in contact with it. Others, when other modes
of punishment will not subdue them, cat-haul
them—that is, take a cat by the nape of
the neck and tail, or by the hind legs, and drag the
claws across the back until satisfied. This kind
of punishment poisons the flesh much worse than the
whip, and is more dreaded by the slave. Some are
branded by a hot iron, others have their flesh cut
out in large gashes, to mark them. Some who are
prone to run away, have iron fetters riveted around
their ancles, sometimes they are put only on one foot,
and are dragged on the ground. Others have on
large iron collars or yokes upon their necks, or clogs
riveted upon their wrists or ancles. Some have
bells put upon them, hung upon a sort of frame to
an iron collar. Some masters fly into a rage
at trifles and knock down their negroes with their
fists, or with the first thing that they can get hold
of. The whiplash-knots, or rawhide, have sometimes
by a reckless stroke reached round to the front of
the body and cut through to the bowels. One slaveholder
with whom I lived, whipped one of his slaves one day,
as many, I should think, as one hundred lashes, and
then turned the butt-end and went to beating
him over the head and ears, and truly I was amazed
that the slave was not killed on the spot. Not
a few slaveholders whip their slaves to death, and
then say that they died under a “moderate correction.”
I wonder that ten are not killed where one is!
Were they not much hardier than the whites many more
of them must die than do. One young mulatto man,
with whom I was well acquainted, was killed by his
master in his yard with impunity. I boarded
at the same time near the place where this glaring
murder was committed, and knew the master well.
He had a plantation, on which he enacted, almost daily,
cruel barbarities, some of them, I was informed, more
terrific, if possible, than death itself. Little
notice was taken of this murder, and it all passed
off without any action being taken against the murderer.
The masters used to try to make me whip their negroes.
They said I could not get along with them without
flogging them—but I found I could get along
better with them by coaxing and encouraging them than
by beating and flogging them. I had not a heart
to beat and kick about those beings; although I had
not grace in my heart the three first years I was
there, yet I sympathised with the slaves. I never
was guilty of having but one whipped, and he was whipped
but eight or nine blows. The circumstances were
as follows: Several negroes were put under my
care, one spring, who were fresh from Congo and
Guinea. I could not understand them, neither
could they me, in one word I spoke. I therefore
pointed to them to go to work; all obeyed me willingly
but one—he refused. I told the driver
that he must tie him up and whip him. After he
had tied him, by the help of some others, we struck
him eight or nine blows, and he yielded. I told