登陆注册
15292500000021

第21章

Thus largely employed, he had little time, and perhaps as little disposition, to interfere with the children individually. What he was to Col. Lloyd, he made Aunt Katy to him. When he had anything to say or do about us, it was said or done in a wholesale manner; disposing of us in classes or sizes, leaving all minor details to Aunt Katy, a person of whom the reader has already received no very favorable impression. Aunt Katy was a woman who never allowed herself to act greatly within the margin of power granted to her, no matter how broad that authority might be. Ambitious, ill-tempered and cruel, she found in her present position an ample field for the exercise of her ill-omened qualities. She had a strong hold on old master she was considered a first rate cook, and she really was very industrious. She was, therefore, greatly favored by old master, and as one mark of his favor, she was the only mother who was permitted to retain her children around her. Even to these children she was often fiendish in her brutality. She pursued her son Phil, one day, in <58>my presence, with a huge butcher knife, and dealt a blow with its edge which left a shocking gash on his arm, near the wrist. For this, old master did sharply rebuke her, and threatened that if she ever should do the like again, he would take the skin off her back. Cruel, however, as Aunt Katy was to her own children, at times she was not destitute of maternal feeling, as I often had occasion to know, in the bitter pinches of hunger I had to endure. Differing from the practice of Col. Lloyd, old master, instead of allowing so much for each slave, committed the allowance for all to the care of Aunt Katy, to be divided after cooking it, amongst us. The allowance, consisting of coarse corn-meal, was not very abundant--indeed, it was very slender; and in passing through Aunt Katy's hands, it was made more slender still, for some of us. William, Phil and Jerry were her children, and it is not to accuse her too severely, to allege that she was often guilty of starving myself and the other children, while she was literally cramming her own. Want of food was my chief trouble the first summer at my old master's. Oysters and clams would do very well, with an occasional supply of bread, but they soon failed in the absence of bread. I speak but the simple truth, when I say, Ihave often been so pinched with hunger, that I have fought with the dog--"Old Nep"--for the smallest crumbs that fell from the kitchen table, and have been glad when I won a single crumb in the combat. Many times have I followed, with eager step, the waiting-girl when she went out to shake the table cloth, to get the crumbs and small bones flung out for the cats. The water, in which meat had been boiled, was as eagerly sought for by me. It was a great thing to get the privilege of dipping a piece of bread in such water; and the skin taken from rusty bacon, was a positive luxury. Nevertheless, I sometimes got full meals and kind words from sympathizing old slaves, who knew my sufferings, and received the comforting assurance that I should be a man some day. "Never mind, honey--better day comin'," was even then a solace, a cheering consolation to me in my <59 JARGON OF THEPLANTATION>troubles. Nor were all the kind words I received from slaves. I had a friend in the parlor, as well, and one to whom Ishall be glad to do justice, before I have finished this part of my story.

I was not long at old master's, before I learned that his surname was Anthony, and that he was generally called "Captain Anthony"--a title which he probably acquired by sailing a craft in the Chesapeake Bay. Col. Lloyd's slaves never called Capt. Anthony "old master," but always Capt. Anthony; and _me_ they called "Captain Anthony Fred." There is not, probably, in the whole south, a plantation where the English language is more imperfectly spoken than on Col. Lloyd's. It is a mixture of Guinea and everything else you please. At the time of which I am now writing, there were slaves there who had been brought from the coast of Africa. They never used the "s" in indication of the possessive case. "Cap'n Ant'ney Tom," "Lloyd Bill," "Aunt Rose Harry," means "Captain Anthony's Tom," "Lloyd's Bill," &c.

_"Oo you dem long to?"_ means, "Whom do you belong to?" _"Oo dem got any peachy?"_ means, "Have you got any peaches?" I could scarcely understand them when I first went among them, so broken was their speech; and I am persuaded that I could not have been dropped anywhere on the globe, where I could reap less, in the way of knowledge, from my immediate associates, than on this plantation. Even "MAS' DANIEL," by his association with his father's slaves, had measurably adopted their dialect and their ideas, so far as they had ideas to be adopted. The equality of nature is strongly asserted in childhood, and childhood requires children for associates. _Color_ makes no difference with a child. Are you a child with wants, tastes and pursuits common to children, not put on, but natural? then, were you black as ebony you would be welcome to the child of alabaster whiteness. The law of compensation holds here, as well as elsewhere. Mas'

Daniel could not associate with ignorance without sharing its shade; and he could not give his black playmates his company, without giving them his intelligence, as well. Without knowing <60>this, or caring about it, at the time, I, for some cause or other, spent much of my time with Mas' Daniel, in preference to spending it with most of the other boys.

Mas' Daniel was the youngest son of Col. Lloyd; his older brothers were Edward and Murray--both grown up, and fine looking men. Edward was especially esteemed by the children, and by me among the rest; not that he ever said anything to us or for us, which could be called especially kind; it was enough for us, that he never looked nor acted scornfully toward us. There were also three sisters, all married; one to Edward Winder; a second to Edward Nicholson; a third to Mr. Lownes.

The family of old master consisted of two sons, Andrew and Richard; his daughter, Lucretia, and her newly married husband, Capt. Auld. This was the house family. The kitchen family consisted of Aunt Katy, Aunt Esther, and ten or a dozen children, most of them older than myself. Capt. Anthony was not considered a rich slaveholder, but was pretty well off in the world. He owned about thirty _"head"_ of slaves, and three farms in Tuckahoe. The most valuable part of his property was his slaves, of whom he could afford to sell one every year. This crop, therefore, brought him seven or eight hundred dollars a year, besides his yearly salary, and other revenue from his farms.

The idea of rank and station was rigidly maintained on Col.

Lloyd's plantation. Our family never visited the great house, and the Lloyds never came to our home. Equal non-intercourse was observed between Capt. Anthony's family and that of Mr. Sevier, the overseer.

Such, kind reader, was the community, and such the place, in which my earliest and most lasting impressions of slavery, and of slave-life, were received; of which impressions you will learn more in the coming chapters of this book.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 衍道者

    衍道者

    百年后,我会如何?千年后,世间会如何?我想知道的,不仅是这些。诸天万域的古往今来,沉沦了多少人,又崛起了多少人。听浪声涛涛,那是谁在咏叹浮沉,又是谁在逆天改命。一朵浪花,一个世界。衍之一字,又有何种解释?他们曾经辉煌一时,却又销声匿迹,为何……
  • 重生初中之逆天学霸

    重生初中之逆天学霸

    这辈子受尽谴责,众叛亲离,如果有下辈子,我萧鲤必将百倍偿还。
  • 女人20几岁跟对人,30几岁做对事

    女人20几岁跟对人,30几岁做对事

    本书是一本二三十岁女性的励志书。最适合当代年轻女性阅读的时尚励志读本,语言清新时尚,整合前沿观点。适合职场白领女性阅读,在二三十岁前赢得未来,女性把握青春幸福的必修读本。
  • 那些年的栀子花开

    那些年的栀子花开

    烽烟起,寻爱似浪淘沙:遇见她,如春映梨花。她的笑,转瞬即逝。遇见你,一件倾心。爱,到底是盛凌在荆棘上的花朵,还是隐藏在花朵中的荆棘?明明回头就可以看见你,为什么我还要这样傻?现在我回头了,你还爱我吗?
  • 七夕节的诅咒【完】

    七夕节的诅咒【完】

    讲述的是一个神秘的女生,拥有着不一般的背景,身为灵魂歌手的她为什么在她10岁事业最高峰突然消失,为什么一次又一次的晕倒....有一天女生的身上出现了奇怪的变化,眼睛,头发开始变成蓝色...肩上出现了奇怪的蓝色花纹...她的身上究竟隐藏着怎么样的秘密....
  • 太虚法皇

    太虚法皇

    心守灵台天地静,手握阴阳斩太虚。六道轮回终不止,仙魔神佛亦难逃。自古万物成一体,一法皆空万法空。相生相克成定律,一切自随混沌开。今日有仇今日报,明日我自乐逍遥。
  • 极品女王:校草大人请滚蛋

    极品女王:校草大人请滚蛋

    她是风云全校的问题学生;而他是风云全校的校草男神。她是闻风丧胆的女王;而他是红遍全校的校草男神。一次又一次相遇,她的冷漠成功引起了他的注意,他一番又一番地‘骚扰’她,慢慢打开了她紧闭的心扉。“色狼?我看色狼也没有你色吧?每天强吻我十多遍……”她翻着白眼。“是吗?你有见过这么帅的色狼吗?”他厚颜无耻。厚脸皮的大灰狼和凶猛冷漠的大老虎,最终他们的命运是……?
  • 玄霄逆战

    玄霄逆战

    玄霄大陆,强者为尊,强者挥手天翻地覆,弱智则如蝼蚁一样苟且偷生,来自偏远小村的傻瓜,踏入这个陌生的大陆,又会引发怎样的风云与热血,逆战天下,只为守护我爱的人
  • 爱上你不算晚

    爱上你不算晚

    无论你是否爱我,都无法阻止我竭尽所能哪怕是用生命来守护我对你的爱。他怎么可以这样对她,她是他的小狗小猫吗,高兴时过来抚摸一下,不需要时把她晾在一边。她是卑微的女佣,怎么有资格去奢望他会爱上她,她该庆幸她还有可以被他利用的价值,其他人还没这个荣幸呢。她快要死了吗,身体上的剧痛慢慢地被寒冷吞噬了......
  • 真故事真理念

    真故事真理念

    让读者在轻松愉快的阅读中领悟到影响世界的企业经营的奥妙,受到启迪,感受世界级企业经营的秘密和真谛。本书轻松好读,融真实性、针对性、专业性和实用性为一体,紧紧贴近企业、贴近大众。