“Glad ’um suit-fo’h true!” retorts the negress, her heavy lips and sullen face giving out the very incarnation of hatred.
“Now don’t make a noise when you go out.” Rebecca in reply says she is “gwine down to da kitchen to see Isaac,” and toddles out of the room, gently closing the door after her.
Resignedly Mrs. Swiggs closes her eyes, moderates her rocking, and commences evolving and revolving the subject over in her mind. “I haven’t much of this world’s goods-no, I haven’t; but I’m of a good family, and its name for hospitality must be kept up. Don’t see that I can keep it up better than by helping Sister Slocum and the Tract Society out,” she muses. But the exact way to effect this has not yet come clear to her mind. Times are rather hard, and, as we have said before, she is in straightened circumstances, having, for something more than ten years, had nothing but the earnings of eleven old negroes, five of whom are cripples, to keep up the dignity of the house of the Swiggs. “There’s old Zeff,” she says, “has took to drinking, and Flame, his wife, ain’t a bit better; and neither one of them have been worth anything since I sold their two children-which I had to do, or let the dignity of the family suffer. I don’t like to do it, but I must. I must send Zeff to the workhouse-have him nicely whipped, I only charge him eighteen dollars a month for himself, and yet he will drink, and won’t pay over his wages. Yes!—he shall have it. The extent of the law, well laid on, will learn him a lesson. There’s old Cato pays me twenty dollars a month, and Cato’s seventy-four-four years older than Zeff. In truth, my negro property is all getting careless about paying wages. Old Trot runs away whenever he can get a chance; Brutus has forever got something the matter with him; and Cicero has come to be a real skulk. He don’t care for the cowhide; the more I get him flogged the worse he gets. Curious creature! And his old woman, since she broke her leg, and goes with a crutch, thinks she can do just as she pleases. There is plenty of work in her-plenty; she has no disposition to let it come out, though! And she has kept up a grumbling ever since I sold her girls. Well, I didn’t want to keep them all the time at the whipping-post; so I sold them to save their characters.” Thus Mrs. Swiggs muses until she drops into a profound sleep, in which she remains,