\\ 0 REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA BY, EMILY P. BURKE <{ THESE I DISTINCTLY HOLD IM MEMORY STILL." Pollok. JAMES M. FITCH ^ .**- Entered acco rding to Act of Congress, in the. year 1850, by EMILY p. BURKE, , In the Clerks Office of the District Court of Ohio. I * PREFACE. THESE letters were originally written/to avoid the trouble of verbal replies to the individual questions of many ivho were anxious to learn more of the private, domes tic arrangements and manners of the South, than are found in the journals of those, who in their descriptions of places, usually delineate their general features rather than particular ones. In issuing these communicants the authoress had in epecial view many of her New England pupils, who in anticipation of being engaged in teaching at the South, were desirous to collect as muck information as possible relative to those customs by which their future comfort and happiness might be greatly en hanced or diminished. I have now collected these articles which at first ap- ; pea-red in one of the New England journals, and in com pliance witli the earnest solicitations of friends and pu- "; pils at the West, consented to republish them in the j form of a book, which I now most cheerfully dedicate to that noble hearted friend, whose house has been the ; home for the homeless and the refuge of the oppressed, y .-- 2V PREFACE. who, when I was a stranger in a strange land, gave me a % cordial welcome beneath her hospitable roof, with the soul reviving assurance, that I " should have a larger place in her heart than she could give me in her house." To this dear friend I would say, in view of that separa tion which must ere long take place between us, " Farewell! If ever fondest prayer For others* weal avails on high, Mine shall not all be lost in air,. But waft thy name beyond the sky." E. P. B. CONTENTS. LETTER I. Voyage at Sea--A Calm--Mother Carey's Chickens --Horses frightened, ........................... 1 LETTER II. Irish People--Table Furniture--Sea Birds--Sea Mon sters--Cape Hatteras--Pilot Boat--The Savannah Bar, 8 LETTER III. Savannah--The Pride of India--Pulaski Monument-- Market--A Colored Woman's Head Dress--Low Life in Georgia, .............................. 15 LETTER IV. Habits, Pursuits, and Ignorance of the People in the Northern Part of the State,.....................23 LETTER V. Savannah--Its Churches--Destruction of the Pulaski,.29 LETTER VI, Orphan Asylum--Children of Different Nations--Piety and Happy Death of an Orphan Girl nine years old, .36 LETTER VH. Punishment of Slaves--Their Opinions--The Bar racks? ........,,.i.,.11i.>111,..i* t*43 VI COXTr.XTS. f- - LETTER VIH. j The Hospital--A Little Friendless Girl--Her Sickness i Death, and Burial, ........ ....................50 | LETTER IX. | The Stranger's Hospital--Sickness, Death, and Burial I of the, Deserted Woman,....................... 56 I LETTER X. sk. Streets of Savannah--Bay Street--Ships in the Harbor '! --The Bluff--Resort for Men of Business--Death of ! a Cotton Merchant's Son,....................... 63 LETTER XI. Browton Street and an Old, Dilapitated Building--Its Aged Occupant--South Broad Street--A Rural Re treat--Captain Abraham's Place,................69 LETTER XII. Boniventure--Thunderbolt--Extract from a Letter from New Orleans,............................76 LETTER XIII. . Condition of the Slaves--Two Little Girls trying to learn the Letters of the Alphabet--The Colored Peo> pie's Asylum--Dogs--The Militia of Georgia, ... < 85 LETTER XIV. A Journey into the Country--The Church in the ' Woods--A Dinner by the Way-side--Wells on ther' >Highway--The Little Haven--Arrival at the Plants t lion, . .^.....................................95 LETTER-XV. ^ A-Southern Planter's House,.....................103 Iff CONTENTS. VU LETTER XVI. Buildings connected with a Southern Plantation--A Walk in the Woods--The Robin--The Preparation , of Cotton for the Market--Women engaged in Fall ing Trees and Building Fences,................ Ill LETTER XVII. Why the Southern Planters build no better houses-- Hand Mills--Negro Dance--The African Slave-- A Southern Cook,............................ 118 LETTER XVIH. Cultivation of Rice--The Sweet'Potato--Nuts--Feed ing of Swine--Garden Vegetables, Fruits, Flowers, Shrubs and Trees,............................125 LETTER XIX. Birds of the South--The Buzzard--Alligator--Deer Hunting--Fishes,............................. 133 LETTER XX. Sabbath at the South--Going to Church--Visit to a Cemetery--Service at Church -- Refreshments-- Stubbornness of a Mule--Pastimes of Slaves, .... 141 LETTER XXI. Evils of Slavery as felt by the Mas.ter--Early Train ing of Children at the South--Theft and Robbery,. 151 LETTER XXII. | Runaway Slaves--The Swamps--A Family in<>onceal- ment--Murder of an Old Slave--Elopement of an Orphan Lady, ................... f ...........168 : Vlll CONTENTS. :. ' .. LETTER XXHL A Visit in the Country--A Southern. Kitchen--plea sure Excursion--An Equestrian Scene;.'.'..';..... 175 ^ LETTER XXIV. A Plantation on the Sea Coast--Different Kinds of Trees--Rising of the Tide--A Storm--Return from ,, a V t isit,..................................... 185 I: ' -LETTER XXV. Schools in Georgia--Public Examination--A Barba- . > I cue--Macon Female College,.................. 195 LETTER XXVI. TheSand-hillers, their Habits, Poverty and Ignorance, 205 , I LETTER XXVII. j The Residence of an Aged Matron--Affection and Fidelity of her Servants,...................... 214 i. LETTER XXVIII. J, A Large Plantation--Cause of an Unhealthy Atrao- sphere--Cattle, Swine and Sheep--Driving of Oxen by Southerners--Shops of various kinds--Plough ing of the Land by Men and Women--Sports of j the Slaves--A Quilting Party--Marriages and Fu nerals--A Nursery for Colored Children,........220 j_ LETTER XXIX. , A Southern Camp-meeting--Preparations for the same j --Removal to the Camp Ground--Scenes on the Camp Ground--Meeting for the Colored People, . .235 LETTER XXX. iclusion,...,,.,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,.,.,. .246 to REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA, LETTER T. / Voyage at Sea-^^TCalm--Mother Carey's Chickens--Horses Frightened. Ix attempting to give you some account of my journey to Georgia, and my residence in that State, I can hardly expect to interest you who have read the journals of so many, who wield a much abler pen; but if an imperfect desrjption of some of those objects and incidents which came under my observation after I left the shores of my own New England home, can in any wise contribute to your pleasure, I shall feel myself well compensated for my labor. It will hardly be necessary for me to give a^ account of my journey to New York, or a par ticular description of"my passage from thence to Savannah, as it did not differ essentially from accounts of the same kind that we see almost KEMlNfSCEtfCES OP GEORGIA daily in our newspapers ; therefore the inci dents that I shall relate as connected with my passage from New York to Savannah, I intend * shall belong to that class of events which are usually passed over by tourists ; the same course also, I shall pursue in speaking of other things with which I was conversant while in Georgia* Wi e sailed from New York on one of the most gloomy days of an equinoctial storm. The rain beat upon us so severely while we were making our way to the wharves, that we found our umbrellas to be of little service ; and by the time we had passed through those muddy streets and over the decks of three or four ves sels so slippery we could hardly retain an up right position, we saw after we were safely de posited in our own quarters, that we had brought away upon our shoes and the bottom of our dresses not a small share of the filth and dirt of the city : but I endured this inconveni ence much better than I should have done, if I had not seen, by looking around upon my companions, that all were in the same predicament ; #nd in this case, certainly, I felt that ** misery loved company." On board of the vessel, i found myself one of ^ "-J^ 5^ handled human beings, that were all crowded together ia one not very large ship, besides vari- I REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. O ous animals, none of which appeared to be in the most pleasant mood. It was a cold day ; the wind blew ; the rain poured down in torrents, the horses were impa tient in their stables, the pigs squealed, and the fowls cackled; the children cried, and the older passengers were cross, and the very patient cap tain and sailors, arrayed in oil cloth, were doing their ibest to put to sea, and get this little world of uproar and confusion set in order, but I ned that nothing proved so effectual in calm ing this fault-finding assembly, as a few heavy rockings of the vessel, when she had fairly got on her way to sea. It was really quite amusing to me, although no one on board suffered more from sea-sickness than myself, to see how soon we were all brought down to a level after our ship began to sail. We had on board " the high and the low, the rich and the poor," the haflghty aristocrat from the South, and the shrewd merchant from the North; the proud cadet in full uniform from West Point, and the poor emigrant from the East, as well as the down-trodden slave ; and in less than one hour after we left the harbor, one was np higher in the world, in one sense of it, than another, unless we except those who were prostrated in berths instead of lying upon REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. -***. the floor as the slaves were obliged to do. When I observed this, I could not help making this sage reflection, that though our stations in life may be one hour much elevated above that of our neighbors, the next we may, by some provi dence unforeseen by us, be reduced to a level with the meanest serf. The first day of our voyage was so co4d and stormy, the captain was obliged to set -up a stove in the cabin, which was not needed, how ever, after we had sailed about three days to wards the South. The next day it cleared off pleasant, the wind went down so that there was scarcely a breath to fill the sails ; then followed what the sailors call a calm, which continued four orfive days. 1 never experienced any thing more tedious aud discouraging. The motion of the sea caused the ship to rock just enough to make us suffer from that most of all unpleasant sensations that one feels after having been per forming a series of rapid revolutions upon his heel; and what made this still more dishearteniag was the consciousness that we had to suffer all this to no purpose; for we were making no pro gress ati this time towards our much desired haven. For several days we had nothing to cheer up our gloomy spirits but our own wise reflections, REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 5 for we were too sick to see and converse with each other, and we found our own thoughts but sorry comforters when rolling upon the wide ocean, deathly sick and far from our loved homes and all their comforts. During this time our eyes rested upon nothing beyond our own little floating world, satfe the blue arch above us and that same incessantly rolling ocean, be neath us. But nothing seemed so homelike during my voyage as to be awakened every morning by the crowing of the fowls, and my first impres sions were, invariably, on awaking, of being at home in my own chamber, and that I was aroused by the inhabitants of the same barn yard which had in the days of my early youth so many times reminded me that it was morning. The first part of our voyage was very mo notonous, owing to the dead calm I mentioned before. The sailors went through their regular routine of duties: the cook laid the table three times a day, whether the passengers were able to eat or not; sometimes a passenger as pale as a corpse would crawl out of his berth to get a reviving breath of air upon the deck, while per haps a couple more having strength enough to sit up an hour, would try to while away the te dious time by a game at chess or back-gammon. 6 KEMOISC]CN( OF GEORGIA. But no incidents happened worthy of notice, till one morning we were visited by a flock of " Mother Carey's Chickens," a circumstance which created quite a sensation, not only amogg the sailors on board, but among the passengers also; for it is one of the easiest things in the worldjbr people, after they have been out at sea a few days, to imbibe more or less of that superstition that seems to be so natural to sail ors, and they believe beyond a doubt, that the appearance of these birds portends a storm. I did hope that this old-timed omen would fail this time ; for I dislike to see what appears to be nothing but a most natural occurrence .re ceived as a special forewarning of some event; but I was disappointed ; though at the time we saw the ominous birds, no one could have judged from any other circumstance that a storm was approaching. The day was unusually pleasant; not a cloud flitted across the sky, and the gentle breezes that fanned our brows, were scarcely strong enough to expand the sails ; but before three hours had elapsed from the time we first saw the Stormy Petrel skimming over the face of the waters, the wind had arisen to a hurri cane, and the blackest and the wildest clouds overspread the sky. I never experienced any thing more dreadful than the storm that ensued V - REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 7 and lasted three days. We ctfuld reasonably look for nothing but to be swallowed up in the frightful abyss that yawned beneath us. The ship was one scene of confusion. The children screamed, and the older passengers were terri fied. Bottles and dishes were thrown from the shelves, trunks and boxes of all kinds were hurled from one side of the ship to the other; tables, chairs and settees, broke from their fas tenings, and those who were reclining upon them were turned over backwards, being at the same time too weak and feeble to help them selves up again. The horses in the stables be came so frightened by the violent pitching of the ship and the roaring of the wind among the ropes and shrouds, that they strove and dashed against the timbers, till their flesh, in many places, was torn from their bones- After the storm had abated a little, I went on deck to see one of these poor animals that was then almost dead. It was a noble creature, which a young man on board had purchased at the North for two hundred dollars, and was taking South. He was literally covered with blood, and to put aa end to his sufferings as soon as possible when it became apparent that he could not recover from his bruises, he was thrown overboard. LETTER E. Irish People--Table Furniture--Sea Birds--Sea Monsters-- Cape Hatteras--Pilot Boat--The Savannah Bar. THERE was nothing on board I commiserated so much as the Irish people. During the storm they were all shut down in the hole together, as many as sixjty or seventy of them. As soon as the storm was over, the hatches were taken up, ' and these poor creatures began to crawl out, so sick and weak they could scarcely support their own weight, and for two or three days, I saw them lying all around on the barrels, boxes, timbers, and hen-coops, the most forlorn look ing creatures I ever beheld. 'These wretched beings had recently emigrated from Ireland, landing in New York first, where they expected to find all the luxuries oi life in abundance without labor; but being disappointed, H again set sail, directing their course south, still hoping-to find somewhere in the " new coun try" those golden dreams of prosperity realized, for which they had abandoned their own coim- L REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 9 try and homes. Here again as every where they are destined to disappointment. When they have gone as far as the Southern States, they gener ally give up the search for pleasures that are nev er seen only at a distance. Many females soon die of hardships and broken hearts, while the men, to drown thoughts of disappointment in the in toxicating cup, go to drinking whiskey which causes the climate fever to set in, from which they seldom recover. Thus ends every year the existence of thousands of these deluded beings. Before I went to sea, I had often wondered how the plates, knives and forks, and so on, were made to retain their places on the tables. In the first place, the tables are furnished with small strips of wood nailed on so as to form little squares in which are placed all the plates and large dis-hes as well as knives and forks, and spoons; then all such dishes as castors, creamers, sugar bowls, etc., are fastened to the table by tying strings to them, and pinning them by a fork. Then after all this precaution, when the sea is rough they are often forced from their places, and dashed upon the floor. Some times our seats broke loose while sitting at our meals, and before we had time to help each other we would find ourselves on the opposite side of the cabin. REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. One day during the storm a lone sea-bird came and rested upon one of the yards. It was prob ably driven out to sea by the heavy winds, and had lost its reckoning. The bird had appar ently been a long time on the wing not finding a resting place till it descried our vessel; for it could hardly move its wings when it reached us, and I seldom ever had my feelings more wound ed, than when in mere wantonness, several young men seized their guns to shoot the poor bird, which had flown to us for refuge; but not finding it a place of safety, it again exerted every weary muscle to hasten from the abode of man, from whom instinct usually teaches the brute creation to fly. Though the storm had abated, the sea con- **!?* tinued rough for many days; a circumstance which seemed to give us an opportunity of see ing some of the monsters of the deep. Perhaps this had nothing to do in rousing up the inhabit ants of the great sea, but it appeared so to me ; for before the storm we saw not a fish, but after wards the ocean seemed to be alive with whales, grampuses, porpoises, and other sea-monsters. For two or three days the porpoises passed our vessel by the thousand; they would be seen riding upon every wave as far as the eye could reach. I have stood for hours at a time leaning upon REMINISCENCES OF GEO^QIA. the gunwale, to see these fishes swim by me, and sometimes they came so near I could almost reach them with my hand. After the storm had passed, I learned that during the worst of it we were going round Cape Hatteras, where I had a great many times before heard that mariners usually fpund a storm. Whether it always storms there or whether it so happens that a storm always comes up just as a vessel is passing, is not known ; but the fact that it is generally squally when a ship is off the point, is well authenti cated. I have inquired of a great many per sons who have been round the cape, if this y REMINISCENCES OE GEORGIA. 93 all the streets to summon all the soldiers to the parade ground. This performance also calls out all the servants that can obtain permission to at tend the training; and it is not a few of them, that not only follow, but go before the companies wherever they march. They are excessively fond of such scenes, and crowds of men, women, and children, never fail of being present on all such occasions, some carrying their master's young children on their heads and shoulders, while many are seen with large trays on their heads, loaded with fruit, sweetmeats, and various kinds of drinks to sell, to those who always wish to purchase on such days. In Savannah there are five of that kind of companies that exist in all the States, and are called by all names, com posed of all such persons as only perform mili tary duty because they are obliged. In Savan nah they are called ragmuffins, and I never heard a name more appropriately applied. Scarcely any two were ydressed alike or took the same step; and whenever I saw them approaching some with a shoe on one foot and a boot on the other, some with their guns wrong end up, and others with them on their shoulders, wearing their knapsacks bottom up, and wrong side out, I could not help thinking one might suppose they were learning how to catch up their guns lUOCIlflSCElfCES OF GEORGIA* mid knapsacks and effect the most speedy escape in tune of danger instead of facing an enemy. The independent companies are a credit to the militia system. They are well disciplined and wear elegant and expensive uniforms. The hussars are a noble and splendid company, mounted on fine spirited steeds so well-trained that they understand the word of command nearly as well as their riders. LETTER XIV. A journey into the country--The Church in the woods-;--A dinner by the way side--Wells on the highway--The little haven--Arrival at the Plantation. AFTER having spent several months in the city, I left it for a residence in the country during the summer season. As we had a journey of fifty or sixty miles.ito perform in one day, by private conveyance, it was necessary to set out very early in the morning. Accordingly, long be IK fore the dawn of day, or the morning sun be gan to lift the dense white fog from the tops of the trees and houses, the carriages were at the door, and all things ready for our departure. Here 1 took a reluctant leave of those friendswhose acquaintance, though it had been short, I highly valued, to go again among entire stran gers. One friend abundantly supplied me with the richest tropical fruits and sweet meats for my journey, another loaded me with papers, periodicals and books, very opportunely remem bering that the mind as well as the body needed refreshment, while all heaped upon me thetf REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. best farewell wishes. Never did I feel sadder L when taking leave of a place than I did that morning. When I looked back to catch the last glimpse of the place where lived the few * In a strange land who cared for me or I for them, and when I cast my eye around upon the A companions of my journey, and saw not one ., among them whom I had ever seen before, my heart misgave me for the step I was taking. | On leaving the city, we took a south-easterly j ,, course, and a few moments' ride carried us into the dark woods, where; certainly, if I had not Been traveling in a HtMe caravan, I should have ! had some apprehensions concerning our safety; ! bttt_our company was large and well provided witfe means of defence, which is always neces sary when traveling in the woods of Georgia, *IJtnd was particularly so at that time on account of the Indians, by whom many were cobbed and killed that year while traveling. Seeing that our personal safety had been cared and pro vided for, I endeavored to make myself as com fortable as possible in my no wise enviable sit uation, thinking, too, we should shortly come to open land and cultivated fields, but in this I was disappointed. The further we went the more dark and gloomy every thing grew. Trees oa each side of us, heavy with moss, REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 97 stretched out their limbs over our pathway, shutting out almost every cheerful ray from the sun, which at that time, we greatly needed, it being the winter season, and the morning was cold and Samp. In this manner we rode, hour after hour, meeting with nothing to vary the scene save nofv and then a little country car$ drawn by a mule and conducted by a woman* or a slave with a swine, or deer, or bunch of r*. live fowls upon his head, going to market. Oc casionally our approach would start a timid , hare from the path, or scare up some large wild ? bird, which then would flap its lazy wings and disappear from our sight. Finally, about the middle of the forenoon, we passed a building in the woods, by the way side, that I supposed was a barn, yet why it should be there, so far from any cultivated field or human habitation, I could not divine ; consequently I made inquiry colfecerning the matter of the gentleman I was rid ing with. He looked quite surprised at my interrogation,, and certainly I was no less so at his answer, when he said it was a meeting house. I then asked, as a matter of course, where the people came from who worshipped there 1 He replied: "Oh, out of the woods, all around here." But I was no more enlightened upon the subject,; it was all beyond my comprehen- G f 96 REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. sion what the church was there for, or from whence the people could come who assembled in it, for we had then rode perhaps twenty miles and had not before seen a single spot of cleared land, or any thing that bore the least resemblance to a building, and the whole re mained a mystery to me till I had been in ,the country long enough to know more of its manners and customs. I had observed, all the way along, little dark avenues leading off iato the woods on our right and left, but never once dreamed they were more than such Uhs are at the North, which we often see while traveling on a road through the woods. Here such roads are made by lumber men while clearing timber in the winter, but there each one of them leads to a plantation. In all that country one might travel a week on the main road, and see nothing of the plantations. To have a view of these, one must turn off from * the highway and pass through one of those nar row avenues for two, three, or fqur miles, then *after passing a gate he will soon find himself among luxuriant crops of corn, cotton, and. to bacco. So I was much nearer the abodes of men than I supposed through all that long day in which I thought we were all the time going farther and farther from human habilations. If REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 99 / I had known this at the time, it would have sav ed me a good many unhappy regrets for hav ing left the city. In such a path as this we traveled long after I had begun anxiously to look out for an inn, greatly needing rest and refreshment; but just as I began to despair of finding the desired ^entertainment that day, as the woods all the time seemed to grow thick er and darker, the gentleman in the forward carriage who took the lead of our little party stopped and called out to the company, " if it was not time for dinner." I was not a littley. surprised as well as amused, and began to thinJfc this was going to be another incomprehensible meeting-house affair, but all mystery vanished when I saw saddle-bags, portmanteaus, and wallets brought out and emptied of their con tents upon a cloth spread upon the ground. Then I found, for the first time, how conven ient it was to be independent of a public house, and that our necessities could be well supplied right in the woods, and save our half dollars into the bargain; for our good host had well considered our wants before leaving the city. After a little rest, and man and beast had suf ficiently partaken of their repast, we set for ward on our journey again, while the plumed songsters sent forth their sweetest and most en- REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA, chanting notes to cheer us on. We often pass ed in the course of the day wells of water by the way-side, dug for the comfort of the wayfaring man and his beast in that " dry and thirs ty land/' where there are no cooling streams nor fountains of water.' Here " the old oaken, iron-bound bucket hung in the well," from jOThich our horses many times during the day quenched their thirst. About the middle of the forenoon we came to a river where we had a toll-bridge to pass. Here was a toll-house and blacksmith's shop, the first buildings we had seen, excepting the meeting-house, after leaving Sa vannah. We tarried there a little while to have one of the carriages repaired, and then plunged into the dark woods agfrin. Near evening we reached a small settlement on a wide creek wtyere large boats and sloops run up from South Newport river to land various kinds of mer chandise. It was one of the sweetest little spots I ever saw. Weeping willows grew plen tifully up and down the shores of the creek, ex tending their slender branches over the barges there lying upon their oars, while 'the sailors trho manned them, added the sound of the bu- and violin to the music of the surrounding forest in chanting the evening's parting lay to setting sun. Now for a short season we en- f .it REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 101 joyed the evening twilight, then the darkness of night began to close in upon us. Trees on eith er hand formed arches above our heads, and though occasional openings among the boughs suffered us to get a peep at a star or two, the* darkness before us the remainder of the even ing appeared impenetrable, yet we always found the darkness to recede'as we advanced. So we* may always find it in life's pathway. When our course appears the darkest and most hedg ed up, if we but persevere we shall find when we arrive at the spot which seems impassable at a distance,' like Marv at the tomb of our Savior, that " the stone is already rolled a way.'* If Bunyan's Pilgrim when he saw the lions on the hill of Difficulty, had then turned back he never would have known that they were bound. So we should never give up a laudable under takinog because doubts and uncertainties often seem to obstruct our path ; these are placed be fore us to test our fortitude and perseverance rather than to prevent us from doing what we thought to be our duty. At length we came to one of those dark avenues I Have before spoken of. ' After having gone about two miles in this road, so narrow we were often obliged to make use of much adroitness in order to avoid the limbs of the trees, we came to a gate 102 REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA, i opened upon an extensive plantation, as I right ly judged was the one to which we were bound. ' At the farther extremity of this wide plain we saw faint lights through the branches of a cluster ; of trees, when one of the company observed that when we reached the spot where those lights were we should complete our day's journey. ^It was grateful news to me, for then it was past eight o'clock, and besides being chilled through by a cold December dew, I was never more faint and weary, but still the thought almost froze my soul that those warm hearts which would gladly have welcomed me to a good warm j^ew-England fire, were not waiting there to greet my coming. When we arrived at the planter's house we were met at the gate by half a score of servants, who came out to take the horses and assist us from our carriages. I was fhen conducted beneath a beautiful growth of Shade trees, then up a short flight of steps on to a broad piazza, and from thence into one of the principal rooms of the house, of which in my next letter I will try to give you some de scription, and if I succeed in giving you a good idea of |his, you will well understand the gene ral appearance and situation of all the buildings of the kind in that region. LETTER XV. A Southern Planter's House. THE house of which I promised in my last let ter to give a description, according to general custom, stood upon four posts about five feet from the ground, allowing . a free circulation of air beneath, as well as forming a fine covert for the hounds, goats, and all the domestic fowls. It was only one story high, though much taller than buildings of the same description at the North. It was divided into four apartments below, and two in the roof, and furnished with two broad piazzas, one in front of the building; which there is always the gentleman's sitting room, and one on the back of the house, where the servants await their master's orders. Hou ses are built low on account of the high winds they are exposed to, their foundations being so frail that if high they would be easily thrown down in one of their heavy gales. The building was slightly covered with boards, arranged like clapboards to shed the rain. This was the 104 OF GEORGIA. entire thicknesV%f the walls, there being no ceiling, lathing, or plastering within. The floors were all single and laid in so unworkman like manner, I could often see the ground be neath, when the carpets were not on the floor, and they are always taken up in the summer to make the apartments cooler. The roof was covered with long shingles nailed to the tim bers, to save the expense of boards beneath, the ends of one tier just lapping upon the next, an^ this executed so shammily that not only the wind, but the light and rain often finds free ac cess into the upper apartments, through ten thousand holes among the shingles. Two chim neys, one upon each end, built of turfs, sticks, blocks of wood, and occasionally a brick, plas tered over with clay, ornamented the outside of the house. The windows were furnished with panes of glass, a luxury but few enjoy ; after all glazed windows were used more for orna|pent than comfort, for in the coldest weather they were always raised, and in stormy weath er the piazzas protected the inner rooms. The above is as true a description as I can give of the singular fashioned house to which I was con ducted on my arrival in the country. My ap pearance there was altogether unexpected by the whole family, therefore there was no small V-,*' REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 105 stir, nor little inquiry among jti$ negroes and the younger members of the family, what I was there for, who I was, and from whence the strange lady had come, who had so unexpec tedly dropped in among them. From the room in which I sat, I could look into all the other apartments about me, and I was not a little amused to see the many dark forms with bare feet and noiseless steps flitting about from one place to another, to get a peep at the new com er, and to hear the whisperings on all sides of me, of which I well understood I was the sub ject. The servants would come to the win dows on the outside, and lift up one corner of the curtain to steal a look at me, others would creep softly up the steps of the piazza and peep into the door, while one old woman, less bash ful than the others, ventured into the room, dressed in a coarse ozenburg gown, extending a little below the knees, with bare feet, neck, and arms, and came before me and made a low courtesy, accompanied by the formal salutation, "how de Misse," and then sat, down on the floor at a little distance from me, and in a very respectful manner entered into conversation. She was one of the oldest women on the plan tation, and though she was one of the field hands, she had free access to her master's house, 106 OF GEORGIA. and she possessed such a good share of common sense that her master and mistress always con sulted her on important matters, and she was looked up to and reverenced by the whole fam ily as a sort of mother. While I remained on the plantation she frequently called at my room to spend an hour or two in conversation, and I never failed of obtaining some useful informa tion from her on these occasions. All this time I was eagerly watching to see if I could discov er any preparations going on preliminary to a supper, but as I could discover none, and it was then near nine o'clock, I had just summoned all my fortitude to meet my hungry fate with the most becoming resignation,. when a robust yoiing woman made her appearance up the steps of the back piazza into the room where I was, and brought out two or three large tables, nearly reaching from one side of the room to the other, and began to lay them for supper. Presently another of the same description came ifrom the same quarter, bringing the eatables. When all these preparations were complete, the tea-bell was rung from the piazza, which to my great surprise, for I had seen only two or three white person?, excepting those I came with, brought around the table a family of twenty or twenty-five persons^ consisting partly of tran- .*. REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 107 sient members and visitors. Where they all came from, was as mysterious to me as where those people lived who attended the church, for I had not yet forgotten about the meeting house in the woods. Soon after tea I was conducted to the room I was to occupy while a resident in in the family, one of the chambers in the roof. Though my first impressions concerning my fu ture comfort in it were very unfavorable, yet I found, after I had learned that my accomodations for that place were of a superior order, and when I had had a view of the surrounding scenery from my windows, that it was one of the most delightful of situations, but the dark ness of evening when I first entered my apart ment shutting out from my view every object but the rough walls around me, it could not be thought strange if my forebodings were not of the most pleasing kind. Though the house was of but one story, it was ,so constructed that I had three windows in my chamber; these were closed with heavy board shutters. The floor was smooth and white, and the walls ceiled to the windows, the remainder being rough boards. Over head there was nothing to be seen but the unfinished timbers and shingles, warped into all shapes. The furniture was brought from the North, and consisted of all those articles usual- 108 REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. Iy used in furnishing such rooms, and looked irery natural, all but my bed. This had very high posts, and was covered with a spread so small that it gave the bed the appearance of standing on stilts. My doubts concerning my future convenience did not at all diminish bv taking a view of the surrounding objects; never theless I made haste to avail myself of all the comforts my apartment afforded, and shortly was nicely ensconsed beneath the quilts and coverlets ; but when I had extinguished my light I was utterly thrown into the horrors, to find instead of a close warm shelter for my head, a complete seive was stretched out over me, and being raised in a land where every one is taught to be afraid of the least crevice that will admit the cold air, I could not shut my eyes to sleep for perfect terror at those thousand of holes in the roof, through which the light of the then rising moon was staring in upon me; they seemed to me, through the greater part of that night, to be so many cold and freezing eyes try ing to look me out of countenance. In the morning, on throwing open my blinds, and tak ing a view of the surrounding scenery, I began to feel much more reconciled to my situation than on the previous evening. At the south east the ever rolling Atlantic stretched itself out REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 109 as far as the eye could reach, and where the sky and water seemed to meet, now and then a sloop would lose itself to the sight, or a little white speck would appear which would grow larger and larger till a ship under full sail would ride majestically over the mighty waves. On all other sides of the plantation the dark green forest of the long leafed pines completely hem med us in, separating us from all other planta tions and leaving us a little world by ourselves. As I said before, the plantation was an exten sive plain, which at this season of the year was covered with the decaying stalks of the last years' crops, waiting to be gathered and burned to make room for a new harvest. The dry, black cotton stalks were still standing, and though it was very early in the morning the slaves were busy in pulling from the bursting burs the snow-white cotton. Here and there in different parts of the field the little curling smokes betrayed the bon-fires at which the poor women warmed their frost-chilled fingers. The plantation was beautifully dotted with oak and mulberry trees that fortunately for those who love to hear the birds sing, did not share in the general wreck when the plantation was cleared. I found, also, that on this as all other plantations, it required more than one building to make up a 110 REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. it: family residence, and that instead of having all tfae necessary apartments under one roof as at the North, there were nearly as many roofs as rooms. In my next letter I will speak of all these separate little buildings. LETTER XVI. Buildings connected with a Southern Plantation--A Walk in the Woods--The Robin--The Preparation of Cotton for the Market--Women engaged in Falling Trees and Build ing Fences. AGREEABLE to my promise in my last letter, I will now go on with my description of the buildings belonging to a Southern plantation. In the first place there was a paling enclosing all the buildings belonging to the family and all the house servants. In the centre of this enclo sure stood the principal house, the same I have already in a previous letter described. In this the father of the family and all the females lodged. The next house of importance was the one occupied by the steward of the plantation, and where all the white boys belonging to the family had their sleeping apartments. The next after this was a school house consisting of two rooms, one for a study, the other the master's dormitory. Then the cook, the washer-woman, and the milk-maid, had each their several houses, the children's nurses always sleeping upon the REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. floor of their mistress' apartment. Then again there was the kitchen, the store-house, cornhouse, stable, hen-coop, the hound's kennel, the shed for the corn mill, all these were separate little buildings within the same enclosure. Even the milk-safe stood out under one great tree, while under another the old washer wo man had all her apparatus arranged; even her kettle was there suspended from a cross-pole. Then to increase the beauty of the scene, the whole establishment was completely shaded by ornamental trees, which grew at a convenient distances among the buildings, and towering far above them all. The huts of the field servants formed another little cluster of dwellings at con siderable distance from the master's residence, yet not beyond the sight of his watchful and jealous eye. These latter huts were arranged with a good deal of order and here each slave had his small patch of ground adjacent to his own dwelling, which he assiduously cultivated after completing his daily task. I have known the poor creatures, notwithstanding " tired na ture" longed for repose, to spend the greater part "of a moonlight night on these grounds. In this way they often raise considerable crops of corn, tobacco, and potatoes, besides various kinds of garden vegetables. Their object in doing this REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 113 is to have something with, which to purchase o tea, coffee, sugar, flour, and all such articles of diet as are not provided by their masters, also such clothing as is necessary to make them appear decent in church, but which they can not have unless they procure it by extra ef forts. From this you see the slave is obliged to work the greater part of his time, for one coarse torn garment a year, and hardly food enough of the coarsest kind to support nature, without the least luxury that can be named. Neither can they after the fatigues of the day repose their toil worn bodies upon a comfortable bed unless they have earned .it by laboring many a long, weary hour after even the beasts and the birds have retired to rest. It is a common rule to furnish every slave with one coarse blanket each, and these they always carry with them, so when night overtakes them, let it be where -it may, they are not obliged to hasten home to go to rest. Poor creatures! all the home they have is where their blanket is, and this is all the slave pretends to call his own besides his dog. But I find I have wandered far from the morning which com menced the period of my residence in the coun try, so now I will return to my own strange quarters again. H IH ! REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. Early I went to work to make such a disposi tion of my books and all other things pertaining to my own apartment as I fancied would contri bute most to my own comfort and make it ap pear the most homelike. When this was done I left the house for a walk in the woods, hoping there to be able to shake off those evil spirits, sometimes called the blues, which I found were determined to haunt me at all events. Although it was now the last of December the forests were still green, and scarcely a tree had shed its sum mer leaves, yet there was not that freshness in the verdure that characterizes the young leaves of spring, but age was written upon every little shrub and twining vine, and an autumnal hue tinged every thing with a sort' of melancholy. I went far into the woods, and finding a little grassy mound in the midst of a sort o$topening among the trees, I seated myself to think of that sacred spot in the land of my fathers I still loved to call my home, and if fancy's airy wings could have as easily transported the material as the immaterial, how soon should I have been there basking in the sunshine of a mother's love! Though I always make it a point in whatever situation I am placed "therewith to be content," yet I must confess a degree of sadness came over me I do not often experience, and I shall REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 115 never forget how opportunely a lone robin came and seated herself upon the ground at a little distance from me. I would have pressed the dear bird to my bosom, for she was one. of my own country's sweet songsters, and I knew that like myself, she felt that she was a stranger there. She looked sorrowful and timid as though she thought she must be careful about her de portment while from home, and it is a fact that the robins do not appear to be the same cheer ful, happy birds while at their winter homes that they are at the North. I never heard a robin sing while I was there, and instead of coming around the buildings as they do when they are with us, they appear shy and tarry in the woods. People at the South never see their nests and young ones, but when spring comes they hasten home, and every little child here knows with what glad songs they return to their old nests again. I found after I had been in the country a few months that the season when I first went thiere was the most gloomy part of the year. At this time there were but few slaves upon the planta tion, many of them being let out to boatmen who at this season of the year are busily engaged in the transportation of goods and produce of all kinds up and down the rivers. The sweet sing- 116 REMINISCENCES OF'GEORGIA. ing birds, too, were all gone to their winter quarters still farther South, but when they had all return!ed, and the trees began to assume the freshness of summer, and the plants to put forth their blossoms, I found it was far from being a dull and gloomy place. During the greater part of the winter season the negro women are busy in picking, ginning, and packing the cotton for market. In packing the cotton, the sack is suspended from strong spikes, and while one colored person stands in it to tread the cotton down, others throw it into the sack. I have often wondered how the cotton could be sold so cheap when it required so much labor to get it ready for the market, and certainly it could not be if all their help was hired at the rate of northern labor. The last of January the servants began to re turn to the plantation to repair the fences and make ready for planting and sowing. The fences are built of poles arranged in a zigzag manner, so that the ends of one tier of poles icests upon the ends of another. In this work the* women are engaged as well as the men. They all go into the woods and each woman as well as man cuts down her own pine sapling, and brings it upon her head. It certainly was a most revolting sight to see the female form REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 117 scarcely covered with one old miserable gar ment, with no covering for the head, arms, or neck, nor shoes to protect her feet from briers and thorns, employed in conveying trees upon tor head from one place to another to build fences. When I beheld such scenes I felt cul pable in living in ease and enjoying the luxuries of life, while so many of my own sex were obliged to drag out such miserable existences merely to procure these luxuries enjoyed by their masters. When the fences were com pleted, they proceeded to prepare the ground for planting. This is done by throwing the earth up in ridges from one side of-the field to the other. This work is usually executed by hand labor, the soil is so light, though sometimes to facilitate the process a light plough, drawn by a mule, is used. The ground there is reck oned by tasks instead of acres. If a person is asked the extent of a certain piece of land, .he is told it contains so many tasks, accordingly so many tasks are assigned for a day's work. In hoeing corn, three tasks are considered a good day's work for a man, two for a woman and one and a half for a boy or girl fourteen or fifteen years old* LETTER XVII. Why the Southern Planters build no better houses--Hand Mills --Negro Dance--The African slave--A Southern cook. IN answer to the question, " Why tne planters have no better dwellings," I would reply, that they are under the necessity of changing their places of residence so often, on account of the soil, which in a few years becomes barren, owing to the manner in which it is cultivated, if they invested much property in buildings, they would be obliged to make great pecuniary sac rifices ; therefore they have but little property that is not moveable. Their possessions gen erally consist in slaves, herds of swine and cat tle, horses, mules, flocks of goats, and numer ous fowls of all kinds, fine carriages, furniture, plate, ejtc., which can be transported when oc casion demands a removal from one old worn out plantation to another of new and fruitful soil. A Northerner, who is accustomed to judge of a farmer's property by his buildings, would suppose, when he first went into the country at REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 119 the South, that many of great wealth were poor men, their buildings are so miserable. The manner of estimating a planter's pecuniary circumstances is by the number of his slaves, consequently a man ambitious to be called wealthy, strives as hard to increase the number of his slaves, as a man North does to add to the number of his acres of land, or dollars in the. bank. I have visited plantations where the master's residence had not a pane of glass in the windows, nor a door between the apart ments, and even the outside doors would have been dispensed with, if it could have been done with personal safety. Neither was there the shadow of a board to intervene between the ground floor and the coarse unhewn shingles, as seen on the inside of the roof, yet the table was loaded with an almost endless variety of the richest delicacies that could be obtained from the woods, fields and creeks, and when night came, beds of the softest down were ready for our reception. The fields, too, were full of men servants and women servants. The poultry yards were full to overflowing, and the woods teemed with numerous herds of cattle, horses, mules, and goats, while scores of red and yel low swine literally turned up the meadows in search of worms; vet with all these posses- 120 OP GEORGIA. sions, that which we consider so indispensable -3#- to comfort, was a mere shell, and could .all be taken down and removed in a few hours. In traveling in that section one often meets deserted plantations, and I have often been told such is the case throughout the Slave States. This is occasioned by no means being used to enrich the soil. A plantation is cleared, and a sert of temporary huts erected, then covered with slaves who cultivate the soil as long as it will produce any thing, then left for another to be used in the same way. I have often visited these ruined grounds, but never could I walk over the spot where the poor slave seated him self to partake of his scanty meal, or where he couched down upon the hard ground in his tent for a short repose after a long day of hard toil, without thinking of the many tears that had probably fallen there, and of the sighs and groans that had been wafted to heaven from that very spot, and when I looked over those desolate and barren wastes, I was superstitious enough to think that even the toil of the stolen son of/Sfrica had cursed the soil, and that his sweat bedewing the ground had been trans formed to a blighting mildew. I have, in a previous letter, spoken of the rfaves grinding corn; thts^is done by hand- REMIMSCESCES OF GEORGIA. 121 mills constructed of two round flat stones, the upper one being turned around upon the other by hand labor. One person can, though, with a good deal of difficulty, grind corn alone, but it is customary for two at a time to engage in this labor. This mill is probably the same in kind with those used in Oriental countries, res pecting which our Savior said, " Two women shall be grinding at the mill, the one shall be taken the other left." The time for the grind ing of corn was always in the evening after the daily tasks were done. About seven o'clock, in the summer season, the colored people would generally begin to as semble in the yard belonging to the planter's residence. Here they would kindle little bon fires, not only to ward off the musquitoes, but because they are considered essential in the hot season to purify the air when it is filled with feverish vapors that arise from decayed vege table matter. Then while two of their number are engaged at the mill, all the rest join in a dance around the burning fagots. In this man ner were spent the greater part of the summer evenings, and it was usual for the white mem bers of the family to assemble on the piazza to witness their pastimes, and sometimes at the re quest of a favorite slave, I have seen the white- r---l OP GEORGIA. children engage in the waltz, or take their places in the quadrille. Slaves from adjoining plantations would often come to spend an even ing with their acquaintances, and bring their corn with them to grind. The grinding gener ally commences at about six in the evening, and the lioarse sound of the mill seldom ceased much before midnight. Though the slaves in general, notwithstand ing all their hard toils and sorrows, had their happy hours, there was one old woman on the plantation who always looked cast down and sorrowful, and never appeared to take any inter est in what caused the joy and mirth of those around her. She was one of Afric's own home born daughters, and she had never forgotten those who nursed her in infancy, nor the play mates of her childhood's happy hours. She told me she was stolen one day while gathering -s. shells into a little basket on the sea shore, when she was about ten years old, and crowded into a vessel with a good many of her own race, who had also been stolen and sold for slaves, and from that hour when she left her mother's hut to go ut to play she had never seen one of her own kindred, though she had always hoped that Providence might bring some of them in -her way; " But now," she replied, "I begin to REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 123 despair of ever ,seeing those faces which are still fresh in my memory, for now I am an old woman, and shall soon get through all my troub les and sorrows, and I only think now of meet ing them in heaven." When requested she would favor us with a song in her own language, learned before she was'stolen, but when she came to sing of her native hills and sparkling streams, the tears would trickle down her sun burnt and furrowed cheeks, and my heart could but ache for this poor creature, stolen away in the innocence of youth, from parents, kindred, home, and country, which were as dear to her as mine to me. Of all the house-servants, I thought the task of the coqk was the most laborious. Though she did no other house-work she was obliged to do every thing belonging to the kitchen depart ment, and that, too, with none of those con veniences without which a Northern woman would think it was impossible for her to prepare a meal of victuals. After having cooked the supper and washed the dishes she goes about making preparations for the next morning's meal. In the first place she goes into the woods to gather sticks and dried limbs of trees, which she ties in bundles and brings to the kitchen on her head, with which toj kindle the morning fire; 124 REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. to get as much fuel as she will want to use in preparing the breakfast she is often obliged to go into the woods several times. When this is done she has all the corn to grind for the hommony and bread, then the evening's preparations are completed. In the morning she is obliged to rise very early, for she has every article of food that comes on to the table to cook, nothing ever being prepared till the hour it is needed. When she has gone through with all the duties connected with the morning's repast, then she goes about the dinner, bringing fuel from the woods, grinding corn, etc. In this manner the cook spends her days, for in whatever depart ment the slaves are educated, they are generally obliged to wear out their lives. LETTER XVIII. Cultivation of Rice--The Sweet Potato--Pea Nuts--Feeding of Swine--Garden Vegetables, Fruits, Flowers, Shrubs and Trees. BESIDES rice, I believe corn is the only kind of r1 grain produced in the Southern part of Geor gia, and this differs very much in the size of its kernel, color and taste from the kind which is used among us. The flour that is made from ft is as white as our wheat flour, and makes much better bread than our corn. As no wheat is raised there, corn meal and flour are used in cooking almost every dish. It is sej^ved up in hpnimony, to be used as a vegetable with meat, gen erally three times a day. On the plantations but a very little bread is used besides the corn bread, and this is prepared hot for every meal. In its growth it is very stout and tall, reaching to the height of eight or nine feet. I have been in corn-fields so extensive and the stalks so much above my head that I thought one might be in nearly as much danger of losing his way out 126 REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. as he would be in a forest he was unacquainted with. The Southern corn is much longer in coming to maturity than ours. It is planted two or three months earlier, and gathered about the same time. The next thing that is planted after the corn is the sweet potato. This vegeta ble is of two kinds, called yams and slips. The yams are raised by planting the root in the spring as our farmers do the Irish potato, then when the tops of these are about six inches high, slips are cut from them and planted on another piece of ground. This is done on rainy days, or in the morning and evening, when the dew is on the ground. The potato obtained in this way is called the slip, and is long and slender in form while the yam is short and thick. Great quan tities of pea-nuts are raised there, not only as an article for export, but to fatten swine upon. They are planted in the same manner as potatoes and when they have come to maturity the swine are turned in upon them to dig their own food. It is not usual for planters to feed their swine in any other way, and this only in the fall previ ous to slaughter. At other times they procure their own food, either by digging roots in the woods, or hunting for snails and worms in the marshes. When they are fed the performance is attended to every day just between day-light REMINtSCENCES OF GEORGIA. 127 and dark. First* their suppers are all made ready for them, then a horn is sounded which occasions a truly swinish concert from every hole, nook and corner in the surrounding woods and marshes, from which one or two hundred of these noisy creatures might issue. It was strange to me they could so readily distinguish the horn that was sounded for them from the one that called the dogs to hunting; but they perfectly understood the difference, so did the hounds. The cattle also in that region pro cured their own sustenance, both in summer and winter, in the woods and swamps. It is common for one man to own one thousand or fifteen hundred cattle, all of which, except a very few, being too wild to come out in the open fields. In the summer season the" slaves kin dle little bonfires on the borders of the planta tion every evening, around which crowds of cattle gather to escape the dreadful bite of the gallinippers, a kind of mammoth musquitoes. When a beef is to be killed, several men, mounted on fleet horses and followed by a pack of hounds, hunt them down as they would other wild game. Of all the productions of slavery, the cultivation of no one is attended with so much physical suffering and loss of life as ti^at of'ithe rice plant. This is owing to the circum- 128 REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. stance of its being raised in a swamp overflowed with stagnant water. I never visited but one rice field, then I was obliged to go on horse back, as it was inaccessible on foot, all the ground lying round about the field being cov ered with mud and water. Rice grounds are those over which the tide flows, but to make them suitable for the production of this grain, the salt water is turned off by dikes, and over flowed with fresh water, which soon stagnates in that hot country; this is what makes these fields so unhealthy. Formerly, all the land bordering on the Savannah river, from its mouth up a good many miles, both on the Georgia and Carolina sides, was cultivated with rice; the consequence of which was those yellow fevers which proved so fatal to thousands in Savannah several years ago. Now the government forbids the cultivation of those grounds, and being cleansed and purified twice in the course of twenty-four hours by the rising of the tides, Savannah has become one of the most healthy cities on the Atlantic coast. The swamp I vis-. ited was cut out in the heart of the woods, and the stumps of the trees were all standing among the rice stalks, which were then about five ~m : b$t high and almost covered with wdfer. When, the rice is ready for harvesting, REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. water is drained off a few days before it is o-athered. Musquitoes accumulate in these swamps beyond all conception. The few mo ments I tarried at the field it seemed as if I should be devoured alive, and I believe those monstrous gallinippers, if they had an opportunit*v,7 would have in a little while transformed myself and beast into mere skeletons. Yet in such horrible places as these, filled with pestilential vapors, scarcely less fatal than the deadly simoon of the desert, not only men, but thousands of poor, feeble, and halfstarved women and girls, with flesh and blood like our own, are compelled by the lash to drag out their wretched and miserable, but short existence, merely to procure an article of diet for those of their brethren in the human family who were born with little fairer com plexions. Melons of all kinds, the nicest and richest I ever saw, were raised in such abundance on the plantation where I was that they were brought from the field by cart loads. Their fruit consists principally of figs and oranges;-->, attempts have been made to raise the Northern apple, but with very little success; if they suc ceed at all in raising apples, they will be crab bed and spongy. Some planters try to cultivate r L 130 REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. the Iristy potato, but they are as miserable as is the sweet potato when it is cultivated here. Figs are raised in abundance in the Southern part of Georgia. This fruit, when fresh from the tree, is extremely delicious, and bears no sort of resemblance in taste, color, or shape to the same fruit when dried. When on the tree, it resembles in shape a bell 'pear, in color our purple grape. To preserve figs they are placed on tins, covered over with sugar, and dried in the sun. In beauty the fig-tree holds a high rank in the vegetable kingdom; its branches J ' are long and slender, and all the lower ones reach the ground, while its broad, palmate leaves are so numerous that the tree not only forms a cool and shady covert from the sun, but also a safe retreat from wind and rain. I have often thought, while sitting beneath one of these beautiful trees, completely hidden from the view of those round about, that Nathaniel might well think that our Savior must be divine, if he saw him "when he was under the fig tree." Habakkuk says, "Although the fig-tree shall not blosfoca," but it is an anomaly in the vegetable kingdom that the fig-tree never does blossom. I have examined very closely the little stalks from which the fruit makes its appearance, and I never could discover the least appearance of REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 131 anything that resembled the organs of fructifi cation. I suppose, however, they are contained in the fruit itself. Before closing this letter I will say a word or two about plants and flowers. In the Southern country we see a great many more flowering shrubs than we do here. Many plants that are annual here, and have soft fibrous stems, become perennial there, and their stems grow hard and woody. Geraniums almost be come shrubs at the South. Some plants which we cultivate with care, as the chrysanthenum, -are there regarded as noxious weeds. The prickly pear almost covers the uncultivated soil* and the colored people with their unshod feet often suffer very much in consequence of travel ing among them. Among the forest trees, the different species of the laurel, as the bay tree and magnolia, might be considered as the pride of the woods. They all bear beautiful, large, white blossoms, even more fragrant than the pond lily; and when they are in full bloom, they fill the air with their delicious fragrance. The leaves of the magnolia are large and lustrous, and I have often plucked them for sun-shades, and as long as they .lasted found them equally as good as those manufactured of silk and whale bone. Many of the Southern forests are liter ally hedged up with all kinds of tough vines, so 132 REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA* interwoven among the trees that the woods in many places are utterly impenetrable. Many of these vines bear "the sweetest flowers of every rich hne that can be described, literally forming a hedge of blossoms. Cedars are among the most common trees that grow in the open fields and on the banks of the creeks, and many have been the twilight hours I have spent among their dark shadgws* LETTER XIX. Sirds of the South--The Buzzard--Alligator--Deer Hunt* ing--Fishes. I should be doing violence to my own feelings if I did not honor the most lovely part of crea tion with a place in my letters, not that I expect with my feeble powers to do justice to the downy singers of Georgia, but it surely would be wanting in respect, for me to pass them by, when I speak of so many other things belong ing to the place. Of all the birds I ever heard sing, the moc'king bird has the greatest compass of voice. This bird very much resembles our little ground sparrow in color; in size it may be a little larger. One would never suppose, just to see her, she could afford such rich entertainment as will at times pour forth from her little throat. I never heard them sing excepting in the night, and then their sweet melodious songs have kept me awake during many of the hours of darkness. 134 REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. Some nights I have hardly closed my eyes in sleep before daylight began to dawn. During the day they generally concealed themselves in the woods, but when evening came, and every thing about the buildings was hushed and still, then they began to collect among the boughs that overshadowed my windows, and there for hours at a time, vie with other in variety and sweetness of strains. In the woods they will imitate every bird they hear. Sometimes they will draw around them flocks of birds by coun terfeiting the soft tones of their notes, and then all of a sudden throw them into a terrible fright by screaming like a hawk. They will often lead the hunter astray by imitating the notes of the game he is in pursuit of. When she is do mesticated she will not only make her little voice accord with every tone of the piaao, but she will mock with precision every other sound she hears. Sometimes she she will cluck like a hen and a flock of chickens 'will be running in all directions to find their mother; she mews like a hurt kitten, and old puss runs to see what has happened to her young ones; at another time she will collect together a pack of hounds, which thought their master had called them to hunting. Not less sweet and charming, though not of that endless variety as those of the mock- REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 135 ing bird, were the notes of the rice birds. The plumage of this bird was very beautiful; the body being covered with feathers as black and lustrous as that of the raven; the wings were nearly red, tinged with a golden col or, and a tuft of yellow feathers ornamented its head. I have sat for hours at my window to see these gay birds clinging firmly to a slender twig at the utmost extremity of a branch, waving in the air at the slightest breath, while the more rudely the winds seemed to sport with their frail situations, the more widely they opened their mouths to warble out a louder song. These songsters continued through the day, and when twilight came, the whip-poor-will ap peared, to finish out the song, so we had our evening as well as morning music. In the latter part of the summer the rice bird becomes very fat, then vast numbers of them are killed and served up on the table; but it always seemed to me to be a sacrilege for us to gorge on such little sweet musical instruments; to cut these little throats that filled the air with praises to God. The most useful bird in all the South, is the buzzard, more properly called the vulture. It is about as large as our tame turkey, and is a 135 REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. very ugly, filthy-looking bird, though there are none more harmless. They are so useful in clearing the ground of all putrid flesh, that the public authorities impose a fine of five dollars upon any person who intentionally kills one of them. As they are never frightened by being fired at, they have become so tame they will enter the front yards, and perch upon the fences and the tops of houses and chimneys^ and they can scarcely be driven away. I have counted thirty of them at one time sitting close together upon the paling enclosing the house. In no way are the buzzards more useful to places on the sea-board than in destroying alligator's eggs. It is said the buzzard perches upon the top of a tree and there watches the alligator when it comes up out of .the water to deposit its eggs in the sand, then as soon as it returns to the river, he calls a great many other buzzards to the spot , where they uncover the eggs and eat them. The alligator lays from one to two hundred eggs a year, and if a great many of them were not in sjome way destroyed, the whole coast wauld be so overrun with these terrible animals no one coiald live there. They came up in the creeks all about the plantation where I resided, and a gentleman told me they would often spring out of the water, and seize a dog, a swine, or a calf REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 137 two years old, if any of these animals happened to be on the shore of the creek, and plunge with them into the deep water again. He said, also, little colored children had been caught in their ponderous jaws while playing on the shores. I have often seen their places of concealment when walking in damp places and near the marshes. The slaves caught one soon after I went on to the plantation, and dragged it up uninjured to the house. This one was about sixteen feet long, and its jaws not less than three quarters of a yard in length. A gentleman tried several times with a pistol, to shoot it, but the balls would bound from the scaly covering as soon as if they had been fired upon a rock. There are two places, however, just back of each eye that may be penetrated by a ball. Many of the plantations near the sea board af t> bordered on one, or all its sides, by extensive marshes, which are overflowed twice in the course of every twenty-four hours by the tide. In these marshes, thousands of birds, called marsh-hens, build their nests upon the ground, and when the tide came up and drove them from their eggs they would make the marsh resound with their cackling till one was nearly stunned. REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. *"-" .Many large birds lived in the marshes by digging warms and snails. The largest of these are the gannet and "poor job." The gannet is a grey bird, with very long legs, neck, and bill, and about as large as the crane. * I llie poor job is a good deal larger and as *white as snow, with a long yellow bill about ten inches in length, and legs in proportion to its bill. The mourning dove is a solitary bird nearly as large as the robin, and of a light brown color. They seemed to keep aloof from all other birds, and were seldom seen in pairs. They had a very forlorn appearance, and their mournful cooing has given them the name of " Mourning Doves." Wild turkeys were very common in the woods, and were hunted a great M deal, not only for the flesh, but as a source of amusement. Of all the amusements resorted to, at the South, by gentlemen, to pass away time, I always looked upon deer hunting, as one of the most cruej. When I saw half a dozen men on horse-back, followed by as many hungry hounds all in hot pursuit for one of those helpless and innocent animals, I always wondered how men could enjoy such sports. When closely pur sued, they would often retreat -to the planta tions, and when I have seen theto panting for REMINISCENCES QF GEORGIA. 139 breath, and almost dead with fear, shifting and turning, sometimes retracing their own steps to elude tha hounds, my sympathies were al ways with the poor animals rather than the cruel hunters, and I always wanted to lend a helping hand to effect their escape. Deer hunt ing days are always hailed as the most joyous and merry, and when the company was about setting out, the prancing of the horses and the barking of the hounds testified their eagerness to be in the chase ; but I never could see ^hese preparations, without commiseration for the poor animals, at whose expense all this merri ment was to be purchased. As I have a little more room in my sheet, I will say a few words about the fishes I saw while in Georgia. The most valuable of the finny tribes was the drum fish. These attain a very large size; I have seen them as large as swine, weighing four or five hundred, and they somewhat resemble this animal. A good deal of danger attends the taking of them; unless much precaution is used, they will upset the boat of the fisherman. The white fish, black fish, and even the cat fish, came on to the table as frequently as any other; shell fish, such as the crab, shrimp, and prawns, were more salea ble than those with fins. *** 140 REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. Oyster banks were very numerous; rising out of the rivers like a ledge of rocks, and when these banks occurr near the plantations the slaves are able to add a very valuable arti cle of diet to their otherwise coarse food. Jf LETTER XX. Sabbath at the South--Going to Church--Visit to a Ceme tery--Service at Church--Refreshments--Stubbornness of a mule--Pastimes of Slaves. THAT my readers may have some idea of the manner of spending holy time at the South, I propose to relate in this letter some of the events as they occurred on one of the Sabbaths in July, while I was in the country, and this will give you a pretty good idea of the way of spending the Sabbath in general. But in at tempting to do this, I am aware that I may show a picture that to New-England's daughters, who have been brought up within the sound of the church going bell, could hardly appear true to life. For even, after I had been there so long as to become somewhat accustomed to that mode of society, I often found it difficult to realize the return of holy time, so much labor was per formed and so many kinds of amusements were indulged in; but still I felt that I was culpable for losing sight for one moment of that day of 142 REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. rest, which seems to be a prelude to that long and everlasting rest which is in reserve for 'God's dear children; for notwithstanding there was so little distinction made between the day s of the week, it seemed as though there was I something in nature itself, that said, " This is the Sabbath; remember to keep the day holy;" and so did it speak to me on the morning of that day, whose events I am now about to re late, as I arose and threw aside my curtain to enjoy a rich view of the broad Atlantic, as it rolled and dashed its briny waters far upon the shore. Though nature was not silent, her voice was not the hum of a busy world, but a sublime an them, sung as a prelude to the worship of this holy day, in which the lowing cattle made sweet harmony with the songsters of the groves, while the ocean's loud peal formed the bass to the whole; and even the flowers, whose lan guage is that of the deaf and dumb, seemed to lift up their heads and smile a welcome to the coming Sabbath. But I dwell too long upon the most pleasant, the most sacred part of the day, for the purpose I had in view when I sat down to write this letter, but I have done it be-1 cause it is so painful to reflect that the rising 0$ that being from a night of sweet repose for REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 143 whom the Sabbath was alone designed, should cause its violation, and now I almost regret that I have thought of exposing those customs and arrangements which so much interfere with a strict observance of the Sabbath; but as I in tended at the commencement of this letter I will begin with the morning. After the first duties of the day had been dis charged, which were, to serve up the morning repast, the family was called together (that is, the white portion of it,) to attend prayers, a ceremony, which, for want of time, could not be attended to on any other day of the week. This duty was succeeded by one, that by the spirit which accompanied it, I judged was con sidered by the family the most important of the two. This was a loud exercise in scolding, and long enough to last all day, preparatory to the white people going to church, and the slaves staying at home to work or play according to the indulgence of the master. I never very well understood the philosophy of this kind of discipline, unless it was the same which prompts some men to beat their cattle in anticipation of what they may possibly do. The jJhing that was to be done, was to house servants the various kinds of labor edor must perform before he could be 144 REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. allowed to play. Some were sent to churn the milk, some to grind corn, and others to the fields to prevent the depredations of jackdaws, a kind of birds that are equally as well skilled in the art of pulling up com at the South as our crows are at the North; and there instead of stuffing old coats and hats, to be a terror to all the birds, it is only necessary to command some half dozen colored boys and girls, and the cotto^ fields and corn fields are well supplied witfc the most effectual scare-crows. After all these duties had been discharged it was time for us to prepare for church. As all the plantations in that section of the country are five, ten, or fifteen miles from the place of worship, it was customary for people to go there in coaches; but that day, as all the hor ses on the plantation had been on a journey, I was either under the necessity of staying at homeTor be conveyed to church on the back of a mule, and being very fond of this kind of exercise, I chose the later alternative ; so in due time my mule was properly equipped, and when every thing was ready for our departure, I was glad to turn my face from the spot where old and young, boys and girls, servants and dogs, had ail assembled to see how I should look going to church mule-back. REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 145 On leaving the house my path to the high way carried me across the plantation among nu merous luxuriant fields of cotton, corn, and to bacco ; and now will you suffer me to depart from my subject long enough to say, that I nev er saw any thing in the vegetable kingdom more beautiful than an extensive cotton field in full blossom. The blossoms of the cotton plant are about as large as a half blown hollyhock, and red, or yellow, or white, according to the kind of cotton. The beauty of these fields is great ly enhanced by high cultivation. The slaves watch over them with such paternal care, that every stalk seems obliged to grow to the same stature, and not a noxious weed ventures to show its head. Here, as I rode along, I had an opportunity to see a plenty of those human scare-crows I referred to a few lines above. One of these poor oppressed daughters of Africa roused my sympathies more than all the rest. I judged she was about the age of fifteen. Her form, instead of being thick and robust like colored girls in general, was slight and delicate. She was stand ing in the open field, exposed to the intense heat of a July sun, with not a vestige of any thing to shield her head from its rays or her body from being scorched, but an old tattered garment, 146 REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. she was trying to draw around her form, that was so amaciated the crows could not have been considered culpable if they had mistaken their prey. The first thing I saw after leaving the planta tion, worthy of note, was a burying ground. Though a sight of these last resting places for all the living, must always cause the reflective mind to feel sad, I do not recollect of ever hav ing a scene create such a feeling of desolateness as I experienced during the few moments I tarried to view this home of the dead. Per haps the day and my own situation, being sep arated from all my dear friends, contributed to these feelings in some degree; but the place itself was one of dark shadows ; it was far from any human habitation, laid out in a dense dark forest of lofty pines, surrounded by a high brick wall once plastered but now almost overgrown with moss and vines. It was an ancient bury ing ground, where the silent repose of its long forgotten dead had not been for ages disturbed by the sound of the spade or shovel. The gloomy cypress had been left to grow till its branches touched the graves it sheltered. The willows too, upon which the long grey moss of that country had been suffered to accumulate for ages, looked as though they hung their heads REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 147 in sackcloth, and were the only beings left to mourn the fate of the departed. Here the whippoorwills, mistaking the gloominess of the place for evening, came and seated themselves upon the graves and shouted a requiem to the dead, while the midnight owl hooted from his hiding place among the old pines a warning to him who might intrude upon their silent repose. Though this place was enshrouded in gloom, I could have tarried there for hours; and indeed, if I had, I should have received more instruc tion than I did from the sermons I listened to. At length, having rode several miles further in the woods, I came to what the people in that country are obliged to call a church, but what we should call a barn, situated among the trees of the forest. This building was merely a frame covered slightly with boards, set up on four posts five or six feet from the ground, and hav ing neither bell, cupola, or glass windows; finally the most that can be said of it, is, that it was only a shelter on the Sabbath for those who went to church, and a great bird-house, where all kinds of the feathered tribes congre gate on week days to sing songs and build nests. When I arrived I saw by the number of horses and carriages that were standing beneath the trees, that I was late to church; I rode up 148 REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. to a stump in front of the house, dismounted, and when I had fastened my mule in nature's own stable, I went into the church. In that part of the country both the white people and colored people are seated upon the same floor, with only this difference, the white people sit nearest the pulpit. The services were conducted much as they are at the North, excepting the singing. As the slaves join in this part of the worship, and can not read, the minister to accommodate them only reads two lines of a hymn at a time, and when these are sung, he reads two more, and so on through the hymn. At the close of the morning ser vice the white part of the congregation retired for refreshment to their seats in the woods erect ed for this purpose. These places seemed to be the general depot for all the news of the week. All letters and papers from the post office were distributed there, strangers introduced, and the state of the cotton market discussed, and, as in all other assemblies, the faults of neighbors slightly hinted at. While all sorts of news was in circulation, the servants at the same time were busy in passing round on trays those lux uries provided forjour physical wants, of which the heavens above and the waters beneath had not furnished a meagre part. Our repast being REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 149 finished we were once more ready to listen to the eloquence of the pulpit, and having again been entertained by a very fervent appeal to " servants to obey their masters in all things," we were ready to turn our faces homeward. But as the wind and tide are not always fa vorable to the course we wish to take, so was not my mules disposition to the direction she was desired to go that evening, for when she was coming towards me, all of a sudden she stopped and planted her feet firmly in the ground, and all the beating, pushing, and coaxing that could be urged by all the men, boys and servants, that had collected on this very important occa sion, could not make her move one step for near ly an hour, and notwithstanding it was a very serious affair, I could have enjoyed a good hearty laugh; but as my situation was a very con spicuous one; being through the whole of the scene perched upon a high stump in front of the meeting house, I thought it would be too irreverant to indulge in a propensity so natural to me. Finally, after having more trouble to mount this stubborn creature than I ever had before to do any thing of the kind, I succeeded, and going upon the principle that what had been lost in time should be made up in speed, I soon found myself before the gate of the plantation. 150 REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. There a new scene presented itself to my view. The slaves had finished the tasks that had been assigned them in the morning, and were now enjoying holiday recreations. Some were trundling the hoop, some were playing ball, some dancing at the sound of the fiddle, some grinding their own corn at the mill, while others were just returning from fishing or hunt ing excursions. In this manner the Sabbath is usually spent on a Southern plantation; and when I retired to my own room that evening, and remembered the sanctuaries in my own land, I truly longed for that day when I might once more go up to the house of God in company with those " who keep holy day." *'- LETTER XXI. Evils of Slavery as felt by the Master--Early training of Children at the South--Theft and Robbery. THOSE who have never lived in the Southern States, can have but a faint conception of the evils that accrue to the master as well as slave, from their peculiar institutionsi Incidents of such a nature have many times come under my own observation, as almost to cause me to feel that the master lived in the greatest bondage. But it would be impossible for me to make you believe there is any trnth in such an asser tion, without something more tangible than the simple statement, therefore I will relate a few facts, not only to show that slaveholders live in constant fear for the safety of their lives and property, but also the corrupting and demorali zing influence such a system has upon every thing that comes in contact with it. Of all the evils that a country under the dominion of slavery is heir to, I consider that the greatest which arises from the early training 152 REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. of its youth. Nothing in my opinion seems so calculated to sap the very foundation of all their institutions, both moral and religious, and even government itself, as this. Just think of the very individual who is destined to wield the scepter of government, receiving the first im press upon his mind from an ignorant, degraded, and perhaps profane nurse, to whose almost en tire charge his mind as well as his body has been consigned ere his infant tongue has been taught to utter its first syllable. Yet such is the case In a thousand instances, and instead of all those holy influences that hover around the cradle in the Christian mother's nursery, the very atmo sphere in which the slaveholder's soy. draws his first breath, is infected with that moral miasma which poisons the soul, and corrupts all the virtuous principles of the heart; and when the Christian mother would hush her little one to slumber with the sweet assurance that " holy angels will guard its bed," the untutored slave rocks the cradle of its infant master to the song of " Old Dan Tucker," or " Lucy Long." " The manner of training children at the South ac counts for that pugilistic spirit and uncontroHa le temper when excited we all know is charac- ristic of the Southerner. At that tender age when the heart is in its most plastic state, no at- KEMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 153 tempts are made to subdue the will or control the passions, and the nurse, whether good or bad, often fosters in her bosom a little Nero,-who is taught that it is manly to strike his nurse in the face in a fit of anger. I have seen a child plunge a fork into the face of its nurse, and no punishment was inflicted upon the little criminal. If the boy is allowed to make such free use of the fork, what could we expect to see in the hand of the man but the pistol and bowie knife, ready to be used upon the slightest provocation. Another of the many evils of slavery and one which in its immediate influence is felt probably as much as any other, is that which arises from the universal want of confidence in the honesty x)f slaves. The fear of theft haunts the slave holder at all times and in all places. In harvest time he is obliged to set a strict watch over his O . r corn fields, orchards, and melon patches, when night comes every moveable article of property must be put under lock and key, even the fowls have to be all collected together every evening as soon as it is time for them to go to roost, and locked up in coops. It is really amusing to see kitchens, stables, cotton houses and graneries all fastened with great padlocks, and that too in the day time if not occupied. A slave can not be trusted for a moment with the key to the 154' REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. granary, if a peck of corn is to be measured, it must begone under the eye of a vigilant stew ard. It is just so too in the department that particularly belongs to the mistress of the fam ily. She is obliged to weigh and measure every thing that passes into the hands of the cook. In a large family, this duty is so arduous that I | have often thought the mistress was the great est slave. Every cupboard, closet and drawer, in those apartments to which the slaves have access are kept constantly locked, and I myself found by experience that it was not safe to leave my work box in the drawing room unfastened. <> Then to sum up the whole, a family living on one of "these isolated plantations must, when night comes, be all fastened up within windows { and Qoors bolted and barred like a prison house. In the city it is not unusual to hear of color ed boys gaining admittance to a house by de scending through the chimney. An instance of ! this kind came under my observation, while in Savannah. Two young men who boarded at \* one of the public houses, lodged in rooms over their office, one of which they had furnished for a parlor. It was their custom to send a servant ! v into this room every evening to prepare a table J of refreshments, which having done, he would lock -the door and hand the key to his masters. REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 155 At length they*discovered that depredations were committed every evening upon their wines, cigars, etc., and notwithstanding they took great pains, they were not able to get the least clue to the source of this mischief, till one even ing when going into the room as usual, they found the culprit lying upon the floor in a state of intoxication. When he recovered his senses sufficiently to give an account of himself, he confessed he had been in the practice of enter ing the room by the way of the chimney, and taking whatever he wanted, this time ha had partaken to freely of champaigne to ftcape de tection. The propensity for stealing among the slaves is so great that even the dead are often ex humed for the purpose of securing their grave clothes. In some parts of Georgia where I have been, it is customary to bury the dead in full dress. For example, a man is interred in every article of dress he would wear in life, even to a coat and boots. A female would be laid out in what would be called a full* dress for church. When such is the custom, there is a strong temp tation to disturb the grave for the wardrobe it contains. Such a violation, however, of the sacredness of the tomb, if found out, meets a pen alty more cruel than death itself, though I could 156 REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. never see why such an act should be considered wore criminal than it would be to steal the body and all, a theft =,that is committed as fre quently by the medical-student at the South as with us, and the student if detected is only sentenced a heavy fine. But the fear the slaveholder often has for his life is much greater than that he suffers for his property. When I was living in the southern part of Georgia, a lady whose husband expected to be gone on a journey for several weeks sent for me to come and stay with her in his absence. While there she gave a particular account of her domestic trials. She said when her husband was not at home, there was not a person on her plantation she dared trust her life with, and as she could not defend herself with fire arms in case of an attack upon her life, she never retired at night without an axe so near her pillow she could lay her hand upon it instantly. In this instance, the fear of this lady had been greatly increased by an attempt a few years previous to an insurrection among her own slaves. This^plantation was situated on the sea coast not far from Florida, in the im mediate vicinity of the live oak timber. Here the slaves came in frequent contact with the lumber men from Maine, who go out there every REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 157 winter in great numbers, to cut the live oak for ship building. Through the instigation of these men, every slave on this plantation united in a plot to rise on a certain -night and massa cre every member of their master's family. The plot was revealed however, just in time to prevent the execution of the dreadful deed, by one old servant, who felt she could not stand and see her master and mistress and all the children murdered. In '35 deep measures for the same dreadful purpose were concerted in South Carolina, ex tending through that and several other contig uous States. The time then fixed upon was Christmas eve, in order to prevent any mistake. In this case, thousands were save,d from a dread ful death by the warning one faithful slave gave to her master to take care of himself and fami ly on Christmas night. Circumstances like these have excited so much fear among slave holders, especially in the extreme South, where the plantations are large and slaves very numer ous, they generally go armed with pistols or bowie knives. I have seen young men just on an equestrian excursion for an evening, conceal in their bosoms a brace of pistols loaded with balls, and others only going out a little distance in a gig, take with them their guns, and I had 15S REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. no reason to think that either had any other mo tive in doing so than self-defense. I must say, myself, if the use of carnal weapons could ever be justifiable, I should think it was in this, for the same season not far from the plantation where I was staying, three white men were murdere/d while passing from one plantation to another, by slaves who had secreted themselves for llhat purpose. Ladies even, under certain circumstances, provide for their own defense in the use of fire arms. I have known ladies that would not dare to go to sleep without one or two jfcstols under their pillows. A lady in Savannah came very near being the executioner of her own hus band in consequence of such a custom. He had been from home on a journey, and wishing to give his wife an agreeable surprise, made his arrangements to return a few days sooner than she anticipated. Arriving at a late hour for retiring, he thought he would make her sur prise to see him still greater by appearing with out the least warning in her own room. Ac cordingly he succeeded in effecting an entrance into his house, by forcing a shutter in the base ment, and with noiseless steps was making his way in the dark up to his wife's apartment. He had gone as far as the stairs, when that REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 159 slight creaking which every one understands who has ever tried to walk stealthily in a noise less house at night, reached her ears, and being prepared by every unusual sound to expect thieves and robbers, she sprang out of her bed, seized a pistol and commanding her chamber maid to follow, she stepped into the hall and then towards the stair case when she indistinct ly saw the figure of a man cautiously approach ing her. At the first sight she leveled her pistol, and the next instant would in all probability have fixed a bullet in his brain, had not one screech from the well known voice of her husband paralized her hand for the moment and caused the deadly weapon to fall harmless at her feet. I think I have now said enough upon this sub ject to convince you that slaveholders are by no means, with all their possessions, the happiest people in the world. Sin and iniquity are often accompanied by their own reward, but in this case this truth is strikingly apparent. Although it is now late in the evening and all around me are lost in the forgetfulness of sleep, still, as I see I have a little more room in my sheet I will trim my midnight lamp and add one more paragraph, though upon a subject a little different from the one contained in the first part of my letter. 160 REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. The question has often been asked me,, can a - person under any circumstances be justified in owning property in slaves. I will state two in stances of persons possessing property of this kind, with which I was well acquainted in Au gusta, Georgia, then leave the question to be decided by my readers. A large company of slaves had been brought from Virginia to Hamburg, which lies just be yond the river over against Augusta. This place is the great slave market for both Georgia and South Carolina. Among these poor crea tures who were mostly purchased for markets again still farther South, was one female with an infant at her breast. When it came her turn to stand under the hammer, the highest bidder would give no more for the mother with the child than he would without it. The auctioneer would not let the^child go for any sum less than i one hundred dollars, and as he could not dispose of the woman to a better advantage, h& con cluded to separate the mother and child and the former was dragged off to New Orleans, Finally after many fruitless attempts to sell the infant and the commiseration of a good many had been excited in behalf of the little sufferer, a lady in Augusta hearing of the circumstance, went over to Hamburg, paid the hundred dol- REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 161 lars demanded by the owner, and took the child home to her own bed and bosom. The other instance I thought of mentioning, was that of a gentleman from the North who had been in Augusta several years and up to the time of my story, although wealthy, had never purchased slaves, and was resolved he never would, on any condition, own property in hu man flesh, and instead of purchasing help he hired it. When he began to keep house, he se cured of a gentlemen who had slaves to hire out the services of one for a cook. This woman brought with her an infant child, and as she proved to be a faithful servant, she continued in the family of Mr. P., retaining her child with her till she arrived at the age of fifteen. About this time the owner of these slaves, having oc* casion to make out a sum of money, offered this girl for sale, and as she had, been well trained and had a fine personal appearance, a satis factory price was soon proposed for her, and the bargain ratified before Mr. P. was apprised of the matter. When the gentleman who had made the purchase came for her, the whole family was thrown into affliction. Mrs. P. had always retained her in her own immediate pres ence, more in the capacity of a child than of a domestic, and she had never felt the oppressive K REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. ( chains of slavery, and now the thought that she was to be dragged off, and consigned over to slavery, made her nearly frantic. Mr. P. made great efforts to repurchase her, contrary to his principles, but all to ne purpose, and she was taken by main force, put jnto a carriage and car ried away to a distant plantation. After sev eral months, Mr. P. received a letter from this gentleman, saying the girl was so homesick, she was of no service to him, that she appeared to be wasting away every day, and if he wanted the girl he might have her for the price he gave for her. Mr. P. did not allow many hours to elapse after receiving this intelligence, before he was on his way to bring her home. The last time I was in Augusta, I saw Lucy, and a hap pier face I scarcely ever met. I will now ask 1**^ one question. Would my readers purchase a slave under the same circumstances ? Accord ing to the laws of Georgia she was safe no longer than Mr. P. held his claim upon her per son as an article of property. .*- LETTER XXH. Runaway slaves--The Swamps--Cruelty to slaves--A family in concealment--Murder of an old slave--Elopement of an Orphan Lady* SUPPOSING many of my readers always associate the term " Runaway slave," with " Canada," or the " North Star," I will devote one letter to the purpose of showing them that there are thousands in the woods and swamps of the Southern States, who have fled from the galling shackles of slavery, that have never heard of Canada, or even learned to distinguish from all the rest that one star which has to so many pointed out the way to the land of free and equal rights. It has been thought that there are as many south of " Mason and Dixon's line," who have escaped from their masters, as there are north of it. As strange as it may seem to those un acquainted with these things, there are whole families secreted in the uncultivated portions of the slave States, who subsist year after only by 164 OF GEORGIA. plunder and stealing. To show you how this can be possible, I must give you a little idea of the situation of the Southern plantations, and the unimproved grounds belonging to each, that you may see the opportunity the slaves have to furnish themselves with hiding places. In the first place I will remark that the land at the South never becomes as extensively clear ed of all its forest timber as in the Northern States, the reason of this is, the Southern plan ter never resorts to any artificial means to en rich the soil when once it becomes unproduc tive ; the only way old and worn-out fields are ever improved, is by turning them wild and suf fering them to rest for forty or fifty years, in which time the trees attain their full growth, and these fields once covered with cotton, corn and tobacco, assume again every appearance of native forest. Daring the time these grounds lie waste, the foliage from the trees and other kinds of vegeta ble matter, which accumulates and decays from year to year, in course of time, renders the soil as rich and fertile as that which has never been cultivated. This is one reason why the South ern country, although it has been settled longer than ours, always has the appearance of being a new country, just beginning to be settled, for REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 165 all the land that is not ploughed and planted every year soon becomes a forest of pines. One accustomed to the growth of the pine, can judge very correctly by their size before they reach their full height, how long the field has been uncultivated. I have seen fields completely covered with little pines just springing from the ground, then others again where they had not grown to the height of a foot, in this case the soil has not been disturbed for about two years. When the sapplings are five or six feet in height, then one calculates the ground has act been cultivated for five or six years, and so on up to the time of the maturity of the trees. Then again, many of the planters own hun dreds and even thousands of acres of land, which on account of their being swampy and infested with snakes and other venemous rep tiles, they scarcely ever venture to explore, and when they do, it is only on horseback, when some occasion like hunting cattle and swine that run wild in the woods and swamps, calls them out, yet there are thousands of human be ings who can find no other retreat from the w cruel hound and knotted scourge, than in thepestilential swamps of the Southern States. To show how many provide for themselves in these lurking places, I will give you one account just 166 KEMimSCENCES OF GEORGIA. as I had it from the same gentleman who him self assisted in searching out one of these long lost families. This family consisting of nine persons disap peared all of a sudden, and after many long but fruitless attempts to get some clue to their place of concealment, farther search was deemed useless, and all this property in human flesh and blood, was given up as irrecoverably lost. They were however at last found after they had been gone six years, by one of their number being de tected in plundering from the plantation, and jbllowed to his place of rendezvous. The course they bad taken to elude the search of the hotzttds, was to hide themselves where the ground was covered with water, consequently this cut off the scent of the hounds. These poor creatures after having gone several miles through deeply entangled swamps covered with water to the depth of more than a foot, went 4o work to erect for themselves a little shelter. First they drove posts into the ground upon which they could lay a foundation above the water, then with branches of trees skillfully and iagenuously woven together, they constructed the floor, roof, and walls of this their most ru ral habitation. To complete the structure they overlaid the whole with long marsh grass and REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 167 the tough palmetto leaves, till it was quite com fortable even during the winter season. The gentleman who gave me this account, said when he found them they had collected together a good supply of food of various kinds, such as meat, potatoes, meal, etc., as well as many other little domestic comforts. They even had a good supply of live fowls, but they had cun ningly taken the precaution not to bring into the camp any of the feathered tribes whose loud voices might betray their place of concealment. Many secure themselves among the branches of trees as their best refuge from houads and. snakes, and wild beasts that prowl about In the night in search of prey. I have many times seen the tree in which a slave was concealed six months. He had carried into the tree sticks of wood and broken branches, and so arranged them as to make a sort of platform, upon which he spread grass and leaves sufficiently thick to make a place of repose quite comfortable when. wrapped in his blanket. He afterwards return ed to his master of his own accord, and told him the men and dogs in pursuit of him, many times passed beneath the very tree where he was se creted. The planters are greatly annoyed by the slaves who live in the manner above described, 168 REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. coming out in the night to plunder every thing they can lay hands upon. They kill their mas ter's cattle and swine, they pluck the corn from the field and dig the potatoes from the ground, rob the poultry yards, brake into the milk house and even go into the same kitchen night after night, to cook their stolen vegetables and meat. You may ask where the watch dogs are all this time, when these depredations are going on in the fields and yards, and why the cook did not lock the kitchen door ? In the first instance, those who are on theiving excursions, are care ful to go where they are acquainted with the dogs* As to the kitchen, the very cook who is so loud in her vociferations about the operations that have been going on all night in her kitch en, in all probability is accessory to the whole affair. As harsh treatment is more frequently the cause of the slaves running away than merely the desire for freedom, I will give you one ex ample of that cruelty which scattered and drove into the woods almost one entire plantation of slaves, as I had the account from a friend who w$s hersetf a party concerned. Mrs. B. informed me that when she was at the age of ten, and her only sister sixteen years, they were left orphans with eighty slaves to be * --- OF GEORGIA. 169 divided equally between them. Her sister soon married one of her many suitors, -who had been attracted by so large a fortune. To secure to himself the property of both, Mr. S. succeeded in being appointed guardian over his wife's sis ter, which gave him complete control over the whole. He very soon abused the power with which he had been invested by a course of treatment that proved him to be one of the most cruel of tyrants. Mrs. B. said he once beat a boy of about ten years of age till his steps for several rods could be traced by the blood that issued from his lacerated back and limbs. Although she gave me many instances of her brother-in-law's cruelty to the slaves, I will only mention one more. Among the slaves that fell to Mrs. B.'s share, was one old woman, who had been, not only her nurse in childhood and infancy, but also her mother's. She had raised * her mother and had "*-. had almost the entire charge of her from the cradle to the grave. She had taught her infant feet to walk and tongue to speak. She had soothed her childhood's sorrows, and from one season to another had carried her in her arms to and from the school room. In matures years she had been her mother's counselor and comforter, standing by her bedside in sickness f 170 BEMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. and death, and her ever faithful hand smoothed the dying pillow and closed the eyelids for their long and lasting sleep. After the death of her mother, Mrs. B. said there was no person on earth dearer to her than was old Charity. This woman had never la bored in the field till she came into the posses sion of Mr. S., and being then very aged, and unaccustomed to that kind of labor, she often failed, for which she was like the rest cruelly beaten. One day after they had been on this plantation three or four years, Mrs. B. said her brother-in-law returned from the field in the forenoon about ten o'clock in great haste, and said he was called away to another town on business of great importance and probably should not return for several days, and took his departure with so little preparation, as not only to excite in the family great curiosity, but a kind of apprehension of evil no one dared to express. He had not been gone many minutes when several slaves from -the plantation, nearly out of breath, rushed into the house, saying, " master has killed old Charity." Mrs. B. said, with feelings that could never be told, they has tened to the spot and found the dreadful intelli gence too true. Her master had in the morn ing driven this old feeble woman with the lash REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 171 from her bed, when she was scarcely able to support her weight upon her feet. Fearing she would not labor when she was in the field, he went there to see, and not being satisfied with the manner she used the hoe, he gave her a blow upon the neck, and she fell dead at his feet. She was carried to the house and after these bereaved sisters had exhausted their strength mid sighs and tears, in vain attempts to resusci tate that life .that had been so precious to them, they gave up the body to be buried. After several days, the report having been circulated that this old slave had been murdered, several medical men came up and asked permission to have the body disinterred. It was granted and a post-mortem examination being held, it was found that her neck was broken. For a time this circumstance caused a good deal of excite ment, but as Mr/S. could not be found, nothing was done. Finally the excitement died away, and as it was only a poor old slave, when the cruel tyrant did return, the whole matter was nearly forgotten excepting by his own family. Mrs. B. said, that by the time she was fifteen, there were but a few slaves left upon the plan tation ; a good many had died of hardships, and others had fled to the woods, where being exposed to the pestilential miazma of the swamp, 172 REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. they suffered from fevers, or had their fingers and toes frost bitten till they were greatly mu tilated, by exposure to the chilly atmosphere of Southern winter nights, and having an offer of marriage from Mr. B., although very young, she thought she would try to secure for herself a better guardian and for her slaves a kinder mas ter. As soon as Mr. S. became apprized of her determination he was so enjaged he locked her in her chamber and forbid her holding any communicatioa with Mr. B. . Through the assist ance however of faithful servants, she found means to correspond with him, though to her peril, for every letter she received, if her broth er-in-law found it out, he would go into her chamber with a cow-hide and beat her just as he did the slaves. Finally as soon as arrange ments could be made, she consented to elope with Mr. B. and be married before her guardi an should have time to veto such an act. Ac cordingly the time of midnight was fixed upon, and she leaped from her chamber window into the arms of faithful servants who were there ready to hasten her away with the greatest possible speed to the carriage that was in wait ing at the end of the avenue. She said some times they actually carried her along without her feet touching the ground in their great fear REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. ] 73 she might be overtaken by her guardian who was already on his way in hot pursuit. In - a few hours they reached the spot where the mar riage ceremony was to be performed, and just as the words were pronounced that made Mr. B. her lawful husband and guardian, Mr. S. rushed into the room and forbid the marriage, but too late, she was no longer exposed to his oppression, and in a few days she had all her slaves under a very different master. I was well acquainted with Mr. B., and I believe but a few slaves find a better one. To use Mrs. B.'s own words, " and now many are the evenings that these old servants come in and sit with me till near midnight, talking over the sufferings we all endured from the hands of my brotherin-law." This depraved man lost every slave, all his property, his wife died, leaving him with two little girls who were in the Orphan Asylum when I taught there. Finally he fell into that state of mind similar to one who has the deliri um tremens, and at last died such a frightful death, people shuddered to stand near his bed side, all occasioned, as Mrs. B. believed, by re morse of conscience. Before I close this letter, suffer me in justic&to the good people of the South to say, that su6h cruelty is not countenanced by them any mori 41" 174 OF GEORGIA. than crime Is by the same class of persons at the North* and when incidents such as I have just related do occur, they form for months the lead ing topics of conversation in the sitting room and parlor, and wherever there is a little collec tion of persons, the same as criminal acts do with LETTER XXIII. A visit in the country--A -Southern kitchen--Pleasure ex cursions--An equestrian scene. TO-DAY an occurrence recalled to my mind a visit I received when in the t Southern part of Georgia, from a friend who came from the North, and was like myself engaged in teaching in that country. My friend came and spent a week with me, and as the season we were together, was one of events and amusements to us both, I will give you some account of it, hoping it will furnish you with a few moments of ente9flinmerit, and at the same time enable you to see th&t in almost any situation, if per sons are so disposed, there are many sources of pleasure to avail themselves of, even if they are strangers in a land that is not theirs, and far from all the sweet scenes of childhood's happy hours. *i* Besides Miss 8., there was no other person in all that section of the country with whom I ever had a previous acquaintance; the same X 176 REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. was true also in respect to my friend. Though we were situated at a distance of six miles from each other, we found opportunities for frequent interviews, though many of them were but of a few moments' duration. To understand the import, in all its force, of the expression, " birds of a feather flock together," you must be situa ted just as we were, surrounded by those who bad but a few sentiments and interests in com mon with our own. It was only in each other's society we ever felt at home. Yes, those were angel meetings when we could escape from every watchful eye, and alone and undisturbed, where only squirrels chattered, and the birds song, heart could meet heart, and voice mingle with voice in sweet and hallowed communion. * Oh 1 I remember, and will ne'er frS(^gp Oar meeting-spot, our chosen, sacred(0ars, Oar burning words tha^ uttered all fie soul.'* A few weeks previous to the visit I am about to describe, my friend had been brought very low by a fever. As soon as she recovered sufficjeattf^toride out, J sent for Her to come and (spend a few"davs with me, thinking she would recover more rapidly if she could be with some one a shortjime who would try to cheer up her gloomy /Spirits, that had become very much REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 177 depressed by a long illness, through which, she had been surrounded only by strangers, and besides I had the most implicit confidence in yankee nursing, and I was anxious to test Hs efficacy in the case of my friend. She received my invitation with great pleasure, and in the course of two or three days I had the privilege of trying the potency of my skill in the restora tion of the wasted energies of the physical being as well as in dispelling the dark clouds that hung about the mental. I soon learned after her arrival, that she had since her illness, suffer ed much from want of that kind of food she could relish. Nothing that the cooks there could suggest, would in the least tempt her ap petite. She only could think of some dish she had been accustomed to at the North, and after^the best directions that could be given, it woura tye prepared altogether different from what it woula have been, if served up by a Northern cook. Finally, after a considerable consultation upon a matter of so much importance, I told her I would go to the kitchen myself, and prove my abilities in the cooking line. But I,never was more disheartened about any undertaking of the kind than this, when I found myself surrounded by such an extensive array of culinary appara tus as is always furnished for a Southern kitch- 178 REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. en. Now if you will suffer me to turn aside from my story a little while, I will tell you something about a kitchen on a Southern plan tation. In the first place, this was built of large, rough logs, the ends of which were standing out in all shapes and at different distances on all its corners. At one end was an immense, but low chimney, not much higher than the roof of the building, built of sticks and mud and the opening at the top was of such great extent one would have the impression, when in the .kitchen that a part of the roof was gone. On one side was a wide opening which was used both as a door and windows. Within I found tubs, pails,*fceelers, piggins, pots, kettles, spiders, Dutch ovens, wafer-irons, and every thing else one could think of belonging to such an apart ment, all in one room not over fifteen feet square. After making a few observations upon this homogeneous collection of iron and woodenware, I concluded to leave the cook in the quiet possession of her own sanctum, and do my cooking in the open air. I apprised my friend of my sage determination, and told her she could seat herself before the window, and be an eye-witness of the operations that were then in contemplation, and if I judged correctly i REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 179 the effect of the scene upon her health was as salutary as the supper itself. The next day Miss S. was able to walk out, and we commenced a series of excursions that lasted through the week, our good host in the mean time so providing for our accommodation that we had at our command, horses and mules, saddles and carriages, boats and rowers to be used at our discretion or pleasure. Of course, we tried them all; we rode horseback and muleback, in carriages with servants and with out them, we sailed the creeks, caught fishes and cooked them, very much to the amusement of the servants who beheld all our operations with perfect amazement and could only account for the whole on the principle that we were yankees and of course would do a great man unaccountable things. I shall never forget the merriment our first horseback ride occasioned among the servants. As my friend was very timid in the manage ment of a.horse, I requested that two of the most gentle saddle beasts should be brought to us that afternoon. Accordingly, Peggy and Van Buren were soon saddled and waiting our pleasure before the gate. I might as well say here, that it is quite customary at the South to give names to V* w >. jfr * " s* r f~ - 180 REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. I their horses, mules, oxen and cows, as it is to t- the hounds and dogs. I have often been puz zled to know, when I have heard old Peggy or Sally spoken of, whether the conversation refer red to a mule, a cow, or a woman. Sometimes my ears have just caught the isolated word Van Buren, and it was impossible for me to tell, which was meant, a horse, an ox, or the Ex- President of the United States. This time, however, we understood the term Van Buren to mean a noble animal of the horse kind, and Peggy an oldL grey mule with exceedingly long ears which seemed to stand up unusually erect that afternoon. These two animals were so accustomed to go together and were so attached to each other, that although the universe could not have per suaded old Peggy to take the lead one inch, yet she would have followed Van Buren if he had gone over the top of the house. But unfortu nately for our ride that afternoon, I found my friend too much in the condition of old Peggy, though from a cause altogether different. One was under the influence of a mulish will, the other, that of fear. After we were seated upon our animals, Miss S. upon the back of Van Buren and myself upon Peggy, I found she was as much afraid to make the first move in REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 181 advance, although having at her command a beast willing to go at her bidding, as my mule was determined she would not take one step first. I never felt m^pelf in such a comical predicament before. I exerted my persuasive powers to the utmost to induce Jane to ex change beasts, but all' my persuasions and argu ments were nothing to her, whenever she looked at those great ears that stood up so high before me, and there we sat, surrounded by a large concourse of men, women, boys and girls, who made the plantation resound with their shouts of laughter at our expense. Even the dogs looked as though they wanted to laugh as loud as their masters. At last one of the servants took my mule by the bridle, and led her out a little distance on the plantation, Van Buren following in the rear ; but no sooner had he let go his hold upon the bridle, than in direct opposition to all that I could do, she would turn right about, and go back to the gate again, with a great deal more speed than she went from it, Jane, of course, following all the time, most obediently. Finally, all the ride we had that afternoon, was just in semicircles, never getting further than a couple of rods from the house. The next time we contemplated an . equestrian excursion, we succeeded a little bet- '3* 182 REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. ter, for we had the precaution to leave Peggy out of the company. At the distance of about six miles from us in an opposite direction t^ the plantation where my friend Miss S. was teaching, was a Southern lady who was also engaged in the same voca tion. Qut of nineteen female teachers who were located in that section of the country, when I was thef\ re, she was the only native teacher; all the rest were from the North. If you ask how she would compare with Northern teachers in qualifications for such a station, I would answer, by no means unfavorably. Her intellectual attainments an4 personal accom plishments were of a high order. During this week, our Southern friend who had heard we had dismissed our schools for a vacation, dis missed hers also, for a few days, and sent us an invitation to come and spend a day with her. According to the general practice of that coun try when a ride is to be taken in the Summer season, we were up early the next day, and ^started on our way long before the morning flowers b^lLfaded, or the dew had,disappeared fron%'4mtb.*eaS^*H'"'pves. Never did I enioy a morning ride more than this. It was just at that season of the year when the woods, of Georgia were decked in their utmost loveliness, and the open REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 183 fields were waving with luxuriant crops of grain cotton and tobacco, in full bloom. j- From all directions echoed the merry laugh of the refreshed and invigorated slaves now going to their morning tasks. The young men arrayed in their sea-green hunting garbs were busily engaged in collecting their rifles, balls and powder, for a deer-hunt, while the horses already at the gate, impatiently pawed the ground at the sound of the bugle and barking of the hounds that always accompany the prepara tions for a hunting day. After leaving the house we went about one mile on the open plantation before we entered the avenue that led to the highway. This path was about a mile in length, and so narrow, and the branches of the trees so low, we often got sprinkled with the heavy dew that was still on the trees, if we were so careless as to let our bonnets touch a bough. The highway between the plantations was one complete arch of lofty oaks and giant cypresses, crowned from their roots to the top most branches with the woodbine, honeysuckle and trumpet-flowered jessamine, all in blossom, rendering the atmosphere deliciously fragrant with their sweet odors, while multitudes of birds with every variety of gay plumage, made the woods vocal with their early music. Though 184 REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. we had prolonged the time of our morning ride as much afe possible for the purpose of enjoying the beatftiesJ^h^ppund us. still we found ourselves at an early hour before^he gate of the planta tion where we were to spend the day, and were cordially met at the carriage by those who even then had been waiting our arrival with fears that we were not coming. The situation of this plantation was more pleasant than that of any one I ever saw on a Southern sea-coast, In my next letter, I will give you a little ac count of it, LETTER XXIV. A plantation on the sea-coast--Different kinds of trees--Ri sing of the Tide--A storm--Return from a visit. THE plantation to which I alluded in my last letter, was bounded on the North and West by a forest of the oak, cypress, and long-leaved pine, with which were beautifully mingled the dogwood tree, bay, laurel and magnolia. The Southern dogwood bears a little white flower very much like the wild rose ; it puts forth its blossoms before the green leaves appear, and they so completely cover the tree that at a dis tance it strikingly resembles our New England trees when loaded with snow in the winter. The magnolia is about as large as a full-grown pine and a few rods distant it might be mistaken for one, on account of its height. The blossom of the magnolia is of a cream color, the corrolla bell-form, and about as large as a pint measure. When the tree is full of these blossoms it pre sents a most beautiful appearance. The flowers are very fragrant, and I have known one tree to 186 REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. fill the air with their sweet perfume for more than half a mile in every direction. The bay ' and laurel belonog to the same class of trees as the magnolia, but of different species. All the difference I could discover between them con sisted in size, On this plantation I had an opportunity for the first time to see what was to me a great curiosity in the vegetable kingdom. This was the cabbage-tree, or more properly in botanical language, the " cabbage palmetto." I could call it nothing more nor less than a huge cab bage, consisting of two parts only, the body twenty or thirty feet in height, and perhaps a foot and a half in diameter, surmounted by an enormous head of coarse large leaves snugly rolled up like our garden cabbage, and ten to twelve feet in diameter. I have been told that tSe leaves in the middle of the head a re often served up on the table, and could hardly be distiaguished from the common cabbage. These trees I have since heard are very common in Florida. Their trunks are filled with the same kind of vegetable matter that composes the heart of the garden cabbage stump. On the South and East the plantation was bounded by a beautiful green marsh which sep arated /it from the Atlantic. Every where ,j REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 187 through this meadow, quietly crept the clear, smooth creek, advancing and retreating in its serpentine course, sometimes coming very near the plantation, then softly retracing its path, till finally its waters are mingled with the parent fountain. This creek was navigable for sloops which were constantly coming and going laden with imports and exports to and from the plantation. These articles of mer chandize were landed at a small wharf but a few rods from the house. Fishing boats and canoes in various directions moved leisurely among these green meadows, and flocks of wild geese and ducks appeared as if propelled by some magic power, as they sailed upon these still waters with so little apparent motion. No scene of the kind was ever to me fraught with so many rural beauties, perfectly enchanting to the eye as well as ear as this, for in addition td that sweet music from the trees, with which f the singing birds of Georgia are ever read^-to regale the ear, such melodious strains trom' the bugle, the violin and the harp, often issued from these little barques, that one could not feel it would be compromising the dignity of Orpheus to suppose he had resumed his harp again. Be tween these streams of water, fowls of the gralic order, the bittern and crane, " with bills 188 REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. engulphed, shook the surrounding marsh " in gathering from the muddy soil their snails and worms. This plantation was nearer to a level with the ocean than perhaps any other on the coast of Georgia. This circumstance in part accounts for the distressing event that occurred there, several years previous to the time we were there, to the family of the lady with whom we were spending the day. Mrs. G. informed us that a few years subsequent to the time they took up their residence on this plantation, the sea (rose one night to the distance of ten or twelve feet above the ordinary height of the Spring tide, a phenomenon that had never to their knowledge previously occurred on the At lantic coast. At first, they only beheld the tide *. rising to an uncommon height, with surprise, but when they found the water was overflowing thai.,-part of the plantation the tide had never refccfaed before, they began to feel alarmed, and this alarm increased, as Mrs. G. said, to a con sternation that could not be described, when white people, children and servants, all saw the waters with a rapid course still upwards, reach ing their own doors. Then one thought only pervaded the minds of all, which was to escape to a! little eminence at the distance of one or REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 189 two miles. Then almost instantly women and children flew from their dwellings, plunged into the tide two or three feet deep, hoping to save their lives by securing this rise of ground, but soon, the waters rose with such great rapid ity, all hope was abandoned of reaching the spot excepting by those who could swim, or had in the first place been thoughtful enough to secure some of the boats, of which there are generally a good supply upon those plantations abounding with creeks. By this thoughtfulness many of the slaves saved their lives. Mrs. G. said her husband and herself started with their three children, carry ing the two youngest in their arms, while the oldest trying to follow on foot was soon swept away by the flood. Finding after they had gone a few rods that it was useless for them to try to stem the current any longer, they as cended a high stump with their children in their arms, still the course of the waters was upwards and about midnight it reached their chins, then all hope of life was lost, they were nearly exhaust ed, they had but little strength to resist the mighty waves that swept over them, and the little ones they had till then, held in their arms were carried away by the raging billow. Mrs. G. said herself and husband stood in that situa- 190 REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. tion, be returned to his kindred dust. When a slave dies,, the friends and companions- of the deceased assemble together oa the night of the same day on which the death occurred, and for at* hour or two they sing and pray, and weep and wail for the departed. Then the body Is taken rap and carried to the grave. On a star less night the gloomy path of the mourners is f lighted by pitch-pine torches, which every one forming the funeral procession holds a little above his head. But the body of the poor slave that is now se little heeded and cared for, when it can no longer minister to the pleasure of its master, and is now hurried to its long home amid the darkness of the evening, is destined ere long t& rise in a new and glorious form in the brightness of the morning, and though all j that remains f thfe once afflicted and crushed body is soon mingled with its native soil and forgotten by every thing earthly, " yet our Fa*- i Iher's care shall keep this little dustr " Till the last angel rise and break. The long and dreary sleep,.*'' REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 233 In a previous letter I spoke of the packing of cotton by hand labor. When I wrote that arti cle I had never seen it put up for market in any other way, but since that, I have made a second tour to the South, and have learned that this method has now given place to the machine, which greatly facilitates the process and com presses the same amount of cotton into a much smaller compass. The machine will press into a sack one yard and a half long, three quarters of a yard wide and the same in depth, from four to five hundred pounds. Tales are often circulated at the North about the infant children of slaves being left unpro tected in the field while the mother is obliged to continue at her task. All the time I was at the South, I never saw or heard of any such inci dent, and as I believe such statements are false, and know them to be altogether inconsistent. with the solicitude the slaveholder always evin ces with respect to this kind of property, I thought I would in this letter speak of the man ner in which the young children are provided for in their mother's absence. On all plan tations of much extent there are always nur series where all the children from infants a week old, up to ages of four or five are cradled and nursed as well as the aged women to whose 234 REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. care they are entrusted while their mothers are in the field, are capable of doing. But even then it seems cruel that a mother can not see her little nursling oftener than three times a day, and then for only a few hasty moments, and I doubt not from the cries I have heard from those nurseries, that those helpless little ones often suffer from want of that nourishment nature has provided for infancy. The situation of those who have the charge of these houses demands as much if not more commiseration than that of the children them selves. The individuals to whom such a task is con signed, is generally those women whose great age incapacitates them for any other labor. It is no small task for two or three of these fe- hales, themselves in a second infancv, to rock . y v7 * the cradles and attend to the wants of twenty * or thirty young children. But slavery in its best form is nothing more nor less than a cruel bondage of which any country ought to be ashamed, much more one that makes such loud boasts of freedom as ours is always ready to trumpet far and wide. LETTER XXIX. A Southern Camp-raeeting-^Preparations for the same--Re moval to the camp ground--Scenes on the camp ground-- Meeting for the colored people. NOTHING would give me more pleasure than to furnish my readers with a full account .of a Southern camp-meeting, if I could be assured it w ould afford them half the entertainment I have myself enjoyed from a scene so extremely novel. ; Those of my readers who have had the pleas ure of mingling with such congregations in the Northern country, may suppose I can present nothing new upon this subject, but if I fail of clothing this account with interest, it will certainly be owing to a defect in the descriptive powers of the writer, rather than to a want of what is in itself truly novel, amusing and exciting, for I can assure you, a Southern camp-meeting is very unlike any thing called by the same name at the North. To the country people in the Northern part of Georgia, the season of the annual camp-meet ing furnishes a date, (Tom which and before -&.. 236 REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. which, all the most important events of the whole year are reckoned. This convocation is to them, what the Thanksgiving day is to the New England people, and it occurs at about the same time of the year. By it, the time for the closing of the summer schools and commence ment of the winter schools is regulated, and many business transactions refer to this time, and for months previous to an event of so much importance to all, every member in the family from the oldest to the youngest, anticipated an addition to his or her ward robe, and this is so well understood by the city merchants and mil liners, they endeavor to make their arrange ments, if possible to meet all the demands upon their stock of fancy and dry goods, during this, as I have heard them say, their best harvesttime in all the year, and while Christians in an ticipation of a glorious revival of religion, often recall to mind the most eloquent speakers of the past year, and ask who are expected to be, the coming season, the principal topics of con versation among the young and gay will be, costly and elegant articles of dress, and who was the " belle" last year and who probably wilfcbe this; and this rage for dress is not con fined to the parlor and keeping rooms, but ex tends with equal ardor to the kitchen and field, REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 237 and you might hear the cook at the corn mill and women bending over the plough, each saying, she must have a new pair of shoes or a new frock, or a new handkerchief for her nead. All past events are reckoned from the last camp-meeting. For instance, you will hear one woman say, " she has had a bad cough ever since the camp meeting, such a person was taken sick with a fever soon after the camp-meet ing, another died or was married so many months after the camp-meeting. The removal of planters from their summer to their winter residences occurs at this time, for the hospitable and generous planter of the South, on occasions such as I am now describ ing, not only makes provision for the the enter tainment of his own family and numerous rela tions, but also for a large company of strangers; therefore he is obliged to take with him all those household conveniences that are indispensable to the comfort and good order of a well regula ted family at home. Consequently they make their arrangements, in order to avoid the trouble of one extra move in the year, to go with all their goods and chattels from their summer homes to the camp ground, and from thence to their winter quarters. f. 238 SEMTNISCENES OF GEORGIA. The camp ground I visited was a beautiful square lot of forest land about one acre and a half in extent, laid out amid a native and gigan tic growth of oaks several miles from any plan tation. Upon one corner of this square stands the oldest church in the United States, and I be lieve the only one, for the erection of which a grant was obtained from the king of England. This building accommodates the usual Sabbathday congregation, but for all large assemblies, and the annual county meetings, another large building called the Tabernacle has been erected upon an opposite corner of the same square. This latter house of worship, in construction, more strikingly resembles the city market, which I have already described, than it does a church, as it consists merely of a roof of great extent every where supported by pillars stand ing at regular distances from each other. On every side of the square, all fronting the centre, the fathers of the principal families con stituting these assemblies, have each their own family residence. These little habitations are built of logs, having a piazza in front, and their number is sufficient to enclose the entire square, -while in the background are arranged all the out houses belonging to each, such as the kitchens, stables for the horses, as also pens for the swine REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 239 and folds for the herds and flocks, and coops for the chickens, all of which have been previously stalled for the coming slaughter; and I ought;, not to forget to mention in this connection, ths' kennels for the hounds and watch dogs, which are needed even more at such places than on the plantations, and which in many parts of Georgia and South Carolina, constitute the only police of the place. But while such ample provision is made for the entertainment of those who assemble to gether for a season of spiritual refreshment, ar rangements are also made to supply the wants of those who congregate in the out skirts of this little village to drink whisky, smoke cigars, play cards and steal horses. For the accom modation of this class of persons, a large framed saloon has been erected just a little beyond the church square, which was well furnished with all those things calculated to tempt the ap petite, that one usually finds at resorts of the same kind in the city. I think I can truly say, I never saw a congregation of people, where the extremes from good to bad were so great as in this. It appeared to me that if it was ever true, that" when the sons of God assembled to gether, Satan came also," it was in this instance, for while the fervent and incessant prayers of 340 REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. the righteous ascended on high like holy incense from within the camp, the curses and blasphe mies that were poured forth from the throats of those who had encamped round about this place of prayer and praise, were sufficient to induce one to conclude he must have fallen somewhere near the precincts of the infernal regions. For several days previous to the commence ment of worship, persons from all quarters within the distance of fifteen or twenty miles, are busy in the transportation of all kinds of food and articles of furniture; chairs, tables, beds and bedsteads, cradles for babies, and coops for chickens, all heaped upon cotton Jer sey carts, together with scores of men-servants and women-servants accompanied by a large sup ply of the canine race equally as well pleased as their masters with every thing new and exciting, all on the move to the same spot, com posed a scene that was to me amusing beyond expression, and very forcibly recalled .to my mind a little couplet associated with my early school days, which probably some of you will recollect having seen in Adams' old Arithmetic: " Kits, cats, sacks and wives, How many were going to St. Ives 7" But after every article of household forniture Is arranged in its proper place, as the sailor REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 241 would say, in " sea trim" and every thing re duced to order and quiet, the whole scene with in the camp-ground assumes an aspect not only imposing but beautiful and romantic in the ex treme, and particularly so in the evening and during the intervals of worship, when hundreds of young and joyous people, richly and gaily dressed, could be seen moving in all directions, or standing in small groups beneath the shade of some wide spreading tree, in this little city of oaks, as it might justly be called; for when the ground was prepared for the purpose for which it is now used, a sufficient number of the native forest trees were left standing to form a com plete shade for the whole area. And now the branches from one tree to another have become so interwoven and the foliage so thick and heavy the sun's rays hardly ever reach the ground, but the same dark and green shade which ren ders this little spot so delightfully cool and re freshing during a hot summer's day, would also prevent those who spent the night there, from ever enjoying a moonlight evening, therefore to compensate for this apparent loss of the moon, every man has erected in front of his own house a platform about six feet from the ground and four or five feet square, upon which is laid earth to the depth of about one foot, for the p 242 REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. purpose of making a foundation for a fire, which is lighted every evening as soon as the stars be gin to appear. This light is kept burning till towards midnight by a constant supply of pitch wood furnished by boys whose business it is to see that the whole camp-ground is sufficiently lighted during the convocation. These great fires at this elevation sent forth such a broad and brilliant sheet of light in all directions, that those who seated themselves in front of their dwellings could read with perfect ease without the aid of any other light, and while millions of sparks emitted from the burning fagots were carried up amid wreaths of curling smofce and lost among the thick boughs of the trees. The older members of the families would seat them selves beneath the piazzas to witness the pasttimes of the children, all collected together to Tie with* each other in the dexterity of trun dling the hoop, throwing the ball, jumping the rope or running races, in all of which sports the dogs sustained a part by no means the least con spicuous, with caninish glee running to pick up the fallen hoop, bringing back the ball that had hounded too far, and in the race, often outstrip ping all the children. But how I regret that a want of descriptive talent must prevent me from giving you a full REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 243 and complete idea of a scene so rich and beau tiful, the best that I can do, it will fall far short of the reality and I must submit to this meagre description of a scene I now contemplate with interest and pleasure. The first thing in the morning, just as the sun is rising, this sleeping congregation is aroused from its slumbers by several loud and long blasts from a hunting trumpet, to attend early prayers, consequently with a slight attention to the toilet, the mem bers of each family are soon collected together for worship. I shall never forget the impres sion made upon my mind, the first time I ever had the pleasure of being present at one of these scenes. The master of the family in which I was most hospitably entertained for several days was a young man of about the age of twentysix or eight, yet he presided over one of these . extensive household establishments with all that ease and dignity becoming a patriarch of three score and ten. On that morning to which I have just alluded when for the first time I con stituted one member of his family, now greatly increased by a large number of strangers, as soon as we were assembled he arose and in a sweet, clear and strong voice, sung, " A charge to keep I have, A God to glorify," &c. 244 REMIXISCENCE^F GEORGIA. * We were assembled in that part of the house called the " dining hall," the front of which was all open to the public view, and-as all the other families were similarly situated, the songs of praise which went up from each could * be distinctly heard by all the rest, as they re sounded that morning through every part of the camp-ground. I never expect to enjoy an other scene like this beneath the skies, but in i the language of the poet I could sincerely say, " My willing soul would stay, In such a scene as this." During the meetings we had usually four ser mons in the day from different speakers, the firs't in the morning at eight o'clock, then at eleven, one and four in the afternoon. As the most commanding eloquence of the Southern pulpits is collected on such occasions, one would not fail of having at least, an intellectual feast if not a spiritual one. Before closing this letter, I will just notice an assembly of the colored people, who are during these meetings exempt from all labor, excepting what is connected with their masters' establish ments. A good many of the servants, especial- & ly the females, prefer to go to the Tabernacle to meeting with their masters* families, but as I there are hundreds more who want that free- REMIXISCRNCES OF GEORGIA. 245 dom in speaking, singing, shouting and praying, they could not enjoy in the presence of their masters, efforts were made to accommodate them at an out-of-hearing distance, as any one would suppose from the white congregation, but after all, the sound of " glory to God," shouted from the top of a strong sonorous voice on a still evening, would often fall upon the ears of those seated on the camp-ground. The minis ters in their turn went down to preach for the colored people, and they frequently'returned with the tale that there, they had had the most interestingf-j meeting<_?s. Now I will close this letter by saying, I can never recall the scenes con nected with a Southern camp-meeting, but with emotions of the deepest interest and pleasure, and when with a retrospective glance of the mind's eye, I review scenes such as I have de scribed in these letters, my soul invariably thirsts for a return to Southern life. \ LETTER XXX. Conclusion. BEFORE I close these letters, I Will observe, that if I had allowed a predilection for Southern life iave influenced my pen, I should have with held every incident that would in the least be calculated to militate against the character, manners, or institutions of the South, but I have laid aside as far as I was able all my own indi vidual prejudices, and endeavored honestly to present things in a true light, sometimes exhib iting the light side of the picture, then again the dark side, and that too, by showing the state of my own feelings under different circumstan ces, as for instance, my readers could not help seeing I was unhappy when I saw the Sabbath spent as I have described, when I was in the Southern part of Georgia, then again, when I was in an other section of the country and un der other circumstances, I enjoyed the campmeeting, and if my Southern friends should be REMINISCENCES OP GEORGIA. 247 disposed to think I have been too severe, I would say to them, if I were to give an ac count of the manners and customs of any place wherever I have visited at the North, I could draw one side of a picture with many shadqws. ,1 would not be so illiberal as to wish to ex pose the mote in your eye* while a beam is in ours, but while I regret the oppression that ex ists at the South, I can only wish for that place, with which many of the fondest recollections of my life are associated, that the morning of that day will ere long dawn upon her, when her laws shall annul the right "To buy and sell, to barter, whip and hold In chains a being of celestial make, Of kindred form of kindred faculties, Of kindred feelings, passions, thoughts, desires, Born free, an heir of an immortal hope." But with all the faults of the South, I love her still, her sunny skies and forests ever green, her birds of song with voices sweet and plu mage gay, are painted in indellible characters upon the tablets of my memory and often pre sent themselves to my mind with all the fresh ness and vividness of a pleasing dream when one awaketh, and if I did not hold in grateful remembrance a place where I have received so 248 REMINISCENCES OP GEORGIA. many favors, my conscience must plead guilty for the sin of ingratitude, for I never received any other treatment while in the Southern country, but that of the utmost politeness and kindness, and^I do not know how I can express the sentiments I now entertain for all my South ern friends and acquaintances better than in the words of the valedictory I gave to the institu tion with which I was last connected at the South just before I left to return home, and as the expressions of respect, gratitude and affec tion which it contains are equally applicable to all the students and officers of the different in stitutions in which I have taught in that coun try, as well as to friends in general, I will re peat the same to all my Southern friends who may happen to see this work. " As my labors in the A---- Female Sem inary are now about to close, I deem it requi site for me to address a few words to the pat rons and members of the Institution before I leavg, therefore I have chosen this time as the one most convenient and proper for this pur pose, and it may not be unmeet for my friends and pupils to learn my feelings when about to bid adieu, and that perhaps forever, to a place that by many hallowed associations, has found a deep place in my affection-. * REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 249 " Till within a few weeks I have consideVed A---- my home, but an overruling hand of Providence has recently caused me to change my purposes, and now seems to bid me return to my own country and people, and leave that situation which I have occupied for the few past months, to be filled by another who I trust will discharge the duties of one of the most responsible and difficult stations with no less acceptance to all than her predecessor. " In justice to the young ladies who have been committed to my care, and for the satis faction of their parents and guardians, I will now say, that your lady-like deportment in school and the strongo attachment v> ou have universally manifested towards me, has not only won my highest respect for you but my most sincere affection. The interest the greater part of you have felt in your studies and the rapid progress you have made in the various sciences you have been pursuing, has been a source of extreme satisfaction to me, and I think we can all say we have enjoyed ourselves much in each~ others society, notwithstanding we have had many occasions for deep sorrow. Death has been permitted to make inroads upon one little number, and to some of us under the most af- 250 REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. flictive circumstances,* but in these trying hours we have shared each others sympathies and our tears have flowed together, but now we are about to separate, and though hundreds of miles shall intervene between us, I trust we * Within the short space of five months, while the writer of these letters was connected with this Institution she buried her husband, lost one pupil who died of a fever, after an illness of only a few hours; another, a young lady of fifteen, in a most horrible manner by fire, and that too, in the school room in time of recess. As the day was rather cool for a Southern winter's day, this young lady with several of her companions had drawn around the stove for a few moments, which was an open one, and at the time had but a little fire in it. While standing there, earnestly engaged in conversation, her dress caught fire, and having on a great number of in flammable garments, she was in a moment enveloped in such a flame it was out of human power to extinguish it before her flesh was burnt to a crisp. The muscles in her limbs were so contracted, she said to one standing by her bedside, " aunt, I shall never straighten these arms again.** After she was removed from the spot, where she had been burnt, the entire skin of one hand, all in shape like a glove, with the nails upon each finger, and two rings upon the third finger, was picked up by one of the young ladies which was buried without informing the bereaved friends, of the painful circumstance. She sur vived her first dreadful agonies but a few hours, then her soul, as we doubted not by her Christian life, took its flight to a better world, without a groan or struggle. REMINISCENCES OF GEORGIA. 251 shall ever maintain a strong place in each oth ers' memories and affections, and if you would show your love for me when I am gone, let your deportment on all occasions be such, that no one shall have reason to reproach me, for hav ing been remiss in my instruction to you, and now may God grant that if we are never permitted to meet again this side of the grave, we may at last all be united where separation is never known. To THE HONORABLE BOARD or TRUSTEES :-- Sirs:--To a stranger as I was when I came among you, cast upon the mercies of those to whom no claim could be laid by any natural ties, for that friendship and protection which a lone female so much needs, nothing" could be more acceptable than the tokens of kindness, which I have received at your hands since my lot has fallen among you, and nothing could have been more opportune, nor more gratefully received than was that recent testimonial of yours which so warmly expressed your approbation of my course in school, and reassured me of your firm and unshaken friendship, and now for this as well as for all other favors you have bestowed upon me, please accept my most cordial thanks. To my friends in general, I would say, that I hope I fully appreciate all your efforts to make my situation among you a pleasant one. That '-V OF GEORGIA. hospitality towards strangers, for which' the ! pejxple of the Southern States are so distin guished has ever been shown to me. I have i ^. visited many of you and never failed of receiv ing the most cordial welcome, and when afflic tion has nearly overwhelmed me, you have beta ready to socfctie my sorrows, and pour the balm of consolation into my wounded heart; but i though every kind look and word, and every token of afiection I have received from you, are treasured up in a heart that can never forget them, yet the favors I * value above all price are those which were bestowed upon him whose mortal remains I must leave when I go away, to slumber in your soil. It is with mingled emotions of pain and pleas ure that I think of leaving a place that has be come so dear to me. Year after year will pass away, and with them those who now know me here, and I shall be forgotten; but while life remains, I cannot forget A----, for with that name must forever be associated hot only the most pleasant, but also the most painful remi niscences of my life. Now with the desire that you may be abu^idantly rewarded for all your kindness to me, and that you in like circumstances will receive like favors, I will bid you Adieu.