Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 300 pages of information about Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl.

Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 300 pages of information about Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl.
in our neighborhood, and had breathed his contaminating atmosphere.  He offered her a reward if she could find out any thing about me.  I know not what was the nature of her reply; but he soon after started for New York in haste, saying to his family that he had business of importance to transact.  I peeped at him as he passed on his way to the steamboat.  It was a satisfaction to have miles of land and water between us, even for a little while; and it was a still greater satisfaction to know that he believed me to be in the Free States.  My little den seemed less dreary than it had done.  He returned, as he did from his former journey to New York, without obtaining any satisfactory information.  When he passed our house next morning, Benny was standing at the gate.  He had heard them say that he had gone to find me, and he called out, “Dr. Flint, did you bring my mother home?  I want to see her.”  The doctor stamped his foot at him in a rage, and exclaimed, “Get out of the way, you little damned rascal!  If you don’t, I’ll cut off your head.”

Benny ran terrified into the house, saying, “You can’t put me in jail again.  I don’t belong to you now.”  It was well that the wind carried the words away from the doctor’s ear.  I told my grandmother of it, when we had our next conference at the trap-door, and begged of her not to allow the children to be impertinent to the irascible old man.

Autumn came, with a pleasant abatement of heat.  My eyes had become accustomed to the dim light, and by holding my book or work in a certain position near the aperture I contrived to read and sew.  That was a great relief to the tedious monotony of my life.  But when winter came, the cold penetrated through the thin shingle roof, and I was dreadfully chilled.  The winters there are not so long, or so severe, as in northern latitudes; but the houses are not built to shelter from cold, and my little den was peculiarly comfortless.  The kind grandmother brought me bedclothes and warm drinks.  Often I was obliged to lie in bed all day to keep comfortable; but with all my precautions, my shoulders and feet were frostbitten.  O, those long, gloomy days, with no object for my eye to rest upon, and no thoughts to occupy my mind, except the dreary past and the uncertain future!  I was thankful when there came a day sufficiently mild for me to wrap myself up and sit at the loophole to watch the passers by.  Southerners have the habit of stopping and talking in the streets, and I heard many conversations not intended to meet my ears.  I heard slave-hunters planning how to catch some poor fugitive.  Several times I heard allusions to Dr. Flint, myself, and the history of my children, who, perhaps, were playing near the gate.  One would say, “I wouldn’t move my little finger to catch her, as old Flint’s property.”  Another would say, “I’ll catch any nigger for the reward.  A man ought to have what belongs to him, if he is a damned brute.”  The opinion was often expressed that I was in the Free States.  Very rarely did any one suggest that I might be in the vicinity.  Had the least suspicion rested on my grandmother’s house, it would have been burned to the ground.  But it was the last place they thought of.  Yet there was no place, where slavery existed, that could have afforded me so good a place of concealment.

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Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.