Chap. XVII.
Letter from W.H. Gatewood,
117.
My reply, 118.
My efforts as a public lecturer,
119.
Singular incident in Steubenville,
119.
Meeting with a friend of Whitfield
in Michigan, 121.
Outrage on a canal packet,
122.
Fruitless efforts to find
my wife, 124.
Chap. XVIII.
My last effort to recover
my family, 126.
Sad tidings of my wife, 126.
Her degradation, 126.
I am compelled to regard our
relation as dissolved for ever, 127.
Chap. XIX.
Comments on S. Gatewood’s
letter about slaves stealing, 130.
Their conduct vindicated,
131.
Comments on W. Gatewood’s
letter, 132.
Chap. XX.
Review of my narrative, 134.
Licentiousness a prop of Slavery,
134.
A case of mild slavery given,
135.
Its revolting features, 135.
Times of my purchase and sale
by professed Christians, 136.
Concluding remarks, 137.