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    Key to Uncle Tom's Cabin

    Page 55
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      exhibited on sale. They made them up with far sadder feelings

      than they would have sewed on their own shrouds. Hope had

      almost died out of their bosoms. A few days before the gang

      were to be sent off, their sister made them a sad farewell visit.

      They mingled their prayers and tears, and the girls made up

      little tokens of remembrance to send by her as parting gifts to

      their brothers and sisters, and aged father and mother; and

      with a farewell sadder than that of a death-bed, the sisters

      parted.

      The evening before the coffle was to start drew on. Mary

      and Emily went to the house to bid Bruin's family good-bye.

      Bruin had a little daughter who had been a pet and favourite

      with the girls. She clung round them, cried, and begged them

      not to go. Emily told her that if she wished to have them

      stay, she must go and ask her father. Away ran the little

      pleader, full of her errand; and was so very earnest in her

      importunities, that he, to pacify her, said he would consent to

      their remaining, if his partner, Captain Hill, would do so. At

      this time Bruin, hearing Mary crying aloud in the prison, went

      up to see her. With all the earnestness of despair, she made

      her last appeal to his feelings. She begged him to make the

      case his own, to think of his own dear little daughter--what if

      she were exposed tobe torn away from every friend on earth,

      and cut off from all hope of redemption, at the very moment,

      too, when deliverance was expected! Bruin was not absolutely

      a man of stone, and this agonising appeal brought tears to his

      eyes. He gave some encouragement that, if Hill would consent,

      they need not be sent off with the gang. A sleepless night

      followed, spent in weeping, groaning, and prayer. Morning

      at last dawned; and, according to orders received the day

      before, they prepared themselves to go, and even put on their

      bonnets and shawls, and stood ready for the word to be given.

      When the very last tear of hope was shed, and they were going

      out to join the gang, Bruin's heart relented. He called them

      to him, and told them they might remain! Oh, how glad were

      their hearts made by this, as they might now hope on a little

      longer! Either the entreaties of little Martha or Mary's plea

      with Bruin had prevailed.

      Soon the gang was started on foot--men, women, and chil-

      dren, two and two, the men all handcuffed together, the right

      wrist of one to the left wrist of the other, and a chain passing

      through the middle from the handcuffs of one couple to those

      of the next. The women and children walked in the same

      manner throughout, handcuffed or chained. Drivers went be-

      fore and at the side, to take up those who were sick or lame.

      They were obliged to set off singing! accompanied with fiddles

      and banjoes!--“For they that carried us away captive required

      of us a song, and they that wasted us required of us mirth.”

      And this is a scene of daily occurrence in a Christian country!

      and Christian ministers say that the right to do these things is

      given by God himself!!

      Meanwhile poor old Paul Edmondson went northward to

      supplicate aid. Any one who should have travelled in the cars

      at that time might have seen a venerable-looking black man, all

      whose air and attitude indicated a patient humility, and who

      seemed to carry a weight of overwhelming sorrow, like one who had

      long been acquainted with grief. That man was Paul Edmondson.

      Alone, friendless, unknown, and, worst of all, black, he came

      into the great bustling city of New York, to see if there was

      any one there who could give him twenty-five hundred dollars

      to buy his daughters with. Can anybody realise what a poor

      man's feelings are, who visits a great, bustling, rich city, alone

      and unknown, for such an object? The writer has now, in a

      letter from a slave father and husband who was visiting Port-

      land on a similar errand, a touching expression of it:

      I walked all day, till I was tired and discouraged. O! Mrs. S--, when I see

      so many people who seem to have so many more things than they want or know

      what to do with, and then think that I have worked hard, till I am past forty, all

      my life, and don't own even my own wife and children, it makes me feel sick and

      discouraged!

      So sick at heart and discouraged felt Paul Edmondson. He

      went to the Anti-Slavery Office, and made his case known. The

      sum was such a large one, and seemed to many so exorbitant,

      that though they pitied the poor father, they were disheartened

      about raising it. They wrote to Washington to authenticate the

      particulars of the story, and wrote to Bruin and Hill to see if

      there could be any reduction of price. Meanwhile the poor old

      man looked sadly from one adviser to another. He was recom-

      mended to go to the Rev. H. W. Beecher, and tell his story.

      He inquired his way to his door--ascended the steps to ring

      the door-bell, but his heart failed him: he sat down on the

      steps, weeping!

      There Mr. Beecher found him. He took him in, and inquired

      his story. There was to be a public meeting that night to raise

      money. The hapless father begged him to go and plead for his

      children. He did go, and spoke as if he were pleading for his

      own father and sisters. Other clergymen followed in the same

      strain, the meeting became enthusiastic, and the money was

      raised on the spot, and poor old Paul laid his head that night

      on a grateful pillow--not to sleep, but to give thanks!

      Meanwhile the girls had been dragging on anxious days in the

      slave-prison. They were employed in sewing for Bruin's family,

      staying sometimes in the prison, and sometimes in the house.

      It is to be stated here that Mr. Bruin is a man of very

      different character from many in his trade. He is such a man

      as never would have been found in the profession of a slave-

      trader, had not the most respectable and religious part of the

      community defended the right to buy and sell, as being conferred

      by God himself. It is a fact, with regard to this man, that he

      was one of the earliest subscribers to the National Era, in the

      District of Columbia; and when a certain individual there

      brought himself into great peril by assisting fugitive slaves, and

      there was no one found to go bail for him, Mr. Bruin came

      forward and performed this kindness.

      While we abhor the horrible system and the horrible trade

      with our whole soul, there is no harm, we suppose, in wishing

      that such a man had a better occupation. Yet we cannot forbear

      reminding all such that, when we come to give our account at

      the judgment-seat of Christ, every man must speak for himself

      alone; and that Christ will not accept as an apology for sin the

      word of all the ministers and all the synods in the country. He

      has given fair warning, “Beware of false prophets;” and if

      people will not beware of them, their blood is upon their own

      heads.

      The girls, while under Mr. Bruin's care, were treated with as


      much kindness and consideration as could possibly consist with

      the design of selling them. There is no doubt that Bruin was

      personally friendly to them, and really wished most earnestly

      that they might be ransomed; but then he did not see how he

      was to lose two thousand five hundred dollars. He had just

      the same difficulty on this subject that some New York members

      of churches have had, when they have had slaves brought into

      their hands as security for Southern debts. He was sorry for

      them, and wished them well, and hoped Providence would pro-

      vide for them when they were sold, but still he could not afford

      to lose his money; and while such men remain elders and com-

      municants in churches in New York, we must not be surprised

      that there remain slave-traders in Alexandria.

      It is one great art of the enemy of souls to lead men to com-

      pound for their participation in one branch of sin by their

      righteous horror of another. The slave-trader has been the

      general scape-goat on whom all parties have vented their indig-

      nation, while buying of him and selling to him.

      There is an awful warning given in the fiftieth Psalm to those

      who in word have professed religion and in deed consented to

      iniquity, where from the judgment-seat Christ is represented as

      thus addressing them:--“What hast thou to do to declare my

      statutes, or that thou shouldst take my covenant into thy mouth,

      seeing thou hatest instruction, and castest my words behind

      thee? When thou sawest a thief, then thou consentedst with

      him, and hast been partaker with adulterers.”

      One thing is certain, that all who do these things, openly or

      secretly, must, at last, make up their account with a Judge who

      is no respecter of persons, and who will just as soon condemn

      an elder in the church for slave-trading as a professed trader;

      nay, He may make it more tolerable for the Sodom and Gomorrah

      of the trade than for them--for it may be, if the trader had the

      means of grace that they have had, that he would have repented

      long ago.

      But to return to our history.--The girls were sitting sewing

      near the open window of their cage, when Emily said to Mary,

      “There, Mary, is that white man we have seen from the North.”

      They both looked, and in a moment more saw their own dear

      father. They sprang and ran through the house and the office,

      and into the street, shouting as they ran, followed by Bruin, who

      said he thought the girls were crazy. In a moment they were

      in their father's arms, but observed that he trembled exceedingly,

      and that his voice was unsteady. They eagerly inquired if the

      money was raised for their ransom. Afraid of exciting their

      hopes too soon, before their free papers were signed, he said he

      would talk with them soon, and went into the office with Mr.

      Bruin and Mr. Chaplin. Mr. Bruin professed himself sincerely

      glad, as undoubtedly he was, that they had brought the money;

      but seemed much hurt by the manner in which he had been

      spoken of by the Rev. H. W. Beecher at the liberation meeting

      in New York, thinking it hard that no difference should be made

      between him and other traders, when he had shown himself so

      much more considerate and humane than the great body of them.

      He, however, counted over the money and signed the papers with

      great good will, taking out a five-dollar gold piece for each of

      the girls, as a parting present.

      The affair took longer than they supposed, and the time

      seemed an age to the poor girls, who were anxiously walking up

      and down outside the room, in ignorance of their fate. Could

      their father have brought the money? Why did he tremble so?

      Could he have failed of the money, at last? Or could it be that

      their dear mother was dead, for they had heard that she was

      very ill!

      At length a messenger came shouting to them, “You are free,

      you are free!” Emily thinks she sprang nearly to the ceiling

      overhead. They jumped, clapped their hands, laughed and

      shouted aloud. Soon their father came to them, embraced them

      tenderly, and attempted to quiet them, and told them to prepare

      themselves to go and see their mother. This they did they

      know not how, but with considerable help from the family, who

      all seemed to rejoice in their joy. Their father procured a car-

      riage to take them to the wharf, and, with joy overflowing all

      bounds, they bade a most affectionate farewell to each member

      of the family, not even omitting Bruin himself. The “good

      that there is in human nature” for once had the upper hand,

      and all were moved to tears of sympathetic joy. Their father,

      with subdued tenderness, made great efforts to soothe their

      tumultuous feelings, and at length partially succeeded. When

      they arrived at Washington, a carriage was ready to take them

      to their sister's house. People of every rank and description

      came running together to get a sight of them. Their brothers

      caught them up in their arms, and ran about with them, almost

      frantic with joy. Their aged and venerated mother, raised up

      from a sick-bed by the stimulus of the glad news, was there,

      weeping and giving thanks to God. Refreshments were pre-

      pared in their sister's house for all who called, and amid greet-

      ings and rejoicings, tears and gladness, prayers and thanks-

      givings, but without sleep, the night passed away, and the

      morning of November 4, 1848, dawned upon them free and

      happy.

      This last spring, during the month of May, as the writer has

      already intimated, the aged mother of the Edmondson family

      came on to New York, and the reason of her coming may be

      thus briefly explained. She had still one other daughter, the

      guide and support of her feeble age, or, as she calls her, in her

      own expressive language, “the last drop of blood in her heart.”

      She had also a son, twenty-one years of age, still a slave on a

      neighbouring plantation. The infirm woman in whose name the

      estate was held was supposed to be drawing near to death, and

      the poor parents were distressed with the fear that, in case of

      this event, their two remaining children would be sold for the

      purpose of dividing the estate, and thus thrown into the dreaded

      Southern market. No one can realise what a constant horror

      the slave-prisons and the slave-traders are to all the unfortunate

      families in the vicinity. Everything for which other parents

      look on their children with pleasure and pride is to these poor

      souls a source of anxiety and dismay, because it renders the

      child so much more a merchantable article.

      It is no wonder, therefore, that the light in Paul and Milly's

      cottage was overshadowed by this terrible idea.

      The guardians of these children had given their father a

      written promise to sell them to him for a certain sum, and

      by hard begging he had acquired a hundred dollars towards the

      twelve hundred which were necessary. But he was now confined

      to his bed with sickness. After pouring out earne
    st prayer to

      the Helper of the helpless, Milly says, one day she said to Paul,

      “I tell ye, Paul, I'm going up to New York myself, to see if I

      can't get that money.”

      “Paul says to me, `Why, Milly dear, how can you? Ye

      an't fit to be off the bed, and ye's never in the cars in your

      life.'

      “Never you fear, Paul,' says I; `I shall go trusting in

      the Lord; and the Lord, He'll take me, and He'll bring me,

      that I know.'

      “So I went to the cars and got a white man to put me

      aboard; and, sure enough, there I found two Bethel minis-

      ters; and one set one side o' me, and one set the other, all

      the way; and they got me my tickets, and looked after my

      things, and did everything for me. There didn't anything

      happen to me all the way. Sometimes, when I went to set

      down in the sitting-rooms, people looked at me and moved

      off so scornful! Well, I thought, I wish the Lord would give

      you a better mind.”

      Emily and Mary, who had been at school in New York State,

      came to the city to meet their mother, and they brought her

      directly to the Rev. Henry W. Beecher's house, where the

      writer then was.

      The writer remembers now the scene when she first met this

      mother and daughters. It must be recollected that they had

      not seen each other before for four years. One was sitting each

      side the mother, holding her hand; and the air of pride and

      filial affection with which they presented her was touching to

      behold. After being presented to the writer, she again sat

      down between them, took a hand of each, and looked very

      earnestly first on one and then on the other; and then looking

      up, said, with a smile, “Oh, these children! how they do lie

      round our hearts!”

      She then explained to the writer all her sorrows and anxieties

      for the younger children. “Now, madam,” she says, “that

      man that keeps the great trading-house at Alexandria, that

      man,” she said with a strong, indignant expression, “has sent

      to know if there's any more of my children to be sold. That

      man said he wanted to see me! Yes, ma'am, he said he'd give

      twenty dollars to see me. I wouldn't see him if he'd give me

      a hundred! He sent for me to come and see him when he

      had my daughters in his prison. I wouldn't go to see him; I

     


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