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Our
friend Tom, in his own simple musings, often compared his more fortunate lot, in
the bondage into which he was cast, with that of Joseph in Egypt; and, in fact,
as time went on, and he developed more and more under the eye of his master, the
strength of the parallel increased.
St. Clare was indolent and careless of
money. Hitherto the providing and
marketing had been principally done by Adolph, who was, to the full, as careless
and extravagant as his master; and, between them both, they had carried on the
dispersing process with great alacrity. Accustomed,
for many years, to regard his master's property as his own care, Tom saw, with
an uneasiness he could scarcely repress, the wasteful expenditure of the
establishment; and, in the quiet, indirect way which his class often acquire,
would sometimes make his own suggestions.
St. Clare at first employed him
occasionally; but, struck with his soundness of mind and good business capacity,
he confided in him more and more, till gradually all the marketing and providing
for the family were intrusted to him.
"No, no, Adolph," he said, one
day, as Adolph was deprecating the passing of power out of his hands; "let
Tom alone. You only understand what
you want; Tom understands cost and come to; and there may be some end to money,
bye and bye if we don't let somebody do that."
Trusted to an unlimited extent by a
careless master, who handed him a bill without looking at it, and pocketed the
change without counting it, Tom had every facility and temptation to dishonesty;
and nothing but an impregnable simplicity of nature, strengthened by Christian
faith, could have kept him from it. But, to that nature, the very unbounded trust reposed in him
was bond and seal for the most scrupulous accuracy.
With Adolph the case had been different.
Thoughtless and self-indulgent, and unrestrained by a master who found it
easier to indulge than to regulate, he had fallen into an absolute confusion as
to _meum tuum_ with regard to himself and his master, which sometimes troubled
even St. Clare. His own good sense
taught him that such a training of his servants was unjust and dangerous.
A sort of chronic remorse went with him everywhere, although not strong
enough to make any decided change in his course; and this very remorse reacted
again into indulgence. He passed
lightly over the most serious faults, because he told himself that, if he had
done his part, his dependents had not fallen into them.
Tom regarded his gay, airy, handsome
young master with an odd mixture of fealty, reverence, and fatherly solicitude.
That he never read the Bible; never went to church; that he jested and
made free with any and every thing that came in the way of his wit; that he
spent his Sunday evenings at the opera or theatre; that he went to wine parties,
and clubs, and suppers, oftener than was at all expedient,--were all things that
Tom could see as plainly as anybody, and on which he based a conviction that
"Mas'r wasn't a Christian;"--a conviction, however, which he would
have been very slow to express to any one else, but on which he founded many
prayers, in his own simple fashion, when he was by himself in his little
dormitory. Not that Tom had not his
own way of speaking his mind occasionally, with something of the tact often
observable in his class; as, for example, the very day after the Sabbath we have
described, St. Clare was invited out to a convivial party of choice spirits, and
was helped home, between one and two o'clock at night, in a condition when the
physical had decidedly attained the upper hand of the intellectual.
Tom and Adolph assisted to get him composed for the night, the latter in
high spirits, evidently regarding the matter as a good joke, and laughing
heartily at the rusticity of Tom's horror, who really was simple enough to lie
awake most of the rest of the night, praying for his young master.
"Well, Tom, what are you waiting
for?" said St. Clare, the next day, as he sat in his library, in
dressing-gown and slippers. St.
Clare had just been entrusting Tom with some money, and various commissions.
"Isn't all right there, Tom?" he added, as Tom still stood
waiting.
"I'm 'fraid not, Mas'r," said
Tom, with a grave face.
St. Clare laid down his paper, and set
down his coffee-cup, and looked at Tom.
"Why Tom, what's the case?
You look as solemn as a coffin."
"I feel very bad, Mas'r.
I allays have thought that Mas'r would be good to everybody."
"Well, Tom, haven't I been?
Come, now, what do you want? There's
something you haven't got, I suppose, and this is the preface."
"Mas'r allays been good to me.
I haven't nothing to complain of on that head.
But there is one that Mas'r isn't good to."
"Why, Tom, what's got into you?
Speak out; what do you mean?"
"Last night, between one and two, I
thought so. I studied upon the
matter then. Mas'r isn't good to
_himself_."
Tom said this with his back to his
master, and his hand on the door-knob. St.
Clare felt his face flush crimson, but he laughed.
"O, that's all, is it?" he
said, gayly.
"All!" said Tom, turning
suddenly round and falling on his knees. "O,
my dear young Mas'r; I'm 'fraid it will be _loss of all--all_--body and soul.
The good Book says, `it biteth like a serpent and stingeth like an
adder!' my dear Mas'r!"
Tom's voice choked, and the tears ran
down his cheeks.
"You poor, silly fool!" said
St. Clare, with tears in his own eyes. "Get
up, Tom. I'm not worth crying
over."
But Tom wouldn't rise, and looked
imploring.
"Well, I won't go to any more of
their cursed nonsense, Tom," said St. Clare; "on my honor, I won't.
I don't know why I haven't stopped long ago.
I've always despised _it_, and myself for it,--so now, Tom, wipe up your
eyes, and go about your errands. Come,
come," he added, "no blessings. I'm
not so wonderfully good, now," he said, as he gently pushed Tom to the
door. "There, I'll pledge my
honor to you, Tom, you don't see me so again," he said; and Tom went off,
wiping his eyes, with great satisfaction.
"I'll keep my faith with him,
too," said St. Clare, as he closed the door.
And St. Clare did so,--for gross
sensualism, in any form, was not the peculiar temptation of his nature.
But, all this time, who shall detail the
tribulations manifold of our friend Miss Ophelia, who had begun the labors of a
Southern housekeeper?
There is all the difference in the world
in the servants of Southern establishments, according to the character and
capacity of the mistresses who have brought them up.
South as well as north, there are women
who have an extraordinary talent for command, and tact in educating.
Such are enabled, with apparent ease, and without severity, to subject to
their will, and bring into harmonious and systematic order, the various members
of their small estate,--to regulate their peculiarities, and so balance and
compensate the deficiencies of one by the excess of another, as to produce a
harmonious and orderly system.
Such a housekeeper was Mrs. Shelby, whom
we have already described; and such our readers may remember to have met with.
If they are not common at the South, it is because they are not common in
the world. They are to be found
there as often as anywhere; and, when existing, find in that peculiar state of
society a brilliant opportunity to exhibit their domestic talent.
Such a housekeeper Marie St. Clare was
not, nor her mother before her. Indolent
and childish, unsystematic and improvident, it was not to be expected that
servants trained under her care should not be so likewise; and she had very
justly described to Miss Ophelia the state of confusion she would find in the
family, though she had not ascribed it to the proper cause.
The first morning of her regency, Miss
Ophelia was up at four o'clock; and having attended to all the adjustments of
her own chamber, as she had done ever since she came there, to the great
amazement of the chambermaid, she prepared for a vigorous onslaught on the
cupboards and closets of the establishment of which she had the keys.
The store-room, the linen-presses, the
china-closet, the kitchen and cellar, that day, all went under an awful review.
Hidden things of darkness were brought to light to an extent that alarmed
all the principalities and powers of kitchen and chamber, and caused many
wonderings and murmurings about "dese yer northern ladies" from the
domestic cabinet.
Old Dinah, the head cook, and principal
of all rule and authority in the kitchen department, was filled with wrath at
what she considered an invasion of privilege.
No feudal baron in _Magna Charta_ times could have more thoroughly
resented some incursion of the crown.
Dinah was a character in her own way,
and it would be injustice to her memory not to give the reader a little idea of
her. She was a native and essential
cook, as much as Aunt Chloe,-- cooking being an indigenous talent of the African
race; but Chloe was a trained and methodical one, who moved in an orderly
domestic harness, while Dinah was a self-taught genius, and, like geniuses in
general, was positive, opinionated and erratic, to the last degree.
Like a certain class of modern
philosophers, Dinah perfectly scorned logic and reason in every shape, and
always took refuge in intuitive certainty; and here she was perfectly
impregnable. No possible amount of
talent, or authority, or explanation, could ever make her believe that any other
way was better than her own, or that the course she had pursued in the smallest
matter could be in the least modified. This had been a conceded point with her old mistress, Marie's
mother; and "Miss Marie," as Dinah always called her young mistress,
even after her marriage, found it easier to submit than contend; and so Dinah
had ruled supreme. This was the
easier, in that she was perfect mistress of that diplomatic art which unites the
utmost subservience of manner with the utmost inflexibility as to measure.
Dinah was mistress of the whole art and
mystery of excuse-making, in all its branches.
Indeed, it was an axiom with her that the cook can do no wrong; and a
cook in a Southern kitchen finds abundance of heads and shoulders on which to
lay off every sin and frailty, so as to maintain her own immaculateness entire.
If any part of the dinner was a failure, there were fifty indisputably
good reasons for it; and it was the fault undeniably of fifty other people, whom
Dinah berated with unsparing zeal.
But it was very seldom that there was
any failure in Dinah's last results. Though
her mode of doing everything was peculiarly meandering and circuitous, and
without any sort of calculation as to time and place,--though her kitchen
generally looked as if it had been arranged by a hurricane blowing through it,
and she had about as many places for each cooking utensil as there were days in
the year,--yet, if one would have patience to wait her own good time, up would
come her dinner in perfect order, and in a style of preparation with which an
epicure could find no fault.
It was now the season of incipient
preparation for dinner. Dinah, who
required large intervals of reflection and repose, and was studious of ease in
all her arrangements, was seated on the kitchen floor, smoking a short, stumpy
pipe, to which she was much addicted, and which she always kindled up, as a sort
of censer, whenever she felt the need of an inspiration in her arrangements.
It was Dinah's mode of invoking the domestic Muses.
Seated around her were various members
of that rising race with which a Southern household abounds, engaged in shelling
peas, peeling potatoes, picking pin-feathers out of fowls, and other preparatory
arrangements,--Dinah every once in a while interrupting her meditations to give
a poke, or a rap on the head, to some of the young operators, with the
pudding-stick that lay by her side. In
fact, Dinah ruled over the woolly heads of the younger members with a rod of
iron, and seemed to consider them born for no earthly purpose but to "save
her steps," as she phrased it. It
was the spirit of the system under which she had grown up, and she carried it
out to its full extent.
Miss Ophelia, after passing on her
reformatory tour through all the other parts of the establishment, now entered
the kitchen. Dinah had heard, from
various sources, what was going on, and resolved to stand on defensive and
conservative ground,--mentally determined to oppose and ignore every new
measure, without any actual observable contest.
The kitchen was a large brick-floored
apartment, with a great old-fashioned fireplace stretching along one side of
it,--an arrangement which St. Clare had vainly tried to persuade Dinah to
exchange for the convenience of a modern cook-stove. Not she. No
Puseyite,[1] or conservative of any school, was ever more inflexibly attached to
time-honored inconveniences than Dinah.
[1] Edward
Bouverie Pusey (1800-1882), champion of the orthodoxy of revealed religion,
defender of the Oxford movement, and Regius professor of Hebrew and Canon of
Christ Church, Oxford.
When St. Clare had first returned from the north, impressed
with the system and order of his uncle's kitchen arrangements, he had largely
provided his own with an array of cupboards, drawers, and various apparatus, to
induce systematic regulation, under the sanguine illusion that it would be of
any possible assistance to Dinah in her arrangements. He
might as well have provided them for a squirrel or a magpie.
The more drawers and closets there were, the more hiding-holes could
Dinah make for the accommodation of old rags, hair-combs, old shoes, ribbons,
cast-off artificial flowers, and other articles of _vertu_, wherein her soul
delighted.
When Miss Ophelia entered the kitchen
Dinah did not rise, but smoked on in sublime tranquillity, regarding her
movements obliquely out of the corner of her eye, but apparently intent only on
the operations around her.
Miss Ophelia commenced opening a set of
drawers.
"What is this drawer for,
Dinah?" she said.
"It's handy for most anything,
Missis," said Dinah. So it
appeared to be. From the variety it
contained, Miss Ophelia pulled out first a fine damask table-cloth stained with
blood, having evidently been used to envelop some raw meat.
"What's this, Dinah?
You don't wrap up meat in your mistress' best table-cloths?"
"O Lor, Missis, no; the towels was
all a missin'--so I jest did it. I
laid out to wash that a,--that's why I put it thar."
"Shif'less!" said Miss Ophelia
to herself, proceeding to tumble over the drawer, where she found a
nutmeg-grater and two or three nutmegs, a Methodist hymn-book, a couple of
soiled Madras handkerchiefs, some yarn and knitting-work, a paper of tobacco and
a pipe, a few crackers, one or two gilded china-saucers with some pomade in
them, one or two thin old shoes, a piece of flannel carefully pinned up
enclosing some small white onions, several damask table-napkins, some coarse
crash towels, some twine and darning-needles, and several broken papers, from
which sundry sweet herbs were sifting into the drawer.
"Where do you keep your nutmegs,
Dinah?" said Miss Ophelia, with the air of one who prayed for patience.
"Most anywhar, Missis; there's some
in that cracked tea-cup, up there, and there's some over in that ar
cupboard."
"Here are some in the grater,"
said Miss Ophelia, holding them up.
"Laws, yes, I put 'em there this
morning,--I likes to keep my things handy," said Dinah.
"You, Jake! what are you stopping for!
You'll cotch it! Be still,
thar!" she added, with a dive of her stick at the criminal.
"What's this?" said Miss
Ophelia, holding up the saucer of pomade.
"Laws, it's my har _grease_;--I put
it thar to have it handy."
"Do you use your mistress' best
saucers for that?"
"Law! it was cause I was driv, and
in sich a hurry;--I was gwine to change it this very day."
"Here are two damask
table-napkins."
"Them table-napkins I put thar, to
get 'em washed out, some day."
"Don't you have some place here on
purpose for things to be washed?"
"Well, Mas'r St. Clare got dat ar
chest, he said, for dat; but I likes to mix up biscuit and hev my things on it
some days, and then it an't handy a liftin' up the lid."
"Why don't you mix your biscuits on
the pastry-table, there?"
"Law, Missis, it gets sot so full
of dishes, and one thing and another, der an't no room, noway--"
"But you should _wash_ your dishes,
and clear them away."
"Wash my dishes!" said Dinah,
in a high key, as her wrath began to rise over her habitual respect of manner;
"what does ladies know 'bout work, I want to know?
When 'd Mas'r ever get his dinner, if I vas to spend all my time a
washin' and a puttin' up dishes? Miss
Marie never telled me so, nohow."
"Well, here are these onions."
"Laws, yes!" said Dinah;
"thar _is_ whar I put 'em, now. I
couldn't 'member. Them 's
particular onions I was a savin' for dis yer very stew.
I'd forgot they was in dat ar old flannel."
Miss Ophelia lifted out the sifting
papers of sweet herbs.
"I wish Missis wouldn't touch dem
ar. I likes to keep my things where
I knows whar to go to 'em," said Dinah, rather decidedly.
"But you don't want these holes in
the papers."
"Them 's handy for siftin' on 't
out," said Dinah.
"But you see it spills all over the
drawer."
"Laws, yes! if Missis will go a
tumblin' things all up so, it will. Missis
has spilt lots dat ar way," said Dinah, coming uneasily to the drawers.
"If Missis only will go up stars till my clarin' up time comes, I'll
have everything right; but I can't do nothin' when ladies is round, a henderin'. You, Sam, don't you gib the baby dat ar sugar-bowl!
I'll crack ye over, if ye don't mind!"
"I'm going through the kitchen, and
going to put everything in order, _once_, Dinah; and then I'll expect you to
_keep_ it so."
"Lor, now! Miss Phelia; dat ar an't no way for ladies to do.
I never did see ladies doin' no sich; my old Missis nor Miss Marie never
did, and I don't see no kinder need on 't;" and Dinah stalked indignantly
about, while Miss Ophelia piled and sorted dishes, emptied dozens of scattering
bowls of sugar into one receptacle, sorted napkins, table-cloths, and towels,
for washing; washing, wiping, and arranging with her own hands, and with a speed
and alacrity which perfectly amazed Dinah.
"Lor now! if dat ar de way dem
northern ladies do, dey an't ladies, nohow," she said to some of her
satellites, when at a safe hearing distance.
"I has things as straight as anybody, when my clarin' up times
comes; but I don't want ladies round, a henderin', and getting my things all
where I can't find 'em."
To do Dinah justice, she had, at
irregular periods, paroxyms of reformation and arrangement, which she called
"clarin' up times," when she would begin with great zeal, and turn
every drawer and closet wrong side outward, on to the floor or tables, and make
the ordinary confusion seven-fold more confounded. Then she would light her pipe, and leisurely go over her
arrangements, looking things over, and discoursing upon them; making all the
young fry scour most vigorously on the tin things, and keeping up for several
hours a most energetic state of confusion, which she would explain to the
satisfaction of all inquirers, by the remark that she was a "clarin'
up." "She couldn't hev
things a gwine on so as they had been, and she was gwine to make these yer young
ones keep better order;" for Dinah herself, somehow, indulged the illusion
that she, herself, was the soul of order, and it was only the _young uns_, and
the everybody else in the house, that were the cause of anything that fell short
of perfection in this respect. When
all the tins were scoured, and the tables scrubbed snowy white, and everything
that could offend tucked out of sight in holes and corners, Dinah would dress
herself up in a smart dress, clean apron, and high, brilliant Madras turban, and
tell all marauding "young uns" to keep out of the kitchen, for she was
gwine to have things kept nice. Indeed,
these periodic seasons were often an inconvenience to the whole household; for
Dinah would contract such an immoderate attachment to her scoured tin, as to
insist upon it that it shouldn't be used again for any possible purpose,--at
least, till the ardor of the "clarin' up" period abated.
Miss Ophelia, in a few days, thoroughly
reformed every department of the house to a systematic pattern; but her labors
in all departments that depended on the cooperation of servants were like those
of Sisyphus or the Danaides. In
despair, she one day appealed to St. Clare.
"There is no such thing as getting
anything like a system in this family!"
"To be sure, there isn't,"
said St. Clare.
"Such shiftless management, such
waste, such confusion, I never saw!"
"I dare say you didn't."
"You would not take it so coolly,
if you were housekeeper."
"My dear cousin, you may as well
understand, once for all, that we masters are divided into two classes,
oppressors and oppressed. We who
are good-natured and hate severity make up our minds to a good deal of
inconvenience. If we _will keep_ a
shambling, loose, untaught set in the community, for our convenience, why, we
must take the consequence. Some
rare cases I have seen, of persons, who, by a peculiar tact, can produce order
and system without severity; but I'm not one of them,--and so I made up my mind,
long ago, to let things go just as they do.
I will not have the poor devils thrashed and cut to pieces, and they know
it,--and, of course, they know the staff is in their own hands."
"But to have no time, no place, no
order,--all going on in this shiftless way!"
"My dear Vermont, you natives up by
the North Pole set an extravagant value on time! What on earth is the use of time to a fellow who has twice as
much of it as he knows what to do with? As
to order and system, where there is nothing to be done but to lounge on the sofa
and read, an hour sooner or later in breakfast or dinner isn't of much account.
Now, there's Dinah gets you a capital dinner,--soup, ragout, roast fowl,
dessert, ice-creams and all,--and she creates it all out of chaos and old night
down there, in that kitchen. I
think it really sublime, the way she manages.
But, Heaven bless us! if we are to go down there, and view all the
smoking and squatting about, and hurryscurryation of the preparatory process, we
should never eat more! My good
cousin, absolve yourself from that! It's
more than a Catholic penance, and does no more good.
You'll only lose your own temper, and utterly confound Dinah.
Let her go her own way."
But, Augustine, you don't know how I
found things."
"Don't I? Don't I know that the rolling-pin is under her bed, and the
nutmeg-grater in her pocket with her tobacco,--that there are sixty-five
different sugar-bowls, one in every hole in the house,--that she washes dishes
with a dinner-napkin one day, and with a fragment of an old petticoat the next?
But the upshot is, she gets up glorious dinners, makes superb coffee; and
you must judge her as warriors and statesmen are judged, _by her success_."
"But the waste,--the expense!"
"O, well! Lock everything you can,
and keep the key. Give out by
driblets, and never inquire for odds and ends,--it isn't best."
"That troubles me, Augustine.
I can't help feeling as if these servants were not _strictly honest_.
Are you sure they can be relied on?"
Augustine laughed immoderately at the
grave and anxious face with which Miss Ophelia propounded the question.
"O, cousin, that's too
good,--_honest!_--as if that's a thing to be expected!
Honest!--why, of course, they arn't.
Why should they be? What
upon earth is to make them so?"
"Why don't you instruct?"
"Instruct! O,
fiddlestick! What instructing do you think I should do?
I look like it! As to Marie, she has spirit enough, to be sure, to kill off a
whole plantation, if I'd let her manage; but she wouldn't get the cheatery out
of them."
"Are there no honest ones?"
"Well, now and then one, whom
Nature makes so impracticably simple, truthful and faithful, that the worst
possible influence can't destroy it. But,
you see, from the mother's breast the colored child feels and sees that there
are none but underhand ways open to it. It
can get along no other way with its parents, its mistress, its young master and
missie play-fellows. Cunning and
deception become necessary, inevitable habits.
It isn't fair to expect anything else of him. He ought not to be punished for it. As to honesty, the slave is kept in that dependent,
semi-childish state, that there is no making him realize the rights of property,
or feel that his master's goods are not his own, if he can get them.
For my part, I don't see how they _can_ be honest.
Such a fellow as Tom, here, is,--is a moral miracle!"
"And what becomes of their
souls?" said Miss Ophelia.
"That isn't my affair, as I know
of," said St. Clare; "I am only dealing in facts of the present life.
The fact is, that the whole race are pretty generally understood to be
turned over to the devil, for our benefit, in this world, however it may turn
out in another!"
"This is perfectly horrible!"
said Miss Ophelia; you ought to be ashamed of yourselves!"
"I don't know as I am.
We are in pretty good company, for all that," said St. Clare,
"as people in the broad road generally are.
Look at the high and the low, all the world over, and it's the same
story,--the lower class used up, body, soul and spirit, for the good of the
upper. It is so in England; it is
so everywhere; and yet all Christendom stands aghast, with virtuous indignation,
because we do the thing in a little different shape from what they do it."
"It isn't so in Vermont."
"Ah, well, in New England, and in
the free States, you have the better of us, I grant. But there's the bell; so, Cousin, let us for a while lay
aside our sectional prejudices, and come out to dinner."
As Miss Ophelia was in the kitchen in
the latter part of the afternoon, some of the sable children called out,
"La, sakes! thar's Prue a coming, grunting along like she allers
does."
A tall, bony colored woman now entered
the kitchen, bearing on her head a basket of rusks and hot rolls.
"Ho, Prue! you've come," said
Dinah.
Prue had a peculiar scowling expression
of countenance, and a sullen, grumbling voice.
She set down her basket, squatted herself down, and resting her elbows on
her knees said,
"O Lord! I wish't I 's dead!"
"Why do you wish you were
dead?" said Miss Ophelia.
"I'd be out o' my misery,"
said the woman, gruffly, without taking her eyes from the floor.
"What need you getting drunk, then,
and cutting up, Prue?" said a spruce quadroon chambermaid, dangling, as she
spoke, a pair of coral ear-drops.
The woman looked at her with a sour
surly glance.
"Maybe you'll come to it, one of
these yer days. I'd be glad to see
you, I would; then you'll be glad of a drop, like me, to forget your
misery."
"Come, Prue," said Dinah,
"let's look at your rusks. Here's
Missis will pay for them."
Miss Ophelia took out a couple of dozen.
"Thar's some tickets in that ar old
cracked jug on the top shelf," said Dinah. "You, Jake, climb up and get it down."
"Tickets,--what are they for?"
said Miss Ophelia.
"We buy tickets of her Mas'r, and
she gives us bread for 'em."
"And they counts my money and
tickets, when I gets home, to see if I 's got the change; and if I han't, they
half kills me."
"And serves you right," said
Jane, the pert chambermaid, "if you will take their money to get drunk on.
That's what she does, Missis."
"And that's what I _will_ do,--I
can't live no other ways,--drink and forget my misery."
"You are very wicked and very
foolish," said Miss Ophelia, "to steal your master's money to make
yourself a brute with."
"It's mighty likely, Missis; but I
will do it,--yes, I will. O Lord!
I wish I 's dead, I do,--I wish I 's dead, and out of my misery!"
and slowly and stiffly the old creature rose, and got her basket on her head
again; but before she went out, she looked at the quadroon girt, who still stood
playing with her ear-drops.
"Ye think ye're mighty fine with
them ar, a frolickin' and a tossin' your head, and a lookin' down on everybody.
Well, never mind,--you may live to be a poor, old, cut-up crittur, like
me. Hope to the Lord ye will, I do;
then see if ye won't drink,--drink,--drink,--yerself into torment; and sarve ye
right, too--ugh!" and, with a malignant howl, the woman left the room.
"Disgusting old beast!" said
Adolph, who was getting his master's shaving-water. "If I was her master, I'd cut her up worse than she
is."
"Ye couldn't do that ar, no
ways," said Dinah. "Her
back's a far sight now,--she can't never get a dress together over it."
"I think such low creatures ought
not to be allowed to go round to genteel families," said Miss Jane.
"What do you think, Mr. St. Clare?" she said, coquettishly
tossing her head at Adolph.
It must be observed that, among other
appropriations from his master's stock, Adolph was in the habit of adopting his
name and address; and that the style under which he moved, among the colored
circles of New Orleans, was that of _Mr. St. Clare_.
"I'm certainly of your opinion,
Miss Benoir," said Adolph.
Benoir was the name of Marie St. Clare's
family, and Jane was one of her servants.
"Pray, Miss Benoir, may I be
allowed to ask if those drops are for the ball, tomorrow night?
They are certainly bewitching!"
"I wonder, now, Mr. St. Clare, what
the impudence of you men will come to!" said Jane, tossing her pretty head
til the ear-drops twinkled again. "I
shan't dance with you for a whole evening, if you go to asking me any more
questions."
"O, you couldn't be so cruel, now!
I was just dying to know whether you would appear in your pink tarletane,"
said Adolph.
"What is it?" said Rosa, a
bright, piquant little quadroon who came skipping down stairs at this moment.
"Why, Mr. St. Clare's so
impudent!"
"On my honor," said Adolph,
"I'll leave it to Miss Rosa now."
"I know he's always a saucy
creature," said Rosa, poising herself on one of her little feet, and
looking maliciously at Adolph. "He's
always getting me so angry with him."
"O! ladies, ladies, you will
certainly break my heart, between you," said Adolph. "I shall be found dead in my bed, some morning, and
you'll have it to answer for."
"Do hear the horrid creature
talk!" said both ladies, laughing immoderately.
"Come,--clar out, you! I can't have
you cluttering up the kitchen," said Dinah; "in my way, foolin' round
here."
"Aunt Dinah's glum, because she
can't go to the ball," said Rosa.
"Don't want none o' your
light-colored balls," said Dinah; "cuttin' round, makin' b'lieve you's
white folks. Arter all, you's
niggers, much as I am."
"Aunt Dinah greases her wool stiff,
every day, to make it lie straight," said Jane.
"And it will be wool, after
all," said Rosa, maliciously shaking down her long, silky curls.
"Well, in the Lord's sight, an't
wool as good as bar, any time?" said Dinah.
"I'd like to have Missis say which is worth the most,--a couple such
as you, or one like me. Get out wid
ye, ye trumpery,--I won't have ye round!"
Here the conversation was interrupted in
a two-fold manner. St. Clare's
voice was heard at the head of the stairs, asking Adolph if he meant to stay all
night with his shaving-water; and Miss Ophelia, coming out of the dining-room,
said,
"Jane and Rosa, what are you
wasting your time for, here? Go in
and attend to your muslins."
Our friend Tom, who had been in the
kitchen during the conversation with the old rusk-woman, had followed her out
into the street. He saw her go on,
giving every once in a while a suppressed groan.
At last she set her basket down on a doorstep, and began arranging the
old, faded shawl which covered her shoulders.
"I'll carry your basket a
piece," said Tom, compassionately.
"Why should ye?" said the
woman. "I don't want no
help."
"You seem to be sick, or in
trouble, or somethin'," said Tom.
"I an't sick," said the woman,
shortly.
"I wish," said Tom, looking at
her earnestly,--"I wish I could persuade you to leave off drinking.
Don't you know it will be the ruin of ye, body and soul?"
"I knows I'm gwine to
torment," said the woman, sullenly. "Ye
don't need to tell me that ar. I 's
ugly, I 's wicked,-- I 's gwine straight to torment. O, Lord!
I wish I 's thar!"
Tom shuddered at these frightful words,
spoken with a sullen, impassioned earnestness.
"O, Lord have mercy on ye! poor
crittur. Han't ye never heard of
Jesus Christ?"
"Jesus Christ,--who's he?"
"Why, he's _the Lord_," said
Tom.
"I think I've hearn tell o' the
Lord, and the judgment and torment. I've
heard o' that."
"But didn't anybody ever tell you
of the Lord Jesus, that loved us poor sinners, and died for us?"
"Don't know nothin' 'bout
that," said the woman; "nobody han't never loved me, since my old man
died."
"Where was you raised?" said
Tom.
"Up in Kentuck.
A man kept me to breed chil'en for market, and sold 'em as fast as they
got big enough; last of all, he sold me to a speculator, and my Mas'r got me o'
him."
"What set you into this bad way of
drinkin'?"
"To get shet o' my misery.
I had one child after I come here; and I thought then I'd have one to
raise, cause Mas'r wasn't a speculator. It
was de peartest little thing! and Missis she seemed to think a heap on 't, at
first; it never cried,--it was likely and fat.
But Missis tuck sick, and I tended her; and I tuck the fever, and my milk
all left me, and the child it pined to skin and bone, and Missis wouldn't buy
milk for it. She wouldn't hear to me, when I telled her I hadn't milk.
She said she knowed I could feed it on what other folks eat; and the
child kinder pined, and cried, and cried, and cried, day and night, and got all
gone to skin and bones, and Missis got sot agin it and she said 't wan't nothin'
but crossness. She wished it was
dead, she said; and she wouldn't let me have it o' nights, cause, she said, it
kept me awake, and made me good for nothing.
She made me sleep in her room; and I had to put it away off in a little
kind o' garret, and thar it cried itself to death, one night.
It did; and I tuck to drinkin', to keep its crying out of my ears!
I did,--and I will drink! I
will, if I do go to torment for it! Mas'r
says I shall go to torment, and I tell him I've got thar now!"
"O, ye poor crittur!" said
Tom, "han't nobody never telled ye how the Lord Jesus loved ye, and died
for ye? Han't they telled ye that
he'll help ye, and ye can go to heaven, and have rest, at last?"
"I looks like gwine to
heaven," said the woman; "an't thar where white folks is gwine?
S'pose they'd have me thar? I'd
rather go to torment, and get away from Mas'r and Missis.
I had _so_," she said, as with her usual groan, she got her basket
on her head, and walked sullenly away.
Tom turned, and walked sorrowfully back
to the house. In the court he met
little Eva,--a crown of tuberoses on her head, and her eyes radiant with
delight.
"O, Tom! here you are.
I'm glad I've found you. Papa
says you may get out the ponies, and take me in my little new carriage,"
she said, catching his hand. "But
what's the matter Tom?--you look sober."
"I feel bad, Miss Eva," said
Tom, sorrowfully. "But I'll
get the horses for you."
"But do tell me, Tom, what is the
matter. I saw you talking to cross old Prue."
Tom, in simple, earnest phrase,
told Eva the woman's history. She
did not exclaim or wonder, or weep, as other children do.
Her cheeks grew pale, and a deep, earnest shadow passed over her eyes.
She laid both hands on her bosom, and sighed heavily. |