|
|
"Well, suh, you is a stranger ter me, en I is a stranger ter you,
|
|
en we is bofe strangers ter one anudder, but 'f I 'uz in yo'
|
|
place, I wouldn' buy dis vimya'd."
|
|
|
|
"Why not?" I asked.
|
|
|
|
"Well, I dunner whe'r you b'lieves in cunj'in er not,--some er de
|
|
w'ite folks don't, er says dey don't,--but de truf er de matter is
|
|
dat dis yer ole vimya'd is goophered."
|
|
|
|
"Is what?" I asked, not grasping the meaning of this unfamiliar
|
|
word.
|
|
|
|
"Is goophered, cunju'd, bewitch'."
|
|
|
|
He imparted this information with such solemn earnestness, and
|
|
with such an air of confidential mystery, that I felt somewhat
|
|
interested, while Annie was evidently much impressed, and drew
|
|
closer to me.
|
|
|
|
"How do you know it is bewitched?" I asked.
|
|
|
|
"I wouldn' spec' fer you ter b'lieve me 'less you know all 'bout
|
|
de fac's. But ef you en young miss dere doan' min' lis'n'in' ter
|
|
a ole nigger run on a minute er two w'ile you er restin', I kin
|
|
'splain to yer how it all happen'."
|
|
|
|
We assured him that we would be glad to hear how it all happened,
|
|
and he began to tell us. At first the current of his memory--or
|
|
imagination--seemed somewhat sluggish; but as his embarrassment
|
|
wore off, his language flowed more freely, and the story acquired
|
|
perspective and coherence. As he became more and more absorbed in
|
|
the narrative, his eyes assumed a dreamy expression, and he seemed
|
|
to lose sight of his auditors, and to be living over again in
|
|
monologue his life on the old plantation.
|
|
|
|
"Ole Mars Dugal' McAdoo bought dis place long many years befo' de
|
|
wah, en I 'member well w'en he sot out all dis yer part er de
|
|
plantation in scuppernon's. De vimes growed monst'us fas', en
|
|
Mars Dugal' made a thousan' gallon er scuppernon' wine eve'y year.
|
|
|
|
"Now, ef dey's an'thing a nigger lub, nex' ter 'possum, en
|
|
chick'n, en watermillyums, it's scuppernon's. Dey ain' nuffin dat
|
|
kin stan' up side'n de scuppernon' fer sweetness; sugar ain't a
|
|
suckumstance ter scuppernon'. W'en de season is nigh 'bout ober,
|
|
en de grapes begin ter swivel up des a little wid de wrinkles er
|
|
ole age,--w'en de skin git sof' en brown,--den de scuppernon' make
|
|
you smack yo' lip en roll yo' eye en wush fer mo'; so I reckon it
|
|
ain' very 'stonishin' dat niggers lub scuppernon'.
|
|
|
|
"Dey wuz a sight er niggers in de naberhood er de vimya'd. Dere
|
|
wuz ole Mars Henry Brayboy's niggers, en ole Mars Dunkin McLean's
|
|
niggers, en Mars Dugal's own niggers; den dey wuz a settlement er
|
|
free niggers en po' buckrahs down by de Wim'l'ton Road, en Mars
|
|
Dugal' had de only vimya'd in de naberhood. I reckon it ain' so
|
|
much so nowadays, but befo' de wah, in slab'ry times, er nigger
|
|
didn' mine goin' fi' er ten mile in a night, w'en dey wuz sump'n
|
|
good ter eat at de yuther een.
|
|
|
|
"So atter a w'ile Mars Dugal' begin ter miss his scuppernon's.
|
|
Co'se he 'cuse' de niggers er it, but dey all 'nied it ter de
|
|
las'. Mars Dugal' sot spring guns en steel traps, en he en de
|
|
oberseah sot up nights once't er twice't, tel one night Mars
|
|
Dugal'--he 'uz a monst'us keerless man--got his leg shot full er
|
|
cow-peas. But somehow er nudder dey couldn' nebber ketch none er
|
|
de niggers. I dunner how it happen, but it happen des like I tell
|
|
yer, en de grapes kep' on a-goin des de same.
|
|
|
|
"But bimeby ole Mars Dugal' fix' up a plan ter stop it. Dey 'uz a
|
|
cunjuh 'ooman livin' down mongs' de free niggers on de Wim'l'ton
|
|
Road, en all de darkies fum Rockfish ter Beaver Crick wuz feared
|
|
uv her. She could wuk de mos' powerfulles' kind er goopher,--
|
|
could make people hab fits er rheumatiz, er make 'em des dwinel
|
|
away en die; en dey say she went out ridin' de niggers at night,
|
|
for she wuz a witch 'sides bein' a cunjuh 'ooman. Mars Dugal'
|
|
hearn 'bout Aun' Peggy's doin's, en begun ter 'flect whe'r er no
|
|
he couldn' git her ter he'p him keep de niggers off'n de
|
|
grapevimes. One day in de spring er de year, ole miss pack' up a
|
|
basket er chick'n en poun'-cake, en a bottle er scuppernon' wine,
|
|
en Mars Dugal' tuk it in his buggy en driv ober ter Aun' Peggy's
|
|
cabin. He tuk de basket in, en had a long talk wid Aun' Peggy.
|
|
De nex' day Aun' Peggy come up ter de vimya'd. De niggers seed
|
|
her slippin' 'roun', en dey soon foun' out what she 'uz doin'
|
|
dere. Mars Dugal' had hi'ed her ter goopher de grapevimes. She
|
|
sa'ntered 'roun' mongs' de vimes, en tuk a leaf fum dis one, en a
|
|
grape-hull fum dat one, en a grape-seed fum anudder one; en den a
|
|
little twig fum here, en a little pinch er dirt fum dere,--en put
|
|
it all in a big black bottle, wid a snake's toof en a speckle'
|
|
hen's gall en some ha'rs fum a black cat's tail, en den fill' de
|
|
bottle wid scuppernon' wine. W'en she got de goopher all ready en
|
|
fix', she tuk 'n went out in de woods en buried it under de root
|
|
uv a red oak tree, en den come back en tole one er de niggers she
|
|
done goopher de grapevimes, en a'er a nigger w'at eat dem grapes
|
|
'ud be sho ter die inside'n twel' mont's.
|
|
|
|
"Atter dat de niggers let de scuppernon's 'lone, en Mars Dugal'
|
|
didn' hab no 'casion ter fine no mo' fault; en de season wuz mos'
|
|
gone, w'en a strange gemman stop at de plantation one night ter
|
|
see Mars Dugal' on some business; en his coachman, seein' de
|
|
scuppernon's growin' so nice en sweet, slip 'roun' behine de
|
|
smoke-house, en et all de scuppernon's he could hole. Nobody
|
|
didn' notice it at de time, but dat night, on de way home, de
|
|
gemman's hoss runned away en kill' de coachman. W'en we hearn de
|
|
noos, Aun' Lucy, de cook, she up 'n say she seed de strange nigger
|
|
eat'n' er de scuppernon's behine de smoke-house; en den we knowed
|
|
de goopher had b'en er wukkin. Den one er de nigger chilluns
|
|
runned away fum de quarters one day, en got in de scuppernon's, en
|
|
died de nex' week. W'ite folks say he die' er de fevuh, but de
|
|
niggers knowed it wuz de goopher. So you k'n be sho de darkies
|
|
didn' hab much ter do wid dem scuppernon' vimes.
|
|
|
|
"W'en de scuppernon' season 'uz ober fer dat year, Mars Dugal'
|
|
foun' he had made fifteen hund'ed gallon er wine; en one er de
|
|
niggers hearn him laffin' wid de oberseah fit ter kill, en sayin'
|
|
dem fifteen hund'ed gallon er wine wuz monst'us good intrus' on de
|
|
ten dollars he laid out on de vimya'd. So I 'low ez he paid Aun'
|
|
Peggy ten dollars fer to goopher de grapevimes.
|
|
|
|
"De goopher didn' wuk no mo' tel de nex' summer, w'en 'long to'ds
|
|
de middle er de season one er de fiel' han's died; en ez dat lef'
|
|
Mars Dugal' sho't er han's, he went off ter town fer ter buy
|
|
anudder. He fotch de noo nigger home wid 'im. He wuz er ole
|
|
nigger, er de color er a gingy-cake, en ball ez a hoss-apple on de
|
|
top er his head. He wuz a peart ole nigger, do', en could do a
|
|
big day's wuk.
|
|
|
|
"Now it happen dat one er de niggers on de nex' plantation, one er
|
|
ole Mars Henry Brayboy's niggers, had runned away de day befo', en
|
|
tuk ter de swamp, en ole Mars Dugal' en some er de yuther nabor
|
|
w'ite folks had gone out wid dere guns en dere dogs fer ter he'p
|
|
'em hunt fer de nigger; en de han's on our own plantation wuz all
|
|
so flusterated dat we fuhgot ter tell de noo han' 'bout de goopher
|
|
on de scuppernon' vimes. Co'se he smell de grapes en see de
|
|
vimes, an atter dahk de fus' thing he done wuz ter slip off ter de
|
|
grapevimes 'dout sayin' nuffin ter nobody. Nex' mawnin' he tole
|
|
some er de niggers 'bout de fine bait er scuppernon' he et de
|
|
night befo'.
|
|
|
|
"W'en dey tole 'im 'bout de goopher on de grapevimes, he 'uz dat
|
|
tarrified dat he turn pale, en look des like he gwine ter die
|
|
right in his tracks. De oberseah come up en axed w'at 'uz de
|
|
matter; en w'en dey tole 'im Henry be'n eatin' er de scuppernon's,
|
|
en got de goopher on 'im, he gin Henry a big drink er w'iskey, en
|
|
'low dat de nex' rainy day he take 'im ober ter Aun' Peggy's, en
|
|
see ef she wouldn' take de goopher off'n him, seein' ez he didn'
|
|
know nuffin erbout it tel he done et de grapes.
|
|
|
|
"Sho nuff, it rain de nex' day, en de oberseah went ober ter Aun'
|
|
Peggy's wid Henry. En Aun' Peggy say dat bein' ez Henry didn'
|
|
know 'bout de goopher, en et de grapes in ign'ance er de
|
|
quinseconces, she reckon she mought be able fer ter take de
|
|
goopher off'n him. So she fotch out er bottle wid some cunjuh
|
|
medicine in it, en po'd some out in a go'd fer Henry ter drink.
|
|
He manage ter git it down; he say it tas'e like whiskey wid sump'n
|
|
bitter in it. She 'lowed dat 'ud keep de goopher off'n him tel de
|
|
spring; but w'en de sap begin ter rise in de grapevimes he ha' ter
|
|
come en see her agin, en she tell him w'at e's ter do.
|
|
|
|
"Nex' spring, w'en de sap commence' ter rise in de scuppernon'
|
|
vime, Henry tuk a ham one night. Whar'd he git de ham? I doan
|
|
know; dey wa'nt no hams on de plantation 'cep'n' w'at 'uz in de
|
|
smoke-house, but I never see Henry 'bout de smoke-house. But ez I
|
|
wuz a-sayin', he tuk de ham ober ter Aun' Peggy's; en Aun' Peggy
|
|
tole 'im dat w'en Mars Dugal' begin ter prume de grapevimes, he
|
|
mus' go en take 'n scrape off de sap whar it ooze out'n de cut
|
|
een's er de vimes, en 'n'int his ball head wid it; en ef he do dat
|
|
once't a year de goopher wouldn' wuk agin 'im long ez he done it.
|
|
En bein' ez he fotch her de ham, she fix' it so he kin eat all de
|
|
scuppernon' he want.
|
|
|
|
"So Henry 'n'int his head wid de sap out'n de big grapevime des
|
|
ha'f way 'twix' de quarters en de big house, en de goopher nebber
|
|
wuk agin him dat summer. But de beatenes' thing you eber see
|
|
happen ter Henry. Up ter dat time he wuz ez ball ez a sweeten'
|
|
'tater, but des ez soon ez de young leaves begun ter come out on
|
|
de grapevimes de ha'r begun ter grow out on Henry's head, en by de
|
|
middle er de summer he had de bigges' head er ha'r on de
|
|
plantation. Befo' dat, Henry had tol'able good ha'r 'roun de
|
|
aidges, but soon ez de young grapes begun ter come Henry's ha'r
|
|
begun ter quirl all up in little balls, des like dis yer reg'lar
|
|
grapy ha'r, en by de time de grapes got ripe his head look des
|
|
like a bunch er grapes. Combin' it didn' do no good; he wuk at it
|
|
ha'f de night wid er Jim Crow[1], en think he git it straighten'
|
|
out, but in de mawnin' de grapes 'ud be dere des de same. So he
|
|
gin it up, en tried ter keep de grapes down by havin' his ha'r cut
|
|
sho't.
|
|
|
|
[1] A small card, resembling a curry-comb in construction, and
|
|
used by negroes in the rural districts instead of a comb.
|
|
|
|
"But dat wa'nt de quares' thing 'bout de goopher. When Henry come
|
|
ter de plantation, he wuz gittin' a little ole an stiff in de
|
|
j'ints. But dat summer he got des ez spry en libely ez any young
|
|
nigger on de plantation; fac' he got so biggity dat Mars Jackson,
|
|
de oberseah, ha' ter th'eaten ter whip 'im, ef he didn' stop
|
|
cuttin' up his didos en behave hisse'f. But de mos' cur'ouses'
|
|
thing happen' in de fall, when de sap begin ter go down in de
|
|
grapevimes. Fus', when de grapes 'uz gethered, de knots begun ter
|
|
straighten out'n Henry's h'ar; en w'en de leaves begin ter fall,
|
|
Henry's ha'r begin ter drap out; en w'en de vimes 'uz b'ar,
|
|
Henry's head wuz baller 'n it wuz in de spring, en he begin ter
|
|
git ole en stiff in de j'ints ag'in, en paid no mo' tention ter de
|
|
gals dyoin' er de whole winter. En nex' spring, w'en he rub de
|
|
sap on ag'in, he got young ag'in, en so soopl en libely dat none
|
|
er de young niggers on de plantation couldn' jump, ner dance, ner
|
|
hoe ez much cotton ez Henry. But in de fall er de year his grapes
|
|
begun ter straighten out, en his j'ints ter git stiff, en his ha'r
|
|
drap off, en de rheumatiz begin ter wrastle wid 'im.
|
|
|
|
"Now, ef you'd a knowed ole Mars Dugal' McAdoo, you'd a knowed dat
|
|
it ha' ter be a mighty rainy day when he couldn' fine sump'n fer
|
|
his niggers ter do, en it ha' ter be a mighty little hole he
|
|
couldn' crawl thoo, en ha' ter be a monst'us cloudy night w'en a
|
|
dollar git by him in de dahkness; en w'en he see how Henry git
|
|
young in de spring en ole in de fall, he 'lowed ter hisse'f ez how
|
|
he could make mo' money outen Henry dan by wukkin' him in de
|
|
cotton fiel'. 'Long de nex' spring, atter de sap commence' ter
|
|
rise, en Henry 'n'int 'is head en commence fer ter git young en
|
|
soopl, Mars Dugal' up 'n tuk Henry ter town, en sole 'im fer
|
|
fifteen hunder' dollars. Co'se de man w'at bought Henry didn'
|
|
know nuffin 'bout de goopher, en Mars Dugal' didn' see no 'casion
|
|
fer ter tell 'im. Long to'ds de fall, w'en de sap went down,
|
|
Henry begin ter git ole again same ez yuzhal, en his noo marster
|
|
begin ter git skeered les'n he gwine ter lose his fifteen-hunder'-
|
|
dollar nigger. He sent fer a mighty fine doctor, but de med'cine
|
|
didn' 'pear ter do no good; de goopher had a good holt. Henry
|
|
tole de doctor 'bout de goopher, but de doctor des laff at 'im.
|
|
|
|
"One day in de winter Mars Dugal' went ter town, en wuz santerin'
|
|
'long de Main Street, when who should he meet but Henry's noo
|
|
marster. Dey said 'Hoddy,' en Mars Dugal' ax 'im ter hab a
|
|
seegyar; en atter dey run on awhile 'bout de craps en de weather,
|
|
Mars Dugal' ax 'im, sorter keerless, like ez ef he des thought of
|
|
it,--
|
|
|
|
"'How you like de nigger I sole you las' spring?'
|
|
|
|
"Henry's marster shuck his head en knock de ashes off'n his
|
|
seegyar.
|
|
|
|
"'Spec' I made a bad bahgin when I bought dat nigger. Henry done
|
|
good wuk all de summer, but sence de fall set in he 'pears ter be
|
|
sorter pinin' away. Dey ain' nuffin pertickler de matter wid 'im--
|
|
leastways de doctor say so--'cep'n' a tech er de rheumatiz; but
|
|
his ha'r is all fell out, en ef he don't pick up his strenk mighty
|
|
soon, I spec' I'm gwine ter lose 'im."
|
|
|
|
"Dey smoked on awhile, en bimeby ole mars say, 'Well, a bahgin's a
|
|
bahgin, but you en me is good fren's, en I doan wan' ter see you
|
|
lose all de money you paid fer dat digger [sic]; en ef w'at you
|
|
say is so, en I ain't 'sputin' it, he ain't wuf much now. I
|
|
spec's you wukked him too ha'd dis summer, er e'se de swamps down
|
|
here don't agree wid de san'-hill nigger. So you des lemme know,
|
|
en ef he gits any wusser I'll be willin' ter gib yer five hund'ed
|
|
dollars fer 'im, en take my chances on his livin'.'
|
|
|
|
"Sho nuff, when Henry begun ter draw up wid de rheumatiz en it
|
|
look like he gwine ter die fer sho, his noo marster sen' fer Mars
|
|
Dugal', en Mars Dugal' gin him what he promus, en brung Henry home
|
|
ag'in. He tuk good keer uv 'im dyoin' er de winter,--give 'im
|
|
w'iskey ter rub his rheumatiz, en terbacker ter smoke, en all he
|
|
want ter eat,--'caze a nigger w'at he could make a thousan'
|
|
dollars a year off'n didn' grow on eve'y huckleberry bush.
|
|
|
|
"Nex' spring, w'en de sap ris en Henry's ha'r commence' ter
|
|
sprout, Mars Dugal' sole 'im ag'in, down in Robeson County dis
|
|
time; en he kep' dat sellin' business up fer five year er mo'.
|
|
Henry nebber say nuffin 'bout de goopher ter his noo marsters,
|
|
'caze he know he gwine ter be tuk good keer uv de nex' winter,
|
|
w'en Mars Dugal' buy him back. En Mars Dugal' made 'nuff money
|
|
off'n Henry ter buy anudder plantation ober on Beaver Crick.
|
|
|
|
"But long 'bout de een' er dat five year dey come a stranger ter
|
|
stop at de plantation. De fus' day he 'uz dere he went out wid
|
|
Mars Dugal' en spent all de mawnin' lookin' ober de vimya'd, en
|
|
atter dinner dey spent all de evenin' playin' kya'ds. De niggers
|
|
soon 'skiver' dat he wuz a Yankee, en dat he come down ter Norf
|
|
C'lina fer ter learn de w'ite folks how to raise grapes en make
|
|
wine. He promus Mars Dugal' he cud make de grapevimes b'ar
|
|
twice't ez many grapes, en dat de noo wine-press he wuz a-sellin'
|
|
would make mo' d'n twice't ez many gallons er wine. En ole Mars
|
|
Dugal' des drunk it all in, des 'peared ter be bewitched wit dat
|
|
Yankee. W'en de darkies see dat Yankee runnin' 'roun de vimya'd
|
|
en diggin' under de grapevimes, dey shuk dere heads, en 'lowed dat
|
|
dey feared Mars Dugal' losin' his min'. Mars Dugal' had all de
|
|
dirt dug away fum under de roots er all de scuppernon' vimes, an'
|
|
let 'em stan' dat away fer a week er mo'. Den dat Yankee made de
|
|
niggers fix up a mixtry er lime en ashes en manyo, en po' it roun'
|
|
de roots er de grapevimes. Den he 'vise' Mars Dugal' fer ter trim
|
|
de vimes close't, en Mars Dugal' tuck 'n done eve'ything de Yankee
|
|
tole him ter do. Dyoin' all er dis time, mind yer, 'e wuz libbin'
|
|
off'n de fat er de lan', at de big house, en playin' kyards wid
|
|
Mars Dugal' eve'y night; en dey say Mars Dugal' los' mo'n a
|
|
thousan' dollars dyoin' er de week dat Yankee wuz a runnin' de
|
|
grapevimes.
|
|
|
|
"W'en de sap ris nex' spring, ole Henry 'n'inted his head ez
|
|
yuzhal, en his ha'r commence' ter grow des de same ez it done
|
|
eve'y year. De scuppernon' vimes growed monst's fas', en de
|
|
leaves wuz greener en thicker dan dey eber be'n dyowin my
|
|
rememb'ance; en Henry's ha'r growed out thicker dan eber, en he
|
|
'peared ter git younger 'n younger, en soopler 'n soopler; en
|
|
seein' ez he wuz sho't er han's dat spring, havin' tuk in
|
|
consid'able noo groun', Mars Dugal' 'cluded he wouldn' sell Henry
|
|
'tel he git de crap in en de cotton chop'. So he kep' Henry on de
|
|
plantation.
|
|
|
|
"But 'long 'bout time fer de grapes ter come on de scuppernon'
|
|
vimes, dey 'peared ter come a change ober dem; de leaves wivered
|
|
en swivel' up, en de young grapes turn' yaller, en bimeby
|
|
eve'ybody on de plantation could see dat de whole vimya'd wuz
|
|
dyin'. Mars Dugal' tuck 'n water de vimes en done all he could,
|
|
but 't wan' no use: dat Yankee done bus' de watermillyum. One
|
|
time de vimes picked up a bit, en Mars Dugal' thought dey wuz
|
|
gwine ter come out ag'in; but dat Yankee done dug too close unde'
|
|
de roots, en prune de branches too close ter de vime, en all dat
|
|
lime en ashes done burn' de life outen de vimes, en dey des kep' a
|
|
with'in' en a swivelin'.
|
|
|
|
"All dis time de goopher wuz a-wukkin'. W'en de vimes commence'
|
|
ter wither, Henry commence' ter complain er his rheumatiz, en when
|
|
de leaves begin ter dry up his ha'r commence' ter drap out. When
|
|
de vimes fresh up a bit Henry 'ud git peart agin, en when de vimes
|
|
wither agin Henry 'ud git ole agin, en des kep' gittin' mo' en mo'
|
|
fitten fer nuffin; he des pined away, en fine'ly tuk ter his
|
|
cabin; en when de big vime whar he got de sap ter 'n'int his head
|
|
withered en turned yaller en died, Henry died too,--des went out
|
|
sorter like a cannel. Dey didn't 'pear ter be nuffin de matter
|
|
wid 'im, 'cep'n de rheumatiz, but his strenk des dwinel' away 'tel
|
|
he didn' hab ernuff lef' ter draw his bref. De goopher had got de
|
|
under holt, en th'owed Henry fer good en all dat time.
|
|
|
|
"Mars Dugal' tuk on might'ly 'bout losin' his vimes en his nigger
|
|
in de same year; en he swo' dat ef he could git hold er dat Yankee
|
|
he'd wear 'im ter a frazzle, en den chaw up de frazzle; en he'd
|
|
done it, too, for Mars Dugal' 'uz a monst'us brash man w'en he
|
|
once git started. He sot de vimya'd out ober agin, but it wuz
|
|
th'ee er fo' year befo' de vimes got ter b'arin' any scuppernon's.
|
|
|
|
"W'en de wah broke out, Mars Dugal' raise' a comp'ny, en went off
|
|
ter fight de Yankees. He saw he wuz mighty glad dat wah come, en
|
|
he des want ter kill a Yankee fer eve'y dollar he los' 'long er
|
|
dat grape-raisin' Yankee. En I 'spec' he would a done it, too, ef
|
|
de Yankees hadn' s'picioned sump'n, en killed him fus'. Atter de
|
|
s'render ole miss move' ter town, de niggers all scattered 'way
|
|
fum de plantation, en de vimya'd ain' be'n cultervated sence."
|
|
|
|
"Is that story true?" asked Annie, doubtfully, but seriously, as
|
|
the old man concluded his narrative.
|
|
|
|
"It's des ez true ez I'm a-settin' here, miss. Dey's a easy way
|
|
ter prove it: I kin lead de way right ter Henry's grave ober
|
|
yander in de plantation buryin'-groun'. En I tell yer w'at,
|
|
marster, I wouldn' 'vise yer to buy dis yer ole vimya'd, 'caze de
|
|
goopher's on it yit, en dey ain' no tellin' w'en it's gwine ter
|
|
crap out."
|
|
|
|
"But I thought you said all the old vines died."
|
|
|
|
"Dey did 'pear ter die, but a few ov 'em come out ag'in, en is
|
|
mixed in mongs' de yuthers. I ain' skeered ter eat de grapes,
|
|
'caze I knows de old vimes fum de noo ones; but wid strangers dey
|
|
ain' no tellin' w'at might happen. I wouldn' 'vise yer ter buy
|
|
dis vimya'd."
|
|
|
|
I bought the vineyard, nevertheless, and it has been for a long
|
|
time in a thriving condition, and is referred to by the local
|
|
press as a striking illustration of the opportunities open to
|
|
Northern capital in the development of Southern industries. The
|
|
luscious scuppernong holds first rank among our grapes, though we
|
|
cultivate a great many other varieties, and our income from grapes
|
|
packed and shipped to the Northern markets is quite considerable.
|
|
I have not noticed any developments of the goopher in the
|
|
vineyard, although I have a mild suspicion that our colored
|
|
assistants do not suffer from want of grapes during the season.
|
|
|
|
I found, when I bought the vineyard, that Uncle Julius had
|
|
occupied a cabin on the place for many years, and derived a
|
|
respectable revenue from the neglected grapevines. This,
|
|
doubtless, accounted for his advice to me not to buy the vineyard,
|
|
though whether it inspired the goopher story I am unable to state.
|
|
I believe, however, that the wages I pay him for his services are
|
|
more than an equivalent for anything he lost by the sale of the
|
|
vineyard.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
PO' SANDY
|
|
by Charles W. Chesnutt
|
|
|
|
|
|
On the northeast corner of my vineyard in central North Carolina,
|
|
and fronting on the Lumberton plank-road, there stood a small
|
|
frame house, of the simplest construction. It was built of pine
|
|
lumber, and contained but one room, to which one window gave light
|
|
and one door admission. Its weather-beaten sides revealed a
|
|
virgin innocence of paint. Against one end of the house, and
|
|
occupying half its width, there stood a huge brick chimney: the
|
|
crumbling mortar had left large cracks between the bricks; the
|
|
bricks themselves had begun to scale off in large flakes, leaving
|
|
the chimney sprinkled with unsightly blotches. These evidences of
|
|
decay were but partially concealed by a creeping vine, which
|
|
extended its slender branches hither and thither in an ambitious
|
|
but futile attempt to cover the whole chimney. The wooden
|
|
shutter, which had once protected the unglazed window, had fallen
|
|
from its hinges, and lay rotting in the rank grass and jimson-
|
|
weeds beneath. This building, I learned when I bought the place,
|
|
had been used as a school-house for several years prior to the
|
|
breaking out of the war, since which time it had remained
|
|
unoccupied, save when some stray cow or vagrant hog had sought
|
|
shelter within its walls from the chill rains and nipping winds of
|
|
winter.
|
|
|
|
One day my wife requested me to build her a new kitchen. The
|
|
house erected by us, when we first came to live upon the vineyard,
|
|
contained a very conveniently arranged kitchen; but for some
|
|
occult reason my wife wanted a kitchen in the back yard, apart
|
|
from the dwelling-house, after the usual Southern fashion. Of
|
|
course I had to build it.
|
|
|
|
To save expense, I decided to tear down the old school-house, and
|
|
use the lumber, which was in a good state of preservation, in the
|
|
construction of the new kitchen. Before demolishing the old
|
|
house, however, I made an estimate of the amount of material
|
|
contained in it, and found that I would have to buy several
|
|
hundred feet of new lumber in order to build the new kitchen
|
|
according to my wife's plan.
|
|
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One morning old Julius McAdoo, our colored coachman, harnessed the
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gray mare to the rockaway, and drove my wife and me over to the
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saw-mill from which I meant to order the new lumber. We drove
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down the long lane which led from our house to the plank-road;
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following the plank-road for about a mile, we turned into a road
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running through the forest and across the swamp to the sawmill
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beyond. Our carriage jolted over the half-rotted corduroy road
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which traversed the swamp, and then climbed the long hill leading
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to the saw-mill. When we reached the mill, the foreman had gone
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over to a neighboring farm-house, probably to smoke or gossip, and
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we were compelled to await his return before we could transact our
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business. We remained seated in the carriage, a few rods from the
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mill, and watched the leisurely movements of the mill-hands. We
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had not waited long before a huge pine log was placed in position,
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the machinery of the mill was set in motion, and the circular saw
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began to eat its way through the log, with a loud whirr which
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resounded throughout the vicinity of the mill. The sound rose and
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fell in a sort of rhythmic cadence, which, heard from where we
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sat, was not unpleasing, and not loud enough to prevent
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conversation. When the saw started on its second journey through
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the log, Julius observed, in a lugubrious tone, and with a
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perceptible shudder:--
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"Ugh! but dat des do cuddle my blood!"
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"What's the matter, Uncle Julius?" inquired my wife, who is of a
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very sympathetic turn of mind. "Does the noise affect your
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nerves?"
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"No, Miss Annie," replied the old man, with emotion, "I ain'
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narvous; but dat saw, a-cuttin' en grindin' thoo dat stick er
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timber, en moanin', en groanin', en sweekin', kyars my 'memb'ance
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back ter ole times, en 'min's me er po' Sandy." The pathetic
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intonation with which he lengthened out the "po' Sandy" touched a
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responsive chord in our own hearts."
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"And who was poor Sandy?" asked my wife, who takes a deep interest
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in the stories of plantation life which she hears from the lips of
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the older colored people. Some of these stories are quaintly
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humorous; others wildly extravagant, revealing the Oriental cast
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of the negro's imagination; while others, poured freely into the
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sympathetic ear of a Northern-bred woman, disclose many a tragic
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incident of the darker side of slavery.
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"Sandy," said Julius, in reply to my wife's question, "was a
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nigger w'at useter b'long ter ole Mars Marrabo McSwayne. Mars
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Marrabo's place wuz on de yuther side'n de swamp, right nex' ter
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yo' place. Sandy wuz a monst'us good nigger, en could do so many
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things erbout a plantation, en alluz 'ten ter his wuk so well, dat
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w'en Mars Marrabo's chilluns growed up en married off, dey all un
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'em wanted dey daddy fer ter gin 'em Sandy fer a weddin' present.
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But Mars Marrabo knowed de res' wouldn' be satisfied ef he gin
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Sandy ter a'er one un 'em; so w'en dey wuz all done married, he
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fix it by 'lowin' one er his chilluns ter take Sandy fer a mont'
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er so, en den ernudder for a mont' er so, en so on dat erway tel
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dey had all had 'im de same lenk er time; en den dey would all
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take him roun' ag'in, 'cep'n oncet in a w'ile w'en Mars Marrabo
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would len' 'im ter some er his yuther kinfolks 'roun' de country,
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w'en dey wuz short er han's; tel bimeby it go so Sandy didn'
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hardly knowed whar he wuz gwine ter stay fum one week's een ter de
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yuther.
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"One time w'en Sandy wuz lent out ez yushal, a spekilater come
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erlong wid a lot er niggers, en Mars Marrabo swap' Sandy's wife
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off fer a noo 'oman. W'en Sandy come back, Mars Marrabo gin 'im a
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dollar, en 'lowed he wuz monst'us sorry fer ter break up de
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fambly, but de spekilater had gin 'im big boot, en times wuz hard
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en money skase, en so he wuz bleedst ter make de trade. Sandy tuk
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on some 'bout losin' his wife, but he soon seed dey want no use
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cryin' ober spilt merlasses; en bein' ez he lacked de looks er de
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noo 'ooman, he tuk up wid her atter she b'n on de plantation a
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mont' er so.
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"Sandy en his noo wife got on mighty well tergedder, en de niggers
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all 'mence' ter talk about how lovin' dey wuz. W'en Tenie wuz tuk
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sick oncet, Sandy useter set up all night wid 'er, en den go ter
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wuk in de mawnin' des lack he had his reg'lar sleep; en Tenie
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would 'a done anythin' in de worl' for her Sandy.
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"Sandy en Tenie hadn' b'en libbin' tergedder fer mo' d'n two
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mont's befo' Mars Marrabo's old uncle, w'at libbed down in Robeson
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County, sent up ter fine out ef Mars Marrabo couldn' len' 'im er
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hire 'im a good han' fer a mont' er so. Sandy's marster wuz one
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er dese yer easy-gwine folks w'at wanter please eve'ybody, en he
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says yas, he could len' 'im Sandy. En Mars Marrabo tole Sandy fer
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ter git ready ter go down ter Robeson nex' day, fer ter stay a
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mont' er so.
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"Hit wuz monst'us hard on Sandy fer ter take 'im 'way fum Tenie.
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Hit wuz so fur down ter Robeson dat he didn' hab no chance er
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comin' back ter see her tel de time wuz up; he wouldn' a' mine
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comin' ten er fifteen mile at night ter see Tenie, but Mars
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Marrabo's uncle's plantation wuz mo' d'n forty mile off. Sandy
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wuz mighty sad en cas' down atter w'at Mars Marrabo tole 'im, en
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he says ter Tenie, sezee:--
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"'I'm gittin monstus ti'ed er dish yer gwine roun' so much. Here
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I is lent ter Mars Jeems dis mont', en I got ter do so-en-so; en
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ter Mars Archie de nex' mont', en I got ter do so-en-so; den I got
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ter go ter Miss Jinnie's: en hit's Sandy dis en Sandy dat, en
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Sandy yer en Sandy dere, tel it 'pears ter me I ain' got no home,
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ner no marster, ner no mistiss, ner no nuffin'. I can't eben keep
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a wife: my yuther ole 'oman wuz sole away widout my gittin' a
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chance fer ter tell her good-by; en now I got ter go off en leab
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you, Tenie, en I dunno whe'r I'm eber gwine ter see yer ag'in er
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no. I wisht I wuz a tree, er a stump, er a rock, er sump'n w'at
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could stay on de plantation fer a w'ile.'
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"Atter Sandy got thoo talkin', Tenie didn' say naer word, but des
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sot dere by de fier, studyin' en studyin'. Bimeby she up'n says:--
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"'Sandy, is I eber tole you I wuz a cunjuh-'ooman?'
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"Co'se Sandy hadn' nebber dremp' er nuffin lack dat, en he made a
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great miration w'en he hear w'at Tenie say. Bimeby Tenie went
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on:--
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"'I ain' goophered nobody, ner done no cunjuh-wuk fer fifteen yer
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er mo; en w'en I got religion I made up my mine I wouldn' wuk no
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mo' goopher. But dey is some things I doan b'lieve it's no sin
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fer ter do; en ef you doan wanter be sent roun' fum pillar ter
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pos', en ef you doan wanter go down ter Robeson, I kin fix things
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so yer won't haf ter. Ef you'll des say de word, I kin turn yer
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ter w'ateber yer wanter be, en yer kin stay right whar yer wanter,
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ez long ez yer mineter.'
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"Sandy say he doan keer; he's willin' fer ter do anythin' fer ter
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stay close ter Tenie. Den Tenie ax 'im ef he doan wanter be turnt
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inter a rabbit.
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"Sandy say, 'No, de dogs mout git atter me.'
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"'Shill I turn yer ter a wolf?' sez Tenie.
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"'No, eve'ybody's skeered er a wolf, en I doan want nobody ter be
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skeered er me.'
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"'Shill I turn yer ter a mawkin'-bird?'
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"'No, a hawk mout ketch me. I wanter be turnt inter sump'n
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w'at'll stay in one place.'
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"'I kin turn yer ter a tree,' sez Tenie. 'You won't hab no mouf
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ner years, but I kin turn yer back oncet in a w'ile, so yer kin
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git sump'n ter eat, en hear w'at's gwine on.'
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"Well, Sandy say dat'll do. En so Tenie tuk 'im down by de aidge
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er de swamp, not fur fum de quarters, en turnt 'im inter a big
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pine-tree, en sot 'im out mongs' some yuther trees. En de nex'
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mawnin', ez some er de fiel' han's wuz gwine long dere, dey seed a
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tree w'at dey didn' 'member er habbin' seed befo; it wuz monst'us
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quare, en dey wuz bleedst ter 'low dat dey hadn' 'membered right,
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er e'se one er de saplin's had be'n growin' monst'us fas'.
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"W'en Mars Marrabo 'skiver' dat Sandy wuz gone, he 'lowed Sandy
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had runned away. He got de dogs out, but de las' place dey could
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track Sandy ter wuz de foot er dat pine-tree. En dere de dogs
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stood en barked, en bayed, en pawed at de tree, en tried ter climb
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up on it; en w'en dey wuz tuk roun' thoo de swamp ter look fer de
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scent, dey broke loose en made fer dat tree ag'in. It wuz de
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beatenis' thing de w'ite folks eber hearn of, en Mars Marrabo
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'lowed dat Sandy must a' clim' up on de tree en jump' off on a
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mule er sump'n, en rid fur 'nuff fer ter spile de scent. Mars
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Marrabo wanted ter 'cuse some er de yuther niggers er heppin Sandy
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off, but dey all 'nied it ter de las'; en eve'ybody knowed Tenie
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sot too much by Sandy fer ter he'p 'im run away whar she couldn'
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nebber see 'im no mo'.
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"W'en Sandy had be'n gone long 'nuff fer folks ter think he done
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got clean away, Tenie useter go down ter de woods at night en turn
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'im back, en den dey'd slip up ter de cabin en set by de fire en
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talk. But dey ha' ter be monst'us keerful, er e'se somebody would
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a seed 'em, en dat would a spile de whole thing; so Tenie alluz
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turnt Sandy back in de mawnin' early, befo' anybody wuz
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a'stirrin'.
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"But Sandy didn' git erlong widout his trials en tribberlations.
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One day a woodpecker come erlong en 'mence' ter peck at de tree;
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en de nex' time Sandy wuz turnt back he had a little roun' hole in
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his arm, des lack a sharp stick be'n stuck in it. Atter dat Tenie
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sot a sparrer-hawk fer ter watch de tree; en w'en de woodpecker
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come erlong nex' mawnin' fer ter finish his nes', he got gobble'
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up mos' fo' he stuck his bill in de bark.
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"Nudder time, Mars Marrabo sent a nigger out in de woods fer ter
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chop tuppentime boxes. De man chop a box in dish yer tree, en
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hack' de bark up two er th'ee feet, fer ter let de tuppentime run.
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De nex' time Sandy wuz turnt back he had a big skyar on his lef'
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leg, des lack it be'n skunt; en it tuk Tenie nigh 'bout all night
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fer ter fix a mixtry ter kyo it up. Atter dat, Tenie sot a hawnet
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fer ter watch de tree; en w'en de nigger come back ag'in fer ter
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cut ernudder box on de yuther side'n de tree, de hawnet stung 'im
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so hard dat de ax slip en cut his foot nigh 'bout off.
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"W'en Tenie see so many things happenin' ter de tree, she 'cluded
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she'd ha' ter turn Sandy ter sump'n e'se; en atter studyin' de
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matter ober, en talkin' wid Sandy one ebenin', she made up her
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mine fer ter fix up a goopher mixtry w'at would turn herse'f en
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Sandy ter foxes, er sump'n, so dey could run away en go some'rs
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whar dey could be free en lib lack w'ite folks.
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"But dey ain' no tellin' w'at's gwine ter happen in dis worl'.
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Tenie had got de night sot fer her en Sandy ter run away, w'en dat
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ve'y day one er Mars Marrabo's sons rid up ter de big house in his
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buggy, en say his wife wuz monst'us sick, en he want his mammy ter
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len' 'im a 'ooman fer ter nuss his wife. Tenie's mistiss say sen
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Tenie; she wuz a good nuss. Young mars wuz in a tarrible hurry
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fer ter git back home. Tenie wuz washin' at de big house dat day,
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en her mistiss say she should go right 'long wid her young
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marster. Tenie tried ter make some 'scuse fer ter git away en
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hide tel night, w'en she would have eve'ything fix' up fer her en
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Sandy; she say she wanter go ter her cabin fer ter git her bonnet.
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Her mistiss say it doan matter 'bout de bonnet; her head-hankcher
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wuz good 'nuff. Den Tenie say she wanter git her bes' frock; her
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mistiss say no, she doan need no mo' frock, en w'en dat one got
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dirty she could git a clean one whar she wuz gwine. So Tenie had
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ter git in de buggy en go 'long wid young Mars Dunkin ter his
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plantation, w'ich wuz mo' d'n twenty mile away; en dey want no
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chance er her seein' Sandy no mo' tel she come back home. De po'
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gal felt monst'us bad erbout de way things wuz gwine on, en she
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knowed Sandy mus' be a wond'rin' why she didn' come en turn 'im
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back no mo'.
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"W'iles Tenie wuz away nussin' young Mars Dunkin's wife, Mars
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Marrabo tuk a notion fer ter buil' 'im a noo kitchen; en bein' ez
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he had lots er timber on his place, he begun ter look 'roun' fer a
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tree ter hab de lumber sawed out'n. En I dunno how it come to be
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so, but he happen fer ter hit on de ve'y tree w'at Sandy wuz turnt
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inter. Tenie wuz gone, en dey wa'n't nobody ner nuffin' fer ter
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watch de tree.
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"De two men w'at cut de tree down say dey nebber had sech a time
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wid a tree befo': dey axes would glansh off, en didn' 'pear ter
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make no progress thoo de wood; en of all de creakin', en shakin',
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en wobblin' you eber see, dat tree done it w'en it commence' ter
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fall. It wuz de beatenis' thing!
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"W'en dey got de tree all trim' up, dey chain it up ter a timber
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waggin, en start fer de saw-mill. But dey had a hard time gittin'
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de log dere: fus' dey got stuck in de mud w'en dey wuz gwine
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crosst de swamp, en it wuz two er th'ee hours befo' dey could git
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out. W'en dey start' on ag'in, de chain kep' a-comin' loose, en
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dey had ter keep a-stoppin' en a-stoppin' fer ter hitch de log up
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ag'in. W'en dey commence' ter climb de hill ter de saw-mill, de
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log broke loose, en roll down de hill en in mongs' de trees, en
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hit tuk nigh 'bout half a day mo' ter git it haul' up ter de saw-
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mill.
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"De nex' mawnin' atter de day de tree wuz haul' ter de saw-mill,
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Tenie come home. W'en she got back ter her cabin, de fus' thing
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she done wuz ter run down ter de woods en see how Sandy wuz
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gittin' on. W'en she seed de stump standin' dere, wid de sap
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runnin' out'n it, en de limbs layin' scattered roun', she nigh
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'bout went out'n her mine. She run ter her cabin, en got her
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goopher mixtry, en den foller de track er de timber waggin ter de
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saw-mill. She knowed Sandy couldn' lib mo' d'n a minute er so ef
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she turn' him back, fer he wuz all chop' up so he'd a be'n bleedst
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ter die. But she wanted ter turn 'im back long ernuff fer ter
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'splain ter 'im dat she hadn' went off a-purpose, en lef' 'im ter
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be chop' down en sawed up. She didn' want Sandy ter die wid no
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hard feelin's to'ds her.
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"De han's at de saw-mill had des got de big log on de kerridge, en
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wuz startin' up de saw, w'en dey seed a 'oman runnin up de hill,
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all out er bref, cryin' en gwine on des lack she wuz plumb
|
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'stracted. It wuz Tenie; she come right inter de mill, en th'owed
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herse'f on de log, right in front er de saw, a-hollerin' en cryin'
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ter her Sandy ter fergib her, en not ter think hard er her, fer it
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wa'n't no fault er hern. Den Tenie 'membered de tree didn' hab no
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years, en she wuz gittin' ready fer ter wuk her goopher mixtry so
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ez ter turn Sandy back, w'en de mill-hands kotch holt er her en
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tied her arms wid a rope, en fasten' her to one er de posts in de
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saw-mill; en den dey started de saw up ag'in, en cut de log up
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inter bo'ds en scantlin's right befo' her eyes. But it wuz mighty
|
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hard wuk; fer of all de sweekin', en moanin', en groanin', dat log
|
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done it w'iles de saw wuz a-cuttin' thoo it. De saw wuz one er
|
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dese yer ole-timey, up-en-down saws, en hit tuk longer dem days
|
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ter saw a log 'en it do now. Dey greased de saw, but dat didn'
|
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stop de fuss; hit kep' right on, tel finely dey got de log all
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sawed up.
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"W'en de oberseah w'at run de saw-mill come fum brekfas', de han's
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up en tell him 'bout de crazy 'ooman--ez dey s'posed she wuz--
|
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w'at had come runnin' in de saw-mill, a-hollerin' en gwine on, en
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tried ter th'ow herse'f befo' de saw. En de oberseah sent two er
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th'ee er de han's fer ter take Tenie back ter her marster's
|
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plantation.
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"Tenie 'peared ter be out'n her mine fer a long time, en her
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marster ha' ter lock her up in de smoke-'ouse tel she got ober her
|
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spells. Mars Marrabo wuz monst'us mad, en hit would a made yo'
|
|
flesh crawl fer ter hear him cuss, caze he say de spekilater w'at
|
|
he got Tenie fum had fooled 'im by wukkin' a crazy 'oman off on
|
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him. Wiles Tenie wuz lock up in de smoke-'ouse, Mars Marrabo
|
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tuk'n' haul de lumber fum de saw-mill, en put up his noo kitchen.
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"W'en Tenie got quiet' down, so she could be 'lowed ter go 'roun'
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de plantation, she up'n tole her marster all erbout Sandy en de
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pine-tree; en w'en Mars Marrabo hearn it, he 'lowed she wuz de
|
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wuss 'stracted nigger he eber hearn of. He didn' know w'at ter do
|
|
wid Tenie: fus' he thought he'd put her in de po'-house; but
|
|
finely, seein' ez she didn' do no harm ter nobody ner nuffin', but
|
|
des went roun' moanin', en groanin', en shakin' her head, he
|
|
'cluded ter let her stay on de plantation en nuss de little nigger
|
|
chilluns w'en dey mammies wuz ter wuk in de cotton-fiel'.
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"De noo kitchen Mars Marrabo buil' wuzn' much use, fer it hadn'
|
|
be'n put up long befo' de niggers 'mence' ter notice quare things
|
|
erbout it. Dey could hear sump'n moanin' en groanin' 'bout de
|
|
kitchen in de night-time, en w'en de win' would blow dey could
|
|
hear sump'n a-hollerin' en sweekin' lack hit wuz in great pain en
|
|
sufferin'. En hit got so atter a w'ile dat hit wuz all Mars
|
|
Marrabo's wife could do ter git a 'ooman ter stay in de kitchen in
|
|
de daytime long ernuff ter do de cookin'; en dey wa'n't naer
|
|
nigger on de plantation w'at wouldn' rudder take forty dan ter go
|
|
'bout dat kitchen atter dark,--dat is, 'cep'n Tenie; she didn'
|
|
pear ter mine de ha'nts. She useter slip 'roun' at night, en set
|
|
on de kitchen steps, en lean up agin de do'-jamb, en run on ter
|
|
herse'f wid some kine er foolishness w'at nobody couldn' make out;
|
|
fer Mars Marrabo had th'eaten' ter sen' her off'n de plantation ef
|
|
she say anything ter any er de yuther niggers 'bout de pine-tree.
|
|
But somehow er nudder de niggers foun' out all 'bout it, en dey
|
|
knowed de kitchen wuz ha'anted by Sandy's sperrit. En bimeby hit
|
|
got so Mars Marrabo's wife herse'f wuz skeered ter go out in de
|
|
yard atter dark.
|
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"W'en it come ter dat, Mars Marrabo tuk 'n' to' de kitchen down,
|
|
en use' de lumber fer ter buil' dat ole school-'ouse w'at youer
|
|
talkin' 'bout pullin' down. De school-'ouse wuzn' use' 'cep'n' in
|
|
de daytime, en on dark nights folks gwine 'long de road would hear
|
|
quare soun's en see quare things. Po' ole Tenie useter go down
|
|
dere at night, en wander 'roun' de school-'ouse; en de niggers all
|
|
'lowed she went fer ter talk wid Sandy's sperrit. En one winter
|
|
mawnin', w'en one er de boys went ter school early fer ter start
|
|
de fire, w'at should he fine but po' ole Tenie, layin' on de flo',
|
|
stiff, en cole, en dead. Dere didn' 'pear ter be nuffin'
|
|
pertickler de matter wid her,--she had des grieve' herse'f ter def
|
|
fer her Sandy. Mars Marrabo didn' shed no tears. He thought
|
|
Tenie wuz crazy, en dey wa'n't no tellin' w'at she mout do nex';
|
|
en dey ain' much room in dis worl' fer crazy w'ite folks, let
|
|
'lone a crazy nigger.
|
|
|
|
"Hit wa'n't long atter dat befo' Mars Marrabo sole a piece er his
|
|
track er lan' ter Mars Dugal' McAdoo,--MY ole marster,--en dat's
|
|
how de ole school-house happen to be on yo' place. W'en de wah
|
|
broke out, de school stop', en de ole school-'ouse be'n stannin'
|
|
empty ever sence,--dat is, 'cep'n' fer de ha'nts. En folks sez
|
|
dat de ole school-'ouse, er any yuther house w'at got any er dat
|
|
lumber in it w'at wuz sawed out'n de tree w'at Sandy wuz turnt
|
|
inter, is gwine ter be ha'nted tel de las' piece er plank is
|
|
rotted en crumble' inter dus'."
|
|
|
|
Annie had listened to this gruesome narrative with strained
|
|
attention.
|
|
|
|
"What a system it was," she exclaimed, when Julius had finished,
|
|
"under which such things were possible!"
|
|
|
|
"What things?" I asked, in amazement. "Are you seriously
|
|
considering the possibility of a man's being turned into a tree?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, no," she replied quickly, "not that;" and then she added
|
|
absently, and with a dim look in her fine eyes, "Poor Tenie!"
|
|
|
|
We ordered the lumber, and returned home. That night, after we
|
|
had gone to bed, and my wife had to all appearances been sound
|
|
asleep for half an hour, she startled me out of an incipient doze
|
|
by exclaiming suddenly,--
|
|
|
|
"John, I don't believe I want my new kitchen built out of the
|
|
lumber in that old school-house."
|
|
|
|
"You wouldn't for a moment allow yourself," I replied, with some
|
|
asperity, "to be influenced by that absurdly impossible yarn which
|
|
Julius was spinning to-day?"
|
|
|
|
"I know the story is absurd," she replied dreamily, "and I am not
|
|
so silly as to believe it. But I don't think I should ever be
|
|
able to take any pleasure in that kitchen if it were built out of
|
|
that lumber. Besides, I think the kitchen would look better and
|
|
last longer if the lumber were all new."
|
|
|
|
Of course she had her way. I bought the new lumber, though not
|
|
without grumbling. A week or two later I was called away from
|
|
home on business. On my return, after an absence of several days,
|
|
my wife remarked to me,--
|
|
|
|
"John, there has been a split in the Sandy Run Colored Baptist
|
|
Church, on the temperance question. About half the members have
|
|
come out from the main body, and set up for themselves. Uncle
|
|
Julius is one of the seceders, and he came to me yesterday and
|
|
asked if they might not hold their meetings in the old school-
|
|
house for the present."
|
|
|
|
"I hope you didn't let the old rascal have it," I returned, with
|
|
some warmth. I had just received a bill for the new lumber I had
|
|
bought.
|
|
|
|
"Well," she replied, "I could not refuse him the use of the house
|
|
for so good a purpose."
|
|
|
|
"And I'll venture to say," I continued, "that you subscribed
|
|
something toward the support of the new church?"
|
|
|
|
She did not attempt to deny it.
|
|
|
|
"What are they going to do about the ghost?" I asked, somewhat
|
|
curious to know how Julius would get around this obstacle.
|
|
|
|
"Oh," replied Annie, "Uncle Julius says that ghosts never disturb
|
|
religious worship, but that if Sandy's spirit SHOULD happen to
|
|
stray into meeting by mistake, no doubt the preaching would do it
|
|
good."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
DAVE'S NECKLISS
|
|
by Charles W. Chesnutt
|
|
|
|
|
|
"Have some dinner, Uncle Julius?" said my wife.
|
|
|
|
It was a Sunday afternoon in early autumn. Our two women-
|
|
servants had gone to a camp-meeting some miles away, and would not
|
|
return until evening. My wife had served the dinner, and we were
|
|
just rising from the table, when Julius came up the lane, and,
|
|
taking off his hat, seated himself on the piazza.
|
|
|
|
The old man glanced through the open door at the dinner-table, and
|
|
his eyes rested lovingly upon a large sugar-cured ham, from which
|
|
several slices had been cut, exposing a rich pink expanse that
|
|
would have appealed strongly to the appetite of any hungry
|
|
Christian.
|
|
|
|
"Thanky, Miss Annie," he said, after a momentary hesitation, "I
|
|
dunno ez I keers ef I does tas'e a piece er dat ham, ef yer'll cut
|
|
me off a slice un it."
|
|
|
|
"No," said Annie, "I won't. Just sit down to the table and help
|
|
yourself; eat all you want, and don't be bashful."
|
|
|
|
Julius drew a chair up to the table, while my wife and I went out
|
|
on the piazza. Julius was in my employment; he took his meals
|
|
with his own family, but when he happened to be about our house at
|
|
meal-times, my wife never let him go away hungry.
|
|
|
|
I threw myself into a hammock, from which I could see Julius
|
|
through an open window. He ate with evident relish, devoting his
|
|
attention chiefly to the ham, slice after slice of which
|
|
disappeared in the spacious cavity of his mouth. At first the old
|
|
man ate rapidly, but after the edge of his appetite had been taken
|
|
off he proceeded in a more leisurely manner. When he had cut the
|
|
sixth slice of ham (I kept count of them from a lazy curiosity to
|
|
see how much he COULD eat) I saw him lay it on his plate; as he
|
|
adjusted the knife and fork to cut it into smaller pieces, he
|
|
paused, as if struck by a sudden thought, and a tear rolled down
|
|
his rugged cheek and fell upon the slice of ham before him. But
|
|
the emotion, whatever the thought that caused it, was transitory,
|
|
and in a moment he continued his dinner. When he was through
|
|
eating, he came out on the porch, and resumed his seat with the
|
|
satisfied expression of countenance that usually follows a good
|
|
dinner.
|
|
|
|
"Julius," I said, "you seemed to be affected by something, a
|
|
moment ago. Was the mustard so strong that it moved you to
|
|
tears?"
|
|
|
|
"No, suh, it wa'n't de mustard; I wuz studyin' 'bout Dave."
|
|
|
|
"Who was Dave, and what about him?" I asked.
|
|
|
|
The conditions were all favorable to story-telling. There was an
|
|
autumnal languor in the air, and a dreamy haze softened the dark
|
|
green of the distant pines and the deep blue of the Southern sky.
|
|
The generous meal he had made had put the old man in a very good
|
|
humor. He was not always so, for his curiously undeveloped nature
|
|
was subject to moods which were almost childish in their
|
|
variableness. It was only now and then that we were able to
|
|
study, through the medium of his recollection, the simple but
|
|
intensely human inner life of slavery. His way of looking at the
|
|
past seemed very strange to us; his view of certain sides of life
|
|
was essentially different from ours. He never indulged in any
|
|
regrets for the Arcadian joyousness and irresponsibility which was
|
|
a somewhat popular conception of slavery; his had not been the lot
|
|
of the petted house-servant, but that of the toiling field-hand.
|
|
While he mentioned with a warm appreciation the acts of kindness
|
|
which those in authority had shown to him and his people, he would
|
|
speak of a cruel deed, not with the indignation of one accustomed
|
|
to quick feeling and spontaneous expression, but with a furtive
|
|
disapproval which suggested to us a doubt in his own mind as to
|
|
whether he had a right to think or to feel, and presented to us
|
|
the curious psychological spectacle of a mind enslaved long after
|
|
the shackles had been struck off from the limbs of its possessor.
|
|
Whether the sacred name of liberty ever set his soul aglow with a
|
|
generous fire; whether he had more than the most elementary ideas
|
|
of love, friendship, patriotism, religion,--things which are half,
|
|
and the better half, of life to us; whether he even realized,
|
|
except in a vague, uncertain way, his own degradation, I do not
|
|
know. I fear not; and if not, then centuries of repression had
|
|
borne their legitimate fruit. But in the simple human feeling,
|
|
and still more in the undertone of sadness, which pervaded his
|
|
stories, I thought I could see a spark which, fanned by favoring
|
|
breezes and fed by the memories of the past, might become in his
|
|
children's children a glowing flame of sensibility, alive to every
|
|
thrill of human happiness or human woe.
|
|
|
|
"Dave use' ter b'long ter my ole marster," said Julius; "he wuz
|
|
raise' on dis yer plantation, en I kin 'member all erbout 'im, fer
|
|
I wuz ole 'nuff ter chop cotton w'en it all happen'. Dave wuz a
|
|
tall man, en monst'us strong: he could do mo' wuk in a day dan any
|
|
yuther two niggers on de plantation. He wuz one er dese yer
|
|
solemn kine er men, en nebber run on wid much foolishness, like de
|
|
yuther darkies. He use' ter go out in de woods en pray; en w'en
|
|
he hear de han's on de plantation cussin' en gwine on wid dere
|
|
dancin' en foolishness, he use' ter tell 'em 'bout religion en
|
|
jedgmen'-day, w'en dey would haf ter gin account fer eve'y idle
|
|
word en all dey yuther sinful kyarin's-on.
|
|
|
|
"Dave had l'arn' how ter read de Bible. Dey wuz a free nigger boy
|
|
in de settlement w'at wuz monst'us smart, en could write en
|
|
cipher, en wuz alluz readin' books er papers. En Dave had hi'ed
|
|
dis free boy fer ter l'arn 'im how ter read. Hit wuz 'g'in de
|
|
law, but co'se none er de niggers didn' say nuffin ter de w'ite
|
|
folks 'bout it. Howsomedever, one day Mars Walker--he wuz de
|
|
oberseah--foun' out Dave could read. Mars Walker wa'n't nuffin
|
|
but a po' bockrah, en folks said he couldn' read ner write
|
|
hisse'f, en co'se he didn' lack ter see a nigger w'at knowed mo'
|
|
d'n he did; so he went en tole Mars Dugal'. Mars Dugal' sont fer
|
|
Dave, en ax' 'im 'bout it.
|
|
|
|
"Dave didn't hardly knowed w'at ter do; but he couldn' tell no
|
|
lie, so he 'fessed he could read de Bible a little by spellin' out
|
|
de words. Mars Dugal' look' mighty solemn.
|
|
|
|
"'Dis yer is a se'ious matter,' sezee; 'it's 'g'in de law ter
|
|
l'arn niggers how ter read, er 'low 'em ter hab books. But w'at
|
|
yer l'arn out'n dat Bible, Dave?'
|
|
|
|
"Dave wa'n't no fool, ef he wuz a nigger, en sezee:--
|
|
|
|
"'Marster, I l'arns dat it's a sin fer ter steal, er ter lie, er
|
|
fer ter want w'at doan b'long ter yer; en I l'arns fer ter love de
|
|
Lawd en ter 'bey my marster.'
|
|
|
|
"Mars Dugal' sorter smile' en laf' ter hisse'f, like he 'uz
|
|
might'ly tickle' 'bout sump'n, en sezee:--
|
|
|
|
"'Doan 'pear ter me lack readin' de Bible done yer much harm,
|
|
Dave. Dat's w'at I wants all my niggers fer ter know. Yer keep
|
|
right on readin', en tell de yuther han's w'at yer be'n tellin'
|
|
me. How would yer lack fer ter preach ter de niggers on Sunday?'
|
|
|
|
"Dave say he'd be glad fer ter do w'at he could. So Mars Dugal'
|
|
tole de oberseah fer ter let Dave preach ter de niggers, en tell
|
|
'em w'at wuz in de Bible, en it would he'p ter keep 'em fum
|
|
stealin' er runnin' erway.
|
|
|
|
"So Dave 'mence' ter preach, en done de han's on de plantation a
|
|
heap er good, en most un 'em lef' off dey wicked ways, en 'mence'
|
|
ter love ter hear 'bout God, en religion, en de Bible; en dey done
|
|
dey wuk better, en didn' gib de oberseah but mighty little trouble
|
|
fer ter manage 'em.
|
|
|
|
"Dave wuz one er dese yer men w'at didn' keer much fer de gals,--
|
|
leastways he didn' tel Dilsey come ter de plantation. Dilsey wuz
|
|
a monst'us peart, good-lookin', gingybread-colored gal,--one er
|
|
dese yer high-steppin' gals w'at hol's dey heads up, en won' stan'
|
|
no foolishness fum no man. She had b'long' ter a gemman over on
|
|
Rockfish, w'at died, en whose 'state ha' ter be sol' fer ter pay
|
|
his debts. En Mars Dugal' had b'en ter de oction, en w'en he seed
|
|
dis gal a-cryin' en gwine on 'bout bein' sol' erway fum her ole
|
|
mammy, Aun' Mahaly, Mars Dugal' bid 'em bofe in, en fotch 'em ober
|
|
ter our plantation.
|
|
|
|
"De young nigger men on de plantation wuz des wil' atter Dilsey,
|
|
but it didn' do no good, en none un 'em couldn' git Dilsey fer dey
|
|
junesey,[1] 'tel Dave 'mence' fer ter go roun' Aun' Mahaly's
|
|
cabin. Dey wuz a fine-lookin' couple, Dave en Dilsey wuz, bofe
|
|
tall, en well-shape', en soopl'. En dey sot a heap by one
|
|
ernudder. Mars Dugal' seed 'em tergedder one Sunday, en de nex'
|
|
time he seed Dave atter dat, sezee:--
|
|
|
|
|
|
[1] Sweetheart.
|
|
|
|
|
|
"Dave, w'en yer en Dilsey gits ready fer ter git married, I ain'
|
|
got no rejections. Dey's a poun' er so er chawin'-terbacker up at
|
|
de house, en I reckon yo' mist'iss kin fine a frock en a ribbin er
|
|
two fer Dilsey. Youer bofe good niggers, en yer neenter be feared
|
|
er bein' sol' 'way fum one ernudder long ez I owns dis plantation;
|
|
en I 'spec's ter own it fer a long time yit.'
|
|
|
|
"But dere wuz one man on de plantation w'at didn' lack ter see
|
|
Dave en Dilsey tergedder ez much ez ole marster did. W'en Mars
|
|
Dugal' went ter de sale whar he got Dilsey en Mahaly, he bought
|
|
ernudder han', by de name er Wiley. Wiley wuz one er dese yer
|
|
shiny-eyed, double-headed little niggers, sha'p ez a steel trap,
|
|
en sly ez de fox w'at keep out'n it. Dis yer Wiley had be'n
|
|
pesterin' Dilsey 'fo' she come ter our plantation, en had nigh
|
|
'bout worried de life out'n her. She didn' keer nuffin fer 'im,
|
|
but he pestered her so she ha' ter th'eaten ter tell her marster
|
|
fer ter make Wiley let her 'lone. W'en he come ober to our place
|
|
it wuz des ez bad, 'tel bimeby Wiley seed dat Dilsey had got ter
|
|
thinkin' a heap 'bout Dave, en den he sorter hilt off aw'ile, en
|
|
purten' lack he gin Dilsey up. But he wuz one er dese yer
|
|
'ceitful niggers, en w'ile he wuz laffin' en jokin' wid de yuther
|
|
han's 'bout Dave en Dilsey, he wuz settin' a trap fer ter ketch
|
|
Dave en git Dilsey back fer hisse'f.
|
|
|
|
"Dave en Dilsey made up dere min's fer ter git married long 'bout
|
|
Christmas time, w'en dey'd hab mo' time fer a weddin'. But 'long
|
|
'bout two weeks befo' dat time ole mars 'mence' ter lose a heap er
|
|
bacon. Eve'y night er so somebody 'ud steal a side er bacon, er a
|
|
ham, er a shoulder, er sump'n, fum one er de smoke-'ouses. De
|
|
smoke-'ouses wuz lock', but somebody had a key, en manage' ter git
|
|
in some way er 'nudder. Dey's mo' ways 'n one ter skin a cat, en
|
|
dey's mo' d'n one way ter git in a smoke-'ouse,--leastways dat's
|
|
w'at I hearn say. Folks w'at had bacon fer ter sell didn' hab no
|
|
trouble 'bout gittin' rid un it. Hit wuz 'g'in' de law fer ter
|
|
buy things fum slabes; but Lawd! dat law didn' 'mount ter a hill
|
|
er peas. Eve'y week er so one er dese yer big covered waggins
|
|
would come 'long de road, peddlin' terbacker en w'iskey. Dey wuz
|
|
a sight er room in one er dem big waggins, en it wuz monst'us easy
|
|
fer ter swop off bacon fer sump'n ter chaw er ter wa'm yer up in
|
|
de winter-time. I s'pose de peddlers didn' knowed dey wuz
|
|
breakin' de law, caze de niggers alluz went at night, en stayed on
|
|
de dark side er de waggin; en it wuz mighty hard fer ter tell W'AT
|
|
kine er folks dey wuz.
|
|
|
|
"Atter two er th'ee hund'ed er meat had be'n stole', Mars Walker
|
|
call all de niggers up one ebenin', en tol' 'em dat de fus' nigger
|
|
he cot stealin' bacon on dat plantation would git sump'n fer ter
|
|
'member it by long ez he lib'. En he say he'd gin fi' dollars ter
|
|
de nigger w'at 'skiver' de rogue. Mars Walker say he s'picion'
|
|
one er two er de niggers, but he couldn' tell fer sho, en co'se
|
|
dey all 'nied it w'en he 'cuse em un it.
|
|
|
|
"Dey wa'n't no bacon stole' fer a week er so, 'tel one dark night
|
|
w'en somebody tuk a ham fum one er de smoke-'ouses. Mars Walker
|
|
des cusst awful w'en he foun' out de ham wuz gone, en say he gwine
|
|
ter sarch all de niggers' cabins; w'en dis yer Wiley I wuz tellin'
|
|
yer 'bout up'n say he s'picion' who tuk de ham, fer he seed Dave
|
|
comin' 'cross de plantation fum to'ds de smoke-'ouse de night
|
|
befo'. W'en Mars Walker hearn dis fum Wiley, he went en sarch'
|
|
Dave's cabin, en foun' de ham hid under de flo'.
|
|
|
|
"Eve'ybody wuz 'stonish'; but dere wuz de ham. Co'se Dave 'nied
|
|
it ter de las', but dere wuz de ham. Mars Walker say it wuz des
|
|
ez he 'spected: he didn' b'lieve in dese yer readin' en prayin'
|
|
niggers; it wuz all 'pocrisy, en sarve' Mars Dugal' right fer
|
|
'lowin' Dave ter be readin' books w'en it wuz 'g'in de law.
|
|
|
|
"W'en Mars Dugal' hearn 'bout de ham, he say he wuz might'ly
|
|
'ceived en disapp'inted in Dave. He say he wouldn' nebber hab no
|
|
mo' conferdence in no nigger, en Mars Walker could do des ez he
|
|
wuz a mineter wid Dave er any er de res' er de niggers. So Mars
|
|
Walker tuk'n tied Dave up en gin 'im forty; en den he got some er
|
|
dis yer wire clof w'at dey uses fer ter make sifters out'n, en
|
|
tuk'n wrap' it roun' de ham en fasten it tergedder at de little
|
|
een'. Den he tuk Dave down ter de blacksmif-shop, en had Unker
|
|
Silas, de plantation black-smif, fasten a chain ter de ham, en den
|
|
fasten de yuther een' er de chain roun' Dave's neck. En den he
|
|
says ter Dave, sezee:--
|
|
|
|
"'Now, suh, yer'll wear dat neckliss fer de nex' six mont's; en I
|
|
'spec's yer ner none er de yuther niggers on dis plantation won'
|
|
steal no mo' bacon dyoin' er dat time.'
|
|
|
|
"Well, it des 'peared ez if fum dat time Dave didn' hab nuffin but
|
|
trouble. De niggers all turnt ag'in' 'im, caze he be'n de 'casion
|
|
er Mars Dugal' turnin' 'em all ober ter Mars Walker. Mars Dugal'
|
|
wa'n't a bad marster hisse'f, but Mars Walker wuz hard ez a rock.
|
|
Dave kep' on sayin' he didn' take de ham, but none un 'em didn'
|
|
b'lieve 'im.
|
|
|
|
"Dilsey wa'n't on de plantation w'en Dave wuz 'cused er stealin'
|
|
de bacon. Ole mist'iss had sont her ter town fer a week er so fer
|
|
ter wait on one er her darters w'at had a young baby, en she didn'
|
|
fine out nuffin 'bout Dave's trouble 'tel she got back ter de
|
|
plantation. Dave had patien'ly endyoed de finger er scawn, en all
|
|
de hard words w'at de niggers pile' on 'im, caze he wuz sho'
|
|
Dilsey would stan' by 'im, en wouldn' b'lieve he wuz a rogue, ner
|
|
none er de yuther tales de darkies wuz tellin' 'bout 'im.
|
|
|
|
"W'en Dilsey come back fum town, en got down fum behine de buggy
|
|
whar she be'n ridin' wid ole mars, de fus' nigger 'ooman she met
|
|
says ter her,--
|
|
|
|
"'Is yer seed Dave, Dilsey?'
|
|
|
|
"No, I ain' seed Dave,' says Dilsey.
|
|
|
|
"'Yer des oughter look at dat nigger; reckon yer wouldn' want 'im
|
|
fer yo' junesey no mo'. Mars Walker cotch 'im stealin' bacon, en
|
|
gone en fasten' a ham roun' his neck, so he can't git it off'n
|
|
hisse'f. He sut'nly do look quare.' En den de 'ooman bus' out
|
|
laffin' fit ter kill herse'f. W'en she got thoo laffin' she up'n
|
|
tole Dilsey all 'bout de ham, en all de yuther lies w'at de
|
|
niggers be'n tellin' on Dave.
|
|
|
|
"W'en Dilsey started down ter de quarters, who should she meet but
|
|
Dave, comin' in fum de cotton-fiel'. She turnt her head ter one
|
|
side, en purten' lack she didn' seed Dave.
|
|
|
|
"'Dilsey!' sezee.
|
|
|
|
"Dilsey walk' right on, en didn' notice 'im.
|
|
|
|
"'OH, Dilsey!'
|
|
|
|
"Dilsey didn' paid no 'tention ter 'im, en den Dave knowed some er
|
|
de niggers be'n tellin' her 'bout de ham. He felt monst'us bad,
|
|
but he 'lowed ef he could des git Dilsey fer ter listen ter 'im
|
|
fer a minute er so, he could make her b'lieve he didn' stole de
|
|
bacon. It wuz a week er two befo' he could git a chance ter speak
|
|
ter her ag'in; but fine'ly he cotch her down by de spring one day,
|
|
en sezee:--
|
|
|
|
"'Dilsey, w'at fer yer won' speak ter me, en purten' lack yer doan
|
|
see me? Dilsey, yer knows me too well fer ter b'lieve I'd steal,
|
|
er do dis yuther wick'ness de niggers is all layin' ter me,--yer
|
|
KNOWS I wouldn' do dat, Dilsey. Yer ain' gwine back on yo' Dave,
|
|
is yer?'
|
|
|
|
"But w'at Dave say didn' hab no 'fec' on Dilsey. Dem lies folks
|
|
b'en tellin' her had p'isen' her min' 'g'in' Dave.
|
|
|
|
"'I doan wanter talk ter no nigger,' says she, 'w'at be'n whip'
|
|
fer stealin', en w'at gwine roun' wid sich a lookin' thing ez dat
|
|
hung roun' his neck. I's a 'spectable gal, I is. W'at yer call
|
|
dat, Dave? Is dat a cha'm fer ter keep off witches, er is it a
|
|
noo kine er neckliss yer got?'
|
|
|
|
"Po' Dave didn' knowed w'at ter do. De las' one he had 'pended on
|
|
fer ter stan' by 'im had gone back on 'im, en dey didn' 'pear ter
|
|
be nuffin mo' wuf libbin' fer. He couldn' hol' no mo' pra'r-
|
|
meetin's, fer Mars Walker wouldn' 'low 'im ter preach, en de
|
|
darkies wouldn' 'a' listen' ter 'im ef he had preach'. He didn'
|
|
eben hab his Bible fer ter comfort hisse'f wid, fer Mars Walker
|
|
had tuk it erway fum 'im en burnt it up, en say ef he ketch any
|
|
mo' niggers wid Bibles on de plantation he'd do 'em wuss'n he done
|
|
Dave.
|
|
|
|
"En ter make it still harder fer Dave, Dilsey tuk up wid Wiley.
|
|
Dave could see him gwine up ter Aun' Mahaly's cabin, en settin'
|
|
out on de bench in de moonlight wid Dilsey, en singin' sinful
|
|
songs en playin' de banjer. Dave use' ter scrouch down behine de
|
|
bushes, en wonder w'at de Lawd sen' 'im all dem tribberlations
|
|
fer.
|
|
|
|
"But all er Dave's yuther troubles wa'n't nuffin side er dat ham.
|
|
He had wrap' de chain roun' wid a rag, so it didn' hurt his neck;
|
|
but w'eneber he went ter wuk, dat ham would be in his way; he had
|
|
ter do his task, howsomedever, des de same ez ef he didn' hab de
|
|
ham. W'eneber he went ter lay down, dat ham would be in de way.
|
|
Ef he turn ober in his sleep, dat ham would be tuggin' at his
|
|
neck. It wuz de las' thing he seed at night, en de fus' thing he
|
|
seed in de mawnin'. W'eneber he met a stranger, de ham would be
|
|
de fus' thing de stranger would see. Most un 'em would 'mence'
|
|
ter laf, en whareber Dave went he could see folks p'intin' at him,
|
|
en year 'em sayin:--
|
|
|
|
"'W'at kine er collar dat nigger got roun' his neck?' er, ef dey
|
|
knowed 'im, 'Is yer stole any mo' hams lately?' er 'W'at yer take
|
|
fer yo' neckliss, Dave?' er some joke er 'nuther 'bout dat ham.
|
|
|
|
"Fus' Dave didn' mine it so much, caze he knowed he hadn' done
|
|
nuffin. But bimeby he got so he couldn' stan' it no longer, en
|
|
he'd hide hisse'f in de bushes w'eneber he seed anybody comin', en
|
|
alluz kep' hisse'f shet up in his cabin atter he come in fum wuk.
|
|
|
|
"It wuz monst'us hard on Dave, en bimeby, w'at wid dat ham
|
|
eberlastin' en etarnally draggin' roun' his neck, he 'mence' fer
|
|
ter do en say quare things, en make de niggers wonder ef he wa'n't
|
|
gittin' out'n his mine. He got ter gwine roun' talkin' ter
|
|
hisse'f, en singin' corn-shuckin' songs, en laffin' fit ter kill
|
|
'bout nuffin. En one day he tole one er de niggers he had
|
|
'skivered a noo way fer ter raise hams,--gwine ter pick 'em off'n
|
|
trees, en save de expense er smoke-'ouses by kyoin' 'em in de sun.
|
|
En one day he up'n tole Mars Walker he got sump'n pertickler fer
|
|
ter say ter 'im; en he tuk Mars Walker off ter one side, en tole
|
|
'im he wuz gwine ter show 'im a place in de swamp whar dey wuz a
|
|
whole trac' er lan' covered wid ham-trees.
|
|
|
|
"W'en Mars Walker hearn Dave talkin' dis kine er fool-talk, en
|
|
w'en he seed how Dave wuz 'mencin' ter git behine in his wuk, en
|
|
w'en he ax' de niggers en dey tole 'im how Dave be'n gwine on, he
|
|
'lowed he reckon' he'd punish' Dave ernuff, en it mou't do mo'
|
|
harm dan good fer ter keep de ham on his neck any longer. So he
|
|
sont Dave down ter de blacksmif-shop en had de ham tak off. Dey
|
|
wa'n't much er de ham lef' by dat time, fer de sun had melt all de
|
|
fat, en de lean had all swivel' up, so dey wa'n't but th'ee er fo'
|
|
poun's lef'.
|
|
|
|
"W'en de ham had be'n tuk off'n Dave, folks kinder stopped talkin'
|
|
'bout 'im so much. But de ham had be'n on his neck so long dat
|
|
Dave had sorter got use' ter it. He look des lack he'd los'
|
|
sump'n fer a day er so atter de ham wuz tuk off, en didn' 'pear
|
|
ter know w'at ter do wid hisse'f; en fine'ly he up'n tuk'n tied a
|
|
lightered-knot ter a string, en hid it under de flo' er his cabin,
|
|
en w'en nobody wuzn' lookin' he'd take it out en hang it roun' his
|
|
neck, en go off in de woods en holler en sing; en he allus tied it
|
|
roun' his neck w'en he went ter sleep. Fac', it 'peared lack Dave
|
|
done gone clean out'n his mine. En atter a w'ile he got one er de
|
|
quarest notions you eber hearn tell un. It wuz 'bout dat time dat
|
|
I come back ter de plantation fer ter wuk,--I had be'n out ter
|
|
Mars Dugal's yuther place on Beaver Crick for a mont' er so. I
|
|
had hearn 'bout Dave en de bacon, en 'bout w'at wuz gwine on on de
|
|
plantation; but I didn' b'lieve w'at dey all say 'bout Dave, fer I
|
|
knowed Dave wa'n't dat kine er man. One day atter I come back,
|
|
me'n Dave wuz choppin' cotton tergedder, w'en Dave lean' on his
|
|
hoe, en motion' fer me ter come ober close ter 'im; en den he
|
|
retch' ober en w'ispered ter me.
|
|
|
|
"'Julius', [sic] sezee, 'did yer knowed yer wuz wukkin' long yer
|
|
wid a ham?'
|
|
|
|
"I couldn 'magine w'at he meant. 'G'way fum yer, Dave,' says I.
|
|
'Yer ain' wearin' no ham no mo'; try en fergit 'bout dat; 't ain'
|
|
gwine ter do yer no good fer ter 'member it.'
|
|
|
|
"Look a-yer, Julius,' sezee, 'kin yer keep a secret?'
|
|
|
|
"'Co'se I kin, Dave,' says I. 'I doan go roun' tellin' people
|
|
w'at yuther folks says ter me.'
|
|
|
|
"'Kin I trus' yer, Julius? Will yer cross yo' heart?'
|
|
|
|
"I cross' my heart. 'Wush I may die ef I tells a soul,' says I.
|
|
|
|
"Dave look' at me des lack he wuz lookin' thoo me en 'way on de
|
|
yuther side er me, en sezee:--
|
|
|
|
"'Did yer knowed I wuz turnin' ter a ham, Julius?'
|
|
|
|
"I tried ter 'suade Dave dat dat wuz all foolishness, en dat he
|
|
oughtn't ter be talkin' dat-a-way,--hit wa'n't right. En I tole
|
|
'im ef he'd des be patien', de time would sho'ly come w'en
|
|
eve'ything would be straighten' out, en folks would fine out who
|
|
de rale rogue wuz w'at stole de bacon. Dave 'peared ter listen
|
|
ter w'at I say, en promise' ter do better, en stop gwine on dat-a-
|
|
way; en it seem lack he pick' up a bit w'en he seed dey wuz one
|
|
pusson didn' b'lieve dem tales 'bout 'im.
|
|
|
|
"Hit wa'n't long atter dat befo' Mars Archie McIntyre, ober on de
|
|
Wimbleton road, 'mence' ter complain 'bout somebody stealin'
|
|
chickens fum his hen-'ouse. De chickens kip' on gwine, en at las'
|
|
Mars Archie tole de han's on his plantation dat he gwine ter shoot
|
|
de fus' man he ketch in his hen-'ouse. In less'n a week atter he
|
|
gin dis warnin', he cotch a nigger in de hen-'ouse, en fill' 'im
|
|
full er squir'l-shot. W'en he got a light, he 'skivered it wuz a
|
|
strange nigger; en w'en he call' one er his own sarven's, de
|
|
nigger tole 'im it wuz our Wiley. W'en Mars Archie foun' dat out,
|
|
he sont ober ter our plantation fer ter tell Mars Dugal' he had
|
|
shot one er his niggers, en dat he could sen' ober dere en git
|
|
w'at wuz lef' un 'im.
|
|
|
|
"Mars Dugal' wuz mad at fus'; but w'en he got ober dere en hearn
|
|
how it all happen', he didn' hab much ter say. Wiley wuz shot so
|
|
bad he wuz sho' he wuz gwine ter die, so he up'n says ter ole
|
|
marster:--
|
|
|
|
"'Mars Dugal',' sezee, 'I knows I's be'n a monst'us bad nigger,
|
|
but befo' I go I wanter git sump'n off'n my mine. Dave didn'
|
|
steal dat bacon w'at wuz tuk out'n de smoke-'ouse. I stole it
|
|
all, en I hid de ham under Dave's cabin fer ter th'ow de blame on
|
|
him--en may de good Lawd fergib me fer it.'
|
|
|
|
"Mars Dugal' had Wiley tuk back ter de plantation, en sont fer a
|
|
doctor fer ter pick de shot out'n 'im. En de ve'y nex' mawnin'
|
|
Mars Dugal' sont fer Dave ter come up ter de big house; he felt
|
|
kinder sorry fer de way Dave had be'n treated. Co'se it wa'n't no
|
|
fault er Mars Dugal's, but he wuz gwine ter do w'at he could fer
|
|
ter make up fer it. So he sont word down ter de quarters fer Dave
|
|
en all de yuther han's ter 'semble up in de yard befo' de big
|
|
house at sun-up nex' mawnin'.
|
|
|
|
"yearly in de mawnin' de niggers all swarm' up in de yard. Mars
|
|
Dugal' wuz feelin' so kine dat he had brung up a bairl er cider,
|
|
en tole de niggers all fer ter he'p deyselves.
|
|
|
|
"All dey han's on de plantation come but Dave; en bimeby, w'en it
|
|
seem lack he wa'n't comin', Mars Dugal' sont a nigger down ter de
|
|
quarters ter look fer 'im. De sun wuz gittin' up, en dey wuz a
|
|
heap er wuk ter be done, en Mars Dugal' sorter got ti'ed waitin';
|
|
so he up'n says:--
|
|
|
|
"'Well, boys en gals, I sont fer yer all up yer fer ter tell yer
|
|
dat all dat 'bout Dave's stealin' er de bacon wuz a mistake, ez I
|
|
s'pose yer all done hearn befo' now, en I's mighty sorry it
|
|
happen'. I wants ter treat all my niggers right, en I wants yer
|
|
all ter know dat I sets a heap by all er my han's w'at is hones'
|
|
en smart. En I want yer all ter treat Dave des lack yer did befo'
|
|
dis thing happen', en mine w'at he preach ter yer; fer Dave is a
|
|
good nigger, en has had a hard row ter hoe. En de fus' one I
|
|
ketch sayin' anythin' 'g'in Dave, I'll tell Mister Walker ter gin
|
|
'im forty. Now take ernudder drink er cider all roun', en den git
|
|
at dat cotton, fer I wanter git dat Persimmon Hill trac' all pick'
|
|
ober ter-day.'
|
|
|
|
"W'en de niggers wuz gwine 'way, Mars Dugal' tole me fer ter go en
|
|
hunt up Dave, en bring 'im up ter de house. I went down ter
|
|
Dave's cabin, but couldn' fine 'im dere. Den I look' roun' de
|
|
plantation, en in de aidge er de woods, en 'long de road; but I
|
|
couldn' fine no sign er Dave. I wuz 'bout ter gin up de sarch,
|
|
w'en I happen' fer ter run 'cross a foot-track w'at look' lack
|
|
Dave's. I had wukked 'long wid Dave so much dat I knowed his
|
|
tracks: he had a monst'us long foot, wid a holler instep, w'ich
|
|
wuz sump'n skase 'mongs' black folks. So I follered dat track
|
|
'cross de fiel' fum de quarters 'tel I got ter de smoke-'ouse. De
|
|
fus' thing I notice' wuz smoke comin' out'n de cracks: it wuz
|
|
cu'ous, caze dey hadn' be'n no hogs kill' on de plantation fer six
|
|
mont' er so, en all de bacon in de smoke-'ouse wuz done kyoed. I
|
|
couldn' 'magine fer ter sabe my life w'at Dave wuz doin' in dat
|
|
smoke-'ouse. I went up ter de do' en hollered:--
|
|
|
|
"'Dave!'
|
|
|
|
"Dey didn' nobody answer. I didn' wanter open de do', fer w'ite
|
|
folks is monst'us pertickler 'bout dey smoke-'ouses; en ef de
|
|
oberseah had a-come up en cotch me in dere, he mou't not wanter
|
|
b'lieve I wuz des lookin' fer Dave. So I sorter knock at de do'
|
|
en call' out ag'in:--
|
|
|
|
"'O Dave, hit's me--Julius! Doan be skeered. Mars Dugal' wants
|
|
yer ter come up ter de big house,--he done 'skivered who stole de
|
|
ham.'
|
|
|
|
"But Dave didn' answer. En w'en I look' roun' ag'in en didn' seed
|
|
none er his tracks gwine way fum de smoke-'ouse, I knowed he wuz
|
|
in dere yit, en I wuz 'termine' fer ter fetch 'im out; so I push
|
|
de do' open en look in.
|
|
|
|
"Dey wuz a pile er bark burnin' in de middle er de flo', en right
|
|
ober de fier, hangin' fum one er de rafters, wuz Dave; dey wuz a
|
|
rope roun' his neck, en I didn' haf ter look at his face mo' d'n
|
|
once fer ter see he wuz dead.
|
|
|
|
"Den I knowed how it all happen'. Dave had kep' on gittin' wusser
|
|
en wusser in his mine, 'tel he des got ter b'lievin' he wuz all
|
|
done turnt ter a ham; en den he had gone en built a fier, en tied
|
|
a rope roun' his neck, des lack de hams wuz tied, en had hung
|
|
hisse'f up in de smoke-'ouse fer ter kyo.
|
|
|
|
"Dave wuz buried down by de swamp, in de plantation buryin'-
|
|
groun'. Wiley didn' died fum de woun' he got in Mars McIntyre's
|
|
hen-'ouse; he got well atter a w'ile, but Dilsey wouldn' hab
|
|
nuffin mo' ter do wid 'im, en 't wa'n't long 'fo' Mars Dugal' sol'
|
|
'im ter a spekilater on his way souf,--he say he didn' want no
|
|
sich a nigger on de plantation, ner in de county, ef he could he'p
|
|
it. En w'en de een' er de year come, Mars Dugal' turnt Mars
|
|
Walker off, en run de plantation hisse'f atter dat.
|
|
|
|
"Eber sence den," said Julius in conclusion, "w'eneber I eats ham,
|
|
it min's me er Dave. I lacks ham, but I nebber kin eat mo' d'n
|
|
two er th'ee poun's befo' I gits ter studyin' 'bout Dave, en den I
|
|
has ter stop en leab de res' fer ernudder time."
|
|
|
|
There was a short silence after the old man had finished his
|
|
story, and then my wife began to talk to him about the weather, on
|
|
which subject he was an authority. I went into the house. When I
|
|
came out, half an hour later, I saw Julius disappearing down the
|
|
lane, with a basket on his arm.
|
|
|
|
At breakfast, next morning, it occurred to me that I should like a
|
|
slice of ham. I said as much to my wife.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, no, John," she responded, "you shouldn't eat anything so
|
|
heavy for breakfast."
|
|
|
|
I insisted.
|
|
|
|
"The fact is," she said, pensively, "I couldn't have eaten any
|
|
more of that ham, and so I gave it to Julius."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE AWAKENING OF THE NEGRO
|
|
by Booker T. Washington
|
|
|
|
|
|
When a mere boy, I saw a young colored man, who had spent several
|
|
years in school, sitting in a common cabin in the South, studying
|
|
a French grammar. I noted the poverty, the untidiness, the want
|
|
of system and thrift, that existed about the cabin,
|
|
notwithstanding his knowledge of French and other academic
|
|
subjects. Another time, when riding on the outer edges of a town
|
|
in the South, I heard the sound of a piano coming from a cabin of
|
|
the same kind. Contriving some excuse, I entered, and began a
|
|
conversation with the young colored woman who was playing, and who
|
|
had recently returned from a boarding-school, where she had been
|
|
studying instrumental music among other things. Despite the fact
|
|
that her parents were living in a rented cabin, eating poorly
|
|
cooked food, surrounded with poverty, and having almost none of
|
|
the conveniences of life, she had persuaded them to rent a piano
|
|
for four or five dollars per month. Many such instances as these,
|
|
in connection with my own struggles, impressed upon me the
|
|
importance of making a study of our needs as a race, and applying
|
|
the remedy accordingly.
|
|
|
|
Some one may be tempted to ask, Has not the negro boy or girl as
|
|
good a right to study a French grammar and instrumental music as
|
|
the white youth? I answer, Yes, but in the present condition of
|
|
the negro race in this country there is need of something more.
|
|
Perhaps I may be forgiven for the seeming egotism if I mention the
|
|
expansion of my own life partly as an example of what I mean. My
|
|
earliest recollection is of a small one-room log hut on a large
|
|
slave plantation in Virginia. After the close of the war, while
|
|
working in the coal-mines of West Virginia for the support of my
|
|
mother, I heart in some accidental way of the Hampton Institute.
|
|
When I learned that it was an institution where a black boy could
|
|
study, could have a chance to work for his board, and at the same
|
|
time be taught how to work and to realize the dignity of labor, I
|
|
resolved to go there. Bidding my mother good-by, I started out
|
|
one morning to find my way to Hampton, though I was almost
|
|
penniless and had no definite idea where Hampton was. By walking,
|
|
begging rides, and paying for a portion of the journey on the
|
|
steam-cars, I finally succeeded in reaching the city of Richmond,
|
|
Virginia. I was without money or friends. I slept under a
|
|
sidewalk, and by working on a vessel next day I earned money to
|
|
continue my way to the institute, where I arrived with a surplus
|
|
of fifty cents. At Hampton I found the opportunity--in the way of
|
|
buildings, teachers, and industries provided by the generous--to
|
|
get training in the class-room and by practical touch with
|
|
industrial life, to learn thrift, economy, and push. I was
|
|
surrounded by an atmosphere of business, Christian influence, and
|
|
a spirit of self-help that seemed to have awakened every faculty
|
|
in me, and caused me for the first time to realize what it meant
|
|
to be a man instead of a piece of property.
|
|
|
|
While there I resolved that when I had finished the course of
|
|
training I would go into the far South, into the Black Belt of the
|
|
South, and give my life to providing the same kind of opportunity
|
|
for self-reliance and self-awakening that I had found provided for
|
|
me at Hampton. My work began at Tuskegee, Alabama, in 1881, in a
|
|
small shanty and church, with one teacher and thirty students,
|
|
without a dollar's worth of property. The spirit of work and of
|
|
industrial thrift, with aid from the State and generosity from the
|
|
North, has enabled us to develop an institution of eight hundred
|
|
students gathered from nineteen States, with seventy-nine
|
|
instructors, fourteen hundred acres of land, and thirty buildings,
|
|
including large and small; in all, property valued at $280,000.
|
|
Twenty-five industries have been organized, and the whole work is
|
|
carried on at an annual cost of about $80,000 in cash; two fifths
|
|
of the annual expense so far has gone into permanent plant.
|
|
|
|
What is the object of all this outlay? First, it must be borne in
|
|
mind that we have in the South a peculiar and unprecedented state
|
|
of things. It is of the utmost importance that our energy be
|
|
given to meeting conditions that exist right about us rather than
|
|
conditions that existed centuries ago or that exist in countries a
|
|
thousand miles away. What are the cardinal needs among the seven
|
|
millions of colored people in the South, most of whom are to be
|
|
found on the plantations? Roughly, these needs may be stated as
|
|
food, clothing, shelter, education, proper habits, and a
|
|
settlement of race relations. The seven millions of colored
|
|
people of the South cannot be reached directly by any missionary
|
|
agency, but they can be reached by sending out among them strong
|
|
selected young men and women, with the proper training of head,
|
|
hand, and heart, who will live among these masses and show them
|
|
how to lift themselves up.
|
|
|
|
The problem that the Tuskegee Institute keeps before itself
|
|
constantly is how to prepare these leaders. From the outset, in
|
|
connection with religious and academic training, it has emphasized
|
|
industrial or hand training as a means of finding the way out of
|
|
present conditions. First, we have found the industrial teaching
|
|
useful in giving the student a chance to work out a portion of his
|
|
expenses while in school. Second, the school furnishes labor that
|
|
has an economic value, and at the same time gives the student a
|
|
chance to acquire knowledge and skill while performing the labor.
|
|
Most of all, we find the industrial system valuable in teaching
|
|
economy, thrift, and the dignity of labor, and in giving moral
|
|
backbone to students. The fact that a student goes out into the
|
|
world conscious of his power to build a house or a wagon, or to
|
|
make a harness, gives him a certain confidence and moral
|
|
independence that he would not possess without such training.
|
|
|
|
A more detailed example of our methods at Tuskegee may be of
|
|
interest. For example, we cultivate by student labor six hundred
|
|
and fifty acres of land. The object is not only to cultivate the
|
|
land in a way to make it pay our boarding department, but at the
|
|
same time to teach the students, in addition to the practical
|
|
work, something of the chemistry of the soil, the best methods of
|
|
drainage, dairying, the cultivation of fruit, the care of
|
|
livestock and tools, and scores of other lessons needed by a
|
|
people whose main dependence is on agriculture. Notwithstanding
|
|
that eighty-five per cent of the colored people in the South live
|
|
by agriculture in some form, aside from what has been done by
|
|
Hampton, Tuskegee, and one or two other institutions practically
|
|
nothing has been attempted in the direction of teaching them about
|
|
the very industry from which the masses of our people must get
|
|
their subsistence. Friends have recently provided means for the
|
|
erection of a large new chapel at Tuskegee. Our students have
|
|
made the bricks for this chapel. A large part of the timber is
|
|
sawed by students at our own sawmill, the plans are drawn by our
|
|
teacher of architecture and mechanical drawing, and students do
|
|
the brick-masonry, plastering, painting, carpentry work, tinning,
|
|
slating, and make most of the furniture. Practically, the whole
|
|
chapel will be built and furnished by student labor; in the end
|
|
the school will have the building for permanent use, and the
|
|
students will have a knowledge of the trades employed in its
|
|
construction. In this way all but three of the thirty buildings
|
|
on the grounds have been erected. While the young men do the
|
|
kinds of work I have mentioned, the young women to a large extent
|
|
make, mend, and launder the clothing of the young men, and thus
|
|
are taught important industries.
|
|
|
|
One of the objections sometimes urged against industrial education
|
|
for the negro is that it aims merely to teach him to work on the
|
|
same plan that he was made to follow when in slavery. This is far
|
|
from being the object at Tuskegee. At the head of each of the
|
|
twenty-five industrial departments we have an intelligent and
|
|
competent instructor, just as we have in our history classes, so
|
|
that the student is taught not only practical brick-masonry, for
|
|
example, but also the underlying principles of that industry, the
|
|
mathematics and the mechanical and architectural drawing. Or he
|
|
is taught how to become master of the forces of nature so that,
|
|
instead of cultivating corn in the old way, he can use a corn
|
|
cultivator, that lays off the furrows, drops the corn into them,
|
|
and covers it, and in this way he can do more work than three men
|
|
by the old process of corn-planting; at the same time much of the
|
|
toil is eliminated and labor is dignified. In a word, the
|
|
constant aim is to show the student how to put brains into every
|
|
process of labor; how to bring his knowledge of mathematics and
|
|
the sciences into farming, carpentry, forging, foundry work; how
|
|
to dispense as soon as possible with the old form of ante-bellum
|
|
labor. In the erection of the chapel just referred to, instead of
|
|
letting the money which was given us go into outside hands, we
|
|
make it accomplish three objects: first, it provides the chapel;
|
|
second, it gives the students a chance to get a practical
|
|
knowledge of the trades connected with building; and third, it
|
|
enables them to earn something toward the payment of board while
|
|
receiving academic and industrial training.
|
|
|
|
Having been fortified at Tuskegee by education of mind, skill of
|
|
hand, Christian character, ideas of thrift, economy, and push, and
|
|
a spirit of independence, the student is sent out to become a
|
|
centre of influence and light in showing the masses of our people
|
|
in the Black Belt of the South how to lift themselves up. How can
|
|
this be done? I give but one or two examples. Ten years ago a
|
|
young colored man came to the institute from one of the large
|
|
plantation districts; he studied in the class-room a portion of
|
|
the time, and received practical and theoretical training on the
|
|
farm the remainder of the time. Having finished his course at
|
|
Tuskegee, he returned to his plantation home, which was in a
|
|
county where the colored people outnumber the whites six to one,
|
|
as is true of many of the counties in the Black Belt of the South.
|
|
He found the negroes in debt. Ever since the war they had been
|
|
mortgaging their crops for the food on which to live while the
|
|
crops were growing. The majority of them were living from hand to
|
|
mouth on rented land, in small, one-room log cabins, and
|
|
attempting to pay a rate of interest on their advances that ranged
|
|
from fifteen to forty per cent per annum. The school had been
|
|
taught in a wreck of a log cabin, with no apparatus, and had never
|
|
been in session longer than three months out of twelve. With as
|
|
many as eight or ten persons of all ages and conditions and of
|
|
both sexes huddled together in one cabin year after year, and with
|
|
a minister whose only aim was to work upon the emotions of the
|
|
people, one can imagine something of the moral and religious state
|
|
of the community.
|
|
|
|
But the remedy. In spite of the evil, the negro got the habit of
|
|
work from slavery. The rank and file of the race, especially
|
|
those on the Southern plantations, work hard, but the trouble is,
|
|
what they earn gets away from them in high rents, crop mortgages,
|
|
whiskey, snuff, cheap jewelry, and the like. The young man just
|
|
referred to had been trained at Tuskegee, as most of our graduates
|
|
are, to meet just this condition of things. He took the three
|
|
months' public school as a nucleus for his work. Then he
|
|
organized the older people into a club, or conference, that held
|
|
meetings every week. In these meetings he taught the people in a
|
|
plain, simple manner how to save their money, how to farm in a
|
|
better way, how to sacrifice,--to live on bread and potatoes, if
|
|
need be, till they could get out of debt, and begin the buying of
|
|
lands.
|
|
|
|
Soon a large proportion of the people were in condition to make
|
|
contracts for the buying of homes (land is very cheap in the
|
|
South), and to live without mortgaging their crops. Not only
|
|
this: under the guidance and leadership of this teacher, the first
|
|
year that he was among them they learned how, by contributions in
|
|
money and labor, to build a neat, comfortable schoolhouse that
|
|
replaced the wreck of a log cabin formerly used. The following
|
|
year the weekly meetings were continued, and two months were added
|
|
to the original three months of school. The next year two more
|
|
months were added. The improvement has gone on, until now these
|
|
people have every year an eight months' school.
|
|
|
|
I wish my readers could have the chance that I have had of going
|
|
into this community. I wish they could look into the faces of the
|
|
people and see them beaming with hope and delight. I wish they
|
|
could see the two or three room cottages that have taken the place
|
|
of the usual one-room cabin, the well-cultivated farms, and the
|
|
religious life of the people that now means something more than
|
|
the name. The teacher has a good cottage and a well-kept farm
|
|
that serve as models. In a word, a complete revolution has been
|
|
wrought in the industrial, educational, and religious life of this
|
|
whole community by reason of the fact that they have had this
|
|
leader, this guide and object-lesson, to show them how to take the
|
|
money and effort that had hitherto been scattered to the wind in
|
|
mortgages and high rents, in whiskey and gewgaws, and concentrate
|
|
them in the direction of their own uplifting. One community on
|
|
its feet presents an object-lesson for the adjoining communities,
|
|
and soon improvements show themselves in other places.
|
|
|
|
Another student who received academic and industrial training at
|
|
Tuskegee established himself, three years ago, as a blacksmith and
|
|
wheelwright in a community, and, in addition to the influence of
|
|
his successful business enterprise, he is fast making the same
|
|
kind of changes in the life of the people about him that I have
|
|
just recounted. It would be easy for me to fill many pages
|
|
describing the influence of the Tuskegee graduates in every part
|
|
of the South. We keep it constantly in the minds of our students
|
|
and graduates that the industrial or material condition of the
|
|
masses of our people must be improved, as well as the
|
|
intellectual, before there can be any permanent change in their
|
|
moral and religious life. We find it a pretty hard thing to make
|
|
a good Christian of a hungry man. No matter how much our people
|
|
"get happy" and "shout" in church, if they go home at night from
|
|
church hungry, they are tempted to find something before morning.
|
|
This is a principle of human nature, and is not confined to the
|
|
negro.
|
|
|
|
The negro has within him immense power for self-uplifting, but for
|
|
years it will be necessary to guide and stimulate him. The
|
|
recognition of this power led us to organize, five years ago, what
|
|
is now known as the Tuskegee Negro Conference,--a gathering that
|
|
meets every February, and is composed of about eight hundred
|
|
representative colored men and women from all sections of the
|
|
Black Belt. They come in ox-carts, mule-carts, buggies, on
|
|
muleback and horseback, on foot, by railroad: some traveling all
|
|
night in order to be present. The matters considered at the
|
|
conferences are those that the colored people have it within their
|
|
own power to control: such as the evils of the mortgage system,
|
|
the one-room cabin, buying on credit, the importance of owning a
|
|
home and of putting money in the bank, how to build schoolhouses
|
|
and prolong the school term, and how to improve their moral and
|
|
religious condition.
|
|
|
|
As a single example of the results, one delegate reported that
|
|
since the conferences were started five years ago eleven people in
|
|
his neighborhood had bought homes, fourteen had got out of debt,
|
|
and a number had stopped mortgaging their crops. Moreover, a
|
|
schoolhouse had been built by the people themselves, and the
|
|
school term had been extended from three to six months; and with a
|
|
look of triumph he exclaimed, "We is done stopped libin' in de
|
|
ashes!"
|
|
|
|
Besides this Negro Conference for the masses of the people, we now
|
|
have a gathering at the same time known as the Workers'
|
|
Conference, composed of the officers and instructors in the
|
|
leading colored schools of the South. After listening to the
|
|
story of the conditions and needs from the people themselves, the
|
|
Workers' Conference finds much food for thought and discussion.
|
|
|
|
Nothing else so soon brings about right relations between the two
|
|
races in the South as the industrial progress of the negro.
|
|
Friction between the races will pass away in proportion as the
|
|
black man, by reason of his skill, intelligence, and character,
|
|
can produce something that the white man wants or respects in the
|
|
commercial world. This is another reason why at Tuskegee we push
|
|
the industrial training. We find that as every year we put into a
|
|
Southern community colored men who can start a brick-yard, a
|
|
sawmill, a tin-shop, or a printing-office,--men who produce
|
|
something that makes the white man partly dependent upon the
|
|
negro, instead of all the dependence being on the other side,--a
|
|
change takes place in the relations of the races.
|
|
|
|
Let us go on for a few more years knitting our business and
|
|
industrial relations into those of the white man, till a black man
|
|
gets a mortgage on a white man's house that he can foreclose at
|
|
will. The white man on whose house the mortgage rests will not
|
|
try to prevent that negro from voting when he goes to the polls.
|
|
It is through the dairy farm, the truck garden, the trades, and
|
|
commercial life, largely, that the negro is to find his way to the
|
|
enjoyment of all his rights. Whether he will or not, a white man
|
|
respects a negro who owns a two-story brick house.
|
|
|
|
What is the permanent value of the Tuskegee system of training to
|
|
the South in a broader sense? In connection with this, it is well
|
|
to bear in mind that slavery taught the white man that labor with
|
|
the hands was something fit for the negro only, and something for
|
|
the white man to come into contact with just as little as
|
|
possible. It is true that there was a large class of poor white
|
|
people who labored with the hands, but they did it because they
|
|
were not able to secure negroes to work for them; and these poor
|
|
whites were constantly trying to imitate the slave-holding class
|
|
in escaping labor, and they too regarded it as anything but
|
|
elevating. The negro in turn looked down upon the poor whites
|
|
with a certain contempt because they had to work. The negro, it
|
|
is to be borne in mind, worked under constant protest, because he
|
|
felt that his labor was being unjustly required, and he spent
|
|
almost as much effort in planning how to escape work as in
|
|
learning how to work. Labor with him was a badge of degradation.
|
|
The white man was held up before him as the highest type of
|
|
civilization, but the negro noted that this highest type of
|
|
civilization himself did no labor; hence he argued that the less
|
|
work he did, the more nearly he would be like a white man. Then,
|
|
in addition to these influences, the slave system discouraged
|
|
labor-saving machinery. To use labor-saving machinery
|
|
intelligence was required, and intelligence and slavery were not
|
|
on friendly terms; hence the negro always associated labor with
|
|
toil, drudgery, something to be escaped. When the negro first
|
|
became free, his idea of education was that it was something that
|
|
would soon put him in the same position as regards work that his
|
|
recent master had occupied. Out of these conditions grew the
|
|
Southern habit of putting off till to-morrow and the day after the
|
|
duty that should be done promptly to-day. The leaky house was not
|
|
repaired while the sun shone, for then the rain did not come
|
|
through. While the rain was falling, no one cared to expose
|
|
himself to stop the leak. The plough, on the same principle, was
|
|
left where the last furrow was run, to rot and rust in the field
|
|
during the winter. There was no need to repair the wooden chimney
|
|
that was exposed to the fire, because water could be thrown on it
|
|
when it was on fire. There was no need to trouble about the
|
|
payment of a debt to-day, for it could just as well be paid next
|
|
week or next year. Besides these conditions, the whole South, at
|
|
the close of the war, was without proper food, clothing, and
|
|
shelter,--was in need of habits of thrift and economy and of
|
|
something laid up for a rainy day.
|
|
|
|
To me it seemed perfectly plain that here was a condition of
|
|
things that could not be met by the ordinary process of education.
|
|
At Tuskegee we became convinced that the thing to do was to make a
|
|
careful systematic study of the condition and needs of the South,
|
|
especially the Black Belt, and to bend our efforts in the
|
|
direction of meeting these needs, whether we were following a
|
|
well-beaten track, or were hewing out a new path to meet
|
|
conditions probably without a parallel in the world. After
|
|
fourteen years of experience and observation, what is the result?
|
|
Gradually but surely, we find that all through the South the
|
|
disposition to look upon labor as a disgrace is on the wane, and
|
|
the parents who themselves sought to escape work are so anxious to
|
|
give their children training in intelligent labor that every
|
|
institution which gives training in the handicrafts is crowded,
|
|
and many (among them Tuskegee) have to refuse admission to
|
|
hundreds of applicants. The influence of the Tuskegee system is
|
|
shown again by the fact that almost every little school at the
|
|
remotest cross-roads is anxious to be known as an industrial
|
|
school, or, as some of the colored people call it, an "industrus"
|
|
school.
|
|
|
|
The social lines that were once sharply drawn between those who
|
|
labored with the hand and those who did not are disappearing.
|
|
Those who formerly sought to escape labor, now when they see that
|
|
brains and skill rob labor of the toil and drudgery once
|
|
associated with it, instead of trying to avoid it are willing to
|
|
pay to be taught how to engage in it. The South is beginning to
|
|
see labor raised up, dignified and beautified, and in this sees
|
|
its salvation. In proportion as the love of labor grows, the
|
|
large idle class which has long been one of the curses of the
|
|
South disappears. As its members become absorbed in occupations,
|
|
they have less time to attend to everybody else's business, and
|
|
more time for their own.
|
|
|
|
The South is still an undeveloped and unsettled country, and for
|
|
the next half century and more the greater part of the energy of
|
|
the masses will be needed to develop its material opportunities.
|
|
Any force that brings the rank and file of the people to a greater
|
|
love of industry is therefore especially valuable. This result
|
|
industrial education is surely bringing about. It stimulates
|
|
production and increases trade,--trade between the races,--and in
|
|
this new and engrossing relation both forget the past. The white
|
|
man respects the vote of the colored man who does $10,000 worth of
|
|
business, and the more business the colored man has, the more
|
|
careful he is how he votes.
|
|
|
|
Immediately after the war, there was a large class of Southern
|
|
people who feared that the opening of the free schools to the
|
|
freedmen and the poor whites--the education of the head alone--
|
|
would result merely in increasing the class who sought to escape
|
|
labor, and that the South would soon be overrun by the idle and
|
|
vicious. But as the results of industrial combined with academic
|
|
training begin to show themselves in hundreds of communities that
|
|
have been lifted up through the medium of the Tuskegee system,
|
|
these former prejudices against education are being removed. Many
|
|
of those who a few years ago opposed general education are now
|
|
among its warmest advocates.
|
|
|
|
This industrial training, emphasizing as it does the idea of
|
|
economic production, is gradually bringing the South to the point
|
|
where it is feeding itself. Before the war, and long after it,
|
|
the South made what little profit was received from the cotton
|
|
crop, and sent its earnings out of the South to purchase food
|
|
supplies,--meat, bread, canned vegetables, and the like; but the
|
|
improved methods of agriculture are fast changing this habit.
|
|
With the newer methods of labor, which teach promptness and
|
|
system, and emphasize the worth of the beautiful,--the moral value
|
|
of the well-painted house, and the fence with every paling and
|
|
nail in its place,--we are bringing to bear upon the South an
|
|
influence that is making it a new country in industry, education,
|
|
and religion.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE STORY OF UNCLE TOM'S CABIN
|
|
by Charles Dudley Warner
|
|
|
|
|
|
On the 29th of June, 1852, Henry Clay died. In that month the two
|
|
great political parties, in their national conventions, had
|
|
accepted as a finality all the compromise measures of 1850, and
|
|
the last hours of the Kentucky statesman were brightened by the
|
|
thought that his efforts had secured the perpetuity of the Union.
|
|
|
|
But on the 20th of March, 1852, there had been an event, the
|
|
significance of which was not taken into account by the political
|
|
conventions or by Clay, which was to test the conscience of the
|
|
nation. This was the publication of Uncle Tom's Cabin. Was this
|
|
only an "event," the advent of a new force in politics; was the
|
|
book merely an abolition pamphlet, or was it a novel, one of the
|
|
few great masterpieces of fiction that the world has produced?
|
|
After the lapse of forty-four years and the disappearance of
|
|
African slavery on this continent, it is perhaps possible to
|
|
consider this question dispassionately.
|
|
|
|
The compromise of 1850 satisfied neither the North nor the South.
|
|
The admission of California as a free State was regarded by
|
|
Calhoun as fatal to the balance between the free and the slave
|
|
States, and thereafter a fierce agitation sprang up for the
|
|
recovery of this loss of balance, and ultimately for Southern
|
|
preponderance, which resulted in the repeal of the Missouri
|
|
Compromise, the Kansas-Nebraska war, and the civil war. The
|
|
fugitive slave law was hateful to the North not only because it
|
|
was cruel and degrading, but because it was seen to be a move
|
|
formed for nationalizing slavery. It was unsatisfactory to the
|
|
South because it was deemed inadequate in its provisions, and
|
|
because the South did not believe the North would execute it in
|
|
good faith. So unstable did the compromise seem that in less than
|
|
a year after the passage of all its measures, Henry Clay and
|
|
forty-four Senators and Representatives united in a manifesto
|
|
declaring that they would support no man for office who was not
|
|
known to be opposed to any disturbance of the settlements of the
|
|
compromise. When, in February, 1851, the recaptured fugitive
|
|
slave, Burns, was rescued from the United States officers in
|
|
Boston, Clay urged the investment of the President with
|
|
extraordinary power to enforce the law.
|
|
|
|
Henry Clay was a patriot, a typical American. The republic and
|
|
its preservation were the passions of his life. Like Lincoln, who
|
|
was born in the State of his adoption, he was willing to make
|
|
almost any sacrifice for the maintenance of the Union. He had no
|
|
sympathy with the system of slavery. There is no doubt that he
|
|
would have been happy in the belief that it was in the way of
|
|
gradual and peaceful extinction. With him, it was always the
|
|
Union before state rights and before slavery. Unlike Lincoln, he
|
|
had not the clear vision to see that the republic could not endure
|
|
half slave and half free. He believed that the South, appealing
|
|
to the compromises of the Constitution, would sacrifice the Union
|
|
before it would give up slavery, and in fear of this menace he
|
|
begged the North to conquer its prejudices. We are not liable to
|
|
overrate his influence as a compromising pacificator from 1832 to
|
|
1852. History will no doubt say that it was largely due to him
|
|
that the war on the Union was postponed to a date when its success
|
|
was impossible.
|
|
|
|
It was the fugitive slave law that brought the North face to face
|
|
with slavery nationalized, and it was the fugitive slave law that
|
|
produced Uncle Tom's Cabin. The effect of this story was
|
|
immediate and electric. It went straight to the hearts of tens of
|
|
thousands of people who had never before considered slavery except
|
|
as a political institution for which they had no personal
|
|
responsibility. What was this book, and how did it happen to
|
|
produce such an effect? It is true that it struck into a time of
|
|
great irritation and agitation, but in one sense there was nothing
|
|
new in it. The facts had all been published. For twenty years
|
|
abolition tracts, pamphlets, newspapers, and books had left little
|
|
to be revealed, to those who cared to read, as to the nature of
|
|
slavery or its economic aspects. The evidence was practically all
|
|
in,--supplied largely by the advertisements of Southern newspapers
|
|
and by the legislation of the slaveholding States,--but it did not
|
|
carry conviction; that is, the sort of conviction that results in
|
|
action. The subject had to be carried home to the conscience.
|
|
Pamphleteering, convention-holding, sermons, had failed to do
|
|
this. Even the degrading requirements of the fugitive slave law,
|
|
which brought shame and humiliation, had not sufficed to fuse the
|
|
public conscience, emphasize the necessity of obedience to the
|
|
moral law, and compel recognition of the responsibility of the
|
|
North for slavery. Evidence had not done this, passionate appeals
|
|
had not done it, vituperation had not done it. What sort of
|
|
presentation of the case would gain the public ear and go to the
|
|
heart? If Mrs. Stowe, in all her fervor, had put forth first the
|
|
facts in The Key to Uncle Tom's Cabin, which so buttressed her
|
|
romance, the book would have had no more effect than had followed
|
|
the like compilations and arraignments. What was needed? If we
|
|
can discover this, we shall have the secret of this epoch-making
|
|
novel.
|
|
|
|
The story of this book has often been told. It is in the nature
|
|
of a dramatic incident of which the reader never tires any more
|
|
than the son of Massachusetts does of the minutest details of that
|
|
famous scene in the Senate Chamber when Webster replied to Hayne.
|
|
|
|
At the age of twenty-four the author was married and went to live
|
|
in Cincinnati, where her husband held a chair in the Lane
|
|
Theological Seminary. There for the first time she was brought
|
|
into relations with the African race and saw the effects of
|
|
slavery. She visited slaveholders in Kentucky and had friends
|
|
among them. In some homes she saw the "patriarchal" institution
|
|
at its best. The Beecher family were anti-slavery, but they had
|
|
not been identified with the abolitionists, except perhaps Edward,
|
|
who was associated with the murdered Lovejoy. It was long a
|
|
reproach brought by the abolitionists against Henry Ward Beecher
|
|
that he held entirely aloof from their movement. At Cincinnati,
|
|
however, the personal aspects of the case were brought home to
|
|
Mrs. Stowe. She learned the capacities and peculiarities of the
|
|
negro race. They were her servants; she taught some of them;
|
|
hunted fugitives applied to her; she ransomed some by her own
|
|
efforts; every day there came to her knowledge stories of the
|
|
hunger for freedom, of the ruthless separation of man and wife and
|
|
mother and child, and of the heroic sufferings of those who ran
|
|
away from the fearful doom of those "sold down South." These
|
|
things crowded upon her mind and awoke her deepest compassion.
|
|
But what could she do against all the laws, the political and
|
|
commercial interests, the great public apathy? Relieve a case
|
|
here and there, yes. But to dwell upon the gigantic evil, with no
|
|
means of making head against it, was to invite insanity.
|
|
|
|
As late as 1850, when Professor Stowe was called to Bowdoin
|
|
College, and the family removed to Brunswick, Maine, Mrs. Stowe
|
|
had not felt impelled to the duty she afterwards undertook. "In
|
|
fact, it was a sort of general impression upon her mind, as upon
|
|
that of many humane people in those days, that the subject was so
|
|
dark and painful a one, so involved in difficulty and obscurity,
|
|
so utterly beyond human hope or help, that it was of no use to
|
|
read, or think, or distress one's self about it." But when she
|
|
reached New England the excitement over the fugitive slave law was
|
|
at its height. There was a panic in Boston among the colored
|
|
people settled there, who were daily fleeing to Canada. Every
|
|
mail brought her pitiful letters from Boston, from Illinois, and
|
|
elsewhere, of the terror and despair caused by the law. Still
|
|
more was the impressed by the apathy of the Christian world at the
|
|
North, and surely, she said, the people did not understand what
|
|
the "system" was. Appeals were made to her, who had some personal
|
|
knowledge of the subject, to take up her pen. The task seemed
|
|
beyond her in every way. She was not strong, she was in the midst
|
|
of heavy domestic cares, with a young infant, with pupils to whom
|
|
she was giving daily lessons, and the limited income of the family
|
|
required the strictest economy. The dependence was upon the small
|
|
salary of Professor Stowe, and the few dollars she could earn by
|
|
an occasional newspaper or magazine article. But the theme burned
|
|
in her mind, and finally took this shape: at least she would write
|
|
some sketches and show the Christian world what slavery really
|
|
was, and what the system was that they were defending. She wanted
|
|
to do this with entire fairness, showing all the mitigations of
|
|
the "patriarchal" system, and all that individuals concerned in it
|
|
could do to alleviate its misery. While pondering this she came
|
|
by chance, in a volume of an anti-slavery magazine, upon the
|
|
authenticated account of the escape of a woman with her child on
|
|
the ice across the Ohio River from Kentucky. She began to
|
|
meditate. The faithful slave husband in Kentucky, who had refused
|
|
to escape from a master who trusted him, when he was about to be
|
|
sold "down river," came to her as a pattern of Uncle Tom, and the
|
|
scenes of the story began to form themselves in her mind. "The
|
|
first part of the book ever committed to writing [this is the
|
|
statement of Mrs. Stowe] was the death of Uncle Tom. This scene
|
|
presented itself almost as a tangible vision to her mind while
|
|
sitting at the communion-table in the little church in Brunswick.
|
|
She was perfectly overcome by it, and could scarcely restrain the
|
|
convulsion of tears and sobbings that shook her frame. She
|
|
hastened home and wrote it, and her husband being away, read it to
|
|
her two sons of ten and twelve years of age. The little fellows
|
|
broke out into convulsions of weeping, one of them saying through
|
|
his sobs, 'Oh, mamma, slavery is the most cursed thing in the
|
|
world!' From that time the story can less be said to have been
|
|
composed by her than imposed upon her. Scenes, incidents,
|
|
conversations rushed upon her with a vividness and importunity
|
|
that would not be denied. The book insisted upon getting itself
|
|
into being, and would take no denial."
|
|
|
|
When two or three chapters were written she wrote to her friend,
|
|
Dr. Bailey, of Washington, the editor of The National Era, to
|
|
which she had contributed, that she was planning a story that
|
|
might run through several numbers of the Era. The story was at
|
|
once applied for, and thereafter weekly installments were sent on
|
|
regularly, in spite of all cares and distractions. The
|
|
installments were mostly written during the morning, on a little
|
|
desk in a corner of the dining-room of the cottage in Brunswick,
|
|
subject to all the interruptions of house-keeping, her children
|
|
bursting into the room continually with the importunity of
|
|
childhood. But they did not break the spell or destroy her
|
|
abstraction. With a smile and a word and a motion of the hand she
|
|
would wave them off, and keep on in her magician's work. Long
|
|
afterwards they recalled this, dimly understood at the time, and
|
|
wondered at her power of concentration. Usually at night the
|
|
chapters were read to the family, who followed the story with
|
|
intense feeling. The narrative ran on for nine months, exciting
|
|
great interest among the limited readers of the Era, and gaining
|
|
sympathetic words from the anti-slavery people, but without making
|
|
any wide impression on the public.
|
|
|
|
We may pause here in the narrative to note two things: the story
|
|
was not the work of a novice, and it was written out of abundant
|
|
experience and from an immense mass of accumulated thought and
|
|
material. Mrs. Stowe was in her fortieth year. She had been
|
|
using her pen since she was twelve years old, in extensive
|
|
correspondence, in occasional essays, in short stories and
|
|
sketches, some of which appeared in a volume called The Mayflower,
|
|
published in 1843, and for many years her writing for newspapers
|
|
and periodicals had added appreciably to the small family income.
|
|
She was in the maturity of her intellectual powers, she was
|
|
trained in the art of writing, and she had, as Walter Scott had
|
|
when he began the Waverley Novels at the age of forty-three,
|
|
abundant store of materials on which to draw. To be sure, she was
|
|
on fire with a moral purpose, but she had the dramatic instinct,
|
|
and she felt that her object would not be reached by writing an
|
|
abolition tract.
|
|
|
|
"In shaping her material the author had but one purpose, to show
|
|
the institution of slavery truly, just as it existed. She had
|
|
visited in Kentucky; had formed the acquaintance of people who
|
|
were just, upright, and generous, and yet slave-holders. She had
|
|
heard their views, and appreciated their situation; she felt that
|
|
justice required that their difficulties should be recognized and
|
|
their virtues acknowledged. It was her object to show that the
|
|
evils of slavery were the inherent evils of a bad system, and not
|
|
always the fault of those who had become involved in it and were
|
|
its actual administrators. Then she was convinced that the
|
|
presentation of slavery alone, in its most dreadful forms, would
|
|
be a picture of such unrelieved horror and darkness as nobody
|
|
could be induced to look at. Of set purpose, she sought to light
|
|
up the darkness by humorous and grotesque episodes, and the
|
|
presentation of the milder and more amusing phases of slavery, for
|
|
which her recollection of the never-failing wit and drollery of
|
|
her former colored friends in Ohio gave her abundant material."
|
|
|
|
This is her own account of the process, years after. But it is
|
|
evident that, whether consciously or unconsciously, she did but
|
|
follow the inevitable law of all great dramatic creators and true
|
|
story-tellers since literature began.
|
|
|
|
For this story Mrs. Stowe received from the Era the sum of three
|
|
hundred dollars. Before it was finished it attracted the
|
|
attention of Mr. J. P. Jewett, of Boston, a young and then unknown
|
|
publisher, who offered to issue it in book form. His offer was
|
|
accepted, but as the tale ran on he became alarmed at its length,
|
|
and wrote to the author that she was making the story too long for
|
|
a one-volume novel; that the subject was unpopular; that people
|
|
would not willingly hear much about it; that one short volume
|
|
might possibly sell, but that if it grew to two that might prove a
|
|
fatal obstacle to its success. Mrs. Stowe replied that she did
|
|
not make the story, that the story made itself, and that she could
|
|
not stop it till it was done. The publisher hesitated. It is
|
|
said that a competent literary critic to whom he submitted it sat
|
|
up all night with the novel, and then reported, "The story has
|
|
life in it; it will sell." Mr. Jewett proposed to Professor Stowe
|
|
to publish it on half profits if he would share the expenses.
|
|
This offer was declined, for the Stowes had no money to advance,
|
|
and the common royalty of ten per cent on the sales was accepted.
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Stowe was not interested in this business transaction. She
|
|
was thinking only of having the book circulated for the effect she
|
|
had at heart. The intense absorption in the story held her until
|
|
the virtual end in the death of Uncle Tom, and then it seemed as
|
|
if the whole vital force had left her. She sank into a profound
|
|
discouragement. Would this appeal, which she had written with her
|
|
heart's blood, go for nothing, as all the prayers and tears and
|
|
strivings had already gone? When the last proof sheets left her
|
|
hands, "it seemed to her that there was no hope; that nobody would
|
|
read, nobody would pity; that this frightful system, which had
|
|
already pursued its victims into the free States, might at last
|
|
even threaten them in Canada." Resolved to leave nothing undone
|
|
to attract attention to her cause, she wrote letters and ordered
|
|
copies of her novel sent to men of prominence who had been known
|
|
for their anti-slavery sympathies,--to Prince Albert, Macaulay,
|
|
Charles Dickens, Charles Kingsley, and Lord Carlisle. Then she
|
|
waited for the result.
|
|
|
|
She had not long to wait. The success of the book was immediate.
|
|
Three thousand copies were sold the first day, within a few days
|
|
ten thousand copies had gone, on the 1st of April a second edition
|
|
went to press, and thereafter eight presses running day and night
|
|
were barely able to keep pace with the demand for it. Within a
|
|
year three hundred thousand copies were sold. No work of fiction
|
|
ever spread more quickly throughout the reading community or
|
|
awakened a greater amount of public feeling. It was read by
|
|
everybody, learned and unlearned, high and low, for it was an
|
|
appeal to universal human sympathy, and the kindling of this
|
|
spread the book like wildfire. At first it seemed to go by
|
|
acclamation. But this was not altogether owing to sympathy with
|
|
the theme. I believe that it was its power as a novel that
|
|
carried it largely. The community was generally apathetic when it
|
|
was not hostile to any real effort to be rid of slavery. This
|
|
presently appeared. At first there were few dissenting voices
|
|
from the chorus of praise. But when the effect of the book began
|
|
to be evident it met with an opposition fiercer and more personal
|
|
than the great wave of affectionate thankfulness which greeted it
|
|
at first. The South and the defenders and apologists of slavery
|
|
everywhere were up in arms. It was denounced in pulpit and in
|
|
press, and some of the severest things were said of it at the
|
|
North. The leading religious newspaper of the country, published
|
|
in New York, declared that it was "anti-Christian."
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Stowe was twice astonished: first by its extraordinary sale,
|
|
and second by the quarter from which the assault on it came. She
|
|
herself says that her expectations were strikingly different from
|
|
the facts. "She had painted slaveholders as amiable, generous,
|
|
and just. She had shown examples among them of the noblest and
|
|
most beautiful traits of character; had admitted fully their
|
|
temptations, their perplexities, and their difficulties, so that a
|
|
friend of hers who had many relatives in the South wrote to her:
|
|
'Your book is going to be the great pacificator; it will unite
|
|
both North and South.' Her expectation was that the professed
|
|
abolitionists would denounce it as altogether too mild in its
|
|
dealings with slaveholders. To her astonishment, it was the
|
|
extreme abolitionists who received, and the entire South who rose
|
|
up against it."
|
|
|
|
There is something almost amusing in Mrs. Stowe's honest
|
|
expectation that the deadliest blow the system ever suffered
|
|
should have been received thankfully by those whose traditions,
|
|
education, and interests were all bound up in it. And yet from
|
|
her point of view it was not altogether unreasonable. Her
|
|
blackest villain and most loathsome agent of the system, Legree,
|
|
was a native of Vermont. All her wrath falls upon the slave-
|
|
traders, the auctioneers, the public whippers, and the overseers,
|
|
and all these persons and classes were detested by the Southerners
|
|
to the point of loathing, and were social outcasts. The slave-
|
|
traders and the overseers were tolerated as perhaps necessary in
|
|
the system, but they were never admitted into respectable society.
|
|
This feeling Mrs. Stowe regarded as a condemnation of the system.
|
|
|
|
Pecuniary reward was the last thing that Mrs. Stowe expected for
|
|
her disinterested labor, but it suits the world's notion of the
|
|
fitness of things that this was not altogether wanting. For the
|
|
millions of copies of Uncle Tom scattered over the world the
|
|
author could expect nothing, but in her own country her copyright
|
|
yielded her a moderate return that lifted her out of poverty and
|
|
enabled her to pursue her philanthropic and literary career. Four
|
|
months after the publication of the book Professor Stowe was in
|
|
the publisher's office, and Mr. Jewett asked him how much he
|
|
expected to receive. "I hope," said Professor Stowe, with a
|
|
whimsical smile, "that it will be enough to buy my wife a silk
|
|
dress." The publisher handed him a check for ten thousand
|
|
dollars.
|
|
|
|
Before Mrs. Stowe had a response to the letters accompanying the
|
|
books privately sent to England, the novel was getting known
|
|
there. Its career in Great Britain paralleled its success in
|
|
America. In April a copy reached London in the hands of a
|
|
gentleman who had taken it on the steamer to read. He gave it to
|
|
Mr. Henry Vizetelly, who submitted it to Mr. David Bogue, a man
|
|
known for his shrewdness and enterprise. He took a night to
|
|
consider it, and then declined it, although it was offered to him
|
|
for five pounds. A Mr. Gilpin also declined it. It was then
|
|
submitted to Mr. Salisbury, a printer. This taster for the public
|
|
sat up with the book till four o'clock in the morning, alternately
|
|
weeping and laughing. Fearing, however, that this result was due
|
|
to his own weakness, he woke up his wife, whom he describes as a
|
|
rather strong-minded woman, and finding that the story kept her
|
|
awake and made her also laugh and cry, he thought it might safely
|
|
be printed. It seems, therefore, that Mr. Vizetelly ventured to
|
|
risk five pounds, and the volume was brought out through the
|
|
nominal agency of Clarke & Company. In the first week an edition
|
|
of seven thousand was worked off. It made no great stir until the
|
|
middle of June, but during July it sold at the rate of one
|
|
thousand a week. By the 20th of August the demand for it was
|
|
overwhelming. The printing firm was then employing four hundred
|
|
people in getting it out, and seventeen printing-machines, besides
|
|
hand-presses. Already one hundred and fifty thousand copies were
|
|
sold. Mr. Vizetelly disposed of his interest, and a new printing
|
|
firm began to issue monster editions. About this time the
|
|
publishers awoke to the fact that any one was at liberty to
|
|
reprint the book, and the era of cheap literature was initiated,
|
|
founded on American reprints which cost the publisher no royalty.
|
|
A shilling edition followed the one-and-sixpence, and then one
|
|
complete for sixpence. As to the total sale, Mr. Sampson Low
|
|
reports: "From April to December, 1852, twelve different editions
|
|
(not reissues) were published, and within the twelve months of its
|
|
first appearance eighteen different London publishing houses were
|
|
engaged in supplying the great demand that had set in, the total
|
|
number of editions being forty, varying from fine illustrated
|
|
editions at 15s., 10s., and 7s. 6d. to the cheap popular editions
|
|
of 1s. 9d. and 6d. After carefully analyzing these editions and
|
|
weighing probabilities with ascertained facts, I am able pretty
|
|
confidently to say that the aggregate number of copies circulated
|
|
in Great Britain and the colonies exceeds one and a half
|
|
millions." Later, abridgments were published.
|
|
|
|
Almost simultaneously with this furor in England the book made its
|
|
way on the Continent. Several translations appeared in Germany
|
|
and France, and for the authorized French edition Mrs. Stowe wrote
|
|
a new preface, which served thereafter for most of the European
|
|
editions. I find no record of the order of the translations of
|
|
the book into foreign languages, but those into some of the
|
|
Oriental tongues did not appear till several years after the great
|
|
excitement. The ascertained translations are into twenty-three
|
|
tongues, namely: Arabic, Armenian, Chinese, Danish, Dutch,
|
|
Finnish, Flemish, French, German, Hungarian, Illyrian, Italian,
|
|
Japanese, Polish, Portuguese, modern Greek, Russian, Servian,
|
|
Siamese, Spanish, Swedish, Wallachian, and Welsh. Into some of
|
|
these languages several translations were made. In 1878 the
|
|
British Museum contained thirty-five editions of the original
|
|
text, and eight editions of abridgments or adaptations.
|
|
|
|
The story was dramatized in the United States in August, 1852,
|
|
without the consent or knowledge of the author, and was played
|
|
most successfully in the leading cities, and subsequently was
|
|
acted in every capital in Europe. Mrs. Stowe had neglected to
|
|
secure the dramatic rights, and she derived no benefit from the
|
|
great popularity of a drama which still holds the stage. From the
|
|
phenomenal sale of a book which was literally read by the whole
|
|
world, the author received only the ten per cent on the American
|
|
editions, and by the laws of her own country her copyright expired
|
|
before her death.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The narrative of the rise and fortunes of this book would be
|
|
incomplete without some reference to the response that the author
|
|
received from England and the Continent, and of her triumphant
|
|
progress through the British Isles. Her letters accompanying the
|
|
special copies were almost immediately replied to, generally in
|
|
terms of enthusiastic and fervent thankfulness for the book, and
|
|
before midsummer her mail contained letters from all classes of
|
|
English society. In some of them appeared a curious evidence of
|
|
the English sensitiveness to criticism. Lord Carlisle and Sir
|
|
Arthur Helps supplemented their admiration by a protest against
|
|
the remark in the mouth of one of the characters that "slaves are
|
|
better off than a large class of the population of England." This
|
|
occurred in the defense of the institution by St. Clare, but it
|
|
was treated by the British correspondents as the opinion of Mrs.
|
|
Stowe. The charge was disposed of in Mrs. Stowe's reply: "The
|
|
remark on that subject occurs in the dramatic part of the book, in
|
|
the mouth of an intelligent Southerner. As a fair-minded person,
|
|
bound to state for both sides all that could be said, in the
|
|
person of St. Clare, the best that could be said on that point,
|
|
and what I know IS in fact constantly reiterated, namely, that the
|
|
laboring class of the South are in many respects, as to physical
|
|
comfort, in a better condition than the poor in England. This is
|
|
the slaveholder's stereo-typed apology; a defense it cannot be,
|
|
unless two wrongs make one right."
|
|
|
|
In April, 1853, Mr. and Mrs. Stowe and the latter's brother,
|
|
Charles Beecher, sailed for Europe. Her reception there was like
|
|
a royal progress. She was met everywhere by deputations and
|
|
addresses, and the enthusiasm her presence called forth was
|
|
thoroughly democratic, extending from the highest in rank to the
|
|
lowest. At Edinburgh there was presented to her a national penny
|
|
offering, consisting of a thousand golden sovereigns on a
|
|
magnificent silver salver, an unsolicited contribution in small
|
|
sums by the people.
|
|
|
|
At a reception in Stafford House, London, the Duchess of
|
|
Sutherland presented her with a massive gold bracelet, which has
|
|
an interesting history. It is made of ten oval links in imitation
|
|
of slave fetters. On two of the links were the inscriptions
|
|
"March 25, 1807," the date of the abolition of the slave-trade,
|
|
and "August 1, 1838," the date of the abolition of slavery in all
|
|
British territory. The third inscription is "562,848--March 19,
|
|
1853," the date of the address of the women of England to the
|
|
women of America on slavery, and the number of the women who
|
|
signed. It was Mrs. Stowe's privilege to add to these
|
|
inscriptions the following: "Emancipation D. C. Apl. 16, '62;"
|
|
"President's Proclamation Jan. 1, '63;" "Maryland free Oct. 13,
|
|
'64;" "Missouri free Jan. 11, '65;" and on the clasp link,
|
|
"Constitution amended by Congress Jan. 31, '65. Constitutional
|
|
Amendment ratified." Two of the links are vacant. What will the
|
|
progress of civilization in America offer for the links nine and
|
|
ten?
|
|
|
|
One of the most remarkable documents which resulted from Uncle Tom
|
|
was an address from the women of England to the women of America,
|
|
acknowledging the complicity in slavery of England, but praying
|
|
aid in removing from the world "our common crimes and common
|
|
dishonor," which was presented to Mrs. Stowe in 1853. It was the
|
|
result of a meeting at Stafford House, and the address, composed
|
|
by Lord Shaftesbury, was put into the hands of canvassers in
|
|
England and on the Continent, and as far as Jerusalem. The
|
|
signatures of 562,848 women were obtained, with their occupations
|
|
and residences, from the nobility on the steps of the throne down
|
|
to maids in the kitchen. The address is handsomely engrossed on
|
|
vellum. The names are contained in twenty-six massive volumes,
|
|
each fourteen inches high by nine in breadth and three inches
|
|
thick, inclosed in an oak case. It is believed that this is the
|
|
most numerously signed address in existence. The value of the
|
|
address, with so many names collected in haphazard fashion, was
|
|
much questioned, but its use was apparent in the height of the
|
|
civil war, when Mrs. Stowe replied to it in one of the most
|
|
vigorous and noble appeals that ever came from her pen. This
|
|
powerful reply made a profound impression in England.
|
|
|
|
This is in brief the story of the book. It is still read, and
|
|
read the world over, with tears and with laughter; it is still
|
|
played to excited audiences. Is it a great novel, or was it only
|
|
an event of an era of agitation and passion? Has it the real
|
|
dramatic quality--the poet's visualizing of human life--that makes
|
|
works of fiction, of imagination, live? Till recently, I had not
|
|
read the book since 1852. I feared to renew acquaintance with it
|
|
lest I should find only the shell of an exploded cartridge. I
|
|
took it up at the beginning of a three-hours' railway journey. To
|
|
my surprise the journey did not seem to last half an hour, and
|
|
half the time I could not keep back the tears from my eyes. A
|
|
London critic, full of sympathy with Mrs. Stowe and her work,
|
|
recently said, "Yet she was not an artist, she was not a great
|
|
woman." What is greatness? What is art? In 1862 probably no one
|
|
who knew General Grant would have called him a great man. But he
|
|
took Vicksburg. This woman did something with her pen,--on the
|
|
whole, the most remarkable and effective book in her generation.
|
|
How did she do it? Without art? George Sand said, "In matters of
|
|
art there is but one rule, to paint and to move. And where shall
|
|
we find conditions more complete, types more vivid, situations
|
|
more touching, more original, than in Uncle Tom?" If there is not
|
|
room in our art for such a book, I think we shall have to stretch
|
|
our art a little. "Women, too, are here judged and painted with a
|
|
master hand." This subtle critic, in her overpoweringly tender
|
|
and enthusiastic review, had already inquired about the capacity
|
|
of this writer. "Mrs. Stowe is all instinct; it is the very
|
|
reason that she appears to some not to have talent. Has she not
|
|
talent? What is talent? Nothing, doubtless, compared to genius;
|
|
but has she genius? I cannot say that she has talent as one
|
|
understands it in the world of letters, but she has genius as
|
|
humanity feels the need of genius,--the genius of goodness, not
|
|
that of the man of letters, but of the saint." It is admitted
|
|
that Mrs. Stowe was not a woman of letters in the common
|
|
acceptation of that term, and it is plain that in the French
|
|
tribunal, where form is of the substance of the achievement, and
|
|
which reluctantly overlooked the crudeness of Walter Scott, in
|
|
France where the best English novel seems a violation of
|
|
established canons, Uncle Tom would seem to belong where some
|
|
modern critics place it, with works of the heart, and not of the
|
|
head. The reviewer is, however, candid: "For a long time we have
|
|
striven in France against the prolix explanations of Walter Scott.
|
|
We have cried out against those of Balzac, but on consideration
|
|
have perceived that the painter of manners and character has never
|
|
done too much, that every stroke of the pencil was needed for the
|
|
general effect. Let us learn then to appreciate all kinds of
|
|
treatment, where the effect is good, and where they bear the seal
|
|
of a master hand."
|
|
|
|
It must be admitted to the art critic that the book is defective
|
|
according to the rules of the modern French romance; that Mrs.
|
|
Stowe was possessed by her subject, and let her fervid interest in
|
|
it be felt; that she had a definite purpose. That purpose was to
|
|
quicken the sense of responsibility of the North by showing the
|
|
real character of slavery, and to touch the South by showing that
|
|
the inevitable wrong of it lay in the system rather than in those
|
|
involved in it. Abundant material was in her hands, and the
|
|
author burned to make it serviceable. What should she do? She
|
|
might have done what she did afterwards in The Key, presented to
|
|
the public a mass of statistics, of legal documents. The evidence
|
|
would have been unanswerable, but the jury might not have been
|
|
moved by it; they would have balanced it by considerations of
|
|
political and commercial expediency. I presume that Mrs. Stowe
|
|
made no calculation of this kind. She felt her course, and went
|
|
on in it. What would an artist have done, animated by her purpose
|
|
and with her material? He would have done what Cervantes did,
|
|
what Tourgenieff did, what Mrs. Stowe did. He would have
|
|
dramatized his facts in living personalities, in effective scenes,
|
|
in vivid pictures of life. Mrs. Stowe exhibited the system of
|
|
slavery by a succession of dramatized pictures, not always
|
|
artistically welded together, but always effective as an
|
|
exhibition of the system. Cervantes also showed a fading feudal
|
|
romantic condition by a series of amusing and pathetic adventures,
|
|
grouped rather loosely about a singularly fascinating figure.
|
|
|
|
Tourgenieff, a more consummate artist, in his hunting scenes
|
|
exhibited the effect of serfdom upon society, in a series of
|
|
scenes with no necessary central figure, without comment, and with
|
|
absolute concealment of any motive. I believe the three writers
|
|
followed their instincts, without an analytic argument as to the
|
|
method, as the great painter follows his when he puts an idea upon
|
|
canvas. He may invent a theory about it afterwards; if he does
|
|
not, some one else will invent it for him. There are degrees of
|
|
art. One painter will put in unnecessary accessories, another
|
|
will exhibit his sympathy too openly, the technique or the
|
|
composition of another can be criticised. But the question is, is
|
|
the picture great and effective?
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Stowe had not Tourgenieff's artistic calmness. Her mind was
|
|
fused into a white heat with her message. Yet, how did she begin
|
|
her story? Like an artist, by a highly dramatized scene, in which
|
|
the actors, by a few strokes of the pen, appear as distinct and
|
|
unmistakable personalities, marked by individual peculiarities of
|
|
manner, speech, motive, character, living persons in natural
|
|
attitudes. The reader becomes interested in a shrewd study of
|
|
human nature, of a section of life, with its various refinement,
|
|
coarseness, fastidiousness and vulgarity, its humor and pathos.
|
|
As he goes on he discovers that every character has been perfectly
|
|
visualized, accurately limned from the first; that a type has been
|
|
created which remains consistent, which is never deflected from
|
|
its integrity by any exigencies of plot. This clear conception of
|
|
character (not of earmarks and peculiarities adopted as labels),
|
|
and faithful adhesion to it in all vicissitudes, is one of the
|
|
rarest and highest attributes of genius. All the chief characters
|
|
in the book follow this line of absolutely consistent development,
|
|
from Uncle Tom and Legree down to the most aggravating and
|
|
contemptible of all, Marie St. Clare. The selfish and hysterical
|
|
woman has never been so faithfully depicted by any other author.
|
|
|
|
Distinguished as the novel is by its character-drawing and its
|
|
pathos, I doubt if it would have captivated the world without its
|
|
humor. This is of the old-fashioned kind, the large humor of
|
|
Scott, and again of Cervantes, not verbal pleasantry, not the
|
|
felicities of Lamb, but the humor of character in action, of
|
|
situations elaborated with great freedom, and with what may be
|
|
called a hilarious conception. This quality is never wanting in
|
|
the book, either for the reader's entertainment by the way, or to
|
|
heighten the pathos of the narrative by contrast. The
|
|
introduction of Topsy into the New Orleans household saves us in
|
|
the dangerous approach to melodrama in the religious passages
|
|
between Tom and St. Clare. Considering the opportunities of the
|
|
subject, the book has very little melodrama; one is apt to hear
|
|
low music on the entrance of little Eva, but we are convinced of
|
|
the wholesome sanity of the sweet child. And it is to be remarked
|
|
that some of the most exciting episodes, such as that of Eliza
|
|
crossing the Ohio River on the floating ice (of which Mr. Ruskin
|
|
did not approve), are based upon authentic occurrences. The want
|
|
of unity in construction of which the critics complain is
|
|
partially explained by the necessity of exhibiting the effect of
|
|
slavery in its entirety. The parallel plots, one running to
|
|
Louisiana and the other to Canada, are tied together by this
|
|
consideration, and not by any real necessity to each other.
|
|
|
|
There is no doubt that Mrs. Stowe was wholly possessed by her
|
|
theme, rapt away like a prophet in a vision, and that, in her
|
|
feeling at the time, it was written through her quite as much as
|
|
by her. This idea grew upon her mind in the retrospective light
|
|
of the tremendous stir the story made in the world, so that in her
|
|
later years she came to regard herself as a providential
|
|
instrument, and frankly to declare that she did not write the
|
|
book; "God wrote it." In her own account, when she reached the
|
|
death of Uncle Tom, "the whole vital force left her." The
|
|
inspiration there left her, and the end of the story, the weaving
|
|
together of all the loose ends of the plot, in the joining
|
|
together almost by miracle the long separated, and the discovery
|
|
of the relationships, is the conscious invention of the novelist.
|
|
|
|
It would be perhaps going beyond the province of the critic to
|
|
remark upon what the author considered the central power of the
|
|
story, and its power to move the world, the faith of Uncle Tom in
|
|
the Bible. This appeal to the emotion of millions of readers
|
|
cannot, however, be overlooked. Many regard the book as effective
|
|
in regions remote from our perplexities by reason of this grace.
|
|
When the work was translated into Siamese, the perusal of it by
|
|
one of the ladies of the court induced her to liberate all her
|
|
slaves, men, women, and children, one hundred and thirty in all.
|
|
"Hidden Perfume," for that was the English equivalent of her name,
|
|
said she was wishful to be good like Harriet Beecher Stowe. And
|
|
as to the standpoint of Uncle Tom and the Bible, nothing more
|
|
significant can be cited than this passage from one of the latest
|
|
writings of Heinrich Heine:--
|
|
|
|
"The reawakening of my religious feelings I owe to that holy book
|
|
the Bible. Astonishing that after I have whirled about all my
|
|
life over all the dance-floors of philosophy, and yielded myself
|
|
to all the orgies of the intellect, and paid my addresses to all
|
|
possible systems, without satisfaction like Messalina after a
|
|
licentious night, I now find myself on the same standpoint where
|
|
poor Uncle Tom stands,--on that of the Bible! I kneel down by my
|
|
black brother in the same prayer! What a humiliation! With all
|
|
my science I have come no further than the poor ignorant negro who
|
|
has scarce learned to spell. Poor Tom, indeed, seems to have seen
|
|
deeper things in the holy book than I. . . . Tom, perhaps,
|
|
understands them better than I, because more flogging occurs in
|
|
them; that is to say, those ceaseless blows of the whip which have
|
|
aesthetically disgusted me in reading the Gospels and the Acts.
|
|
But a poor negro slave reads with his back, and understands better
|
|
than we do. But I, who used to make citations from Homer, now
|
|
begin to quote the Bible as Uncle Tom does."
|
|
|
|
The one indispensable requisite of a great work of imaginative
|
|
fiction is its universality, its conception and construction so
|
|
that it will appeal to universal human nature in all races and
|
|
situations and climates. Uncle Tom's Cabin does that.
|
|
Considering certain artistic deficiencies, which the French
|
|
writers perceived, we might say that it was the timeliness of its
|
|
theme that gave it currency in England and America. But that
|
|
argument falls before the world-wide interest in it as a mere
|
|
story, in so many languages, by races unaffected by our own
|
|
relation to slavery.
|
|
|
|
It was the opinion of James Russell Lowell that the anti-slavery
|
|
element in Uncle Tom and Dred stood in the way of a full
|
|
appreciation, at least in her own country, of the remarkable
|
|
genius of Mrs. Stowe. Writing in 1859, he said, "From my habits
|
|
and the tendency of my studies I cannot help looking at things
|
|
purely from an aesthetic point of view, and what I valued in Uncle
|
|
Tom was the genius, and not the moral." This had been his
|
|
impression when he read the book in Paris, long after the whirl of
|
|
excitement produced by its publication had subsided, and far
|
|
removed by distance from local influences. Subsequently, in a
|
|
review, he wrote, "We felt then, and we believe now, that the
|
|
secret of Mrs. Stowe's power lay in that same genius by which the
|
|
great successes in creative literature have always been achieved,--
|
|
the genius that instinctively goes to the organic elements of
|
|
human nature, whether under a white skin or a black, and which
|
|
disregards as trivial the conventions and fictitious notions which
|
|
make so large a part both of our thinking and feeling. . . . The
|
|
creative faculty of Mrs. Stowe, like that of Cervantes in Don
|
|
Quixote and of Fielding in Joseph Andrews, overpowered the narrow
|
|
specialty of her design, and expanded a local and temporary theme
|
|
with the cosmopolitanism of genius."
|
|
|
|
A half-century is not much in the life of a people; it is in time
|
|
an inadequate test of the staying power of a book. Nothing is
|
|
more futile than prophecy on contemporary literary work. It is
|
|
safe, however, to say that Uncle Tom's Cabin has the fundamental
|
|
qualities, the sure insight into human nature, and the fidelity to
|
|
the facts of its own time which have from age to age preserved
|
|
works of genius.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
STRIVINGS OF THE NEGRO PEOPLE
|
|
by W. E. Burghardt Du Bois
|
|
|
|
|
|
Berween me and the other world there is ever an unasked question:
|
|
unasked by some through feelings of delicacy; by others through
|
|
the difficulty of rightly framing it. All, nevertheless, flutter
|
|
round it. They approach me in a half-hesitant sort of way, eye me
|
|
curiously or compassionately, and then, instead of saying
|
|
directly, How does it feel to be a problem? they say, I know an
|
|
excellent colored man in my town; or, I fought at Mechanicsville;
|
|
or, Do not these Southern outrages make your blood boil? At these
|
|
I smile, or am interested, or reduce the boiling to a simmer, as
|
|
the occasion may require. To the real question, How does it feel
|
|
to be a problem? I answer seldom a word.
|
|
|
|
And yet, being a problem is a strange experience,--peculiar even
|
|
for one who has never been anything else, save perhaps in babyhood
|
|
and in Europe. It is in the early days of rollicking boyhood that
|
|
the revelation first bursts upon one, all in a day, as it were. I
|
|
remember well when the shadow swept across me. I was a little
|
|
thing, away up in the hills of New England, where the dark
|
|
Housatonic winds between Hoosac and Taghanic to the sea. In a wee
|
|
wooden schoolhouse, something put it into the boys' and girls'
|
|
heads to buy gorgeous visiting-cards--ten cents a package--and
|
|
exchange. The exchange was merry, till one girl, a tall newcomer,
|
|
refused my card,--refused it peremptorily, with a glance. Then it
|
|
dawned upon me with a certain suddenness that I was different from
|
|
the others; or like, mayhap, in heart and life and longing, but
|
|
shut out from their world by a vast veil. I had thereafter no
|
|
desire to tear down that veil, to creep through; I held all beyond
|
|
it in common contempt, and lived above it in a region of blue sky
|
|
and great wandering shadows. That sky was bluest when I could
|
|
beat my mates at examination-time, or beat them at a foot-race, or
|
|
even beat their stringy heads. Alas, with the years all this fine
|
|
contempt began to fade; for the world I longed for, and all its
|
|
dazzling opportunities, were theirs, not mine. But they should
|
|
not keep these prizes, I said; some, all, I would wrest from them.
|
|
Just how I would do it I could never decide: by reading law, by
|
|
healing the sick, by telling the wonderful tales that swam in my
|
|
head,--some way. With other black boys the strife was not so
|
|
fiercely sunny: their youth shrunk into tasteless sycophancy, or
|
|
into silent hatred of the pale world about them and mocking
|
|
distrust of everything white; or wasted itself in a bitter cry.
|
|
Why did God make me an outcast and a stranger in mine own house?
|
|
The "shades of the prison-house" closed round about us all: walls
|
|
strait and stubborn to the whitest, but relentlessly narrow, tall,
|
|
and unscalable to sons of night who must plod darkly on in
|
|
resignation, or beat unavailing palms against the stone, or
|
|
steadily, half hopelessly watch the streak of blue above.
|
|
|
|
After the Egyptian and Indian, the Greek and Roman, the Teuton and
|
|
Mongolian, the Negro is a sort of seventh son, born with a veil,
|
|
and gifted with second-sight in this American world,--a world
|
|
which yields him no self-consciousness, but only lets him see
|
|
himself through the revelation of the other world. It is a
|
|
peculiar sensation, this double-consciousness, this sense of
|
|
always looking at one's self through the eyes of others, of
|
|
measuring one's soul by the tape of a world that looks on in
|
|
amused contempt and pity. One ever feels his two-ness,--an
|
|
American, a Negro; two souls, two thoughts, two unreconciled
|
|
strivings; two warring ideals in one dark body, whose dogged
|
|
strength alone keeps it from being torn asunder. The history of
|
|
the American Negro is the history of this strife,--this longing to
|
|
attain self-conscious manhood, to merge his double self into a
|
|
better and truer self. In this merging he wishes neither of the
|
|
older selves to be lost. He does not wish to Africanize America,
|
|
for America has too much to teach the world and Africa; he does
|
|
not wish to bleach his Negro blood in a flood of white
|
|
Americanism, for he believes--foolishly, perhaps, but fervently--
|
|
that Negro blood has yet a message for the world. He simply
|
|
wishes to make it possible for a man to be both a Negro and an
|
|
American without being cursed and spit upon by his fellows,
|
|
without losing the opportunity of self-development.
|
|
|
|
This is the end of his striving: to be a co-worker in the kingdom
|
|
of culture, to escape both death and isolation, and to husband and
|
|
use his best powers. These powers, of body and of mind, have in
|
|
the past been so wasted and dispersed as to lose all
|
|
effectiveness, and to seem like absence of all power, like
|
|
weakness. The double-aimed struggle of the black artisan, on the
|
|
one hand to escape white contempt for a nation of mere hewers of
|
|
wood and drawers of water, and on the other hand to plough and
|
|
nail and dig for a poverty-stricken horde, could only result in
|
|
making him a poor craftsman, for he had but half a heart in either
|
|
cause. By the poverty and ignorance of his people the Negro
|
|
lawyer or doctor was pushed toward quackery and demagogism, and by
|
|
the criticism of the other world toward an elaborate preparation
|
|
that overfitted him for his lowly tasks. The would-be black
|
|
savant was confronted by the paradox that the knowledge his people
|
|
needed was a twice-told tale to his white neighbors, while the
|
|
knowledge which would teach the white world was Greek to his own
|
|
flesh and blood. The innate love of harmony and beauty that set
|
|
the ruder souls of his people a-dancing, a-singing, and a-laughing
|
|
raised but confusion and doubt in the soul of the black artist;
|
|
for the beauty revealed to him was the soul-beauty of a race which
|
|
his larger audience despised, and he could not articulate the
|
|
message of another people.
|
|
|
|
This waste of double aims, this seeking to satisfy two
|
|
unreconciled ideals, has wrought sad havoc with the courage and
|
|
faith and deeds of eight thousand thousand people, has sent them
|
|
often wooing false gods and invoking false means of salvation, and
|
|
has even at times seemed destined to make them ashamed of
|
|
themselves. In the days of bondage they thought to see in one
|
|
divine event the end of all doubt and disappointment; eighteenth-
|
|
century Rousseauism never worshiped freedom with half the
|
|
unquestioning faith that the American Negro did for two centuries.
|
|
To him slavery was, indeed, the sum of all villainies, the cause
|
|
of all sorrow, the root of all prejudice; emancipation was the key
|
|
to a promised land of sweeter beauty than ever stretched before
|
|
the eyes of wearied Israelites. In his songs and exhortations
|
|
swelled one refrain, liberty; in his tears and curses the god he
|
|
implored had freedom in his right hand. At last it came,--
|
|
suddenly, fearfully, like a dream. With one wild carnival of
|
|
blood and passion came the message in his own plaintive cadences:--
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
"Shout, O children!
|
|
Shout, you're free!
|
|
The Lord has bought your liberty!"
|
|
|
|
|
|
Years have passed away, ten, twenty, thirty. Thirty years of
|
|
national life, thirty years of renewal and development, and yet
|
|
the swarthy ghost of Banquo sits in its old place at the national
|
|
feast. In vain does the nation cry to its vastest problem,--
|
|
|
|
"Take any shape but that, and my firm nerves Shall never
|
|
tremble!"
|
|
|
|
The freedman has not yet found in freedom his promised land.
|
|
Whatever of lesser good may have come in these years of change,
|
|
the shadow of a deep disappointment rests upon the Negro people,--
|
|
a disappointment all the more bitter because the unattained ideal
|
|
was unbounded save by the simple ignorance of a lowly folk.
|
|
|
|
The first decade was merely a prolongation of the vain search for
|
|
freedom, the boom that seemed ever barely to elude their grasp,--
|
|
like a tantalizing will-o'-the-wisp, maddening and misleading the
|
|
headless host. The holocaust of war, the terrors of the Kuklux
|
|
Klan, the lies of carpet-baggers, the disorganization of industry,
|
|
and the contradictory advice of friends and foes left the
|
|
bewildered serf with no new watchword beyond the old cry for
|
|
freedom. As the decade closed, however, he began to grasp a new
|
|
idea. The ideal of liberty demanded for its attainment powerful
|
|
means, and these the Fifteenth Amendment gave him. The ballot,
|
|
which before he had looked upon as a visible sign of freedom, he
|
|
now regarded as the chief means of gaining and perfecting the
|
|
liberty with which war had partially endowed him. And why not?
|
|
Had not votes made war and emancipated millions? Had not votes
|
|
enfranchised the freedmen? Was anything impossible to a power
|
|
that had done all this? A million black men started with renewed
|
|
zeal to vote themselves into the kingdom. The decade fled away,--
|
|
a decade containing, to the freedman's mind, nothing but
|
|
suppressed votes, stuffed ballot-boxes, and election outrages that
|
|
nullified his vaunted right of suffrage. And yet that decade from
|
|
1875 to 1885 held another powerful movement, the rise of another
|
|
ideal to guide the unguided, another pillar of fire by night after
|
|
a clouded day. It was the ideal of "book-learning;" the
|
|
curiosity, born of compulsory ignorance, to know and test the
|
|
power of the cabalistic letters of the white man, the longing to
|
|
know. Mission and night schools began in the smoke of battle, ran
|
|
the gauntlet of reconstruction, and at last developed into
|
|
permanent foundations. Here at last seemed to have been
|
|
discovered the mountain path to Canaan; longer than the highway of
|
|
emancipation and law, steep and rugged, but straight, leading to
|
|
heights high enough to overlook life.
|
|
|
|
Up the new path the advance guard toiled, slowly, heavily,
|
|
doggedly; only those who have watched and guided the faltering
|
|
feet, the misty minds, the dull understandings of the dark pupils
|
|
of these schools know how faithfully, how piteously, this people
|
|
strove to learn. It was weary work. The cold statistician wrote
|
|
down the inches of progress here and there, noted also where here
|
|
and there a foot had slipped or some one had fallen. To the tired
|
|
climbers, the horizon was ever dark, the mists were often cold,
|
|
the Canaan was always dim and far away. If, however, the vistas
|
|
disclosed as yet no goal, no resting-place, little but flattery
|
|
and criticism, the journey at least gave leisure for reflection
|
|
and self-examination; it changed the child of emancipation to the
|
|
youth with dawning self-consciousness, self-realization, self-
|
|
respect. In those sombre forests of his striving his own soul
|
|
rose before him, and he saw himself,--darkly as through a veil;
|
|
and yet he saw in himself some faint revelation of his power, of
|
|
his mission. He began to have a dim feeling that, to attain his
|
|
place in the world, he must be himself, and not another. For the
|
|
first time he sought to analyze the burden he bore upon his back,
|
|
that dead-weight of social degradation partially masked behind a
|
|
half-named Negro problem. He felt his poverty; without a cent,
|
|
without a home, without land, tools, or savings, he had entered
|
|
into competition with rich, landed, skilled neighbors. To be a
|
|
poor man is hard, but to be a poor race in a land of dollars is
|
|
the very bottom of hardships. He felt the weight of his
|
|
ignorance,--not simply of letters, but of life, of business, of
|
|
the humanities; the accumulated sloth and shirking and awkwardness
|
|
of decades and centuries shackled his hands and feet. Nor was his
|
|
burden all poverty and ignorance. The red stain of bastardy,
|
|
which two centuries of systematic legal defilement of Negro women
|
|
had stamped upon his race, meant not only the loss of ancient
|
|
African chastity, but also the hereditary weight of a mass of
|
|
filth from white whoremongers and adulterers, threatening almost
|
|
the obliteration of the Negro home.
|
|
|
|
A people thus handicapped ought not to be asked to race with the
|
|
world, but rather allowed to give all its time and thought to its
|
|
own social problems. But alas! while sociologists gleefully count
|
|
his bastards and his prostitutes, the very soul of the toiling,
|
|
sweating black man is darkened by the shadow of a vast despair.
|
|
Men call the shadow prejudice, and learnedly explain it as the
|
|
natural defense of culture against barbarism, learning against
|
|
ignorance, purity against crime, the "higher" against the "lower"
|
|
races. To which the Negro cries Amen! and swears that to so much
|
|
of this strange prejudice as is founded on just homage to
|
|
civilization, culture, righteousness, and progress he humbly bows
|
|
and meekly does obeisance. But before that nameless prejudice
|
|
that leaps beyond all this he stands helpless, dismayed, and well-
|
|
nigh speechless; before that personal disrespect and mockery, the
|
|
ridicule and systematic humiliation, the distortion of fact and
|
|
wanton license of fancy, the cynical ignoring of the better and
|
|
boisterous welcoming of the worse, the all-pervading desire to
|
|
inculcate disdain for everything black, from Toussaint to the
|
|
devil,--before this there rises a sickening despair that would
|
|
disarm and discourage any nation save that black host to whom
|
|
"discouragement" is an unwritten word.
|
|
|
|
They still press on, they still nurse the dogged hope,--not a hope
|
|
of nauseating patronage, not a hope of reception into charmed
|
|
social circles of stock-jobbers, pork-packers, and earl-hunters,
|
|
but the hope of a higher synthesis of civilization and humanity, a
|
|
true progress, with which the chorus
|
|
|
|
|
|
"Peace, good will to men,"
|
|
"May make one music as before,
|
|
But vaster."
|
|
|
|
|
|
Thus the second decade of the American Negro's freedom was a
|
|
period of conflict, of inspiration and doubt, of faith and vain
|
|
questionings, of Sturm and Drang. The ideals of physical freedom,
|
|
of political power, of school training, as separate all-
|
|
sufficient panaceas for social ills, became in the third decade
|
|
dim and overcast. They were the vain dreams of credulous race
|
|
childhood; not wrong, but incomplete and over-simple. The
|
|
training of the schools we need to-day more than ever,--the
|
|
training of deft hands, quick eyes and ears, and the broader,
|
|
deeper, higher culture of gifted minds. The power of the ballot
|
|
we need in sheer self-defense, and as a guarantee of good faith.
|
|
We may misuse it, but we can scarce do worse in this respect than
|
|
our whilom masters. Freedom, too, the long-sought, we still
|
|
seek,--the freedom of life and limb, the freedom to work and
|
|
think. Work, culture, and liberty,--all these we need, not
|
|
singly, but together; for to-day these ideals among the Negro
|
|
people are gradually coalescing, and finding a higher meaning in
|
|
the unifying ideal of race,--the ideal of fostering the traits and
|
|
talents of the Negro, not in opposition to, but in conformity
|
|
with, the greater ideals of the American republic, in order that
|
|
some day, on American soil, two world races may give each to each
|
|
those characteristics which both so sadly lack. Already we come
|
|
not altogether empty-handed: there is to-day no true American
|
|
music but the sweet wild melodies of the Negro slave; the American
|
|
fairy tales are Indian and African; we are the sole oasis of
|
|
simple faith and reverence in a dusty desert of dollars and
|
|
smartness. Will America be poorer if she replace her brutal,
|
|
dyspeptic blundering with the light-hearted but determined Negro
|
|
humility; or her coarse, cruel wit with loving, jovial good humor;
|
|
or her Annie Rooney with Steal Away?
|
|
|
|
Merely a stern concrete test of the underlying principles of the
|
|
great republic is the Negro problem, and the spiritual striving of
|
|
the freedmen's sons is the travail of souls whose burden is almost
|
|
beyond the measure of their strength, but who bear it in the name
|
|
of an historic race, in the name of this land of their fathers'
|
|
fathers, and in the name of human opportunity.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE WIFE OF HIS YOUTH
|
|
by Charles W. Chesnutt
|
|
|
|
|
|
I.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Ryder was going to give a ball. There were several reasons
|
|
why this was an opportune time for such an event.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Ryder might aptly be called the dean of the Blue Veins. The
|
|
original Blue Veins were a little society of colored persons
|
|
organized in a certain Northern city shortly after the war. Its
|
|
purpose was to establish and maintain correct social standards
|
|
among a people whose social condition presented almost unlimited
|
|
room for improvement. By accident, combined perhaps with some
|
|
natural affinity, the society consisted of individuals who were,
|
|
generally speaking, more white than black. Some envious outsider
|
|
made the suggestion that no one was eligible for membership who
|
|
was not white enough to show blue veins. The suggestion was
|
|
readily adopted by those who were not of the favored few, and
|
|
since that time the society, though possessing a longer and more
|
|
pretentious name, had been known far and wide as the "Blue Vein
|
|
Society," and its members as the "Blue Veins."
|
|
|
|
The Blue Veins did not allow that any such requirement existed for
|
|
admission to their circle, but, on the contrary, declared that
|
|
character and culture were the only things considered; and that if
|
|
most of their members were light-colored, it was because such
|
|
persons, as a rule, had had better opportunities to qualify
|
|
themselves for membership. Opinions differed, too, as to the
|
|
usefulness of the society. There were those who had been known
|
|
to assail it violently as a glaring example of the very prejudice
|
|
from which the colored race had suffered most; and later, when
|
|
such critics had succeeded in getting on the inside, they had been
|
|
heard to maintain with zeal and earnestness that the society was a
|
|
life-boat, an anchor, a bulwark and a shield, a pillar of cloud by
|
|
day and of fire by night, to guide their people through the social
|
|
wilderness. Another alleged prerequisite for Blue Vein membership
|
|
was that of free birth; and while there was really no such
|
|
requirement, it is doubtless true that very few of the members
|
|
would have been unable to meet it if there had been. If there
|
|
were one or two of the older members who had come up from the
|
|
South and from slavery, their history presented enough romantic
|
|
circumstances to rob their servile origin of its grosser aspects.
|
|
While there were no such tests of eligibility, it is true that the
|
|
Blue Veins had their notions on these subjects, and that not all
|
|
of them were equally liberal in regard to the things they
|
|
collectively disclaimed. Mr. Ryder was one of the most
|
|
conservative. Though he had not been among the founders of the
|
|
society, but had come in some years later, his genius for social
|
|
leadership was such that he had speedily become its recognized
|
|
adviser and head, the custodian of its standards, and the
|
|
preserver of its traditions. He shaped its social policy, was
|
|
active in providing for its entertainment, and when the interest
|
|
fell off, as it sometimes did, he fanned the embers until they
|
|
burst again into a cheerful flame. There were still other
|
|
reasons for his popularity. While he was not as white as some of
|
|
the Blue Veins, his appearance was such as to confer distinction
|
|
upon them. His features were of a refined type, his hair was
|
|
almost straight; he was always neatly dressed; his manners were
|
|
irreproachable, and his morals above suspicion. He had come to
|
|
Groveland a young man, and obtaining employment in the office of a
|
|
railroad company as messenger had in time worked himself up to the
|
|
position of stationery clerk, having charge of the distribution of
|
|
the office supplies for the whole company. Although the lack of
|
|
early training had hindered the orderly development of a naturally
|
|
fine mind, it had not prevented him from doing a great deal of
|
|
reading or from forming decidedly literary tastes. Poetry was his
|
|
passion. He could repeat whole pages of the great English poets ;
|
|
and if his pronunciation was sometimes faulty, his eye, his voice,
|
|
his gestures, would respond to the changing sentiment with a
|
|
precision that revealed a poetic soul, and disarm criticism. He
|
|
was economical, and had saved money; he owned and occupied a very
|
|
comfortable house on a respectable street. His residence was
|
|
handsomely furnished, containing among other things a good
|
|
library, especially rich in poetry, a piano, and some choice
|
|
engravings. He generally shared his house with some young couple,
|
|
who looked after his wants and were company for him; for Mr. Ryder
|
|
was a single man. In the early days of his connection with the
|
|
Blue Veins he had been regarded as quite a catch, and ladies and
|
|
their mothers had manoeuvred with much ingenuity to capture him.
|
|
Not, however, until Mrs. Molly Dixon visited Groveland had any
|
|
woman ever made him wish to change his condition to that of a
|
|
married man.
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Dixon had come to Groveland from Washington in the spring,
|
|
and before the summer was over she had won Mr. Ryder's heart. She
|
|
possessed many attractive qualities. She was much younger than
|
|
he; in fact, he was old enough to have been her father, though no
|
|
one knew exactly how old he was. She was whiter than he, and
|
|
better educated. She had moved in the best colored society of the
|
|
country, at Washington, and had taught in the schools of that
|
|
city. Such a superior person had been eagerly welcomed to the
|
|
Blue Vein Society, and had taken a leading part in its activities.
|
|
Mr. Ryder had at first been attracted by her charms of person, for
|
|
she was very good looking and not over twenty-five; then by her
|
|
refined manners and by the vivacity of her wit. Her husband had
|
|
been a government clerk, and at his death had left a considerable
|
|
life insurance. She was visiting friends in Groveland, and,
|
|
finding the town and the people to her liking, had prolonged her
|
|
stay indefinitely. She had not seemed displeased at Mr. Ryder's
|
|
attentions, but on the contrary had given him every proper
|
|
encouragement; indeed, a younger and less cautious man would long
|
|
since have spoken. But he had made up his mind, and had only to
|
|
determine the time when he would ask her to be his wife. He
|
|
decided to give a ball in her honor, and at some time during the
|
|
evening of the ball to offer her his heart and hand. He had no
|
|
special fears about the outcotme, but, with a little touch of
|
|
romance, he wanted the surroundings to be in harmony with his own
|
|
feelings when he should have received the answer he expected.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Ryder resolved that this ball should mark an epoch in the
|
|
social history of Groveland. He knew, of course,--no one could
|
|
know better,--the entertainments that had taken place in past
|
|
years, and what must be done to surpass them. His ball must be
|
|
worthy of the lady in whose honor it was to be given, and must, by
|
|
the quality of its guests, set an example for the future. He had
|
|
observed of late a growing liberality, almost a laxity, in social
|
|
matters, even among members of his own set, and had several times
|
|
been forced to meet in a social way persons whose complexions and
|
|
callings in life were hardly up to the standard which he
|
|
considered proper for the society to maintain. He had a theory of
|
|
his own.
|
|
|
|
"I have no race prejudice," he would say, "but we people of mixed
|
|
blood are ground between the upper and the nether millstone. Our
|
|
fate lies between absorption by the white race and extinction in
|
|
the black. The one doesn't want us yet, but may take us in time.
|
|
The other would welcome us, but it would be for us a backward
|
|
step. 'With malice towards none, with charity for all,' we must
|
|
do the best we can for ourselves and those who are to follow us.
|
|
Self-preservation is the first law of nature."
|
|
|
|
His ball would serve by its exclusiveness to counteract leveling
|
|
tendencies, and his marriage with Mrs. Dixon would help to further
|
|
the upward process of absorption he had been wishing and waiting
|
|
for.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
II.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The ball was to take place on Friday night. The house had been
|
|
put in order, the carpets covered with canvas, the halls and
|
|
stairs decorated with palms and potted plants; and in the
|
|
afternoon Mr. Ryder sat on his front porch, which the shade of a
|
|
vine running up over a wire netting made a cool and pleasant
|
|
lounging-place. He expected to respond to the toast "The Ladies,"
|
|
at the supper, and from a volume of Tennyson--his favorite poet
|
|
--was fortifying himself with apt quotations. The volume was
|
|
open at A Dream of Fair Women. His eyes fell on these lines, and
|
|
he read them aloud to judge better of their effect:--
|
|
|
|
"At length I saw a lady within call. Stiller than chisell'd
|
|
marble, standing there; A daughter of the gods, divinely tall,
|
|
And most divinely fair."
|
|
|
|
He marked the verse, and turning the page read the stanza
|
|
beginning,--
|
|
|
|
|
|
"O sweet pale Margaret,
|
|
O rare pale Margaret."
|
|
|
|
|
|
He weighed the passage a moment, and decided that it would not do.
|
|
Mrs. Dixon was the palest lady he expected at the ball, and she
|
|
was of a rather ruddy complexion, and of lively disposition and
|
|
buxom build. So he ran over the leaves until his eye rested on
|
|
the description of Queen Guinevere:--
|
|
|
|
|
|
"She seem'd a part of joyous Spring:
|
|
A gown of grass-green silk she wore,
|
|
Buckled with golden clasps before;
|
|
A light-green tuft of plumes she bore
|
|
Closed in a golden ring.
|
|
|
|
. . . . . . . . . .
|
|
|
|
"She look'd so lovely, as she sway'd
|
|
The rein with dainty finger-tips,
|
|
A man had given all other bliss,
|
|
And all his worldly worth for this,
|
|
To waste his whole heart in one kiss
|
|
Upon her perfect lips."
|
|
|
|
|
|
As Mr. Ryder murmured these words audibly, with an appreciative
|
|
thrill, he heard the latch of his gate click, and a light footfall
|
|
sounding on the steps. He turned his head, and saw a woman
|
|
standing before the door.
|
|
|
|
She was a little woman, not five feet tall, and proportioned to
|
|
her height. Although she stood erect, and looked around her with
|
|
very bright and restless eyes, she seemed quite old; for her face
|
|
was crossed and recrossed with a hundred wrinkles, and around the
|
|
edges of her bonnet could be seen protruding here and there a tuft
|
|
of short gray wool. She wore a blue calico gown of ancient cut, a
|
|
little red shawl fastened around her shoulders with an old-
|
|
fashioned brass brooch, and a large bonnet profusely ornamented
|
|
with faded red and yellow artificial flowers. And she was very
|
|
black--so black that her toothless gums, revealed when she
|
|
opened her mouth to speak, were not red, but blue. She looked
|
|
like a bit of the old plantation life, summoned up from the past
|
|
by the wave of a magician's wand, as the poet's fancy had called
|
|
into being the gracious shapes of which Mr. Ryder had just been
|
|
reading.
|
|
|
|
He rose from his chair and came over to where she stood.
|
|
|
|
"Good-afternoon, madam," he said.
|
|
|
|
"Good-evenin', suh," she answered, ducking suddenly with a quaint
|
|
curtsy. Her voice was shrill and piping, but softened somewhat by
|
|
age. "Is dis yere whar Mistuh Ryduh lib, suh?" she asked, looking
|
|
around her doubtfully, and glancing into the open windows, through
|
|
which some of the preparations for the evening were visible.
|
|
|
|
"Yes," he replied, with an air of kindly patronage, unconsciously
|
|
flattered by her manner, "I am Mr. Ryder. Did you want to see
|
|
me?"
|
|
|
|
"Yas, suh, ef I ain't 'sturbin' of you too much."
|
|
|
|
"Not at all. Have a seat over here behind the vine, where it is
|
|
cool. What can I do for you?"
|
|
|
|
"'Scuse me, suh," she continued, when she had sat down on the edge
|
|
of a chair, "'scuse me, suh, I's lookin' for my husban'. I heerd
|
|
you wuz a big man an' had libbed heah a long time, an' I 'lowed
|
|
you wouldn't min' ef I'd come roun' an' ax you ef you'd eber heerd
|
|
of a merlatter man by de name er Sam Taylor 'quirin' roun' in de
|
|
chu'ches ermongs' de people fer his wife 'Liza Jane?"
|
|
|
|
Mr. Ryder seemed to think for a moment.
|
|
|
|
"There used to be many such cases right after the war," he said,
|
|
"but it has been so long that I have forgotten them. There are
|
|
very few now. But tell me your story, and it may refresh my
|
|
memory."
|
|
|
|
She sat back farther in her chair so as to be more comfortable,
|
|
and folded her withered hands in her lap.
|
|
|
|
"My name's 'Liza," she began, "'Liza Jane. Wen I wuz young I
|
|
us'ter b'long ter Marse Bob Smif, down in old Missourn. I wuz
|
|
bawn down dere. W'en I wuz a gal I wuz married ter a man named
|
|
Jim. But Jim died, an' after dat I married a merlatter man named
|
|
Sam Taylor. Sam wuz free-bawn, but his mammy and daddy died, an'
|
|
de w'ite folks 'prenticed him ter my marster fer ter work fer 'im
|
|
'tel he wuz growed up. Sam worked in de fiel', an' I wuz de cook.
|
|
One day Ma'y Ann, ole miss's maid, come rushin' out ter de
|
|
kitchen, an' says she, ''Liza Jane, ole marse gwine sell yo' Sam
|
|
down de ribber.'
|
|
|
|
"'Go way f'm yere,' says I; 'my husban's free!'
|
|
|
|
"'Don' make no diff'ence. I heerd ole marse tell ole miss he wuz
|
|
gwine take yo' Sam 'way wid 'im ter-morrow, fer he needed money,
|
|
an' he knowed whar he could git a t'ousan' dollars fer Sam an' no
|
|
questions axed.'
|
|
|
|
"W'en Sam come home f'm de fiel', dat night, I tole him 'bout ole
|
|
marse gwine steal 'im, an' Sam run erway. His time wuz mos' up,
|
|
an' he swo' dat w'en he wuz twenty-one he would come back an' he'p
|
|
me run erway, er else save up de money ter buy my freedom. An' I
|
|
know he'd 'a' done it, fer he thought a heap er me, Sam did. But
|
|
w'en he come back he didn' fin' me, fer I wuzn' dere. Ole marse
|
|
had heerd dat I warned Sam, so he had me whip' an' sol' down de
|
|
ribber.
|
|
|
|
"Den de wah broke out, an' w'en it wuz ober de cullud folks wuz
|
|
scattered. I went back ter de ole home; but Sam wuzn' dere, an' I
|
|
couldn' l'arn nuffin' 'bout 'im. But I knowed he'd be'n dere to
|
|
look fer me an' hadn' foun' me, an' had gone erway ter hunt fer
|
|
me.
|
|
|
|
"I's be'n lookin' fer 'im eber sence," she added simply, as though
|
|
twenty-five years were but a couple of weeks, "an' I knows he's
|
|
be'n lookin' fer me. Fer he sot a heap er sto' by me, Sam did,
|
|
an' I know he's be'n huntin' fer me all dese years,--'less'n he's
|
|
be'n sick er sump'n, so he couldn' work, er out'n his head, so he
|
|
couldn' 'member his promise. I went back down de ribber, fer I
|
|
'lowed he'd gone down dere lookin' fer me. I's be'n ter Noo
|
|
Orleens, an' Atlanty, an' Charleston, an' Richmon'; an' w'en I'd
|
|
be'n all ober de Souf I come ter de Norf. Fer I knows I'll fin'
|
|
'im some er dese days," she added softly, "er he'll fin' me, an'
|
|
den we'll bofe be as happy in freedom as we wuz in de ole days
|
|
befo' de wah." A smile stole over her withered countenance as she
|
|
paused a moment, and her bright eyes softened into a far-away
|
|
look.
|
|
|
|
This was the substance of the old woman's story. She had wandered
|
|
a little here and there. Mr. Ryder was looking at her curiously
|
|
when she finished.
|
|
|
|
"How have you lived all these years?" he asked.
|
|
|
|
"Cookin', suh. I's a good cook. Does you know anybody w'at needs
|
|
a good cook, suh? I's stoppin' wid a cullud fam'ly roun' de
|
|
corner yonder 'tel I kin fin' a place."
|
|
|
|
"Do you really expect to find your husband? He may be dead long
|
|
ago."
|
|
|
|
She shook her head emphatically. "Oh no, he ain' dead. De signs
|
|
an' de tokens tells me. I dremp three nights runnin' on'y dis
|
|
las' week dat I foun' him."
|
|
|
|
"He may have married another woman. Your slave marriage would not
|
|
have prevented him, for you never lived with him after the war,
|
|
and without that your marriage doesn't count."
|
|
|
|
"Wouldn' make no diff'ence wid Sam. He wouldn' marry no yuther
|
|
'ooman 'tel he foun' out 'bout me. I knows it," she added.
|
|
"Sump'n's be'n tellin' me all dese years dat I's gwine fin' Sam
|
|
'fo I dies."
|
|
|
|
"Perhaps he's outgrown you, and climbed up in the world where he
|
|
wouldn't care to have you find him."
|
|
|
|
"No, indeed, suh," she replied, "Sam ain' dat kin' er man. He wuz
|
|
good ter me, Sam wuz, but he wuzn' much good ter nobody e'se, fer
|
|
he wuz one er de triflin'es' han's on de plantation. I 'spec's
|
|
ter haf ter suppo't 'im w'en I fin' 'im, fer he nebber would work
|
|
'less'n he had ter. But den he wuz free, an' he didn' git no pay
|
|
fer his work, an' I don' blame 'im much. Mebbe he's done better
|
|
sence he run erway, but I ain' 'spectin' much."
|
|
|
|
"You may have passed him on the street a hundred times during the
|
|
twenty-five years, and not have known him; time works great
|
|
changes."
|
|
|
|
She smiled incredulously. "I'd know 'im 'mongs' a hund'ed men.
|
|
Fer dey wuzn' no yuther merlatter man like my man Sam, an' I
|
|
couldn' be mistook. I's toted his picture roun' wid me twenty-
|
|
five years."
|
|
|
|
"May I see it?" asked Mr. Ryder. "It might help me to remember
|
|
whether I have seen the original."
|
|
|
|
As she drew a small parcel from her bosom, he saw that it was
|
|
fastened to a string that went around her neck. Removing several
|
|
wrappers, she brought to light an old-fashioned daguerreotype in a
|
|
black case. He looked long and intently at the portrait. It was
|
|
faded with time, but the features were still distinct, and it was
|
|
easy to see what manner of man it had represented.
|
|
|
|
He closed the case, and with a slow movement handed it back to
|
|
her.
|
|
|
|
"I don't know of any man in town who goes by that name," he said,
|
|
"nor have I heard of any one making such inquiries. But if you
|
|
will leave me your address, I will give the matter some attention,
|
|
and if I find out anything I will let you know."
|
|
|
|
She gave him the number of a house in the neighborhood, and went
|
|
away, after thanking him warmly.
|
|
|
|
He wrote down the address on the flyleaf of the volume of
|
|
Tennyson, and, when she had gone, rose to his feet and stood
|
|
looking after her curiously. As she walked down the street with
|
|
mincing step, he saw several persons whom she passed turn and look
|
|
back at her with a smile of kindly amusement. When she had turned
|
|
the corner, he went upstairs to his bedroom, and stood for a long
|
|
time before the mirror of his dressing-case, gazing thoughtfully
|
|
at the reflection of his own face.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
III.
|
|
|
|
|
|
At eight o'clock the ballroom was a blaze of light and the guests
|
|
had begun to assemble; for there was a literary programme and some
|
|
routine business of the society to be gone through with before the
|
|
dancing. A black servant in evening dress waited at the door and
|
|
directed the guests to the dressing-rooms.
|
|
|
|
The occasion was long memorable among the colored people of the
|
|
city; not alone for the dress and display, but for the high
|
|
average of intelligence and culture that distinguished the
|
|
gathering as a whole. There were a number of school-teachers,
|
|
several young doctors, three or four lawyers, some professional
|
|
singers, an editor, a lieutenant in the United States army
|
|
spending his furlough in the city, and others in various polite
|
|
callings; these were colored, though most of them would not have
|
|
attracted even a casual glance because of any marked difference
|
|
from white people. Most of the ladies were in evening costume,
|
|
and dress coats and dancing-pumps were the rule among the men. A
|
|
band of string music, stationed in an alcove behind a row of
|
|
palms, played popular airs while the guests were gathering.
|
|
|
|
The dancing began at half past nine. At eleven o'clock supper was
|
|
served. Mr. Ryder had left the ballroom some little time before
|
|
the intermission, but reappeared at the supper-table. The spread
|
|
was worthy of the occasion, and the guests did full justice to it.
|
|
When the coffee had been served, the toastmaster, Mr. Solomon
|
|
Sadler, rapped for order. He made a brief introductory speech,
|
|
complimenting host and guests, and then presented in their order
|
|
the toasts of the evening. They were responded to with a very
|
|
fair display of after-dinner wit.
|
|
|
|
"The last toast," said the toast-master, when he reached the end
|
|
of the list, "is one which must appeal to us all. There is no one
|
|
of us of the sterner sex who is not at some time dependent upon
|
|
woman,--in infancy for protection, in manhood for companionship,
|
|
in old age for care and comforting. Our good host has been trying
|
|
to live alone, but the fair faces I see around me to-night prove
|
|
that he too is largely dependent upon the gentler sex for most
|
|
that makes life worth living,--the society and love of friends,--
|
|
and rumor is at fault if he does not soon yield entire subjection
|
|
to one of them. Mr. Ryder will now respond to the toast,--The
|
|
Ladies."
|
|
|
|
There was a pensive look in Mr. Ryder's eyes as he took the floor
|
|
and adjusted his eyeglasses. He began by speaking of woman as the
|
|
gift of Heaven to man, and after some general observations on the
|
|
relations of the sexes he said: "But perhaps the quality which
|
|
most distinguishes woman is her fidelity and devotion to those she
|
|
loves. History is full of examples, but has recorded none more
|
|
striking than one which only to-day came under my notice."
|
|
|
|
He then related, simply but effectively, the story told by his
|
|
visitor of the afternoon. He told it in the same soft dialect,
|
|
which came readily to his lips, while the company listened
|
|
attentively and sympathetically. For the story had awakened a
|
|
responsive thrill in many hearts. There were some present who had
|
|
seen, and others who had heard their fathers and grandfathers
|
|
tell, the wrongs and sufferings of this past generation, and all
|
|
of them still felt, in their darker moments, the shadow hanging
|
|
over them. Mr. Ryder went on:--
|
|
|
|
"Such devotion and such confidence are rare even among women.
|
|
There are many who would have searched a year, some who would have
|
|
waited five years, a few who might have hoped ten years; but for
|
|
twenty-five years this woman has retained her affection for and
|
|
her faith in a man she has not seen or heard of in all that time.
|
|
|
|
"She came to me to-day in the hope that I might be able to help
|
|
her find this long-lost husband. And when she was gone I gave my
|
|
fancy rein, and imagined a case I will put to you.
|
|
|
|
"Suppose that this husband, soon after his escape, had learned
|
|
that his wife had been sold away, and that such inquiries as he
|
|
could make brought no information of her whereabouts. Suppose
|
|
that he was young, and she much older than he; that he was light,
|
|
and she was black; that their marriage was a slave marriage, and
|
|
legally binding only if they chose to make it so after the war.
|
|
Suppose, too, that he made his way to the North, as some of us
|
|
have done, and there, where he had larger opportunities, had
|
|
improved them, and had in the course of all these years grown to
|
|
be as different from the ignorant boy who ran away from fear of
|
|
slavery as the day is from the night. Suppose, even, that he had
|
|
qualified himself, by industry, by thrift, and by study, to win
|
|
the friendship and be considered worthy the society of such people
|
|
as these I see around me to-night, gracing my board and filling my
|
|
heart with gladness; for I am old enough to remember the day when
|
|
such a gathering would not have been possible in this land.
|
|
Suppose, too, that, as the years went by, this man's memory of the
|
|
past grew more and more indistinct, until at last it was rarely,
|
|
except in his dreams, that any image of this bygone period rose
|
|
before his mind. And then suppose that accident should bring to
|
|
his knowledge the fact that the wife of his youth, the wife he had
|
|
left behind him,--not one who had walked by his side and kept pace
|
|
with him in his upward struggle, but one upon whom advancing years
|
|
and a laborious life had set their mark,--was alive and seeking
|
|
him, but that he was absolutely safe from recognition or
|
|
discovery, unless he chose to reveal himself. My friends, what
|
|
would the man do? I will suppose that he was one who loved honor,
|
|
and tried to deal justly with all men. I will even carry the case
|
|
further, and suppose that perhaps he had set his heart upon
|
|
another, whom he had hoped to call his own. What would he do, or
|
|
rather what ought he to do, in such a crisis of a lifetime?
|
|
|
|
"It seemed to me that he might hesitate, and I imagined that I was
|
|
an old friend, a near friend, and that he had come to me for
|
|
advice; and I argued the case with him. I tried to discuss it
|
|
impartially. After we had looked upon the matter from every point
|
|
of view, I said to him, in words that we all know:
|
|
|
|
|
|
'This above all: to thine own self be true,
|
|
And it must follow, as the night the day,
|
|
Thou canst not then be false to any man.'
|
|
|
|
|
|
Then, finally, I put the question to him, 'Shall you acknowledge
|
|
her?'
|
|
|
|
"And now, ladies and gentlemen, friends and companions, I ask you,
|
|
what should he have done?"
|
|
|
|
There was something in Mr. Ryder's voice that stirred the hearts
|
|
of those who sat around him. It suggested more than mere sympathy
|
|
with an imaginary situation; it seemed rather in the nature of a
|
|
personal appeal. It was observed, too, that his look rested more
|
|
especially upon Mrs. Dixon, with a mingled expression of
|
|
renunciation and inquiry.
|
|
|
|
She had listened, with parted lips and streaming eyes. She was
|
|
the first to speak: "He should have acknowledged her."
|
|
|
|
"Yes," they all echoed, "he should have acknowledged her."
|
|
|
|
"My friends and companions," responded Mr. Ryder, "I thank you,
|
|
one and all. It is the answer I expected, for I knew your
|
|
hearts."
|
|
|
|
He turned and walked toward the closed door of an adjoining room,
|
|
while every eye followed him in wondering curiosity. He came back
|
|
in a moment, leading by the hand his visitor of the afternoon, who
|
|
stood startled and trembling at the sudden plunge into this scene
|
|
of brilliant gayety. She was neatly dressed in gray, and wore the
|
|
white cap of an elderly woman.
|
|
|
|
"Ladies and gentlemen," he said, "this is the woman, and I am the
|
|
man, whose story I have told you. Permit me to introduce to you
|
|
the wife of my youth."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE BOUQUET
|
|
by Charles W. Chesnutt
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mary Myrover's friends were somewhat surprised when she began to
|
|
teach a colored school. Miss Myrover's friends are mentioned
|
|
here, because nowhere more than in a Southern town is public
|
|
opinion a force which cannot be lightly contravened. Public
|
|
opinion, however, did not oppose Miss Myrover's teaching colored
|
|
children; in fact, all the colored public schools in town--and
|
|
there were several--were taught by white teachers, and had been so
|
|
taught since the state had undertaken to provide free public
|
|
instruction for all children within its boundaries. Previous to
|
|
that time there had been a Freedman's Bureau school and a
|
|
Presbyterian missionary school, but these had been withdrawn when
|
|
the need for them became less pressing. The colored people of the
|
|
town had been for some time agitating their right to teach their
|
|
own schools, but as yet the claim had not been conceded.
|
|
|
|
The reason Miss Myrover's course created some surprise was not,
|
|
therefore, the fact that a Southern white woman should teach a
|
|
colored school; it lay in the fact that up to this time no woman
|
|
of just her quality had taken up such work. Most of the teachers
|
|
of colored schools were not of those who had constituted the
|
|
aristocracy of the old regime; they might be said rather to
|
|
represent the new order of things, in which labor was in time to
|
|
become honorable, and men were, after a somewhat longer time, to
|
|
depend, for their place in society, upon themselves rather than
|
|
upon their ancestors. But Mary Myrover belonged to one of the
|
|
proudest of the old families. Her ancestors had been people of
|
|
distinction in Virginia before a collateral branch of the main
|
|
stock had settled in North Carolina. Before the war they had been
|
|
able to live up to their pedigree. But the war brought sad
|
|
changes. Miss Myrover's father--the Colonel Myrover who led a
|
|
gallant but desperate charge at Vicksburg--had fallen on the
|
|
battlefield, and his tomb in the white cemetery was a shrine for
|
|
the family. On the Confederate Memorial Day no other grave was so
|
|
profusely decorated with flowers, and in the oration pronounced
|
|
the name of Colonel Myrover was always used to illustrate the
|
|
highest type of patriotic devotion and self-sacrifice. Miss
|
|
Myrover's brother, too, had fallen in the conflict; but his bones
|
|
lay in some unknown trench, with those of a thousand others who
|
|
had fallen on the same field. Ay, more, her lover, who had hoped
|
|
to come home in the full tide of victory and claim his bride as a
|
|
reward for gallantry, had shared the fate of her father and
|
|
brother. When the war was over, the remnant of the family found
|
|
itself involved in the common ruin,--more deeply involved, indeed,
|
|
than some others; for Colonel Myrover had believed in the ultimate
|
|
triumph of his cause, and had invested most of his wealth in
|
|
Confederate bonds, which were now only so much waste paper.
|
|
|
|
There had been a little left. Mrs. Myrover was thrifty, and had
|
|
laid by a few hundred dollars, which she kept in the house to meet
|
|
unforeseen contingencies. There remained, too, their home, with
|
|
an ample garden and a well-stocked orchard, besides a considerable
|
|
tract of country land, partly cleared, but productive of very
|
|
little revenue.
|
|
|
|
With their shrunken resources, Miss Myrover and her mother were
|
|
able to hold up their heads without embarrassment for some years
|
|
after the close of the war. But when things were adjusted to the
|
|
changed conditions, and the stream of life began to flow more
|
|
vigorously in the new channels, they saw themselves in danger of
|
|
dropping behind, unless in some way they could add to their meagre
|
|
income. Miss Myrover looked over the field of employment, never
|
|
very wide for women in the South, and found it occupied. The only
|
|
available position she could be supposed prepared to fill, and
|
|
which she could take without distinct loss of caste, was that of a
|
|
teacher, and there was no vacancy except in one of the colored
|
|
schools. Even teaching was a doubtful experiment; it was not what
|
|
she would have preferred, but it was the best that could be done.
|
|
|
|
"I don't like it, Mary," said her mother. "It's a long step from
|
|
owning such people to teaching them. What do they need with
|
|
education? It will only make them unfit for work."
|
|
|
|
"They're free now, mother, and perhaps they'll work better if
|
|
they're taught something. Besides, it's only a business
|
|
arrangement, and doesn't involve any closer contact than we have
|
|
with our servants."
|
|
|
|
"Well, I should say not!" sniffed the old lady. "Not one of them
|
|
will ever dare to presume on your position to take any liberties
|
|
with us. I'll see to that."
|
|
|
|
Miss Myrover began her work as a teacher in the autumn, at the
|
|
opening of the school year. It was a novel experience at first.
|
|
Though there always had been negro servants in the house, and
|
|
though on the streets colored people were more numerous than her
|
|
own people, and though she was so familiar with their dialect that
|
|
she might almost be said to speak it, barring certain
|
|
characteristic grammatical inaccuracies, she had never been
|
|
brought in personal contact with so many of them at once as when
|
|
she confronted the fifty or sixty faces--of colors ranging from a
|
|
white almost as clear as her own to the darkest livery of the sun--
|
|
which were gathered in the schoolroom on the morning when she
|
|
began her duties. Some of the inherited prejudice of her caste,
|
|
too, made itself felt, though she tried to repress any outward
|
|
sign of it; and she could perceive that the children were not
|
|
altogether responsive; they, likewise, were not entirely free from
|
|
antagonism. The work was unfamiliar to her. She was not
|
|
physically very strong, and at the close of the first day she went
|
|
home with a splitting headache. If she could have resigned then
|
|
and there without causing comment or annoyance to others, she
|
|
would have felt it a privilege to do so. But a night's rest
|
|
banished her headache and improved her spirits, and the next
|
|
morning she went to her work with renewed vigor, fortified by the
|
|
experience of the first day.
|
|
|
|
Miss Myrover's second day was more satisfactory. She had some
|
|
natural talent for organization, though she had never known it,
|
|
and in the course of the day she got her classes formed and
|
|
lessons under way. In a week or two she began to classify her
|
|
pupils in her own mind, as bright or stupid, mischievous or well
|
|
behaved, lazy or industrious, as the case might be, and to
|
|
regulate her discipline accordingly. That she had come of a long
|
|
line of ancestors who had exercised authority and mastership was
|
|
perhaps not without its effect upon her character, and enabled her
|
|
more readily to maintain good order in the school. When she was
|
|
fairly broken in she found the work rather to her liking, and
|
|
derived much pleasure from such success as she achieved as a
|
|
teacher.
|
|
|
|
It was natural that she should be more attracted to some of her
|
|
pupils than to others. Perhaps her favorite--or rather, the one
|
|
she liked best, for she was too fair and just for conscious
|
|
favoritism--was Sophy Tucker. Just the ground for the teacher's
|
|
liking for Sophy might not at first be apparent. The girl was far
|
|
from the whitest of Miss Myrover's pupils; in fact, she was one of
|
|
the darker ones. She was not the brightest in intellect, though
|
|
she always tried to learn her lessons. She was not the best
|
|
dressed, for her mother was a poor widow, who went out washing and
|
|
scrubbing for a living. Perhaps the real tie between them was
|
|
Sophy's intense devotion to the teacher. It had manifested itself
|
|
almost from the first day of the school, in the rapt look of
|
|
admiration Miss Myrover always saw on the little black face turned
|
|
toward her. In it there was nothing of envy, nothing of regret;
|
|
nothing but worship for the beautiful white lady--she was not
|
|
especially handsome, but to Sophy her beauty was almost divine--
|
|
who had come to teach her. If Miss Myrover dropped a book, Sophy
|
|
was the first to spring and pick it up; if she wished a chair
|
|
moved, Sophy seemed to anticipate her wish; and so of all the
|
|
numberless little services that can be rendered in a school-room.
|
|
|
|
Miss Myrover was fond of flowers, and liked to have them about
|
|
her. The children soon learned of this taste of hers, and kept
|
|
the vases on her desk filled with blossoms during their season.
|
|
Sophy was perhaps the most active in providing them. If she could
|
|
not get garden flowers, she would make excursions to the woods in
|
|
the early morning, and bring in great dew-laden bunches of bay, or
|
|
jasmine, or some other fragrant forest flower which she knew the
|
|
teacher loved.
|
|
|
|
"When I die, Sophy," Miss Myrover said to the child one day, "I
|
|
want to be covered with roses. And when they bury me, I'm sure I
|
|
shall rest better if my grave is banked with flowers, and roses
|
|
are planted at my head and at my feet."
|
|
|
|
Miss Myrover was at first amused at Sophy's devotion; but when she
|
|
grew more accustomed to it, she found it rather to her liking. It
|
|
had a sort of flavor of the old regime, and she felt, when she
|
|
bestowed her kindly notice upon her little black attendant, some
|
|
of the feudal condescension of the mistress toward the slave. She
|
|
was kind to Sophy, and permitted her to play the role she had
|
|
assumed, which caused sometimes a little jealousy among the other
|
|
girls. Once she gave Sophy a yellow ribbon which she took from
|
|
her own hair. The child carried it home, and cherished it as a
|
|
priceless treasure, to be worn only on the greatest occasions.
|
|
|
|
Sophy had a rival in her attachment to the teacher, but the
|
|
rivalry was altogether friendly. Miss Myrover had a little dog, a
|
|
white spaniel, answering to the name of Prince. Prince was a dog
|
|
of high degree, and would have very little to do with the children
|
|
of the school; he made an exception, however, in the case of
|
|
Sophy, whose devotion for his mistress he seemed to comprehend.
|
|
He was a clever dog, and could fetch and carry, sit up on his
|
|
haunches, extend his paw to shake hands, and possessed several
|
|
other canine accomplishments. He was very fond of his mistress,
|
|
and always, unless shut up at home, accompanied her to school,
|
|
where he spent most of his time lying under the teacher's desk,
|
|
or, in cold weather, by the stove, except when he would go out now
|
|
and then and chase an imaginary rabbit round the yard, presumably
|
|
for exercise.
|
|
|
|
At school Sophy and Prince vied with each other in their
|
|
attentions to Miss Myrover. But when school was over, Prince went
|
|
away with her, and Sophy stayed behind; for Miss Myrover was white
|
|
and Sophy was black, which they both understood perfectly well.
|
|
Miss Myrover taught the colored children, but she could not be
|
|
seen with them in public. If they occasionally met her on the
|
|
street, they did not expect her to speak to them, unless she
|
|
happened to be alone and no other white person was in sight. If
|
|
any of the children felt slighted, she was not aware of it, for
|
|
she intended no slight; she had not been brought up to speak to
|
|
negroes on the street, and she could not act differently from
|
|
other people. And though she was a woman of sentiment and capable
|
|
of deep feeling, her training had been such that she hardly
|
|
expected to find in those of darker hue than herself the same
|
|
susceptibility--varying in degree, perhaps, but yet the same in
|
|
kind--that gave to her own life the alternations of feeling that
|
|
made it most worth living.
|
|
|
|
Once Miss Myrover wished to carry home a parcel of books. She had
|
|
the bundle in her hand when Sophy came up.
|
|
|
|
"Lemme tote yo' bundle fer yer, Miss Ma'y?" she asked eagerly.
|
|
"I'm gwine yo' way."
|
|
|
|
"Thank you, Sophy," was the reply. "I'll be glad if you will."
|
|
|
|
Sophy followed the teacher at a respectful distance. When they
|
|
reached Miss Myrover's home Sophy carried the bundle to the
|
|
doorstep, where Miss Myrover took it and thanked her.
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Myrover came out on the piazza as Sophy was moving away. She
|
|
said, in the child's hearing, and perhaps with the intention that
|
|
she should hear: "Mary, I wish you wouldn't let those little
|
|
darkies follow you to the house. I don't want them in the yard.
|
|
I should think you'd have enough of them all day."
|
|
|
|
"Very well, mother," replied her daughter. "I won't bring any
|
|
more of them. The child was only doing me a favor."
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Myrover was an invalid, and opposition or irritation of any
|
|
kind brought on nervous paroxysms that made her miserable, and
|
|
made life a burden to the rest of the household; so that Mary
|
|
seldom crossed her whims. She did not bring Sophy to the house
|
|
again, nor did Sophy again offer her services as porter.
|
|
|
|
One day in spring Sophy brought her teacher a bouquet of yellow
|
|
roses.
|
|
|
|
"Dey come off'n my own bush, Miss Ma'y," she said proudly, "an' I
|
|
didn' let nobody e'se pull 'em, but saved 'em all fer you, 'cause
|
|
I know you likes roses so much. I'm gwine bring 'em all ter you
|
|
as long as dey las'."
|
|
|
|
"Thank you, Sophy," said the teacher; "you are a very good girl."
|
|
|
|
For another year Mary Myrover taught the colored school, and did
|
|
excellent service. The children made rapid progress under her
|
|
tuition, and learned to love her well; for they saw and
|
|
appreciated, as well as children could, her fidelity to a trust
|
|
that she might have slighted, as some others did, without much
|
|
fear of criticism. Toward the end of her second year she
|
|
sickened, and after a brief illness died.
|
|
|
|
Old Mrs. Myrover was inconsolable. She ascribed her daughter's
|
|
death to her labors as teacher of negro children. Just how the
|
|
color of the pupils had produced the fatal effects she did not
|
|
stop to explain. But she was too old, and had suffered too deeply
|
|
from the war, in body and mind and estate, ever to reconcile
|
|
herself to the changed order of things following the return of
|
|
peace; and with an unsound yet not unnatural logic, she visited
|
|
some of her displeasure upon those who had profited most, though
|
|
passively, by her losses.
|
|
|
|
"I always feared something would happen to Mary," she said. "It
|
|
seemed unnatural for her to be wearing herself out teaching little
|
|
negroes who ought to have been working for her. But the world has
|
|
hardly been a fit place to live in since the war, and when I
|
|
follow her, as I must before long, I shall not be sorry to go."
|
|
|
|
She gave strict orders that no colored people should be admitted
|
|
to the house. Some of her friends heard of this, and
|
|
remonstrated. They knew the teacher was loved by the pupils, and
|
|
felt that sincere respect from the humble would be a worthy
|
|
tribute to the proudest. But Mrs. Myrover was obdurate.
|
|
|
|
"They had my daughter when she was alive," she said, "and they've
|
|
killed her. But she's mine now, and I won't have them come near
|
|
her. I don't want one of them at the funeral or anywhere around."
|
|
|
|
For a month before Miss Myrover's death Sophy had been watching
|
|
her rosebush--the one that bore the yellow roses--for the first
|
|
buds of spring, and when these appeared had awaited impatiently
|
|
their gradual unfolding. But not until her teacher's death had
|
|
they become full-blown roses. When Miss Myrover died, Sophy
|
|
determined to pluck the roses and lay them on her coffin.
|
|
Perhaps, she thought, they might even put them in her hand or on
|
|
her breast. For Sophy remembered Miss Myrover's thanks and praise
|
|
when she had brought her the yellow roses the spring before.
|
|
|
|
On the morning of the day set for the funeral Sophy washed her
|
|
face until it shone, combed and brushed her hair with painful
|
|
conscientiousness, put on her best frock, plucked her yellow
|
|
roses, and, tying them with the treasured ribbon her teacher had
|
|
given her, set out for Miss Myrover's home.
|
|
|
|
She went round to the side gate--the house stood on a corner--and
|
|
stole up the path to the kitchen. A colored woman, whom she did
|
|
not know, came to the door.
|
|
|
|
"W'at yer want, chile?" she inquired.
|
|
|
|
"Kin I see Miss Ma'y?" asked Sophy timidly.
|
|
|
|
"I don' know, honey. Ole Miss Myrover say she don' want no cullud
|
|
folks roun' de house endyoin' dis fun'al. I'll look an' see if
|
|
she's roun' de front room, whar de co'pse is. You sed-down heah
|
|
an' keep still, an' ef she's upstairs maybe I kin git yer in dere
|
|
a minute. Ef I can't, I kin put yo' bokay 'mongs' de res', whar
|
|
she won't know nuthin' erbout it."
|
|
|
|
A moment after she had gone there was a step in the hall, and old
|
|
Mrs. Myrover came into the kitchen.
|
|
|
|
"Dinah!" she said in a peevish tone. "Dinah!"
|
|
|
|
Receiving no answer, Mrs. Myrover peered around the kitchen, and
|
|
caught sight of Sophy.
|
|
|
|
"What are you doing here?" she demanded.
|
|
|
|
"I--I'm-m waitin' ter see de cook, ma'am," stammered Sophy.
|
|
|
|
"The cook isn't here now. I don't know where she is. Besides, my
|
|
daughter is to be buried to-day, and I won't have any one visiting
|
|
the servants until the funeral is over. Come back some other day,
|
|
or see the cook at her own home in the evening."
|
|
|
|
She stood waiting for the child to go, and under the keen glance
|
|
of her eyes Sophy, feeling as though she had been caught in some
|
|
disgraceful act, hurried down the walk and out of the gate, with
|
|
her bouquet in her hand.
|
|
|
|
"Dinah," said Mrs. Myrover, when the cook came back, "I don't want
|
|
any strange people admitted here to-day. The house will be full
|
|
of our friends, and we have no room for others."
|
|
|
|
"Yas'm," said the cook. She understood perfectly what her
|
|
mistress meant; and what the cook thought about her mistress was a
|
|
matter of no consequence.
|
|
|
|
The funeral services were held at St. John's Episcopal Church,
|
|
where the Myrovers had always worshiped. Quite a number of Miss
|
|
Myrover's pupils went to the church to attend the services. The
|
|
church was not a large one. There was a small gallery at the
|
|
rear, to which colored people were admitted, if they chose to
|
|
come, at ordinary services; and those who wished to be present at
|
|
the funeral supposed that the usual custom would prevail. They
|
|
were therefore surprised, when they went to the side entrance, by
|
|
which colored people gained access to the gallery stairs, to be
|
|
met by an usher who barred their passage.
|
|
|
|
"I'm sorry," he said, "but I have had orders to admit no one until
|
|
the friends of the family have all been seated. If you wish to
|
|
wait until the white people have all gone in, and there's any room
|
|
left, you may be able to get into the back part of the gallery.
|
|
Of course I can't tell yet whether there'll be any room or not."
|
|
|
|
Now the statement of the usher was a very reasonable one; but,
|
|
strange to say, none of the colored people chose to remain except
|
|
Sophy. She still hoped to use her floral offering for its
|
|
destined end, in some way, though she did not know just how. She
|
|
waited in the yard until the church was filled with white people,
|
|
and a number who could not gain admittance were standing about the
|
|
doors. Then she went round to the side of the church, and,
|
|
depositing her bouquet carefully on an old mossy gravestone,
|
|
climbed up on the projecting sill of a window near the chancel.
|
|
The window was of stained glass, of somewhat ancient make. The
|
|
church was old, had indeed been built in colonial times, and the
|
|
stained glass had been brought from England. The design of the
|
|
window showed Jesus blessing little children. Time had dealt
|
|
gently with the window; but just at the feet of the figure of
|
|
Jesus a small triangular piece of glass had been broken out. To
|
|
this aperture Sophy applied her eyes, and through it saw and heard
|
|
what she could of the services within.
|
|
|
|
Before the chancel, on trestles draped in black, stood the sombre
|
|
casket in which lay all that was mortal of her dear teacher. The
|
|
top of the casket was covered with flowers; and lying stretched
|
|
out underneath it she saw Miss Myrover's little white dog, Prince.
|
|
He had followed the body to the church, and, slipping in unnoticed
|
|
among the mourners, had taken his place, from which no one had the
|
|
heart to remove him.
|
|
|
|
The white-robed rector read the solemn service for the dead, and
|
|
then delivered a brief address, in which he spoke of the
|
|
uncertainty of life, and, to the believer, the certain blessedness
|
|
of eternity. He spoke of Miss Myrover's kindly spirit, and, as an
|
|
illustration of her love and self-sacrifice for others, referred
|
|
to her labors as a teacher of the poor ignorant negroes who had
|
|
been placed in their midst by an all-wise Providence, and whom it
|
|
was their duty to guide and direct in the station in which God had
|
|
put them. Then the organ pealed, a prayer was said, and the long
|
|
cortege moved from the church to the cemetery, about half a mile
|
|
away, where the body was to be interred.
|
|
|
|
When the services were over, Sophy sprang down from her perch,
|
|
and, taking her flowers, followed the procession. She did not
|
|
walk with the rest, but at a proper and respectful distance from
|
|
the last mourner. No one noticed the little black girl with the
|
|
bunch of yellow flowers, or thought of her as interested in the
|
|
funeral.
|
|
|
|
The cortege reached the cemetery and filed slowly through the
|
|
gate; but Sophy stood outside, looking at a small sign in white
|
|
letters on a black background:--
|
|
|
|
"NOTICE. This cemetery is for white people only. Others please
|
|
keep out."
|
|
|
|
Sophy, thanks to Miss Myrover's painstaking instruction, could
|
|
read this sign very distinctly. In fact, she had often read it
|
|
before. For Sophy was a child who loved beauty, in a blind,
|
|
groping sort of way, and had sometimes stood by the fence of the
|
|
cemetery and looked through at the green mounds and shaded walks
|
|
and blooming flowers within, and wished that she could walk among
|
|
them. She knew, too, that the little sign on the gate, though so
|
|
courteously worded, was no mere formality; for she had heard how a
|
|
colored man, who had wandered into the cemetery on a hot night and
|
|
fallen asleep on the flat top of a tomb, had been arrested as a
|
|
vagrant and fined five dollars, which he had worked out on the
|
|
streets, with a ball-and-chain attachment, at twenty-five cents a
|
|
day. Since that time the cemetery gate had been locked at night.
|
|
|
|
So Sophy stayed outside, and looked through the fence. Her poor
|
|
bouquet had begun to droop by this time, and the yellow ribbon had
|
|
lost some of its freshness. Sophy could see the rector standing
|
|
by the grave, the mourners gathered round; she could faintly
|
|
distinguish the solemn words with which ashes were committed to
|
|
ashes, and dust to dust. She heard the hollow thud of the earth
|
|
falling on the coffin; and she leaned against the iron fence,
|
|
sobbing softly, until the grave was filled and rounded off, and
|
|
the wreaths and other floral pieces were disposed upon it. When
|
|
the mourners began to move toward the gate, Sophy walked slowly
|
|
down the street, in a direction opposite to that taken by most of
|
|
the people who came out.
|
|
|
|
When they had all gone away, and the sexton had come out and
|
|
locked the gate behind him, Sophy crept back. Her roses were
|
|
faded now, and from some of them the petals had fallen. She stood
|
|
there irresolute, loath to leave with her heart's desire
|
|
unsatisfied, when, as her eyes fell upon the teacher's last
|
|
resting place, she saw lying beside the new-made grave what looked
|
|
like a small bundle of white wool. Sophy's eyes lighted up with a
|
|
sudden glow.
|
|
|
|
"Prince! Here, Prince!" she called.
|
|
|
|
The little dog rose, and trotted down to the gate. Sophy pushed
|
|
the poor bouquet between the iron bars. "Take that ter Miss Ma'y,
|
|
Prince," she said, "that's a good doggie."
|
|
|
|
The dog wagged his tail intelligently, took the bouquet carefully
|
|
in his mouth, carried it to his mistress's grave, and laid it
|
|
among the other flowers. The bunch of roses was so small that
|
|
from where she stood Sophy could see only a dash of yellow against
|
|
the white background of the mass of flowers.
|
|
|
|
When Prince had performed his mission he turned his eyes toward
|
|
Sophy inquiringly, and when she gave him a nod of approval lay
|
|
down and resumed his watch by the graveside. Sophy looked at him
|
|
a moment with a feeling very much like envy, and then turned and
|
|
moved slowly away.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE CASE OF THE NEGRO
|
|
by Booker T. Washington
|
|
|
|
|
|
All attempts to settle the question of the Negro in the South by
|
|
his removal from this country have so far failed, and I think that
|
|
they are likely to fail. The next census will probably show that
|
|
we have nearly ten million black people in the United States,
|
|
about eight millions of whom are in the Southern states. In fact,
|
|
we have almost a nation within a nation. The Negro population in
|
|
the United States lacks but two millions of being as large as the
|
|
whole population of Mexico, and is nearly twice as large as that
|
|
of Canada. Our black people equal in number the combined
|
|
populations of Switzerland, Greece, Honduras, Nicaragua, Cuba,
|
|
Uraguay [sic], Santo Domingo, Paraguay, and Costa Rica. When we
|
|
consider, in connection with these facts, that the race has
|
|
doubled itself since its freedom, and is still increasing, it
|
|
hardly seems possible for any one to take seriously any scheme of
|
|
emigration from America as a method of solution. At most, even if
|
|
the government were to provide the means, but a few hundred
|
|
thousand could be transported each year. The yearly increase in
|
|
population would more than likely overbalance the number
|
|
transported. Even if it did not, the time required to get rid of
|
|
the Negro by this method would perhaps be fifty or seventy-five
|
|
years.
|
|
|
|
Some have advised that the Negro leave the South, and take up his
|
|
residence in the Northern states. I question whether this would
|
|
make him any better off than he is in the South, when all things
|
|
are considered. It has been my privilege to study the condition
|
|
of our people in nearly every part of America; and I say without
|
|
hesitation that, with some exceptional cases, the Negro is at his
|
|
best in the Southern states. While he enjoys certain privileges
|
|
in the North that he does not have in the South, when it comes to
|
|
the matter of securing property, enjoying business advantages and
|
|
employment, the South presents a far better opportunity than the
|
|
North. Few colored men from the South are as yet able to stand up
|
|
against the severe and increasing competition that exists in the
|
|
North, to say nothing of the unfriendly influence of labor
|
|
organizations, which in some way prevents black men in the North,
|
|
as a rule, from securing occupation in the line of skilled labor.
|
|
|
|
Another point of great danger for the colored man who goes North
|
|
is the matter of morals, owing to the numerous temptations by
|
|
which he finds himself surrounded. More ways offer in which he
|
|
can spend money than in the South, but fewer avenues of employment
|
|
for earning money are open to him. The fact that at the North the
|
|
Negro is almost confined to one line of occupation often tends to
|
|
discourage and demoralize the strongest who go from the South, and
|
|
makes them an easy prey for temptation. A few years ago, I made
|
|
an examination into the condition of a settlement of Negroes who
|
|
left the South and went into Kansas about twenty years since, when
|
|
there was a good deal of excitement in the South concerning
|
|
emigration from the West, and found it much below the standard of
|
|
that of similar communities in the South. The only conclusion
|
|
which any one can reach, from this and like instances, is that the
|
|
Negroes are to remain in the Southern states. As a race they do
|
|
not want to leave the South, and the Southern white people do not
|
|
want them to leave. We must therefore find some basis of
|
|
settlement that will be constitutional, just, manly; that will be
|
|
fair to both races in the South and to the whole country. This
|
|
cannot be done in a day, a year, or any short period of time. We
|
|
can, however, with the present light, decide upon a reasonably
|
|
safe method of solving the problem, and turn our strength and
|
|
effort in that direction. In doing this, I would not have the
|
|
Negro deprived of any privilege guaranteed to him by the
|
|
Constitution of the United States. It is not best for the Negro
|
|
that he relinquish any of his constitutional rights; it is not
|
|
best for the Southern white man that he should, as I shall attempt
|
|
to show in this article.
|
|
|
|
In order that we may concentrate our forces upon a wise object,
|
|
without loss of time or effort, I want to suggest what seems to me
|
|
and many others the wisest policy to be pursued. I have reached
|
|
these conclusions not only by reason of my own observations and
|
|
experience, but after eighteen years of direct contact with
|
|
leading and influential colored and white men in most parts of our
|
|
country. But I wish first to mention some elements of danger in
|
|
the present situation, which all who desire the permanent welfare
|
|
of both races in the South should carefully take into account.
|
|
|
|
First. There is danger that a certain class of impatient
|
|
extremists among the Negroes in the North, who have little
|
|
knowledge of the actual conditions in the South, may do the entire
|
|
race injury by attempting to advise their brethren in the South to
|
|
resort to armed resistance or the use of the torch, in order to
|
|
secure justice. All intelligent and well-considered discussion of
|
|
any important question, or condemnation of any wrong, whether in
|
|
the North or the South, from the public platform and through the
|
|
press, is to be commended and encouraged; but ill-considered and
|
|
incendiary utterances from black men in the North will tend to add
|
|
to the burdens of our people in the South rather than to relieve
|
|
them. We must not fall into the temptation of believing that we
|
|
can raise ourselves by abusing some one else.
|
|
|
|
Second. Another danger in the South which should be guarded
|
|
against is that the whole white South, including the wise,
|
|
conservative, law-abiding element, may find itself represented
|
|
before the bar of public opinion by the mob or lawless element,
|
|
which gives expression to its feelings and tendency in a manner
|
|
that advertises the South throughout the world; while too often
|
|
those who have no sympathy with such disregard of law are either
|
|
silent, or fail to speak in a sufficiently emphatic manner to
|
|
offset in any large degree the unfortunate reputation which the
|
|
lawless have made for many portions of the South.
|
|
|
|
Third. No race or people ever got upon its feet without severe
|
|
and constant struggle, often in the face of the greatest
|
|
discouragement. While passing through the present trying period
|
|
of its history, there is danger that a large and valuable element
|
|
of the Negro race may become discouraged in the effort to better
|
|
its condition. Every possible influence should be exerted to
|
|
prevent this.
|
|
|
|
Fourth. There is a possibility that harm may be done to the South
|
|
and to the Negro by exaggerated newspaper articles which are
|
|
written near the scene or in the midst of specially aggravating
|
|
occurrences. Often these reports are written by newspaper men,
|
|
who give the impression that there is a race conflict throughout
|
|
the South, and that all Southern white people are opposed to the
|
|
Negro's progress; overlooking the fact that though in some
|
|
sections there is trouble, in most parts of the South, if matters
|
|
are not yet in all respects as we would have them, there is
|
|
nevertheless a very large measure of peace, good will, and mutual
|
|
helpfulness. In the same relation, much can be done to retard the
|
|
progress of the Negro by a certain class of Southern white people,
|
|
who in the midst of excitement speak or write in a manner that
|
|
gives the impression that all Negroes are lawless, untrustworthy,
|
|
and shiftless. For example, a Southern writer said, not long ago,
|
|
in a communication to the New York Independent: "Even in small
|
|
towns the husband cannot venture to leave his wife alone for an
|
|
hour at night. At no time, in no place, is the white woman safe
|
|
from the insults and assaults of these creatures." These
|
|
statements, I presume, represented the feelings and the conditions
|
|
that existed, at the time of the writing, in one community or
|
|
county in the South; but thousands of Southern white men and women
|
|
would be ready to testify that this is not the condition
|
|
throughout the South, nor throughout any Southern state.
|
|
|
|
Fifth. Owing to the lack of school opportunities for the Negro in
|
|
the rural districts of the South, there is danger that ignorance
|
|
and idleness may increase to the extent of giving the Negro race a
|
|
reputation for crime, and that immorality may eat its way into the
|
|
fibre of the race so as to retard its progress for many years. In
|
|
judging the Negro we must not be too harsh. We must remember that
|
|
it has been only within the last thirty-four years that the black
|
|
father and mother have had the responsibility, and consequently
|
|
the experience, of training their own children. That perfection
|
|
has not been reached in one generation, with the obstacles that
|
|
the parents have been compelled to overcome, is not to be wondered
|
|
at.
|
|
|
|
Sixth. Finally, I would mention my fear that some of the white
|
|
people of the South may be led to feel that the way to settle the
|
|
race problem is to repress the aspirations of the Negro by
|
|
legislation of a kind that confers certain legal or political
|
|
privileges upon an ignorant and poor white man, and withholds the
|
|
same privileges from a black man in a similar condition. Such
|
|
legislation injures and retards the progress of both races. It is
|
|
an injustice to the poor white man, because it takes from him
|
|
incentive to secure education and property as prerequisites for
|
|
voting. He feels that because he is a white man, regardless of
|
|
his possessions, a way will be found for him to vote. I would
|
|
label all such measures "laws to keep the poor white man in
|
|
ignorance and poverty."
|
|
|
|
The Talladega News Reporter, a Democratic newspaper of Alabama,
|
|
recently said: "But it is a weak cry when the white man asks odds
|
|
on intelligence over the Negro. When nature has already so
|
|
handicapped the African in the race for knowledge, the cry of the
|
|
boasted Anglo-Saxon for still further odds seems babyish. What
|
|
wonder that the world looks on in surprise, if not disgust? It
|
|
cannot help but say, If our contention be true that the Negro is
|
|
an inferior race, then the odds ought to be on the other side, if
|
|
any are to be given. And why not? No; the thing to do--the only
|
|
thing that will stand the test of time--is to do right, exactly
|
|
right, let come what will. And that right thing, as it seems to
|
|
us, is to place a fair educational qualification before every
|
|
citizen,--one that is self-testing, and not dependent on the
|
|
wishes of weak men,--letting all who pass the test stand in the
|
|
proud ranks of American voters, whose votes shall be counted as
|
|
cast, and whose sovereign will shall be maintained as law by all
|
|
the powers that be. Nothing short of this will do. Every
|
|
exemption, on whatsoever ground, is an outrage that can only rob
|
|
some legitimate voter of his rights."
|
|
|
|
Such laws have been made,--in Mississippi, for example,--with the
|
|
"understanding" clause, hold out a temptation for the election
|
|
officer to perjure and degrade himself by too often deciding that
|
|
the ignorant white man does understand the Constitution when it is
|
|
read to him, and that the ignorant black man does not. By such a
|
|
law, the state not only commits a wrong against its black
|
|
citizens; it injures the morals of its white citizens by
|
|
conferring such a power upon any white man who may happen to be a
|
|
judge of elections.
|
|
|
|
Such laws are hurtful, again, because they keep alive in the heart
|
|
of the black man the feeling that the white man means to oppress
|
|
him. The only safe way out is to set a high standard as a test of
|
|
citizenship, and require blacks and whites alike to come up to it.
|
|
When this is done, both will have a higher respect for the
|
|
election laws, and for those who make them. I do not believe
|
|
that, with his centuries of advantage over the Negro in the
|
|
opportunity to acquire property and education as prerequisites for
|
|
voting, the average white man in the South desires that any
|
|
special law be passed to give him further advantage over one who
|
|
has had but a little more than thirty years in which to prepare
|
|
himself for citizenship. In this relation, another point of
|
|
danger is that the Negro has been made to feel that it is his duty
|
|
continually to oppose the Southern white man in politics, even in
|
|
matters where no principle is involved; and that he is only loyal
|
|
to his own race and acting in a manly way in thus opposing the
|
|
white man. Such a policy has proved very hurtful to both races.
|
|
Where it is a matter of principle, where a question of right or
|
|
wrong is involved, I would advise the Negro to stand by principle
|
|
at all hazards. A Southern white man has no respect for or
|
|
confidence in a Negro who acts merely for policy's sake; but there
|
|
are many cases, and the number is growing, where the Negro has
|
|
nothing to gain, and much to lose, by opposing the Southern white
|
|
man in matters that relate to government.
|
|
|
|
Under the foregoing six heads I believe I have stated some of the
|
|
main points which, all high-minded white men and black men, North
|
|
and South, will agree, need our most earnest and thoughtful
|
|
consideration, if we would hasten, and not hinder, the progress of
|
|
our country.
|
|
|
|
Now as to the policy that should be pursued. On this subject I
|
|
claim to possess no superior wisdom or unusual insight. I may be
|
|
wrong; I may be in some degree right.
|
|
|
|
In the future we want to impress upon the Negro, more than we have
|
|
done in the past, the importance of identifying himself more
|
|
closely with the interests of the South; of making himself part of
|
|
the South, and at home in it. Heretofore, for reasons which were
|
|
natural, and for which no one is especially to blame, the colored
|
|
people have been too much like a foreign nation residing in the
|
|
midst of another nation. If William Lloyd Garrison, Wendell
|
|
Phillips, or George L. Stearns were alive to-day, I feel sure that
|
|
he would advise the Negroes to identify their interests as closely
|
|
as possible with those of their white neighbors,--always
|
|
understanding that no question of right and wrong is involved. In
|
|
no other way, it seems to me, can we get a foundation for peace
|
|
and progress. He who advises against this policy will advise the
|
|
Negro to do that which no people in history, who have succeeded,
|
|
have done. The white man, North or South, who advises the Negro
|
|
against it advises him to do that which he himself has not done.
|
|
The bed rock upon which every individual rests his chances for
|
|
success in life is the friendship, the confidence, the respect, of
|
|
his next-door neighbor in the little community in which he lives.
|
|
The problem of the Negro in the South turns on whether he can make
|
|
himself of such indispensable service to his neighbor and the
|
|
community that no one can fill his place better in the body
|
|
politic. There is at present no other safe course for the black
|
|
man to pursue. If the Negro in the South has a friend in his
|
|
white neighbor, and a still larger number of friends in his own
|
|
community, he has a protection and a guarantee of his rights that
|
|
will be more potent and more lasting than any our Federal Congress
|
|
or any outside power can confer.
|
|
|
|
The London Times, in a recent editorial discussing affairs in the
|
|
Transvaal, where Englishmen have been denied certain privileges by
|
|
the Boers, says: "England is too sagacious not to prefer a gradual
|
|
reform from within, even should it be less rapid than most of us
|
|
might wish, to the most sweeping redress of grievances imposed
|
|
from without. Our object is to obtain fair play for the
|
|
Outlanders, but the best way to do it is to enable them to help
|
|
themselves." This policy, I think, is equally safe when applied
|
|
to conditions in the South. The foreigner who comes to America
|
|
identifies himself as soon as possible, in business, education,
|
|
and politics, with the community in which he settles. We have a
|
|
conspicuous example of this in the case of the Jews, who in the
|
|
South, as well as in other parts of our country, have not always
|
|
been justly treated; but the Jews have so woven themselves into
|
|
the business and patriotic interests of the communities in which
|
|
they live, have made themselves so valuable as citizens, that they
|
|
have won a place in the South which they could have obtained in no
|
|
other way. The Negro in Cuba has practically settled the race
|
|
question there, because he has made himself a part of Cuba in
|
|
thought and action.
|
|
|
|
What I have tried to indicate cannot be accomplished by any sudden
|
|
revolution of methods, but it does seem that the tendency should
|
|
be more and more in this direction. Let me emphasize this by a
|
|
practical example. The North sends thousands of dollars into the
|
|
South every year for the education of the Negro. The teachers in
|
|
most of the Southern schools supported by the North are Northern
|
|
men and women of the highest Christian culture and most unselfish
|
|
devotion. The Negro owes them a debt of gratitude which can never
|
|
be paid. The various missionary societies in the North have done
|
|
a work which to a large degree has proved the salvation of the
|
|
South, and the results of it will appear more in future
|
|
generations than in this. We have now reached the point, in the
|
|
South, where, I believe, great good could be accomplished in
|
|
changing the attitude of the white people toward the Negro, and of
|
|
the Negro toward the whites, if a few Southern white teachers, of
|
|
high character, would take an active interest in the work of our
|
|
higher schools. Can this be done? Yes. The medical school
|
|
connected with Shaw University at Raleigh, North Carolina, has
|
|
from the first had as instructors and professors almost
|
|
exclusively Southern white doctors who reside in Raleigh, and they
|
|
have given the highest satisfaction. This gives the people of
|
|
Raleigh the feeling that the school is theirs, and not something
|
|
located in, but not a part of, the South. In Augusta, Georgia,
|
|
the Payne Institute, one of the best colleges for our people, is
|
|
officered and taught almost wholly by Southern white men and
|
|
women. The Presbyterian Theological School at Tuscaloosa,
|
|
Alabama, has only Southern white men as instructors. Some time
|
|
ago, at the Calhoun School in Alabama, one of the leading white
|
|
men in the county was given an important position; since then the
|
|
feeling of the white people in the county has greatly changed
|
|
toward the school.
|
|
|
|
We must admit the stern fact that at present the Negro, through no
|
|
choice of his own, is living in the midst of another race, which
|
|
is far ahead of him in education, property, and experience; and
|
|
further, that the Negro's present condition makes him dependent
|
|
upon the white people for most of the things necessary to sustain
|
|
life, as well as, in a large measure, for his education. In all
|
|
history, those who have possessed the property and intelligence
|
|
have exercised the greatest control in government, regardless of
|
|
color, race, or geographical location. This being the case, how
|
|
can the black man in the South improve his estate? And does the
|
|
Southern white man want him to improve it? The latter part of
|
|
this question I shall attempt to answer later in this article.
|
|
|
|
The Negro in the South has it within his power, if he properly
|
|
utilizes the forces at land, to make of himself such a valuable
|
|
factor in the life of the South that for the most part he need not
|
|
seek privileges, but they will be conferred upon him. To bring
|
|
this about, the Negro must begin at the bottom and lay a sure
|
|
foundation, and not be lured by any temptation into trying to rise
|
|
on a false footing. While the Negro is laying this foundation, he
|
|
will need help and sympathy and justice from the law. Progress by
|
|
any other method will be but temporary and superficial, and the
|
|
end of it will be worse than the beginning. American slavery was
|
|
a great curse to both races, and I should be the last to apologize
|
|
for it; but in the providence of God I believe that slavery laid
|
|
the foundation for the solution of the problem that is now before
|
|
us in the South. Under slavery, the Negro was taught every trade,
|
|
every industry, that furnishes the means of earning a living. Now
|
|
if on this foundation, laid in a rather crude way, it is true, but
|
|
a foundation nevertheless, we can gradually grow and improve, the
|
|
future for us is bright. Let me be more specific. Agriculture is
|
|
or has been the basic industry of nearly every race or nation that
|
|
has succeeded. The Negro got a knowledge of this under slavery:
|
|
hence in a large measure he is in possession of this industry in
|
|
the South to-day. Taking the whole South, I should say that
|
|
eighty per cent of the Negroes live by agriculture in some form,
|
|
though it is often a very primitive and crude form. The Negro can
|
|
buy land in the South, as a rule, wherever the white man can buy
|
|
it, and at very low prices. Now, since the bulk of our people
|
|
already have a foundation in agriculture, are at their best when
|
|
living in the country engaged in agricultural pursuits, plainly,
|
|
the best thing, the logical thing, is to turn the larger part of
|
|
our strength in a direction that will put the Negroes among the
|
|
most skilled agricultural people in the world. The man who has
|
|
learned to do something better than any one else, has learned to
|
|
do a common thing in an uncommon manner, has power and influence
|
|
which no adverse surroundings can take from him. It is better to
|
|
show a man how to make a place for himself than to put him in one
|
|
that some one else has made for him. The Negro who can make
|
|
himself so conspicuous as a successful farmer, a large taxpayer, a
|
|
wise helper of his fellow men, as to be placed in a position of
|
|
trust and honor by natural selection, whether the position be
|
|
political or not, is a hundredfold more secure in that position
|
|
than one placed there by mere outside force or pressure. I know a
|
|
Negro, Hon. Isaiah T. Montgomery, in Mississippi, who is mayor of
|
|
a town; it is true that the town is composed almost wholly of
|
|
Negroes. Mr. Montgomery is mayor of this town because his genius,
|
|
thrift, and foresight have created it; and he is held and
|
|
supported in his office by a charter granted by the state of
|
|
Mississippi, and by the vote and public sentiment of the community
|
|
in which he lives.
|
|
|
|
Let us help the Negro by every means possible to acquire such an
|
|
education in farming, dairying, stock-raising, horticulture, etc.,
|
|
as will place him near the top in these industries, and the race
|
|
problem will in a large part be settled, or at least stripped of
|
|
many of its most perplexing elements. This policy would also tend
|
|
to keep the Negro in the country and smaller towns, where he
|
|
succeeds best, and stop the influx into the large cities, where he
|
|
does not succeed so well. The race, like the individual, which
|
|
produces something of superior worth that has a common human
|
|
interest, wins a permanent place, and is bound to be recognized.
|
|
|
|
At a county fair in the South, not long ago, I saw a Negro awarded
|
|
the first prize, by a jury of white men, over white competitors,
|
|
for the production of the best specimen of Indian corn. Every
|
|
white man at the fair seemed to be proud of the achievement of the
|
|
Negro, because it was apparent that he had done something that
|
|
would add to the wealth and comfort of the people of both races in
|
|
that county. At the Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute, in
|
|
Alabama, we have a department devoted to training men along the
|
|
lines of agriculture that I have named; but what we are doing is
|
|
small when compared with what should be done in Tuskegee, and at
|
|
other educational centres. In a material sense the South is still
|
|
an undeveloped country. While in some other affairs race
|
|
prejudice is strongly marked, in the matter of business, of
|
|
commercial and industrial development, there are few obstacles in
|
|
the Negro's way. A Negro who produces or has for sale something
|
|
that the community wants finds customers among white people as
|
|
well as black. Upon equal security, a Negro can borrow money at
|
|
the bank as readily as a white man can. A bank in Birmingham,
|
|
Alabama, which has existed ten years, is officered and controlled
|
|
wholly by Negroes. This bank has white borrowers and white
|
|
depositors. A graduate of the Tuskegee Institute keeps a well-
|
|
appointed grocery store in Tuskegee, and he tells me that he sells
|
|
about as many goods to one race as to the other. What I have said
|
|
of the opening that awaits the Negro in the business of
|
|
agriculture is almost equally true of mechanics, manufacturing,
|
|
and all the domestic arts. The field is before him and right
|
|
about him. Will he seize upon it? Will he "cast down his bucket
|
|
where he is"? Will his friends, North and South, encourage him
|
|
and prepare him to occupy it? Every city in the South, for
|
|
example, would give support to a first-class architect or
|
|
housebuilder or contractor of our race. The architect or
|
|
contractor would not only receive support, but through his example
|
|
numbers of young colored men would learn such trades as carpentry,
|
|
brickmasonry, plastering, painting, etc., and the race would be
|
|
put into a position to hold on to many of the industries which it
|
|
is now in danger of losing, because in too many cases brain,
|
|
skill, and dignity are not imparted to the common occupations.
|
|
Any individual or race that does not fit itself to occupy in the
|
|
best manner the field or service that is right about it will
|
|
sooner or later be asked to move on and let another take it.
|
|
|
|
But I may be asked, Would you confine the Negro to agriculture,
|
|
mechanics, the domestic arts, etc.? Not at all; but just now and
|
|
for a number of years the stress should be laid along the lines
|
|
that I have mentioned. We shall need and must have many teachers
|
|
and ministers, some doctors and lawyers and statesmen, but these
|
|
professional men will have a constituency or a foundation from
|
|
which to draw support just in proportion as the race prospers
|
|
along the economic lines that I have pointed out. During the
|
|
first fifty or one hundred years of the life of any people, are
|
|
not the economic occupations always given the greater attention?
|
|
This is not only the historic, but, I think, the common-sense
|
|
view. If this generation will lay the material foundation, it
|
|
will be the quickest and surest way for enabling later generations
|
|
to succeed in the cultivation of the fine arts, and to surround
|
|
themselves with some of the luxuries of life, if desired. What
|
|
the race most needs now, in my opinion, is a whole army of men and
|
|
women well-trained to lead, and at the same time devote
|
|
themselves to agriculture, mechanics, domestic employment, and
|
|
business. As to the mental training that these educated leaders
|
|
should be equipped with, I should say, give them all the mental
|
|
training and culture that the circumstances of individuals will
|
|
allow,--the more the better. No race can permanently succeed
|
|
until its mind is awakened and strengthened by the ripest thought.
|
|
But I would constantly have it kept in the minds of those who are
|
|
educated in books that a large proportion of those who are
|
|
educated should be so trained in hand that they can bring this
|
|
mental strength and knowledge to bear upon the physical conditions
|
|
in the South, which I have tried to emphasize.
|
|
|
|
Frederick Douglass, of sainted memory, once, in addressing his
|
|
race, used these words: "We are to prove that we can better our
|
|
own condition. One way to do this is to accumulate property.
|
|
This may sound to you like a new gospel. You have been accustomed
|
|
to hear that money is the root of all evil, etc.; on the other
|
|
hand, property, money, if you please, will purchase for us the
|
|
only condition by which any people can rise to the dignity of
|
|
genuine manhood; for without property there can be no leisure,
|
|
without leisure there can be no thought, without thought there can
|
|
be no invention, without invention there can be no progress."
|
|
|
|
The Negro should be taught that material development is not an
|
|
end, but merely a means to an end. As professor W. E. B. Du Bois
|
|
puts it, the idea should not be simply to make men carpenters, but
|
|
to make carpenters men. The Negro has a highly religious
|
|
temperament; but what he needs more and more is to be convinced of
|
|
the importance of weaving his religion and morality into the
|
|
practical affairs of daily life. Equally does he need to be
|
|
taught to put so much intelligence into his labor that he will see
|
|
dignity and beauty in the occupation, and love it for its own
|
|
sake. The Negro needs to be taught to apply more of the religion
|
|
that manifests itself in his happiness in prayer meeting to the
|
|
performance of his daily task. The man who owns a home, and is in
|
|
the possession of the elements by which he is sure of a daily
|
|
living, has a great aid to a moral and religious life. What
|
|
bearing will all this have upon the Negro's place in the South, as
|
|
a citizen and in the enjoyment of the privileges which our
|
|
government confers?
|
|
|
|
To state in detail just what place the black man will occupy in
|
|
the South as a citizen, when he has developed in the direction
|
|
named, is beyond the wisdom of any one. Much will depend upon the
|
|
sense of justice which can be kept alive in the breast of the
|
|
American people; almost as much will depend upon the good sense of
|
|
the Negro himself. That question, I confess, does not give me the
|
|
most concern just now. The important and pressing question is,
|
|
Will the Negro, with his own help and that of his friends, take
|
|
advantage of the opportunities that surround him? When he has
|
|
done this, I believe, speaking of his future in general terms,
|
|
that he will be treated with justice, be given the protection of
|
|
the law and the recognition which his usefulness and ability
|
|
warrant. If, fifty years ago, one had predicted that the Negro
|
|
would receive the recognition and honor which individuals have
|
|
already received, he would have been laughed at as an idle
|
|
dreamer. Time, patience, and constant achievement are great
|
|
factors in the rise of a race.
|
|
|
|
I do not believe that the world ever takes a race seriously, in
|
|
its desire to share in the government of a nation, until a large
|
|
number of individual members of that race have demonstrated beyond
|
|
question their ability to control and develop their own business
|
|
enterprises. Once a number of Negroes rise to the point where
|
|
they own and operate the most successful farms, are among the
|
|
largest taxpayers in their county, are moral and intelligent, I do
|
|
not believe that in many portions of the South such men need long
|
|
be denied the right of saying by their votes how they prefer their
|
|
property to be taxed, and who are to make and administer the laws.
|
|
|
|
I was walking the street of a certain town in the South lately in
|
|
company with the most prominent Negro there. While we were
|
|
together, the mayor of the town sought out the black man, and
|
|
said, "Next week we are going to vote on the question of issuing
|
|
bonds to secure water-works; you must be sure to vote on the day
|
|
of election." The mayor did not suggest whether he should vote
|
|
yes or no; but he knew that the very fact of this Negro's owning
|
|
nearly a block of the most valuable property in the town was a
|
|
guarantee that he would cast a safe, wise vote on this important
|
|
proposition. The white man knew that because of this Negro's
|
|
property interests he would cast his vote in the way he thought
|
|
would benefit every white and black citizen in the town, and not
|
|
be controlled by influences a thousand miles away. But a short
|
|
time ago I read letters from nearly every prominent white man in
|
|
Birmingham, Alabama, asking that the Rev. W. R. Pettiford, a
|
|
Negro, be appointed to a certain important federal office. What
|
|
is the explanation of this? For nine years Mr. Pettiford has been
|
|
the president of the Negro bank in Birmingham, to which I have
|
|
alluded. During these nine years, the white citizens have had the
|
|
opportunity of seeing that Mr. Pettiford can manage successfully a
|
|
private business, and that he has proved himself a conservative,
|
|
thoughtful citizen, and they are willing to trust him in a public
|
|
office. Such individual examples will have to be multiplied, till
|
|
they become more nearly the rule than the exception they now are.
|
|
While we are multiplying these examples, the Negro must keep a
|
|
strong and courageous heart. He cannot improve his condition by
|
|
any short-cut course or by artificial methods. Above all, he must
|
|
not be deluded into believing that his condition can be
|
|
permanently bettered by a mere battledoor [sic] and shuttlecock of
|
|
words, or by any process of mere mental gymnastics or oratory.
|
|
What is desired along with a logical defense of his cause are
|
|
deeds, results,--continued results, in the direction of building
|
|
himself up, so as to leave no doubt in the mind of any one of his
|
|
ability to succeed.
|
|
|
|
An important question often asked is, Does the white man in the
|
|
South want the Negro to improve his present condition? I say yes.
|
|
From the Montgomery (Alabama) Daily Advertiser I clip the
|
|
following in reference to the closing of a colored school in a
|
|
town in Alabama:--
|
|
|
|
"EUFALA, May 25, 1899. The closing exercises of the city colored
|
|
public school were held at St. Luke's A. M. E. Church last night,
|
|
and were witnessed by a large gathering, including many whites.
|
|
The recitations by the pupils were excellent, and the music was
|
|
also an interesting feature. Rev. R. T. Pollard delivered the
|
|
address, which was quite an able one, and the certificates were
|
|
presented by Professor T. L. McCoy, white, of the Sanford Street
|
|
School. The success of the exercises reflects great credit on
|
|
Professor S. M. Murphy, the principal, who enjoys a deserved good
|
|
reputation as a capable and efficient educator."
|
|
|
|
I quote this report, not because it is the exception, but because
|
|
such marks of interest in the education of the Negro on the part
|
|
of the Southern white people may be seen almost every day in the
|
|
local papers. Why should white people, by their presence, words,
|
|
and actions, encourage the black man to get education, if they do
|
|
not desire him to improve his condition?
|
|
|
|
The Payne Institute, an excellent college, to which I have already
|
|
referred, is supported almost wholly by the Southern white
|
|
Methodist church. The Southern white Presbyterians support a
|
|
theological school for Negroes at Tuscaloosa. For a number of
|
|
years the Southern white Baptists have contributed toward Negro
|
|
education. Other denominations have done the same. If these
|
|
people do not want the Negro educated to a higher standard, there
|
|
is no reason why they should pretend they do.
|
|
|
|
Though some of the lynchings in the South have indicated a
|
|
barbarous feeling toward Negroes, Southern white men here and
|
|
there, as well as newspapers, have spoken out strongly against
|
|
lynching. I quote from the address of the Rev. Mr. Vance, of
|
|
Nashville, Tennessee, delivered before the National Sunday School
|
|
Union, in Atlanta, not long since, as an example:--
|
|
|
|
"And yet, as I stand here to-night, a Southerner speaking for my
|
|
section and addressing an audience from all sections, there is one
|
|
foul blot upon the fair fame of the South, at the bare mention of
|
|
which the heart turns sick and the cheek is crimsoned with shame.
|
|
I want to lift my voice to-night in loud and long and indignant
|
|
protest against the awful horror of mob violence, which the other
|
|
day reached the climax of its madness and infamy in a deed as
|
|
black and brutal and barbarous as can be found in the annals of
|
|
human crime.
|
|
|
|
"I have a right to speak on the subject, and I propose to be
|
|
heard. The time has come for every lover of the South to set the
|
|
might of an angered and resolute manhood against the shame and
|
|
peril of the lynch demon. These people whose fiendish glee taunts
|
|
their victim as his flesh crackles in the flames do not represent
|
|
the South. I have not a syllable of apology for the sickening
|
|
crime they meant to avenge. But it is high time we were learning
|
|
that lawlessness is no remedy for crime. For one, I dare to
|
|
believe that the people of my section are able to cope with crime,
|
|
however treacherous and defiant, through their courts of justice;
|
|
and I plead for the masterful sway of a righteous and exalted
|
|
public sentiment that shall class lynch law in the category with
|
|
crime."
|
|
|
|
It is a notable and encouraging fact that no Negro educated in any
|
|
of our larger institutions of learning in the South has been
|
|
charged with any of the recent crimes connected with assaults upon
|
|
women.
|
|
|
|
If we go on making progress in the directions that I have tried to
|
|
indicate, more and more the South will be drawn to one course. As
|
|
I have already said, it is not to the best interests of the white
|
|
race of the South that the Negro be deprived of any privilege
|
|
guaranteed him by the Constitution of the United States. This
|
|
would put upon the South a burden under which no government could
|
|
stand and prosper. Every article in our Federal Constitution was
|
|
placed there with a view of stimulating and encouraging the
|
|
highest type of citizenship. To continue to tax the Negro without
|
|
giving him the right to vote, as fast as he qualifies himself in
|
|
education and property for voting, would insure the alienation of
|
|
the affections of the Negro from the state in which he lives, and
|
|
would be the reversal of the fundamental principles of government
|
|
for which our states have stood. In other ways than this the
|
|
injury would be as great to the white man as to the Negro.
|
|
Taxation without the hope of becoming voters would take away from
|
|
one third of the citizens of the Gulf states their interest in
|
|
government, and a stimulus to become taxpayers or to secure
|
|
education, and thus be able and willing to bear their share of the
|
|
cost of education and government, which now rests so heavily upon
|
|
the white taxpayers of the South. The more the Negro is
|
|
stimulated and encouraged, the sooner will he be able to bear a
|
|
larger share of the burdens of the South. We have recently had
|
|
before us an example, in the case of Spain, of a government that
|
|
left a large portion of its citizens in ignorance, and neglected
|
|
their highest interests.
|
|
|
|
As I have said elsewhere: "There is no escape, through law of man
|
|
or God, from the inevitable.
|
|
|
|
|
|
'The laws of changeless justice bind
|
|
Oppressor with oppressed;
|
|
And close as sin and suffering joined
|
|
We march to fate abreast.'
|
|
|
|
|
|
Nearly sixteen millions of hands will aid you in pulling the load
|
|
upwards, or they will pull the load downwards against you. We
|
|
shall constitute one third and more of the ignorance and crime of
|
|
the South, or one third of its intelligence and progress; we shall
|
|
contribute one third to the business and industrial prosperity of
|
|
the South, or we shall prove a veritable body of death,
|
|
stagnating, depressing, retarding every effort to advance the body
|
|
politic."
|
|
|
|
My own feeling is that the South will gradually reach the point
|
|
where it will see the wisdom and the justice of enacting an
|
|
educational or property qualification, or both, for voting, that
|
|
shall be made to apply honestly to both races. The industrial
|
|
development of the Negro in connection with education and
|
|
Christian character will help to hasten this end. When this is
|
|
done, we shall have a foundation, in my opinion, upon which to
|
|
build a government that is honest, and that will be in a high
|
|
degree satisfactory to both races.
|
|
|
|
I do not suffer myself to take too optimistic a view of the
|
|
conditions in the South. The problem is a large and serious one,
|
|
and will require the patient help, sympathy, and advice of our
|
|
most patriotic citizens, North and South, for years to come. But
|
|
I believe that if the principles which I have tried to indicate
|
|
are followed, a solution of the question will come. So long as
|
|
the Negro is permitted to get education, acquire property, and
|
|
secure employment, and is treated with respect in the business
|
|
world, as is now true in the greater part of the South, I shall
|
|
have the greatest faith in his working out his own destiny in our
|
|
Southern states. The education and preparation for citizenship of
|
|
nearly eight millions of people is a tremendous task, and every
|
|
lover of humanity should count it a privilege to help in the
|
|
solution of a problem for which our whole country is responsible.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
HOT-FOOT HANNIBAL
|
|
by Charles W. Chesnutt
|
|
|
|
|
|
"I hate and despise you! I wish never to see you or speak to you
|
|
again!"
|
|
|
|
"Very well; I will take care that henceforth you have no
|
|
opportunity to do either."
|
|
|
|
These words--the first in the passionately vibrant tones of my
|
|
sister-in-law, and the latter in the deeper and more restrained
|
|
accents of an angry man--startled me from my nap. I had been
|
|
dozing in my hammock on the front piazza, behind the honeysuckle
|
|
vine. I had been faintly aware of a buzz of conversation in the
|
|
parlor, but had not at all awakened to its import until these
|
|
sentences fell, or, I might rather say, were hurled upon my ear.
|
|
I presume the young people had either not seen me lying there,--
|
|
the Venetian blinds opening from the parlor windows upon the
|
|
piazza were partly closed on account of the heat,--or else in
|
|
their excitement they had forgotten my proximity.
|
|
|
|
I felt somewhat concerned. The young man, I had remarked, was
|
|
proud, firm, jealous of the point of honor, and, from my
|
|
observation of him, quite likely to resent to the bitter end what
|
|
he deemed a slight or an injustice. The girl, I knew, was quite
|
|
as high-spirited as young Murchison. I feared she was not so
|
|
just, and hoped she would prove more yielding. I knew that her
|
|
affections were strong and enduring, but that her temperament was
|
|
capricious, and her sunniest moods easily overcast by some small
|
|
cloud of jealousy or pique. I had never imagined, however, that
|
|
she was capable of such intensity as was revealed by these few
|
|
words of hers. As I say, I felt concerned. I had learned to like
|
|
Malcolm Murchison, and had heartily consented to his marriage with
|
|
my ward; for it was in that capacity that I had stood for a year
|
|
or two to my wife's younger sister, Mabel. The match thus rudely
|
|
broken off had promised to be another link binding me to the
|
|
kindly Southern people among whom I had not long before taken up
|
|
my residence.
|
|
|
|
Young Murchison came out of the door, cleared the piazza in two
|
|
strides without seeming aware of my presence, and went off down
|
|
the lane at a furious pace. A few moments later Mabel began
|
|
playing the piano loudly, with a touch that indicated anger and
|
|
pride and independence and a dash of exultation, as though she
|
|
were really glad that she had driven away forever the young man
|
|
whom the day before she had loved with all the ardor of a first
|
|
passion.
|
|
|
|
I hoped that time might heal the breach and bring the two young
|
|
people together again. I told my wife what I had overheard. In
|
|
return she gave me Mabel's version of the affair.
|
|
|
|
"I do not see how it can ever be settled," my wife said. "It is
|
|
something more than a mere lovers' quarrel. It began, it is true,
|
|
because she found fault with him for going to church with that
|
|
hateful Branson girl. But before it ended there were things said
|
|
that no woman of any spirit could stand. I am afraid it is all
|
|
over between them."
|
|
|
|
I was sorry to hear this. In spite of the very firm attitude
|
|
taken by my wife and her sister, I still hoped that the quarrel
|
|
would be made up within a day or two. Nevertheless, when a week
|
|
had passed with no word from young Murchison, and with no sign of
|
|
relenting on Mabel's part, I began to think myself mistaken.
|
|
|
|
One pleasant afternoon, about ten days after the rupture, old
|
|
Julius drove the rockaway up to the piazza, and my wife, Mabel,
|
|
and I took our seats for a drive to a neighbor's vineyard, over on
|
|
the Lumberton plankroad.
|
|
|
|
"Which way shall we go," I asked,--"the short road or the long
|
|
one?"
|
|
|
|
"I guess we had better take the short road," answered my wife.
|
|
"We will get there sooner."
|
|
|
|
"It's a mighty fine dribe roun' by de big road, Mis' Annie,"
|
|
observed Julius, "en it doan take much longer to git dere."
|
|
|
|
"No," said my wife, "I think we will go by the short road. There
|
|
is a bay tree in blossom near the mineral spring, and I wish to
|
|
get some of the flowers."
|
|
|
|
"I 'spec's you'd find some bay trees 'long de big road, ma'am,"
|
|
said Julius.
|
|
|
|
"But I know about the flowers on the short road, and they are the
|
|
ones I want."
|
|
|
|
We drove down the lane to the highway, and soon struck into the
|
|
short road leading past the mineral spring. Our route lay partly
|
|
through a swamp, and on each side the dark, umbrageous foliage,
|
|
unbroken by any clearing, lent to the road solemnity, and to the
|
|
air a refreshing coolness. About half a mile from the house, and
|
|
about halfway to the mineral spring, we stopped at the tree of
|
|
which my wife had spoken, and reaching up to the low-hanging
|
|
boughs I gathered a dozen of the fragrant white flowers. When I
|
|
resumed my seat in the rockaway, Julius started the mare. She
|
|
went on for a few rods, until we had reached the edge of a branch
|
|
crossing the road, when she stopped short.
|
|
|
|
"Why did you stop, Julius?" I asked.
|
|
|
|
"I didn', suh," he replied. "'T wuz de mare stop'. G' 'long
|
|
dere, Lucy! W'at you mean by dis foolis'ness?"
|
|
|
|
Julius jerked the reins and applied the whip lightly, but the mare
|
|
did not stir.
|
|
|
|
"Perhaps you had better get down and lead her," I suggested. "If
|
|
you get her started, you can cross on the log and keep your feet
|
|
dry."
|
|
|
|
Julius alighted, took hold of the bridle, and vainly essayed to
|
|
make the mare move. She planted her feet with even more evident
|
|
obstinacy.
|
|
|
|
"I don't know what to make of this," I said. "I have never known
|
|
her to balk before. Have you, Julius?"
|
|
|
|
"No, suh," replied the old man, "I nebber has. It's a cu'ous
|
|
thing ter me, suh."
|
|
|
|
"What's the best way to make her go?"
|
|
|
|
"I 'spec's, suh, dat ef I'd tu'n her roun' she'd go de udder way."
|
|
|
|
"But we want her to go this way."
|
|
|
|
"Well, suh, I 'low ef we des set heah fo' er fibe minutes, she'll
|
|
sta't up by herse'f."
|
|
|
|
"All right," I rejoined, "it is cooler here than any place I have
|
|
struck to-day. We'll let her stand for a while, and see what she
|
|
does."
|
|
|
|
We had sat in silence for a few minutes, when Julius suddenly
|
|
ejaculated, "Uh huh! I knows w'y dis mare doan go. It des flash
|
|
'cross my reccommemb'ance."
|
|
|
|
"Why is it, Julius?" I inquired.
|
|
|
|
"Ca'se she sees Chloe."
|
|
|
|
"Where is Chloe?" I demanded.
|
|
|
|
"Chloe's done be'n dead dese fo'ty years er mo'," the old man
|
|
returned. "Her ha'nt is settin' ober yander on de udder side er
|
|
de branch, unner dat willer tree, dis blessed minute."
|
|
|
|
"Why, Julius!" said my wife, "do you see the haunt?"
|
|
|
|
"No'm," he answered, shaking his head, "I doan see 'er, but de
|
|
mare sees 'er."
|
|
|
|
"How do you know?" I inquired.
|
|
|
|
"Well, suh, dis yer is a gray hoss, en dis yer is a Friday; en a
|
|
gray hoss kin alluz see a ha'nt w'at walks on Friday."
|
|
|
|
"Who was Chloe?" said Mabel.
|
|
|
|
"And why does Chloe's haunt walk?" asked my wife.
|
|
|
|
"It's all in de tale, ma'am," Julius replied, with a deep sigh.
|
|
"It's all in de tale."
|
|
|
|
"Tell us the tale," I said. "Perhaps, by the time you get
|
|
through, the haunt will go away and the mare will cross."
|
|
|
|
I was willing to humor the old man's fancy. He had not told us a
|
|
story for some time; and the dark and solemn swamp around us; the
|
|
amber-colored stream flowing silently and sluggishly at our feet,
|
|
like the waters of Lethe; the heavy, aromatic scent of the bays,
|
|
faintly suggestive of funeral wreaths,--all made the place an
|
|
ideal one for a ghost story.
|
|
|
|
"Chloe," Julius began in a subdued tone, "use' ter b'long ter ole
|
|
Mars' Dugal' McAdoo--my ole marster. She wuz a ladly gal en a
|
|
smart gal, en ole mis' tuk her up ter de big house, en l'arnt her
|
|
ter wait on de w'ite folks, 'tel bimeby she come ter be mis's own
|
|
maid, en 'peared ter 'low she run de house herse'f, ter heah her
|
|
talk erbout it. I wuz a young boy den, en use' ter wuk about de
|
|
stables, so I knowed ev'ythin' dat wuz gwine on roun' de
|
|
plantation.
|
|
|
|
"Well, one time Mars' Dugal' wanted a house boy, en sont down ter
|
|
de qua'ters fer hab Jeff en Hannibal come up ter de big house nex'
|
|
mawnin'. Ole marster en ole mis' look' de two boys ober, en
|
|
'sco'sed wid deyse'ves fer a little w'ile, en den Mars' Dugal'
|
|
sez, sezee:--
|
|
|
|
"'We laks Hannibal de bes', en we gwine ter keep him. Heah,
|
|
Hannibal, you'll wuk at de house fum now on. En ef you're a good
|
|
nigger en min's yo' bizness, I'll gib you Chloe fer a wife nex'
|
|
spring. You other nigger, you Jeff, you kin go back ter de
|
|
qua'ters. We ain' gwine ter need you.'
|
|
|
|
"Now Chloe had be'n standin' dere behin' ole mis' dyoin' all er
|
|
dis yer talk, en Chloe made up her min' fum de ve'y fus' minute
|
|
she sot eyes on dem two dat she didn' lak dat nigger Hannibal, en
|
|
wa'n't nebber gwine keer fer 'im, en she wuz des ez sho' dat she
|
|
lak Jeff, en wuz gwine ter set sto' by 'im, whuther Mars' Dugal'
|
|
tuk 'im in de big house er no; en so co'se Chloe wuz monst'us
|
|
sorry w'en ole Mars' Dugal' tuk Hannibal en sont Jeff back. So
|
|
she slip' roun' de house en waylaid Jeff on de way back ter de
|
|
qua'ters en tol' 'im not ter be downhea'ted, fer she wuz gwine ter
|
|
see ef she couldn' fin' some way er 'nuther ter git rid er dat
|
|
nigger Hannibal, en git Jeff up ter de house in his place.
|
|
|
|
"De noo house boy kotch on monst'us fas', en it wa'n't no time
|
|
ha'dly befo' Mars' Dugal' en ole mis' bofe 'mence' ter 'low
|
|
Hannibal wuz de bes' house boy dey eber had. He wuz peart en
|
|
soopl', quick ez lightnin', en sha'p ez a razor. But Chloe didn'
|
|
lak his ways. He wuz so sho' he wuz gwine ter git 'er in de
|
|
spring, dat he didn' 'pear ter 'low he had ter do any co'tin', en
|
|
w'en he'd run 'cross Chloe 'bout de house, he'd swell roun' 'er in
|
|
a biggity way en say:
|
|
|
|
"'Come heah en kiss me, honey. You gwine ter be mine in de
|
|
spring. You doan 'pear ter be ez fon' er me ez you oughter be.'
|
|
|
|
"Chloe didn' keer nuffin' fer Hannibal, en hadn' keered nuffin'
|
|
fer 'im, en she sot des ez much sto' by Jeff ez she did de day she
|
|
fus' laid eyes on 'im. En de mo' fermilyus dis yer Hannibal got,
|
|
de mo' Chloe let her min' run on Jeff, en one ebenin' she went
|
|
down ter de qua'ters en watch', 'tel she got a chance fer ter talk
|
|
wid 'im by hisse'f. En she tol' Jeff fer ter go down en see ole
|
|
Aun' Peggy, de cunjuh-'oman down by de Wim'l'ton Road, en ax her
|
|
fer ter gib 'im sump'n ter he'p git Hannibal out'n de big house,
|
|
so de w'ite folks 'u'd sen' fer Jeff ag'in. En bein' ez Jeff
|
|
didn' hab nuffin' ter gib Aun' Peggy, Chloe gun i'm a silber
|
|
dollah en a silk han'kercher fer ter pay her wid, fer Aun' Peggy
|
|
nebber lak ter wuk fer nobody fer nuffin'.
|
|
|
|
"So Jeff slip' off down ter Aun' Peggy's one night, en gun 'er de
|
|
presents he brung, en tol' er all 'bout 'im en Chloe en Hannibal,
|
|
en ax' 'er ter he'p 'im out. Aun' Peggy tol' 'im she'd wuk 'er
|
|
roots, en fer 'im ter come back de nex' night, en she'd tell 'im
|
|
w'at she c'd do fer 'im.
|
|
|
|
"So de nex' night Jeff went back, en Aun' Peggy gun 'im a baby-
|
|
doll, wid a body made out'n a piece er co'n-stalk, en wid
|
|
splinters fer a'ms en legs, en a head made out'n elderberry peth,
|
|
en two little red peppers fer feet.
|
|
|
|
"'Dis yer baby-doll,' sez she, 'is Hannibal. Dis yer peth head is
|
|
Hannibal's head, en dese yer pepper feet is Hannibal's feet. You
|
|
take dis en hide it unner de house, on de sill unner de do', whar
|
|
Hannibal'll hafter walk ober it ev'y day. En ez long ez Hannibal
|
|
comes anywhar nigh dis baby-doll, he'll be des lak it is--light-
|
|
headed en hot-footed; en ef dem two things doan git 'im inter
|
|
trouble mighty soon, den I'm no cunjuh-'oman. But w'en you git
|
|
Hannibal out'n de house, en git all thoo wid dis baby-doll, you
|
|
mus' fetch it back ter me, fer it's monst'us powerful goopher, en
|
|
is liable ter make mo' trouble ef you leabe it layin' roun'.'
|
|
|
|
"Well, Jeff tuk de baby-doll, en slip' up ter de big house, en
|
|
whistle' ter Chloe, en w'en she come out he tol' 'er w'at ole Aun'
|
|
Peggy had said. En Chloe showed 'im how ter git unner de house,
|
|
en w'en he had put de cunjuh-doll on de sill he went 'long back
|
|
ter de qua'ters--en des waited.
|
|
|
|
"Nex' day, sho' 'nuff, de goopher 'mence' ter wuk. Hannibal
|
|
sta'ted in de house soon in de mawnin' wid a armful er wood ter
|
|
make a fier, en he hadn' mo' d'n got 'cross de do'sill befo' his
|
|
feet begun ter bu'n so dat he drap' de armful er wood on de flo'
|
|
en woke ole mis' up an hour sooner'n yuzhal, en co'se ole mis'
|
|
didn' lak dat, en spoke sha'p erbout it.
|
|
|
|
"W'en dinner-time come, en Hannibal wuz help'n de cook kyar de
|
|
dinner f'm de kitchen inter de big house, en wuz gittin' close ter
|
|
de do' what he had ter go in, his feet sta'ted ter bu'n en his
|
|
head begun ter swim, en he let de big dish er chicken en dumplin's
|
|
fall right down in de dirt, in de middle er de ya'd, en de w'ite
|
|
folks had ter make dey dinner dat day off'n col' ham en sweet
|
|
pertaters.
|
|
|
|
"De nex' mawnin' he overslep' hisse'f, en got inter mo' trouble.
|
|
Atter breakfus', Mars' Dugal' sont 'im ober ter Mars' Marrabo
|
|
Utley's fer ter borry a monkey wrench. He oughter be'n back in
|
|
ha'f an hour, but he come pokin' home 'bout dinner'time wid a
|
|
screw-driver stidder a monkey wrench. Mars' Dugal' sont ernudder
|
|
nigger back wid de screw-driver, en Hannibal didn' git no dinner.
|
|
'Long in de atternoon, ole mis' sot Hannibal ter weedin' de
|
|
flowers in de front gyahden, en Hannibal dug up all de bulbs ole
|
|
mis' had sont erway fer, en paid a lot er money fer, en tuk 'em
|
|
down ter de hawg-pen by de ba'nya'd, en fed 'em ter de hawgs.
|
|
W'en ole mis' come out in de cool er de ebenin', en seed w'at
|
|
Hannibal had done, she wuz mos' crazy, en she wrote a note en sont
|
|
Hannibal down ter de obserseah wid it.
|
|
|
|
"But w'at Hannibal got fum de oberseah didn' 'pear ter do no good.
|
|
Ev'y now en den 'is feet'd 'mence ter torment 'im, en 'is min'
|
|
'u'd git all mix' up, en his conduc' kep' gittin' wusser en
|
|
wusser, 'tel fin'ly de w'ite folks couldn' stan' it no longer, en
|
|
Mars' Dugal' tuk Hannibal back down ter de qua'ters.
|
|
|
|
"'Mr. Smif,' sez Mars' Dugal' ter de oberseah, 'dis yer nigger has
|
|
tu'nt out so triflin' yer lately, dat we can't keep 'im at de
|
|
house no mo', en I's fotch' 'im ter you ter be straighten' up.
|
|
You's had 'casion ter deal wid 'im once, so he knows w'at ter
|
|
expec'. You des take 'im in han', en lemme know how he tu'ns out.
|
|
En w'en de han's comes in fum de fiel' dis ebenin' you kin sen'
|
|
dat yaller nigger Jeff up ter de house. I'll try 'im, en see ef
|
|
he's any better'n Hannibal.'
|
|
|
|
"So Jeff went up ter de big house, en pleas' Mars' Dugal' en ole
|
|
mis' en de res' er de fambly so well dat dey all got ter lakin'
|
|
'im fus'rate, en dey'd 'a' fergot all 'bout Hannibal ef it hadn'
|
|
be'n fer de bad repo'ts w'at come up fum de qua'ters 'bout 'im fer
|
|
a mont' er so. Fac' is dat Chloe en Jeff wuz so int'rusted in one
|
|
ernudder since Jeff be'n up ter de house, dat dey fergot all about
|
|
takin' de baby-doll back ter Aun' Peggy, en it kep' wukkin fer a
|
|
w'ile, en makin' Hannibal's feet bu'n mo' er less, 'tel all de
|
|
folks on de plantation got ter callin' 'im Hot-Foot Hannibal. He
|
|
kep' gittin' mo' en mo' triflin', 'tel he got de name er bein' de
|
|
mos' no 'countes' nigger on de plantation, en Mars' Dugal' had ter
|
|
th'eaten ter sell 'im in de spring; w'en bimeby de goopher quit
|
|
wukkin', en Hannibal 'mence' ter pick up some en make folks set a
|
|
little mo' sto' by 'im.
|
|
|
|
"Now, dis yer Hannibal was a monst'us sma't nigger, en w'en he got
|
|
rid er dem so' feet his min' kep' runnin' on 'is udder troubles.
|
|
Heah th'ee er fo' weeks befo' he'd had a' easy job, waitin' on de
|
|
w'ite folks, libbin off'n de fat er de lan', en promus' de fines'
|
|
gal on de plantation fer a wife in de spring, en now heah he wuz
|
|
back in de co'nfiel', wid de oberseah a-cussin' en a r'arin' ef he
|
|
didn' get a ha'd tas' done; wid nuffin' but co'n bread en bacon en
|
|
merlasses ter eat; en all de fiel-han's makin' rema'ks, en pokin'
|
|
fun at 'im ca'se he be'n sont back fum de big house ter de fiel'.
|
|
En de mo' Hannibal studied 'bout it de mo' madder he got, 'tel he
|
|
fin'ly swo' he wuz gwine ter git eben wid Jeff en Chloe ef it wuz
|
|
de las' ac'.
|
|
|
|
"So Hannibal slipped 'way fum de qua'ters one Sunday en hid in de
|
|
co'n up close ter de big house, 'tel he see Chloe gwine down de
|
|
road. He waylaid her, en sezee:--
|
|
|
|
"'Hoddy, Chloe?'
|
|
|
|
"'I ain't got no time fer ter fool wid fiel'-han's,' sez Chloe,
|
|
tossin' her head; 'W'at you want wid me, Hot-Foot?'
|
|
|
|
"'I wants ter know how you en Jeff is gittin' 'long.'
|
|
|
|
"'I 'lows dat's none er yo' bizness, nigger. I doan see w'at
|
|
'casion any common fiel'-han' has got ter mix in wid de 'fairs er
|
|
folks w'at libs in de big house. But ef it'll do you any good ter
|
|
know, I mought say dat me en Jeff is gittin' 'long mighty well, en
|
|
we gwine ter git married in de spring, en you ain' gwine ter be
|
|
'vited ter de weddin' nuther.'
|
|
|
|
"'No, no!' sezee, 'I wouldn' 'spec' ter be 'vited ter de weddin',--
|
|
a common, low-down fiel'-han' lak I is. But I's glad ter heah
|
|
you en Jeff is gittin' 'long so well. I didn' knowed but w'at he
|
|
had 'mence' ter be a little ti'ed.'
|
|
|
|
"'Ti'ed er me? Dat's rediklus!' sez Chloe. 'W'y, dat nigger lubs
|
|
me so I b'liebe he'd go th'oo fier en water fer me. Dat nigger is
|
|
des wrop' up in me.'
|
|
|
|
"'Uh huh,' sez Hannibal, 'den I reckon is mus' be some udder
|
|
nigger w'at meets a 'oman down by de crick in de swamp ev'y Sunday
|
|
ebenin', ter say nuffin' 'bout two er th'ee times a week.'
|
|
|
|
"'Yas, hit is ernudder nigger, en you is a liah w'en you say it
|
|
wuz Jeff.'
|
|
|
|
"'Mebbe I is a liah, en mebbe I ain' got good eyes. But 'less'n I
|
|
IS a liah, en 'less'n I AIN' got good eyes, Jeff is gwine ter meet
|
|
dat 'oman dis ebenin' long 'bout eight o'clock right down dere by
|
|
de crick in de swamp 'bout halfway betwix' dis plantation en Mars'
|
|
Marrabo Utley's.'
|
|
|
|
"Well, Chloe tol' Hannibal she didn' b'liebe a wud he said, en
|
|
call' 'im a low-down nigger who wuz tryin' ter slander Jeff 'ca'se
|
|
he wuz mo' luckier'n he wuz. But all de same, she couldn' keep
|
|
her min' fum runnin' on w'at Hannibal had said. She 'membered
|
|
she'd heared one er de niggers say dey wuz a gal ober at Mars'
|
|
Marrabo Utley's plantation w'at Jeff use' ter go wid some befo' he
|
|
got 'quainted wid Chloe. Den she 'mence' ter figger back, en sho'
|
|
'nuff, dey wuz two er th'ee times in de las' week w'en she'd be'n
|
|
he'p'n de ladies wid dey dressin' en udder fixin's in de ebenin',
|
|
en Jeff mought 'a' gone down ter de swamp widout her knowin' 'bout
|
|
it at all. En den she 'mence' ter 'member little things w'at she
|
|
hadn' tuk no notice of befo', en w'at 'u'd make it 'pear lak Jeff
|
|
had sump'n on his min'.
|
|
|
|
"Chloe set a monst'us heap er sto' by Jeff, en would 'a' done mos'
|
|
anythin' fer 'im, so long ez he stuck ter her. But Chloe wuz a
|
|
mighty jealous 'oman, en w'iles she didn' b'liebe w'at Hannibal
|
|
said, she seed how it COULD 'a' be'n so, en she 'termine' fer ter
|
|
fin' out fer herse'f whuther it WUZ so er no.
|
|
|
|
"Now, Chloe hadn' seed Jeff all day, fer Mars' Dugal' had sont
|
|
Jeff ober ter his daughter's house, young Mis' Ma'g'ret's, w'at
|
|
libbed 'bout fo' miles fum Mars' Dugal's, en Jeff wuzn' 'spected
|
|
home 'tel ebenin'. But des atter supper wuz ober, en w'iles de
|
|
ladies wuz settin' out on de piazzer, Chloe slip' off fum de house
|
|
en run down de road,--dis yer same road we come; en w'en she got
|
|
mos' ter de crick--dis yer same crick right befo' us--she kin' er
|
|
kip' in de bushes at de side er de road, 'tel fin'ly she seed Jeff
|
|
settin' on de back on de udder side er de crick,--right under dat
|
|
ole willer tree droopin' ober de watah yander. En ev'y now en den
|
|
he'd git up en look up de road to'ds Mars' Marrabo's on de udder
|
|
side er de swamp.
|
|
|
|
"Fus' Chloe felt lak she'd go right ober de crick en gib Jeff a
|
|
piece er her min'. Den she 'lowed she better be sho' befo' she
|
|
done anythin'. So she helt herse'f in de bes' she could, gittin'
|
|
madder en madder ev'ry minute, 'tel bimeby she seed a 'oman comin'
|
|
down de road on de udder side fum to'ds Mars' Marrabo Utley's
|
|
plantation. En w'en she seed Jeff jump up en run to'ds dat 'oman,
|
|
en th'ow his a'ms roun' her neck, po' Chloe didn' stop ter see no
|
|
mo', but des tu'nt roun' en run up ter de house, en rush' up on de
|
|
piazzer, en up en tol' Mars' Dugal' en ole mis' all 'bout de baby-
|
|
doll, en all 'bout Jeff gittin' de goopher fum Aun' Peggy, en
|
|
'bout w'at de goopher had done ter Hannibal.
|
|
|
|
"Mars' Dugal' wuz monst'us mad. He didn' let on at fus' lak he
|
|
b'liebed Chloe, but w'en she tuk en showed 'im whar ter fin' de
|
|
baby-doll, Mars' Dugal' tu'nt w'ite ez chalk.
|
|
|
|
"'What debil's wuk is dis?' sezee. 'No wonder de po' nigger's
|
|
feet eetched. Sump'n got ter be done ter l'arn dat ole witch ter
|
|
keep her han's off'n my niggers. En ez fer dis yer Jeff, I'm
|
|
gwine ter do des w'at I promus', so de darkies on dis
|
|
plantation'll know I means w'at I sez.'
|
|
|
|
"Fer Mars' Dugal' had warned de han's befo' 'bout foolin' wid
|
|
cunju'ation; fac', he had los' one er two niggers hisse'f fum dey
|
|
bein' goophered, en he would 'a' had ole Aun' Peggy whip' long
|
|
ago, on'y Aun' Peggy wuz a free 'oman, en he wuz 'feard she'd
|
|
cunjuh him. En wi'les Mars' Dugal' say he didn' b'liebe in
|
|
cunj'in' en sich, he 'peared ter 'low it wuz bes' ter be on de
|
|
safe side, en let Aun' Peggy alone.
|
|
|
|
"So Mars' Dugal' done des ez he say. Ef ole mis' had ple'd fer
|
|
Jeff he mought 'a' kep' 'im. But ole mis' hadn' got ober losin'
|
|
dem bulbs yit, en she nebber said a wud. Mars' Dugal' tuk Jeff
|
|
ter town nex' day en' sol' 'im ter a spekilater, who sta'ted down
|
|
de ribber wid 'im nex' mawnin' on a steamboat, fer ter take 'im
|
|
ter Alabama.
|
|
|
|
"Now, w'en Chloe tol' ole Mars' Dugal' 'bout dis yer baby-doll en
|
|
dis udder goopher, she hadn' ha'dly 'lowed Mars' Dugal' would sell
|
|
Jeff down Souf. Howsomeber, she wuz so mad wid Jeff dat she
|
|
'suaded herse'f she didn' keer; en so she hilt her head up en went
|
|
roun' lookin' lak she wuz rale glad 'bout it. But one day she wuz
|
|
walkin' down de road, w'en who sh'd come 'long but dis yer
|
|
Hannibal.
|
|
|
|
"W'en Hannibal seed 'er he bus' out laffin' fittin' fer ter kill:
|
|
'Yah, yah, yah! ho, ho, ho! ha, ha, ha! Oh, hol' me, honey, hol'
|
|
me, er I'll laf myse'f ter def. I ain' nebber laf' so much sence
|
|
I be'n bawn.'
|
|
|
|
"'W'at you laffin' at, Hot-Foot?'
|
|
|
|
"'Yah, yah, yah! W'at I laffin' at? W'y, I's laffin' at myse'f,
|
|
tooby sho',--laffin' ter think w'at a fine 'oman I made.'
|
|
|
|
"Chloe tu'nt pale, en her hea't come up in her mouf.
|
|
|
|
"'W'at you mean, nigger?' sez she, ketchin' holt er a bush by de
|
|
road fer ter stiddy herse'f. 'W'at you mean by de kin' er 'oman
|
|
you made?'
|
|
|
|
"W'at do I mean? I means dat I got squared up wid you fer
|
|
treatin' me de way you done, en I got eben wid dat yaller nigger
|
|
Jeff fer cuttin' me out. Now, he's gwine ter know w'at it is ter
|
|
eat co'n bread en merlasses once mo', en wuk fum daylight ter
|
|
da'k, en ter hab a oberseah dribin' 'im fum one day's een' ter de
|
|
udder. I means dat I sont wud ter Jeff dat Sunday dat you wuz
|
|
gwine ter be ober ter Mars' Marrabo's visitin' dat ebenin', en you
|
|
want i'm ter meet you down by de crick on de way home en go de
|
|
rest er de road wid you. En den I put on a frock en a sun-bonnet
|
|
en fix' myse'f up ter look lak a 'oman; en w'en Jeff seed me
|
|
comin' he run ter meet me, en you seed 'im,--fer I had be'n
|
|
watchin' in de bushes befo' en 'skivered you comin' down de road.
|
|
En now I reckon you en Jeff bofe knows w'at it means ter mess wid
|
|
a nigger lak me.'
|
|
|
|
"Po' Chloe hadn' heared mo' d'n half er de las' part er w'at
|
|
Hannibal said, but she had heared 'nuff to l'arn dat dis nigger
|
|
had fooler her en Jeff, en dat po' Jeff hadn' done nuffin', en dat
|
|
fer lovin' her too much en goin' ter meet her she had cause' 'im
|
|
ter be sol' erway whar she'd nebber, nebber see 'im no mo'. De
|
|
sun mought shine by day, de moon by night, de flowers mought
|
|
bloom, en de mawkin'-birds mought sing, but po' Jeff wuz done los'
|
|
ter her fereber en fereber.
|
|
|
|
"Hannibal hadn' mo' d'n finish' w'at he had ter say, w'en Chloe's
|
|
knees gun 'way unner her, en she fell down in de road, en lay dere
|
|
half a' hour er so befo' she come to. W'en she did, she crep' up
|
|
ter de house des ez pale ez a ghos'. En fer a mont' er so she
|
|
crawled roun' de house, en 'peared ter be so po'ly dat Mars'
|
|
Dugal' sont fer a doctor; en de doctor kep' on axin' her questions
|
|
'tel he foun' she wuz des pinin' erway fer Jeff.
|
|
|
|
"W'en he tol' Mars' Dugal', Mars' Dugal' lafft, en said he'd fix
|
|
dat. She could hab de noo house boy fer a husban'. But ole mis'
|
|
say, no, Chloe ain' dat kinder gal, en dat Mars' Dugal' should buy
|
|
Jeff back.
|
|
|
|
"So Mars' Dugal' writ a letter ter dis yer spekilater down ter
|
|
Wim'l'ton, en tol' ef he ain' done sol' dat nigger Souf w'at he
|
|
bought fum 'im, he'd lak ter buy 'm back ag'in. Chloe 'mence' ter
|
|
pick up a little w'en ole mis' tol' her 'bout dis letter.
|
|
Howsomeber, bimeby Mars' Dugal' got a' answer fum de spekilater,
|
|
who said he wuz monst'us sorry, but Jeff had fell ove'boa'd er
|
|
jumped off'n de steamboat on de way ter Wim'l'ton, en got
|
|
drownded, en co'se he couldn' sell 'im back, much ez he'd lak ter
|
|
'bleedge Mars' Dugal'.
|
|
|
|
"Well, atter Chloe heared dis she pu'tended ter do her wuk, en ole
|
|
mis' wa'n't much mo' use ter nobody. She put up wid her, en hed
|
|
de doctor gib her medicine, en let 'er go ter de circus, en all
|
|
so'ts er things fer ter take her min' off'n her troubles. But dey
|
|
didn' none un 'em do no good. Chloe got ter slippin' down here in
|
|
de ebenin' des lak she 'uz comin' ter meet Jeff, en she'd set dere
|
|
unner dat willer tree on de udder side, en wait fer 'im, night
|
|
atter night. Bimeby she got so bad de w'ite folks sont her ober
|
|
ter young Mis' Ma'g'ret's fer ter gib her a change; but she runned
|
|
erway de fus' night, en w'en dey looked fer 'er nex' mawnin' dey
|
|
foun' her co'pse layin' in de branch yander, right 'cross fum whar
|
|
we're settin' now.
|
|
|
|
"Eber sence den," said Julius in conclusion, "Chloe's ha'nt comes
|
|
eve'y ebenin' en sets down unner dat willer tree en waits fer
|
|
Jeff, er e'se walks up en down de road yander, lookin' en lookin',
|
|
en' [sic] waitin' en waitin', fer her sweethea't w'at ain' nebber,
|
|
nebber come back ter her no mo'."
|
|
|
|
There was silence when the old man had finished, and I am sure I
|
|
saw a tear in my wife's eye, and more than one in Mabel's.
|
|
|
|
"I think, Julius," said my wife after a moment, "that you may turn
|
|
the mare around and go by the long road."
|
|
|
|
The old man obeyed with alacrity, and I noticed no reluctance on
|
|
the mare's part.
|
|
|
|
"You are not afraid of Chloe's haunt, are you?" I asked jocularly.
|
|
|
|
My mood was not responded to, and neither of the ladies smiled.
|
|
|
|
"Oh no," said Annie, "but I've changed my mind. I prefer the
|
|
other route."
|
|
|
|
When we had reached the main road and had proceeded along it for a
|
|
short distance, we met a cart driven by a young negro, and on the
|
|
cart were a trunk and a valise. We recognized the man as Malcolm
|
|
Murchison's servant, and drew up a moment to speak to him.
|
|
|
|
"Who's going away, Marshall?" I inquired.
|
|
|
|
"Young Mistah Ma'colm gwine 'way on de boat ter Noo Yo'k dis
|
|
ebenin', suh, en I'm takin' his things down ter de wharf, suh."
|
|
|
|
This was news to me, and I heard it with regret. My wife looked
|
|
sorry, too, and I could see that Mabel was trying hard to hide her
|
|
concern.
|
|
|
|
"He's comin' 'long behin', suh, en I 'spec's you'll meet 'im up de
|
|
road a piece. He's gwine ter walk down ez fur ez Mistah Jim
|
|
Williams's, en take de buggy fum dere ter town. He 'spec's ter be
|
|
gone a long time, suh, en say prob'ly he ain' nebber comin' back."
|
|
|
|
The man drove on. There were a few words exchanged in an
|
|
undertone between my wife and Mabel, which I did not catch. Then
|
|
Annie said: "Julius, you may stop the rockaway a moment. There
|
|
are some trumpet-flowers by the road there that I want. Will you
|
|
get them for me, John?"
|
|
|
|
I sprang into the underbrush, and soon returned with a great bunch
|
|
of scarlet blossoms.
|
|
|
|
"Where is Mabel?" I asked, noting her absence.
|
|
|
|
"She has walked on ahead. We shall overtake her in a few
|
|
minutes."
|
|
|
|
The carriage had gone only a short distance when my wife
|
|
discovered that she had dropped her fan.
|
|
|
|
"I had it where we were stopping. Julius, will you go back and
|
|
get it for me?"
|
|
|
|
Julius got down and went back for the fan. He was an
|
|
unconscionably long time finding it. After we got started again
|
|
we had gone only a little way, when we saw Mabel and young
|
|
Murchison coming toward us. They were walking arm in arm, and
|
|
their faces were aglow with the light of love.
|
|
|
|
|
|
I do not know whether or not Julius had a previous understanding
|
|
with Malcolm Murchison by which he was to drive us round by the
|
|
long road that day, nor do I know exactly what motive influenced
|
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the old man's exertions in the matter. He was fond of Mabel, but
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I was old enough, and knew Julius well enough, to be skeptical of
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his motives. It is certain that a most excellent understanding
|
|
existed between him and Murchison after the reconciliation, and
|
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that when the young people set up housekeeping over at the old
|
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Murchison place Julius had an opportunity to enter their service.
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For some reason or other, however, he preferred to remain with us.
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The mare, I might add, was never known to balk again.
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A NEGRO SCHOOLMASTER IN THE NEW SOUTH
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by W. E. Burghardt Du Bois
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Once upon a time I taught school in the hills of Tennessee, where
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the broad dark vale of the Mississippi begins to roll and crumple
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to greet the Alleghanies. I was a Fisk student then, and all Fisk
|
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men think that Tennessee--beyond the Veil--is theirs alone, and in
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vacation time they sally forth in lusty bands to meet the county
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school commissioners. Young and happy, I too went, and I shall
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not soon forget that summer, ten years ago.
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First, there was a teachers' Institute at the county-seat; and
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there distinguished guests of the superintendent taught the
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teachers fractions and spelling and other mysteries,--white
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teachers in the morning, Negroes at night. A picnic now and then,
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and a supper, and the rough world was softened by laughter and
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song. I remember how--But I wander.
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There came a day when all the teachers left the Institute, and
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began the hunt for schools. I learn from hearsay (for my mother
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was mortally afraid of firearms) that the hunting of ducks and
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bears and men is wonderfully interesting, but I am sure that the
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man who has never hunted a country school has something to learn
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of the pleasures of the chase. I see now the white, hot roads
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lazily rise and fall and wind before me under the burning July
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sun; I feel the deep weariness of heart and limb, as ten, eight,
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six miles stretch relentlessly ahead; I feel my heart sink heavily
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as I hear again and again, "Got a teacher? Yes." So I walked on
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and on,--horses were too expensive,--until I had wandered beyond
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railways, beyond stage lines, to a land of "varmints" and
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rattlesnakes, where the coming of a stranger was an event, and men
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lived and died in the shadow of one blue hill.
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Sprinkled over hill and dale lay cabins and farmhouses, shut out
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from the world by the forests and the rolling hills toward the
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east. There I found at last a little school. Josie told me of
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it; she was a thin, homely girl of twenty, with a dark brown face
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and thick, hard hair. I had crossed the stream at Watertown, and
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rested under the great willows; then I had gone to the little
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cabin in the lot where Josie was resting on her way to town. The
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gaunt farmer made me welcome, and Josie, hearing my errand, told
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me anxiously that they wanted a school over the hill; that but
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once since the war had a teacher been there; that she herself
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longed to learn,--and thus she ran on, talking fast and loud, with
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much earnestness and energy.
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Next morning I crossed the tall round hill, lingered to look at
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the blue and yellow mountains stretching toward the Carolinas;
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then I plunged into the wood, and came out at Josie's home. It
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was a dull frame cottage with four rooms, perched just below the
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brow of the hill, amid peach trees. The father was a quiet,
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simple soul, calmly ignorant, with no touch of vulgarity. The
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mother was different,--strong, bustling, and energetic, with a
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quick, restless tongue, and an ambition to live "like folks."
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There was a crowd of children. Two boys had gone away. There
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remained two growing girls; a shy midget of eight; John, tall,
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awkward, and eighteen; Jim, younger, quicker, and better looking;
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and two babies of indefinite age. Then there was Josie herself.
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She seemed to be the centre of the family: always busy at service
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or at home, or berry-picking; a little nervous and inclined to
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scold, like her mother, yet faithful, too, like her father. She
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had about her a certain fineness, the shadow of an unconscious
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moral heroism that would willingly give all of life to make life
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broader, deeper, and fuller for her and hers. I saw much of this
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family afterward, and grew to love them for their honest efforts
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to be decent and comfortable, and for their knowledge of their own
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ignorance. There was with them no affectation. The mother would
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scold the father for being so "easy;" Josie would roundly rate the
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boys for carelessness; and all knew that it was a hard thing to
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dig a living out of a rocky side hill.
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I secured the school. I remember the day I rode horseback out to
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the commissioner's house, with a pleasant young white fellow, who
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wanted the white school. The road ran down the bed of a stream;
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the sun laughed and the water jingled, and we rode on. "Come in,"
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said the commissioner,--"come in. Have a seat. Yes, that
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certificate will do. Stay to dinner. What do you want a month?"
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Oh, thought I, this is lucky; but even then fell the awful shadow
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of the Veil, for they ate first, then I--alone.
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The schoolhouse was a log hut, where Colonel Wheeler used to
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shelter his corn. It sat in a lot behind a rail fence and thorn
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bushes, near the sweetest of springs. There was an entrance where
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a door once was, and within, a massive rickety fireplace; great
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chinks between the logs served as windows. Furniture was scarce.
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A pale blackboard crouched in the corner. My desk was made of
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three boards, reinforced at critical points, and my chair,
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borrowed from the landlady, had to be returned every night. Seats
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for the children,--these puzzled me much. I was haunted by a New
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England vision of neat little desks and chairs, but, alas, the
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reality was rough plank benches without backs, and at times
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without legs. They had the one virtue of making naps dangerous,--
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possibly fatal, for the floor was not to be trusted.
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It was a hot morning late in July when the school opened. I
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trembled when I heard the patter of little feet down the dusty
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road, and saw the growing row of dark solemn faces and bright
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eager eyes facing me. First came Josie and her brothers and
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sisters. The longing to know, to be a student in the great school
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at Nashville, hovered like a star above this child woman amid her
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work and worry, and she studied doggedly. There were the Dowells
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from their farm over toward Alexandria: Fanny, with her smooth
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|
black face and wondering eyes; Martha, brown and dull; the pretty
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girl wife of a brother, and the younger brood. There were the
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Burkes, two brown and yellow lads, and a tiny haughty-eyed girl.
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Fat Reuben's little chubby girl came, with golden face and old
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gold hair, faithful and solemn. 'Thenie was on hand early,--a
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jolly, ugly, good-hearted girl, who slyly dipped snuff and looked
|
|
after her little bow-legged brother. When her mother could spare
|
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her, 'Tildy came,--a midnight beauty, with starry eyes and
|
|
tapering limbs; and her brother, correspondingly homely. And then
|
|
the big boys: the hulking Lawrences; the lazy Neills, unfathered
|
|
sons of mother and daughter; Hickman, with a stoop in his
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shoulders; and the rest.
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There they sat, nearly thirty of them, on the rough benches, their
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|
faces shading from a pale cream to a deep brown, the little feet
|
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bare and swinging, the eyes full of expectation, with here and
|
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there a twinkle of mischief, and the hands grasping Webster's
|
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blue-back spelling-book. I loved my school, and the fine faith
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the children had in the wisdom of their teacher was truly
|
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marvelous. We read and spelled together, wrote a little, picked
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flowers, sang, and listened to stories of the world beyond the
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|
hill. At times the school would dwindle away, and I would start
|
|
out. I would visit Mun Eddings, who lived in two very dirty
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|
rooms, and ask why little Lugene, whose flaming face seemed ever
|
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ablaze with the dark red hair uncombed, was absent all last week,
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|
or why I missed so often the inimitable rags of Mack and Ed. Then
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|
the father, who worked Colonel Wheeler's farm on shares, would
|
|
tell me how the crops needed the boys; and the thin, slovenly
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mother, whose face was pretty when washed, assured me that Lugene
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must mind the baby. "But we'll start them again next week." When
|
|
the Lawrences stopped, I knew that the doubts of the old folks
|
|
about book-learning had conquered again, and so, toiling up the
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|
hill, and getting as far into the cabin as possible, I put Cicero
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pro Archia Poeta into the simplest English with local
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|
applications, and usually convinced them--for a week or so.
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On Friday nights I often went home with some of the children;
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|
sometimes to Doc Burke's farm. He was a great, loud, thin Black,
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|
ever working, and trying to buy the seventy-five acres of hill and
|
|
dale where he lived; but people said that he would surely fail,
|
|
and the "white folks would get it all." His wife was a
|
|
magnificent Amazon, with saffron face and shining hair, uncorseted
|
|
and barefooted, and the children were strong and beautiful. They
|
|
lived in a one-and-a-half-room cabin in the hollow of the farm,
|
|
near the spring. The front room was full of great fat white beds,
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|
scrupulously neat; and there were bad chromos on the walls, and a
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|
tired centre-table. In the tiny back kitchen I was often invited
|
|
to "take out and help" myself to fried chicken and wheat biscuit,
|
|
"meat" and corn pone, string beans and berries. At first I used
|
|
to be a little alarmed at the approach of bed-time in the one lone
|
|
bedroom, but embarrassment was very deftly avoided. First, all
|
|
the children nodded and slept, and were stowed away in one great
|
|
pile of goose feathers; next, the mother and the father discreetly
|
|
slipped away to the kitchen while I went to bed; then, blowing out
|
|
the dim light, they retired in the dark. In the morning all were
|
|
up and away before I thought of awaking. Across the road, where
|
|
fat Reuben lived, they all went outdoors while the teacher
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|
retired, because they did not boast the luxury of a kitchen.
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I liked to stay with the Dowells, for they had four rooms and
|
|
plenty of good country fare. Uncle Bird had a small, rough farm,
|
|
all woods and hills, miles from the big road; but he was full of
|
|
tales,--he preached now and then,--and with his children, berries,
|
|
horses, and wheat he was happy and prosperous. Often, to keep the
|
|
peace, I must go where life was less lovely; for instance,
|
|
'Tildy's mother was incorrigibly dirty, Reuben's larder was
|
|
limited seriously, and herds of untamed bedbugs wandered over the
|
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Eddingses' beds. Best of all I loved to go to Josie's, and sit on
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|
the porch, eating peaches, while the mother bustled and talked:
|
|
how Josie had bought the sewing-machine; how Josie worked at
|
|
service in winter, but that four dollars a month was "mighty
|
|
little" wages; how Josie longed to go away to school, but that it
|
|
"looked like" they never could get far enough ahead to let her;
|
|
how the crops failed and the well was yet unfinished; and,
|
|
finally, how "mean" some of the white folks were.
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For two summers I lived in this little world; it was dull and
|
|
humdrum. The girls looked at the hill in wistful longing, and the
|
|
boys fretted, and haunted Alexandria. Alexandria was "town,"--a
|
|
straggling, lazy village of houses, churches, and shops, and an
|
|
aristocracy of Toms, Dicks, and Captains. Cuddled on the hill to
|
|
the north was the village of the colored folks, who lived in three
|
|
or four room unpainted cottages, some neat and homelike, and some
|
|
dirty. The dwellings were scattered rather aimlessly, but they
|
|
centred about the twin temples of the hamlet, the Methodist and
|
|
the Hard-Shell Baptist churches. These, in turn, leaned gingerly
|
|
on a sad-colored schoolhouse. Hither my little world wended its
|
|
crooked way on Sunday to meet other worlds, and gossip, and
|
|
wonder, and make the weekly sacrifice with frenzied priest at the
|
|
altar of the "old-time religion." Then the soft melody and mighty
|
|
cadences of Negro song fluttered and thundered.
|
|
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|
I have called my tiny community a world, and so its isolation made
|
|
it; and yet there was among us but a half-awakened common
|
|
consciousness, sprung from common joy and grief, at burial, birth,
|
|
or wedding; from a common hardship in poverty, poor land, and low
|
|
wages; and, above all, from the sight of the Veil that hung
|
|
between us and Opportunity. All this caused us to think some
|
|
thoughts together; but these, when ripe for speech, were spoken in
|
|
various languages. Those whose eyes thirty and more years before
|
|
had seen "the glory of the coming of the Lord" saw in every
|
|
present hindrance or help a dark fatalism bound to bring all
|
|
things right in His own good time. The mass of those to whom
|
|
slavery was a dim recollection of childhood found the world a
|
|
puzzling thing: it asked little of them, and they answered with
|
|
little, and yet it ridiculed their offering. Such a paradox they
|
|
could not understand, and therefore sank into listless
|
|
indifference, or shiftlessness, or reckless bravado. There were,
|
|
however, some such as Josie, Jim, and Ben,--they to whom War,
|
|
Hell, and Slavery were but childhood tales, whose young appetites
|
|
had been whetted to an edge by school and story and half-awakened
|
|
thought. Ill could they be content, born without and beyond the
|
|
World. And their weak wings beat against their barriers,--
|
|
barriers of caste, of youth, of life; at last, in dangerous
|
|
moments, against everything that opposed even a whim.
|
|
|
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|
The ten years that follow youth, the years when first the
|
|
realization comes that life is leading somewhere,--these were the
|
|
years that passed after I left my little school. When they were
|
|
past, I came by chance once more to the walls of Fisk University,
|
|
to the halls of the chapel of melody. As I lingered there in the
|
|
joy and pain of meeting old school friends, there swept over me a
|
|
sudden longing to pass again beyond the blue hill, and to see the
|
|
homes and the school of other days, and to learn how life had gone
|
|
with my school-children; and I went.
|
|
|
|
Josie was dead, and the gray-haired mother said simply, "We've had
|
|
a heap of trouble since you've been away." I had feared for Jim.
|
|
With a cultured parentage and a social caste to uphold him, he
|
|
might have made a venturesome merchant or a West Point cadet. But
|
|
here he was, angry with life and reckless; and when Farmer Durham
|
|
charged him with stealing wheat, the old man had to ride fast to
|
|
escape the stones which the furious fool hurled after him. They
|
|
told Jim to run away; but he would not run, and the constable came
|
|
that afternoon. It grieved Josie, and great awkward John walked
|
|
nine miles every day to see his little brother through the bars of
|
|
Lebanon jail. At last the two came back together in the dark
|
|
night. The mother cooked supper, and Josie emptied her purse, and
|
|
the boys stole away. Josie grew thin and silent, yet worked the
|
|
more. The hill became steep for the quiet old father, and with
|
|
the boys away there was little to do in the valley. Josie helped
|
|
them sell the old farm, and they moved nearer town. Brother
|
|
Dennis, the carpenter, built a new house with six rooms; Josie
|
|
toiled a year in Nashville, and brought back ninety dollars to
|
|
furnish the house and change it to a home.
|
|
|
|
When the spring came, and the birds twittered, and the stream ran
|
|
proud and full, little sister Lizzie, bold and thoughtless,
|
|
flushed with the passion of youth, bestowed herself on the
|
|
tempter, and brought home a nameless child. Josie shivered, and
|
|
worked on, with the vision of schooldays all fled, with a face wan
|
|
and tired,--worked until, on a summer's day, some one married
|
|
another; then Josie crept to her mother like a hurt child, and
|
|
slept--and sleeps.
|
|
|
|
I paused to scent the breeze as I entered the valley. The
|
|
Lawrences have gone; father and son forever, and the other son
|
|
lazily digs in the earth to live. A new young widow rents out
|
|
their cabin to fat Reuben. Reuben is a Baptist preacher now, but
|
|
I fear as lazy as ever, though his cabin has three rooms; and
|
|
little Ella has grown into a bouncing woman, and is ploughing corn
|
|
on the hot hillside. There are babies a plenty, and one half-
|
|
witted girl. Across the valley is a house I did not know before,
|
|
and there I found, rocking one baby and expecting another, one of
|
|
my schoolgirls, a daughter of Uncle Bird Dowell. She looked
|
|
somewhat worried with her new duties, but soon bristled into pride
|
|
over her neat cabin, and the tale of her thrifty husband, the
|
|
horse and cow, and the farm they were planning to buy.
|
|
|
|
My log schoolhouse was gone. In its place stood Progress, and
|
|
Progress, I understand, is necessarily ugly. The crazy foundation
|
|
stones still marked the former site of my poor little cabin, and
|
|
not far away, on six weary boulders, perched a jaunty board house,
|
|
perhaps twenty by thirty feet, with three windows and a door that
|
|
locked. Some of the window glass was broken, and part of an old
|
|
iron stove lay mournfully under the house. I peeped through the
|
|
window half reverently, and found things that were more familiar.
|
|
The blackboard had grown by about two feet, and the seats were
|
|
still without backs. The county owns the lot now, I hear, and
|
|
every year there is a session of school. As I sat by the spring
|
|
and looked on the Old and the New I felt glad, very glad, and yet--
|
|
|
|
|
|
After two long drinks I started on. There was the great double
|
|
log house on the corner. I remembered the broken, blighted family
|
|
that used to live there. The strong, hard face of the mother,
|
|
with its wilderness of hair, rose before me. She had driven her
|
|
husband away, and while I taught school a strange man lived there,
|
|
big and jovial, and people talked. I felt sure that Ben and
|
|
'Tildy would come to naught from such a home. But this is an odd
|
|
world; for Ben is a busy farmer in Smith County, "doing well,
|
|
too," they say, and he had cared for little 'Tildy until last
|
|
spring, when a lover married her. A hard life the lad had led,
|
|
toiling for meat, and laughed at because he was homely and
|
|
crooked. There was Sam Carlon, an impudent old skinflint, who had
|
|
definite notions about niggers, and hired Ben a summer and would
|
|
not pay him. Then the hungry boy gathered his sacks together, and
|
|
in broad daylight went into Carlon's corn; and when the hard-
|
|
fisted farmer set upon him, the angry boy flew at him like a
|
|
beast. Doc Burke saved a murder and a lynching that day.
|
|
|
|
The story reminded me again of the Burkes, and an impatience
|
|
seized me to know who won in the battle, Doc or the seventy-five
|
|
acres. For it is a hard thing to make a farm out of nothing, even
|
|
in fifteen years. So I hurried on, thinking of the Burkes. They
|
|
used to have a certain magnificent barbarism about them that I
|
|
liked. They were never vulgar, never immoral, but rather rough
|
|
and primitive, with an unconventionality that spent itself in loud
|
|
guffaws, slaps on the back, and naps in the corner. I hurried by
|
|
the cottage of the misborn Neill boys. It was empty, and they
|
|
were grown into fat, lazy farm hands. I saw the home of the
|
|
Hickmans, but Albert, with his stooping shoulders, had passed from
|
|
the world. Then I came to the Burkes' gate and peered through;
|
|
the inclosure looked rough and untrimmed, and yet there were the
|
|
same fences around the old farm save to the left, where lay
|
|
twenty-five other acres. And lo! the cabin in the hollow had
|
|
climbed the hill and swollen to a half-finished six-room cottage.
|
|
|
|
The Burkes held a hundred acres, but they were still in debt.
|
|
Indeed, the gaunt father who toiled night and day would scarcely
|
|
be happy out of debt, being so used to it. Some day he must stop,
|
|
for his massive frame is showing decline. The mother wore shoes,
|
|
but the lionlike physique of other days was broken. The children
|
|
had grown up. Rob, the image of his father, was loud and rough
|
|
with laughter. Birdie, my school baby of six, had grown to a
|
|
picture of maiden beauty, tall and tawny. "Edgar is gone," said
|
|
the mother, with head half bowed,--"gone to work in Nashville; he
|
|
and his father couldn't agree."
|
|
|
|
Little Doc, the boy born since the time of my school, took me
|
|
horseback down the creek next morning toward Farmer Dowell's. The
|
|
road and the stream were battling for mastery, and the stream had
|
|
the better of it. We splashed and waded, and the merry boy,
|
|
perched behind me, chattered and laughed. He showed me where
|
|
Simon Thompson had bought a bit of ground and a home; but his
|
|
daughter Lana, a plump, brown, slow girl, was not there. She had
|
|
married a man and a farm twenty miles away. We wound on down the
|
|
stream till we came to a gate that I did not recognize, but the
|
|
boy insisted that it was "Uncle Bird's." The farm was fat with
|
|
the growing crop. In that little valley was a strange stillness
|
|
as I rode up; for death and marriage had stolen youth, and left
|
|
age and childhood there. We sat and talked that night, after the
|
|
chores were done. Uncle Bird was grayer, and his eyes did not see
|
|
so well, but he was still jovial. We talked of the acres bought,--
|
|
one hundred and twenty-five,--of the new guest chamber added, of
|
|
Martha's marrying. Then we talked of death: Fanny and Fred were
|
|
gone; a shadow hung over the other daughter, and when it lifted
|
|
she was to go to Nashville to school. At last we spoke of the
|
|
neighbors, and as night fell Uncle Bird told me how, on a night
|
|
like that, 'Thenie came wandering back to her home over yonder, to
|
|
escape the blows of her husband. And next morning she died in the
|
|
home that her little bow-legged brother, working and saving, had
|
|
bought for their widowed mother.
|
|
|
|
My journey was done, and behind me lay hill and dale, and Life and
|
|
Death. How shall man measure Progress there where the dark-faced
|
|
Josie lies? How many heartfuls of sorrow shall balance a bushel
|
|
of wheat? How hard a thing is life to the lowly, and yet how
|
|
human and real! And all this life and love and strife and
|
|
failure,--is it the twilight of nightfall or the flush of some
|
|
faint-dawning day?
|
|
|
|
Thus sadly musing, I rode to Nashville in the Jim Crow car.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE CAPTURE OF A SLAVER
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by J. Taylor Wood
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From 1830 to 1850 both Great Britain and the United States, by
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joint convention, kept on the coast of Africa at least eighty guns
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afloat for the suppression of the slave trade. Most of the
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vessels so employed were small corvettes, brigs, or schooners;
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steam at that time was just being introduced into the navies of
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the world.
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Nearly fifty years ago I was midshipman on the United States brig
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Porpoise, of ten guns. Some of my readers may remember these
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little ten-gun coffins, as many of them proved to be to their
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crews. The Porpoise was a fair sample of the type; a full-rigged
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brig of one hundred and thirty tons, heavily sparred, deep
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waisted, and carrying a battery of eight twenty-four-pound
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carronades and two long chasers; so wet that even in a moderate
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breeze or sea it was necessary to batten down; and so tender that
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she required careful watching; only five feet between decks, her
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quarters were necessarily cramped and uncomfortable, and, as far
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as possible, we lived on deck. With a crew of eighty all told,
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Lieutenant Thompson was in command, Lieutenant Bukett executive
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officer, and two midshipmen were the line officers. She was so
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slow that we could hardly hope for a prize except by a fluke.
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Repeatedly we had chased suspicious craft only to be out-sailed.
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At this time the traffic in slaves was very brisk; the demand in
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the Brazils, in Cuba, and in other Spanish West Indies was urgent,
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and the profit of the business so great that two or three
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successful ventures would enrich any one. The slavers were
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generally small, handy craft; fast, of course; usually schooner-
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rigged, and carrying flying topsails and forecourse. Many were
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built in England or elsewhere purposely for the business, without,
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of course, the knowledge of the builders, ostensibly as yachts or
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traders. The Spaniards and Portuguese were the principal
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offenders, with occasionally an English-speaking renegade.
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The slave depots, or barracoons, were generally located some miles
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up a river. Here the slaver was secure from capture and could
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embark his live cargo at his leisure. Keeping a sharp lookout on
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the coast, the dealers were able to follow the movements of the
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cruisers, and by means of smoke, or in other ways, signal when the
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coast was clear for the coming down the river and sailing of the
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loaded craft. Before taking in the cargoes they were always
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fortified with all the necessary papers and documents to show they
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were engaged in legitimate commerce, so it was only when caught in
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flagrante delicto that we could hold them.
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We had been cruising off the coast of Liberia doing nothing, when
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we were ordered to the Gulf of Guinea to watch the Bonny and
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Cameroons mouths of the great Niger River. Our consort was H.M.
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schooner Bright, a beautiful craft about our tonnage, but with
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half our crew, and able to sail three miles to our two. She was
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an old slaver, captured and adapted as a cruiser. She had been
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very successful, making several important captures of full
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cargoes, and twice or thrice her commanding officer and others had
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been promoted. Working our way slowly down the coast in company
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with the Bright, we would occasionally send a boat on shore to
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reconnoitre or gather any information we could from the natives
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through our Krooman interpreter. A few glasses of rum or a string
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of beads would loosen the tongue of almost any one. At Little
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Bonny we heard that two vessels were some miles up the river,
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ready to sail, and were only waiting until the coast was clear.
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Captain James, of the Bright, thought that one, if not both, would
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sail from another outlet of the river, about thirty miles to the
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southward, and determined to watch it.
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We both stood to that direction. Of course we were watched from
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the shore, and the slavers were kept posted as to our movements.
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They supposed we had both gone to the Cameroons, leaving Little
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Bonny open; but after dark, with a light land breeze, we wore
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round and stood to the northward, keeping offshore some distance,
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so that captains leaving the river might have sufficient offing to
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prevent their reaching port again or beaching their craft. At
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daybreak, as far as we could judge, we were about twenty miles
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offshore to the northward and westward of Little Bonny, in the
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track of any vessel bound for the West Indies. The night was dark
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with occasional rain squalls, when the heavens would open and the
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water come down in a flood. Anxiously we all watched for
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daylight, which comes under the equator with a suddenness very
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different from the prolonged twilight of higher latitudes. At the
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first glimmer in the east every eye was strained on the horizon,
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all eager, all anxious to be the first to sight anything within
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our vision. The darkness soon gave way to gray morn. Day was
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dawning, when suddenly a Krooman by my side seized my hand and,
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without saying a word, pointed inshore. I looked, but could see
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nothing. All eyes were focused in that direction, and in a few
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minutes the faint outline of a vessel appeared against the sky.
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She was some miles inshore of us, and as the day brightened we
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made her out to be a brigantine (an uncommon rig in those days),
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standing across our bows, with all studding sails set on the
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starboard side, indeed everything that could pull, including water
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sails and save-all. We were on the same tack heading to the
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northward. We set everything that would draw, and kept off two
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points, bringing the wind abeam so as to head her off.
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The breeze was light and off the land. We had not yet been seen
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against the darker western horizon, but we knew it could only be a
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few minutes longer before their sharp eyes would make us out.
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Soon we saw the studding sails and all kites come down by the run
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and her yards braced up sharp on the same tack as ours. We also
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hauled by the wind. At sunrise she was four points on our weather
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bow, distant about four miles. We soon perceived that she could
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outsail our brig and if the wind held would escape. Gradually she
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drew away from us until she was hull down. Our only hope now was
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that the land breeze would cease and the sea breeze come in. As
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the sun rose we gladly noticed the wind lessening, until at eleven
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o'clock it was calm. Not a breath ruffled the surface of the sea;
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the sun's rays in the zenith were reflected as from a mirror; the
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waters seemed like molten lead.
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I know of nothing more depressing than a calm in the tropics,--a
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raging sun overhead, around an endless expanse of dead sea, and a
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feeling of utter helplessness that is overpowering. What if this
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should last? what a fate! The Rime of the Ancient Mariner comes
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to our mind. Come storm and tempest, come hurricanes and
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blizzards, anything but an endless stagnation. For some hours we
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watched earnestly the horizon to the westward, looking for the
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first dark break on the smooth sea. Not a cloud was in the
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heavens. The brig appeared to be leaving us either by towing or
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by sweeps; only her topgallant sail was above the horizon. It
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looked as if the sea breeze would desert us. It usually came in
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about one o'clock, but that hour and another had passed and yet we
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watched for the first change. Without a breeze our chances of
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overhauling the stranger were gone. Only a white speck like the
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wing of a gull now marked her whereabouts on the edge of the
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horizon, and in another hour she would be invisible even from the
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masthead.
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When we were about to despair, our head Krooman drew the captain's
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attention to the westward and said the breeze was coming. We saw
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no signs of it, but his quick eye had noticed light feathery
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clouds rising to the westward, a sure indication of the coming
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breeze. Soon we could see the glassy surface ruffled at different
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points as the breeze danced over it, coming on like an advancing
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line of skirmishers; and as we felt its first gentle movement on
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our parched faces, it was welcome indeed, putting new life into
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all of us. The crew needed no encouragement to spring to their
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work. As the little brig felt the breeze and gathered
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steerageway, she was headed for the chase, bringing the wind on
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her starboard quarter. In less than five minutes all the studding
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sails that would draw were set, as well as everything that would
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pull. The best quartermaster was sent to the wheel, with orders
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to keep the chase directly over the weather end of the spritsail
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yard. The captain ordered the sails wet, an expedient I never had
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much faith in, unless the sails are very old. But as if to
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recompense us for the delay, the breeze came in strong and steady.
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Our one hope now was to follow it up close, and to carry it within
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gunshot of the brig, for if she caught it before we were within
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range she would certainly escape. All hands were piped to
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quarters, and the long eighteen-pounder on the forecastle was
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loaded with a full service charge; on this piece we relied to
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cripple the chase. We were now rapidly raising her, and I was
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sent aloft on the fore topsail yard, with a good glass to watch
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her movements. Her hull was in sight and she was still becalmed,
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though her head was pointed in the right direction, and everything
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was set to catch the coming breeze. She carried a boat on each
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side at the davits like a man-of-war, and I reported that I could
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make out men securing them. They had been towing her, and only
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stopped when they saw us drawing near.
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Anxiously we watched the breeze on the water as it narrowed the
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sheen between us, and we were yet two miles or more distant when
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she first felt the breeze. As she did so we hoisted the English
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blue ensign,--for the fleet at this time was under a Rear Admiral
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of the Blue,--and fired a weather gun, but no response was made.
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Fortunately the wind continued to freshen and the Porpoise was
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doing wonderfully well. We were rapidly closing the distance
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between us. We fired another gun, but no attention was paid to
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it. I noticed from the movements of the crew of the brig that
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they were getting ready for some manoeuvre, and reported to the
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captain. He divined at once what the manoeuvre would be, and
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ordered the braces be led along, hands by the studding-sail
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halyards and tacks, and everything ready to haul by the wind. We
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felt certain now of the character of our friend, and the men were
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already calculating the amount of their prize money. We were now
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within range, and must clip her wings if possible.
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The first lieutenant was ordered to open fire with the eighteen-
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pounder. Carefully the gun was laid, and as the order "fire" was
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given, down came our English flag, and the stop of the Stars and
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Stripes was broken at the gaff. The first shot touched the water
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abeam of the chase and ricochetted ahead of her. She showed the
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Spanish flag. The captain of the gun was ordered to elevate a
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little more and try again. The second shot let daylight through
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her fore topsail, but the third was wide again.
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Then the sharp, quick order of the captain, "Fore topsail yard
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there, come down on deck, sir!" brought me down on the run. "Have
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both cutters cleared away and ready for lowering," were my orders
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as I reached the quarter-deck. Practice from the bow chasers
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continued, but the smoke that drifted ahead of us interfered with
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the accuracy of the firing, and no vital part was touched, though
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a number of shots went through her sails. The captain in the main
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rigging never took his eye from the Spaniard, evidently expecting
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that as a fox when hard pressed doubles on the hounds, the chase
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would attempt the same thing. And he was not disappointed, for
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when we had come within easy range of her, the smoke hid her from
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view for a few minutes, and as it dispersed the first glimpse
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showed the captain that her studding sails had all gone, and that
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she had hauled by the wind, standing across our weather bow. Her
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captain had lost no time in taking in his studding sails;
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halyards, tacks, and sheets had all been cut together and dropped
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overboard.
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It was a bold and well-executed manoeuvre, and we could not help
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admiring the skill with which she was handled. However, we had
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been prepared for this move. "Ease down your helm." "Lower away.
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Haul down the studding sails." "Ease away the weather braces.
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Brace up." "Trim down the head sheets," were the orders which
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followed in rapid succession, and were as quickly executed. The
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Spaniard was now broad on our lee bow, distant not more than half
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a mile, but as she felt the wind which we brought down she fairly
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spun through the water, exposing her bright copper. She was both
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head-reaching and outsailing us; in half an hour she would have
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been right ahead of us, and in an hour the sun would be down. It
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was now or never. We could bring nothing to bear except the gun
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on the forecastle. Fortunately it continued smooth, and we were
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no longer troubled with smoke. Shot after shot went hissing
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through the air after her; a number tore through the sails or
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rigging, but not a spar was touched nor an important rope cut. We
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could see some of her crew aloft reeving and stopping braces and
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ready to repair any damage done, working as coolly under fire as
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old man-of-war's men. But while we were looking, down came the
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gaff of her mainsail, and the gaff-topsail fell all adrift; a
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lucky shot had cut her peak halyards. Our crew cheered with a
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will. "Well done, Hobson; try it again!" called the captain to
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the boatswain's mate, who was captain of the gun.
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After the next shot, the topgallant yard swayed for a few minutes
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and fell forward. The order was given to cease firing; she was at
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our mercy. We were rapidly nearing the chase, when she backed her
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topsail. We kept off, and when within easy range of the
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carronades "hove to" to windward. Lieutenant Bukett was ordered
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to board her in the first cutter and take charge. I followed in
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the second cutter, with orders to bring the captain on board with
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his papers. A few strokes sent us alongside of a brig about our
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tonnage, but with a low rail and a flush deck. The crew, some
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eighteen or twenty fine-looking seamen, were forward eagerly
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discussing the situation of affairs. The captain was aft with his
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two officers, talking to Lieutenant Bukett. He was fair, with
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light hair curling all over his head, beard cut short, about forty
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years of age, well set up, with a frame like a Roman wrestler,
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evidently a tough customer in a rough-and-ready scrimmage.
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He spoke fairly good English, and was violently denouncing the
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outrage done to his flag; his government would demand instant
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satisfaction for firing upon a legitimate trader on the high seas.
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I have the lieutenant Captain Thompson's orders, to bring the
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captain and his papers on board at once. His harangue was cut
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short by orders to get on board my boat. He swore with a terrible
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oath that he would never leave his vessel. "Come on board, men,"
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said I, and twenty of our crew were on deck in a jiffy. I
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stationed my coxswain, Parker, at the cabin companion way with
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orders to allow no one to pass. "Now," said Lieutenant Bukett to
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the Spaniard, "I will take you on board in irons unless you go
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quietly." He hesitated a moment, then said he would come as soon
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as he had gone below to bring up his papers. "No, never mind your
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papers; I will find them," said the lieutenant, for he saw the
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devil in the Spaniard's eyes, and knew he meant mischief. Our
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captive made one bound for the companion way, however, and seizing
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Parker by the throat hurled him into the water ways as if he had
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been a rag baby. But fortunately he slipped on a small grating
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and fell on his knees, and before he could recover himself two of
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our men threw themselves upon him.
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I closed the companion way. The struggle was desperate for a few
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minutes, for the Spaniard seemed possessed of the furies, and his
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efforts were almost superhuman. Twice he threw the men from him
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across the deck, but they were reinforced by Parker, who, smarting
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under his discomfiture, rushed in, determined to down him. I was
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anxious to end it with my pistol, but Lieutenant Bukett would not
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consent. The Spaniard's officers and men made some demonstration
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to assist, but they were quickly disposed of: his two mates were
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put in irons and the crew driven forward. Struggling, fighting,
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every limb and every muscle at work, the captain was overpowered;
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a piece of the signal halyards brought his hands together, and
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handcuffs were slipped on his wrists. Only then he succumbed, and
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begged Lieutenant Bukett to blow out his brains, for he had been
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treated like a pirate.
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Without doubt if he had reached the cabin he would have blown up
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the vessel, for in a locker over the transom were two open kegs of
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powder. I led him to my boat, assisted him in, and returned to
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the Porpoise. As soon as the Spaniard reached the deck the
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captain ordered his irons removed, and expressed his regret that
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it had been necessary to use force. The prisoner only bowed and
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said nothing. The captain asked him what his cargo consisted of.
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He replied, "About four hundred blacks bound to the Brazils."
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I was then ordered to return to the brig, bring on board her crew,
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leaving only the cook and steward, and to take charge of the prize
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as Lieutenant Bukett, our first lieutenant, was not yet wholly
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recovered from an attack of African fever. The crew of twenty
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men, when brought on board, consisted of Spaniards, Greeks,
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Malays, Arabs, white and black, but had not one Anglo-Saxon. They
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were ironed in pairs and put under guard.
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From the time we first got on board we had heard moans, cries, and
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rumblings coming from below, and as soon as the captain and crew
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were removed, the hatches had been taken off, when there arose a
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hot blast as from a charnel house, sickening and overpowering. In
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the hold were three or four hundred human beings, gasping,
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struggling for breath, dying; their bodies, limbs, faces, all
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expressing terrible suffering. In their agonizing fight for life,
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some had torn or wounded themselves or their neighbors dreadfully;
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some were stiffened in the most unnatural positions. As soon as I
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knew the condition of things I sent the boat back for the doctor
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and some whiskey. It returned bringing Captain Thompson, and for
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an hour or more we were all hard at work lifting and helping the
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poor creatures on deck, where they were laid out in rows. A
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little water and stimulant revived most of them; some, however,
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were dead or too far gone to be resuscitated. The doctor worked
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earnestly over each one, but seventeen were beyond human skill.
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As fast as he pronounced them dead they were quickly dropped
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overboard.
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Night closed in with our decks covered so thickly with the ebony
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bodies that with difficulty we could move about; fortunately they
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were as quiet as so many snakes. In the meantime the first
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officer, Mr. Block, was sending up a new topgallant yard, reeving
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new rigging, repairing the sails, and getting everything ataunto
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aloft. The Kroomen were busy washing out and fumigating the hold,
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getting ready for our cargo again. It would have been a very
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anxious night, except that I felt relieved by the presence of the
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brig which kept within hail. Soon after daybreak Captain Thompson
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came on board again, and we made a count of the captives as they
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were sent below; 188 men and boys, and 166 women and girls.
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Seeing everything snug and in order the captain returned to the
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brig, giving me final orders to proceed with all possible dispatch
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to Monrovia, Liberia, land the negroes, then sail for Porto Praya,
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Cape de Verde Islands, and report to the commodore. As the brig
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hauled to the wind and stood to the southward and eastward I
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dipped my colors, when her crew jumped into the rigging and gave
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us three cheers, which we returned.
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As she drew away from us I began to realize my position and
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responsibility: a young midshipman, yet in my teens, commanding a
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prize, with three hundred and fifty prisoners on board, two or
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three weeks' sail from port, with only a small crew. From the
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first I kept all hands aft except two men on the lookout, and the
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weather was so warm that we could all sleep on deck. I also
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ordered the men never to lay aside their pistols or cutlasses,
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except when working aloft, but my chief reliance was in my
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knowledge of the negro,--of his patient, docile disposition. Born
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and bred a slave he never thought of any other condition, and he
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accepted the situation without a murmur. I had never heard of
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blacks rising or attempting to gain their freedom on board a
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slaver.
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My charges were all of a deep black; from fifteen to twenty-five
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years of age, and, with a few exceptions, nude, unless copper or
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brass rings on their ankles or necklaces of cowries can be
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described as articles of dress. All were slashed, or had the
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scars of branding on their foreheads and cheeks; these marks were
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the distinguishing features of different tribes or families. The
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men's hair had been cut short, and their heads looked in some
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cases as if they had been shaven. The women, on the contrary,
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wore their hair "a la pompadour;" the coarse kinky locks were
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sometimes a foot or more above their heads, and trained square or
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round like a boxwood bush. Their features were of the pronounced
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African type, but, notwithstanding this disfigurement, were not
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unpleasing in appearance. The figures of all were very good,
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straight, well developed, some of the young men having bodies that
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would have graced a Mercury or an Apollo. Their hands were small,
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showing no evidences of work, only the cruel marks of shackles.
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These in some cases had worn deep furrows on their wrists or
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ankles.
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They were obedient to all orders as far as they understood them,
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and would, I believe, have jumped overboard if told to do so. I
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forbade the men to treat them harshly or cruelly. I had the sick
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separated from the others, and allowed them to remain on deck all
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the time, and in this way I partly gained their confidence. I was
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anxious to learn their story. Fortunately one of the Kroomen
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found among the prisoners a native of a tribe living near the
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coast, and with him as interpreter was able to make himself
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understood. After a good deal of questioning I learned that most
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of them were from a long distance in the interior, some having
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been one and some two moons on the way, traveling partly by land
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and partly by river until they reached the coast. They had been
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sold by their kings or by their parents to the Arab trader for
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firearms or for rum. Once at the depots near the coast, they were
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sold by the Arabs or other traders to the slave captains for from
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twenty-five to fifty dollars a head. In the Brazils or West
|
|
Indies they were worth from two to five hundred dollars. This
|
|
wide margin, of course, attracted unscrupulous and greedy
|
|
adventurers, who if they succeeded in running a few cargoes would
|
|
enrich themselves.
|
|
|
|
Our daily routine was simple. At six in the morning the rope
|
|
netting over the main hatch which admitted light and air was taken
|
|
off, and twenty-five of each sex were brought up, and seated in
|
|
two circles, one on each side of the deck. A large pan of boiled
|
|
paddy was then placed in the centre by the cook and all went to
|
|
work with their hands. A few minutes sufficed to dispose of every
|
|
grain; then one of the Kroomen gave each of them a cup of water
|
|
from a bucket. For half an hour after the meal they had the
|
|
liberty of the deck, except the poop, for exercise, to wash and to
|
|
sun themselves; for sunshine to a negro is meat and drink. At the
|
|
end of this time they were sent below and another fifty brought
|
|
up, and so on until all had been fed and watered. Paddy or rice
|
|
was the staple article of food. At dinner boiled yams were given
|
|
with the rice. Our passengers were quartered on a flying deck
|
|
extending from the foremast to a point twenty feet abaft the main
|
|
hatch from which came light and air. The height was about five
|
|
feet; the men had one side and the women the other. Of course
|
|
there was no furnishing of any kind, but all lay prone upon the
|
|
bare deck in rows.
|
|
|
|
Every morning after breakfast the Kroomen would rig the force
|
|
pump, screw on the hose and drench them all, washing out
|
|
thoroughly between decks. They appeared to enjoy this, and it was
|
|
cooling, for be it remembered we were close under the equator, the
|
|
thermometer dancing about 90 deg. As the water was sluiced over
|
|
them they would rub and scrub each other. Only the girls would
|
|
try not to get their hair wet, for they were at all times
|
|
particular about their headdress. It may be that this was the
|
|
only part of their toilet that gave them any concern.
|
|
|
|
The winds were baffling and light, so we made but slow progress.
|
|
Fortunately frequent rains, with sometimes a genuine tropical
|
|
downpour or cloud-burst, gave us an opportunity of replenishing
|
|
our water casks, and by spreading the awnings we were able to get
|
|
a good supply. I found on inspection that there were at least
|
|
thirty days' provisions on board, so on this score and that of
|
|
water I felt easy. I lived on deck, seldom using the cabin, which
|
|
was a veritable arsenal, with racks of muskets and cutlasses on
|
|
two sides, many more than the captain needed to arm his crew,
|
|
evidently intended for barter. Two or three prints of his
|
|
favorite saints, ornamented with sharks' teeth, hung on one
|
|
bulkhead. A well-thrummed mandolin and a number of French novels
|
|
proved him to be a musical and literary fellow, who could probably
|
|
play a bolero while making a troublesome slave walk a plank. I
|
|
found also some choice vintages from the Douro and Bordeaux snugly
|
|
stowed in his spirit locker, which proved good medicines for some
|
|
of our captives, who required stimulants. Several of the girls
|
|
were much reduced, refused nearly all food, and were only kept
|
|
alive by a little wine and water. Two finally died of mere
|
|
inanition. Their death did not in the least affect their fellows,
|
|
who appeared perfectly indifferent and callous to all their
|
|
surroundings, showing not the least sympathy or desire to help or
|
|
wait on one another.
|
|
|
|
The fifth day after parting from the brig we encountered a
|
|
tropical storm. The sun rose red and angry, and owing to the
|
|
great refraction appeared three times its natural size. It
|
|
climbed lazily to the zenith, and at noon we were shadowless. The
|
|
sky was as calm as a vault, and the surface of the water was like
|
|
burnished steel. The heat became so stifling that even the
|
|
Africans were gasping for breath, and we envied them their freedom
|
|
from all impediments. The least exertion was irksome, and
|
|
attended with extreme lassitude. During the afternoon thin cirri
|
|
clouds, flying very high, spread out over the western heavens like
|
|
a fan. As the day lengthened they thickened to resemble the
|
|
scales of a fish, bringing to mind the old saying, "A mackerel sky
|
|
and a mare's tail," etc. The signs were all unmistakable, and
|
|
even the gulls recognized a change, and, screaming, sought shelter
|
|
on our spars. Mr. Block was ordered to send down all the light
|
|
yards and sails; to take in and furl everything, using storm
|
|
gaskets, except on the fore and main storm staysails; to lash
|
|
everything on deck; to batten down the hatches, except one square
|
|
of the main; see all the shifting boards in place, so that our
|
|
living cargo would not be thrown to leeward higgledy-piggledy, and
|
|
to take four or five of the worst cases of the sick into the cabin
|
|
and lay them on the floor.
|
|
|
|
The sun disappeared behind a mountainous mass of leaden-colored
|
|
clouds which rose rapidly in the southern and western quarters.
|
|
To the eastward, also, the signs were threatening. Night came on
|
|
suddenly as it does in the tropics. Soon the darkness enveloped
|
|
us, a palpable veil. A noise like the march of a mighty host was
|
|
heard, which proved to be the approach of a tropical flood,
|
|
heralded by drops as large as marbles. It churned the still
|
|
waters into a phosphorescent foam which rendered the darkness only
|
|
more oppressive. The rain came down as it can come only in the
|
|
Bight of Benin. The avalanche cooled us, reducing the temperature
|
|
ten or fifteen degrees, giving us new life, and relieving our
|
|
fevered blood. I told Mr. Block to throw back the tarpaulin over
|
|
the main hatch and let our dusky friends get some benefit of it.
|
|
In half an hour the rain ceased, but it was as calm and ominous as
|
|
ever.
|
|
|
|
I knew this was but the forerunner of something worse to follow,
|
|
and we had not long to wait, for suddenly a blinding flash of
|
|
lightning darted through the gloom from east to west, followed by
|
|
one in the opposite direction. Without intermission, one blaze
|
|
after another and thunder crashing until our eyes were blinded and
|
|
our ears deafened, a thousand times ten thousand pieces of
|
|
artillery thundered away. We seemed utterly helpless and
|
|
insignificant. "How wonderful are Thy works," came to my mind.
|
|
Still no wind; the brig lay helpless.
|
|
|
|
Suddenly, as a slap in the face, the wind struck us,--on the
|
|
starboard quarter, fortunately. "Hard-a-starboard." "Hanl aft
|
|
port fore staysail sheet," I called. But before she could gather
|
|
way she was thrown down by the wind like a reed. She was "coming
|
|
to" instead of "going off," and I tried to get the main storm
|
|
staysail down but could not make myself heard. She was lying on
|
|
her broadside. Luckily the water was smooth as yet. The main
|
|
staysail shot out of the boltropes with a report like a twelve-
|
|
pounder, and this eased her so that if the fore staysail would
|
|
only hold she would go off. For a few minutes all we could do was
|
|
to hold on, our lee rail in the water; but the plucky little brig
|
|
rallied a little, her head went off inch by inch, and as she
|
|
gathered way she righted, and catching the wind on our quarter we
|
|
were off like a shot out of a gun. I knew we were too near the
|
|
vortex of the disturbance for the wind to hang long in one
|
|
quarter, so watched anxiously for a change. The sea rose rapidly
|
|
while we were running to the northward on her course, and after a
|
|
lull of a few minutes the wind opened from the eastward, butt end
|
|
foremost, a change of eight points. Nothing was to be done but
|
|
heave to, and this in a cross sea where pitch, weather roll, lee
|
|
lurch, followed one another in such earnest that it was a wonder
|
|
her masts were not switched out of her.
|
|
|
|
I passed an anxious night, most concerned about the poor creatures
|
|
under hatches, whose sufferings must have been terrible. To
|
|
prevent their suffocating I kept two men at the main hatch with
|
|
orders to lift one corner of the tarpaulin whenever possible, even
|
|
if some water did go below. Toward morning the wind and the sea
|
|
went down rapidly, and as the sun rose it chased the clouds off,
|
|
giving us the promise of a fine day. When the cook brought me a
|
|
cup of coffee, I do not know that I ever enjoyed anything more.
|
|
Hatches off, I jumped down into the hold to look after my
|
|
prisoners. Battered and bruised they lay around in heaps. Only
|
|
the shifting boards had kept them from being beaten into an
|
|
indistinguishable mass. As fast as possible they were sent on
|
|
deck, and the sun's rays, with a few buckets of water that were
|
|
thrown over them, accomplished wonders in bringing them to life
|
|
and starting them to care for their sore limbs and bruises.
|
|
|
|
One boy, when I motioned for him to go on deck, pointed quietly to
|
|
his leg, and upon examination I found a fracture just above the
|
|
knee. Swelling had already commenced. I had seen limbs set, and
|
|
had some rough idea how it should be done. So while getting some
|
|
splints of keg staves and bandages ready, I kept a stream of water
|
|
pouring on the fracture, and then ordered two men to pull the limb
|
|
in place, and it took all their strength. That done I put on the
|
|
splints and wrapped the bandages tightly. Three weeks later I
|
|
landed him in a fair way of recovery.
|
|
|
|
Gradually I allowed a larger number of the blacks to remain on
|
|
deck, a privilege which they greatly enjoyed. To lie basking in
|
|
the sun like saurians, half sleeping, half waking, appeared to
|
|
satisfy all their wishes. They were perfectly docile and
|
|
obedient, and not by word, gesture, or look did they express any
|
|
dissatisfaction with orders given them. But again for any little
|
|
acts of kindness they expressed no kind of appreciation or
|
|
gratitude. Physically they were men and women, but otherwise as
|
|
far removed from the Anglo-Saxon as the oyster from the baboon, or
|
|
the mole from the horse.
|
|
|
|
On the fourteenth day from parting with the brig we made the palms
|
|
on Cape Mesurado, the entrance to Monrovia Harbor. A light sea
|
|
breath wafted us to the anchorage, a mile from the town, and when
|
|
the anchor dropped from the bows and the chain ran through the
|
|
hawse pipe, it was sweet music to my ears; for the strain had been
|
|
great, and I felt years older than when I parted from my
|
|
messmates. A great responsibility seemed lifted from my
|
|
shoulders, and I enjoyed a long and refreshing sleep for the first
|
|
time in a fortnight. At nine the next morning I went on shore and
|
|
reported to the authorities, the officials of Liberia, of which
|
|
Monrovia is the capital.
|
|
|
|
This part of the African coast had been selected by the United
|
|
States government as the home of emancipated slaves; for prior to
|
|
the abolition excitement which culminated in the war, numbers of
|
|
slaves in the South had been manumitted by their masters with the
|
|
understanding that they should be deported to Liberia, and the
|
|
Colonization Society, an influential body, comprising some of the
|
|
leading men, like Madison, Webster, and Clay, had assisted in the
|
|
same work. The passages of the negroes were paid; each family was
|
|
given a tract of land and sufficient means to build a house.
|
|
Several thousand had been sent out, most of whom had settled at
|
|
Monrovia, and a few at other places on the coast. They had made
|
|
no impression on the natives. On the contrary, many of them had
|
|
intermarried with the natives, and the off-spring of these unions
|
|
had lost the use of the English tongue, and had even gone back to
|
|
the life and customs of their ancestors, sans clothing, sans
|
|
habitations, and worship of a fetich.
|
|
|
|
Of course there were some notable exceptions, especially President
|
|
Roberts, who proved himself a safe and prudent ruler, taking into
|
|
consideration his surroundings and the material with which he had
|
|
to work. The form of government was modeled after that of the
|
|
United States, but it was top-heavy. Honorables, colonels, and
|
|
judges were thicker than in Georgia. Only privates were scarce;
|
|
for nothing delights a negro more than a little show or a gaudy
|
|
uniform. On landing I was met by a dark mulatto, dressed in a
|
|
straw hat, blue tail coat, silver epaulettes, linen trousers, with
|
|
bare feet, and a heavy cavalry sabre hanging by his side. With
|
|
him were three or four others in the same rig, except the
|
|
epaulettes. He introduced himself as Colonel Harrison, chief of
|
|
police. I asked to be directed to the custom house.
|
|
|
|
The collector proved to be an old negro from Raleigh, N. C., gray
|
|
as a badger, spectacled, with manners of Lord Grandison and
|
|
language of Mrs. Malaprop. I reported my arrival, and asked
|
|
permission to land my cargo as soon as possible. He replied that
|
|
in a matter of so much importance, devolving questions of
|
|
momentous interest, it would be obligatory on him to consult the
|
|
Secretary of the Treasury. I said I trusted he would so
|
|
facilitate affairs that I might at an early hour disembarrass
|
|
myself of my involuntary prisoners. I returned on board, and the
|
|
day passed without any answer. The next morning I determined to
|
|
go at once to headquarters and find out the cause of the delay by
|
|
calling on the President.
|
|
|
|
He received me without any formality. I made my case as strong as
|
|
possible, and pressed for an immediate answer. In reply he
|
|
assured me he would consult with other members of his cabinet, and
|
|
give me a final answer the next morning. That evening I dined
|
|
with him en famille, and recognized some old Virginia dishes on
|
|
the table. The next morning I waited impatiently for his
|
|
decision, having made up my mind however, if it was unfavorable,
|
|
to land my poor captives, be the consequences what they might.
|
|
|
|
About eleven o'clock a boat came off with an officer in full
|
|
uniform, who introduced himself as Colonel Royal, bearer of
|
|
dispatches from his Excellency the President. He handed me a
|
|
letter couched in diplomatic language, as long as some of his
|
|
brother presidents' messages on this side of the Atlantic. I had
|
|
hardly patience to read it. The gist of it was, I might not land
|
|
the captives at Monrovia, but might land them at Grand Bassa,
|
|
about a hundred and fifty miles to the eastward; that Colonel
|
|
Royal would accompany me with orders to the governor there to
|
|
receive them. This was something I had not anticipated, and
|
|
outside of my instructions. However, I thought it best to comply
|
|
with the wishes of the government of our only colony.
|
|
|
|
Getting under way we stood to the southward and eastward, taking
|
|
advantage of the light land and sea breeze, keeping the coast
|
|
close aboard. The colonel had come on board without any
|
|
impediments, and I wondered if he intended to make the voyage in
|
|
his cocked hat, epaulettes, sword, etc. But soon after we had
|
|
started he disappeared and emerged from the cabin bareheaded,
|
|
barefooted, and without clothing except a blue dungaree shirt and
|
|
trousers. Like a provident negro, having stowed away all his
|
|
trappings, he appeared as a roustabout on a Western steamer. But
|
|
he had not laid aside with his toggery any of his important and
|
|
consequential airs. He ran foul of Mr. Block, who called him Mr.
|
|
Cuffy, and ordered him to give him a pull with the main sheet.
|
|
The colonel complained to me that he was not addressed by his name
|
|
or title, and that he was not treated as a representative of his
|
|
government should be. I reprimanded Mr. Block, and told him to
|
|
give the visitor all his title. "All right, sir, but the colonel
|
|
must keep off the weather side of the deck," growled the officer.
|
|
The cook, the crew, and even the Kroomen, all took their cue from
|
|
the first officer, and the colonel's lot was made most unhappy.
|
|
|
|
On the third day we reached Grand Bassa, and anchored off the
|
|
beach about two miles, along which the surf was breaking so high
|
|
that any attempt to land would be hazardous. Toward evening it
|
|
moderated, and a canoe with three naked natives came off. One I
|
|
found could speak a little English. I told him to say to the
|
|
governor that I would come on shore in the morning and see him,
|
|
and land my cargo at the same time.
|
|
|
|
The next morning at sunrise we were boarded by a party of natives
|
|
headed by one wearing a black hat half covered with a tarnished
|
|
silver band, an old navy frock coat, much too small, between the
|
|
buttons of which his well-oiled skin showed clearly. A pair of
|
|
blue flannel trousers completed his outfit. An interpreter
|
|
introduced him as King George of Grand Bassa. With him were about
|
|
a dozen followers, each one wearing a different sort of garment--
|
|
and seldom more than a single one--representing old uniforms of
|
|
many countries. Two coats I noticed were buttoned up the back.
|
|
|
|
The king began by saying that he was and always had been a friend
|
|
of the Americans; that he was a big man, had plenty of men and
|
|
five wives, etc. While he was speaking, a white-bearded old
|
|
colored gentleman came over the gangway, dressed in a linen
|
|
roundabout and trousers, with a wide-brimmed straw hat. At the
|
|
same time Colonel Royal came up from the cabin in grande tenue and
|
|
introduced us to the Hon. Mr. Marshall, governor of Bassa,
|
|
formerly of Kentucky.
|
|
|
|
In a few minutes he explained the situation. With a few settlers
|
|
he was located at this place, on the frontier of the colony, and
|
|
they were there on sufferance only from the natives. I told him
|
|
Colonel Royal would explain my mission to him and the king. The
|
|
colonel, bowing low to the king, the governor, and myself, and
|
|
bringing his sword down with a thud on the deck, drew from between
|
|
the bursting buttons of his coat the formidable document I had
|
|
seen at Monrovia, and with most impressive voice and gesture
|
|
commenced to read it. The king listened for a few minutes, and
|
|
then interrupted him. I asked the interpreter what he said. He
|
|
replied, "King say he fool nigger; if he comes on shore he give
|
|
him to Voodoo women." Then turning his back he walked forward.
|
|
The colonel dropped his paper, and drawing his sword, in the most
|
|
dramatic manner claimed protection in the name of the government,
|
|
declaring that he had been insulted. I told him to keep cool,
|
|
since he was certainly safe as long as he was on board my ship.
|
|
He grumbled and muttered terrible things, but subsided gradually
|
|
like the departing thunder of a summer storm.
|
|
|
|
I arranged the landing of the passengers with Governor Marshall,
|
|
whom I found a sensible, clear-headed old man, ready to cooperate
|
|
in every way. But he suggested that I had better consult the king
|
|
before doing anything. I did so, and he at once said they could
|
|
not land. I told the interpreter to say they would be landed at
|
|
once and put under the protection of the governor; that if the
|
|
king or his people hurt them or ran them off I would report it to
|
|
our commodore, who would certainly punish him severely. Finding
|
|
me determined, he began to temporize, and asked that the landing
|
|
be put off until the next day, that he might consult with his head
|
|
people, for if I sent them on shore before he had done so they
|
|
would kill them. "If that is the case," I replied, "I will hold
|
|
you on board as a hostage for their good behavior." This threat
|
|
surprised him, and he changed his tactics. After a little powwow
|
|
with some of his followers, he said that if I would give him fifty
|
|
muskets, twenty pounds of powder, the colonel's sword, and some
|
|
red cloth for his wives, I might land them. I replied that I had
|
|
not a musket to spare nor an ounce of powder, that the colonel was
|
|
a high officer of his government, and that he of course would not
|
|
give up his uniform. Fortunately the colonel had retired to the
|
|
cabin and did not hear this modest demand, or he would have been
|
|
as much outraged as if his sable Majesty had asked for him to be
|
|
served "roti a l'Ashantee." However, I told the king I would send
|
|
his wives some cloth and buttons. He grunted his approval but
|
|
returned again to the charge, and asked that he might choose a few
|
|
of the captives for his own use, before landing. "Certainly not,"
|
|
I answered, "neither on board nor on shore," and added that he
|
|
would be held accountable for their good treatment as free men and
|
|
women. He left thoroughly disappointed and bent on mischief.
|
|
|
|
In the meantime Mr. Block had made all preparations for landing,
|
|
and had the boats lowered and ranged alongside, with sufficient
|
|
rice to last the blacks a week or ten days. The men and boys were
|
|
sent first. When they were called up from the hold and ordered
|
|
into the boats not one of them moved. They evidently divined what
|
|
had been going on and dreaded leaving the vessel, though our
|
|
Kroomen tried to explain that they would be safe and free on
|
|
shore. The explanation was without effect, however, and they
|
|
refused to move. The could only understand that they were
|
|
changing masters, and they preferred the present ones. Sending
|
|
three or four men down, I told them to pass up the negroes one at
|
|
a time. Only a passive resistance was offered, such as one often
|
|
sees exhibited by cattle being loaded on the cars or on a steamer,
|
|
and were silent, not uttering a word of complaint. By noon the
|
|
men were all on shore, and then we began with the girls. They
|
|
were more demonstrative than the men, and by their looks and
|
|
gestures begged not to be taken out of the vessel. I was much
|
|
moved, for it was a painful duty, and I had become interested in
|
|
these beings, so utterly helpless, so childlike in their
|
|
dependence on those around them. And I could not help thinking
|
|
what their fate would be, thrown upon the shore hundreds of miles
|
|
from their homes, and among a people strange to them in language.
|
|
|
|
Even Mr. Block was deeply stirred. "He had not shipped," he said,
|
|
"for such work." I went to my cabin and left him in charge. In
|
|
the course of an hour he reported, "All ashore, sir." I told him
|
|
to have the gig manned and I would go on shore with Colonel Royal,
|
|
and get a receipt from Governor Marshall for my late cargo. The
|
|
colonel declined to accompany me, alleging sickness and requesting
|
|
me to get the necessary papers signed. No doubt he felt safer on
|
|
board than within reach of King George.
|
|
|
|
We landed through the surf on a sandy beach, on which the waves of
|
|
the Atlantic were fretting. Near by was a thick grove of cocoanut
|
|
trees, under which in groups of four and five were those who had
|
|
just been landed. They were seated on the ground, their heads
|
|
resting on their knees, in a position of utter abnegation,
|
|
surrounded by three or four hundred chattering savages of all
|
|
ages, headed by the king. With the exception of him and a few of
|
|
his head men, the clothing of the company would not have covered a
|
|
rag baby. They were no doubt discussing the appearance of the
|
|
strangers and making their selections.
|
|
|
|
I found the governor's house and the houses of the few settlers
|
|
some distance back on a slight elevation. The governor was
|
|
comfortably, though plainly situated, with a large family around
|
|
him. He gave me a receipt for the number of blacks landed, but
|
|
said it would be impossible for him to prevent the natives from
|
|
taking and enslaving them. I agreed with him, and said he must
|
|
repeat to the king what I had told him. Then bidding him good-by
|
|
I returned on board, sad and weary as one often feels after being
|
|
relieved of a great burden. At the same time I wondered whether
|
|
the fate of these people would have been any worse if the captain
|
|
of the slaver had succeeded in landing them in the Brazils or the
|
|
West Indies. Sierra Leone being a crown colony, the English could
|
|
land all their captives there and provide for them until they were
|
|
able to work for themselves. In this respect they had a great
|
|
advantage over us.
|
|
|
|
Getting under way, I proceeded to Monrovia to land Colonel Royal,
|
|
and then to Porto Praya, our squadron's headquarters. There I
|
|
found Commodore Gregory in the flagship corvette Portsmouth, and
|
|
reported to him. Soon after the Porpoise came in, and I joined my
|
|
old craft, giving up my command of the captured slaver rather
|
|
reluctantly.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
MR. CHARLES W. CHESNUTT'S STORIES
|
|
by W. D. Howells
|
|
|
|
|
|
The critical reader of the story called The Wife of his Youth,
|
|
which appeared in these pages two years ago, must have noticed
|
|
uncommon traits in what was altogether a remarkable piece of work.
|
|
The first was the novelty of the material; for the writer dealt
|
|
not only with people who were not white, but with people who were
|
|
not black enough to contrast grotesquely with white people,--who
|
|
in fact were of that near approach to the ordinary American in
|
|
race and color which leaves, at the last degree, every one but the
|
|
connoisseur in doubt whether they are Anglo-Saxon or Anglo-
|
|
African. Quite as striking as this novelty of the material was
|
|
the author's thorough mastery of it, and his unerring knowledge of
|
|
the life he had chosen in its peculiar racial characteristics.
|
|
But above all, the story was notable for the passionless handling
|
|
of a phase of our common life which is tense with potential
|
|
tragedy; for the attitude, almost ironical, in which the artist
|
|
observes the play of contesting emotions in the drama under his
|
|
eyes; and for his apparently reluctant, apparently helpless
|
|
consent to let the spectator know his real feeling in the matter.
|
|
Any one accustomed to study methods in fiction, to distinguish
|
|
between good and bad art, to feel the joy which the delicate skill
|
|
possible only from a love of truth can give, must have known a
|
|
high pleasure in the quiet self-restraint of the performance; and
|
|
such a reader would probably have decided that the social
|
|
situation in the piece was studied wholly from the outside, by an
|
|
observer with special opportunities for knowing it, who was, as it
|
|
were, surprised into final sympathy.
|
|
|
|
Now, however, it is known that the author of this story is of
|
|
negro blood,--diluted, indeed, in such measure that if he did not
|
|
admit this descent few would imagine it, but still quite of that
|
|
middle world which lies next, though wholly outside, our own.
|
|
Since his first story appeared he has contributed several others
|
|
to these pages, and he now makes a showing palpable to criticism
|
|
in a volume called The Wife of his Youth, and Other Stories of the
|
|
Color Line; a volume of Southern sketches called The Conjure
|
|
Woman; and a short life of Frederick Douglass, in the Beacon
|
|
Series of biographies. The last is a simple, solid, straight
|
|
piece of work, not remarkable above many other biographical
|
|
studies by people entirely white, and yet important as the work of
|
|
a man not entirely white treating of a great man of his
|
|
inalienable race. But the volumes of fiction ARE remarkable above
|
|
many, above most short stories by people entirely white, and would
|
|
be worthy of unusual notice if they were not the work of a man not
|
|
entirely white.
|
|
|
|
It is not from their racial interest that we could first wish to
|
|
speak of them, though that must have a very great and very just
|
|
claim upon the critic. It is much more simply and directly, as
|
|
works of art, that they make their appeal, and we must allow the
|
|
force of this quite independently of the other interest. Yet it
|
|
cannot always be allowed. There are times in each of the stories
|
|
of the first volume when the simplicity lapses, and the effect is
|
|
as of a weak and uninstructed touch. There are other times when
|
|
the attitude, severely impartial and studiously aloof, accuses
|
|
itself of a little pompousness. There are still other times when
|
|
the literature is a little too ornate for beauty, and the diction
|
|
is journalistic, reporteristic. But it is right to add that these
|
|
are the exceptional times, and that for far the greatest part Mr.
|
|
Chesnutt seems to know quite as well what he wants to do in a
|
|
given case as Maupassant, or Tourguenief, or Mr. James, or Miss
|
|
Jewett, or Miss Wilkins, in other given cases, and has done it
|
|
with an art of kindred quiet and force. He belongs, in other
|
|
words, to the good school, the only school, all aberrations from
|
|
nature being so much truancy and anarchy. He sees his people very
|
|
clearly, very justly, and he shows them as he sees them, leaving
|
|
the reader to divine the depth of his feeling for them. He
|
|
touches all the stops, and with equal delicacy in stories of real
|
|
tragedy and comedy and pathos, so that it would be hard to say
|
|
which is the finest in such admirably rendered effects as The Web
|
|
of Circumstance, The Bouquet, and Uncle Wellington's Wives. In
|
|
some others the comedy degenerates into satire, with a look in the
|
|
reader's direction which the author's friend must deplore.
|
|
|
|
As these stories are of our own time and country, and as there is
|
|
not a swashbuckler of the seventeenth century, or a sentimentalist
|
|
of this, or a princess of an imaginary kingdom, in any of them,
|
|
they will possibly not reach half a million readers in six months,
|
|
but in twelve months possibly more readers will remember them than
|
|
if they had reached the half million. They are new and fresh and
|
|
strong, as life always is, and fable never is; and the stories of
|
|
The Conjure Woman have a wild, indigenous poetry, the creation of
|
|
sincere and original imagination, which is imparted with a tender
|
|
humorousness and a very artistic reticence. As far as his race is
|
|
concerned, or his sixteenth part of a race, it does not greatly
|
|
matter whether Mr. Chesnutt invented their motives, or found them,
|
|
as he feigns, among his distant cousins of the Southern cabins.
|
|
In either case, the wonder of their beauty is the same; and
|
|
whatever is primitive and sylvan or campestral in the reader's
|
|
heart is touched by the spells thrown on the simple black lives in
|
|
these enchanting tales. Character, the most precious thing in
|
|
fiction, is as faithfully portrayed against the poetic background
|
|
as in the setting of the Stories of the Color Line.
|
|
|
|
Yet these stories, after all, are Mr. Chesnutt's most important
|
|
work, whether we consider them merely as realistic fiction, apart
|
|
from their author, or as studies of that middle world of which he
|
|
is naturally and voluntarily a citizen. We had known the
|
|
nethermost world of the grotesque and comical negro and the
|
|
terrible and tragic negro through the white observer on the
|
|
outside, and black character in its lyrical moods we had known
|
|
from such an inside witness as Mr. Paul Dunbar; but it had
|
|
remained for Mr. Chesnutt to acquaint us with those regions where
|
|
the paler shades dwell as hopelessly, with relation to ourselves,
|
|
as the blackest negro. He has not shown the dwellers there as
|
|
very different from ourselves. They have within their own circles
|
|
the same social ambitions and prejudices; they intrigue and
|
|
truckle and crawl, and are snobs, like ourselves, both of the
|
|
snobs that snub and the snobs that are snubbed. We may choose to
|
|
think them droll in their parody of pure white society, but
|
|
perhaps it would be wiser to recognize that they are like us
|
|
because they are of our blood by more than a half, or three
|
|
quarters, or nine tenths. It is not, in such cases, their negro
|
|
blood that characterizes them; but it is their negro blood that
|
|
excludes them, and that will imaginably fortify them and exalt
|
|
them. Bound in that sad solidarity from which there is no hope of
|
|
entrance into polite white society for them, they may create a
|
|
civilization of their own, which need not lack the highest
|
|
quality. They need not be ashamed of the race from which they
|
|
have sprung, and whose exile they share; for in many of the arts
|
|
it has already shown, during a single generation of freedom, gifts
|
|
which slavery apparently only obscured. With Mr. Booker
|
|
Washington the first American orator of our time, fresh upon the
|
|
time of Frederick Douglass; with Mr. Dunbar among the truest of
|
|
our poets; with Mr. Tanner, a black American, among the only three
|
|
Americans from whom the French government ever bought a picture,
|
|
Mr. Chesnutt may well be willing to own his color.
|
|
|
|
But that is his personal affair. Our own more universal interest
|
|
in him arises from the more than promise he has given in a
|
|
department of literature where Americans hold the foremost place.
|
|
In this there is, happily, no color line; and if he has it in him
|
|
to go forward on the way which he has traced for himself, to be
|
|
true to life as he has known it, to deny himself the glories of
|
|
the cheap success which awaits the charlatan in fiction, one of
|
|
the places at the top is open to him. He has sounded a fresh
|
|
note, boldly, not blatantly, and he has won the ear of the more
|
|
intelligent public.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
PATHS OF HOPE FOR THE NEGRO
|
|
PRACTICAL SUGGESTIONS OF A SOUTHERNER
|
|
by Jerome Dowd
|
|
|
|
|
|
It is too late in the day to discuss whether it would have been
|
|
better had the Negro never been brought into the Southern States.
|
|
If his presence here has been beneficial, or is ever to prove so,
|
|
the price of the benefit has already been dearly paid for. He was
|
|
the occasion of the deadliest and most expensive war in modern
|
|
times. In the next place, his presence has corrupted politics and
|
|
has limited statesmanship to a mere question of race supremacy.
|
|
Great problems concerning the political, industrial, and moral
|
|
life of the people have been subordinated or overshadowed, so
|
|
that, while important strides have been made elsewhere in the
|
|
investigation of social conditions and in the administration of
|
|
State and municipal affairs, in civil-service reform, in the
|
|
management of penal and charitable institutions, and in the field
|
|
of education, the South has lagged behind.
|
|
|
|
On the charts of illiteracy and crime the South is represented by
|
|
an immense black spot. Such are a few items of the account. It
|
|
will require millions more of dollars and generations more of
|
|
earnest work before the total cost is met of bringing the black
|
|
man to this side of the globe. But the debt has been incurred and
|
|
must be liquidated.
|
|
|
|
The welfare of the Negro is bound up with that of the white man in
|
|
many important particulars:
|
|
|
|
First, the low standard of living among the blacks keeps down the
|
|
wages of all classes of whites. So long as the Negroes are
|
|
content to live in miserable huts, wear rags, and subsist upon hog
|
|
fat and cow-pease, so long must the wages of white people in the
|
|
same kind of work be pressed toward the same level. The higher we
|
|
raise the standard of living among the Negroes, the higher will be
|
|
the wages of the white people in the same occupations. The low
|
|
standard of the Negroes is the result of low productive power.
|
|
The less intelligent and skilled the Negroes are, the less they
|
|
can produce, whether working for themselves or others, and hence,
|
|
the less will be the total wealth of the country.
|
|
|
|
But it may be asked, When the standard of living of the Negroes is
|
|
raised, will not wages go up, and will not that be a drawback?
|
|
Certainly wages will go up, because the income of all classes will
|
|
be increased. High wages generally indicate high productive power
|
|
and general wealth, while low wages indicate the opposite. Only
|
|
benefits can arise from better wages.
|
|
|
|
In the next place, the Negro's propensity to crime tends to excite
|
|
the criminal tendencies of the white man. The South enjoys the
|
|
distinction of having the highest percentage of crime in all the
|
|
civilized world, and the reason is that the crimes of the one race
|
|
provoke counter-crimes in the other.
|
|
|
|
The physical well-being of the one race has such a conspicuous
|
|
influence upon that of the other that the subject requires no
|
|
elaboration. The uncleanliness of person and habits of the
|
|
Negroes in their homes and in the homes of their employers tends
|
|
to propagate diseases, and thus impairs the health and increases
|
|
the death-rate of the whole population.
|
|
|
|
Again, the lack of refinement in intellect, manners, and dress
|
|
among the Negroes is an obstacle to the cultivated life of the
|
|
whites. Ignorance and the absence of taste and self-respect in
|
|
servants result in badly kept homes and yards, destruction of
|
|
furniture and ware, ill-prepared food, poor table service, and a
|
|
general lowering of the standard of living. Furthermore, the
|
|
corrupt, coarse, and vulgar language of the Negroes is largely
|
|
responsible for the jumbled and distorted English spoken by many
|
|
of the Southern whites.
|
|
|
|
Seeing that the degradation of the Negro is an impediment to the
|
|
progress and civilization of the white man, how may we effect an
|
|
improvement in his condition?
|
|
|
|
First, municipalities should give more attention to the streets
|
|
and alleys that traverse Negro settlements. In almost every town
|
|
in the South there are settlements, known by such names as "New
|
|
Africa," "Haiti," "Log Town," "Smoky Hollow," or "Snow Hill,"
|
|
exclusively inhabited by Negroes. These settlements are often
|
|
outside the corporate limits. The houses are built along narrow,
|
|
crooked, and dirty lanes, and the community is without sanitary
|
|
regulations or oversight. These quarters should be brought under
|
|
municipal control, the lanes widened into streets and cleaned, and
|
|
provision made to guard against the opening of similar ones in the
|
|
future.
|
|
|
|
In the next place, property-owners should build better houses for
|
|
the Negroes to live in. The weakness in the civilization of the
|
|
Negroes is most pronounced in their family life. But improvement
|
|
in this respect is not possible without an improvement in the
|
|
character and the comforts of the houses they live in. Bad houses
|
|
breed bad people and bad neighborhoods. There is no more
|
|
distinctive form of crime than the building and renting of houses
|
|
unfit for human habitation.
|
|
|
|
Scarcely second in importance to improvements in house
|
|
architecture is the need among Negroes of more time to spend with
|
|
their families. Employers of Negro labor should be less exacting
|
|
in the number of hours required for a day's work. Many domestic
|
|
servants now work from six in the morning until nine and ten
|
|
o'clock at night. The Southern habit of keeping open shopping-
|
|
places until late at night encourages late suppers, retains cooks,
|
|
butlers, and nurses until bedtime, and robs them of all home life.
|
|
If the merchants would close their shops at six o'clock, as is the
|
|
custom in the North, the welfare of both races would be greatly
|
|
promoted.
|
|
|
|
Again, a revolution is needed in the character of the Negro's
|
|
religion. At present it is too largely an affair of the emotions.
|
|
He needs to be taught that the religious life is something to grow
|
|
into by the perfection of personality, and not to be jumped into
|
|
or sweated into at camp-meetings. The theological seminaries and
|
|
the graduate preachers should assume the task of grafting upon the
|
|
religion of the Negro that much sanity at least.
|
|
|
|
A reform is as much needed in the methods and aims of Negro
|
|
education. Up to the present Negro education has shared with that
|
|
of the white man the fault of being top-heavy. Colleges and
|
|
universities have developed out of proportion to, and at the
|
|
expense of, common schools. Then, the kind of education afforded
|
|
the Negro has not been fitted to his capacities and needs. He has
|
|
been made to pursue courses of study parallel to those prescribed
|
|
for the whites, as though the individuals of both races had to
|
|
fill the same positions in life. Much of the Negro's education
|
|
has had nothing to do with his real life-work. It has only made
|
|
him discontented and disinclined to unfold his arms. The survival
|
|
of the Negroes in the race for existence depends upon their
|
|
retaining possession of the few bread-winning occupations now open
|
|
to them. But instead of better qualifying themselves for these
|
|
occupations they have been poring over dead languages and working
|
|
problems in mathematics. In the meantime the Chinaman and the
|
|
steam-laundry have abolished the Negro's wash-tub, trained white
|
|
"tonsorial artists" have taken away his barber's chair, and
|
|
skilled painters and plasterers and mechanics have taken away his
|
|
paint-brushes and tool-chests. Every year the number of
|
|
occupations open to him becomes fewer because of his lack of
|
|
progress in them. Unless a radical change takes place in the
|
|
scope of his education, so that he may learn better how to do his
|
|
work, a tide of white immigration will set in and force him out of
|
|
his last stronghold, domestic service, and limit his sphere to the
|
|
farm.
|
|
|
|
All primary schools for the Negroes should be equipped for
|
|
industrial training in such work as sewing, cooking, laundering,
|
|
carpentry, and house-cleaning, and, in rural districts, in
|
|
elementary agriculture.
|
|
|
|
Secondary schools should add to the literary courses a more
|
|
advanced course in industrial training, so as to approach as
|
|
nearly as possible the objects and methods of the Tuskegee and
|
|
Hampton Industrial and Normal Schools. Too much cannot be said in
|
|
behalf of the revolution in the life of the Negro which the work
|
|
of these schools promises and, in part, has already wrought. The
|
|
writer is fully aware that education has a value aside from and
|
|
above its bread-winning results, and he would not dissuade the
|
|
Negro from seeking the highest culture that he may be capable of;
|
|
but it is folly for him to wing his way through the higher realms
|
|
of the intellect without some acquaintance with the requirements
|
|
and duties of life.
|
|
|
|
Changes are needed in the methods of Negro education as well as in
|
|
its scope. Educators should take into account, more than they
|
|
have yet done, the differences in the mental characteristics of
|
|
the two races. It is a well-established fact that, while the
|
|
lower races possess marked capacity to deal with simple, concrete
|
|
ideas, they lack power of generalization, and soon fatigue in the
|
|
realm of the abstract. It is also well known that the inferior
|
|
races, being deficient in generalization, which is a subjective
|
|
process, are absorbed almost entirely in the things that are
|
|
objective. They have strong and alert eyesight, and are
|
|
susceptible to impressions through the medium of the eye to an
|
|
extent that is impossible to any of the white races. This fact is
|
|
evidenced in the great number of pictures found in the homes of
|
|
the Negroes. In default of anything better, they will paper their
|
|
walls with advertisements of the theater and the circus, and even
|
|
with pictures from vicious newspapers. They delight in street
|
|
pageantry, fancy costumes, theatrical performances, and similar
|
|
spectacles. Factories employing Negroes generally find it
|
|
necessary to suspend operations on "circus day." They love
|
|
stories of adventure and any fiction that gives play to their
|
|
imaginations. All their tastes lie in the realm of the objective
|
|
and the concrete.
|
|
|
|
Hence, in the school-room stress should be laid on those studies
|
|
that appeal to the eye and the imagination. Lessons should be
|
|
given in sketching, painting, drawing, and casting. Reprints of
|
|
the popular works of art should be placed before the Negroes, that
|
|
their love for art may be gratified and their taste cultivated at
|
|
the same time. Fancy needlework, dress-making, and home
|
|
decorations should also have an important place. These studies,
|
|
while not contributing directly to bread-winning, have a refining
|
|
and softening influence upon character, and inspire efforts to
|
|
make the home more attractive. The more interest we can make the
|
|
Negro take in his personal appearance and in the comforts of his
|
|
home, the more we shall strengthen and promote his family life and
|
|
raise the level of his civilization.
|
|
|
|
The literary education of the Negro should consist of carefully
|
|
selected poems and novels that appeal to his imagination and
|
|
produce clear images upon his mind, excluding such literature as
|
|
is in the nature of psychological or moral research. Recitations
|
|
and dialogues should be more generally and more frequently
|
|
required. In history emphasis should be given to what is
|
|
picturesque, dramatic, and biographical.
|
|
|
|
Coming to the political phase of the Negro problem, there is a
|
|
general agreement among white men that the Southern States cannot
|
|
keep pace with the progress of the world as long as they are
|
|
menaced by Negro domination, and that, therefore, it is necessary
|
|
to eliminate the Negro vote from politics. When the Negroes
|
|
become intelligent factors in society, when they become thrifty
|
|
and accumulate wealth, they will find the way to larger exercise
|
|
of citizenship. They can never sit upon juries to pass upon life
|
|
and property until they are property-owners themselves, and they
|
|
can never hold the reins of government by reason of mere
|
|
superiority of numbers. Before they can take on larger political
|
|
responsibilities they must demonstrate their ability to meet them.
|
|
|
|
The Negroes will never be allowed to control State governments so
|
|
long as they vote at every election upon the basis of color,
|
|
without regard whatever to political issues or private
|
|
convictions. If the Negroes would divide their votes according to
|
|
their individual opinions, as the lamented Charles Price, one of
|
|
their best leaders, advised, there would be no danger of Negro
|
|
domination and no objection to their holding offices which they
|
|
might be competent to fill. But as there is no present prospect
|
|
of their voting upon any other basis than that of color, the white
|
|
people are forced to accept the situation and protect themselves
|
|
accordingly. Years of bitter and costly experience have
|
|
demonstrated over and over again that Negro rule is not only
|
|
incompetent and corrupt, but a menace to civilization. Some
|
|
people imagine that there is something anomalous, peculiar, or
|
|
local in the race prejudice that binds all Negroes together; but
|
|
this clan spirit is a characteristic of all savage and semi-
|
|
civilized peoples.
|
|
|
|
It should be well understood by this time that no foreign race
|
|
inhabiting this country and acting together politically can
|
|
dominate the native whites. To permit an inferior race, holding
|
|
less than one tenth of the property of the community, to take the
|
|
reins of government in its hands, by reason of mere numerical
|
|
strength, would be to renounce civilization. Our national
|
|
government, in making laws for Hawaii, has carefully provided for
|
|
white supremacy by an educational qualification for suffrage that
|
|
excludes the semi-civilized natives. No sane man, let us hope,
|
|
would think of placing Manila under the control of a government of
|
|
the Philippine Islands based upon universal suffrage. Yet the
|
|
problem in the South and the problem in the Philippines and in
|
|
Hawaii differ only in degree.
|
|
|
|
The only proper safeguard against Negro rule in States where the
|
|
blacks outnumber or approximate in number the whites lies in
|
|
constitutional provisions establishing an educational test for
|
|
suffrage applicable to black and white alike. If the suffrage is
|
|
not thus limited it is necessary for the whites to resort to
|
|
technicalities and ballot laws, to bribery or intimidation. To
|
|
set up an educational test with a "grandfather clause," making the
|
|
test apply for a certain time to the blacks only, seems to an
|
|
outsider unnecessary, arbitrary, and unjust. The reason for such
|
|
a clause arises from the belief that no constitutional amendment
|
|
could ever carry if it immediately disfranchised the illiterate
|
|
whites, as many property-holding whites belong to that class. But
|
|
the writer does not believe in the principle nor in the necessity
|
|
for a "grandfather clause." If constitutional amendments were to
|
|
be submitted in North Carolina and Virginia applying the
|
|
educational test to both races alike after 1908, the question
|
|
would be lifted above the level of party gain, and would receive
|
|
the support of white men of all parties and the approbation of the
|
|
moral sentiment of the American people. A white man who would
|
|
disfranchise a Negro because of his color or for mere party
|
|
advantage is himself unworthy of the suffrage. With the suffrage
|
|
question adjusted upon an educational basis the Negroes would have
|
|
the power to work out their political emancipation, the white
|
|
people having made education necessary and provided the means for
|
|
attaining it.
|
|
|
|
When the question of Negro domination is settled the path of
|
|
progress of both races will be very much cleared. Race conflicts
|
|
will then be less frequent and race feeling less bitter. With
|
|
more friendly relations growing up, and with more concentration of
|
|
energy on the part of the Negroes in industrial lines, the
|
|
opportunities for them will be widened and the task of finding
|
|
industrial adjustment in the struggle for life made easier. The
|
|
wisest and best leaders among the Negroes, such as Booker
|
|
Washington and the late Charles Price, have tried to turn the
|
|
attention of the Negroes from politics to the more profitable
|
|
pursuits of industry, and if the professional politician would
|
|
cease inspiring the Negroes to seek salvation in political
|
|
domination over the whites, the race issue would soon cease to
|
|
exist.
|
|
|
|
The field is broad enough in the South for both races to attain
|
|
all that is possible to them. In spite of the periodic political
|
|
conflicts and occasional local riots and acts of individual
|
|
violence, the relations between the races, in respect to nine
|
|
tenths of the population, are very friendly. The general
|
|
condition has been too often judged by the acts of a small
|
|
minority. The Southern people understand the Negroes, and feel a
|
|
real fondness for those that are thrifty and well behaved. When
|
|
fairly treated the Negro has a strong affection for his employer.
|
|
He seldom forgets a kindness, and is quick to forget a wrong. If
|
|
he does not stay long at one place, it is not that he dislikes his
|
|
employer so much as that he has a restless temperament and craves
|
|
change. His disposition is full of mirth and sunshine, and not a
|
|
little of the fine flavor of Southern wit and humor is due to his
|
|
influence. His nature is plastic, and while he is easily molded
|
|
into a monster, he is also capable of a high degree of culture.
|
|
Many Negroes are thoroughly honest, notwithstanding their bad
|
|
environment and hereditary disposition to steal. Negro servants
|
|
are trusted with the keys to households to an extent that,
|
|
probably, is not the case among domestics elsewhere in the
|
|
civilized world.
|
|
|
|
It is strange that two races working side by side should possess
|
|
so many opposite traits of character. The white man has strong
|
|
will and convictions and is set in his ways. He lives an indoor,
|
|
monotonous life, restrains himself like a Puritan, and is inclined
|
|
to melancholy. The prevalence of Populism throughout the South is
|
|
nothing but the outcome of this morbid tendency. Farmers and
|
|
merchants are entirely absorbed in their business, and the women,
|
|
especially the married women, contrast with the women of France,
|
|
Germany, and even England, in their indoor life and disinclination
|
|
to mingle with the world outside. Public parks and public
|
|
concerts, such as are found in Europe, which call out husband,
|
|
wife, and children for a few hours of rest and communion with
|
|
their friends, are almost unknown in the South. The few
|
|
entertainments that receive sanction generally exclude all but the
|
|
well-to-do by the cost of admission. The life of the poor in town
|
|
and country is bleak and bare to the last degree.
|
|
|
|
Contrasting with this tendency is the free-and-easy life of the
|
|
blacks. The burdens of the present and the future weigh lightly
|
|
upon their shoulders. They love all the worldly amusements; in
|
|
their homes they are free entertainers, and in their fondness for
|
|
conversation and love of street life they are equal to the French
|
|
or Italians.
|
|
|
|
May we not hope that the conflict of these two opposite races is
|
|
working out some advantages to both, and that the final result
|
|
will justify all that the conflict has cost?
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
SIGNS OF PROGRESS AMONG THE NEGROES
|
|
by Booker T. Washington
|
|
|
|
|
|
In addition to the problem of educating eight million negroes in
|
|
our Southern States and ingrafting them into American citizenship,
|
|
we now have the additional responsibility, either directly or
|
|
indirectly, of educating and elevating about eight hundred
|
|
thousand others of African descent in Cuba and Porto Rico, to say
|
|
nothing of the white people of these islands, many of whom are in
|
|
a condition about as deplorable as that of the negroes. We have,
|
|
however, one advantage in approaching the question of the
|
|
education of our new neighbors.
|
|
|
|
The experience that we have passed through in the Southern States
|
|
during the last thirty years in the education of my race, whose
|
|
history and needs are not very different from the history and
|
|
needs of the Cubans and Porto Ricans, will prove most valuable in
|
|
elevating the blacks of the West Indian Islands. To tell what has
|
|
already been accomplished in the South under most difficult
|
|
circumstances is to tell what may be done in Cuba and Porto Rico.
|
|
|
|
To this end let me tell a story.
|
|
|
|
In what is known as the black belt of the South--that is, where
|
|
the negroes outnumber the whites--there lived before the Civil War
|
|
a white man who owned some two hundred slaves, and was prosperous.
|
|
At the close of the war he found his fortune gone, except that
|
|
which was represented in land, of which he owned several thousand
|
|
acres. Of the two hundred slaves a large proportion decided,
|
|
after their freedom, to continue on the plantation of their former
|
|
owner.
|
|
|
|
Some years after the war a young black boy, who seemed to have
|
|
"rained down," was discovered on the plantation by Mr. S-----, the
|
|
owner. In daily rides through the plantation Mr. S----- saw this
|
|
boy sitting by the roadside, and his condition awakened his pity,
|
|
for, from want of care, he was covered from head to foot with
|
|
sores, and Mr. S----- soon grew into the habit of tossing him a
|
|
nickel or a dime as he rode by. In some way this boy heard of the
|
|
Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute in Alabama, and of the
|
|
advantages which it offered poor but deserving colored men and
|
|
women to secure an education through their own labor while taking
|
|
the course of study. This boy, whose name was William, made known
|
|
to the plantation hands his wish to go to the Tuskegee school. By
|
|
each one "chipping in," and through the efforts of the boy
|
|
himself, a few decent pieces of clothing were secured, and a
|
|
little money, but not enough to pay his railroad fare, so the boy
|
|
resolved to walk to Tuskegee, a distance of about one hundred and
|
|
fifty miles. Strange to say, he made the long distance with an
|
|
expenditure of only twenty cents in cash. He frankly told every
|
|
one with whom he came in contact where he was going and what he
|
|
was seeking. Both white and colored people along the route gave
|
|
him food and a place to sleep free of cost, and even the usually
|
|
exacting ferrymen were so impressed with the young negro's desire
|
|
for an education that, except in one case, he was given free
|
|
ferriage across the creeks and rivers.
|
|
|
|
One can easily imagine his appearance when he first arrived at
|
|
Tuskegee, with his blistered feet and small white bundle, which
|
|
contained all the clothing he possessed.
|
|
|
|
On being shown into my office his first words were: "I's come.
|
|
S'pose you been lookin' for me, but I didn't come on de railroad."
|
|
Looking up the records, it was found that this young man had been
|
|
given permission to come several months ago, but the
|
|
correspondence had long since been forgotten.
|
|
|
|
After being sent to the bath-room and provided with a tooth-
|
|
brush,--for the tooth-brush at Tuskegee is the emblem of
|
|
civilization,--William was assigned to a room, and was given work
|
|
on the school farm of fourteen hundred acres, seven hundred of
|
|
which are cultivated by student labor. During his first year at
|
|
Tuskegee William worked on the farm during the day, where he soon
|
|
learned to take a deep interest in all that the school was doing
|
|
to teach the students the best and most improved methods of
|
|
farming, and studied for two hours at night in the class-room
|
|
after his hard day's work was over. At first he seemed drowsy and
|
|
dull in the night-school, and would now and then fall asleep while
|
|
trying to study; but he did not grow discouraged. The new
|
|
machinery that he was compelled to use on the farm interested him
|
|
because it taught him that the farm work could be stripped of much
|
|
of the old-time drudgery and toil, and seemed to awaken his
|
|
sleeping intellect. Soon he began asking the farm-instructors
|
|
such questions as where the Jersey and Holstein cattle came from,
|
|
and why they produced more milk and butter than the common long-
|
|
tailed and long-horned cows that he had seen at home.
|
|
|
|
His night-school teachers found that he ceased to sleep in school,
|
|
and began asking questions about his lessons, and was soon able to
|
|
calculate the number of square yards in an acre and to tell the
|
|
number of peach-trees required to plant an acre of land. After he
|
|
had been at Tuskegee two or three months the farm-manager came
|
|
into my office on a cold, rainy day, and said that William was
|
|
virtually barefooted, the soles of his shoes having separated from
|
|
the uppers, though William had fastened them together as best he
|
|
could with bits of wire. In this condition the farm-instructor
|
|
found him plowing without a word of complaint. A pair of second-
|
|
hand shoes was secured for him, and he was soon very happy.
|
|
|
|
I will not take this part of the story further except to say that
|
|
at the end of his first year at Tuskegee this young man, having
|
|
made a start in his books, and having saved a small sum of money
|
|
above the cost of his board, which was credited to his account,
|
|
entered the next year our regular day-classes, though still
|
|
dividing his time between the class-room and work on the farm.
|
|
|
|
Toward the end of the year he found himself in need of money with
|
|
which to buy books, clothing, etc., and so wrote a carefully
|
|
worded letter to Mr. S-----, the white man on whose plantation he
|
|
had lived, and who had been, in slavery, the owner of his mother.
|
|
|
|
In the letter he told Mr. S----- how he got to Tuskegee, what he
|
|
was doing, and what his needs were, and asked Mr. S----- to lend
|
|
him fifteen dollars. Before receiving this letter Mr. S----- had
|
|
not thought once about the boy during his two years' absence; in
|
|
fact, did not know that he had left the plantation.
|
|
|
|
Mr. S----- was a good deal shocked, as well as amused, over such a
|
|
request from such a source. The letter went to the wastebasket
|
|
without being answered. A few weeks later William sent a second
|
|
letter, in which he took it for granted that the first letter had
|
|
not been received. The second letter shared the same fate as the
|
|
first. A third letter reached Mr. S----- in a few weeks, making
|
|
the same request. In answer to the third letter Mr. S----- told
|
|
me that, moved by some impulse which he himself never understood,
|
|
he sent William the fifteen dollars.
|
|
|
|
Two or three years passed, and Mr. S----- had about forgotten
|
|
William and the fifteen dollars; but one morning while sitting
|
|
upon his porch a bright young colored man walked up and introduced
|
|
himself as William, the boy to whom he used to toss small pieces
|
|
of money, and the one to whom he had sent fifteen dollars.
|
|
|
|
William paid Mr. S----- the fifteen dollars with interest, which
|
|
he had earned while teaching school after leaving Tuskegee.
|
|
|
|
This simple experience with this young colored man made a new and
|
|
different person of Mr. S-----, so far as the negro was concerned.
|
|
|
|
He began to think. He thought of the long past, but he thought
|
|
most of the future, and of his duty toward the hundreds of colored
|
|
people on his plantation and in his community. After careful
|
|
thought he asked William Edwards to open a school on his
|
|
plantation in a vacant log cabin. That was seven years ago. On
|
|
this same plantation at Snow Hill, Wilcox county, Alabama, a
|
|
county where, according to the last census, there are twenty-four
|
|
thousand colored people and about six thousand whites, there is
|
|
now a school with two hundred pupils, five teachers from Tuskegee,
|
|
and three school buildings. The school has forty acres of land.
|
|
In addition to the text-book lessons, the boys are taught farming
|
|
and carpentry, and the girls sewing and general house-keeping, and
|
|
the school is now in the act of starting a blacksmith and
|
|
wheelwright department. This school owes its existence almost
|
|
wholly to Mr. S-----, who gave to the trustees the forty acres of
|
|
land, and has contributed liberally to the building fund, as well
|
|
as to the pay of the teachers. Gifts from a few friends in the
|
|
North have been received, and the colored people have given their
|
|
labor and small sums in cash. When the people cannot find money
|
|
to give, they have often given corn, chickens, and eggs. The
|
|
school has grown so popular that almost every leading white man in
|
|
the community is willing to make a small gift toward its
|
|
maintenance.
|
|
|
|
In addition to the work done directly in the school for the
|
|
children, the teachers in the Snow Hill school have organized a
|
|
kind of university extension movement. The farmers are organized
|
|
into conferences, which hold meetings each month. In these
|
|
meetings they are taught better methods of agriculture, how to buy
|
|
land, how to economize and keep out of debt, how to stop
|
|
mortgaging, how to build school-houses and dwelling-houses with
|
|
more than one room, how to bring about a higher moral and
|
|
religious standing, and are warned against buying cheap jewelry,
|
|
snuff, and whisky.
|
|
|
|
No one is a more interested visitor at these meetings than Mr. S-----
|
|
himself. The matter does not end in mere talk and advice.
|
|
The women teachers go right into the cabins of the people and show
|
|
them how to keep them clean, how to dust, sweep, and cook.
|
|
|
|
When William Edwards left this community a few years ago for the
|
|
Tuskegee school, he left the larger proportion in debt, mortgaging
|
|
their crops every year for the food on which to live. Most of
|
|
them were living on rented land in small one-room log cabins, and
|
|
attempting to pay an enormous rate of interest on the value of
|
|
their food advances. As one old colored man expressed it, "I
|
|
ain't got but six feet of land, and I is got to die to git dat."
|
|
The little school taught in a cabin lasted only three or four
|
|
months in the year. The religion was largely a matter of the
|
|
emotions, with almost no practical ideas of morality. It was the
|
|
white man for himself and the negro for himself, each in too many
|
|
cases trying to take advantage of the other. The situation was
|
|
pretty well described by a black man who said to me: "I tells you
|
|
how we votes. We always watches de white man, and we keeps
|
|
watchin' de white man. De nearer it gits to 'lection-time de more
|
|
we watches de white man. We keeps watchin' de white man till we
|
|
find out which way he gwine to vote; den we votes 'zactly de odder
|
|
way. Den we knows we is right."
|
|
|
|
Now how changed is all at Snow Hill, and how it is gradually
|
|
changing each year! Instead of the hopelessness and dejection
|
|
that were there a few years ago, there are now light and buoyancy
|
|
in the countenances and movements of the people. The negroes are
|
|
getting out of debt and buying land, ceasing to mortgage their
|
|
crops, building houses with two or three rooms, and a higher moral
|
|
and religious standard has been established.
|
|
|
|
Last May, on the day that the school had its closing exercises,
|
|
there were present, besides the hundreds of colored-people, about
|
|
fifty of the leading white men and women of the county, and these
|
|
white people seemed as much interested in the work of the school
|
|
as the people of my own race.
|
|
|
|
Only a few years ago in the State of Alabama the law in reference
|
|
to the education of the negro read as follows: "Any person or
|
|
persons who shall attempt to teach any free person of color or
|
|
slave to spell, read, or write shall, upon conviction thereof by
|
|
indictment, be fined in a sum not less than two hundred and fifty
|
|
dollars nor more than five hundred dollars."
|
|
|
|
Within half a dozen years I have heard Dr. J. L. M. Curry, a
|
|
brave, honest ex-Confederate officer, in addressing both the
|
|
Alabama and Georgia State legislatures, say to those bodies in the
|
|
most emphatic manner that it was as much the duty of the State to
|
|
educate the negro children as the white children, and in each case
|
|
Dr. Curry's words were cheered.
|
|
|
|
Here at Snow Hill is the foundation for the solution of the legal
|
|
and political difficulties that exist in the South, and the
|
|
improvement of the industrial condition of the negro in Cuba and
|
|
Porto Rico. This solution will not come all at once, but
|
|
gradually. The foundation must exist in the commercial and
|
|
industrial development of the people of my race in the South and
|
|
in the West Indian Islands.
|
|
|
|
The most intelligent whites are beginning to realize that they
|
|
cannot go much higher than they lift the negro at the same time.
|
|
When a black man owns and cultivates the best farm to be found in
|
|
his county he will have the confidence and respect of most of the
|
|
white people in that county. When a black man is the largest
|
|
taxpayer in his community his white neighbor will not object very
|
|
long to his voting, and having that vote honestly counted. Even
|
|
now a black man who has five hundred dollars to lend has no
|
|
trouble in finding a white man who is willing to borrow his money.
|
|
The negro who is a large stockholder in a railroad company will
|
|
always be treated with justice on that railroad.
|
|
|
|
Many of the most intelligent colored people are learning that
|
|
while there are many bad white men in the South, there are
|
|
Southern whites who have the highest interests of the negro just
|
|
as closely at heart as have any other people in any part of the
|
|
country. Many of the negroes are learning that it is folly not to
|
|
cultivate in every honorable way the friendship of the white man
|
|
who is their next-door neighbor.
|
|
|
|
To describe the work being done in connection with the public
|
|
schools by graduates of Tuskegee and other institutions in the
|
|
South, at such places as Mount Meigs, under Miss Cornelia Bowen;
|
|
Denmark, South Carolina; Abbeville and Newville, Alabama;
|
|
Christiansburg, Virginia, and numbers of other places in the Gulf
|
|
States, would be only to repeat in a larger or smaller degree what
|
|
I have said of Snow Hill.
|
|
|
|
Not very long after the last national election I visited a town in
|
|
the South, to speak at a meeting which had for its object the
|
|
raising of money to complete the school-house. The audience was
|
|
about equally divided between white men and women and black men
|
|
and women. When the time for the collection came it was intensely
|
|
satisfactory to observe that the white side of the audience was
|
|
just as eager to make its small contributions as were the members
|
|
of my own race. But I was anxious to see how the late election
|
|
had been conducted in that community. I soon found out that the
|
|
Republican party, composed almost wholly of the black people, was
|
|
represented by an election officer in the person of one of the
|
|
best-educated colored men in the town, that both the Democratic
|
|
and Populist parties were equally well represented, and that there
|
|
was no suspicion of unfairness.
|
|
|
|
But I wished to go a little deeper, and I soon found that one of
|
|
the leading stores in this community was owned by a colored man;
|
|
that a cotton-gin was owned by a colored man; that the sawmill was
|
|
owned by another colored man. Colored men had mortgages on white
|
|
men's crops, and vice versa, and colored people not only owned
|
|
land, but in several cases were renting land to white men. Black
|
|
men were in debt to white men, and white men were in debt to black
|
|
men. In a word, the industrial and commercial relations of the
|
|
races were interwoven just as if all had been of one race.
|
|
|
|
An object-lesson in civilization is more potent in compelling
|
|
people to act right than a law compelling them to do so. Some
|
|
years ago a colored woman who had graduated at Tuskegee began her
|
|
life-work in a Southern community where the force of white public
|
|
sentiment was opposed to the starting of what was termed a "nigger
|
|
school." At first this girl was tempted to abuse her white
|
|
sister, but she remembered that perhaps the white woman had been
|
|
taught from her earliest childhood, through reading and
|
|
conversation, that education was not good for the negro, that it
|
|
would result only in trouble to the community, and that no amount
|
|
of abuse could change this prejudice.
|
|
|
|
After a while this colored teacher was married to an educated
|
|
colored man, and they built a little cottage, which, in connection
|
|
with her husband's farm, was a model. One morning one of the
|
|
white women who had been most intense in her feelings was passing
|
|
this cottage, and her attention was attracted to the colored woman
|
|
who was at work in her beautiful flower-garden. A conversation
|
|
took place concerning the flowers. At another time this same
|
|
white woman was so attracted by this flower-garden that she came
|
|
inside the yard, and from the yard she went into the sitting-room
|
|
and examined the books and papers.
|
|
|
|
This acquaintance has now ripened and broadened, so that to-day
|
|
there are few people in that community more highly respected than
|
|
this colored family. What did it all? This object-lesson. No
|
|
one could explain that away. One such object-lesson in every
|
|
community in the South is more powerful than all the laws Congress
|
|
can pass in the direction of bringing about right relations
|
|
between blacks and whites.
|
|
|
|
A few months ago an agricultural county fair, the first ever held
|
|
in that county, was organized and held at Calhoun, Alabama, by the
|
|
teachers in the Calhoun School, which is an offshoot of the
|
|
Hampton Institute. Both the colored people and numbers of white
|
|
visitors were astonished at the creditable exhibits made by the
|
|
colored people. Most of these white people saw the school work at
|
|
Calhoun for the first time. Perhaps no amount of abstract talk or
|
|
advice could have brought them to this school, but the best hog,
|
|
the largest pumpkin, or the most valuable bale of cotton possessed
|
|
a common interest, and it has been a comparatively easy thing to
|
|
extend their interest from the best hog to the work being done in
|
|
the school-room. Further, this fair convinced these white people,
|
|
as almost nothing else could have done, that education was making
|
|
the negroes better citizens rather than worse; that the people
|
|
were not being educated away from themselves, but with their
|
|
elevation the conditions about them were being lifted in a manner
|
|
that possessed an interest and value for both races.
|
|
|
|
It was after speaking, not long ago, to the colored people at such
|
|
a county fair in North Carolina that I was asked the next morning
|
|
to speak to the white students at their college, who gave me as
|
|
hearty a greeting as I have ever received at Northern colleges.
|
|
|
|
But such forces as I have described--forces that are gradually
|
|
regenerating the entire South and will regenerate Cuba and Porto
|
|
Rico--are not started and kept in motion without a central plant--
|
|
a power-house, where the power is generated. I cannot describe
|
|
all these places of power. Perhaps the whole South and the whole
|
|
country are most indebted to the Hampton Institute in Virginia.
|
|
Then there is Fisk University at Nashville, Tennessee; Talladega
|
|
College at Talladega, Alabama; Spelman Seminary, Atlanta
|
|
University, and Atlanta Baptist College at Atlanta; Biddle
|
|
University in North Carolina; Claflin University at Orangeburg,
|
|
South Carolina; and Knoxville College at Knoxville, Tennessee.
|
|
Some of these do a different grade of work, but one much needed.
|
|
|
|
At Tuskegee, Alabama, starting fifteen years ago in a little
|
|
shanty with one teacher and thirty students, with no property,
|
|
there has grown up an industrial and educational village where the
|
|
ideas that I have referred to are put into the heads, hearts, and
|
|
hands of an army of colored men and women, with the purpose of
|
|
having them become centers of light and civilization in every part
|
|
of the South. One visiting the Tuskegee Normal and Industrial
|
|
Institute to-day will find eight hundred and fifty students
|
|
gathered from twenty-four States, with eighty-eight teachers and
|
|
officers training these students in literary, religious, and
|
|
industrial work.
|
|
|
|
Counting the students and the families of the instructors, the
|
|
visitor will find a black village of about twelve hundred people.
|
|
Instead of the old, worn-out plantation that was there fifteen
|
|
years ago, there is a modern farm of seven hundred acres
|
|
cultivated by student labor. There are Jersey and Holstein cows
|
|
and Berkshire pigs, and the butter used is made by the most modern
|
|
process.
|
|
|
|
Aside from the dozens of neat, comfortable cottages owned by
|
|
individual teachers and other persons, who have settled in this
|
|
village for the purpose of educating their children, he will find
|
|
thirty-six buildings of various kinds and sizes, owned and built
|
|
by the school, property valued at three hundred thousand dollars.
|
|
Perhaps the most interesting thing in connection with these
|
|
buildings is that, with the exception of three, they have been
|
|
built by student labor. The friends of the school have furnished
|
|
money to pay the teachers and for material.
|
|
|
|
When a building is to be erected, the teacher in charge of the
|
|
mechanical and architectural drawing department gives to the class
|
|
in drawing a general description of the building desired, and then
|
|
there is a competition to see whose plan will be accepted. These
|
|
same students in most cases help do the practical work of putting
|
|
up the building--some at the sawmill, the brick-yard, or in the
|
|
carpentry, brickmaking, plastering, painting, and tinsmithing
|
|
departments. At the same time care is taken to see not only that
|
|
the building goes up properly, but that the students, who are
|
|
under intelligent instructors in their special branch, are taught
|
|
at the same time the principles as well as the practical part of
|
|
the trade.
|
|
|
|
The school has the building in the end, and the students have the
|
|
knowledge of the trade. This same principle applies, whether in
|
|
the laundry, where the washing for seven or eight hundred people
|
|
is done, or in the sewing-room, where a large part of the clothing
|
|
for this colony is made and repaired, or in the wheelwright and
|
|
blacksmith departments, where all the wagons and buggies used by
|
|
the school, besides a large number for the outside public, are
|
|
manufactured, or in the printing-office, where a large part of the
|
|
printing for the white and colored people in this region is done.
|
|
Twenty-six different industries are here in constant operation.
|
|
|
|
When the student is through with his course of training he goes
|
|
out feeling that it is just as honorable to labor with the hand as
|
|
with the head, and instead of his having to look for a place, the
|
|
place usually seeks him, because he has to give that which the
|
|
South wants. One other thing should not be overlooked in our
|
|
efforts to develop the black man. As bad as slavery was, almost
|
|
every large plantation in the South during that time was, in a
|
|
measure, an industrial school. It had its farming department, its
|
|
blacksmith, wheelwright, brickmaking, carpentry, and sewing
|
|
departments. Thus at the close of the war our people were in
|
|
possession of all the common and skilled labor in the South. For
|
|
nearly twenty years after the war we overlooked the value of the
|
|
ante-bellum training, and no one was trained to replace these
|
|
skilled men and women who were soon to pass away; and now, as
|
|
skilled laborers from foreign countries, with not only educated
|
|
hands but trained brains, begin to come into the South and take
|
|
these positions once held by us, we are gradually waking up to the
|
|
fact that we must compete with the white man in the industrial
|
|
world if we would hold our own. No one understands his value in
|
|
the labor world better than the old colored man. Recently, when a
|
|
convention was held in the South by the white people for the
|
|
purpose of inducing white settlers from the North and West to
|
|
settle in the South, one of these colored men said to the
|
|
president of the convention: "'Fore de Lord, boss, we's got as
|
|
many white people down here now as we niggers can support."
|
|
|
|
The negro in the South has another advantage. While there is
|
|
prejudice against him along certain lines,--in the matter of
|
|
business in general, and the trades especially,--there is
|
|
virtually no prejudice so far as the native Southern white man is
|
|
concerned. White men and black men work at the same carpenter's
|
|
bench and on the same brick wall. Sometimes the white man is the
|
|
"boss," sometimes the black man is the boss.
|
|
|
|
Some one chaffed a colored man recently because, when he got
|
|
through with a contract for building a house, he cleared just ten
|
|
cents; but he said: "All right, boss; it was worth ten cents to be
|
|
de boss of dem white men." If a Southern white man has a contract
|
|
to let for the building of a house, he prefers the black
|
|
contractor, because he has been used to doing business of this
|
|
character with a negro rather than with a white man.
|
|
|
|
The negro will find his way up as a man just in proportion as he
|
|
makes himself valuable, possesses something that a white man
|
|
wants, can do something as well as, or better than, a white man.
|
|
|
|
I would not have my readers get the thought that the problem in
|
|
the South is settled, that there is nothing else to be done; far
|
|
from this. Long years of patient, hard work will be required for
|
|
the betterment of the condition of the negro in the South, as well
|
|
as for the betterment of the condition of the negro in the West
|
|
Indies.
|
|
|
|
There are bright spots here and there that point the way. Perhaps
|
|
the most that we have accomplished in the last thirty years is to
|
|
show the North and the South how the fourteen slaves landed a few
|
|
hundred years ago at Jamestown, Virginia,--now nearly eight
|
|
millions of freemen in the South alone,--are to be made a safe and
|
|
useful part of our democratic and Christian institutions.
|
|
|
|
The main thing that is now needed to bring about a solution of the
|
|
difficulties in the South is money in large sums, to be used
|
|
largely for Christian, technical, and industrial education.
|
|
|
|
For more than thirty years we have been trying to solve one of the
|
|
most serious problems in the history of the world largely by
|
|
passing around a hat in the North. Out of their poverty the
|
|
Southern States have done well in assisting; many more millions
|
|
are needed, and these millions will have to come before the
|
|
question as to the negro in the South is settled.
|
|
|
|
There never was a greater opportunity for men of wealth to place a
|
|
few million dollars where they could be used in lifting up and
|
|
regenerating a whole race; and let it always be borne in mind that
|
|
every dollar given for the proper education of the negro in the
|
|
South is almost as much help to the Southern white man as to the
|
|
negro himself. So long as the whites in the South are surrounded
|
|
by a race that is, in a large measure, in ignorance and poverty,
|
|
so long will this ignorance and poverty of the negro in a score of
|
|
ways prevent the highest development of the white man.
|
|
|
|
The problem of lifting up the negro in Cuba and Porto Rico is an
|
|
easier one in one respect, even if it proves more difficult in
|
|
others. It will be less difficult, because there is the absence
|
|
of that higher degree of race feeling which exists in many parts
|
|
of the United States. Both the white Cuban and the white Spaniard
|
|
have treated the people of African descent, in civil, political,
|
|
military, and business matters, very much as they have treated
|
|
others of their own race. Oppression has not cowed and unmanned
|
|
the Cuban negro in certain respects as it has the American negro.
|
|
|
|
In only a few instances is the color-line drawn. How Americans
|
|
will treat the negro Cuban, and what will be the tendency of
|
|
American influences in the matter of the relation of the races,
|
|
remains an interesting and open question. Certainly it will place
|
|
this country in an awkward position to have gone to war to free a
|
|
people from Spanish cruelty, and then as soon as it gets them
|
|
within its power to treat a large proportion of the population
|
|
worse than did even Spain herself, simply on account of color.
|
|
|
|
While in the matter of the relation of the races the problem
|
|
before us in the West Indies is easier, in respect to the
|
|
industrial, moral, and religious sides it is more difficult. The
|
|
negroes on these islands are largely an agricultural people, and
|
|
for this reason, in addition to a higher degree of mental and
|
|
religious training, they need the same agricultural, mechanical,
|
|
and domestic training that is fast helping the negroes in our
|
|
Southern States. Industrial training will not only help them to
|
|
the ownership of property, habits of thrift and economy, but the
|
|
acquiring of these elements of strength will go further than
|
|
anything else in improving the moral and religious condition of
|
|
the masses, just as has been and is true of my people in the
|
|
Southern States.
|
|
|
|
With the idea of getting the methods of industrial education
|
|
pursued at Hampton and Tuskegee permanently and rightly started in
|
|
Cuba and Porto Rico, a few of the most promising men and women
|
|
from these islands have been brought to the Tuskegee Normal and
|
|
Industrial Institute, and educated with the view of having them
|
|
return and take the lead in affording industrial training on these
|
|
islands, where the training can best be given to the masses.
|
|
|
|
The emphasis that I have placed upon an industrial education does
|
|
not mean that the negro is to be excluded from the higher
|
|
interests of life, but it does mean that in proportion as the
|
|
negro gets the foundation,--the useful before the ornamental,--in
|
|
the same proportion will he accelerate his progress in acquiring
|
|
those elements which do not pertain so directly to the
|
|
utilitarian.
|
|
|
|
Phillips Brooks once said, "One generation gathers the material,
|
|
and the next builds the palaces." Very largely this must be the
|
|
material-gathering generation of black people, but in due time the
|
|
palaces will come if we are patient.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE MARCH OF PROGRESS
|
|
by Charles W. Chesnutt
|
|
|
|
|
|
The colored people of Patesville had at length gained the object
|
|
they had for a long time been seeking--the appointment of a
|
|
committee of themselves to manage the colored schools of the town.
|
|
They had argued, with some show of reason, that they were most
|
|
interested in the education of their own children, and in a
|
|
position to know, better than any committee of white men could,
|
|
what was best for their children's needs. The appointments had
|
|
been made by the county commissioners during the latter part of
|
|
the summer, and a week later a meeting was called for the purpose
|
|
of electing a teacher to take charge of the grammar school at the
|
|
beginning of the fall term.
|
|
|
|
The committee consisted of Frank Gillespie, or "Glaspy," a barber,
|
|
who took an active part in local politics; Bob Cotten, a
|
|
blacksmith, who owned several houses and was looked upon as a
|
|
substantial citizen; and Abe Johnson, commonly called "Ole Abe" or
|
|
"Uncle Abe," who had a large family, and drove a dray, and did odd
|
|
jobs of hauling; he was also a class-leader in the Methodist
|
|
church. The committee had been chosen from among a number of
|
|
candidates--Gillespie on account of his political standing, Cotten
|
|
as representing the solid element of the colored population, and
|
|
Old Abe, with democratic impartiality, as likely to satisfy the
|
|
humbler class of a humble people. While the choice had not
|
|
pleased everybody,--for instance, some of the other applicants,--
|
|
it was acquiesced in with general satisfaction. The first meeting
|
|
of the new committee was of great public interest, partly by
|
|
reason of its novelty, but chiefly because there were two
|
|
candidates for the position of teacher of the grammar school.
|
|
|
|
The former teacher, Miss Henrietta Noble, had applied for the
|
|
school. She had taught the colored children of Patesville for
|
|
fifteen years. When the Freedmen's Bureau, after the military
|
|
occupation of North Carolina, had called for volunteers to teach
|
|
the children of the freedmen, Henrietta Nobel had offered her
|
|
services. Brought up in a New England household by parents who
|
|
taught her to fear God and love her fellow-men, she had seen her
|
|
father's body brought home from a Southern battle-field and laid
|
|
to rest in the village cemetery; and a short six months later she
|
|
had buried her mother by his side. Henrietta had no brothers or
|
|
sisters, and her nearest relatives were cousins living in the far
|
|
West. The only human being in whom she felt any special personal
|
|
interest was a certain captain in her father's regiment, who had
|
|
paid her some attention. She had loved this man deeply, in a
|
|
maidenly, modest way; but he had gone away without speaking, and
|
|
had not since written. He had escaped the fate of many others,
|
|
and at the close of the war was alive and well, stationed in some
|
|
Southern garrison.
|
|
|
|
When her mother died, Henrietta had found herself possessed only
|
|
of the house where she lived and the furniture it contained,
|
|
neither being of much value, and she was thrown upon her own
|
|
resources for a livelihood. She had a fair education and had read
|
|
many good books. It was not easy to find employment such as she
|
|
desired. She wrote to her Western cousins, and they advised her
|
|
to come to them, as they thought they could do something for her
|
|
if she were there. She had almost decided to accept their offer,
|
|
when the demand arose for teachers in the South. Whether impelled
|
|
by some strain of adventurous blood from a Pilgrim ancestry, or by
|
|
a sensitive pride that shrank from dependence, or by some dim and
|
|
unacknowledged hope that she might sometime, somewhere, somehow
|
|
meet Captain Carey--whether from one of these motives or a
|
|
combination of them all, joined to something of the missionary
|
|
spirit, she decided to go South, and wrote to her cousins
|
|
declining their friendly offer.
|
|
|
|
She had come to Patesville when the children were mostly a mob of
|
|
dirty little beggars. She had distributed among them the cast-
|
|
off clothing that came from their friends in the North; she had
|
|
taught them to wash their faces and to comb their hair; and
|
|
patiently, year after year, she had labored to instruct them in
|
|
the rudiments of learning and the first principles of religion and
|
|
morality. And she had not wrought in vain. Other agencies, it is
|
|
true, had in time cooperated with her efforts, but any one who had
|
|
watched the current of events must have been compelled to admit
|
|
that the very fair progress of the colored people of Patesville in
|
|
the fifteen years following emancipation had been due chiefly to
|
|
the unselfish labors of Henrietta Noble, and that her nature did
|
|
not belie her name.
|
|
|
|
Fifteen years is a long time. Miss Noble had never met Captain
|
|
Carey; and when she learned later that he had married a Southern
|
|
girl in the neighborhood of his post, she had shed her tears in
|
|
secret and banished his image from her heart. She had lived a
|
|
lonely life. The white people of the town, though they learned in
|
|
time to respect her and to value her work, had never recognized
|
|
her existence by more than the mere external courtesy shown by any
|
|
community to one who lives in the midst of it. The situation was
|
|
at first, of course, so strained that she did not expect sympathy
|
|
from the white people; and later, when time had smoothed over some
|
|
of the asperities of war, her work had so engaged her that she had
|
|
not had time to pine over her social exclusion. Once or twice
|
|
nature had asserted itself, and she had longed for her own kind,
|
|
and had visited her New England home. But her circle of friends
|
|
was broken up, and she did not find much pleasure in boarding-
|
|
house life; and on her last visit to the North but one, she had
|
|
felt so lonely that she had longed for the dark faces of her
|
|
pupils, and had welcomed with pleasure the hour when her task
|
|
should be resumed.
|
|
|
|
But for several reasons the school at Patesville was of more
|
|
importance to Miss Noble at this particular time than it ever had
|
|
been before. During the last few years her health had not been
|
|
good. An affection of the heart similar to that from which her
|
|
mother had died, while not interfering perceptibly with her work,
|
|
had grown from bad to worse, aggravated by close application to
|
|
her duties, until it had caused her grave alarm. She did not have
|
|
perfect confidence in the skill of the Patesville physicians, and
|
|
to obtain the best medical advice had gone to New York during the
|
|
summer, remaining there a month under the treatment of an eminent
|
|
specialist. This, of course, had been expensive and had absorbed
|
|
the savings of years from a small salary; and when the time came
|
|
for her to return to Patesville, she was reduced, after paying her
|
|
traveling expenses, to her last ten-dollar note.
|
|
|
|
"It is very fortunate," the great man had said at her last visit,
|
|
"that circumstances permit you to live in the South, for I am
|
|
afraid you could not endure a Northern winter. You are getting
|
|
along very well now, and if you will take care of yourself and
|
|
avoid excitement, you will be better." He said to himself as she
|
|
went away: "It's only a matter of time, but that is true about us
|
|
all; and a wise physician does as much good by what he withholds
|
|
as by what he tells."
|
|
|
|
Miss Noble had not anticipated any trouble about the school. When
|
|
she went away the same committee of white men was in charge that
|
|
had controlled the school since it had become part of the public-
|
|
school system of the State on the withdrawal of support from the
|
|
Freedmen's Bureau. While there had been no formal engagement made
|
|
for the next year, when she had last seen the chairman before she
|
|
went away, he had remarked that she was looking rather fagged out,
|
|
had bidden her good-by, and had hoped to see her much improved
|
|
when she returned. She had left her house in the care of the
|
|
colored woman who lived with her and did her housework, assuming,
|
|
of course, that she would take up her work again in the autumn.
|
|
|
|
She was much surprised at first, and later alarmed, to find a
|
|
rival for her position as teacher of the grammar school. Many of
|
|
her friends and pupils had called on her since her return, and she
|
|
had met a number of the people at the colored Methodist church,
|
|
where she taught in the Sunday-school. She had many friends and
|
|
supporters, but she soon found out that her opponent had
|
|
considerable strength. There had been a time when she would have
|
|
withdrawn and left him a clear field, but at the present moment it
|
|
was almost a matter of life and death to her--certainly the matter
|
|
of earning a living--to secure the appointment.
|
|
|
|
The other candidate was a young man who in former years had been
|
|
one of Miss Noble's brightest pupils. When he had finished his
|
|
course in the grammar school, his parents, with considerable
|
|
sacrifice, had sent him to a college for colored youth. He had
|
|
studied diligently, had worked industriously during his vacations,
|
|
sometimes at manual labor, sometimes teaching a country school,
|
|
and in due time had been graduated from his college with honors.
|
|
He had come home at the end of his school life, and was very
|
|
naturally seeking the employment for which he had fitted himself.
|
|
He was a "bright" mulatto, with straight hair, an intelligent
|
|
face, and a well-set figure. He had acquired some of the marks of
|
|
culture, wore a frock-coat and a high collar, parted his hair in
|
|
the middle, and showed by his manner that he thought a good deal
|
|
of himself. He was the popular candidate among the progressive
|
|
element of his people, and rather confidently expected the
|
|
appointment.
|
|
|
|
The meeting of the committee was held in the Methodist church,
|
|
where, in fact, the grammar school was taught, for want of a
|
|
separate school-house. After the preliminary steps to effect an
|
|
organization, Mr. Gillespie, who had been elected chairman, took
|
|
the floor.
|
|
|
|
"The principal business to be brought befo' the meet'n' this
|
|
evenin'," he said, "is the selection of a teacher for our grammar
|
|
school for the ensuin' year. Two candidates have filed
|
|
applications, which, if there is no objection, I will read to the
|
|
committee. The first is from Miss Noble, who has been the teacher
|
|
ever since the grammar school was started."
|
|
|
|
He then read Miss Noble's letter, in which she called attention to
|
|
her long years of service, to her need of the position, and to her
|
|
affection for the pupils, and made formal application for the
|
|
school for the next year. She did not, from motives of self-
|
|
respect, make known the extremity of her need; nor did she mention
|
|
the condition of her health, as it might have been used as an
|
|
argument against her retention.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Gillespie then read the application of the other candidate,
|
|
Andrew J. Williams. Mr. Williams set out in detail his
|
|
qualifications for the position: his degree from Riddle
|
|
University; his familiarity with the dead and living languages and
|
|
the higher mathematics; his views of discipline; and a peroration
|
|
in which he expressed the desire to devote himself to the
|
|
elevation of his race and assist the march of progress through the
|
|
medium of the Patesville grammar school. The letter was well
|
|
written in a bold, round hand, with many flourishes, and looked
|
|
very aggressive and overbearing as it lay on the table by the side
|
|
of the sheet of small note-paper in Miss Noble's faint and
|
|
somewhat cramped handwriting.
|
|
|
|
"You have heard the readin' of the applications," said the
|
|
chairman. "Gentlemen, what is yo' pleasure?"
|
|
|
|
There being no immediate response, the chairman continued:
|
|
|
|
"As this is a matter of consid'able importance, involvin' not only
|
|
the welfare of our schools, but the progress of our race, an' as
|
|
our action is liable to be criticized, whatever we decide, perhaps
|
|
we had better discuss the subjec' befo' we act. If nobody else
|
|
has anything to obse've, I will make a few remarks."
|
|
|
|
Mr. Gillespie cleared his throat, and, assuming an oratorical
|
|
attitude, proceeded:
|
|
|
|
"The time has come in the history of our people when we should
|
|
stand together. In this age of organization the march of progress
|
|
requires that we help ourselves, or be forever left behind. Ever
|
|
since the war we have been sendin' our child'n to school an'
|
|
educatin' 'em; an' now the time has come when they are leavin' the
|
|
schools an' colleges, an' are ready to go to work. An' what are
|
|
they goin' to do? The white people won't hire 'em as clerks in
|
|
their sto's an' factories an' mills, an' we have no sto's or
|
|
factories or mills of our own. They can't be lawyers or doctors
|
|
yet, because we haven't got the money to send 'em to medical
|
|
colleges an' law schools. We can't elect many of 'em to office,
|
|
for various reasons. There's just two things they can find to do--
|
|
to preach in our own pulpits, an' teach in our own schools. If
|
|
it wasn't for that, they'd have to go on forever waitin' on white
|
|
folks, like their fo'fathers have done, because they couldn't help
|
|
it. If we expect our race to progress, we must educate our young
|
|
men an' women. If we want to encourage 'em to get education, we
|
|
must find 'em employment when they are educated. We have now an
|
|
opportunity to do this in the case of our young friend an' fellow-
|
|
citizen, Mr. Williams, whose eloquent an' fine-lookin' letter
|
|
ought to make us feel proud of him an' of our race.
|
|
|
|
"Of co'se there are two sides to the question. We have got to
|
|
consider the claims of Miss Noble. She has been with us a long
|
|
time an' has done much good work for our people, an' we'll never
|
|
forget her work an' frien'ship. But, after all, she has been paid
|
|
for it; she has got her salary regularly an' for a long time, an'
|
|
she has probably saved somethin', for we all know she hasn't lived
|
|
high; an', for all we know, she may have had somethin' left her by
|
|
her parents. An' then again, she's white, an' has got her own
|
|
people to look after her; they've got all the money an' all the
|
|
offices an' all the everythin',--all that they've made an' all
|
|
that we've made for fo' hundred years,--an' they sho'ly would look
|
|
out for her. If she don't get this school, there's probably a
|
|
dozen others she can get at the North. An' another thing: she is
|
|
gettin' rather feeble, an' it 'pears to me she's hardly able to
|
|
stand teachin' so many child'n, an' a long rest might be the best
|
|
thing in the world for her.
|
|
|
|
"Now, gentlemen, that's the situation. Shall we keep Miss Noble,
|
|
or shall we stand by our own people? It seems to me there can
|
|
hardly be but one answer. Self-preservation is the first law of
|
|
nature. Are there any other remarks?"
|
|
|
|
Old Abe was moving restlessly in his seat. He did not say
|
|
anything, however, and the chairman turned to the other member.
|
|
|
|
"Brother Cotten, what is yo' opinion of the question befo' the
|
|
board?"
|
|
|
|
Mr. Cotten rose with the slowness and dignity becoming a
|
|
substantial citizen, and observed:
|
|
|
|
"I think the remarks of the chairman have great weight. We all
|
|
have nothin' but kind feelin's fer Miss Noble, an' I came here to-
|
|
night somewhat undecided how to vote on this question. But after
|
|
listenin' to the just an' forcible arguments of Brother Glaspy, it
|
|
'pears to me that, after all, the question befo' us is not a
|
|
matter of feelin', but of business. As a business man, I am
|
|
inclined to think Brother Glaspy is right. If we don't help
|
|
ourselves when we get a chance, who is goin' to help us?"
|
|
|
|
"That bein' the case," said the chairman, "shall we proceed to a
|
|
vote? All who favor the election of Brother Williams--"
|
|
|
|
At this point Old Abe, with much preliminary shuffling, stood up
|
|
in his place and interrupted the speaker.
|
|
|
|
"Mr. Chuhman," he said, "I s'pose I has a right ter speak in dis
|
|
meet'n? I S'POSE I is a member er dis committee?"
|
|
|
|
"Certainly, Brother Johnson, certainly; we shall be glad to hear
|
|
from you."
|
|
|
|
"I s'pose I's got a right ter speak my min', ef I is po' an'
|
|
black, an' don' weah as good clo's as some other members er de
|
|
committee?"
|
|
|
|
"Most assuredly, Brother Johnson," answered the chairman, with a
|
|
barber's suavity, "you have as much right to be heard as any one
|
|
else. There was no intention of cuttin' you off."
|
|
|
|
"I s'pose," continued Abe, "dat a man wid fo'teen child'n kin be
|
|
'lowed ter hab somethin' ter say 'bout de schools er dis town?"
|
|
|
|
"I am sorry, Brother Johnson, that you should feel slighted, but
|
|
there was no intention to igno' yo' rights. The committee will be
|
|
please' to have you ventilate yo' views."
|
|
|
|
"Ef it's all be'n an' done reco'nized an' 'cided dat I's got de
|
|
right ter be heared in dis meet'n', I'll say w'at I has ter say,
|
|
an' it won't take me long ter say it. Ef I should try ter tell
|
|
all de things dat Miss Noble has done fer de niggers er dis town,
|
|
it'd take me till ter-morrer mawnin'. Fer fifteen long yeahs I
|
|
has watched her incomin's an' her outgoin's. Her daddy was a
|
|
Yankee kunnel, who died fighting fer ou' freedom. She come heah
|
|
when we--yas, Mr. Chuhman, when you an' Br'er Cotten--was jes sot
|
|
free, an' when none er us didn' have a rag ter ou' backs. She
|
|
come heah, an' she tuk yo' child'n an' my child'n, an' she teached
|
|
'em sense an' manners an' religion an' book-l'arnin'. When she
|
|
come heah we didn' hab no chu'ch. Who writ up No'th an' got a
|
|
preacher sent to us, an' de fun's ter buil' dis same chu'ch-house
|
|
we're settin' in ter-night? Who got de money f'm de Bureau to
|
|
s'port de school? An' when dat was stop', who got de money f'm de
|
|
Peabody Fun'? Talk about Miss Noble gittin' a sal'ry! Who paid
|
|
dat sal'ry up ter five years ago? Not one dollah of it come outer
|
|
ou' pockets!
|
|
|
|
"An' den, w'at did she git fer de yuther things she done? Who
|
|
paid her fer de gals she kep' f'm throwin' deyse'ves away? Who
|
|
paid fer de boys she kep' outer jail? I had a son dat seemed to
|
|
hab made up his min' ter go straight ter hell. I made him go ter
|
|
Sunday-school, an' somethin' dat woman said teched his heart, an'
|
|
he behaved hisse'f, an' I ain' got no reason fer ter be 'shame' er
|
|
'im. An' I can 'member, Br'er Cotten, when you didn' own fo'
|
|
houses an' a fahm. An' when yo' fus wife was sick, who sot by her
|
|
bedside an' read de Good Book ter 'er, w'en dey wuzn' nobody else
|
|
knowed how ter read it, an' comforted her on her way across de
|
|
col', dahk ribber? An' dat ain' all I kin 'member, Mr. Chuhman!
|
|
When yo' gal Fanny was a baby, an' sick, an' nobody knowed what
|
|
was de matter wid 'er, who sent fer a doctor, an' paid 'im fer
|
|
comin', an' who he'ped nuss dat chile, an' tol' yo' wife w'at ter
|
|
do, an' save' dat chile's life, jes as sho' as de Lawd has save'
|
|
my soul?
|
|
|
|
"An' now, aftuh fifteen yeahs o' slavin' fer us, who ain't got no
|
|
claim on her, aftuh fifteen yeahs dat she has libbed 'mongs' us
|
|
an' made herse'f one of us, an' endyoed havin' her own people look
|
|
down on her, aftuh she has growed ole an' gray wukkin' fer us an'
|
|
our child'n, we talk erbout turnin' 'er out like a' ole hoss ter
|
|
die! It 'pears ter me some folks has po' mem'ries! Whar would we
|
|
'a' be'n ef her folks at de No'th hadn' 'membered us no bettuh?
|
|
An' we hadn' done nothin', neither, fer dem to 'member us fer. De
|
|
man dat kin fergit w'at Miss Noble has done fer dis town is
|
|
unworthy de name er nigger! He oughter die an' make room fer some
|
|
'spectable dog!
|
|
|
|
"Br'er Glaspy says we got a' educated young man, an' we mus' gib
|
|
him sump'n' ter do. Let him wait; ef I reads de signs right he
|
|
won't hab ter wait long fer dis job. Let him teach in de primary
|
|
schools, er in de country; an' ef he can't do dat, let 'im work
|
|
awhile. It don't hahm a' educated man ter work a little; his
|
|
fo'fathers has worked fer hund'eds of years, an' we's worked, an'
|
|
we're heah yet, an' we're free, an' we's gettin' ou' own houses
|
|
an' lots an' hosses an' cows--an' ou' educated young men. But
|
|
don't let de fus thing we do as a committee be somethin' we ought
|
|
ter be 'shamed of as long as we lib. I votes fer Miss Noble, fus,
|
|
las', an' all de time!"
|
|
|
|
When Old Abe sat down the chairman's face bore a troubled look.
|
|
He remembered how his baby girl, the first of his children that he
|
|
could really call his own, that no master could hold a prior claim
|
|
upon, lay dying in the arms of his distracted young wife, and how
|
|
the thin, homely, and short-sighted white teacher had come like an
|
|
angel into his cabin, and had brought back the little one from the
|
|
verge of the grave. The child was a young woman now, and
|
|
Gillespie had well-founded hopes of securing the superior young
|
|
Williams for a son-in-law; and he realized with something of shame
|
|
that this later ambition had so dazzled his eyes for a moment as
|
|
to obscure the memory of earlier days.
|
|
|
|
Mr. Cotten, too, had not been unmoved, and there were tears in his
|
|
eyes as he recalled how his first wife, Nancy, who had borne with
|
|
him the privations of slavery, had passed away, with the teacher's
|
|
hand in hers, before she had been able to enjoy the fruits of
|
|
liberty. For they had loved one another much, and her death had
|
|
been to them both a hard and bitter thing. And, as Old Abe spoke,
|
|
he could remember, as distinctly as though they had been spoken
|
|
but an hour before, the words of comfort that the teacher had
|
|
whispered to Nancy in her dying hour and to him in his
|
|
bereavement.
|
|
|
|
"On consideration, Mr. Chairman," he said, with an effort to hide
|
|
a suspicious tremor in his voice and to speak with the dignity
|
|
consistent with his character as a substantial citizen, "I wish to
|
|
record my vote fer Miss Noble."
|
|
|
|
"The chair," said Gillespie, yielding gracefully to the majority,
|
|
and greatly relieved that the responsibility of his candidate's
|
|
defeat lay elsewhere, "will make the vote unanimous, and will
|
|
appoint Brother Cotten and Brother Johnson a committee to step
|
|
round the corner to Miss Noble's and notify her of her election."
|
|
|
|
The two committeemen put on their hats, and, accompanied by
|
|
several people who had been waiting at the door to hear the result
|
|
of the meeting, went around the corner to Miss Noble's house, a
|
|
distance of a block or two away. The house was lighted, so they
|
|
knew she had not gone to bed. They went in at the gate, and
|
|
Cotten knocked at the door.
|
|
|
|
The colored maid opened it.
|
|
|
|
"Is Miss Noble home?" said Cotten.
|
|
|
|
'Yes; come in. She's waitin' ter hear from the committee."
|
|
|
|
The woman showed them into the parlor. Miss Noble rose from her
|
|
seat by the table, where she had been reading, and came forward to
|
|
meet them. They did not for a moment observe, as she took a step
|
|
toward them, that her footsteps wavered. In her agitation she was
|
|
scarcely aware of it herself.
|
|
|
|
"Miss Noble," announced Cotten, "we have come to let you know that
|
|
you have be'n 'lected teacher of the grammar school fer the next
|
|
year."
|
|
|
|
"Thank you; oh, thank you so much!" she said. "I am very glad.
|
|
Mary"--she put her hand to her side suddenly and tottered--"Mary,
|
|
will you--"
|
|
|
|
A spasm of pain contracted her face and cut short her speech. She
|
|
would have fallen had Old Abe not caught her and, with Mary's
|
|
help, laid her on a couch.
|
|
|
|
The remedies applied by Mary, and by the physician who was hastily
|
|
summoned, proved unavailing. The teacher did not regain
|
|
consciousness.
|
|
|
|
If it be given to those whose eyes have closed in death to linger
|
|
regretfully for a while about their earthly tenement, or from some
|
|
higher vantage-ground to look down upon it, then Henrietta Noble's
|
|
tolerant spirit must have felt, mingling with its regret, a
|
|
compensating thrill of pleasure; for not only those for whom she
|
|
had labored sorrowed for her, but the people of her own race, many
|
|
of whom, in the blindness of their pride, would not admit during
|
|
her life that she served them also, saw so much clearer now that
|
|
they took charge of her poor clay, and did it gentle reverence,
|
|
and laid it tenderly away amid the dust of their own loved and
|
|
honored dead.
|
|
|
|
TWO weeks after Miss Noble's funeral the other candidate took
|
|
charge of the grammar school, which went on without any further
|
|
obstacles to the march of progress.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE FREEDMEN'S BUREAU
|
|
by W. E. Burghardt Du Bois
|
|
|
|
|
|
The problem of the twentieth century is the problem of the color
|
|
line; the relation of the darker to the lighter races of men in
|
|
Asia and Africa, in America and the islands of the sea. It was a
|
|
phase of this problem that caused the Civil War; and however much
|
|
they who marched south and north in 1861 may have fixed on the
|
|
technical points of union and local autonomy as a shibboleth, all
|
|
nevertheless knew, as we know, that the question of Negro slavery
|
|
was the deeper cause of the conflict. Curious it was, too, how
|
|
this deeper question ever forced itself to the surface, despite
|
|
effort and disclaimer. No sooner had Northern armies touched
|
|
Southern soil than this old question, newly guised, sprang from
|
|
the earth,--What shall be done with slaves? Peremptory military
|
|
commands, this way and that, could not answer the query; the
|
|
Emancipation Proclamation seemed but to broaden and intensify the
|
|
difficulties; and so at last there arose in the South a government
|
|
of men called the Freedmen's Bureau, which lasted, legally, from
|
|
1865 to 1872, but in a sense from 1861 to 1876, and which sought
|
|
to settle the Negro problems in the United States of America.
|
|
|
|
It is the aim of this essay to study the Freedmen's Bureau,--the
|
|
occasion of its rise, the character of its work, and its final
|
|
success and failure,--not only as a part of American history, but
|
|
above all as one of the most singular and interesting of the
|
|
attempts made by a great nation to grapple with vast problems of
|
|
race and social condition.
|
|
|
|
No sooner had the armies, east and west, penetrated Virginia and
|
|
Tennessee than fugitive slaves appeared within their lines. They
|
|
came at night, when the flickering camp fires of the blue hosts
|
|
shone like vast unsteady stars along the black horizon: old men,
|
|
and thin, with gray and tufted hair; women with frightened eyes,
|
|
dragging whimpering, hungry children; men and girls, stalwart and
|
|
gaunt,--a horde of starving vagabonds, homeless, helpless, and
|
|
pitiable in their dark distress. Two methods of treating these
|
|
newcomers seemed equally logical to opposite sorts of minds. Said
|
|
some, "We have nothing to do with slaves." "Hereafter," commanded
|
|
Halleck, "no slaves should be allowed to come into your lines at
|
|
all; if any come without your knowledge, when owners call for
|
|
them, deliver them." But others said, "We take grain and fowl;
|
|
why not slaves?" Whereupon Fremont, as early as August, 1861,
|
|
declared the slaves of Missouri rebels free. Such radical action
|
|
was quickly countermanded, but at the same time the opposite
|
|
policy could not be enforced; some of the black refugees declared
|
|
themselves freemen, others showed their masters had deserted them,
|
|
and still others were captured with forts and plantations.
|
|
Evidently, too, slaves were a source of strength to the
|
|
Confederacy, and were being used as laborers and producers. "They
|
|
constitute a military resource," wrote the Secretary of War, late
|
|
in 1861; "and being such, that they should not be turned over to
|
|
the enemy is too plain to discuss." So the tone of the army
|
|
chiefs changed, Congress forbade the rendition of fugitives, and
|
|
Butler's "contrabands" were welcomed as military laborers. This
|
|
complicated rather than solved the problem; for now the scattering
|
|
fugitives became a steady stream, which flowed faster as the
|
|
armies marched.
|
|
|
|
Then the long-headed man, with care-chiseled face, who sat in the
|
|
White House, saw the inevitable, and emancipated the slaves of
|
|
rebels on New Year's, 1863. A month later Congress called
|
|
earnestly for the Negro soldiers whom the act of July, 1862, had
|
|
half grudgingly allowed to enlist. Thus the barriers were
|
|
leveled, and the deed was done. The stream of fugitives swelled
|
|
to a flood, and anxious officers kept inquiring: "What must be
|
|
done with slaves arriving almost daily? Am I to find food and
|
|
shelter for women and children?"
|
|
|
|
It was a Pierce of Boston who pointed out the way, and thus became
|
|
in a sense the founder of the Freedmen's Bureau. Being specially
|
|
detailed from the ranks to care for the freedmen at Fortress
|
|
Monroe, he afterward founded the celebrated Port Royal experiment
|
|
and started the Freedmen's Aid Societies. Thus, under the timid
|
|
Treasury officials and bold army officers, Pierce's plan widened
|
|
and developed. At first, the able-bodied men were enlisted as
|
|
soldiers or hired as laborers, the women and children were herded
|
|
into central camps under guard, and "superintendents of
|
|
contrabands" multiplied here and there. Centres of massed
|
|
freedmen arose at Fortress Monroe, Va., Washington, D. C.,
|
|
Beaufort and Port Royal, S. C., New Orleans, La., Vicksburg and
|
|
Corinth, Miss., Columbus, Ky., Cairo, Ill., and elsewhere, and the
|
|
army chaplains found here new and fruitful fields.
|
|
|
|
Then came the Freedmen's Aid Societies, born of the touching
|
|
appeals for relief and help from these centres of distress. There
|
|
was the American Missionary Association, sprung from the Amistad,
|
|
and now full grown for work, the various church organizations, the
|
|
National Freedmen's Relief Association, the American Freedmen's
|
|
Union, the Western Freedmen's Aid Commission,--in all fifty or
|
|
more active organizations, which sent clothes, money, school-
|
|
books, and teachers southward. All they did was needed, for the
|
|
destitution of the freedmen was often reported as "too appalling
|
|
for belief," and the situation was growing daily worse rather than
|
|
better.
|
|
|
|
And daily, too, it seemed more plain that this was no ordinary
|
|
matter of temporary relief, but a national crisis; for here loomed
|
|
a labor problem of vast dimensions. Masses of Negroes stood idle,
|
|
or, if they worked spasmodically, were never sure of pay; and if
|
|
perchance they received pay, squandered the new thing
|
|
thoughtlessly. In these and in other ways were camp life and the
|
|
new liberty demoralizing the freedmen. The broader economic
|
|
organization thus clearly demanded sprang up here and there as
|
|
accident and local conditions determined. Here again Pierce's
|
|
Port Royal plan of leased plantations and guided workmen pointed
|
|
out the rough way. In Washington, the military governor, at the
|
|
urgent appeal of the superintendent, opened confiscated estates to
|
|
the cultivation of the fugitives, and there in the shadow of the
|
|
dome gathered black farm villages. General Dix gave over estates
|
|
to the freedmen of Fortress Monroe, and so on through the South.
|
|
The government and the benevolent societies furnished the means of
|
|
cultivation, and the Negro turned again slowly to work. The
|
|
systems of control, thus started, rapidly grew, here and there,
|
|
into strange little governments, like that of General Banks in
|
|
Louisiana, with its 90,000 black subjects, its 50,000 guided
|
|
laborers, and its annual budget of $100,000 and more. It made out
|
|
4000 pay rolls, registered all freedmen, inquired into grievances
|
|
and redressed them, laid and collected taxes, and established a
|
|
system of public schools. So too Colonel Eaton, the
|
|
superintendent of Tennessee and Arkansas, ruled over 100,000,
|
|
leased and cultivated 7000 acres of cotton land, and furnished
|
|
food for 10,000 paupers. In South Carolina was General Saxton,
|
|
with his deep interest in black folk. He succeeded Pierce and the
|
|
Treasury officials, and sold forfeited estates, leased abandoned
|
|
plantations, encouraged schools, and received from Sherman, after
|
|
the terribly picturesque march to the sea, thousands of the
|
|
wretched camp followers.
|
|
|
|
Three characteristic things one might have seen in Sherman's raid
|
|
through Georgia, which threw the new situation in deep and shadowy
|
|
relief: the Conqueror, the Conquered, and the Negro. Some see all
|
|
significance in the grim front of the destroyer, and some in the
|
|
bitter sufferers of the lost cause. But to me neither soldier nor
|
|
fugitive speaks with so deep a meaning as that dark and human
|
|
cloud that clung like remorse on the rear of those swift columns,
|
|
swelling at times to half their size, almost engulfing and choking
|
|
them. In vain were they ordered back, in vain were bridges hewn
|
|
from beneath their feet; on they trudged and writhed and surged,
|
|
until they rolled into Savannah, a starved and naked horde of tens
|
|
of thousands. There too came the characteristic military remedy:
|
|
"The islands from Charleston south, the abandoned ricefields along
|
|
the rivers for thirty miles back from the sea, and the country
|
|
bordering the St. John's River, Florida, are reserved and set
|
|
apart for the settlement of Negroes now made free by act of war."
|
|
So read the celebrated field order.
|
|
|
|
All these experiments, orders, and systems were bound to attract
|
|
and perplex the government and the nation. Directly after the
|
|
Emancipation Proclamation, Representative Eliot had introduced a
|
|
bill creating a Bureau of Emancipation, but it was never reported.
|
|
The following June, a committee of inquiry, appointed by the
|
|
Secretary of War, reported in favor of a temporary bureau for the
|
|
"improvement, protection, and employment of refugee freedmen," on
|
|
much the same lines as were afterward followed. Petitions came in
|
|
to President Lincoln from distinguished citizens and
|
|
organizations, strongly urging a comprehensive and unified plan of
|
|
dealing with the freedmen, under a bureau which should be "charged
|
|
with the study of plans and execution of measures for easily
|
|
guiding, and in every way judiciously and humanely aiding, the
|
|
passage of our emancipated and yet to be emancipated blacks from
|
|
the old condition of forced labor to their new state of voluntary
|
|
industry."
|
|
|
|
Some half-hearted steps were early taken by the government to put
|
|
both freedmen and abandoned estates under the supervision of the
|
|
Treasury officials. Laws of 1863 and 1864 directed them to take
|
|
charge of and lease abandoned lands for periods not exceeding
|
|
twelve months, and to "provide in such leases or otherwise for the
|
|
employment and general welfare" of the freedmen. Most of the army
|
|
officers looked upon this as a welcome relief from perplexing
|
|
"Negro affairs;" but the Treasury hesitated and blundered, and
|
|
although it leased large quantities of land and employed many
|
|
Negroes, especially along the Mississippi, yet it left the virtual
|
|
control of the laborers and their relations to their neighbors in
|
|
the hands of the army.
|
|
|
|
In March, 1864, Congress at last turned its attention to the
|
|
subject, and the House passed a bill, by a majority of two,
|
|
establishing a Bureau for Freedmen in the War Department. Senator
|
|
Sumner, who had charge of the bill in the Senate, argued that
|
|
freedmen and abandoned lands ought to be under the same
|
|
department, and reported a substitute for the House bill,
|
|
attaching the Bureau to the Treasury Department. This bill
|
|
passed, but too late for action in the House. The debate wandered
|
|
over the whole policy of the administration and the general
|
|
question of slavery, without touching very closely the specific
|
|
merits of the measure in hand.
|
|
|
|
Meantime the election took place, and the administration,
|
|
returning from the country with a vote of renewed confidence,
|
|
addressed itself to the matter more seriously. A conference
|
|
between the houses agreed upon a carefully drawn measure which
|
|
contained the chief provisions of Charles Sumner's bill, but made
|
|
the proposed organization a department independent of both the War
|
|
and Treasury officials. The bill was conservative, giving the new
|
|
department "general superintendence of all freedmen." It was to
|
|
"establish regulations" for them, protect them, lease them lands,
|
|
adjust their wages, and appear in civil and military courts as
|
|
their "next friend." There were many limitations attached to the
|
|
powers thus granted, and the organization was made permanent.
|
|
Nevertheless, the Senate defeated the bill, and a new conference
|
|
committee was appointed. This committee reported a new bill,
|
|
February 28, which was whirled through just as the session closed,
|
|
and which became the act of 1865 establishing in the War
|
|
Department a "Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands."
|
|
|
|
This last compromise was a hasty bit of legislation, vague and
|
|
uncertain in outline. A Bureau was created, "to continue during
|
|
the present War of Rebellion, and for one year thereafter," to
|
|
which was given "the supervision and management of all abandoned
|
|
lands, and the control of all subjects relating to refugees and
|
|
freedmen," under "such rules and regulations as may be presented
|
|
by the head of the Bureau and approved by the President." A
|
|
commissioner, appointed by the President and Senate, was to
|
|
control the Bureau, with an office force not exceeding ten clerks.
|
|
The President might also appoint commissioners in the seceded
|
|
states, and to all these offices military officials might be
|
|
detailed at regular pay. The Secretary of War could issue
|
|
rations, clothing, and fuel to the destitute, and all abandoned
|
|
property was placed in the hands of the Bureau for eventual lease
|
|
and sale to ex-slaves in forty-acre parcels.
|
|
|
|
Thus did the United States government definitely assume charge of
|
|
the emancipated Negro as the ward of the nation. It was a
|
|
tremendous undertaking. Here, at a stroke of the pen, was erected
|
|
a government of millions of men,--and not ordinary men, either,
|
|
but black men emasculated by a peculiarly complete system of
|
|
slavery, centuries old; and now, suddenly, violently, they come
|
|
into a new birthright, at a time of war and passion, in the midst
|
|
of the stricken, embittered population of their former masters.
|
|
Any man might well have hesitated to assume charge of such a work,
|
|
with vast responsibilities, indefinite powers, and limited
|
|
resources. Probably no one but a soldier would have answered such
|
|
a call promptly; and indeed no one but a soldier could be called,
|
|
for Congress had appropriated no money for salaries and expenses.
|
|
|
|
Less than a month after the weary emancipator passed to his rest,
|
|
his successor assigned Major General Oliver O. Howard to duty as
|
|
commissioner of the new Bureau. He was a Maine man, then only
|
|
thirty-five years of age. He had marched with Sherman to the sea,
|
|
had fought well at Gettysburg, and had but a year before been
|
|
assigned to the command of the Department of Tennessee. An honest
|
|
and sincere men, with rather too much faith in human nature,
|
|
little aptitude for systematic business and intricate detail, he
|
|
was nevertheless conservative, hard-working, and, above all,
|
|
acquainted at first-hand with much of the work before him. And of
|
|
that work it has been truly said, "No approximately correct
|
|
history of civilization can ever be written which does not throw
|
|
out in bold relief, as one of the great landmarks of political and
|
|
social progress, the organization and administration of the
|
|
Freedmen's Bureau."
|
|
|
|
On May 12, 1865, Howard was appointed, and he assumed the duties
|
|
of his office promptly on the 15th, and began examining the field
|
|
of work. A curious mess he looked upon: little despotisms,
|
|
communistic experiments, slavery, peonage, business speculations,
|
|
organized charity, unorganized almsgiving,--all reeling on under
|
|
the guise of helping the freedman, and all enshrined in the smoke
|
|
and blood of war and the cursing and silence of angry men. On May
|
|
19 the new government--for a government it really was--issued its
|
|
constitution; commissioners were to be appointed in each of the
|
|
seceded states, who were to take charge of "all subjects relating
|
|
to refugees and freedmen," and all relief and rations were to be
|
|
given by their consent alone. The Bureau invited continued
|
|
cooperation with benevolent societies, and declared, "It will be
|
|
the object of all commissioners to introduce practicable systems
|
|
of compensated labor," and to establish schools. Forthwith nine
|
|
assistant commissioners were appointed. They were to hasten to
|
|
their fields of work; seek gradually to close relief
|
|
establishments, and make the destitute self-supporting; act as
|
|
courts of law where there were no courts, or where Negroes were
|
|
not recognized in them as free; establish the institution of
|
|
marriage among ex-slaves, and keep records; see that freedmen were
|
|
free to choose their employers, and help in making fair contracts
|
|
for them; and finally, the circular said, "Simple good faith, for
|
|
which we hope on all hands for those concerned in the passing away
|
|
of slavery, will especially relieve the assistant commissioners in
|
|
the discharge of their duties toward the freedmen, as well as
|
|
promote the general welfare."
|
|
|
|
No sooner was the work thus started, and the general system and
|
|
local organization in some measure begun, than two grave
|
|
difficulties appeared which changed largely the theory and outcome
|
|
of Bureau work. First, there were the abandoned lands of the
|
|
South. It had long been the more or less definitely expressed
|
|
theory of the North that all the chief problems of emancipation
|
|
might be settled by establishing the slaves on the forfeited lands
|
|
of their masters,--a sort of poetic justice, said some. But this
|
|
poetry done into solemn prose meant either wholesale confiscation
|
|
of private property in the South, or vast appropriations. Now
|
|
Congress had not appropriated a cent, and no sooner did the
|
|
proclamations of general amnesty appear than the 800,000 acres of
|
|
abandoned lands in the hands of the Freedmen's Bureau melted
|
|
quickly away. The second difficulty lay in perfecting the local
|
|
organization of the Bureau throughout the wide field of work.
|
|
Making a new machine and sending out officials of duly ascertained
|
|
fitness for a great work of social reform is no child's task; but
|
|
this task was even harder, for a new central organization had to
|
|
be fitted on a heterogeneous and confused but already existing
|
|
system of relief and control of ex-slaves; and the agents
|
|
available for this work must be sought for in an army still busy
|
|
with war operations,--men in the very nature of the case ill
|
|
fitted for delicate social work,--or among the questionable camp
|
|
followers of an invading host. Thus, after a year's work,
|
|
vigorously as it was pushed, the problem looked even more
|
|
difficult to grasp and solve than at the beginning. Nevertheless,
|
|
three things that year's work did, well worth the doing: it
|
|
relieved a vast amount of physical suffering; it transported 7000
|
|
fugitives from congested centres back to the farm; and, best of
|
|
all, it inaugurated the crusade of the New England schoolma'am.
|
|
|
|
The annals of this Ninth Crusade are yet to be written, the tale
|
|
of a mission that seemed to our age far more quixotic than the
|
|
quest of St. Louis seemed to his. Behind the mists of ruin and
|
|
rapine waved the calico dresses of women who dared, and after the
|
|
hoarse mouthings of the field guns rang the rhythm of the
|
|
alphabet. Rich and poor they were, serious and curious. Bereaved
|
|
now of a father, now of a brother, now of more than these, they
|
|
came seeking a life work in planting New England schoolhouses
|
|
among the white and black of the South. They did their work well.
|
|
In that first year they taught 100,000 souls, and more.
|
|
|
|
Evidently, Congress must soon legislate again on the hastily
|
|
organized Bureau, which had so quickly grown into wide
|
|
significance and vast possibilities. An institution such as that
|
|
was well-nigh as difficult to end as to begin. Early in 1866
|
|
Congress took up the matter, when Senator Trumbull, of Illinois,
|
|
introduced a bill to extend the Bureau and enlarge its powers.
|
|
This measure received, at the hands of Congress, far more thorough
|
|
discussion and attention than its predecessor. The war cloud had
|
|
thinned enough to allow a clearer conception of the work of
|
|
emancipation. The champions of the bill argued that the
|
|
strengthening of the Freedmen's Bureau was still a military
|
|
necessity; that it was needed for the proper carrying out of the
|
|
Thirteenth Amendment, and was a work of sheer justice to the ex-
|
|
slave, at a trifling cost to the government. The opponents of the
|
|
measure declared that the war was over, and the necessity for war
|
|
measures past; that the Bureau, by reason of its extraordinary
|
|
powers, was clearly unconstitutional in time of peace, and was
|
|
destined to irritate the South and pauperize the freedmen, at a
|
|
final cost of possibly hundreds of millions. Two of these
|
|
arguments were unanswered, and indeed unanswerable: the one that
|
|
the extraordinary powers of the Bureau threatened the civil rights
|
|
of all citizens; and the other that the government must have power
|
|
to do what manifestly must be done, and that present abandonment
|
|
of the freedmen meant their practical enslavement. The bill which
|
|
finally passed enlarged and made permanent the Freedmen's Bureau.
|
|
It was promptly vetoed by President Johnson, as
|
|
"unconstitutional," "unnecessary," and "extrajudicial," and failed
|
|
of passage over the veto. Meantime, however, the breach between
|
|
Congress and the President began to broaden, and a modified form
|
|
of the lost bill was finally passed over the President's second
|
|
veto, July 16.
|
|
|
|
The act of 1866 gave the Freedmen's Bureau its final form,--the
|
|
form by which it will be known to posterity and judged of men. It
|
|
extended the existence of the Bureau to July, 1868; it authorized
|
|
additional assistant commissioners, the retention of army officers
|
|
mustered out of regular service, the sale of certain forfeited
|
|
lands to freedmen on nominal terms, the sale of Confederate public
|
|
property for Negro schools, and a wider field of judicial
|
|
interpretation and cognizance. The government of the un-
|
|
reconstructed South was thus put very largely in the hands of the
|
|
Freedmen's Bureau, especially as in many cases the departmental
|
|
military commander was now made also assistant commissioner. It
|
|
was thus that the Freedmen's Bureau became a full-fledged
|
|
government of men. It made laws, executed them and interpreted
|
|
them; it laid and collected taxes, defined and punished crime,
|
|
maintained and used military force, and dictated such measures as
|
|
it thought necessary and proper for the accomplishment of its
|
|
varied ends. Naturally, all these powers were not exercised
|
|
continuously nor to their fullest extent; and yet, as General
|
|
Howard has said, "scarcely any subject that has to be legislated
|
|
upon in civil society failed, at one time or another, to demand
|
|
the action of this singular Bureau."
|
|
|
|
To understand and criticise intelligently so vast a work, one must
|
|
not forget an instant the drift of things in the later sixties:
|
|
Lee had surrendered, Lincoln was dead, and Johnson and Congress
|
|
were at loggerheads; the Thirteenth Amendment was adopted, the
|
|
Fourteenth pending, and the Fifteenth declared in force in 1870.
|
|
Guerrilla raiding, the ever present flickering after-flame of war,
|
|
was spending its force against the Negroes, and all the Southern
|
|
land was awakening as from some wild dream to poverty and social
|
|
revolution. In a time of perfect calm, amid willing neighbors and
|
|
streaming wealth, the social uplifting of 4,000,000 slaves to an
|
|
assured and self-sustaining place in the body politic and economic
|
|
would have been an herculean task; but when to the inherent
|
|
difficulties of so delicate and nice a social operation were added
|
|
the spite and hate of conflict, the Hell of War; when suspicion
|
|
and cruelty were rife, and gaunt Hunger wept beside Bereavement,--
|
|
in such a case, the work of any instrument of social regeneration
|
|
was in large part foredoomed to failure. The very name of the
|
|
Bureau stood for a thing in the South which for two centuries and
|
|
better men had refused even to argue,--that life amid free Negroes
|
|
was simply unthinkable, the maddest of experiments. The agents
|
|
which the Bureau could command varied all the way from unselfish
|
|
philanthropists to narrow-minded busybodies and thieves; and even
|
|
though it be true that the average was far better than the worst,
|
|
it was the one fly that helped to spoil the ointment. Then, amid
|
|
all this crouched the freed slave, bewildered between friend and
|
|
foe. He had emerged from slavery: not the worst slavery in the
|
|
world, not a slavery that made all life unbearable,--rather, a
|
|
slavery that had here and there much of kindliness, fidelity, and
|
|
happiness,--but withal slavery, which, so far as human aspiration
|
|
and desert were concerned, classed the black man and the ox
|
|
together. And the Negro knew full well that, whatever their
|
|
deeper convictions may have been, Southern men had fought with
|
|
desperate energy to perpetuate this slavery, under which the black
|
|
masses, with half-articulate thought, had writhed and shivered.
|
|
They welcomed freedom with a cry. They fled to the friends that
|
|
had freed them. They shrank from the master who still strove for
|
|
their chains. So the cleft between the white and black South
|
|
grew. Idle to say it never should have been; it was as inevitable
|
|
as its results were pitiable. Curiously incongruous elements were
|
|
left arrayed against each other: the North, the government, the
|
|
carpetbagger, and the slave, here; and there, all the South that
|
|
was white, whether gentleman or vagabond, honest man or rascal,
|
|
lawless murderer or martyr to duty.
|
|
|
|
Thus it is doubly difficult to write of this period calmly, so
|
|
intense was the feeling, so mighty the human passions, that swayed
|
|
and blinded men. Amid it all two figures ever stand to typify
|
|
that day to coming men: the one a gray-haired gentleman, whose
|
|
fathers had quit themselves like men, whose sons lay in nameless
|
|
graves, who bowed to the evil of slavery because its abolition
|
|
boded untold ill to all; who stood at last, in the evening of
|
|
life, a blighted, ruined form, with hate in his eyes. And the
|
|
other, a form hovering dark and mother-like, her awful face black
|
|
with the mists of centuries, had aforetime bent in love over her
|
|
white master's cradle, rocked his sons and daughters to sleep, and
|
|
closed in death the sunken eyes of his wife to the world; ay, too,
|
|
had laid herself low to his lust and borne a tawny man child to
|
|
the world, only to see her dark boy's limbs scattered to the winds
|
|
by midnight marauders riding after Damned Niggers. These were the
|
|
saddest sights of that woeful day; and no man clasped the hands of
|
|
these two passing figures of the present-past; but hating they
|
|
went to their long home, and hating their children's children live
|
|
to-day.
|
|
|
|
Here, then, was the field of work for the Freedmen's Bureau; and
|
|
since, with some hesitation, it was continued by the act of 1868
|
|
till 1869, let us look upon four years of its work as a whole.
|
|
There were, in 1868, 900 Bureau officials scattered from
|
|
Washington to Texas, ruling, directly and indirectly, many
|
|
millions of men. And the deeds of these rulers fall mainly under
|
|
seven heads,--the relief of physical suffering, the overseeing of
|
|
the beginnings of free labor, the buying and selling of land, the
|
|
establishment of schools, the paying of bounties, the
|
|
administration of justice, and the financiering of all these
|
|
activities. Up to June, 1869, over half a million patients had
|
|
been treated by Bureau physicians and surgeons, and sixty
|
|
hospitals and asylums had been in operation. In fifty months of
|
|
work 21,000,000 free rations were distributed at a cost of over
|
|
$4,000,000,--beginning at the rate of 30,000 rations a day in
|
|
1865, and discontinuing in 1869. Next came the difficult question
|
|
of labor. First, 30,000 black men were transported from the
|
|
refuges and relief stations back to the farms, back to the
|
|
critical trial of a new way of working. Plain, simple
|
|
instructions went out from Washington,--the freedom of laborers to
|
|
choose employers, no fixed rates of wages, no peonage or forced
|
|
labor. So far so good; but where local agents differed toto coelo
|
|
in capacity and character, where the personnel was continually
|
|
changing, the outcome was varied. The largest element of success
|
|
lay in the fact that the majority of the freedmen were willing,
|
|
often eager, to work. So contracts were written,--50,000 in a
|
|
single state,--laborers advised, wages guaranteed, and employers
|
|
supplied. In truth, the organization became a vast labor bureau;
|
|
not perfect, indeed,--notably defective here and there,--but on
|
|
the whole, considering the situation, successful beyond the dreams
|
|
of thoughtful men. The two great obstacles which confronted the
|
|
officers at every turn were the tyrant and the idler: the
|
|
slaveholder, who believed slavery was right, and was determined to
|
|
perpetuate it under another name; and the freedman, who regarded
|
|
freedom as perpetual rest. These were the Devil and the Deep Sea.
|
|
|
|
In the work of establishing the Negroes as peasant proprietors the
|
|
Bureau was severely handicapped, as I have shown. Nevertheless,
|
|
something was done. Abandoned lands were leased so long as they
|
|
remained in the hands of the Bureau, and a total revenue of
|
|
$400,000 derived from black tenants. Some other lands to which
|
|
the nation had gained title were sold, and public lands were
|
|
opened for the settlement of the few blacks who had tools and
|
|
capital. The vision of landowning, however, the righteous and
|
|
reasonable ambition for forty acres and a mule which filled the
|
|
freedmen's dreams, was doomed in most cases to disappointment.
|
|
And those men of marvelous hind-sight, who to-day are seeking to
|
|
preach the Negro back to the soil, know well, or ought to know,
|
|
that it was here, in 1865, that the finest opportunity of binding
|
|
the black peasant to the soil was lost. Yet, with help and
|
|
striving, the Negro gained some land, and by 1874, in the one
|
|
state of Georgia, owned near 350,000 acres.
|
|
|
|
The greatest success of the Freedmen's Bureau lay in the planting
|
|
of the free school among Negroes, and the idea of free elementary
|
|
education among all classes in the South. It not only called the
|
|
schoolmistress through the benevolent agencies, and built them
|
|
schoolhouses, but it helped discover and support such apostles of
|
|
human development as Edmund Ware, Erastus Cravath, and Samuel
|
|
Armstrong. State superintendents of education were appointed, and
|
|
by 1870 150,000 children were in school. The opposition to Negro
|
|
education was bitter in the South, for the South believed an
|
|
educated Negro to be a dangerous Negro. And the South was not
|
|
wholly wrong; for education among all kinds of men always has had,
|
|
and always will have, an element of danger and revolution, of
|
|
dissatisfaction and discontent. Nevertheless, men strive to know.
|
|
It was some inkling of this paradox, even in the unquiet days of
|
|
the Bureau, that allayed an opposition to human training, which
|
|
still to-day lies smouldering, but not flaming. Fisk, Atlanta,
|
|
Howard, and Hampton were founded in these days, and nearly
|
|
$6,000,000 was expended in five years for educational work,
|
|
$750,000 of which came from the freedmen themselves.
|
|
|
|
Such contributions, together with the buying of land and various
|
|
other enterprises, showed that the ex-slave was handling some free
|
|
capital already. The chief initial source of this was labor in
|
|
the army, and his pay and bounty as a soldier. Payments to Negro
|
|
soldiers were at first complicated by the ignorance of the
|
|
recipients, and the fact that the quotas of colored regiments from
|
|
Northern states were largely filled by recruits from the South,
|
|
unknown to their fellow soldiers. Consequently, payments were
|
|
accompanied by such frauds that Congress, by joint resolution in
|
|
1867, put the whole matter in the hands of the Freedmen's Bureau.
|
|
In two years $6,000,000 was thus distributed to 5000 claimants,
|
|
and in the end the sum exceeded $8,000,000. Even in this system,
|
|
fraud was frequent; but still the work put needed capital in the
|
|
hands of practical paupers, and some, at least, was well spent.
|
|
|
|
The most perplexing and least successful part of the Bureau's work
|
|
lay in the exercise of its judicial functions. In a distracted
|
|
land where slavery had hardly fallen, to keep the strong from
|
|
wanton abuse of the weak, and the weak from gloating insolently
|
|
over the half-shorn strength of the strong, was a thankless,
|
|
hopeless task. The former masters of the land were peremptorily
|
|
ordered about, seized and imprisoned, and punished over and again,
|
|
with scant courtesy from army officers. The former slaves were
|
|
intimidated, beaten, raped, and butchered by angry and revengeful
|
|
men. Bureau courts tended to become centres simply for punishing
|
|
whites, while the regular civil courts tended to become solely
|
|
institutions for perpetuating the slavery of blacks. Almost every
|
|
law and method ingenuity could devise was employed by the
|
|
legislatures to reduce the Negroes to serfdom,--to make them the
|
|
slaves of the state, if not of individual owners; while the Bureau
|
|
officials too often were found striving to put the "bottom rail on
|
|
top," and give the freedmen a power and independence which they
|
|
could not yet use. It is all well enough for us of another
|
|
generation to wax wise with advice to those who bore the burden in
|
|
the heat of the day. It is full easy now to see that the man who
|
|
lost home, fortune, and family at a stroke, and saw his land ruled
|
|
by "mules and niggers," was really benefited by the passing of
|
|
slavery. It is not difficult now to say to the young freedman,
|
|
cheated and cuffed about, who has seen his father's head beaten to
|
|
a jelly and his own mother namelessly assaulted, that the meek
|
|
shall inherit the earth. Above all, nothing is more convenient
|
|
than to heap on the Freedmen's Bureau all the evils of that evil
|
|
day, and damn it utterly for every mistake and blunder that was
|
|
made.
|
|
|
|
All this is easy, but it is neither sensible nor just. Some one
|
|
had blundered, but that was long before Oliver Howard was born;
|
|
there was criminal aggression and heedless neglect, but without
|
|
some system of control there would have been far more than there
|
|
was. Had that control been from within, the Negro would have been
|
|
reenslaved, to all intents and purposes. Coming as the control
|
|
did from without, perfect men and methods would have bettered all
|
|
things; and even with imperfect agents and questionable methods,
|
|
the work accomplished was not undeserving of much commendation.
|
|
The regular Bureau court consisted of one representative of the
|
|
employer, one of the Negro, and one of the Bureau. If the Bureau
|
|
could have maintained a perfectly judicial attitude, this
|
|
arrangement would have been ideal, and must in time have gained
|
|
confidence; but the nature of its other activities and the
|
|
character of its personnel prejudiced the Bureau in favor of the
|
|
black litigants, and led without doubt to much injustice and
|
|
annoyance. On the other hand, to leave the Negro in the hands of
|
|
Southern courts was impossible.
|
|
|
|
What the Freedmen's Bureau cost the nation is difficult to
|
|
determine accurately. Its methods of bookkeeping were not good,
|
|
and the whole system of its work and records partook of the hurry
|
|
and turmoil of the time. General Howard himself disbursed some
|
|
$15,000,000 during his incumbency; but this includes the bounties
|
|
paid colored soldiers, which perhaps should not be counted as an
|
|
expense of the Bureau. In bounties, prize money, and all other
|
|
expenses, the Bureau disbursed over $20,000,000 before all of its
|
|
departments were finally closed. To this ought to be added the
|
|
large expenses of the various departments of Negro affairs before
|
|
1865; but these are hardly extricable from war expenditures, nor
|
|
can we estimate with any accuracy the contributions of benevolent
|
|
societies during all these years.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Such was the work of the Freedmen's Bureau. To sum it up in
|
|
brief, we may say: it set going a system of free labor; it
|
|
established the black peasant proprietor; it secured the
|
|
recognition of black freemen before courts of law; it founded the
|
|
free public school in the South. On the other hand, it failed to
|
|
establish good will between ex-masters and freedmen; to guard its
|
|
work wholly from paternalistic methods that discouraged self-
|
|
reliance; to make Negroes landholders in any considerable numbers.
|
|
Its successes were the result of hard work, supplemented by the
|
|
aid of philanthropists and the eager striving of black men. Its
|
|
failures were the result of bad local agents, inherent
|
|
difficulties of the work, and national neglect. The Freedmen's
|
|
Bureau expired by limitation in 1869, save its educational and
|
|
bounty departments. The educational work came to an end in 1872,
|
|
and General Howard's connection with the Bureau ceased at that
|
|
time. The work of paying bounties was transferred to the adjutant
|
|
general's office, where it was continued three or four years
|
|
longer.
|
|
|
|
Such an institution, from its wide powers, great responsibilities,
|
|
large control of moneys, and generally conspicuous position, was
|
|
naturally open to repeated and bitter attacks. It sustained a
|
|
searching congressional investigation at the instance of Fernando
|
|
Wood in 1870. It was, with blunt discourtesy, transferred from
|
|
Howard's control, in his absence, to the supervision of Secretary
|
|
of War Belknap in 1872, on the Secretary's recommendation.
|
|
Finally, in consequence of grave intimations of wrongdoing made by
|
|
the Secretary and his subordinates, General Howard was court-
|
|
martialed in 1874. In each of these trials, and in other attacks,
|
|
the commissioner of the Freedmen's Bureau was exonerated from any
|
|
willful misdoing, and his work heartily commended. Nevertheless,
|
|
many unpleasant things were brought to light: the methods of
|
|
transacting the business of the Bureau were faulty; several cases
|
|
of defalcation among officials in the field were proven, and
|
|
further frauds hinted at; there were some business transactions
|
|
which savored of dangerous speculation, if not dishonesty; and,
|
|
above all, the smirch of the Freedmen's Bank, which, while legally
|
|
distinct from, was morally and practically a part of the Bureau,
|
|
will ever blacken the record of this great institution. Not even
|
|
ten additional years of slavery could have done as much to
|
|
throttle the thrift of the freedmen as the mismanagement and
|
|
bankruptcy of the savings bank chartered by the nation for their
|
|
especial aid. Yet it is but fair to say that the perfect honesty
|
|
of purpose and unselfish devotion of General Howard have passed
|
|
untarnished through the fire of criticism. Not so with all his
|
|
subordinates, although in the case of the great majority of these
|
|
there were shown bravery and devotion to duty, even though
|
|
sometimes linked to narrowness and incompetency.
|
|
|
|
The most bitter attacks on the Freedmen's Bureau were aimed not so
|
|
much at its conduct or policy under the law as at the necessity
|
|
for any such organization at all. Such attacks came naturally
|
|
from the border states and the South, and they were summed up by
|
|
Senator Davis, of Kentucky, when he moved to entitle the act of
|
|
1866 a bill "to promote strife and conflict between the white and
|
|
black races . . . by a grant of unconstitutional power." The
|
|
argument was of tremendous strength, but its very strength was its
|
|
weakness. For, argued the plain common sense of the nation, if it
|
|
is unconstitutional, unpracticable, and futile for the nation to
|
|
stand guardian over its helpless wards, then there is left but one
|
|
alternative: to make those wards their own guardians by arming
|
|
them with the ballot. The alternative offered the nation then was
|
|
not between full and restricted Negro suffrage; else every
|
|
sensible man, black and white, would easily have chosen the
|
|
latter. It was rather a choice between suffrage and slavery,
|
|
after endless blood and gold had flowed to sweep human bondage
|
|
away. Not a single Southern legislature stood ready to admit a
|
|
Negro, under any conditions, to the polls; not a single Southern
|
|
legislature believed free Negro labor was possible without a
|
|
system of restrictions that took all its freedom away; there was
|
|
scarcely a white man in the South who did not honestly regard
|
|
emancipation as a crime, and its practical nullification as a
|
|
duty. In such a situation, the granting of the ballot to the
|
|
black man was a necessity, the very least a guilty nation could
|
|
grant a wronged race. Had the opposition to government
|
|
guardianship of Negroes been less bitter, and the attachment to
|
|
the slave system less strong, the social seer can well imagine a
|
|
far better policy: a permanent Freedmen's Bureau, with a national
|
|
system of Negro schools; a carefully supervised employment and
|
|
labor office; a system of impartial protection before the regular
|
|
courts; and such institutions for social betterment as savings
|
|
banks, land and building associations, and social settlements.
|
|
All this vast expenditure of money and brains might have formed a
|
|
great school of prospective citizenship, and solved in a way we
|
|
have not yet solved the most perplexing and persistent of the
|
|
Negro problems.
|
|
|
|
That such an institution was unthinkable in 1870 was due in part
|
|
to certain acts of the Freedmen's Bureau itself. It came to
|
|
regard its work as merely temporary, and Negro suffrage as a final
|
|
answer to all present perplexities. The political ambition of
|
|
many of its agents and proteges led it far afield into
|
|
questionable activities, until the South, nursing its own deep
|
|
prejudices, came easily to ignore all the good deeds of the
|
|
Bureau, and hate its very name with perfect hatred. So the
|
|
Freedmen's Bureau died, and its child was the Fifteenth Amendment.
|
|
|
|
The passing of a great human institution before its work is done,
|
|
like the untimely passing of a single soul, but leaves a legacy of
|
|
striving for other men. The legacy of the Freedmen's Bureau is
|
|
the heavy heritage of this generation. Today, when new and vaster
|
|
problems are destined to strain every fibre of the national mind
|
|
and soul, would it not be well to count this legacy honestly and
|
|
carefully? For this much all men know: despite compromise,
|
|
struggle, war, and struggle, the Negro is not free. In the
|
|
backwoods of the Gulf states, for miles and miles, he may not
|
|
leave the plantation of his birth; in well-nigh the whole rural
|
|
South the black farmers are peons, bound by law and custom to an
|
|
economic slavery, from which the only escape is death or the
|
|
penitentiary. In the most cultured sections and cities of the
|
|
South the Negroes are a segregated servile caste, with restricted
|
|
rights and privileges. Before the courts, both in law and custom,
|
|
they stand on a different and peculiar basis. Taxation without
|
|
representation is the rule of their political life. And the
|
|
result of all this is, and in nature must have been, lawlessness
|
|
and crime. That is the large legacy of the Freedmen's Bureau, the
|
|
work it did not do because it could not.
|
|
|
|
|
|
I have seen a land right merry with the sun; where children sing,
|
|
and rolling hills lie like passioned women, wanton with harvest.
|
|
And there in the King's Highway sat and sits a figure, veiled and
|
|
bowed, by which the traveler's footsteps hasten as they go. On
|
|
the tainted air broods fear. Three centuries' thought has been
|
|
the raising and unveiling of that bowed human heart, and now,
|
|
behold, my fellows, a century new for the duty and the deed. The
|
|
problem of the twentieth century is the problem of the color line.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
OF THE TRAINING OF BLACK MEN
|
|
by W. E. Burghardt Du Bois
|
|
|
|
|
|
From the shimmering swirl of waters where many, many thoughts ago
|
|
the slave-ship first saw the square tower of Jamestown have flowed
|
|
down to our day three streams of thinking: one from the larger
|
|
world here and over-seas, saying, the multiplying of human wants
|
|
in culture lands calls for the world-wide co-operation of men in
|
|
satisfying them. Hence arises a new human unity, pulling the ends
|
|
of earth nearer, and all men, black, yellow, and white. The
|
|
larger humanity strives to feel in this contact of living nations
|
|
and sleeping hordes a thrill of new life in the world, crying, If
|
|
the contact of Life and Sleep be Death, shame on such Life. To be
|
|
sure, behind this thought lurks the afterthought of force and
|
|
dominion,--the making of brown men to delve when the temptation of
|
|
beads and red calico cloys.
|
|
|
|
The second thought streaming from the death-ship and the curving
|
|
river is the thought of the older South: the sincere and
|
|
passionate belief that somewhere between men and cattle God
|
|
created a tertium quid, and called it a Negro,--a clownish, simple
|
|
creature, at times even lovable within its limitations, but
|
|
straitly foreordained to walk within the Veil. To be sure, behind
|
|
the thought lurks the afterthought,--some of them with favoring
|
|
chance might become men, but in sheer self-defense we dare not let
|
|
them, and build about them walls so high, and hang between them
|
|
and the light a veil so thick, that they shall not even think of
|
|
breaking through.
|
|
|
|
And last of all there trickles down that third and darker thought,
|
|
the thought of the things themselves, the confused half-conscious
|
|
mutter of men who are black and whitened, crying Liberty, Freedom,
|
|
Opportunity--vouchsafe to us, O boastful World, the chance of
|
|
living men! To be sure, behind the thought lurks the
|
|
afterthought: suppose, after all, the World is right and we are
|
|
less than men? Suppose this mad impulse within is all wrong, some
|
|
mock mirage from the untrue?
|
|
|
|
So here we stand among thoughts of human unity, even through
|
|
conquest and slavery; the inferiority of black men, even if forced
|
|
by fraud; a shriek in the night for the freedom of men who
|
|
themselves are not yet sure of their right to demand it. This is
|
|
the tangle of thought and afterthought wherein we are called to
|
|
solve the problem of training men for life.
|
|
|
|
Behind all its curiousness, so attractive alike to sage and
|
|
dilettante, lie its dim dangers, throwing across us shadows at
|
|
once grotesque and awful. Plain it is to us that what the world
|
|
seeks through desert and wild we have within our threshold;--a
|
|
stalwart laboring force, suited to the semi-tropics; if, deaf to
|
|
the voice of the Zeitgeist, we refuse to use and develop these
|
|
men, we risk poverty and loss. If, on the other hand, seized by
|
|
the brutal afterthought, we debauch the race thus caught in our
|
|
talons, selfishly sucking their blood and brains in the future as
|
|
in the past, what shall save us from national decadence? Only
|
|
that saner selfishness which, Education teaches men, can find the
|
|
rights of all in the whirl of work.
|
|
|
|
Again, we may decry the color prejudice of the South, yet it
|
|
remains a heavy fact. Such curious kinks of the human mind exist
|
|
and must be reckoned with soberly. They cannot be laughed away,
|
|
nor always successfully stormed at, nor easily abolished by act of
|
|
legislature. And yet they cannot be encouraged by being let
|
|
alone. They must be recognized as facts, but unpleasant facts;
|
|
things that stand in the way of civilization and religion and
|
|
common decency. They can be met in but one way: by the breadth
|
|
and broadening of human reason, by catholicity of taste and
|
|
culture. And so, too, the native ambition and aspiration of men,
|
|
even though they be black, backward, and ungraceful, must not
|
|
lightly be dealt with. To stimulate wildly weak and untrained
|
|
minds is to play with mighty fires; to flout their striving idly
|
|
is to welcome a harvest of brutish crime and shameless lethargy in
|
|
our very laps. The guiding of thought and the deft coordination
|
|
of deed is at once the path of honor and humanity.
|
|
|
|
And so, in this great question of reconciling three vast and
|
|
partially contradictory streams of thought, the one panacea of
|
|
Education leaps to the lips of all; such human training as will
|
|
best use the labor of all men without enslaving or brutalizing;
|
|
such training as will give us poise to encourage the prejudices
|
|
that bulwark society, and stamp out those that in sheer barbarity
|
|
deafen us to the wail of prisoned souls within the Veil, and the
|
|
mounting fury of shackled men.
|
|
|
|
But when we have vaguely said Education will set this tangle
|
|
straight, what have we uttered but a truism? Training for life
|
|
teaches living; but what training for the profitable living
|
|
together of black men and white? Two hundred years ago our task
|
|
would have seemed easier. Then Dr. Johnson blandly assured us
|
|
that education was needed solely for the embellishments of life,
|
|
and was useless for ordinary vermin. To-day we have climbed to
|
|
heights where we would open at least the outer courts of knowledge
|
|
to all, display its treasures to many, and select the few to whom
|
|
its mystery of Truth is revealed, not wholly by truth or the
|
|
accidents of the stock market, but at least in part according to
|
|
deftness and aim, talent and character. This programme, however,
|
|
we are sorely puzzled in carrying out through that part of the
|
|
land where the blight of slavery fell hardest, and where we are
|
|
dealing with two backward peoples. To make here in human
|
|
education that ever necessary combination of the permanent and the
|
|
contingent--of the ideal and the practical in workable
|
|
equilibrium--has been there, as it ever must be in every age and
|
|
place, a matter of infinite experiment and frequent mistakes.
|
|
|
|
In rough approximation we may point out four varying decades of
|
|
work in Southern education since the Civil War. From the close of
|
|
the war until 1876 was the period of uncertain groping and
|
|
temporary relief. There were army schools, mission schools, and
|
|
schools of the Freedmen's Bureau in chaotic disarrangement,
|
|
seeking system and cooperation. Then followed ten years of
|
|
constructive definite effort toward the building of complete
|
|
school systems in the South. Normal schools and colleges were
|
|
founded for the freedmen, and teachers trained there to man the
|
|
public schools. There was the inevitable tendency of war to
|
|
underestimate the prejudice of the master and the ignorance of the
|
|
slave, and all seemed clear sailing out of the wreckage of the
|
|
storm. Meantime, starting in this decade yet especially
|
|
developing from 1885 to 1895, began the industrial revolution of
|
|
the South. The land saw glimpses of a new destiny and the
|
|
stirring of new ideals. The educational system striving to
|
|
complete itself saw new obstacles and a field of work ever broader
|
|
and deeper. The Negro colleges, hurriedly founded, were
|
|
inadequately equipped, illogically distributed, and of varying
|
|
efficiency and grade; the normal and high schools were doing
|
|
little more than common school work, and the common schools were
|
|
training but a third of the children who ought to be in them, and
|
|
training these too often poorly. At the same time the white
|
|
South, by reason of its sudden conversion from the slavery ideal,
|
|
by so much the more became set and strengthened in its racial
|
|
prejudice, and crystallized it into harsh law and harsher custom;
|
|
while the marvelous pushing forward of the poor white daily
|
|
threatened to take even bread and butter from the mouths of the
|
|
heavily handicapped sons of the freedmen. In the midst, then, of
|
|
the larger problem of Negro education sprang up the more practical
|
|
question of work, the inevitable economic quandary that faces a
|
|
people in the transition from slavery to freedom, and especially
|
|
those who make that change amid hate and prejudice, lawlessness
|
|
and ruthless competition.
|
|
|
|
The industrial school springing to notice in this decade, but
|
|
coming to full recognition in the decade beginning with 1895, was
|
|
the proffered answer to this combined educational and economic
|
|
crisis, and an answer of singular wisdom and timeliness. From the
|
|
very first in nearly all the schools some attention had been given
|
|
to training in handiwork, but now was this training first raised
|
|
to a dignity that brought it in direct touch with the South's
|
|
magnificent industrial development, and given an emphasis which
|
|
reminded black folk that before the Temple of Knowledge swing the
|
|
Gates of Toil.
|
|
|
|
Yet after all they are but gates, and when turning our eyes from
|
|
the temporary and the contingent in the Negro problem to the
|
|
broader question of the permanent uplifting and civilization of
|
|
black men in America, we have a right to inquire, as this
|
|
enthusiasm for material advancement mounts to its height, if after
|
|
all the industrial school is the final and sufficient answer in
|
|
the training of the Negro race; and to ask gently, but in all
|
|
sincerity, the ever recurring query of the ages, Is not life more
|
|
than meat, and the body more than raiment? And men ask this to-
|
|
day all the more eagerly because of sinister signs in recent
|
|
educational movements. The tendency is here born of slavery and
|
|
quickened to renewed life by the crazy imperialism of the day, to
|
|
regard human beings as among the material resources of a land to
|
|
be trained with an eye single to future dividends. Race
|
|
prejudices, which keep brown and black men in their "places," we
|
|
are coming to regard as useful allies with such a theory, no
|
|
matter how much they may dull the ambition and sicken the hearts
|
|
of struggling human beings. And above all, we daily hear that an
|
|
education that encourages aspiration, that sets the loftiest of
|
|
ideals and seeks as an end culture and character than bread-
|
|
winning, is the privilege of white men and the danger and delusion
|
|
of black.
|
|
|
|
Especially has criticism been directed against the former
|
|
educational efforts to aid the Negro. In the four periods I have
|
|
mentioned, we find first boundless, planless enthusiasm and
|
|
sacrifice; then the preparation of teachers for a vast public
|
|
school system; then the launching and expansion of that school
|
|
system amid increasing difficulties; and finally the training of
|
|
workmen for the new and growing industries. This development has
|
|
been sharply ridiculed as a logical anomaly and flat reversal of
|
|
nature. Soothly we have been told that first industrial and
|
|
manual training should have taught the Negro to work, then simple
|
|
schools should have taught him to read and write, and finally,
|
|
after years, high and normal schools could have completed the
|
|
system, as intelligence and wealth demanded.
|
|
|
|
That a system logically so complete was historically impossible,
|
|
it needs but a little thought to prove. Progress in human affairs
|
|
is more often a pull than a push, surging forward of the
|
|
exceptional man, and the lifting of his duller brethren slowly and
|
|
painfully to his vantage ground. Thus it was no accident that
|
|
gave birth to universities centuries before the common schools,
|
|
that made fair Harvard the first flower of our wilderness. So in
|
|
the South: the mass of the freedmen at the end of the war lacked
|
|
the intelligence so necessary to modern workingmen. They must
|
|
first have the common school to teach them to read, write, and
|
|
cipher. The white teachers who flocked South went to establish
|
|
such a common school system. They had no idea of founding
|
|
colleges; they themselves at first would have laughed at the idea.
|
|
But they faced, as all men since them have faced, that central
|
|
paradox of the South, the social separation of the races. Then it
|
|
was the sudden volcanic rupture of nearly all relations between
|
|
black and white, in work and government and family life. Since
|
|
then a new adjustment of relations in economic and political
|
|
affairs has grown up,--an adjustment subtle and difficult to
|
|
grasp, yet singularly ingenious, which leaves still that frightful
|
|
chasm at the color line across which men pass at their peril.
|
|
Thus, then and now, there stand in the South two separate worlds;
|
|
and separate not simply in the higher realms of social
|
|
intercourse, but also in church and school, on railway and street
|
|
car, in hotels and theatres, in streets and city sections, in
|
|
books and newspapers, in asylums and jails, in hospitals and
|
|
graveyards. There is still enough of contact for large economic
|
|
and group cooperation, but the separation is so thorough and deep,
|
|
that it absolutely precludes for the present between the races
|
|
anything like that sympathetic and effective group training and
|
|
leadership of the one by the other, such as the American Negro and
|
|
all backward peoples must have for effectual progress.
|
|
|
|
This the missionaries of '68 soon saw; and if effective industrial
|
|
and trade schools were impractical before the establishment of a
|
|
common school system, just as certainly no adequate common schools
|
|
could be founded until there were teachers to teach them.
|
|
Southern whites would not teach them; Northern whites in
|
|
sufficient numbers could not be had. If the Negro was to learn,
|
|
he must teach himself, and the most effective help that could be
|
|
given him was the establishment of schools to train Negro
|
|
teachers. This conclusion was slowly but surely reached by every
|
|
student of the situation until simultaneously, in widely separated
|
|
regions, without consultation or systematic plan, there arose a
|
|
series of institutions designed to furnish teachers for the
|
|
untaught. Above the sneers of critics at the obvious defects of
|
|
this procedure must ever stand its one crushing rejoinder: in a
|
|
single generation they put thirty thousand black teachers in the
|
|
South; they wiped out the illiteracy of the majority of the black
|
|
people of the land, and they made Tuskegee possible.
|
|
|
|
Such higher training schools tended naturally to deepen broader
|
|
development: at first they were common and grammar schools, then
|
|
some became high schools. And finally, by 1900, some thirty-four
|
|
had one year or more of studies of college grade. This
|
|
development was reached with different degrees of speed in
|
|
different institutions: Hampton is still a high school, while Fisk
|
|
University started her college in 1871, and Spelman Seminary about
|
|
1896. In all cases the aim was identical: to maintain the
|
|
standards of the lower training by giving teachers and leaders the
|
|
best practicable training; and above all to furnish the black
|
|
world with adequate standards of human culture and lofty ideals of
|
|
life. It was not enough that the teachers of teachers should be
|
|
trained in technical normal methods; they must also, so far as
|
|
possible, be broad-minded, cultured men and women, to scatter
|
|
civilization among a people whose ignorance was not simply of
|
|
letters, but of life itself.
|
|
|
|
It can thus be seen that the work of education in the South began
|
|
with higher institutions of training, which threw off as their
|
|
foliage common schools, and later industrial schools, and at the
|
|
same time strove to shoot their roots ever deeper toward college
|
|
and university training. That this was an inevitable and
|
|
necessary development, sooner or later, goes without saying; but
|
|
there has been, and still is, a question in many minds if the
|
|
natural growth was not forced, and if the higher training was not
|
|
either overdone or done with cheap and unsound methods. Among
|
|
white Southerners this feeling is widespread and positive. A
|
|
prominent Southern journal voiced this in a recent editorial:
|
|
|
|
"The experiment that has been made to give the colored students
|
|
classical training has not been satisfactory. Even though many
|
|
were able to pursue the course, most of them did so in a parrot-
|
|
like way, learning what was taught, but not seeming to appropriate
|
|
the truth and import of their instruction, and graduating without
|
|
sensible aim or valuable occupation for their future. The whole
|
|
scheme has proved a waste of time, efforts, and the money of the
|
|
state."
|
|
|
|
While most far-minded men would recognize this as extreme and
|
|
overdrawn, still without doubt many are asking, Are there a
|
|
sufficient number of Negroes ready for college training to warrant
|
|
the undertaking? Are not too many students prematurely forced
|
|
into this work? Does it not have the effect of dissatisfying the
|
|
young Negro with his environment? And do these graduates succeed
|
|
in real life? Such natural questions cannot be evaded, nor on the
|
|
other hand must a nation naturally skeptical as to Negro ability
|
|
assume an unfavorable answer without careful inquiry and patient
|
|
openness to conviction. We must not forget that most Americans
|
|
answer all queries regarding the Negro a priori, and that the
|
|
least that human courtesy can do is to listen to evidence.
|
|
|
|
The advocates of the higher education of the Negro would be the
|
|
last to deny the incompleteness and glaring defects of the present
|
|
system: too many institutions have attempted to do college work,
|
|
the work in some cases has not been thoroughly done, and quantity
|
|
rather than quality has sometimes been sought. But all this can
|
|
be said of higher education throughout the land: it is the almost
|
|
inevitable incident of educational growth, and leaves the deeper
|
|
question of the legitimate demand for the higher training of
|
|
Negroes untouched. And this latter question can be settled in but
|
|
one way--by a first-hand study of the facts. If we leave out of
|
|
view all institutions which have not actually graduated students
|
|
from a course higher than that of a New England high school, even
|
|
though they be called colleges; if then we take the thirty-four
|
|
remaining institutions, we may clear up many misapprehensions by
|
|
asking searchingly, What kind of institutions are they, what do
|
|
they teach, and what sort of men do they graduate?
|
|
|
|
And first we may say that this type of college, including Atlanta,
|
|
Fisk and Howard, Wilberforce and Lincoln, Biddle, Shaw, and the
|
|
rest, is peculiar, almost unique. Through the shining trees that
|
|
whisper before me as I write, I catch glimpses of a boulder of New
|
|
England granite, covering a grave, which graduates of Atlanta
|
|
University have placed there:--
|
|
|
|
|
|
"IN GRATEFUL MEMORY OF THEIR
|
|
FORMER TEACHER AND FRIEND
|
|
AND OF THE UNSELFISH LIFE HE
|
|
LIVED, AND THE NOBLE WORK HE
|
|
WROUGHT; THAT THEY, THEIR
|
|
CHILDREN, AND THEIR CHIL-
|
|
DREN'S CHILDREN MIGHT BE
|
|
BLESSED."
|
|
|
|
|
|
This was the gift of New England to the freed Negro: not alms, but
|
|
a friend; not cash, but character. It was not and is not money
|
|
these seething millions want, but love and sympathy, the pulse of
|
|
hearts beating with red blood; a gift which to-day only their own
|
|
kindred and race can bring to the masses, but which once saintly
|
|
souls brought to their favored children in the crusade of the
|
|
sixties, that finest thing in American history, and one of the few
|
|
things untainted by sordid greed and cheap vainglory. The
|
|
teachers in these institutions came not to keep the Negroes in
|
|
their place, but to raise them out of their places where the filth
|
|
of slavery had wallowed them. The colleges they founded were
|
|
social settlements; homes where the best of the sons of the
|
|
freedmen came in close and sympathetic touch with the best
|
|
traditions of New England. They lived and ate together, studies
|
|
and worked, hoped and harkened in the dawning light. In actual
|
|
formal content their curriculum was doubtless old-fashioned, but
|
|
in educational power it was supreme, for it was the contact of
|
|
living souls.
|
|
|
|
From such schools about two thousand Negroes have gone forth with
|
|
the bachelor's degree. The number in itself is enough to put at
|
|
rest the argument that too large a proportion of Negroes are
|
|
receiving higher training. If the ratio to population of all
|
|
Negro students throughout the land, in both college and secondary
|
|
training, be counted, Commissioner Harris assures us "it must be
|
|
increased to five times its present average" to equal the average
|
|
of the land.
|
|
|
|
Fifty years ago the ability of Negro students in any appreciable
|
|
numbers to master a modern college course would have been
|
|
difficult to prove. To-day it is proved by the fact that four
|
|
hundred Negroes, many of whom have been reported as brilliant
|
|
students, have received the bachelor's degree from Harvard, Yale,
|
|
Oberlin, and seventy other leading colleges. Here we have, then,
|
|
nearly twenty-five hundred Negro graduates, of whom the crucial
|
|
query must be made. How far did their training fit them for life?
|
|
It is of course extremely difficult to collect satisfactory data
|
|
on such a point,--difficult to reach the men, to get trustworthy
|
|
testimony, and to gauge that testimony by any generally acceptable
|
|
criterion of success. In 1900, the Conference at Atlanta
|
|
University undertook to study these graduates, and published the
|
|
results. First they sought to know what these graduates were
|
|
doing, and succeeded in getting answers from nearly two thirds of
|
|
the living. The direct testimony was in almost all cases
|
|
corroborated by the reports of the colleges where they graduated,
|
|
so that in the main the reports were worthy of credence. Fifty-
|
|
three per cent of these graduates were teachers,--presidents of
|
|
institutions, heads of normal schools, principals of city school
|
|
systems, and the like. Seventeen per cent were clergymen; another
|
|
seventeen per cent were in the professions, chiefly as physicians.
|
|
Over six per cent were merchants, farmers, and artisans, and four
|
|
per cent were in the government civil service. Granting even that
|
|
a considerable proportion of the third unheard from are
|
|
unsuccessful, this is a record of usefulness. Personally I know
|
|
many hundreds of these graduates and have corresponded with more
|
|
than a thousand; through others I have followed carefully the
|
|
life-work of scores; I have taught some of them and some of the
|
|
pupils whom they have taught, lived in homes which they have
|
|
builded, and looked at life through their eyes. Comparing them as
|
|
a class with my fellow students in New England and in Europe, I
|
|
cannot hesitate in saying that nowhere have I met men and women
|
|
with a broader spirit of helpfulness, with deeper devotion to
|
|
their life-work, or with more consecrated determination to succeed
|
|
in the face of bitter difficulties than among Negro college-bred
|
|
men. They have, to be sure, their proportion of ne'er-do-weels,
|
|
their pedants and lettered fools, but they have a surprisingly
|
|
small proportion of them; they have not that culture of manner
|
|
which we instinctively associate with university men, forgetting
|
|
that in reality it is the heritage from cultured homes, and that
|
|
no people a generation removed from slavery can escape a certain
|
|
unpleasant rawness and gaucherie, despite the best of training.
|
|
|
|
With all their larger vision and deeper sensibility, these men
|
|
have usually been conservative, careful leaders. They have seldom
|
|
been agitators, have withstood the temptation to head the mob, and
|
|
have worked steadily and faithfully in a thousand communities in
|
|
the South. As teachers they have given the South a commendable
|
|
system of city schools and large numbers of private normal schools
|
|
and academies. Colored college-bred men have worked side by side
|
|
with white college graduates at Hampton; almost from the beginning
|
|
the backbone of Tuskegee's teaching force has been formed of
|
|
graduates from Fisk and Atlanta. And to-day the institute is
|
|
filled with college graduates, from the energetic wife of the
|
|
principal down to the teacher of agriculture, including nearly
|
|
half of the executive council and a majority of the heads of
|
|
departments. In the professions, college men are slowly but
|
|
surely leavening the Negro church, are healing and preventing the
|
|
devastations of disease, and beginning to furnish legal protection
|
|
for the liberty and property of the toiling masses. All this is
|
|
needful work. Who would do it if Negroes did not? How could
|
|
Negroes do it if they were not trained carefully for it? If white
|
|
people need colleges to furnish teachers, ministers, lawyers, and
|
|
doctors, do black people need nothing of the sort?
|
|
|
|
If it be true that there are an appreciable number of Negro youth
|
|
in the land capable by character and talent to receive that higher
|
|
training, the end of which is culture, and if the two and a half
|
|
thousand who have had something of this training in the past have
|
|
in the main proved themselves useful to their race and generation,
|
|
the question then comes, What place in the future development of
|
|
the South might the Negro college and college-bred man to occupy?
|
|
That the present social separation and acute race sensitiveness
|
|
must eventually yield to the influences of culture as the South
|
|
grows civilized is clear. But such transformation calls for
|
|
singular wisdom and patience. If, while the healing of this vast
|
|
sore is progressing, the races are to live for many years side by
|
|
side, united in economic effort, obeying a common government,
|
|
sensitive to mutual thought and feeling, yet subtly and silently
|
|
separate in many matters of deeper human intimacy--if this unusual
|
|
and dangerous development is to progress amid peace and order,
|
|
mutual respect and growing intelligence, it will call for social
|
|
surgery at once the delicatest and nicest in modern history. It
|
|
will demand broad-minded, upright men both white and black, and in
|
|
its final accomplishment American civilization will triumph. So
|
|
far as white men are concerned, this fact is to-day being
|
|
recognized in the South, and a happy renaissance of university
|
|
education seems imminent. But the very voices that cry Hail! to
|
|
this good work are, strange to relate, largely silent or
|
|
antagonistic to the higher education of the Negro.
|
|
|
|
Strange to relate! for this is certain, no secure civilization can
|
|
be built in the South with the Negro as an ignorant, turbulent
|
|
proletariat. Suppose we seek to remedy this by making them
|
|
laborers and nothing more: they are not fools, they have tasted of
|
|
the Tree of Life, and they will not cease to think, will not cease
|
|
attempting to read the riddle of the world. By taking away their
|
|
best equipped teachers and leaders, by slamming the door of
|
|
opportunity in the faces of their bolder and brighter minds, will
|
|
you make them satisfied with their lot? or will you not rather
|
|
transfer their leading from the hands of men taught to think to
|
|
the hands of untrained demagogues? We ought not to forget that
|
|
despite the pressure of poverty, and despite the active
|
|
discouragement and even ridicule of friends, the demand for higher
|
|
training steadily increases among Negro youth: there were, in the
|
|
years from 1875 to 1880, twenty-two Negro graduates from Northern
|
|
colleges; from 1885 to 1895 there were forty-three, and from 1895
|
|
to 1900, nearly 100 graduates. From Southern Negro colleges there
|
|
were, in the same three periods, 143, 413, and over 500 graduates.
|
|
Here, then, is the plain thirst for training; by refusing to give
|
|
this Talented Tenth the key to knowledge can any sane man imagine
|
|
that they will lightly lay aside their yearning and contentedly
|
|
become hewers of wood and drawers of water?
|
|
|
|
No. The dangerously clear logic of the Negro's position will more
|
|
and more loudly assert itself in that day when increasing wealth
|
|
and more intricate social organization preclude the South from
|
|
being, as it so largely is, simply an armed camp for intimidating
|
|
black folk. Such waste of energy cannot be spared if the South is
|
|
to catch up with civilization. And as the black third of the land
|
|
grows in thrift and skill, unless skillfully guided in its larger
|
|
philosophy, it must more and more brood over the red past and the
|
|
creeping, crooked present, until it grasps a gospel of revolt and
|
|
revenge and throws its new-found energies athwart the current of
|
|
advance. Even to-day the masses of the Negroes see all too
|
|
clearly the anomalies of their position and the moral crookedness
|
|
of yours. You may marshal strong indictments against them, but
|
|
their counter-cries, lacking though they be in formal logic, have
|
|
burning truths within them which you may not wholly ignore, O
|
|
Southern Gentlemen! If you deplore their presence here, they ask,
|
|
Who brought us? When you shriek, Deliver us from the vision of
|
|
intermarriage, they answer, that legal marriage is infinitely
|
|
better than systematic concubinage and prostitution. And if in
|
|
just fury you accuse their vagabonds of violating women, they also
|
|
in fury quite as just may wail: the rape which your gentlemen have
|
|
done against helpless black women in defiance of your own laws is
|
|
written on the foreheads of two millions of mulattoes, and written
|
|
in ineffaceable blood. And finally, when you fasten crime upon
|
|
this race as its peculiar trait, they answer that slavery was the
|
|
arch-crime, and lynching and lawlessness its twin abortion; that
|
|
color and race are not crimes, and yet they it is which in this
|
|
land receive most unceasing condemnation, North, East, South, and
|
|
West.
|
|
|
|
I will not say such arguments are wholly justified--I will not
|
|
insist that there is no other side to the shield; but I do say
|
|
that of the nine millions of Negroes in this nation, there is
|
|
scarcely one out of the cradle to whom these arguments do not
|
|
daily present themselves in the guise of terrible truth. I insist
|
|
that the question of the future is how best to keep these millions
|
|
from brooding over the wrongs of the past and the difficulties of
|
|
the present, so that all their energies may be bent toward a
|
|
cheerful striving and cooperation with their white neighbors
|
|
toward a larger, juster, and fuller future. That one wise method
|
|
of doing this lies in the closer knitting of the Negro to the
|
|
great industrial possibilities of the South is a great truth. And
|
|
this the common schools and the manual training and trade schools
|
|
are working to accomplish. But these alone are not enough. The
|
|
foundations of knowledge in this race, as in others, must be sunk
|
|
deep in the college and university if we would build a solid,
|
|
permanent structure. Internal problems of social advance must
|
|
inevitably come,--problems of work and wages, of families and
|
|
homes, of morals and the true valuing of the things of life; and
|
|
all these and other inevitable problems of civilization the Negro
|
|
must meet and solve largely for himself, by reason of his
|
|
isolation; and can there be any possible solution other than by
|
|
study and thought and an appeal to the rich experience of the
|
|
past? Is there not, with such a group and in such a crisis,
|
|
infinitely more danger to be apprehended from half-trained minds
|
|
and shallow thinking than from over-education and over-refinement?
|
|
Surely we have wit enough to found a Negro college so manned and
|
|
equipped as to steer successfully between the dilettante and the
|
|
fool. We shall hardly induce black men to believe that if their
|
|
bellies be full it matters little about their brains. They
|
|
already dimly perceive that the paths of peace winding between
|
|
honest toil and dignified manhood call for the guidance of skilled
|
|
thinkers, the loving, reverent comradeship between the black lowly
|
|
and black men emancipated by training and culture.
|
|
|
|
The function of the Negro college then is clear: it must maintain
|
|
the standards of popular education, it must seek the social
|
|
regeneration of the Negro, and it must help in the solution of
|
|
problems of race contact and cooperation. And finally, beyond all
|
|
this, it must develop men. Above our modern socialism, and out of
|
|
the worship of the mass, must persist and evolve that higher
|
|
individualism which the centres of culture protect; there must
|
|
come a loftier respect for the sovereign human soul that seeks to
|
|
know itself and the world about it; that seeks a freedom for
|
|
expansion and self-development; that will love and hate and labor
|
|
in its own way, untrammeled alike by old and new. Such souls
|
|
aforetime have inspired and guided worlds, and if we be not wholly
|
|
bewitched by our Rhine-gold, they shall again. Herein the longing
|
|
of black men must have respect: the rich and bitter depth of their
|
|
experience, the unknown treasures of their inner life, the strange
|
|
rendings of nature they have seen, may give the world new points
|
|
of view and make their loving, living, and doing precious to all
|
|
human hearts. And to themselves in these the days that try their
|
|
souls the chance to soar in the dim blue air above the smoke is to
|
|
their finer spirits boon and guerdon for what they lose on earth
|
|
by being black.
|
|
|
|
|
|
I sit with Shakespeare and he winces not. Across the color line I
|
|
move arm in arm with Balzac and Dumas, where smiling men and
|
|
welcoming women glide in gilded halls. From out the caves of
|
|
Evening that swing between the strong-limbed earth and the tracery
|
|
of the stars, I summon Aristotle and Aurelius and what soul I
|
|
will, and they come all graciously with no scorn nor
|
|
condescension. So, wed with Truth, I dwell above the Veil. Is
|
|
this the life you grudge us, O knightly America? Is this the life
|
|
you long to change into the dull red hideousness of Georgia? Are
|
|
you so afraid lest peering from this high Pisgah, between
|
|
Philistine and Amalekite, we sight the Promised Land?
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE FRUITS OF INDUSTRIAL TRAINING
|
|
by Booker T. Washington
|
|
|
|
|
|
The political, educational, social, and economic evolution through
|
|
which the South passed during, say, the first fifteen or twenty
|
|
years after the close of the civil war furnishes one of the most
|
|
interesting periods that any country has passed through.
|
|
|
|
A large share of the thought and activity of the white South, of
|
|
the black South, and of that section of the North especially
|
|
interested in my race, was directed during the years of the
|
|
Reconstruction period toward politics, or toward matters bearing
|
|
upon what were termed civil or social rights. The work of
|
|
education was rather slow, and covered a large section of the
|
|
South; still I think I am justified in saying that in the public
|
|
mind the Negro's relation to politics overshadowed nearly every
|
|
other interest. The education of the race was conducted quietly,
|
|
and attracted comparatively little attention, just as is true at
|
|
the present time. The appointment of one Negro postmaster at a
|
|
third or fourth rate post office will be given wider publicity
|
|
through the daily press than the founding of a school, or some
|
|
important discovery in science.
|
|
|
|
With reference to the black man's political relation to the state
|
|
and Federal governments, I think I am safe in saying that for many
|
|
years after the civil war there were sharp and antagonistic views
|
|
between the North and the South, as well as between the white
|
|
South and the black South. At practically every point where there
|
|
was a political question to be decided in the South the blacks
|
|
would array themselves on one side and the whites on the other. I
|
|
remember that very soon after I began teaching school in Alabama
|
|
an old colored man came to me just prior to an election. He said:
|
|
"You can read de newspapers and most of us can't, but dar is one
|
|
thing dat we knows dat you don't, and dat is how to vote down
|
|
here; and we wants you to vote as we does." He added: "I tell you
|
|
how we does. We watches de white man; we keeps watching de white
|
|
man; de nearer it gits to election time de more we watches de
|
|
white man. We watches him till we finds out which way he gwine to
|
|
vote. After we finds out which way he gwine to vote, den we votes
|
|
exactly de other way; den we knows we 's right."
|
|
|
|
Stories on the other side might be given showing that a certain
|
|
class of white people, both at the polls and in the Legislatures,
|
|
voted just as unreasonably in opposing politically what they
|
|
thought the Negro or the North wanted, no matter how much benefit
|
|
might ensue from a contrary action. Unfortunately such antagonism
|
|
did not end with matters political, but in many cases affected the
|
|
relation of the races in nearly every walk of life. Aside from
|
|
political strife, there was naturally deep feeling between the
|
|
North and the South on account of the war. On nearly every
|
|
question growing out of the war, which was debated in Congress, or
|
|
in political campaigns, there was the keenest difference and often
|
|
the deepest feeling. There was almost no question of even a semi-
|
|
political nature, or having a remote connection with the Negro,
|
|
upon which there was not sharp and often bitter division between
|
|
the North and South. It is needless to say that in many cases the
|
|
Negro was the sufferer. He was being ground between the upper and
|
|
nether millstones. Even to this day it is well-nigh impossible,
|
|
largely by reason of the force of habit, in certain states to
|
|
prevent state and even local campaigns from being centred in some
|
|
form upon the black man. In states like Mississippi, for example,
|
|
where the Negro ceased nearly a score of years ago, by operation
|
|
of law, to be a determining factor in politics, he forms in some
|
|
way the principal fuel for campaign discussion at nearly every
|
|
election. The sad feature of this is, that it prevents the
|
|
presentation before the masses of the people of matters pertaining
|
|
to local and state improvement, and to great national issues like
|
|
finance, tariff, or foreign policies. It prevents the masses from
|
|
receiving the broad and helpful education which every political
|
|
campaign should furnish, and, what is equally unfortunate, it
|
|
prevents the youth from seeing and hearing on the platform the
|
|
great political leaders of the two national parties. During a
|
|
national campaign few of the great Democratic leaders debate
|
|
national questions in the South, because it is felt that the old
|
|
antagonism to the Negro politically will keep the South voting one
|
|
way. Few of the great Republican leaders appear on Southern
|
|
platforms, because they feel that nothing will be gained.
|
|
|
|
One of the saddest instances of this situation that has come
|
|
within my knowledge occurred some years ago in a certain Southern
|
|
state where a white friend of mine was making the race for
|
|
Congress on the Democratic ticket in a district that was
|
|
overwhelmingly Democratic. I speak of this man as my friend,
|
|
because there was no personal favor in reason which he would have
|
|
refused me. He was equally friendly to the race, and was generous
|
|
in giving for its education, and in helping individuals to buy
|
|
land. His campaign took him into one of the "white" counties,
|
|
where there were few colored people, and where the whites were
|
|
unusually ignorant. I was surprised one morning to read in the
|
|
daily papers of a bitter attack he had made on the Negro while
|
|
speaking in this county. The next time I saw him I informed him
|
|
of my surprise. He replied that he was ashamed of what he had
|
|
said, and that he did not himself believe much that he had stated,
|
|
but gave as a reason for his action that he had found himself
|
|
before an audience which had heard little for thirty years in the
|
|
way of political discussion that did not bear upon the Negro, and
|
|
that he therefore knew it was almost impossible to interest them
|
|
in any other subject.
|
|
|
|
But this is somewhat aside from my purpose, which is, I repeat, to
|
|
make plain that in all political matters there was for years after
|
|
the war no meeting ground of agreement for the two races, or for
|
|
the North and South. Upon the question of the Negro's civil
|
|
rights, as embodied in what was called the Civil Rights Bill,
|
|
there was almost the same sharp line of division between the
|
|
races, and, in theory at least, between the Northern and Southern
|
|
whites,--largely because the former were supposed to be giving the
|
|
blacks social recognition, and encouraging intermingling between
|
|
the races. The white teachers, who came from the North to work in
|
|
missionary schools, received for years little recognition or
|
|
encouragement from the rank and file of their own race. The lines
|
|
were so sharply drawn that in cities where native Southern white
|
|
women taught Negro children in the public schools, they would have
|
|
no dealings with Northern white women who, perhaps, taught Negro
|
|
children from the same family in a missionary school.
|
|
|
|
I want to call attention here to a phase of Reconstruction policy
|
|
which is often overlooked. All now agree that there was much in
|
|
Reconstruction which was unwise and unfortunate. However we may
|
|
regard that policy, and much as we may regret mistakes, the fact
|
|
is too often overlooked that it was during the Reconstruction
|
|
period that a public school system for the education of all the
|
|
people of the South was first established in most of the states.
|
|
Much that was done by those in charge of Reconstruction
|
|
legislation has been overturned, but the public school system
|
|
still remains. True, it has been modified and improved, but the
|
|
system remains, and is every day growing in popularity and
|
|
strength.
|
|
|
|
As to the difference of opinion between the North and the South
|
|
regarding Negro education, I find that many people, especially in
|
|
the North, have a wrong conception of the attitude of the Southern
|
|
white people. It is and has been very generally thought that what
|
|
is termed "higher education" of the Negro has been from the first
|
|
opposed by the white South. This opinion is far from being
|
|
correct. I remember that, in 1891, when I began the work of
|
|
establishing the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama, practically all of
|
|
the white people who talked to me on the subject took it for
|
|
granted that instruction in the Greek, Latin, and modern languages
|
|
would be one of the main features of our curriculum. I heard no
|
|
one oppose what he thought our course of study was to embrace. In
|
|
fact, there are many white people in the South at the present time
|
|
who do not know that instruction in the dead languages is not
|
|
given at the Tuskegee Institute. In further proof of what I have
|
|
stated, if one will go through the catalogue of the schools
|
|
maintained by the states for Negro people, and managed by Southern
|
|
white people, he will find in almost every case that instruction
|
|
in the higher branches is given with the consent and approval of
|
|
white officials. This was true as far back as 1880. It is not
|
|
unusual to meet at this time Southern white people who are as
|
|
emphatic in their belief in the value of classical education as a
|
|
certain element of colored people themselves. In matters relating
|
|
to civil and political rights, the breach was broad, and without
|
|
apparent hope of being bridged; even in the matter of religion,
|
|
practically all of the denominations had split on the subject of
|
|
the Negro, though I should add that there is now, and always has
|
|
been, a closer touch and more cooperation in matters of religion
|
|
between the white and colored people in the South than is
|
|
generally known. But the breach between the white churches in the
|
|
South and North remains.
|
|
|
|
In matters of education the difference was much less sharp. The
|
|
truth is that a large element in the South had little faith in the
|
|
efficacy of the higher or any other kind of education of the
|
|
Negro. They were indifferent, but did not openly oppose; on the
|
|
other hand, there has always been a potent element of white people
|
|
in all of the Southern states who have stood out openly and
|
|
bravely for the education of all the people, regardless of race.
|
|
This element has thus far been successful in shaping and leading
|
|
public opinion, and I think that it will continue to do so more
|
|
and more. This statement must not be taken to mean that there is
|
|
as yet an equitable division of the school funds, raised by common
|
|
taxation, between the two races in many sections of the South,
|
|
though the Southern states deserve much credit for what has been
|
|
done. In discussing the small amount of direct taxes the Negro
|
|
pays, the fact that he pays tremendous indirect taxes is often
|
|
overlooked.
|
|
|
|
I wish, however, to emphasize the fact that while there was either
|
|
open antagonism or indifference in the directions I have named, it
|
|
was the introduction of industrial training into the Negro's
|
|
education that seemed to furnish the first basis for anything like
|
|
united and sympathetic interest and action between the two races
|
|
in the South and between the whites in the North and those in the
|
|
South. Aside from its direct benefit to the black race,
|
|
industrial education has furnished a basis for mutual faith and
|
|
cooperation, which has meant more to the South, and to the work of
|
|
education, than has been realized.
|
|
|
|
This was, at the least, something in the way of construction.
|
|
Many people, I think, fail to appreciate the difference between
|
|
the problems now before us and those that existed previous to the
|
|
civil war. Slavery presented a problem of destruction; freedom
|
|
presents a problem of construction.
|
|
|
|
From its first inception the white people of the South had faith
|
|
in the theory of industrial education, because they had noted,
|
|
what was not unnatural, that a large element of the colored people
|
|
at first interpreted freedom to mean freedom from work with the
|
|
hands. They naturally had not learned to appreciate the fact that
|
|
they had been WORKED, and that one of the great lessons for
|
|
freemen to learn is to WORK. They had not learned the vast
|
|
difference between WORKING and BEING WORKED. The white people saw
|
|
in the movement to teach the Negro youth the dignity, beauty, and
|
|
civilizing power of all honorable labor with the hands something
|
|
that would lead the Negro into his new life of freedom gradually
|
|
and sensibly, and prevent his going from one extreme of life to
|
|
the other too suddenly. Furthermore, industrial education
|
|
appealed directly to the individual and community interest of the
|
|
white people. They saw at once that intelligence coupled with
|
|
skill would add wealth to the community and to the state, in which
|
|
both races would have an added share. Crude labor in the days of
|
|
slavery, they believed, could be handled and made in a degree
|
|
profitable, but ignorant and unskilled labor in a state of freedom
|
|
could not be made so. Practically every white man in the South
|
|
was interested in agricultural or in mechanical or in some form of
|
|
manual labor; every white man was interested in all that related
|
|
to the home life,--the cooking and serving of food, laundering,
|
|
dairying, poultry-raising, and housekeeping in general. There was
|
|
no family whose interest in intelligent and skillful nursing was
|
|
not now and then quickened by the presence of a trained nurse. As
|
|
already stated, there was general appreciation of the fact that
|
|
the industrial education of the black people had direct, vital,
|
|
and practical bearing upon the life of each white family in the
|
|
South; while there was no such appreciation of the results of mere
|
|
literary training. If a black man became a lawyer, a doctor, a
|
|
minister, or an ordinary teacher, his professional duties would
|
|
not ordinarily bring him in touch with the life of the white
|
|
portion of the community, but rather confine him almost
|
|
exclusively to his own race. While purely literary or
|
|
professional education was not opposed by the white population, it
|
|
was something in which they found little or no interest, beyond a
|
|
confused hope that it would result in producing a higher and a
|
|
better type of Negro manhood. The minute it was seen that through
|
|
industrial education the Negro youth was not only studying
|
|
chemistry, but also how to apply the knowledge of chemistry to the
|
|
enrichment of the soil, or to cooking, or to dairying, and that
|
|
the student was being taught not only geometry and physics, but
|
|
their application to blacksmithing, brickmaking, farming, and what
|
|
not, then there began to appear for the first time a common bond
|
|
between the two races and cooperation between North and South.
|
|
|
|
One of the most interesting and valuable instances of the kind
|
|
that I know of is presented in the case of Mr. George W. Carver,
|
|
one of our instructors in agriculture at Tuskegee Institute. For
|
|
some time it has been his custom to prepare articles containing
|
|
information concerning the conditions of local crops, and warning
|
|
the farmers against the ravages of certain insects and diseases.
|
|
The local white papers are always glad to publish these articles,
|
|
and they are read by white and colored farmers.
|
|
|
|
Some months ago a white land-holder in Montgomery County asked Mr.
|
|
Carver to go through his farm with him for the purpose of
|
|
inspecting it. While doing so Mr. Carver discovered traces of
|
|
what he thought was a valuable mineral deposit, used in making a
|
|
certain kind of paint. The interests of the land-owner and the
|
|
agricultural instructor at once became mutual. Specimens of the
|
|
deposits were taken to the laboratories of the Tuskegee Institute
|
|
and analyzed by Mr. Carver. In due time the land-owner received a
|
|
report of the analysis, together with a statement showing the
|
|
commercial value and application of the mineral. I shall not go
|
|
through the whole interesting story, except to say that a stock
|
|
company, composed of some of the best white people in Alabama, has
|
|
been organized, and is now preparing to build a factory for the
|
|
purpose of putting their product on the market. I hardly need to
|
|
add that Mr. Carver has been freely consulted at every step, and
|
|
his services generously recognized in the organization of the
|
|
concern. When the company was being formed the following
|
|
testimonial, among others, was embodied in the printed copy of the
|
|
circular:--
|
|
|
|
"George W. Carver, Director of the Department of Agriculture,
|
|
Tuskegee, Alabama, says:--
|
|
|
|
"'The pigment is an ochreous clay. Its value as a paint is due to
|
|
the presence of ferric oxide, of which it contains more than any
|
|
of the French, Australian, American, Irish, or Welsh ochres.
|
|
Ferric oxides have long been recognized as the essential
|
|
constituents of such paints as Venetian red, Turkish red, oxide
|
|
red, Indian red, and scarlet. They are most desirable, being
|
|
quite permanent when exposed to light and air. As a stain they
|
|
are most valuable.'"
|
|
|
|
In further proof of what I wish to emphasize, I think I am safe in
|
|
saying that the work of the Hampton Normal and Agricultural
|
|
Institute, under the late General S. C. Armstrong, was the first
|
|
to receive any kind of recognition and hearty sympathy from the
|
|
Southern white people, and General Armstrong was perhaps the first
|
|
Northern educator of Negroes who won the confidence and
|
|
cooperation of the white South. The effects of General
|
|
Armstrong's introduction of industrial education at Hampton, and
|
|
its extension to the Tuskegee Institute in the far South, are now
|
|
actively and helpfully apparent in the splendid work being
|
|
accomplished for the whole South by the Southern Education Board,
|
|
with Mr. Robert C. Ogden at its head, and by the General Education
|
|
Board, with Mr. William H. Baldwin, Jr., as its president.
|
|
Without the introduction of manual training it is doubtful whether
|
|
such work as is now being wrought through these two boards for
|
|
both races in the South could have been possible within a quarter
|
|
of a century to come. Later on in the history of our country it
|
|
will be recognized and appreciated that the far-reaching and
|
|
statesman-like efforts of these two boards for general education
|
|
in the South, under the guidance of the two gentlemen named, and
|
|
with the cooperation and assistance of such men as Mr. George
|
|
Foster Peabody, Dr. Wallace Buttrick, Mr. John D. Rockefeller, of
|
|
the North, and Mr. Edgar Gardner Murphy, Chancellor Hill, Dr.
|
|
Alderman, Dr. McIver, Dr. Dabney, and others of the South, will
|
|
have furnished the material for one of the brightest and most
|
|
encouraging chapters in the history of our country. The fact that
|
|
we have reached the point where men and women who were so far
|
|
apart twenty years ago can meet in the South and discuss freely
|
|
from the same platform questions relating to the industrial,
|
|
educational, political, moral, and religious development of the
|
|
two races marks a great step in advance. It is true that as yet
|
|
the Negro has not been invited to share in these discussions.
|
|
|
|
Aside from the reasons I have given showing why the South favored
|
|
industrial education, coupled with intellectual and moral
|
|
training, many of the whites saw, for example, that the Negroes
|
|
who were master carpenters and contractors, under the guidance of
|
|
their owners, could become still greater factors in the
|
|
development of the South if their children were not suddenly
|
|
removed from the atmosphere and occupations of their fathers, and
|
|
if they could be taught to use the thing in hand as a foundation
|
|
for higher growth. Many of the white people were wise enough to
|
|
see that such education would enable some of the Negro youths to
|
|
become more skillful carpenters and contractors, and that if they
|
|
laid an economic foundation in this way in their generation, they
|
|
would be laying a foundation for a more abstract education of
|
|
their children in the future.
|
|
|
|
Again, a large element of people at the South favored manual
|
|
training for the Negro because they were wise enough to see that
|
|
the South was largely free from the restrictive influences of the
|
|
Northern trades unions, and that such organizations would secure
|
|
little hold in the South so long as the Negro kept abreast in
|
|
intelligence and skill with the same class of people elsewhere.
|
|
Many realized that the South would be tying itself to a body of
|
|
death if it did not help the Negro up. In this connection I want
|
|
to call attention to the fact that the official records show that
|
|
within one year about one million foreigners came into the United
|
|
States. Notwithstanding this number, practically none went into
|
|
the Southern states; to be more exact, the records show that in
|
|
1892 only 2278 all told went into the states of Alabama, Arkansas,
|
|
Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina,
|
|
Tennessee, and Virginia. One ship sometimes brings as many to New
|
|
York. Various reasons are given to explain why these foreigners
|
|
systematically avoid the South. One is that the climate is so
|
|
hot; and another is that they do not like the restrictions thrown
|
|
about the ballot; and still another is the presence of the Negro
|
|
is so large numbers. Whatever the true reason is, the fact
|
|
remains that foreigners avoid the South, and the South is more and
|
|
more realizing that it cannot keep pace with the progress being
|
|
made in other parts of the country if a third of its population is
|
|
ignorant and without skill.
|
|
|
|
The South must frankly face this truth, that for a long period it
|
|
must depend upon the black man to do for it what the foreigner is
|
|
now doing for the great West. If, by reason of his skill and
|
|
knowledge, one man in Iowa learns to produce as much corn in a
|
|
season as four men can produce in Alabama, it requires little
|
|
reasoning to see that Alabama will buy most of her corn from Iowa.
|
|
|
|
Another interesting result of the introduction of industrial
|
|
education for the Negro has been its influence upon the white
|
|
people of the South, and, I believe, upon the whites of the North
|
|
as well. This phase of it has proved of interest in making hand
|
|
training a conciliatory element between the races.
|
|
|
|
In 1883 I was delivering an address on industrial education before
|
|
the colored State Teachers' Association of one of our Southern
|
|
states. When I had finished, some of the teachers began to ask
|
|
the State Superintendent of Education, who was on the programme,
|
|
some questions about the subject. He politely but firmly stopped
|
|
the questions by stating that he knew absolutely nothing about
|
|
industrial training, and had never heard it discussed before. At
|
|
that time there was no such education being given at any white
|
|
institution in that state. With one or two exceptions this case
|
|
will illustrate what was true of all the Southern states. A
|
|
careful investigation of the subject will show that it was not
|
|
until after industrial education was started among the colored
|
|
people, and its value proved, that it was taken up by the Southern
|
|
white people.
|
|
|
|
Manual training or industrial and technical schools for the whites
|
|
have, for the most part, been established under state auspices,
|
|
and are at this time chiefly maintained by the states. An
|
|
investigation would also show that in securing money from the
|
|
state legislatures for the purpose of introducing hand work, one
|
|
of the main arguments used was the existence and success of
|
|
industrial training among the Negroes. It was often argued that
|
|
the white boys and girls would be left behind unless they had the
|
|
opportunities for securing the same kind of training that was
|
|
being given the colored people. Although it is, I think, not
|
|
generally known, it is a fact that since the idea of industrial or
|
|
technical education for white people took root within the last few
|
|
years, much more money is spent annually for such education for
|
|
the whites than for the colored people. Any one who has not
|
|
looked into the subject will be surprised to find how thorough and
|
|
high grade the work is. Take, for example, the state of Georgia,
|
|
and it will be found that several times as much is being spent at
|
|
the Industrial College for white girls at Milledgeville, and at
|
|
the technical school for whites at Atlanta, as is being spent in
|
|
the whole state for the industrial education of Negro youths. I
|
|
have met no Southern white educators who have not been generous in
|
|
their praise of the Negro schools for taking the initiative in
|
|
hand training. This fact has again served to create in matters
|
|
relating to education a bond of sympathy between the two races in
|
|
the South. Referring again to the influence of industrial
|
|
training for the Negro in education, in the Northern states I
|
|
find, while writing this article, the following announcement in
|
|
the advertisement of what is perhaps the most high-priced and
|
|
exclusive girls' seminary in Massachusetts:--
|
|
|
|
"In planning a system of education for young ladies, with the view
|
|
of fitting them for the greatest usefulness in life, the idea was
|
|
conceived of supplementing the purely intellectual work by a
|
|
practical training in the art of home management and its related
|
|
subjects.
|
|
|
|
"It was the first school of high literary grade to introduce
|
|
courses in Domestic Science into the regular curriculum.
|
|
|
|
"The results were so gratifying as to lead to the equipment of
|
|
Experiment Hall, a special building, fitted for the purpose of
|
|
studying the principles of Applied Housekeeping. Here the girls
|
|
do the actual work of cooking, marketing, arranging menus, and
|
|
attend to all the affairs of a well-arranged household.
|
|
|
|
"Courses are arranged also in sewing, dressmaking, and millinery;
|
|
they are conducted on a similarly practical basis, and equip the
|
|
student with a thorough knowledge of the subject."
|
|
|
|
A dozen years ago I do not believe that any such announcement
|
|
would have been made.
|
|
|
|
Beginning with the year 1877, the Negro in the South lost
|
|
practically all political control; that is to say, as early as
|
|
1885 the Negro scarcely had any members of his race in the
|
|
national Congress or state legislatures, and long before this date
|
|
had ceased to hold state offices. This was true, notwithstanding
|
|
the protests and fervent oratory of such strong race leaders as
|
|
Frederick Douglass, B. K. Bruce, John R. Lynch, P. B. S.
|
|
Pinchback, and John M. Langston, with a host of others. When
|
|
Frederick Douglass, the greatest man that the race has produced,
|
|
died in 1895, it is safe to say that the Negro in the Southern
|
|
states, with here and there a few exceptions, had practically no
|
|
political control or political influence, except in sending
|
|
delegates to national conventions, or in holding a few Federal
|
|
positions by appointment. It became evident to many of the wise
|
|
Negroes that the race would have to depend for its success in the
|
|
future less upon political agitations and the opportunity of
|
|
holding office, and more upon something more tangible and
|
|
substantial. It was at this period in the Negro's development,
|
|
when the distance between the races was greatest, and the spirit
|
|
and ambition of the colored people most depressed, that the idea
|
|
of industrial or business development was introduced and began to
|
|
be made prominent. It did not take the more level-headed members
|
|
of the race long to see that while the Negro in the South was
|
|
surrounded by many difficulties, there was practically no line
|
|
drawn and little race discrimination in the world of commerce,
|
|
banking, storekeeping, manufacturing, and the skilled trades, and
|
|
in agriculture, and that in this lay his great opportunity. They
|
|
understood that, while the whites might object to a Negro's being
|
|
a postmaster, they would not object to his being the president of
|
|
a bank, and in the latter occupation they would give him
|
|
assistance and encouragement. The colored people were quick to
|
|
see that while the negro would not be invited as a rule to attend
|
|
the white man's prayer-meeting, he would be invited every time to
|
|
attend the stockholders' meeting of a business concern in which he
|
|
had an interest and that he could buy property in practically any
|
|
portion of the South where the white man could buy it. The white
|
|
citizens were all the more willing to encourage the Negro in this
|
|
economic or industrial development, because they saw that the
|
|
prosperity of the Negro meant also the prosperity of the white
|
|
man. They saw, too, that when a Negro became the owner of a home
|
|
and was a taxpayer, having a regular trade or other occupation, he
|
|
at once became a conservative and safe citizen and voter; one who
|
|
would consider the interests of his whole community before casting
|
|
his ballot; and, further, one whose ballot could not be purchased.
|
|
|
|
One case in point is that of the twenty-eight teachers at our
|
|
school in Tuskegee who applied for life-voting certificates under
|
|
the new constitution of Alabama, not one was refused registration;
|
|
and if I may be forgiven a personal reference, in my own case, the
|
|
Board of Registers were kind enough to send me a special request
|
|
to the effect that they wished me not to fail to register as a
|
|
life voter. I do not wish to convey the impression that all
|
|
worthy colored people have been registered in Alabama, because
|
|
there have been many inexcusable and unlawful omissions; but, with
|
|
few exceptions, the 2700 who have been registered represent the
|
|
best Negroes in the state.
|
|
|
|
Though in some parts of the country he is now misunderstood, I
|
|
believe that the time is going to come when matters can be weighed
|
|
soberly, and when the whole people are going to see that president
|
|
Roosevelt is, and has been from the first, in line with this
|
|
policy,--that of encouraging the colored people who by industry
|
|
and economy have won their way into the confidence and respect of
|
|
their neighbors. Both before and since he became President I have
|
|
had many conversations with him, and at all times I have found him
|
|
enthusiastic over the plan that I have described.
|
|
|
|
The growth of the race in industrial and business directions
|
|
within the last few years cannot perhaps be better illustrated
|
|
than by the fact that what is now the largest secular national
|
|
organization among the colored people is the National Negro
|
|
Business League. This organization brings together annually
|
|
hundreds of men and women who have worked their way up from the
|
|
bottom to the point where they are now in some cases bankers,
|
|
merchants, manufacturers, planters, etc. The sight of this body
|
|
of men and women would surprise a large part of American citizens
|
|
who do not really know the better side of the Negro's life.
|
|
|
|
It ought to be stated frankly here that at first, and for several
|
|
years after the introduction of industrial training at such
|
|
educational centres as Hampton and Tuskegee, there was opposition
|
|
from colored people, and from portions of those Northern white
|
|
people engaged in educational and missionary work among the
|
|
colored people in the South. Most of those who manifested such
|
|
opposition were actuated by the highest and most honest motives.
|
|
From the first the rank and file of the blacks were quick to see
|
|
the advantages of industrial training, as is shown by the fact
|
|
that industrial schools have always been overcrowded. Opposition
|
|
to industrial training was based largely on the old and narrow
|
|
ground that it was something that the Southern white people
|
|
favored, and therefore must be against the interests of the Negro.
|
|
Again, others opposed it because they feared that it meant the
|
|
abandonment of all political privileges, and the higher or
|
|
classical education of the race. They feared that the final
|
|
outcome would be the materialization of the Negro, and the
|
|
smothering of his spiritual and aesthetic nature. Others felt
|
|
that industrial education had for its object the limitation of the
|
|
Negro's development, and the branding him for all time as a
|
|
special hand-working class.
|
|
|
|
Now that enough time has elapsed for those who opposed it to see
|
|
that it meant none of these things, opposition, except from a very
|
|
few of the colored people living in Boston and Washington, has
|
|
ceased, and this system has the enthusiastic support of the
|
|
Negroes and of most of the whites who formerly opposed it. All
|
|
are beginning to see that it was never meant that ALL Negro youths
|
|
should secure industrial education, any more than it is meant that
|
|
ALL white youths should pass through the Massachusetts Institute
|
|
of Technology, or the Amherst Agricultural College, to the
|
|
exclusion of such training as is given at Harvard, Yale, or
|
|
Dartmouth; but that in a peculiar sense a large proportion of the
|
|
Negro youths needed to have that education which would enable them
|
|
to secure an economic foundation, without which no people can
|
|
succeed in any of the higher walks of life.
|
|
|
|
It is because of the fact that the Tuskegee Institute began at the
|
|
bottom, with work in the soil, in wood, in iron, in leather, that
|
|
it has now developed to the point where it is able to furnish
|
|
employment as teachers to twenty-eight Negro graduates of the best
|
|
colleges in the country. This is about three times as many Negro
|
|
college graduates as any other institution in the United States
|
|
for the education of colored people employs, the total number of
|
|
officers and instructors at Tuskegee being about one hundred and
|
|
ten.
|
|
|
|
Those who once opposed this see now that while the Negro youth who
|
|
becomes skilled in agriculture and a successful farmer may not be
|
|
able himself to pass through a purely literary college, he is
|
|
laying the foundation for his children and grandchildren to do it
|
|
if desirable. Industrial education in this generation is
|
|
contributing in the highest degree to make what is called higher
|
|
education a success. It is now realized that in so far as the
|
|
race has intelligent and skillful producers, the greater will be
|
|
the success of the minister, lawyer, doctor, and teacher.
|
|
Opposition has melted away, too, because all men now see that it
|
|
will take a long time to "materialize" a race, millions of which
|
|
hold neither houses nor railroads, nor bank stocks, nor factories,
|
|
nor coal and gold mines.
|
|
|
|
Another reason for the growth of a better understanding of the
|
|
objects and influence of industrial training is the fact, as
|
|
before stated, that it has been taken up with such interest and
|
|
activity by the Southern whites, and that it has been established
|
|
at such universities as Cornell in the East, and in practically
|
|
all of the state colleges of the great West.
|
|
|
|
It is now seen that the result of such education will be to help
|
|
the black man to make for himself an independent place in our
|
|
great American life. It was largely the poverty of the Negro that
|
|
made him the prey of designing politicians immediately after the
|
|
war; and wherever poverty and lack of industry exist to-day, one
|
|
does not find in him that deep spiritual life which the race must
|
|
in the future possess in a higher degree.
|
|
|
|
To those who still express the fear that perhaps too much stress
|
|
is put upon industrial education for the Negro I would add that I
|
|
should emphasize the same kind of training for any people, whether
|
|
black or white, in the same stage of development as the masses of
|
|
the colored people.
|
|
|
|
For a number of years this country has looked to Germany for much
|
|
in the way of education, and a large number of our brightest men
|
|
and women are sent there each year. The official reports show
|
|
that in Saxony, Germany, alone, there are 287 industrial schools,
|
|
or one such school to every 14,641 people. This is true of a
|
|
people who have back of them centuries of wealth and culture. In
|
|
the South I am safe in saying that there is not more than one
|
|
effective industrial school for every 400,000 colored people.
|
|
|
|
A recent dispatch from Germany says that the German Emperor has
|
|
had a kitchen fitted up in the palace for the single purpose of
|
|
having his daughter taught cooking. If all classes and
|
|
nationalities, who are in most cases thousands of years ahead of
|
|
the Negro in the arts of civilization, continue their interest in
|
|
industrial training, I cannot understand how any reasonable person
|
|
can object to such education for a large part of a people who are
|
|
in the poverty-stricken condition that is true of a large element
|
|
of my race, especially when such hand training is combined, as it
|
|
should be, with the best education of head and heart.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE NEGRO IN THE REGULAR ARMY
|
|
by Oswald Garrison Villard
|
|
|
|
|
|
When the Fifty-fourth Massachusetts Regiment stormed Fort Wagner
|
|
July 18, 1863, only to be driven back with the loss of its
|
|
colonel, Robert Gould Shaw, and many of its rank and file, it
|
|
established for all time the fact that the colored soldier would
|
|
fight and fight well. This had already been demonstrated in
|
|
Louisiana by colored regiments under the command of General
|
|
Godfrey Weitzel in the attack upon Port Hudson on May 27 of the
|
|
same year. On that occasion regiments composed for the greater
|
|
part of raw recruits, plantation hands with centuries of servitude
|
|
under the lash behind them, stormed trenches and dashed upon cold
|
|
steel in the hands of their former masters and oppressors. After
|
|
that there was no more talk in the portion of the country of the
|
|
"natural cowardice" of the negro. But the heroic qualities of
|
|
Colonel Shaw, his social prominence and that of his officers, and
|
|
the comparative nearness of their battlefield to the North,
|
|
attracted greater and more lasting attention to the daring and
|
|
bravery of their exploit, until it finally became fixed in many
|
|
minds as the first real baptism of fire of colored American
|
|
soldiers.
|
|
|
|
After Wagner the recruiting of colored regiments, originally
|
|
opposed by both North and South, went on apace, particularly under
|
|
the Federal government, which organized no less than one hundred
|
|
and fifty-four, designated as "United States Colored Troops."
|
|
Colonel Shaw's raising of a colored regiment aroused quite as much
|
|
comment in the North because of the race prejudice it defied, as
|
|
because of the novelty of the new organization. General Weitzel
|
|
tendered his resignation the instant General B. F. Butler assigned
|
|
black soldiers to his brigade, and was with difficulty induced to
|
|
serve on. His change of mind was a wise one, and not only because
|
|
these colored soldiers covered him with glory at Port Hudson. It
|
|
was his good fortune to be the central figure in one of the
|
|
dramatic incidents of a war that must ever rank among the most
|
|
thrilling and tragic the world has seen. The black cavalrymen who
|
|
rode into Richmond, the first of the Northern troops to enter the
|
|
Southern capital, went in waving their sabres and crying to the
|
|
negroes on the sidewalks, "We have come to set you free!" They
|
|
were from the division of Godfrey Weitzel, and American history
|
|
has no more stirring moment.
|
|
|
|
In the South, notwithstanding the raising in 1861 of a colored
|
|
Confederate regiment by Governor Moore of Louisiana (a magnificent
|
|
body of educated colored men which afterwards became the First
|
|
Louisiana National Guards of General Weitzel's brigade and the
|
|
first colored regiment in the Federal Army), the feeling against
|
|
negro troops was insurmountable until the last days of the
|
|
struggle. Then no straw could be overlooked. When, in December,
|
|
1863, Major-General Patrick R. Cleburne, who commanded a division
|
|
of Hardee's Corps of the Confederate Army of the Tennessee, sent
|
|
in a paper in which the employment of the slaves as soldiers of
|
|
the South was vigorously advocated, Jefferson Davis indorsed it
|
|
with the statement, "I deem it inexpedient at this time to give
|
|
publicity to this paper, and request that it be suppressed."
|
|
General Cleburne urged that "freedom within a reasonable time" be
|
|
granted to every slave remaining true to the Confederacy, and was
|
|
moved to this action by the valor of the Fifty-fourth
|
|
Massachusetts, saying, "If they [the negroes] can be made to face
|
|
and fight bravely against their former masters, how much more
|
|
probable is it that with the allurement of a higher reward, and
|
|
led by those masters, they would submit to discipline and face
|
|
dangers?"
|
|
|
|
With the ending of the civil war the regular army of the United
|
|
States was reorganized upon a peace footing by an act of Congress
|
|
dated July 28, 1866. In just recognition of the bravery of the
|
|
colored volunteers six regiments, the Ninth and Tenth Cavalry and
|
|
the Thirty-eighth, Thirty-ninth, Fortieth, and Forth-first
|
|
Infantry, were designated as colored regiments. When the army was
|
|
again reduced in 1869, the Thirty-eighth and Forty-first became
|
|
the Twenty-fourth Infantry, and the Thirty-ninth and Fortieth
|
|
became the Twenty-fifth. This left four colored regiments in the
|
|
regular army as it was constituted from 1870 until 1901. There
|
|
has never been a colored artillery organization in the regular
|
|
service.
|
|
|
|
To these new regiments came a motley mixture of veterans of
|
|
volunteer organizations, newly released slaves, and some freedmen
|
|
of several years' standing but without military experience. They
|
|
were eager to learn, and soon showed the same traits which
|
|
distinguish the black regiments to-day,--loyalty to their officers
|
|
and to their colors, sobriety and courage, and a notable pride in
|
|
the efficiency of their corps. But if ever officers had to
|
|
"father and mother" their soldiers they were the company officers
|
|
of these regiments. The captains in particular had to be bankers,
|
|
secretaries, advisers, and judges for their men. As Lieutenant
|
|
Grote Hutcheson has stated it, "The men knew nothing, and the non-
|
|
commissioned officers but little more. From the very
|
|
circumstances of their preceding life it could not be otherwise.
|
|
They had no independence, no self-reliance, not a thought except
|
|
for the present, and were filled with superstition." Yet the
|
|
officers were determined to prove the wisdom of the experiment.
|
|
To do this they were forced to give their own attention to the
|
|
minutest details of military administration, and to act as non-
|
|
commissioned officers. The total lack of education among the men
|
|
necessitated an enormous amount of writing by the officers. In
|
|
the Ninth Cavalry only one man was found able to write well enough
|
|
to be sergeant-major, and not for several years was it possible to
|
|
obtain troop clerks. When the Tenth Cavalry was being recruited
|
|
an officer was sent to Philadelphia with the express purpose of
|
|
picking up educated colored men for the non-commissioned
|
|
positions. Difficult as the tasks of the officers thus were, most
|
|
of them felt well repaid for their unusual labors by the
|
|
affectionate regard in which they were held by their soldiers, and
|
|
by the never-failing good humor with which the latter went about
|
|
their duties.
|
|
|
|
As the years passed the character of the colored soldiers
|
|
naturally changed. In place of the war veterans, and of the men
|
|
whose chains of servitude had just been struck off, came young men
|
|
from the North and East with more education and more self-
|
|
reliance. They depended less upon their officers, both in the
|
|
barracks and in the field, yet they reverenced and cared for them
|
|
as much as did their predecessors. Their greatest faults then as
|
|
now were gambling and quarreling. On the other hand, the negro
|
|
regiments speedily became favorably known because of greater
|
|
sobriety and of fewer desertions than among the white soldiers.
|
|
It was the Ninth Cavalry which a few years ago astonished the army
|
|
by reporting not a single desertion in twelve months, an unheard-
|
|
of and perhaps undreamed-of record. In all that goes to make a
|
|
good soldier, in drill, fidelity, and smartness, the negro regular
|
|
from the first took front rank.
|
|
|
|
Nor was there ever any lack of the fighting quality which had
|
|
gratified the nation at Fort Wagner, or at Fort Blakely, Ala.,
|
|
where the Seventy-third Colored Infantry, under Colonel Henry C.
|
|
Merriam, stormed the enemy's works, in advance of orders, in one
|
|
of the last actions of the war. It soon fell to the lot of the
|
|
Ninth and Tenth Cavalry to prove that the negroes could do as well
|
|
under fire in the Indian wars as they had when fighting for the
|
|
freedom of their race. While the Twenty-fourth and Twenty-fifth
|
|
Infantry had merely garrison work to do, the Ninth and Tenth
|
|
Cavalry scouted for years against hostile Indians in Texas, New
|
|
Mexico, Colorado, and Kansas, always acquitting themselves
|
|
honorably. In September, 1868, a little over two years after
|
|
their organization, three troops of the Ninth Cavalry did well in
|
|
an action against Indians at Horsehead Hills, Texas. When General
|
|
George A. Forsyth and his detachment of fifty scouts were
|
|
surrounded and "corralled" by seven hundred Indians on an island
|
|
in the Republican River, it was the troop of Captain Louis H.
|
|
Carpenter, of the Tenth Cavalry, which first came to their rescue.
|
|
Similarly when Major T. T. Thornburg's command was nearly wiped
|
|
out by Utes in 1879, it was Captain F. S. Dodge's Troop D of the
|
|
Ninth which succeeded in reaching it in time, losing all its
|
|
horses in so doing. This regiment alone took part in sixty Indian
|
|
fights between 1868 and 1890, during which time it lost three
|
|
officers and twenty-seven men killed, and had three officers and
|
|
thirty-four men wounded. The Tenth Cavalry's casualties were also
|
|
heavy during this same period, and it fought for many years over a
|
|
most difficult country in New Mexico and Arizona, taking a
|
|
conspicuous part in running to earth Geronimo's and Victoria's
|
|
bands of Apaches.
|
|
|
|
On one of these campaigns Lieutenant Powhatan H. Clarke gave
|
|
effective proof of the affection which the officers of colored
|
|
regiments have for their men. In the fight in the Pineto
|
|
Mountains with a portion of Geronimo's forces this young
|
|
Southerner risked his life to save a colored sergeant who had
|
|
fallen wounded in an open space where both he and his rescuer were
|
|
easy marks for the Apaches. For this gallant act Lieutenant
|
|
Clarke rightly received a medal of honor. The Twenty-fourth
|
|
Infantry, on the other hand, has contributed a striking instance
|
|
of the devotion of colored soldiers to their officers. When Major
|
|
Joseph W. Wham, paymaster, was attacked by robbers on May 11,
|
|
1889, his colored escort fought with such gallantry that every one
|
|
of the soldiers was awarded a medal of honor or a certificate of
|
|
merit. Some of them stood their ground although badly wounded,
|
|
notably Sergeant Benjamin Brown, who continued to fight and to
|
|
encourage his men until shot through both arms. In a fight
|
|
against Apaches in the Cuchilo Negro Mountains of New Mexico on
|
|
August 16, 1881, Moses Williams, First Sergeant of Troop I, Ninth
|
|
Cavalry, displayed such gallantry that he was given a medal of
|
|
honor by common consent. When the only officer with the
|
|
detachment, Lieutenant Gustavus Valois, had his horse shot under
|
|
him, and was cut off from his men, Sergeant Williams promptly
|
|
rallied the detachment, and conducted the right flank in a running
|
|
fight for several hours with such coolness, bravery, and
|
|
unflinching devotion to duty that he undoubtedly saved the lives
|
|
of at least three comrades. His action in standing by and
|
|
rescuing Lieutenant Valois was the more noteworthy because he and
|
|
his men were subjected, in an exposed position, to a heavy fire
|
|
from a large number of Indians. For splendid gallantry against
|
|
Indians, while serving as sergeant of Troop K, Ninth Cavalry, on
|
|
May 14, 1880, and August 12, 1881, George Jordan was also given a
|
|
medal of honor. Five of the medal of honor men now in the service
|
|
are colored soldiers, while fifteen others have "certificates of
|
|
merit" also awarded for conspicuous deeds of bravery.
|
|
|
|
It was not until the battle of Santiago, however, that the bulk of
|
|
the American people realized that the standing army comprised
|
|
regiments composed wholly of black men. Up to that time only one
|
|
company of colored soldiers had served at a post east of the
|
|
Mississippi. Even Major, later Brigadier-General, Guy V. Henry's
|
|
gallop to the rescue of the Seventh Cavalry on December 30, 1890,
|
|
with four troops of the Ninth Cavalry, attracted but little
|
|
attention. This feat was the more remarkable because Major
|
|
Henry's command had just completed a march of more than one
|
|
hundred miles in twenty-four hours. But in the battle at
|
|
Santiago, the four colored regiments won praise from all sides,
|
|
particularly for their advance upon Kettle Hill, in which the
|
|
Rough Riders also figured. From the very beginning of the
|
|
movement of the army after its landing, the negro troops were in
|
|
the front of the fighting, and contributed largely to the
|
|
successful result. Although they suffered heavy losses,
|
|
especially in officers, the men fought with the same gallantry
|
|
they had displayed on the plains, as is attested by the honors
|
|
awarded. In every company there were instances of personal
|
|
gallantry. The first sergeants especially lived up to the
|
|
responsibilities placed upon them. The color sergeant of the
|
|
Tenth Cavalry, Adam Houston, bore to the front not only his own
|
|
flags, but those of the Third Cavalry when the latter's color
|
|
sergeant was shot down. In several emergencies where troops or
|
|
companies lost their white officers, the senior sergeants took
|
|
command and handled their men in a faultless manner, notably in
|
|
the Tenth Cavalry.
|
|
|
|
Indeed, the conduct of these men has done much to dispel the old
|
|
belief that colored soldiers will fight only when they have
|
|
efficient white officers. This may well have been true at one
|
|
period of the civil war when the colored race as a whole had never
|
|
even had the responsibilities attaching to free men. It is
|
|
growing less and less true as time passes and better educated men
|
|
enter the ranks. in recognition of their achievements at Santiago
|
|
a number of these black non-commissioned officers were made
|
|
commissioned officers in several of the so-called "immune"
|
|
regiments of United States Volunteers raised in July, 1898. None
|
|
of these organizations were in service long enough to become
|
|
really efficient, and a few were never properly disciplined.
|
|
Nevertheless, a majority of the officers promoted from the colored
|
|
regulars bore themselves well under exceedingly trying
|
|
circumstances. Some of them, and a number of regular sergeants
|
|
and corporals who had succeeded to their former places, were made
|
|
lieutenants and captains in the Forty-eighth and Forty-ninth
|
|
Volunteer Infantry, which served in the Philippines for two years,
|
|
and to which we shall recur later.
|
|
|
|
At Santiago the characteristic cheerfulness of the negro soldiers
|
|
was as striking as their bravery. In his little book called The
|
|
Nth Foot In War, Lieutenant M. B. Stewart says of them:--
|
|
|
|
"The negro troops were in a high good humor. They had made the
|
|
charge of the day; they had fought with a dash and vigor which
|
|
forever established their reputation as fighters, and which would
|
|
carry them down in the pages of history. To have heard them that
|
|
night no one would have ever thought that they had lived for
|
|
twelve mortal hours under a galling fire. They were laughing and
|
|
joking over the events of the day, in the same manner they would
|
|
have done had they been returning from a picnic.
|
|
|
|
"'Golly,' laughed a six-foot sergeant, 'dere was music in de air
|
|
sho' nuff. Dat lead was flying around in sheets, I tell you. I
|
|
seen a buzzard flying around in front of our line, and I says to
|
|
myself, "Buzzard, you is in a mighty dangerous position. You
|
|
better git out uf dat, 'cause dey ain't room out dar for a
|
|
muskeeter."' Another remarked, 'Say, did you see dat man Brown;
|
|
pity dat man been killed. He'd a been a corporal, sho.'
|
|
|
|
"In the utter exhaustion of the moment all race and social
|
|
distinctions were forgotten. Officers lay down among their men
|
|
and slept like logs. The negro troops sought out soft places
|
|
along the sides of the road and lay down with their white
|
|
comrades. There was a little commotion among the latter, and an
|
|
officer was heard to yell: 'Here, you man, take your feet off my
|
|
stomach. Well, I'll be damned if it ain't a nigger. Get out, you
|
|
black rascal.' As the commotion subsided, the negro was heard to
|
|
remark, 'Well, if dat ain't de mos' particler man I ever see.'"
|
|
|
|
Characteristic also is a story of the negro cavalryman who,
|
|
returning to the rear, said to some troops anxious to get to the
|
|
front: "Dat's all right, gemmen; don't git in a sweat; dere's lots
|
|
of it lef' for you. You wants to look out for dese yere
|
|
sharpshooters, for dey is mighty careless with dere weapons, and
|
|
dey is specially careless when dey is officers aroun'."
|
|
|
|
As soon as the army settled down in the trenches before Santiago,
|
|
smuggled musical instruments--guitars, banjos, mouth organs, and
|
|
what not--appeared among the negro troops as if by magic, and they
|
|
were ever in use. It was at once a scene of cheerfulness and
|
|
gayety, and the officers had their usual trouble in making the men
|
|
go to sleep instead of spending the night in talking, singing, and
|
|
gaming. In the peaceful camp of the Third Alabama, in that state,
|
|
the scenes were similar. There was always "a steady hum of
|
|
laughter and talk, dance, song, shout, and the twang of musical
|
|
instruments." It was "a scene full of life and fun, of jostling,
|
|
scuffling, and racing, of clown performances and cake-walks, of
|
|
impromptu minstrelsy, speech-making, and preaching, of deviling,
|
|
guying, and fighting, both real and mimic." The colonel found
|
|
great difficulty in getting men to work alone. Two would
|
|
volunteer for any service. "Colonel," said a visitor to the camp,
|
|
"your sentinels are sociable fellows. I saw No. 5 over at the end
|
|
of his beat entertaining No. 6 with some fancy manual of arms.
|
|
Afterwards, with equal amiability, No. 6 executed a most artistic
|
|
cake-walk for his friend." It must be remembered here that this
|
|
colonel's men were typical Southern negroes, literate and
|
|
illiterate, and all new to military life.
|
|
|
|
In addition to the Forty-eighth and Forty-ninth Volunteers, the
|
|
four regular colored regiments have served in the Philippines.
|
|
Here the work was particularly trying and the temptations to
|
|
misconduct many. The Filipino women were especially attractive to
|
|
the men because of their color, and it is on record that several
|
|
soldiers were tempted from their allegiance to the United States.
|
|
Two of these, whose sympathy and liking for the Filipinos overcame
|
|
their judgment, paid the full penalty of desertion, being hanged
|
|
by their former comrades. Both belonged to the Ninth Cavalry. On
|
|
the other hand, in a remarkable order issued by General A. S. Burt
|
|
in relinquishing command of the Twenty-fifth Infantry, on April
|
|
17, 1902, on his promotion to brigadier-general, he was able to
|
|
quote the Inspector-General of the army as saying: "The Twenty-
|
|
fifth Infantry is the best regiment I have seen in the
|
|
Philippines." General Burt praised highly the excellent conduct
|
|
of the enlisted men while in the Archipelago, which proved to his
|
|
mind that the American negroes are "as law-abiding as any race in
|
|
the world."
|
|
|
|
Three of General Burt's sergeants, Russell, McBryar, and Hoffman,
|
|
were promoted to the Forty-eighth and Forty-ninth Volunteers, and
|
|
served, as lieutenants, for several months with their old
|
|
regiment, the Twenty-fifth, until the arrival of their new
|
|
regiments in Manila. During this time they were frequently under
|
|
fire. General Burt bore high testimony to their soldierly
|
|
bearing, their capacity and ability, and expressed great regret
|
|
when he was forced to let them go. McBryar had won a medal of
|
|
honor for gallantry against Indians in Arizona in 1890. In the
|
|
Forty-ninth Volunteers, Company L, composed wholly of colored men,
|
|
and commanded by Captain Edward L. Baker, a colored veteran of
|
|
Santiago, who had served for seventeen years in the Ninth and
|
|
Tenth Cavalry and in the Tenth "Immunes," made a wonderful record.
|
|
According to a statement which was widely published at the time
|
|
and never denied, this company had on its rolls during a period of
|
|
twelve months one hundred and six men who were fit for duty at all
|
|
times and never lost a day on account of sickness. No white
|
|
company remotely approached this record. More extraordinary still
|
|
is the fact that during this same period not one of these men ever
|
|
went before a court-martial. This is surely a striking
|
|
illustration of what can be done by colored officers. It is
|
|
noticeable, too, that neither the officers nor the men of any
|
|
colored regiment have figured in the charges and counter-charges
|
|
arising out of the use of the water-torture, except one man who at
|
|
the time of his offense was not with his regiment. The Forty-
|
|
ninth Volunteers was a very unhappy regiment during its brief
|
|
life, but its troubles were largely due to its white officers.
|
|
One of these, a major, was dismissed for misconduct, and his place
|
|
was filled by the senior captain, a colored man. Several other
|
|
white officers and one colored captain got into serious trouble,
|
|
the last being dismissed. The Forty-eighth was, on the contrary,
|
|
a contented organization in which the colored officers were
|
|
treated in a kindly and courteous manner by their white associates
|
|
and superiors. The two regiments afford a striking illustration
|
|
of Napoleon's saying, "There are no such things as poor
|
|
regiments,--only poor colonels."
|
|
|
|
The negro regiment unquestionably calls for different treatment
|
|
from that which would be accorded to white troops, just as the
|
|
Indian troops of King Edward's army require different handling
|
|
from that called for in the case of the King's Royal Rifles. Yet
|
|
as fighting machines, the Indian soldiers may be the equals if not
|
|
the superiors of the Englishmen. Major Robert L. Bullard, Twenty-
|
|
eighth United States Infantry who commanded the colored Third
|
|
Alabama Volunteers, already referred to, during the war with
|
|
Spain, discusses in a remarkable paper published in the United
|
|
Service Magazine for July, 1901, the differences between negro and
|
|
white soldiers. They are so great, he says, as to require the
|
|
military commander to treat the negro as a different species. He
|
|
must fit his methods of instruction and discipline to the
|
|
characteristics of the race. Major Bullard adds that "mistakes,
|
|
injustices, and failures would result from his making the same
|
|
rules and methods apply to the two races without regard to how far
|
|
apart set by nature or separated by evolution." But Major Bullard
|
|
would unquestionably concede that these differences in no way
|
|
require a treatment of the negro soldier which implies that he is
|
|
an inferior being and which ever impresses upon him his
|
|
inferiority. Yet this seems to have been the case in the Forty-
|
|
ninth United States Volunteers.
|
|
|
|
In the regular army, as well as in the volunteers, officers have
|
|
frequently appealed with success to the negroes' pride of race,
|
|
and have urged them on to greater efficiency and better behavior
|
|
by reminding them that they have the honor of their people in
|
|
their hands. To such appeals there is ever a prompt response.
|
|
One of the most effective ways of disciplining an offender is by
|
|
holding him up to the ridicule of his fellows. The desire of the
|
|
colored soldiers to amuse and to be amused gives the officers an
|
|
easy way of obtaining a hold upon them and their affections. The
|
|
regimental rifle team, the baseball nine, the minstrel troupe, and
|
|
the regimental band offer positions of importance for which the
|
|
competition is much keener than in the white regiments. There is
|
|
also a friendly rivalry between companies, which is much missed
|
|
elsewhere in the service. The negroes are natural horsemen and
|
|
riders. It is a pleasure to them to take care of their mounts,
|
|
and a matter of pride to keep their animals in good condition.
|
|
Personally they are clean and neat, and they take the greatest
|
|
possible pride in their uniforms. In no white regiment is there a
|
|
similar feeling. With the negroes the canteen question is of
|
|
comparatively slight importance, not only because the men can be
|
|
more easily amused within their barracks, but because their
|
|
appetite for drink is by no means as strong as that of the white
|
|
men. Their sociability is astonishing. They would rather sit up
|
|
and tell stories and crack jokes than go to bed, no matter how
|
|
hard the day has been.
|
|
|
|
The dark sides are, that the negro soldiers easily turn merited
|
|
punishment into martyrdom, that their gambling propensities are
|
|
almost beyond control, that their habit of carrying concealed
|
|
weapons is incurable, and that there is danger of serious fighting
|
|
when they fall out with one another. Frequent failure to act
|
|
honorably toward a comrade in some trifling matter is apt to cause
|
|
scuffling and fighting until the men are well disciplined. Women
|
|
are another cause of quarrels, and are at all times a potent
|
|
temptation to misconduct and neglect of duty. It is very
|
|
difficult to impress upon the men the value of government
|
|
property, and duty which requires memorizing of orders is always
|
|
the most difficult to teach. For the study of guard duty manuals
|
|
or of tactics they have no natural aptitude. The non-commissioned
|
|
officers are of very great importance, and in the regulars they
|
|
are looked up to and obeyed implicitly, much more so than is the
|
|
case with white troops. It is necessary, however, for the
|
|
officers to back up the sergeants and corporals very vigorously,
|
|
even when they are slightly in the wrong. Then colored men are
|
|
more easily "rattled" by poor officers than are their white
|
|
comrades. There was a striking instance of this two or three
|
|
years ago when a newly appointed and wholly untrained white
|
|
officer lost his head at a post in Texas. His black subordinates,
|
|
largely recruits, followed suit, and in carrying out his
|
|
hysterical orders imperiled many lives in the neighboring town.
|
|
Selections for service with colored troops should therefore be
|
|
most carefully made. Major Bullard declares that the officer of
|
|
negro troops "must not only be an officer and a gentleman, but he
|
|
must be considerate, patient, laborious, self-sacrificing, a man
|
|
of affairs, and he must have knowledge and wisdom in a great lot
|
|
of things not really military."
|
|
|
|
If the position of a white officer is a difficult one, that of the
|
|
colored officer is still more so. He has not the self-assumed
|
|
superiority of the white man, naturally feels that he is on trial,
|
|
and must worry himself incessantly about his relations to his
|
|
white comrades of the shoulder straps. While the United States
|
|
Navy has hitherto been closed to negroes who aspire to be
|
|
officers, the army has pursued a wiser and more just policy. The
|
|
contrast between the two services is really remarkable. On almost
|
|
every war vessel white and black sailors sleep and live together
|
|
in crowded quarters without protest or friction. But the negro
|
|
naval officer is kept out of the service by hook or by crook for
|
|
the avowed reason that the cramped quarters of the wardroom would
|
|
make association with him intolerable. In the army, on the other
|
|
hand, the experiment of mixed regiments has never been tried. A
|
|
good colored soldier can nevertheless obtain a commission by going
|
|
through West Point, or by rising from the ranks, or by being
|
|
appointed directly from civil life.
|
|
|
|
Since the foundation of the Military Academy there have been
|
|
eighteen colored boys appointed to West Point, of whom fifteen
|
|
failed in their preliminary examinations, or were discharged after
|
|
entering because of deficiency in studies. Three were graduated
|
|
and commissioned as second lieutenants of cavalry, Henry Ossian
|
|
Flipper, John Hanks Alexander, and Charles Young. Of these,
|
|
Lieutenant Flipper was dismissed June 30, 1882, for "conduct
|
|
unbecoming an officer and a gentleman." The other two proved
|
|
themselves excellent officers, notably Young, who is at this
|
|
writing a captain, and a most efficient one, in the Ninth Cavalry,
|
|
with which he recently served in the Philippines. Lieutenant
|
|
Alexander died suddenly in 1894. In announcing his death in a
|
|
regimental order his colonel spoke of him in terms of high praise,
|
|
and did not use the customary stereotyped phrases of regret. His
|
|
fellow white officers all had good words for him. There never was
|
|
more striking testimony to the discipline and spirit of fairness
|
|
at West Point than was afforded by the sight of Cadet Charles
|
|
Young, who is of very dark complexion, commanding white cadets.
|
|
Nothing else has impressed foreign visitors at West Point half so
|
|
much.
|
|
|
|
An equally remarkable happening, and one which speaks even more
|
|
for the democratic spirit in the army, was the commissioning in
|
|
1901 of Sergeant-Major Benjamin O. Davis, Ninth Cavalry, and of
|
|
Corporal John E. Green, Twenty-fourth Infantry. Both these men
|
|
were examined by boards of white officers, who might easily have
|
|
excluded them because of color prejudice, in which case there
|
|
would have been no appeal from their findings. Lieutenant Davis's
|
|
former troop commander, a West Pointer, openly rejoiced at his
|
|
success, and predicted that he would make an excellent officer.
|
|
These are the first two colored men to rise from the ranks, but
|
|
there will be many more if the same admirable spirit of fair play
|
|
continues to rule in the army and is not altered by outside
|
|
prejudice. It was thought that there would be a severe strain
|
|
upon discipline when a colored officer rose to the rank of captain
|
|
and to the command of white officers. But in Captain Young's case
|
|
his white subordinates seem to have realized that it is the
|
|
position and rank that they are compelled to salute and obey, and
|
|
not the individual. This principle is at the bottom of all
|
|
discipline. Only too frequently do subordinates throughout the
|
|
army have to remind themselves of this when obeying men for whose
|
|
social qualities and character they have neither regard nor
|
|
respect. During the war with Spain Captain Young commanded a
|
|
negro battalion from Ohio, which was pronounced the best drilled
|
|
organization in the large army assembled at Camp Alger near
|
|
Washington. In addition to these officers, Captain John R. Lynch,
|
|
formerly a Congressman from Mississippi, and four colored
|
|
chaplains represent their race on the commissioned rolls of the
|
|
army. All of these men are doing well. One colored chaplain was
|
|
dismissed for drunkenness in 1894. Beyond this their record is
|
|
unblemished.
|
|
|
|
Despite the fairness shown in these appointments, there has been
|
|
considerable very just criticism of the War Department for its
|
|
failure to appoint to the regulars any of the colored officers who
|
|
did well in the Forty-eighth and Forty-ninth Volunteers. Every
|
|
colonel of volunteers was allowed to designate for examination for
|
|
appointment to the regular army the best officers in his regiment.
|
|
Hundreds of white officers were selected in this way, but not a
|
|
single colored officer was given an examination,--not even
|
|
Lieutenant McBryar, with his medal of honor, or Captain Baker.
|
|
Similarly fault has been found with Secretary Root because no new
|
|
colored regiments were established under the law of February 2,
|
|
1901, increasing the army by five regiments of infantry, five of
|
|
cavalry, and a large number of companies of artillery. The excuse
|
|
most often heard is that the negroes already have sufficient
|
|
representation in comparison with the percentage of negroes to
|
|
white persons within the borders of the United States. But the
|
|
sterling characteristics of the colored soldiers, their loyalty to
|
|
the service as shown by the statistics of desertion, and, above
|
|
all, their splendid service in Cuba, should have entitled them to
|
|
additional organizations. To say the least, the decision of the
|
|
War Department smacks considerably of ingratitude. Nevertheless,
|
|
the negro regiments have come to stay, both in the regulars and in
|
|
the volunteers. The hostilities of the last five years have
|
|
dispelled any doubt which may have existed upon this point.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
BAXTER'S PROCRUSTES
|
|
by Charles W. Chesnutt
|
|
|
|
|
|
Baxter's Procrustes is one of the publications of the Bodleian
|
|
Club. The Bodleian Club is composed of gentlemen of culture, who
|
|
are interested in books and book-collecting. It was named, very
|
|
obviously, after the famous library of the same name, and not only
|
|
became in our city a sort of shrine for local worshipers of fine
|
|
bindings and rare editions, but was visited occasionally by
|
|
pilgrims from afar. The Bodleian has entertained Mark Twain,
|
|
Joseph Jefferson, and other literary and histrionic celebrities.
|
|
It possesses quite a collection of personal mementos of
|
|
distinguished authors, among them a paperweight which once
|
|
belonged to Goethe, a lead pencil used by Emerson, an autograph
|
|
letter of Matthew Arnold, and a chip from a tree felled by Mr.
|
|
Gladstone. Its library contains a number of rare books, including
|
|
a fine collection on chess, of which game several of the members
|
|
are enthusiastic devotees.
|
|
|
|
The activities of the club are not, however, confined entirely to
|
|
books. We have a very handsome clubhouse, and much taste and
|
|
discrimination have been exercised in its adornment. There are
|
|
many good paintings, including portraits of the various presidents
|
|
of the club, which adorn the entrance hall. After books, perhaps
|
|
the most distinctive feature of the club is our collection of
|
|
pipes. In a large rack in the smoking-room--really a superfluity,
|
|
since smoking is permitted all over the house--is as complete an
|
|
assortment of pipes as perhaps exists in the civilized world.
|
|
Indeed, it is an unwritten rule of the club that no one is
|
|
eligible for membership who cannot produce a new variety of pipe,
|
|
which is filed with his application for membership, and, if he
|
|
passes, deposited with the club collection, he, however, retaining
|
|
the title in himself. Once a year, upon the anniversary of the
|
|
death of Sir Walter Raleigh, who it will be remembered, first
|
|
introduced tobacco into England, the full membership of the club,
|
|
as a rule, turns out. A large supply of the very best smoking
|
|
mixture is laid in. At nine o'clock sharp each member takes his
|
|
pipe from the rack, fills it with tobacco, and then the whole
|
|
club, with the president at the head, all smoking furiously, march
|
|
in solemn procession from room to room, upstairs and downstairs,
|
|
making the tour of the clubhouse and returning to the smoking-
|
|
room. The president then delivers an address, and each member is
|
|
called upon to say something, either by way of a quotation or an
|
|
original sentiment, in praise of the virtues of nicotine. This
|
|
ceremony--facetiously known as "hitting the pipe"--being thus
|
|
concluded, the membership pipes are carefully cleaned out and
|
|
replaced in the club rack.
|
|
|
|
As I have said, however, the raison d'etre of the club, and the
|
|
feature upon which its fame chiefly rests, is its collection of
|
|
rare books, and of these by far the most interesting are its own
|
|
publications. Even its catalogues are works of art, published in
|
|
numbered editions, and sought by libraries and book-collectors.
|
|
Early in its history it began the occasional publication of books
|
|
which should meet the club standard,--books in which emphasis
|
|
should be laid upon the qualities that make a book valuable in the
|
|
eyes of collectors. Of these, age could not, of course, be
|
|
imparted, but in the matter of fine and curious bindings, of hand-
|
|
made linen papers, of uncut or deckle edges, of wide margins and
|
|
limited editions, the club could control its own publications.
|
|
The matter of contents was, it must be confessed, a less important
|
|
consideration. At first it was felt by the publishing committee
|
|
that nothing but the finest products of the human mind should be
|
|
selected for enshrinement in the beautiful volumes which the club
|
|
should issue. The length of the work was an important
|
|
consideration,--long things were not compatible with wide margins
|
|
and graceful slenderness. For instance, we brought out
|
|
Coleridge's Ancient Mariner, an essay by Emerson, and another by
|
|
Thoreau. Our Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam was Heron-Allen's
|
|
translation of the original MS in the Bodleian Library at Oxford,
|
|
which, though less poetical than FitzGerald's, was not so common.
|
|
Several years ago we began to publish the works of our own
|
|
members. Bascom's Essay on Pipes was a very creditable
|
|
performance. It was published in a limited edition of one hundred
|
|
copies, and since it had not previously appeared elsewhere and was
|
|
copyrighted by the club, it was sufficiently rare to be valuable
|
|
for that reason. The second publication of local origin was
|
|
Baxter's Procrustes.
|
|
|
|
I have omitted to say that once or twice a year, at a meeting of
|
|
which notice has been given, an auction is held at the Bodleian.
|
|
The members of the club send in their duplicate copies, or books
|
|
they for any reason wish to dispose of, which are auctioned off to
|
|
the highest bidder. At these sales, which are well attended, the
|
|
club's publications have of recent years formed the leading
|
|
feature. Three years ago, number three of Bascom's Essay on Pipes
|
|
sold for fifteen dollars;--the original cost of publication was
|
|
one dollar and seventy-five cents. Later in the evening an uncut
|
|
copy of the same brought thirty dollars. At the next auction the
|
|
price of the cut copy was run up to twenty-five dollars, while the
|
|
uncut copy was knocked down at seventy-five dollars. The club had
|
|
always appreciated the value of uncut copies, but this financial
|
|
indorsement enhanced their desirability immensely. This rise in
|
|
the Essay on Pipes was not without a sympathetic effect upon all
|
|
the club publications. The Emerson essay rose from three dollars
|
|
to seventeen, and the Thoreau, being by an author less widely
|
|
read, and, by his own confession commercially unsuccessful,
|
|
brought a somewhat higher figure. The prices, thus inflated, were
|
|
not permitted to come down appreciably. Since every member of the
|
|
club possessed one or more of these valuable editions, they were
|
|
all manifestly interested in keeping up the price. The
|
|
publication, however, which brought the highest prices, and, but
|
|
for the sober second thought, might have wrecked the whole system,
|
|
was Baxter's Procrustes.
|
|
|
|
Baxter was, perhaps, the most scholarly member of the club. A
|
|
graduate of Harvard, he had traveled extensively, had read widely,
|
|
and while not so enthusiastic a collector as some of us, possessed
|
|
as fine a private library as any man of his age in the city. He
|
|
was about thirty-five when he joined the club, and apparently some
|
|
bitter experience--some disappointment in love or ambition--had
|
|
left its mark upon his character. With light, curly hair, fair
|
|
complexion, and gray eyes, one would have expected Baxter to be
|
|
genial of temper, with a tendency toward wordiness of speech. But
|
|
though he had occasional flashes of humor, his ordinary demeanor
|
|
was characterized by a mild cynicism, which, with his gloomy
|
|
pessimistic philosophy, so foreign to the temperament that should
|
|
accompany his physical type, could only be accounted for upon the
|
|
hypothesis of some secret sorrow such as I have suggested. What
|
|
it might be no one knew. He had means and social position, and
|
|
was an uncommonly handsome man. The fact that he remained
|
|
unmarried at thirty-five furnished some support for the theory of
|
|
a disappointment in love, though this the several intimates of
|
|
Baxter who belonged to the club were not able to verify.
|
|
|
|
It had occurred to me, in a vague way, that perhaps Baxter might
|
|
be an unsuccessful author. That he was a poet we knew very well,
|
|
and typewritten copies of his verses had occasionally circulated
|
|
among us. But Baxter had always expressed such a profound
|
|
contempt for modern literature, had always spoken in terms of such
|
|
unmeasured pity for the slaves of the pen, who were dependent upon
|
|
the whim of an undiscriminating public for recognition and a
|
|
livelihood, that no one of us had ever suspected him of
|
|
aspirations toward publication, until, as I have said, it occurred
|
|
to me one day that Baxter's attitude with regard to publication
|
|
might be viewed in the light of effect as well as of cause--that
|
|
his scorn of publicity might as easily arise from failure to
|
|
achieve it, as his never having published might be due to his
|
|
preconceived disdain of the vulgar popularity which one must share
|
|
with the pugilist or balloonist of the hour.
|
|
|
|
The notion of publishing Baxter's Procrustes did not emanate from
|
|
Baxter,--I must do him the justice to say this. But he had spoken
|
|
to several of the fellows about the theme of his poem, until the
|
|
notion that Baxter was at work upon something fine had become
|
|
pretty well disseminated throughout our membership. He would
|
|
occasionally read brief passages to a small coterie of friends in
|
|
the sitting-room or library,--never more than ten lines at once,
|
|
or to more than five people at a time,--and these excerpts gave at
|
|
least a few of us a pretty fair idea of the motive and scope of
|
|
the poem. As I, for one, gathered, it was quite along the line of
|
|
Baxter's philosophy. Society was the Procrustes which, like the
|
|
Greek bandit of old, caught every man born into the world, and
|
|
endeavored to fit him to some preconceived standard, generally to
|
|
the one for which he was least adapted. The world was full of men
|
|
and women who were merely square pegs in round holes, and vice
|
|
versa. Most marriages were unhappy because the contracting
|
|
parties were not properly mated. Religion was mostly
|
|
superstition, science for the most part sciolism, popular
|
|
education merely a means of forcing the stupid and repressing the
|
|
bright, so that all the youth of the rising generation might
|
|
conform to the same dull, dead level of democratic mediocrity.
|
|
Life would soon become so monotonously uniform and so uniformly
|
|
monotonous as to be scarce worth the living.
|
|
|
|
It was Smith, I think, who first proposed that the club publish
|
|
Baxter's Procrustes. The poet himself did not seem enthusiastic
|
|
when the subject was broached; he demurred for some little time,
|
|
protesting that the poem was not worthy of publication. But when
|
|
it was proposed that the edition be limited to fifty copies he
|
|
agreed to consider the proposition. When I suggested, having in
|
|
mind my secret theory of Baxter's failure in authorship, that the
|
|
edition would at least be in the hands of friends, that it would
|
|
be difficult for a hostile critic to secure a copy, and that if it
|
|
should not achieve success from a literary point of view, the
|
|
extent of the failure would be limited to the size of the edition,
|
|
Baxter was visibly impressed. When the literary committee at
|
|
length decided to request formally of Baxter the privilege of
|
|
publishing his Procrustes, he consented, with evident reluctance,
|
|
upon condition that he should supervise the printing, binding, and
|
|
delivery of the books, merely submitting to the committee, in
|
|
advance, the manuscript, and taking their views in regard to the
|
|
bookmaking.
|
|
|
|
The manuscript was duly presented to the literary committee.
|
|
Baxter having expressed the desire that the poem be not read aloud
|
|
at a meeting of the club, as was the custom, since he wished it to
|
|
be given to the world clad in suitable garb, the committee went
|
|
even farther. Having entire confidence in Baxter's taste and
|
|
scholarship, they, with great delicacy, refrained from even
|
|
reading the manuscript, contenting themselves with Baxter's
|
|
statement of the general theme and the topics grouped under it.
|
|
The details of the bookmaking, however, were gone into thoroughly.
|
|
The paper was to be of hand-made linen, from the Kelmscott Mills;
|
|
the type black-letter, with rubricated initials. The cover, which
|
|
was Baxter's own selection, was to be of dark green morocco, with
|
|
a cap-and-bells border in red inlays, and doublures of maroon
|
|
morocco with a blind-tooled design. Baxter was authorized to
|
|
contract with the printer and superintend the publication. The
|
|
whole edition of fifty numbered copies was to be disposed of at
|
|
auction, in advance, to the highest bidder, only one copy to each,
|
|
the proceeds to be devoted to paying for the printing and binding,
|
|
the remainder, if any, to go into the club treasury, and Baxter
|
|
himself to receive one copy by way of remuneration. Baxter was
|
|
inclined to protest at this, on the ground that his copy would
|
|
probably be worth more than the royalties on the edition, at the
|
|
usual ten per cent, would amount to, but was finally prevailed
|
|
upon to accept an author's copy.
|
|
|
|
While the Procrustes was under consideration, some one read, at
|
|
one of our meetings, a note from some magazine, which stated that
|
|
a sealed copy of a new translation of Campanella's Sonnets,
|
|
published by the Grolier Club, had been sold for three hundred
|
|
dollars. This impressed the members greatly. It was a novel
|
|
idea. A new work might thus be enshrined in a sort of holy of
|
|
holies, which, if the collector so desired, could be forever
|
|
sacred from the profanation of any vulgar or unappreciative eye.
|
|
The possessor of such a treasure could enjoy it by the eye of
|
|
imagination, having at the same time the exaltation of grasping
|
|
what was for others the unattainable. The literary committee were
|
|
so impressed with this idea that they presented it to Baxter in
|
|
regard to the Procrustes. Baxter making no objection, the
|
|
subscribers who might wish their copies delivered sealed were
|
|
directed to notify the author. I sent in my name. A fine book,
|
|
after all, was an investment, and if there was any way of
|
|
enhancing its rarity, and therefore its value, I was quite willing
|
|
to enjoy such an advantage.
|
|
|
|
When the Procrustes was ready for distribution, each subscriber
|
|
received his copy by mail, in a neat pasteboard box. Each number
|
|
was wrapped in a thin and transparent but very strong paper
|
|
through which the cover design and tooling were clearly visible.
|
|
The number of the copy was indorsed upon the wrapper, the folds of
|
|
which were securely fastened at each end with sealing-wax, upon
|
|
which was impressed, as a guaranty of its inviolateness, the
|
|
monogram of the club.
|
|
|
|
At the next meeting of the Bodleian, a great deal was said about
|
|
the Procrustes, and it was unanimously agreed that no finer
|
|
specimen of bookmaking had ever been published by the club. By a
|
|
curious coincidence, no one had brought his copy with him, and the
|
|
two club copies had not yet been received from the binder, who,
|
|
Baxter had reported was retaining them for some extra fine work.
|
|
Upon resolution, offered by a member who had not subscribed for
|
|
the volume, a committee of three was appointed to review the
|
|
Procrustes at the next literary meeting of the club. Of this
|
|
committee it was my doubtful fortune to constitute one.
|
|
|
|
In pursuance of my duty in the premises, it of course became
|
|
necessary for me to read the Procrustes. In all probability I
|
|
should have cut my own copy for this purpose, had not one of the
|
|
club auctions intervened between my appointment and the date set
|
|
for the discussion of the Procrustes. At this meeting a copy of
|
|
the book, still sealed, was offered for sale, and bought by a non-
|
|
subscriber for the unprecedented price of one hundred and fifty
|
|
dollars. After this a proper regard for my own interests would
|
|
not permit me to spoil my copy by opening it, and I was therefore
|
|
compelled to procure my information concerning the poem from some
|
|
other source. As I had no desire to appear mercenary, I said
|
|
nothing about my own copy, and made no attempt to borrow. I did,
|
|
however, casually remark to Baxter that I should like to look at
|
|
his copy of the proof sheets, since I wished to make some extended
|
|
quotations for my review, and would rather not trust my copy to a
|
|
typist for that purpose. Baxter assured me, with every evidence
|
|
of regret, that he had considered them of so little importance
|
|
that he had thrown them into the fire. This indifference of
|
|
Baxter to literary values struck me as just a little overdone.
|
|
The proof sheets of Hamlet, corrected in Shakespeare's own hand,
|
|
would be well-nigh priceless.
|
|
|
|
At the next meeting of the club I observed that Thompson and
|
|
Davis, who were with me on the reviewing committee, very soon
|
|
brought up the question of the Procrustes in conversation in the
|
|
smoking-room, and seemed anxious to get from the members their
|
|
views concerning Baxter's production, I supposed upon the theory
|
|
that the appreciation of any book review would depend more or less
|
|
upon the degree to which it reflected the opinion of those to whom
|
|
the review should be presented. I presumed, of course, that
|
|
Thompson and Davis had each read the book,--they were among the
|
|
subscribers,--and I was desirous of getting their point of view.
|
|
|
|
"What do you think," I inquired, "of the passage on Social
|
|
Systems?" I have forgotten to say that the poem was in blank
|
|
verse, and divided into parts, each with an appropriate title.
|
|
|
|
"Well," replied Davis, it seemed to me a little cautiously, "it is
|
|
not exactly Spencerian, although it squints at the Spencerian
|
|
view, with a slight deflection toward Hegelianism. I should
|
|
consider it an harmonious fusion of the best views of all the
|
|
modern philosophers, with a strong Baxterian flavor."
|
|
|
|
"Yes," said Thompson, "the charm of the chapter lies in this very
|
|
quality. The style is an emanation from Baxter's own intellect,--
|
|
he has written himself into the poem. By knowing Baxter we are
|
|
able to appreciate the book, and after having read the book we
|
|
feel that we are so much the more intimately acquainted with
|
|
Baxter,--the real Baxter."
|
|
|
|
Baxter had come in during this colloquy, and was standing by the
|
|
fireplace smoking a pipe. I was not exactly sure whether the
|
|
faint smile which marked his face was a token of pleasure or
|
|
cynicism; it was Baxterian, however, and I had already learned
|
|
that Baxter's opinions upon any subject were not to be gathered
|
|
always from his facial expression. For instance, when the club
|
|
porter's crippled child died Baxter remarked, it seemed to me
|
|
unfeelingly, that the poor little devil was doubtless better off,
|
|
and that the porter himself had certainly been relieved of a
|
|
burden; and only a week later the porter told me in confidence
|
|
that Baxter had paid for an expensive operation, undertaken in the
|
|
hope of prolonging the child's life. I therefore drew no
|
|
conclusions from Baxter's somewhat enigmatical smile. He left the
|
|
room at this point in the conversation, somewhat to my relief.
|
|
|
|
"By the way, Jones," said Davis, addressing me, "are you impressed
|
|
by Baxter's views on Degeneration?"
|
|
|
|
Having often heard Baxter express himself upon the general
|
|
downward tendency of modern civilization, I felt safe in
|
|
discussing his views in a broad and general manner.
|
|
|
|
"I think," I replied, "that they are in harmony with those of
|
|
Schopenhauer, without his bitterness; with those of Nordau,
|
|
without his flippancy. His materialism is Haeckel's, presented
|
|
with something of the charm of Omar Khayyam."
|
|
|
|
"Yes," chimed in Davis, "it answers the strenuous demand of our
|
|
day,--dissatisfaction with an unjustified optimism,--and voices
|
|
for us the courage of human philosophy facing the unknown."
|
|
|
|
I had a vague recollection of having read something like this
|
|
somewhere, but so much has been written, that one can scarcely
|
|
discuss any subject of importance without unconsciously borrowing,
|
|
now and then, the thoughts or the language of others. Quotation,
|
|
like imitation, is a superior grade of flattery.
|
|
|
|
"The Procrustes," said Thompson, to whom the metrical review had
|
|
been apportioned, "is couched in sonorous lines, of haunting
|
|
melody and charm; and yet so closely inter-related as to be
|
|
scarcely quotable with justice to the author. To be appreciated
|
|
the poem should be read as a whole,--I shall say as much in my
|
|
review. What shall you say of the letter-press?" he concluded,
|
|
addressing me. I was supposed to discuss the technical excellence
|
|
of the volume from the connoisseur's viewpoint.
|
|
|
|
"The setting," I replied judicially, "is worthy of the gem. The
|
|
dark green cover, elaborately tooled, the old English lettering,
|
|
the heavy linen paper, mark this as one of our very choicest
|
|
publications. The letter-press is of course De Vinne's best,--
|
|
there is nothing better on this side of the Atlantic. The text is
|
|
a beautiful, slender stream, meandering gracefully through a wide
|
|
meadow of margin."
|
|
|
|
For some reason I left the room for a minute. As I stepped into
|
|
the hall, I almost ran into Baxter, who was standing near the
|
|
door, facing a hunting print of a somewhat humorous character,
|
|
hung upon the wall, and smiling with an immensely pleased
|
|
expression.
|
|
|
|
"What a ridiculous scene!" he remarked. "Look at that fat old
|
|
squire on that tall hunter! I'll wager dollars to doughnuts that
|
|
he won't get over the first fence!"
|
|
|
|
It was a very good bluff, but did not deceive me. Under his mask
|
|
of unconcern, Baxter was anxious to learn what we thought of his
|
|
poem, and had stationed himself in the hall that he might overhear
|
|
our discussion without embarrassing us by his presence. He had
|
|
covered up his delight at our appreciation by this simulated
|
|
interest in the hunting print.
|
|
|
|
|
|
When the night came for the review of the Procrustes there was a
|
|
large attendance of members, and several visitors, among them a
|
|
young English cousin of one of the members, on his first visit to
|
|
the United States; some of us had met him at other clubs, and in
|
|
society, and had found him a very jolly boy, with a youthful
|
|
exuberance of spirits and a naive ignorance of things American
|
|
that made his views refreshing and, at times, amusing.
|
|
|
|
The critical essays were well considered, if a trifle vague.
|
|
Baxter received credit for poetic skill of a high order.
|
|
|
|
"Our brother Baxter," said Thompson, "should no longer bury his
|
|
talent in a napkin. This gem, of course, belongs to the club, but
|
|
the same brain from which issued this exquisite emanation can
|
|
produce others to inspire and charm an appreciative world."
|
|
|
|
"The author's view of life," said Davis, "as expressed in these
|
|
beautiful lines, will help us to fit our shoulders for the heavy
|
|
burden of life, by bringing to our realization those profound
|
|
truths of philosophy which find hope in despair and pleasure in
|
|
pain. When he shall see fit to give to the wider world, in fuller
|
|
form, the thoughts of which we have been vouchsafed this
|
|
foretaste, let us hope that some little ray of his fame may rest
|
|
upon the Bodleian, from which can never be taken away the proud
|
|
privilege of saying that he was one of its members."
|
|
|
|
I then pointed out the beauties of the volume as a piece of
|
|
bookmaking. I knew, from conversation with the publication
|
|
committee, the style of type and rubrication, and could see the
|
|
cover through the wrapper of my sealed copy. The dark green
|
|
morocco, I said, in summing up, typified the author's serious view
|
|
of life, as a thing to be endured as patiently as might be. The
|
|
cap-and-bells border was significant of the shams by which the
|
|
optimist sought to delude himself into the view that life was a
|
|
desirable thing. The intricate blind-tooling of the doublure
|
|
shadowed forth the blind fate which left us in ignorance of our
|
|
future and our past, or of even what the day itself might bring
|
|
forth. The black-letter type, with rubricated initials, signified
|
|
a philosophic pessimism enlightened by the conviction that in duty
|
|
one might find, after all, an excuse for life and a hope for
|
|
humanity. Applying this test to the club, this work, which might
|
|
be said to represent all that the Bodleian stood for, was in
|
|
itself sufficient to justify the club's existence. If the
|
|
Bodleian had done nothing else, if it should do nothing more, it
|
|
had produced a masterpiece.
|
|
|
|
There was a sealed copy of the Procrustes, belonging, I believe,
|
|
to one of the committee, lying on the table by which I stood, and
|
|
I had picked it up and held it in my hand for a moment, to
|
|
emphasize one of my periods, but had laid it down immediately. I
|
|
noted, as I sat down, that young Hunkin, our English visitor, who
|
|
sat on the other side of the table, had picked up the volume and
|
|
was examining it with interest. When the last review was read,
|
|
and the generous applause had subsided, there were cries for
|
|
Baxter.
|
|
|
|
"Baxter! Baxter! Author! Author!"
|
|
|
|
Baxter had been sitting over in a corner during the reading of the
|
|
reviews, and had succeeded remarkably well, it seemed to me, in
|
|
concealing, under his mask of cynical indifference, the exultation
|
|
which I was sure he must feel. But this outburst of enthusiasm
|
|
was too much even for Baxter, and it was clear that he was
|
|
struggling with strong emotion when he rose to speak.
|
|
|
|
"Gentlemen, and fellow members of the Bodleian, it gives me
|
|
unaffected pleasure--sincere pleasure--some day you may know how
|
|
much pleasure--I cannot trust myself to say it now--to see the
|
|
evident care with which your committee have read my poor verses,
|
|
and the responsive sympathy with which my friends have entered
|
|
into my views of life and conduct. I thank you again, and again,
|
|
and when I say that I am too full for utterance,--I'm sure you
|
|
will excuse me from saying any more."
|
|
|
|
Baxter took his seat, and the applause had begun again when it was
|
|
broken by a sudden exclamation.
|
|
|
|
"By Jove!" exclaimed our English visitor, who still sat behind the
|
|
table, "what an extraordinary book!"
|
|
|
|
Every one gathered around him.
|
|
|
|
"You see," he exclaimed; holding up the volume, "you fellows said
|
|
so much about the bally book that I wanted to see what it was
|
|
like; so I untied the ribbon, and cut the leaves with the paper
|
|
knife lying here, and found--and found that there wasn't a single
|
|
line in it, don't you know!"
|
|
|
|
Blank consternation followed this announcement, which proved only
|
|
too true. Every one knew instinctively, without further
|
|
investigation, that the club had been badly sold. In the
|
|
resulting confusion Baxter escaped, but later was waited upon by a
|
|
committee, to whom he made the rather lame excuse that he had
|
|
always regarded uncut and sealed books as tommy-rot, and that he
|
|
had merely been curious to see how far the thing could go; and
|
|
that the result had justified his belief that a book with nothing
|
|
in it was just as useful to a book-collector as one embodying a
|
|
work of genius. He offered to pay all the bills for the sham
|
|
Procrustes, or to replace the blank copies with the real thing, as
|
|
we might choose. Of course, after such an insult, the club did
|
|
not care for the poem. He was permitted to pay the expense,
|
|
however, and it was more than hinted to him that his resignation
|
|
from the club would be favorably acted upon. He never sent it in,
|
|
and, as he went to Europe shortly afterwards, the affair had time
|
|
to blow over.
|
|
|
|
In our first disgust at Baxter's duplicity, most of us cut our
|
|
copies of the Procrustes, some of us mailed them to Baxter with
|
|
cutting notes, and others threw them into the fire. A few wiser
|
|
spirits held on to theirs, and this fact leaking out, it began to
|
|
dawn upon the minds of the real collectors among us that the
|
|
volume was something unique in the way of a publication.
|
|
|
|
"Baxter," said our president one evening to a select few of us who
|
|
sat around the fireplace, "was wiser than we knew, or than he
|
|
perhaps appreciated. His Procrustes, from the collector's point
|
|
of view, is entirely logical, and might be considered as the acme
|
|
of bookmaking. To the true collector, a book is a work of art, of
|
|
which the contents are no more important than the words of an
|
|
opera. Fine binding is a desideratum, and, for its cost, that of
|
|
the Procrustes could not be improved upon. The paper is above
|
|
criticism. The true collector loves wide margins, and the
|
|
Procrustes, being all margin, merely touches the vanishing point
|
|
of the perspective. The smaller the edition, the greater the
|
|
collector's eagerness to acquire a copy. There are but six uncut
|
|
copies left, I am told, of the Procrustes, and three sealed
|
|
copies, of one of which I am the fortunate possessor."
|
|
|
|
After this deliverance, it is not surprising that, at our next
|
|
auction, a sealed copy of Baxter's Procrustes was knocked down,
|
|
after spirited bidding, for two hundred and fifty dollars, the
|
|
highest price ever brought by a single volume published by the
|
|
club.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE HEART OF THE RACE PROBLEM
|
|
by Quincy Ewing
|
|
|
|
|
|
"And, instead of going to the Congress of the United States and
|
|
saying there is no distinction made in Mississippi, because of
|
|
color or previous condition of servitude, tell the truth, and say
|
|
this: 'We tried for many years to live in Mississippi, and share
|
|
sovereignty and dominion with the Negro, and we saw our
|
|
institutions crumbling. . . . We rose in the majesty and highest
|
|
type of Anglo-Saxon manhood, and took the reins of government out
|
|
of the hands of the carpet-bagger and the Negro, and, so help us
|
|
God, from now on we will never share any sovereignty or dominion
|
|
with him again.'"--Governor JAMES K. VARDAMAN, Mississippi, 1904.
|
|
|
|
|
|
During the past decade, newspaper and magazine articles galore,
|
|
and not a few books, have been written on what is called the "Race
|
|
Problem," the problem caused by the presence in this country of
|
|
some ten millions of black and variously-shaded colored people
|
|
known as Negroes. But, strange as it may sound, the writer has no
|
|
hesitation in saying that at this date there appears to be no
|
|
clear conception anywhere, on the part of most people, as to just
|
|
what the essential problem is which confronts the white
|
|
inhabitants of the country because they have for fellow-citizens
|
|
(nominally) ten million Negroes. Ask the average man, ask even
|
|
the average editor or professor anywhere, what the race problem
|
|
is, the heart of it; why, in this land with its millions of
|
|
foreigners of all nationalities, THE race problem of problems
|
|
should be caused by ten million Negroes, not foreigners but native
|
|
to the soil through several generations; and in all probability
|
|
you will get some such answer as this:--
|
|
|
|
"The Negroes, as a rule, are very ignorant, are very lazy, are
|
|
very brutal, are very criminal. But a little way removed from
|
|
savagery, they are incapable of adopting the white man's moral
|
|
code, of assimilating the white man's moral sentiments, of
|
|
striving toward the white man's moral ideals. They are creatures
|
|
of brutal, untamed instincts, and uncontrolled feral passions,
|
|
which give frequent expression of themselves in crimes of horrible
|
|
ferocity. They are, in brief, an uncivilized, semi-savage people,
|
|
living in a civilization to which they are unequal, partaking to a
|
|
limited degree of its benefits, performing in no degree its
|
|
duties. Because they are spatially in a civilization to which
|
|
they are morally and intellectually repugnant, they cannot but be
|
|
as a foreign irritant to the body social. The problem is, How
|
|
shall the body social adjust itself, daily, hourly, to this
|
|
irritant; how feel at ease and safe in spite of it? How shall the
|
|
white inhabitants of the land, with their centuries of inherited
|
|
superiority, conserve their civilization and carry it forward to a
|
|
yet higher plane, hampered by ten million black inhabitants of the
|
|
same land with their centuries of inherited inferiority?"
|
|
|
|
To the foregoing answer, this might now and again be added, or
|
|
advanced independently in reply to our question: "Personal
|
|
aversion on the part of the white person for the Negro; personal
|
|
aversion accounted for by nothing the individual Negro is, or is
|
|
not, intellectually and morally; accounted for by the fact,
|
|
simply, that he is a Negro, that he has a black or colored skin,
|
|
that he is different, of another kind."
|
|
|
|
Now, certainly, there are very few average men or philosophers, to
|
|
whom the answer given to our question would not seem to state, or
|
|
at any rate fairly indicate, the race problem in its essence.
|
|
But, however few they be, I do not hesitate to align myself with
|
|
them as one who does not believe that the essential race problem
|
|
as it exists in the South (whatever it be in the North) is stated,
|
|
or even fairly indicated, in the foregoing answer. In Northern
|
|
and Western communities, where he is outnumbered by many thousands
|
|
of white people, the Negro may be accounted a problem, because he
|
|
is lazy, or ignorant, or brutal, or criminal, or all these things
|
|
together; or because he is black and different. But in Southern
|
|
communities, where the Negro is not outnumbered by many thousands
|
|
of white people, the race problem, essentially, and in its most
|
|
acute form, is something distinct from his laziness or ignorance,
|
|
or brutality, or criminality, or all-round intellectual and moral
|
|
inferiority to the white man. That problem as the South knows and
|
|
deals with it would exist, as certainly as it does to-day, if
|
|
there were no shadow of excuse for the conviction that the Negro
|
|
is more lazy, or more ignorant, or more criminal, or more brutal,
|
|
or more anything else he ought not to be, or less anything else he
|
|
ought to be, than other men. In other words, let it be supposed
|
|
that the average Negro is as a matter of fact the equal, morally
|
|
and intellectually, of the average white man of the same class,
|
|
and the race problem declines to vanish, declines to budge. We
|
|
shall see why, presently. The statements just made demand
|
|
immediate justification. For they are doubtless surprising to a
|
|
degree, and to some readers may prove startling.
|
|
|
|
I proceed to justify them as briefly as possible, asking the
|
|
reader to bear in mind that very much more might be said along
|
|
this line than I allow myself space to say.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
I
|
|
|
|
|
|
That the Negro is not a problem because he is lazy, because he
|
|
declines to work, is evidenced by the patent fact that in
|
|
virtually every Southern community he is sought as a laborer in
|
|
fields, mills, mines, and that in very many Southern communities
|
|
the vexing problem for employers is not too many, but too few
|
|
Negroes. In certain agricultural sections, notably in the
|
|
Louisiana sugar district, quite a number of Italians ("Dagoes")
|
|
are employed. The reason is not dissatisfaction with Negro labor,
|
|
but simply that there is not enough of it to meet the requirements
|
|
of the large plantations. There is, perhaps, not one of these
|
|
plantations on which any able-bodied Negro could not get
|
|
employment for the asking; and as a rule, the Negroes are given,
|
|
not the work which demands the lowest, but that which demands the
|
|
highest, efficiency: they are the ploughmen, the teamsters, the
|
|
foremen. If any one doubts that Negroes are wanted as laborers in
|
|
Southern communities, very much wanted, let him go to any such
|
|
community and attempt to inveigle a few dozen of the laziest away.
|
|
He will be likely to take his life in his hands, after the usual
|
|
warning is disregarded!
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
II
|
|
|
|
|
|
The small politician's trump-card, played early and late, and in
|
|
all seasons, that the Negro is a black shadow over the Southland
|
|
because of his excessive criminality, serves well the politician's
|
|
purpose,--it wins his game; but only because the game is played
|
|
and won on a board where fictions, not facts, are dominant.
|
|
Nothing is easier than to offer so-called proofs of the contention
|
|
that the Negro's tendency to crime is something peculiar to his
|
|
race; there are the jail and penitentiary and gallows statistics,
|
|
for instance. But surely it should not be difficult for these so-
|
|
called proofs to present themselves in their true light to any one
|
|
who takes the trouble to consider two weighty and conspicuous
|
|
facts: this, first, that the Negroes occupy everywhere in this
|
|
country the lowest social and industrial plane, the plane which
|
|
everywhere else supplies the jail, the penitentiary, the gallows,
|
|
with the greatest number of their victims; and secondly this, that
|
|
in the section of the country where these penal statistics are
|
|
gathered, all the machinery of justice is in the hands of white
|
|
men.
|
|
|
|
No Negro is a sheriff, or judge, or justice of the peace, or grand
|
|
or petit juryman, or member of a pardoning board. Charged with
|
|
crime, again and again, the black man must go to jail; he is
|
|
unable to give bond; he is defended, not by the ablest, but by the
|
|
poorest lawyers, often by an unwilling appointee of the court; he
|
|
lacks the benefit of that personal appeal to judge and jury, so
|
|
often enjoyed by other defendants, which would make them WANT to
|
|
believe him innocent until proven guilty; he faces, on the
|
|
contrary, a judge and jury who hold him in some measure of
|
|
contempt as a man, regardless of his guilt or innocence. He is
|
|
without means, except occasionally, to fight his case through
|
|
appeals to higher courts, and errors sleep in many a record that
|
|
on review would upset the verdict. In the light of such
|
|
considerations, it would seem impossible that criminal statistics
|
|
should not bear hard upon the Negro race, even supposing it to be
|
|
a fact that that race of all races in the world is the LEAST
|
|
criminal.
|
|
|
|
Let it be admitted without question that in most Southern
|
|
communities the crimes and misdemeanors of the Negroes exceed
|
|
those committed by an equal number of white people, and we have
|
|
admitted nothing that at all explains or accounts for the race
|
|
problem. For is it not equally true that in every other community
|
|
the doers of society's rough work, the recipients of its meagrest
|
|
rewards, are chargeable, relatively, with the greatest number of
|
|
crimes and misdemeanors? Is it not true, as well in Massachusetts
|
|
and Connecticut as in Louisiana and Mississippi, that the vast
|
|
majority of those occupying prison cells are members of the social
|
|
lowest class? that the vast majority condemned, after trial, to
|
|
hard labor with their hands were accustomed to such labor before
|
|
their judicial condemnation? Nothing is more preposterous than
|
|
the idea that the race problem means more Negroes hanged, more
|
|
Negroes imprisoned, more Negroes in mines and chain-gangs, than
|
|
white people! If the Negro did not furnish the great bulk of the
|
|
grist for the grinding of our penal machinery in the Southern
|
|
states, he would constitute the racial miracle of this and all
|
|
ages!
|
|
|
|
My own conviction is, and I speak with the experience of forty
|
|
years' residence in Southern states, that the Negro is not more
|
|
given to crimes and misdemeanors than the laboring population of
|
|
any other section of the country. But be this as it may, it is
|
|
abundantly certain that no race of people anywhere are more easily
|
|
controlled than the Negroes by the guardians of law and order; and
|
|
there are none anywhere so easily punished for disobedience to the
|
|
statutes and mandates of their economic superiors. Courts and
|
|
juries may be sometimes subject to just criticism for undue
|
|
leniency toward white defendants; but that courts and juries are
|
|
ever subject to just criticism for undue leniency in dealing with
|
|
black defendants is the sheerest nonsense.
|
|
|
|
The frequent charge that the Negro's worst crimes partake of a
|
|
brutality that is peculiarly racial, is not supported by facts. I
|
|
need not enlarge upon this statement further than to say that the
|
|
Negro's worst crimes, with all their shocking accompaniments, are,
|
|
not seldom, but often, duplicated by white men. Let any one who
|
|
doubts the statement observe for one week the criminal statistics
|
|
of any cosmopolitan newspaper, and he will have his doubt removed.
|
|
|
|
Assuredly we do not hit upon the essence of the race problem in
|
|
the Negro's propensity to crime!
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
III
|
|
|
|
|
|
Do we hit upon it in his ignorance, in the fact that an immense
|
|
number of the black people are illiterate, not knowing the first
|
|
from the last letter of the alphabet? Hardly. For, almost to a
|
|
man, the people who most parade and most rail at the race problem
|
|
in private conversation, on the political platform, and in the
|
|
pages of newspapers, books, and periodicals, are disposed rather
|
|
to lament, than to assist, the passing of the Negro's ignorance.
|
|
Ex-Governor Vardaman, of Mississippi, used the following language
|
|
in a message to the legislature of that state, January, 1906:--
|
|
|
|
"The startling facts revealed by the census show that those
|
|
[Negroes] who can read and write are more criminal than the
|
|
illiterate, which is true of no other element of our population. .
|
|
. . The state for many years, at great expense to the tax-payers,
|
|
has maintained a system of Negro education which has produced
|
|
disappointing results, and I am opposed to the perpetuation of
|
|
this system. My own idea is, that the character of education for
|
|
the Negro ought to be changed. If, after forty years of earnest
|
|
effort, and the expenditure of fabulous sums to educate his head,
|
|
we have only succeeded in making a criminal of him and impairing
|
|
his usefulness and efficiency as a laborer, wisdom would suggest
|
|
that we make another experiment and see if we cannot improve him
|
|
by educating his hand and his heart. . . . Slavery is the only
|
|
process by which he has ever been partially civilized. God
|
|
Almighty created the Negro for a menial, he is essentially a
|
|
servant."
|
|
|
|
This is the reply of an ex-governor of one of our blackest states
|
|
to those who contend that the negro is a problem, a "burden
|
|
carried by the white people of the South," because of his
|
|
ignorance and consequent inefficiency; and that the lightening of
|
|
the burden depends upon more money spent, more earnest efforts
|
|
made, for the schooling of the black people. According to this
|
|
ex-governor, and there are thousands who agree with him in and out
|
|
of Mississippi, the race problem is heightened, rather than
|
|
mitigated, by all attempts to increase the negro's intellectual
|
|
efficiency. The more ignorant he is, the less burdensome he is to
|
|
the white man, provided his heart be good, and his hands skillful
|
|
enough to do the service of a menial. Nothing but slavery ever
|
|
partially civilized him, nothing but slavery continued in some
|
|
form can civilize him further!
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
IV
|
|
|
|
|
|
If we listen vainly for the heart-throb of the race problem in the
|
|
Negro's laziness, and criminality, and brutality, and ignorance,
|
|
and inefficiency, do we detect it with clearness and certainty in
|
|
the personal aversion felt by the white people for the black
|
|
people, aversion which the white people can no more help feeling
|
|
than the black people can help exciting? Is this the real
|
|
trouble, the real burden, the real tragedy and sorrow of our white
|
|
population in those sections of the country where the Negroes are
|
|
many,--that they are compelled to dwell face to face, day by day,
|
|
with an inferior, degraded population, repulsive to their finer
|
|
sensibilities, obnoxious to them in countless ways inexplicable?
|
|
Facts are far from furnishing an affirmative answer. However
|
|
pronounced may be the feeling of personal aversion toward the
|
|
Negroes in Northern communities, where they are few, or known at
|
|
long range, or casually, there is no such thing in Southern
|
|
communities as personal aversion for the Negro pronounced enough
|
|
to be responsible for anything resembling a problem. How could
|
|
there be in the South, where from infancy we have all been as
|
|
familiar with black faces as with white; where many of us fell
|
|
asleep in the laps of black mammies, and had for playmates Ephrom,
|
|
Izik, Zeke, black mammy's grandchildren; where most of us have had
|
|
our meals prepared by black cooks, and been waited on by black
|
|
house-servants and dining-room servants, and ridden in carriages
|
|
and buggies with black hostlers? We are so used to the black
|
|
people in the South, their mere personal presence is so far from
|
|
being responsible for our race problem, that the South would not
|
|
seem Southern without them, as it would not without its crape
|
|
myrtles, and live-oaks, and magnolias, its cotton and its sugar-
|
|
cane!
|
|
|
|
It is very easy to go astray in regard to the matter of personal
|
|
aversion toward the members of alien races, to magnify greatly the
|
|
reality and importance of it. What seems race-aversion is
|
|
frequently something else, namely, revulsion aroused by the
|
|
presence of the strange, the unusual, the uncanny, the not-
|
|
understood. Such revulsion is aroused, not only by the members of
|
|
alien races, alien and unfamiliar, but as certainly by strange
|
|
animals of not more terrifying appearance than the well-loved cow
|
|
and horse; and it would be aroused as really and as painfully,
|
|
doubtless, by the sudden proximity of one of Milton's archangels.
|
|
It was not necessarily race-aversion which made Emerson, and may
|
|
have made many another Concord philosopher, uncomfortable in the
|
|
presence of a Negro, any more than it is race-aversion which makes
|
|
the Fifth Avenue boy run from the gentle farmyard cow; any more
|
|
than it is race-aversion which would make me uncomfortable in the
|
|
presence of Li Hung Chang. The Negro, simply, it may be, was a
|
|
mystery to Emerson, as the farmyard cow is a mystery to the Fifth
|
|
Avenue boy, as the Chinaman is a mystery to me.
|
|
|
|
The Negro is NOT a mystery to people whom he has nursed and waited
|
|
on, whose language he has spoken, whose ways, good and bad, he has
|
|
copied for generations; and his personal presence does not render
|
|
them uncomfortable, not, at any rate, uncomfortable enough to
|
|
beget the sense of a burden or a problem.
|
|
|
|
It may be very difficult for Northern readers, to whom the Negro
|
|
is in reality a stranger, a foreigner, to appreciate fully the
|
|
force of what has just been said; but appreciated by them it must
|
|
be, or they can never hope to realize the innermost meaning of the
|
|
race problem in the South.
|
|
|
|
|
|
So much for what the race problem is not. Let me without further
|
|
delay state what it is. The foundation of it, true or false, is
|
|
the white man's conviction that the Negro as a race, and as an
|
|
individual, is his inferior: not human in the sense that he is
|
|
human, not entitled to the exercise of human rights in the sense
|
|
that he is entitled to the exercise of them. The problem itself,
|
|
the essence of it, the heart of it, is the white man's
|
|
determination to make good this conviction, coupled with constant
|
|
anxiety lest, by some means, he should fail to make it good. The
|
|
race problem, in other words, is NOT that the Negro is what he is
|
|
in relation to the white man, the white man's inferior; but this,
|
|
rather: How to keep him what he is in relation to the white man;
|
|
how to prevent his ever achieving or becoming that which would
|
|
justify the belief on his part, or on the part of other people,
|
|
that he and the white man stand on common human ground.
|
|
|
|
That such is the heart of the problem should be made evident by
|
|
this general consideration alone: namely, that everywhere in the
|
|
South friction between the races is entirely absent so long as the
|
|
Negro justifies the white man's opinion of him as an inferior; is
|
|
grateful for privileges and lays no claim to RIGHTS. Let him seem
|
|
content to be as the South insists he shall be, and not only is he
|
|
not harshly treated, not abused, and never boycotted, but he is
|
|
shown much kindness and generosity, and employment awaits him for
|
|
the asking. Trouble brews when he begins to manifest those
|
|
qualities, to reveal those tastes, to give vent to those
|
|
ambitions, which are supposed to be characteristic exclusively of
|
|
the higher human type, and which, unless restrained, would result
|
|
in confounding the lower with the higher. The expression "Good
|
|
Nigger" means everywhere in the South a real Negro, from the
|
|
Southern standpoint, one who in no respect gets out of focus with
|
|
that standpoint; the expression "Bad Nigger" means universally one
|
|
who in some respect, not necessarily criminal, does get out of
|
|
focus with it. So, stated differently, the race problem is the
|
|
problem how to keep the Negro in focus with the traditional
|
|
standpoint.
|
|
|
|
But we are very far from needing to rely upon any general
|
|
consideration in support of the proposition advanced above. It is
|
|
supported by evidences on every hand, waiting only the eye of
|
|
recognition. Scarcely a day passes but something is said or done
|
|
with this end in view, to emphasize, lest they forget, the
|
|
conviction for both white man and Negro that the latter is and
|
|
must remain an inferior. Let me instance a few such evidences.
|
|
|
|
Consider, first, the "Jim Crow" legislation in the manner of its
|
|
enforcement. Such legislation is supposed to have for its object
|
|
the separation of the races in trains, street-cars, etc., to save
|
|
the white people from occasional contact with drunken, rowdy, ill-
|
|
smelling Negroes, and to prevent personal encounters between the
|
|
whites and blacks. How is this object attained in the street cars
|
|
of Southern cities? Members of the different races occupy the
|
|
same cars, separated only by absurdly inadequate little open-mesh
|
|
wire screens, so tiny and light that a conductor can move them
|
|
from one seat to another with the strength of his little finger.
|
|
Needless to add, these screens would serve to obscure neither
|
|
sound, sight, nor smell of drunken rowdies who sat behind them!
|
|
In summer cars black and white passengers may be separated not
|
|
even by a make-believe screen; they are simply required,
|
|
respectively, to occupy certain seats in the front or the back end
|
|
of the cars.
|
|
|
|
In Birmingham, Alabama, the front seats are assigned to Negroes in
|
|
all closed cars, and the back seats in all open ones. Why the
|
|
front seats in the one case, and the back seats in the other, it
|
|
is not easy to understand in the light of the letter and alleged
|
|
spirit of the Jim Crow law! The underlying purpose of the law is
|
|
clearly not the separation of the races in space; for public
|
|
sentiment does not insist upon its fulfillment to that end. The
|
|
underlying purpose of it would seem to be the separation of the
|
|
races in status. The doctrine of inequality would be attacked if
|
|
white and black passengers rode in public conveyances on equal
|
|
terms; therefore the Negro who rides in a public conveyance must
|
|
do so, not as of undoubted right, but as with the white man's
|
|
permission, subject to the white man's regulation. "This place
|
|
you may occupy, that other you may not, because I am I and you are
|
|
you, lest to you or me it should be obscured that I am I and you
|
|
are you." Such is the real spirit of the Jim Crow laws.
|
|
|
|
Why is it that in every Southern city no Negro is allowed to
|
|
witness a dramatic performance, or a baseball game, from a first-
|
|
class seat? In every large city, there are hundreds of Negroes
|
|
who would gladly pay for first-class seats at the theatre and the
|
|
baseball game, were they permitted to. It can hardly be that
|
|
permission is withheld because theatres and baseball games are so
|
|
well attended by half the population that first-class seats could
|
|
not be furnished for the other half. As a matter of fact,
|
|
theatre-auditoriums and baseball grand-stands are seldom crowded;
|
|
the rule is, not all first-class seats occupied, but many vacant.
|
|
Surely as simple as moving from seat to seat a make-shift screen
|
|
in a street-car, would it be to set apart a certain number of
|
|
seats in the dress-circle of every theatre, and in the grand-stand
|
|
of every baseball park, for Negro patrons. The reason why this is
|
|
not done is perfectly obvious: it would be intolerable to the
|
|
average Southern man or woman to sit through the hours of a
|
|
theatrical performance or a baseball game on terms of equal
|
|
accommodation with Negroes, even with a screen between. Negroes
|
|
would look out of place, out of status, in the dress circle or the
|
|
grand-stand; their place, signifying their status, is the peanut-
|
|
gallery, or the bleachers. There, neither they nor others will be
|
|
tempted to forget that as things are they must continue.
|
|
|
|
How shall we account for the "intense feeling" (to quote the
|
|
language of the mayor or New Orleans) occasioned in that city one
|
|
day, last July, when it was flashed over the wires that the first
|
|
prize in the National Spelling Contest had been won by a Negro
|
|
girl, in competition with white children from New Orleans and
|
|
other Southern cities? The indignation of at least one of the
|
|
leading New Orleans papers verged upon hysterics; the editor's
|
|
rhetoric visited upon some foulest crime could hardly have been
|
|
more inflamed than in denunciation of the fact that, on the far-
|
|
away shore of Lake Erie, New Orleans white children had competed
|
|
at a spelling bee with a Negro girl. The superintendent of the
|
|
New Orleans schools was roundly denounced in many quarters for
|
|
permitting his wards to compete with a Negro; and there were broad
|
|
hints in "Letters from the People" to the papers that his
|
|
resignation was in order.
|
|
|
|
Certainly in the days following the National Spelling Contest the
|
|
race problem was in evidence, if it ever was, in New Orleans and
|
|
the South! Did it show itself, then, as the problem of Negro
|
|
crime, or brutality, or laziness? Assuredly not! Of the Negro's
|
|
personal repulsiveness? By no means! There was no evidence of
|
|
Negro criminality, or brutality, or laziness in the Negro child's
|
|
victory; and every day in the South, in their games and otherwise,
|
|
hundreds of white children of the best families are in closer
|
|
personal contact with little Negroes than were the white children
|
|
who took part in the Cleveland spelling bee. The "intense
|
|
feeling" can be explained on one ground only: the Negro girl's
|
|
victory was an affront to the tradition of the Negro's
|
|
inferiority; it suggested--perhaps indicated--that, given equal
|
|
opportunities, all Negroes are not necessarily the intellectual
|
|
inferiors of all white people. What other explanation is
|
|
rationally conceivable? If the race problem means in the South to
|
|
its white inhabitants the burden and tragedy of having to dwell
|
|
face to face with an intellectually and morally backward people,
|
|
why should not the Negro girl's triumph have occasioned intense
|
|
feeling of pleasure, rather than displeasure, by its suggestion
|
|
that her race is not intellectually hopeless?
|
|
|
|
Consider further that while no Negro, no matter what his
|
|
occupation, or personal refinement, or intellectual culture, or
|
|
moral character, is allowed to travel in a Pullman car between
|
|
state lines, or to enter as a guest a hotel patronized by white
|
|
people, the blackest of Negro nurses and valets are given food and
|
|
shelter in all first-class hotels, and occasion neither disgust,
|
|
nor surprise in the Pullman cars. Here again the heart of the
|
|
race problem is laid bare. The black nurse with a white baby in
|
|
her arms, the black valet looking after the comfort of a white
|
|
invalid, have the label of their inferiority conspicuously upon
|
|
them; they understand themselves, and everybody understands them,
|
|
to be servants, enjoying certain privileges for the sake of the
|
|
person served. Almost anything, the Negro may do in the South,
|
|
and anywhere he may go, provided the manner of his doing and his
|
|
doing is that of an inferior. Such is the premium put upon his
|
|
inferiority; such his inducement to maintain it.
|
|
|
|
The point here insisted on may be made clearer, if already it is
|
|
not clear enough, by this consideration, that the man who would
|
|
lose social caste for dining with an Irish street-sweeper might be
|
|
congratulated for dining with an Irish educator; but President
|
|
Roosevelt would scarcely have given greater offense by
|
|
entertaining a Negro laborer at the White House than he gave by
|
|
inviting to lunch there the Principal of Tuskegee Institute. The
|
|
race problem being what it is, the status of any Negro is
|
|
logically the status of every other. There are recognizable
|
|
degrees of inferiority among Negroes themselves; some are vastly
|
|
superior to others. But there is only one degree of inferiority
|
|
separating the Negro from the white person, attached to all
|
|
Negroes alike. The logic of the situation requires that to be any
|
|
sort of black man is to be inferior to any sort of white man; and
|
|
from this logic there is no departure in the South.
|
|
|
|
Inconsistent, perhaps, with what has been said may seem the defeat
|
|
in the Louisiana Legislature (1908) of the anti-miscegenation
|
|
bill, a measure designed to prohibit sexual cohabitation between
|
|
white persons and Negroes; to be specific, between white men and
|
|
Negro women. But there was no inconsistency whatever in the
|
|
defeat of that bill. In all times and places, the status of that
|
|
portion of the female population, Lecky's martyred "priestesses of
|
|
humanity," whose existence men have demanded for the gratification
|
|
of unlawful passion, has been that of social outcasts. They have
|
|
no rights that they can insist upon; they are simply privileged to
|
|
exist by society's permission, and may be any moment legislated
|
|
out of their vocation. Hence the defeat of an anti-miscegenation
|
|
measure by Southern legislators cannot be construed as a failure
|
|
on their part to live up to their conviction of race-superiority.
|
|
It must be construed, rather, as legislative unwillingness to
|
|
restrict the white man's liberty; to dictate by statute the kind
|
|
of social outcast which he may use as a mere means to the
|
|
gratification of his passion. To concede to Negro women the
|
|
status of a degraded and proscribed class, is not in any sense to
|
|
overlook or obscure their racial inferiority, but on the contrary,
|
|
it may be, to emphasize it. Precisely the same principle, in a
|
|
word, compasses the defeat of an anti-miscegenation bill which
|
|
would compass the defeat of a measure to prohibit Negro servants
|
|
from occupying seats in Pullman cars.
|
|
|
|
At the risk of reiteration, I must in concluding this article take
|
|
sharp issue with the view of a recent very able writer, who asks
|
|
the question, "What, essentially, is the Race Problem?" and
|
|
answers it thus: "The race problem is the problem of living with
|
|
human beings who are not like us, whether they are in our
|
|
estimation our 'superiors' or inferiors, whether they have kinky
|
|
hair or pigtails, whether they are slant-eyed, hook-nosed, or
|
|
thick-lipped. In its essence, it is the same problem, magnified,
|
|
which besets every neighborhood, even every family."
|
|
|
|
I have contended so far, and I here repeat, that the race problem
|
|
is essentially NOT what this writer declares it to be. It is
|
|
emphatically not, in the South, "the problem of living with human
|
|
beings who are not like us, whether they are in our estimation our
|
|
superiors or inferiors." It may be, it probably is, that in the
|
|
North, where the Negro is largely a stranger, a foreigner, very
|
|
much to the same degree that the Chinese are strangers and
|
|
foreigners in the South; and where, consequently, the Negro's
|
|
personal repulsiveness is a much more significant force than it is
|
|
in the South. Assuredly there would be no race problem, anywhere,
|
|
were there no contact with others unlike ourselves! The
|
|
unlikeness of the unlike is everywhere its indispensable
|
|
foundation. But we get nowhither unless we carefully distinguish
|
|
between the foundation of the problem and the problem itself.
|
|
There is nothing in the unlikeness of the unlike that is
|
|
necessarily problematical; it may be simply accepted and dealt
|
|
with as a fact, like any other fact. The problem arises only when
|
|
the people of one race are minded to adopt and act upon some
|
|
policy more or less oppressive or repressive in dealing with the
|
|
people of another race. In the absence of some such policy, there
|
|
has never been a race problem since the world began. It is the
|
|
existence of such a policy become traditional, and supported by
|
|
immovable conviction, which constitutes the race problem of the
|
|
Southern states.
|
|
|
|
There was an immensely tragic race problem distressing the South
|
|
fifty years ago; but who will suggest that it was the problem of
|
|
"living with human beings who are not like us?" The problem then
|
|
was, clearly, how to make good a certain conviction concerning the
|
|
unlike, how to maintain a certain policy in dealing with them.
|
|
What else is it today? The problem, How to maintain the
|
|
institution of chattel slavery, ceased to be at Appomattox; the
|
|
problem, How to maintain the social, industrial, and civic
|
|
inferiority of the descendants of chattel slaves, succeeded it,
|
|
and is the race problem of the South at the present time. There
|
|
is no other.
|
|
|
|
Whether the policy adopted by the white South, and supported, as I
|
|
have said, by immovable conviction, is expedient or inexpedient,
|
|
wise or unwise, righteous or unrighteous, these are questions
|
|
which I have not sought to answer one way or another in this
|
|
article. Perhaps they cannot be answered at all in our time.
|
|
Certain is it, that their only real and satisfactory answer will
|
|
be many years ahead of the present generation.
|
|
|
|
In the mean time, nothing could be more unwarranted, than to
|
|
suppose that the race problem of one section of this country is
|
|
peculiar to that section, because its white inhabitants are
|
|
themselves in some sense peculiar; because they are peculiarly
|
|
prejudiced, because they are peculiarly behind the hour which the
|
|
high clock of civilization has struck. Remove the white
|
|
inhabitants of the South, give their place to the white people of
|
|
any other section of the United States, and, beyond a
|
|
peradventure, the Southern race problem, as I have defined it,
|
|
would continue to be--revealed, perhaps, in ways more perplexing,
|
|
more intense and tragic.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
NEGRO SUFFRAGE IN A DEMOCRACY
|
|
by Ray Stannard Baker
|
|
|
|
|
|
In this paper I endeavor to lay down the fundamental principles
|
|
which should govern the Negro franchise in a democracy, and to
|
|
outline a practical programme for the immediate treatment of the
|
|
problem.
|
|
|
|
As I see it, the question of Negro suffrage in the United States
|
|
presents two distinct aspects:--
|
|
|
|
FIRST: the legal aspect.
|
|
|
|
SECOND: the practical aspect.
|
|
|
|
It will be admitted, I think, without argument, that all
|
|
governments do and of a necessity must exercise the right to limit
|
|
the number of people who are permitted to take part in the weighty
|
|
responsibilities of the suffrage. Some governments allow only a
|
|
few men to vote; in an absolute monarchy there is only one voter;
|
|
other governments, as they become more democratic, permit a larger
|
|
proportion of the people to vote.
|
|
|
|
Our own government is one of the freest in the world in the matter
|
|
of suffrage; and yet we bar out, in most states, all women; we bar
|
|
out Mongolians, no matter how intelligent; we bar out Indians, and
|
|
all foreigners who have not passed through a certain probationary
|
|
stage and have not acquired a certain small amount of education.
|
|
We also declare--for an arbitrary limit must be placed somewhere--
|
|
that no person under twenty-one years of age may exercise the
|
|
right to vote, although some boys of eighteen are to-day better
|
|
equipped to pass intelligently upon public questions than many
|
|
grown men. We even place adult white men on probation until they
|
|
have resided for a certain length of time, often as much as two
|
|
years, in the state or the town where they wish to cast their
|
|
ballots. Our registration and ballot laws eliminate hundreds of
|
|
thousands of voters; and finally, we bar out everywhere the
|
|
defective and criminal classes of our population. We do not
|
|
realize, sometimes, I think, how limited the franchise really is,
|
|
even in America. We forget that out of nearly ninety million
|
|
people in the United States, fewer than fifteen million cast their
|
|
votes for President in 1908--or about one in every six.
|
|
|
|
Thus the practice of a restricted suffrage is very deeply
|
|
implanted in our system of government. It is everywhere
|
|
recognized that even in a democracy lines must be drawn, and that
|
|
the ballot, the precious instrument of government, must be hedged
|
|
about with stringent regulations. The question is, where shall
|
|
these lines be drawn in order that the best interests, not of any
|
|
particular class, but of the whole nation, shall be served.
|
|
|
|
Upon this question, we, as free citizens, have the absolute right
|
|
to agree or disagree with the present laws regulating suffrage;
|
|
and if we want more people brought in as partakers in government,
|
|
or some people who are already in, barred out, we have a right to
|
|
organize, to agitate, to do our best to change the laws. Powerful
|
|
organizations of women are now agitating for the right to vote;
|
|
there is an organization which demands the suffrage for Chinese
|
|
and Japanese who wish to become citizens. It is even conceivable
|
|
that a society might be founded to lower the suffrage age-limit
|
|
from twenty-one to nineteen years, thereby endowing a large number
|
|
of young men with the privileges, and therefore the educational
|
|
responsibilities, of political power. On the other hand, a large
|
|
number of people, chiefly in our Southern States, earnestly
|
|
believe that the right of the Negro to vote should be curtailed,
|
|
or even abolished.
|
|
|
|
Thus we disagree, and government is the resultant of all these
|
|
diverse views and forces. No one can say dogmatically how far
|
|
democracy should go in distributing the enormously important
|
|
powers of active government. Democracy is not a dogma; it is not
|
|
even a dogma of free suffrage. Democracy is a life, a spirit, a
|
|
growth. The primal necessity of any sort of government, democracy
|
|
or otherwise, whether it be more unjust or less unjust toward
|
|
special groups of its citizens, is to exist, to be a going
|
|
concern, to maintain upon the whole a stable and peaceful
|
|
administration of affairs. If a democracy cannot provide such
|
|
stability, then the people go back to some form of oligarchy.
|
|
Having secured a fair measure of stability, a democracy proceeds
|
|
with caution toward the extension of the suffrage to more and more
|
|
people--trying foreigners, trying women, trying Negroes.
|
|
|
|
And no one can prophesy how far a democracy will ultimately go in
|
|
the matter of suffrage. We know only the tendency. We know that
|
|
in the beginning, even in America, the right to vote was a very
|
|
limited matter. In the early years, in New England, only church-
|
|
members voted; then the franchise was extended to include
|
|
property-owners; then it was enlarged to include all white adults;
|
|
then to include Negroes; then, in several Western States, to
|
|
include women.
|
|
|
|
Thus the line has been constantly advancing, but with many
|
|
fluctuations, eddies, and back-currents--like any other stream of
|
|
progress. At the present time the fundamental principles which
|
|
underlie popular government, and especially the whole matter of
|
|
popular suffrage, are much in the public mind. The tendency of
|
|
government throughout the entire civilized world is strongly in
|
|
the direction of placing more and more power in the hands of the
|
|
people. In our own country we are enacting a remarkable group of
|
|
laws providing for direct primaries in the nomination of public
|
|
officials, for direct election of United States Senators, and for
|
|
direct legislation by means of the initiative and referendum; and
|
|
we are even going to the point, in many cities, of permitting the
|
|
people to recall an elected official who is unsatisfactory. The
|
|
principle of local option, which is nothing but that of direct
|
|
government by the people, is being everywhere accepted. All these
|
|
changes affect, fundamentally, the historic structure of our
|
|
government, making it less republican and more democratic.
|
|
|
|
Still more important and far-reaching in its significance is the
|
|
tendency of our government, especially our Federal Government, to
|
|
regulate or to appropriate great groups of business enterprises
|
|
formerly left wholly in private hands. More and more, private
|
|
business is becoming public business.
|
|
|
|
Now, then, as the weight of responsibility upon the popular vote
|
|
is increased, it becomes more and more important that the ballot
|
|
should be jealously guarded and honestly exercised. In the last
|
|
few years, therefore, a series of extraordinary new precautions
|
|
have been adopted: the Australian ballot, more stringent
|
|
registration systems, the stricter enforcement of naturalization
|
|
laws to prevent the voting of crowds of unprepared foreigners, and
|
|
the imposition by several states, rightly or wrongly, of
|
|
educational and property tests. It becomes a more and more
|
|
serious matter every year to be an American citizen, more of an
|
|
honor, more of a duty.
|
|
|
|
At the close of the Civil War, in a time of intense idealistic
|
|
emotion, some three-quarters of a million of Negroes, the mass of
|
|
them densely ignorant and just out of slavery, with the iron of
|
|
slavery still in their souls, were suddenly given the political
|
|
rights of free citizens. A great many people, and not in the
|
|
South alone, thought then, and still think, that it was a mistake
|
|
to bestow the high powers and privileges of a wholly unrestricted
|
|
ballot--a ballot which is the symbol of intelligent self-
|
|
government--upon the Negro. Other people, of whom I am one,
|
|
believe that it was a necessary concomitant of the revolution; it
|
|
was itself a revolution, not a growth, and like every other
|
|
revolution it has had its fearful reaction. Revolutions, indeed,
|
|
change names, but they do not at once change human relationships.
|
|
Mankind is reconstructed not by proclamations, or legislation, or
|
|
military occupation, but by time, growth, education, religion,
|
|
thought. At that time, then, the nation drove down the stakes of
|
|
its idealism in government far beyond the point it was able to
|
|
reach in the humdrum activities of everyday existence. A reaction
|
|
was inevitable; it was inevitable and perfectly natural that there
|
|
should be a widespread questioning as to whether all Negroes, or
|
|
indeed any Negroes, should properly be admitted to full political
|
|
fellowship. That questioning continues to this day.
|
|
|
|
Now, the essential principle established by the Fifteenth
|
|
Amendment to the Constitution was not that all Negroes should
|
|
necessarily be given an unrestricted access to the ballot; but
|
|
that the right to vote should not be denied or abridged 'on
|
|
account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude.' This
|
|
amendment wiped out the color-line in politics so far as any
|
|
written law could possibly do it.
|
|
|
|
Let me here express my profound conviction that the principle of
|
|
political equality then laid down is a sound, valid, and
|
|
absolutely essential principle in any free government; that
|
|
restrictions upon the ballot, when necessary, should be made to
|
|
apply equally to white and colored citizens; and that the
|
|
Fifteenth Amendment ought not to be, and cannot be repealed.
|
|
Moreover, I am convinced that the principle of political equality
|
|
is more firmly established to-day in this country than it was
|
|
forty years ago, when it had only Northern bayonets behind it.
|
|
For now, however short the practice falls of reaching the legal
|
|
standard, the principle is woven into the warp and woof of
|
|
Southern life and Southern legislation. Many Southern white
|
|
leaders of thought are to-day CONVINCED, not FORCED believers in
|
|
the principle; and that is a great omen.
|
|
|
|
Limitations have come about, it is true, and were to be expected
|
|
as the back-currents of the revolution. Laws providing for
|
|
educational and property qualifications as a prerequisite to the
|
|
exercise of the suffrage have been passed in all the Southern
|
|
States, and have operated to exclude from the ballot large numbers
|
|
of both white and colored citizens, who on account of ignorance or
|
|
poverty are unable to meet the tests. These provisions, whatever
|
|
the opinion entertained as to the wisdom of such laws, are well
|
|
within the principle laid down by the Fifteenth Amendment. But
|
|
several Southern States have gone a step further, and by means of
|
|
the so-called 'grandfather laws,' have exempted certain ignorant
|
|
white men from the necessity of meeting the educational and
|
|
property tests. These unfair 'grandfather laws,' however, in some
|
|
of the states adopting them, have now expired by limitation.
|
|
|
|
Let me then lay down this general proposition:--
|
|
|
|
Nowhere in the South to-day is the Negro cut off LEGALLY, as a
|
|
Negro, from the ballot. Legally, to-day, any Negro who can meet
|
|
the comparatively slight requirements as to education, or
|
|
property, or both, can cast his ballot on a basis of equality with
|
|
the white man. I have emphasized the word legally, for I know the
|
|
PRACTICAL difficulties which confront the Negro votes in many
|
|
parts of the South. The point I wish to make is that legally the
|
|
Negro is essentially the political equal of the white man; but
|
|
that practically, in the enforcement of the law, the legislative
|
|
ideal is still pegged out far beyond the actual performance.
|
|
|
|
Now, then, if we are interested in the problem of democracy, we
|
|
have two courses open to us. We may think the laws are unjust to
|
|
the Negro, and incidentally to the 'poor white' man as well. If
|
|
we do, we have a perfect right to agitate for changes; and we can
|
|
do much to disclose, without heat, the actual facts regarding the
|
|
complicated and vexatious legislative situation in the South, as
|
|
regards the suffrage. Every change in the legislation upon this
|
|
subject should, indeed, be jealously watched, that the principle
|
|
of political equality between the races be not legally curtailed.
|
|
The doctrine laid down in the Fifteenth Amendment must, at any
|
|
hazard, be maintained.
|
|
|
|
But, personally,--and I am here voicing a profound conviction,--I
|
|
think our emphasis at present should be laid upon the practical
|
|
rather than upon the legal aspect of the problem; I think we
|
|
should take advantage of the widely prevalent feeling in the South
|
|
that the question of suffrage has been settled, legally, for some
|
|
time to come: of the desire on the part of many Southern people,
|
|
both white and colored, to turn aside from the discussion of the
|
|
political status of the Negro.
|
|
|
|
In short, let us for the time being accept the laws as they are,
|
|
and build upward from that point. Let us turn our attention to
|
|
the practical task of finding out why it is that the laws we
|
|
already have are not enforced, and how best to secure an honest
|
|
vote for every Negro and equally for every 'poor white' man, who
|
|
is able to meet the requirements, but who for one reason or
|
|
another does not or cannot now exercise his rights. I include the
|
|
disfranchised white man as well as the Negro, because I take it
|
|
that we are interested, first of all, in democracy, and unless we
|
|
can arouse the spirit of democracy, South and North, we can hope
|
|
for justice neither for Negroes, nor for the poorer class of white
|
|
men, nor for the women of the factories and shops, nor for the
|
|
children of the cottonmills.
|
|
|
|
Taking up this side of the problem we shall discover two entirely
|
|
distinct difficulties:--
|
|
|
|
First, we shall find many Negroes, and indeed hundreds of
|
|
thousands of white men as well, who might vote, but who, through
|
|
ignorance, or inability or unwillingness to pay the poll-taxes, or
|
|
from mere lack of interest, disfranchise themselves.
|
|
|
|
The second difficulty is peculiar to the Negro. It consists in
|
|
open or concealed intimidation on the part of the white men who
|
|
control the election machinery. In many places in the South to-
|
|
day no Negro, how well qualified, would dare to present himself
|
|
for registration; when he does, he is rejected for some trivial or
|
|
illegal reason.
|
|
|
|
Thus we have to meet a vast amount of apathy and ignorance and
|
|
poverty on the one hand, and the threat of intimidation on the
|
|
other.
|
|
|
|
First of all, for it is the chief injustice as between white and
|
|
colored men with which we have to deal,--an injustice which the
|
|
law already makes illegal and punishable,--how shall we meet the
|
|
matter of intimidation? As I have already said, the door of the
|
|
suffrage is everywhere legally open to the Negro, but a certain
|
|
sort of Southerner bars the passage-way. He stands there and, law
|
|
or no law, keeps out many Negroes who might vote; and he
|
|
represents in most parts of the South the prevailing public
|
|
opinion.
|
|
|
|
Shall we meet this situation by force? What force is available?
|
|
Shall the North go down and fight the South? You and I know that
|
|
the North to-day has no feeling but friendship for the South.
|
|
More than that--and I say it with all seriousness, because it
|
|
represents what I have heard wherever I have gone in the North to
|
|
make inquiries regarding the Negro problem--the North, wrongly or
|
|
rightly, is to-day more than half convinced that the South is
|
|
right in imposing some measure of limitation upon the franchise.
|
|
There is now, in short, no disposition anywhere in the North to
|
|
interfere in internal affairs in the South--not even with the
|
|
force of public opinion.
|
|
|
|
What other force, then, is to be invoked? Shall the Negro revolt?
|
|
Shall he migrate? Shall he prosecute his case in the courts? The
|
|
very asking of these questions suggests the inevitable reply.
|
|
|
|
We might as well, here and now, dismiss the idea of force, express
|
|
or implied. There are times of last resort which call for force;
|
|
but this is not such a time.
|
|
|
|
What other alternatives are there?
|
|
|
|
Accepting the laws as they are, then, there are two methods of
|
|
procedure, neither sensational nor exciting. I have no quick cure
|
|
to suggest, but only old and tried methods of commonplace growth.
|
|
|
|
The underlying causes of the trouble in the country being plainly
|
|
ignorance and prejudice, we must meet ignorance and prejudice with
|
|
their antidotes, education and association.
|
|
|
|
Every effort should be made to extend free education among both
|
|
Negroes and white people. A great extension of education is now
|
|
going forward in the South. The Negro is not by any means getting
|
|
his full share; but, as certainly as sunshine makes things grow,
|
|
education in the South will produce tolerance. That there is
|
|
already such a growing tolerance no one who has talked with the
|
|
leading white men in the South can doubt. The old fire-eating,
|
|
Negro-baiting leaders of the Tillman-Vardaman type are swiftly
|
|
passing away: a far better and broader group is coming into power.
|
|
|
|
In his last book, Mr. Edgar Gardner Murphy, of Alabama, expresses
|
|
this new point of view when he says,--
|
|
|
|
'There is no question here as to the unrestricted admission [to
|
|
the ballot] of the great masses of our ignorant and semi-ignorant
|
|
blacks. I know no advocate of such admission. But the question
|
|
is as to whether the individuals of the race, upon conditions or
|
|
restrictions legally imposed and fairly administered, shall be
|
|
admitted to adequate and increasing representation in the
|
|
electorate. And as that question is more seriously and more
|
|
generally considered, many of the leading publicists of the South,
|
|
I am glad to say, are quietly resolved that the answer shall be in
|
|
the affirmative.'
|
|
|
|
From an able Southern white man, a resident of New Orleans, I
|
|
received recently a letter containing these words:--
|
|
|
|
'I believe we have reached the bottom, and a sort of quiescent
|
|
period. I think it most likely that from now on there will be a
|
|
gradual increase of the Negro vote. And I honestly believe that
|
|
the less said about it, the surer the increase will be.'
|
|
|
|
Education--and by education I mean education of all sorts,
|
|
industrial, professional, classical, in accordance with each man's
|
|
talents--will not only produce breadth and tolerance, but will
|
|
help to cure the apathy which now keeps so many thousands of both
|
|
white men and Negroes from the polls: for it will show them that
|
|
it is necessary for every man to exercise all the political rights
|
|
within his reach. If he fails voluntarily to take advantage of
|
|
the rights he already has, how shall he acquire more rights?
|
|
|
|
And as ignorance must be met by education, so prejudice must be
|
|
met with its antidote, which is association. Democracy does not
|
|
consist in mere voting, but in association, the spirit of common
|
|
effort, of which the ballot is a mere visible expression. When we
|
|
come to know one another we soon find that the points of likeness
|
|
are much more numerous than the points of difference. And this
|
|
human association for the common good, which is democracy, is
|
|
difficult to bring about anywhere, whether among different classes
|
|
of white people, or between white people and Negroes. As one of
|
|
the leaders of the Negro race, Dr. Du Bois, has said,--
|
|
|
|
'Herein lies the tragedy of the age. Not that men are poor: all
|
|
men know something of poverty. Not that men are wicked: who is
|
|
good? Not that men are ignorant: what is truth? Nay, but that
|
|
men know so little of each other.'
|
|
|
|
After the Atlanta riot I attended a number of conferences between
|
|
leading white men and leading colored men. It is true those
|
|
meetings bore evidence of awkwardness and embarrassment, for they
|
|
were among the first of the sort to take place in the South, but
|
|
they were none the less valuable. A white man told me after one
|
|
of the meetings,--
|
|
|
|
'I did not know that there were any such sensible Negroes in the
|
|
South.'
|
|
|
|
And a Negro told me that it was the first time in his life that he
|
|
had ever heard a Southern white man reason in a friendly way with
|
|
a Negro concerning their common difficulties.
|
|
|
|
More and more these associations of white and colored men, at
|
|
certain points of contact, must and will come about. Already, in
|
|
connection with various educational and business projects in the
|
|
South, white and colored men meet on common grounds, and the way
|
|
has been opened to a wider mutual understanding. And it is common
|
|
enough now, where it was unheard of a few years ago, for both
|
|
white men and Negroes to speak from the same platform in the
|
|
South. I have attended a number of such meetings. Thus slowly--
|
|
awkwardly, at first, for two centuries of prejudice are not
|
|
immediately overcome--the white man and Negro will come to know
|
|
one another, not merely as master and servant, but as co-workers.
|
|
These things cannot be forced.
|
|
|
|
One reason why the white man and the Negro have not got together
|
|
more rapidly in the South than they have, is because they have
|
|
tried always to meet at the sorest points. When sensible people,
|
|
who must live together whether or no, find that there are points
|
|
at which they cannot agree, it is the part of wisdom to avoid
|
|
these points, and to meet upon other and common interests. Upon
|
|
no other terms, indeed, can a democracy exist, for in no
|
|
imaginable future state will individuals cease to disagree with
|
|
one another upon something less than half of all the problems of
|
|
life.
|
|
|
|
'Here we all live together in a great country,' say the apostles
|
|
of this view; 'let us all get together and develop it. Let the
|
|
Negro do his best to educate himself, to own his own land, and to
|
|
buy and sell with the white people in the fairest possible way.'
|
|
|
|
It is wonderful, indeed, how close together men who are stooping
|
|
to a common task soon come.
|
|
|
|
Now, buying and selling, land ownership and common material
|
|
pursuits, may not be the highest points of contact between man and
|
|
man, but they are real points, and help to give men an idea of the
|
|
worth of their fellows, white or black. How many times, in the
|
|
South, I heard white men speak in high admiration of some Negro
|
|
farmer who had been successful, or of some Negro blacksmith who
|
|
was a worthy citizen, or of some Negro doctor who was a leader of
|
|
his race.
|
|
|
|
It is curious, once a man (any man, white or black) learns to do
|
|
his job well, how he finds himself in a democratic relationship
|
|
with other men. I remember asking a prominent white citizen of a
|
|
town in Central Georgia if he knew anything about Tuskegee. He
|
|
said,--
|
|
|
|
'Yes: I had rather a curious experience last fall. I was building
|
|
a hotel and couldn't get any one to do the plastering as I wanted
|
|
it done. One day I saw two Negro plasterers at work in a new
|
|
house that a friend of mine was building. I watched them for an
|
|
hour. They seemed to know their trade. I invited them to come
|
|
over and see me. They came, took the contract for my work, hired
|
|
a white man to carry mortar at a dollar a day, and when they got
|
|
through it was the best job of plastering in town. I found that
|
|
they had learned their trade at Tuskegee. They averaged four
|
|
dollars a day each in wages. We tried to get them to locate in
|
|
our town, but they went back to school.'
|
|
|
|
When I was in Mississippi a prominent banker showed me his
|
|
business letter-heads.
|
|
|
|
'Good job, isn't it?' he said. 'A Negro printer did it. He wrote
|
|
to me asking if he might bid on my work. I replied that although
|
|
I had known him a long time I couldn't give him the job merely
|
|
because he was a Negro. He told me to forget his color, and said
|
|
that if he couldn't do as good a job and do it as reasonably as
|
|
any white man could, he didn't want it. I let him try, and now he
|
|
does most of our printing.'
|
|
|
|
Out of such points of contact, then, encouraged by such wise
|
|
leaders as Booker T. Washington, will grow an ever finer and finer
|
|
spirit of association and of common and friendly knowledge. And
|
|
that will inevitably lead to an extension upon the soundest
|
|
possible basis of the Negro franchise. I know cases where white
|
|
men have urged intelligent Negroes to come and cast their ballots,
|
|
and have stood sponsor for them, out of genuine respect. As a
|
|
result, to-day, the Negroes who vote in the South are, as a class,
|
|
men of substance and intelligence, fully equal to the tasks of
|
|
citizenship.
|
|
|
|
Thus, I have boundless confidence not only in the sense of the
|
|
white men of the South, but in the innate capability of the Negro,
|
|
and that once these two come really to know each other, not at
|
|
sore points of contact, but as common workers for a common
|
|
country, the question of suffrage will gradually solve itself
|
|
along the lines of true democracy.
|
|
|
|
Another influence also will tend to change the status of the Negro
|
|
as a voter. That is the pending break-up of the political
|
|
solidarity of the South. All the signs point to a political
|
|
realignment upon new issues in this country, both South and North.
|
|
Old party names may even pass away. And that break-up, with the
|
|
attendant struggle for votes, is certain to bring into politics
|
|
thousands of Negroes and white men now disfranchised. The result
|
|
of a real division on live issues has been shown in many local
|
|
contests in the South, as in the fight against the saloons, when
|
|
every qualified Negro voter, and every Negro who could qualify,
|
|
was eagerly pushed forward by one side or the other. With such a
|
|
division on new issues the Negro will tend to exercise more and
|
|
more political power, dividing, not on the color line, but on the
|
|
principles at stake.
|
|
|
|
Thus in spite of the difficulties which now confront the Negro, I
|
|
cannot but look upon the situation in a spirit of optimism. I
|
|
think sometimes we are tempted to set a higher value upon the
|
|
ritual of a belief than upon the spirit which underlies it. The
|
|
ballot is not democracy: it is merely the symbol or ritual of
|
|
democracy, and it may be full of passionate social, yes, even
|
|
religious significance, or it may be a mere empty and dangerous
|
|
formalism. What we should look to, then, primarily, is not the
|
|
shadow, but the substance of democracy in this country. Nor must
|
|
we look for results too swiftly; our progress toward democracy is
|
|
slow of growth and needs to be cultivated with patience and
|
|
watered with faith.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
BIBLIOGRAPHY OF SOURCES
|
|
-----------------------
|
|
|
|
SOJOURNER TRUTH, THE LIBYAN SIBYL
|
|
by Harriet Beecher Stowe
|
|
Atlantic Monthly 11 (April 1863): 473-481.
|
|
|
|
RECONSTRUCTION
|
|
by Frederick Douglass
|
|
Atlantic Monthly 18 (1866): 761-765.
|
|
|
|
AN APPEAL TO CONGRESS FOR IMPARTIAL SUFFRAGE
|
|
by Frederick Douglas
|
|
Atlantic Monthly 19 (Jan. 1867): 112-117.
|
|
|
|
THE NEGRO EXODUS
|
|
by James B. Runnion
|
|
Atlantic Monthly 44 (1879): 222-230.
|
|
|
|
MY ESCAPE FROM SLAVERY
|
|
by Frederick Douglass
|
|
The Century Illustrated Magazine 23, n.s. 1 (Nov. 1881): 125-131.
|
|
|
|
THE GOOPHERED GRAPEVINE
|
|
by Charles W. Chesnutt
|
|
Atlantic Monthly 60 (Aug. 1887): 254-260.
|
|
|
|
PO' SANDY
|
|
by Charles W. Chesnutt
|
|
Atlantic Monthly 61 (1888): 605-611.
|
|
|
|
DAVE'S NECKLISS
|
|
by Charles W. Chesnutt
|
|
Atlantic Monthly 64 (1889): 500-08.
|
|
|
|
THE AWAKENING OF THE NEGRO
|
|
by Booker T. Washington
|
|
Atlantic Monthly 78 (1896): 322-328.
|
|
|
|
THE STORY OF UNCLE TOM'S CABIN
|
|
by Charles Dudley Warner
|
|
Atlantic Monthly 78 (1896): 311-321.
|
|
|
|
STRIVINGS OF THE NEGRO PEOPLE
|
|
by W. E. Burghardt Du Bois
|
|
Atlantic Monthly 80 (1897): 194-198.
|
|
|
|
THE WIFE OF HIS YOUTH
|
|
by Charles W. Chesnutt
|
|
Atlantic Monthly 82 (1898): 55-61.
|
|
|
|
THE BOUQUET
|
|
by Charles W. Chesnutt
|
|
Atlantic Monthly 84 (1899): 648-654.
|
|
|
|
THE CASE OF THE NEGRO
|
|
by Booker T. Washington
|
|
Atlantic Monthly 84 (1899): 577-587.
|
|
|
|
HOT-FOOT HANNIBAL
|
|
by Charles W. Chesnutt
|
|
Atlantic Monthly 83 (1899): 49-56.
|
|
|
|
A NEGRO SCHOOLMASTER IN THE NEW SOUTH
|
|
by W. E. Burghardt Du Bois
|
|
Atlantic Monthly 83 (1899): 99-104.
|
|
|
|
THE CAPTURE OF A SLAVER
|
|
by J. Taylor Wood
|
|
Atlantic Monthly 86 (1900): 451-463.
|
|
|
|
MR. CHARLES W. CHESNUTT'S STORIES
|
|
by W. D. Howells
|
|
Atlantic Monthly 85 (1900): 699-701.
|
|
|
|
PATHS OF HOPE FOR THE NEGRO
|
|
PRACTICAL SUGGESTIONS OF A SOUTHERNER
|
|
by Jerome Dowd
|
|
Century Magazine 61.2 (Dec. 1900): 278-281.
|
|
|
|
SIGNS OF PROGRESS AMONG THE NEGROES
|
|
by Booker T. Washington
|
|
Century Magazine 59 (1900): 472-478.
|
|
|
|
THE MARCH OF PROGRESS
|
|
by Charles W. Chesnutt
|
|
Century Magazine 61.3 (Jan. 1901): 422-428.
|
|
|
|
THE FREEDMEN'S BUREAU
|
|
by W. E. Burghardt Du Bois
|
|
Atlantic Monthly 87 (1901): 354-365.
|
|
|
|
OF THE TRAINING OF BLACK MEN
|
|
by W. E. Burghardt Du Bois
|
|
Atlantic Monthly 90 (1902): 289-297.
|
|
|
|
THE FRUITS OF INDUSTRIAL TRAINING
|
|
by Booker T. Washington
|
|
Atlantic Monthly 92 (1903): 453-462.
|
|
|
|
THE NEGRO IN THE REGULAR ARMY
|
|
by Oswald Garrison Villard
|
|
Atlantic Monthly 91 (1903): 721-729.
|
|
|
|
BAXTER'S PROCRUSTES
|
|
by Charles W. Chesnutt
|
|
Atlantic Monthly 93 (1904): 823-830.
|
|
|
|
THE HEART OF THE RACE PROBLEM
|
|
by Quincy Ewing
|
|
Atlantic Monthly 103 (1909): 389-397.
|
|
|
|
NEGRO SUFFRAGE IN A DEMOCRACY
|
|
by Ray Stannard Baker
|
|
Atlantic Monthly 106 (1910): 612-619.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
End of the Project Gutenberg Etext of Project Gutenberg Anthology #1,
|
|
The Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, 1994, Memorial Issue.
|
|
|