Complete Works of Harriet Beecher Stowe

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Complete Works of Harriet Beecher Stowe Page 28

by Harriet Beecher Stowe


  “But, Augustine, you don’t know how I found things.”

  “Don’t I? Don’t I know that the rolling-pin is under her bed, and the nutmeg-grater in her pocket with her tobacco, — that there are sixty-five different sugar-bowls, one in every hole in the house, — that she washes dishes with a dinner-napkin one day, and with a fragment of an old petticoat the next? But the upshot is, she gets up glorious dinners, makes superb coffee; and you must judge her as warriors and statesmen are judged, by her success.”

  “But the waste, — the expense!”

  “O, well! Lock everything you can, and keep the key. Give out by driblets, and never inquire for odds and ends, — it isn’t best.”

  “That troubles me, Augustine. I can’t help feeling as if these servants were not strictly honest. Are you sure they can be relied on?”

  Augustine laughed immoderately at the grave and anxious face with which Miss Ophelia propounded the question.

  “O, cousin, that’s too good, — honest! — as if that’s a thing to be expected! Honest! — why, of course, they arn’t. Why should they be? What upon earth is to make them so?”

  “Why don’t you instruct?”

  “Instruct! O, fiddlestick! What instructing do you think I should do? I look like it! As to Marie, she has spirit enough, to be sure, to kill off a whole plantation, if I’d let her manage; but she wouldn’t get the cheatery out of them.”

  “Are there no honest ones?”

  “Well, now and then one, whom Nature makes so impracticably simple, truthful and faithful, that the worst possible influence can’t destroy it. But, you see, from the mother’s breast the colored child feels and sees that there are none but underhand ways open to it. It can get along no other way with its parents, its mistress, its young master and missie play-fellows. Cunning and deception become necessary, inevitable habits. It isn’t fair to expect anything else of him. He ought not to be punished for it. As to honesty, the slave is kept in that dependent, semi-childish state, that there is no making him realize the rights of property, or feel that his master’s goods are not his own, if he can get them. For my part, I don’t see how they can be honest. Such a fellow as Tom, here, is, — is a moral miracle!”

  “And what becomes of their souls?” said Miss Ophelia.

  “That isn’t my affair, as I know of,” said St. Clare; “I am only dealing in facts of the present life. The fact is, that the whole race are pretty generally understood to be turned over to the devil, for our benefit, in this world, however it may turn out in another!”

  “This is perfectly horrible!” said Miss Ophelia; “you ought to be ashamed of yourselves!”

  “I don’t know as I am. We are in pretty good company, for all that,” said St. Clare, “as people in the broad road generally are. Look at the high and the low, all the world over, and it’s the same story, — the lower class used up, body, soul and spirit, for the good of the upper. It is so in England; it is so everywhere; and yet all Christendom stands aghast, with virtuous indignation, because we do the thing in a little different shape from what they do it.”

  “It isn’t so in Vermont.”

  “Ah, well, in New England, and in the free States, you have the better of us, I grant. But there’s the bell; so, Cousin, let us for a while lay aside our sectional prejudices, and come out to dinner.”

  As Miss Ophelia was in the kitchen in the latter part of the afternoon, some of the sable children called out, “La, sakes! thar’s Prue a coming, grunting along like she allers does.”

  A tall, bony colored woman now entered the kitchen, bearing on her head a basket of rusks and hot rolls.

  “Ho, Prue! you’ve come,” said Dinah.

  Prue had a peculiar scowling expression of countenance, and a sullen, grumbling voice. She set down her basket, squatted herself down, and resting her elbows on her knees said,

  “O Lord! I wish’t I ‘s dead!”

  “Why do you wish you were dead?” said Miss Ophelia.

  “I’d be out o’ my misery,” said the woman, gruffly, without taking her eyes from the floor.

  “What need you getting drunk, then, and cutting up, Prue?” said a spruce quadroon chambermaid, dangling, as she spoke, a pair of coral ear-drops.

  The woman looked at her with a sour surly glance.

  “Maybe you’ll come to it, one of these yer days. I’d be glad to see you, I would; then you’ll be glad of a drop, like me, to forget your misery.”

  “Come, Prue,” said Dinah, “let’s look at your rusks. Here’s Missis will pay for them.”

  Miss Ophelia took out a couple of dozen.

  “Thar’s some tickets in that ar old cracked jug on the top shelf,” said Dinah. “You, Jake, climb up and get it down.”

  “Tickets, — what are they for?” said Miss Ophelia.

  “We buy tickets of her Mas’r, and she gives us bread for ‘em.”

  “And they counts my money and tickets, when I gets home, to see if I ‘s got the change; and if I han’t, they half kills me.”

  “And serves you right,” said Jane, the pert chambermaid, “if you will take their money to get drunk on. That’s what she does, Missis.”

  “And that’s what I will do, — I can’t live no other ways, — drink and forget my misery.”

  “You are very wicked and very foolish,” said Miss Ophelia, “to steal your master’s money to make yourself a brute with.”

  “It’s mighty likely, Missis; but I will do it, — yes, I will. O Lord! I wish I ‘s dead, I do, — I wish I ‘s dead, and out of my misery!” and slowly and stiffly the old creature rose, and got her basket on her head again; but before she went out, she looked at the quadroon girt, who still stood playing with her ear-drops.

  “Ye think ye’re mighty fine with them ar, a frolickin’ and a tossin’ your head, and a lookin’ down on everybody. Well, never mind, — you may live to be a poor, old, cut-up crittur, like me. Hope to the Lord ye will, I do; then see if ye won’t drink, — drink, — drink, — yerself into torment; and sarve ye right, too — ugh!” and, with a malignant howl, the woman left the room.

  “Disgusting old beast!” said Adolph, who was getting his master’s shaving-water. “If I was her master, I’d cut her up worse than she is.”

  “Ye couldn’t do that ar, no ways,” said Dinah. “Her back’s a far sight now, — she can’t never get a dress together over it.”

  “I think such low creatures ought not to be allowed to go round to genteel families,” said Miss Jane. “What do you think, Mr. St. Clare?” she said, coquettishly tossing her head at Adolph.

  It must be observed that, among other appropriations from his master’s stock, Adolph was in the habit of adopting his name and address; and that the style under which he moved, among the colored circles of New Orleans, was that of Mr. St. Clare.

  “I’m certainly of your opinion, Miss Benoir,” said Adolph.

  Benoir was the name of Marie St. Clare’s family, and Jane was one of her servants.

  “Pray, Miss Benoir, may I be allowed to ask if those drops are for the ball, tomorrow night? They are certainly bewitching!”

  “I wonder, now, Mr. St. Clare, what the impudence of you men will come to!” said Jane, tossing her pretty head ‘til the ear-drops twinkled again. “I shan’t dance with you for a whole evening, if you go to asking me any more questions.”

  “O, you couldn’t be so cruel, now! I was just dying to know whether you would appear in your pink tarletane,” said Adolph.

  “What is it?” said Rosa, a bright, piquant little quadroon who came skipping down stairs at this moment.

  “Why, Mr. St. Clare’s so impudent!”

  “On my honor,” said Adolph, “I’ll leave it to Miss Rosa now.”

  “I know he’s always a saucy creature,” said Rosa, poising herself on one of her little feet, and looking maliciously at Adolph. “He’s always getting me so angry with him.”

  “O! ladies, ladies, you will certainly break my heart, between you,�
� said Adolph. “I shall be found dead in my bed, some morning, and you’ll have it to answer for.”

  “Do hear the horrid creature talk!” said both ladies, laughing immoderately.

  “Come, — clar out, you! I can’t have you cluttering up the kitchen,” said Dinah; “in my way, foolin’ round here.”

  “Aunt Dinah’s glum, because she can’t go to the ball,” said Rosa.

  “Don’t want none o’ your light-colored balls,” said Dinah; “cuttin’ round, makin’ b’lieve you’s white folks. Arter all, you’s niggers, much as I am.”

  “Aunt Dinah greases her wool stiff, every day, to make it lie straight,” said Jane.

  “And it will be wool, after all,” said Rosa, maliciously shaking down her long, silky curls.

  “Well, in the Lord’s sight, an’t wool as good as har, any time?” said Dinah. “I’d like to have Missis say which is worth the most, — a couple such as you, or one like me. Get out wid ye, ye trumpery, — I won’t have ye round!”

  Here the conversation was interrupted in a two-fold manner. St. Clare’s voice was heard at the head of the stairs, asking Adolph if he meant to stay all night with his shaving-water; and Miss Ophelia, coming out of the dining-room, said,

  “Jane and Rosa, what are you wasting your time for, here? Go in and attend to your muslins.”

  Our friend Tom, who had been in the kitchen during the conversation with the old rusk-woman, had followed her out into the street. He saw her go on, giving every once in a while a suppressed groan. At last she set her basket down on a doorstep, and began arranging the old, faded shawl which covered her shoulders.

  “I’ll carry your basket a piece,” said Tom, compassionately.

  “Why should ye?” said the woman. “I don’t want no help.”

  “You seem to be sick, or in trouble, or somethin’,” said Tom.

  “I an’t sick,” said the woman, shortly.

  “I wish,” said Tom, looking at her earnestly,—”I wish I could persuade you to leave off drinking. Don’t you know it will be the ruin of ye, body and soul?”

  “I knows I’m gwine to torment,” said the woman, sullenly. “Ye don’t need to tell me that ar. I ‘s ugly, I ‘s wicked, — I ‘s gwine straight to torment. O, Lord! I wish I ‘s thar!”

  Tom shuddered at these frightful words, spoken with a sullen, impassioned earnestness.

  “O, Lord have mercy on ye! poor crittur. Han’t ye never heard of Jesus Christ?”

  “Jesus Christ, — who’s he?”

  “Why, he’s the Lord,” said Tom.

  “I think I’ve hearn tell o’ the Lord, and the judgment and torment. I’ve heard o’ that.”

  “But didn’t anybody ever tell you of the Lord Jesus, that loved us poor sinners, and died for us?”

  “Don’t know nothin’ ‘bout that,” said the woman; “nobody han’t never loved me, since my old man died.”

  “Where was you raised?” said Tom.

  “Up in Kentuck. A man kept me to breed chil’en for market, and sold ’em as fast as they got big enough; last of all, he sold me to a speculator, and my Mas’r got me o’ him.”

  “What set you into this bad way of drinkin’?”

  “To get shet o’ my misery. I had one child after I come here; and I thought then I’d have one to raise, cause Mas’r wasn’t a speculator. It was de peartest little thing! and Missis she seemed to think a heap on ‘t, at first; it never cried, — it was likely and fat. But Missis tuck sick, and I tended her; and I tuck the fever, and my milk all left me, and the child it pined to skin and bone, and Missis wouldn’t buy milk for it. She wouldn’t hear to me, when I telled her I hadn’t milk. She said she knowed I could feed it on what other folks eat; and the child kinder pined, and cried, and cried, and cried, day and night, and got all gone to skin and bones, and Missis got sot agin it and she said ‘t wan’t nothin’ but crossness. She wished it was dead, she said; and she wouldn’t let me have it o’ nights, cause, she said, it kept me awake, and made me good for nothing. She made me sleep in her room; and I had to put it away off in a little kind o’ garret, and thar it cried itself to death, one night. It did; and I tuck to drinkin’, to keep its crying out of my ears! I did, — and I will drink! I will, if I do go to torment for it! Mas’r says I shall go to torment, and I tell him I’ve got thar now!”

  “O, ye poor crittur!” said Tom, “han’t nobody never telled ye how the Lord Jesus loved ye, and died for ye? Han’t they telled ye that he’ll help ye, and ye can go to heaven, and have rest, at last?”

  “I looks like gwine to heaven,” said the woman; “an’t thar where white folks is gwine? S’pose they’d have me thar? I’d rather go to torment, and get away from Mas’r and Missis. I had so,” she said, as with her usual groan, she got her basket on her head, and walked sullenly away.

  Tom turned, and walked sorrowfully back to the house. In the court he met little Eva, — a crown of tuberoses on her head, and her eyes radiant with delight.

  “O, Tom! here you are. I’m glad I’ve found you. Papa says you may get out the ponies, and take me in my little new carriage,” she said, catching his hand. “But what’s the matter Tom? — you look sober.”

  “I feel bad, Miss Eva,” said Tom, sorrowfully. “But I’ll get the horses for you.”

  “But do tell me, Tom, what is the matter. I saw you talking to cross old Prue.”

  Tom, in simple, earnest phrase, told Eva the woman’s history. She did not exclaim or wonder, or weep, as other children do. Her cheeks grew pale, and a deep, earnest shadow passed over her eyes. She laid both hands on her bosom, and sighed heavily.

  VOLUME II

  CHAPTER XIX

  Miss Ophelia’s Experiences and Opinions Continued

  “Tom, you needn’t get me the horses. I don’t want to go,” she said.

  “Why not, Miss Eva?”

  “These things sink into my heart, Tom,” said Eva,—”they sink into my heart,” she repeated, earnestly. “I don’t want to go;” and she turned from Tom, and went into the house.

  A few days after, another woman came, in old Prue’s place, to bring the rusks; Miss Ophelia was in the kitchen.

  “Lor!” said Dinah, “what’s got Prue?”

  “Prue isn’t coming any more,” said the woman, mysteriously.

  “Why not?” said Dinah, “she an’t dead, is she?”

  “We doesn’t exactly know. She’s down cellar,” said the woman, glancing at Miss Ophelia.

  After Miss Ophelia had taken the rusks, Dinah followed the woman to the door.

  “What has got Prue, any how?” she said.

  The woman seemed desirous, yet reluctant, to speak, and answered, in low, mysterious tone.

  “Well, you mustn’t tell nobody, Prue, she got drunk agin, — and they had her down cellar, — and thar they left her all day, — and I hearn ’em saying that the flies had got to her, — and she’s dead!”

  Dinah held up her hands, and, turning, saw close by her side the spirit-like form of Evangeline, her large, mystic eyes dilated with horror, and every drop of blood driven from her lips and cheeks.

  “Lor bless us! Miss Eva’s gwine to faint away! What go us all, to let her har such talk? Her pa’ll be rail mad.”

  “I shan’t faint, Dinah,” said the child, firmly; “and why shouldn’t I hear it? It an’t so much for me to hear it, as for poor Prue to suffer it.”

  “Lor sakes! it isn’t for sweet, delicate young ladies, like you, — these yer stories isn’t; it’s enough to kill ‘em!”

  Eva sighed again, and walked up stairs with a slow and melancholy step.

  Miss Ophelia anxiously inquired the woman’s story. Dinah gave a very garrulous version of it, to which Tom added the particulars which he had drawn from her that morning.

  “An abominable business, — perfectly horrible!” she exclaimed, as she entered the room where St. Clare lay reading his paper.

  “Pray, what iniquity has turned up now?” said he.

  “
What now? why, those folks have whipped Prue to death!” said Miss Ophelia, going on, with great strength of detail, into the story, and enlarging on its most shocking particulars.

  “I thought it would come to that, some time,” said St. Clare, going on with his paper.

  “Thought so! — an’t you going to do anything about it?” said Miss Ophelia. “Haven’t you got any selectmen, or anybody, to interfere and look after such matters?”

  “It’s commonly supposed that the property interest is a sufficient guard in these cases. If people choose to ruin their own possessions, I don’t know what’s to be done. It seems the poor creature was a thief and a drunkard; and so there won’t be much hope to get up sympathy for her.”

  “It is perfectly outrageous, — it is horrid, Augustine! It will certainly bring down vengeance upon you.”

  “My dear cousin, I didn’t do it, and I can’t help it; I would, if I could. If low-minded, brutal people will act like themselves, what am I to do? they have absolute control; they are irresponsible despots. There would be no use in interfering; there is no law that amounts to anything practically, for such a case. The best we can do is to shut our eyes and ears, and let it alone. It’s the only resource left us.”

  “How can you shut your eyes and ears? How can you let such things alone?”

  “My dear child, what do you expect? Here is a whole class, — debased, uneducated, indolent, provoking, — put, without any sort of terms or conditions, entirely into the hands of such people as the majority in our world are; people who have neither consideration nor self-control, who haven’t even an enlightened regard to their own interest, — for that’s the case with the largest half of mankind. Of course, in a community so organized, what can a man of honorable and humane feelings do, but shut his eyes all he can, and harden his heart? I can’t buy every poor wretch I see. I can’t turn knight-errant, and undertake to redress every individual case of wrong in such a city as this. The most I can do is to try and keep out of the way of it.”

 

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