in such a way that he could not be distinguished
from a person of colour, and then sold as a slave
in Virginia. At the age of twenty, he made his
escape, by
running away, and happily succeeded in
rejoining his parents.
I have known
worthless white people to sell their
own free children into
slavery; and, as there are
good-for-nothing white as well as coloured persons
everywhere, no one, perhaps, will wonder at such
inhuman transactions: particularly in the Southern
States of America, where I believe there is a
greater want of
humanity and high principle
amongst the whites, than among any other
civilized people in the world.
I know that those who are not familiar with the
working of "the
peculiar institution," can scarcely
imagine any one so
totallydevoid of all natural
affection as to sell his own offspring into returnless
bondage. But Shakespeare, that great observer
of human nature, says:--
"With
caution judge of probabilities.
Things deemed
unlikely, e'en impossible,
Experience often shews us to be true."
My wife's new
mistress was
decidedly more
humane than the majority of her class. My wife
has always given her credit for not exposing her to
many of the worst features of
slavery. For instance,
it is a common practice in the slave States for ladies,
when angry with their maids, to send them to the
calybuce sugar-house, or to some other place
established for the purpose of punishing slaves,
and have them
severely flogged; and I am sorry
it is a fact, that the villains to whom those de-
fenceless creatures are sent, not only flog them
as they are ordered, but frequently compel them
to
submit to the greatest indignity. Oh! if there
is any one thing under the wide
canopy of heaven,
horrible enough to stir a man's soul, and to make
his very blood boil, it is the thought of his dear
wife, his unprotected sister, or his young and
virtuous daughters, struggling to save themselves
from falling a prey to such demons!
It always appears strange to me that any one
who was not born a slaveholder, and steeped to the
very core in the demoralizing
atmosphere of the
Southern States, can in any way palliate
slavery.
It is still more
surprising to see
virtuous ladies
looking with
patience upon, and remaining indif-
ferent to, the
existence of a
system that exposes
nearly two millions of their own sex in the manner
I have mentioned, and that too in a professedly
free and Christian country. There is, however,
great
consolation in
knowing that God is just, and
will not let the oppressor of the weak, and the
spoiler of the
virtuous, escape unpunished here and
hereafter.
I believe a similar retribution to that which
destroyed Sodom is
hanging over the slaveholders.
My
sincere prayer is that they may not provoke
God, by persisting in a
reckless course of wicked-
ness, to pour out his consuming wrath upon them.
I must now return to our history.
My old master had the
reputation of being a
very
humane and Christian man, but he thought
nothing of selling my poor old father, and dear
aged mother, at separate times, to different persons,
to be dragged off never to behold each other again,
till summoned to appear before the great tribunal
of heaven. But, oh! what a happy meeting it
will be on that day for those
faithful souls.
I say a happy meeting, because I never saw
persons more
devoted to the service of God
than they. But how will the case stand with those
reckless traffickers in human flesh and blood, who
plunged the
poisonousdagger of
separation into
those
loving hearts which God had for so many
years closely joined together--nay, sealed as it
were with his own hands for the
eternal courts of
heaven? It is not for me to say what will become
of those heartless tyrants. I must leave them in
the hands of an all-wise and just God, who will, in
his own good time, and in his own way,
avenge the
wrongs of his oppressed people.
My old master also sold a dear brother and a
sister, in the same manner as he did my father and
mother. The reason he assigned for disposing of
my parents, as well as of several other aged slaves,
was, that "they were getting old, and would soon
become valueless in the market, and
therefore he
intended to sell off all the old stock, and buy in a
young lot." A most
disgracefulconclusion for a
man to come to, who made such great professions
of religion!
This
shameful conduct gave me a thorough
hatred, not for true Christianity, but for slave-
holding piety.
My old master, then, wishing to make the most
of the rest of his slaves, apprenticed a brother
and myself out to learn trades: he to a black-
smith, and myself to a
cabinet-maker. If a slave
has a good trade, he will let or sell for more
than a person without one, and many slave-
holders have their slaves taught trades on this
account. But before our time expired, my old
master wanted money; so he sold my brother, and
then mortgaged my sister, a dear girl about four-
teen years of age, and myself, then about sixteen,
to one of the banks, to get money to
speculate in
cotton. This we knew nothing of at the moment;
but time rolled on, the money became due, my
master was
unable to meet his payments; so the
bank had us placed upon the
auction stand and
sold to the highest bidder.
My poor sister was sold first: she was knocked
down to a
planter who resided at some distance
in the country. Then I was called upon the stand.
While the
auctioneer was crying the bids, I saw
the man that had purchased my sister getting her
into a cart, to take her to his home. I at once
asked a slave friend who was
standing near the
platform, to run and ask the gentleman if he
would please to wait till I was sold, in order
that I might have an opportunity of bidding her
good-bye. He sent me word back that he had
some distance to go, and could not wait.
I then turned to the
auctioneer, fell upon my
knees, and
humbly prayed him to let me just step
down and bid my last sister
farewell. But, instead
of granting me this request, he grasped me by the