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<h2> CHAPTER XXX </h2>
<h3> The Slave Warehouse </h3>
<p>A slave warehouse! Perhaps some of my readers conjure up horrible visions
of such a place. They fancy some foul, obscure den, some horrible <i>Tartarus
"informis, ingens, cui lumen ademptum."</i> But no, innocent friend; in
these days men have learned the art of sinning expertly and genteelly, so
as not to shock the eyes and senses of respectable society. Human property
is high in the market; and is, therefore, well fed, well cleaned, tended,
and looked after, that it may come to sale sleek, and strong, and shining.
A slave-warehouse in New Orleans is a house externally not much unlike
many others, kept with neatness; and where every day you may see arranged,
under a sort of shed along the outside, rows of men and women, who stand
there as a sign of the property sold within.</p>
<p>Then you shall be courteously entreated to call and examine, and shall
find an abundance of husbands, wives, brothers, sisters, fathers, mothers,
and young children, to be "sold separately, or in lots to suit the
convenience of the purchaser;" and that soul immortal, once bought with
blood and anguish by the Son of God, when the earth shook, and the rocks
rent, and the graves were opened, can be sold, leased, mortgaged,
exchanged for groceries or dry goods, to suit the phases of trade, or the
fancy of the purchaser.</p>
<p>It was a day or two after the conversation between Marie and Miss Ophelia,
that Tom, Adolph, and about half a dozen others of the St. Clare estate,
were turned over to the loving kindness of Mr. Skeggs, the keeper of a
depot on —— street, to await the auction, next day.</p>
<p>Tom had with him quite a sizable trunk full of clothing, as had most
others of them. They were ushered, for the night, into a long room, where
many other men, of all ages, sizes, and shades of complexion, were
assembled, and from which roars of laughter and unthinking merriment were
proceeding.</p>
<p>"Ah, ha! that's right. Go it, boys,—go it!" said Mr. Skeggs, the
keeper. "My people are always so merry! Sambo, I see!" he said, speaking
approvingly to a burly negro who was performing tricks of low buffoonery,
which occasioned the shouts which Tom had heard.</p>
<p>As might be imagined, Tom was in no humor to join these proceedings; and,
therefore, setting his trunk as far as possible from the noisy group, he
sat down on it, and leaned his face against the wall.</p>
<p>The dealers in the human article make scrupulous and systematic efforts to
promote noisy mirth among them, as a means of drowning reflection, and
rendering them insensible to their condition. The whole object of the
training to which the negro is put, from the time he is sold in the
northern market till he arrives south, is systematically directed towards
making him callous, unthinking, and brutal. The slave-dealer collects his
gang in Virginia or Kentucky, and drives them to some convenient, healthy
place,—often a watering place,—to be fattened. Here they are
fed full daily; and, because some incline to pine, a fiddle is kept
commonly going among them, and they are made to dance daily; and he who
refuses to be merry—in whose soul thoughts of wife, or child, or
home, are too strong for him to be gay—is marked as sullen and
dangerous, and subjected to all the evils which the ill will of an utterly
irresponsible and hardened man can inflict upon him. Briskness, alertness,
and cheerfulness of appearance, especially before observers, are
constantly enforced upon them, both by the hope of thereby getting a good
master, and the fear of all that the driver may bring upon them if they
prove unsalable.</p>
<p>"What dat ar nigger doin here?" said Sambo, coming up to Tom, after Mr.
Skeggs had left the room. Sambo was a full black, of great size, very
lively, voluble, and full of trick and grimace.</p>
<p>"What you doin here?" said Sambo, coming up to Tom, and poking him
facetiously in the side. "Meditatin', eh?"</p>
<p>"I am to be sold at the auction tomorrow!" said Tom, quietly.</p>
<p>"Sold at auction,—haw! haw! boys, an't this yer fun? I wish't I was
gwine that ar way!—tell ye, wouldn't I make em laugh? But how is it,—dis
yer whole lot gwine tomorrow?" said Sambo, laying his hand freely on
Adolph's shoulder.</p>
<p>"Please to let me alone!" said Adolph, fiercely, straightening himself up,
with extreme disgust.</p>
<p>"Law, now, boys! dis yer's one o' yer white niggers,—kind o' cream
color, ye know, scented!" said he, coming up to Adolph and snuffing. "O
Lor! he'd do for a tobaccer-shop; they could keep him to scent snuff! Lor,
he'd keep a whole shope agwine,—he would!"</p>
<p>"I say, keep off, can't you?" said Adolph, enraged.</p>
<p>"Lor, now, how touchy we is,—we white niggers! Look at us now!" and
Sambo gave a ludicrous imitation of Adolph's manner; "here's de airs and
graces. We's been in a good family, I specs."</p>
<p>"Yes," said Adolph; "I had a master that could have bought you all for old
truck!"</p>
<p>"Laws, now, only think," said Sambo, "the gentlemens that we is!"</p>
<p>"I belonged to the St. Clare family," said Adolph, proudly.</p>
<p>"Lor, you did! Be hanged if they ar'n't lucky to get shet of ye. Spects
they's gwine to trade ye off with a lot o' cracked tea-pots and sich
like!" said Sambo, with a provoking grin.</p>
<p>Adolph, enraged at this taunt, flew furiously at his adversary, swearing
and striking on every side of him. The rest laughed and shouted, and the
uproar brought the keeper to the door.</p>
<p>"What now, boys? Order,—order!" he said, coming in and flourishing a
large whip.</p>
<p>All fled in different directions, except Sambo, who, presuming on the
favor which the keeper had to him as a licensed wag, stood his ground,
ducking his head with a facetious grin, whenever the master made a dive at
him.</p>
<p>"Lor, Mas'r, 'tan't us,—we 's reglar stiddy,—it's these yer
new hands; they 's real aggravatin',—kinder pickin' at us, all
time!"</p>
<p>The keeper, at this, turned upon Tom and Adolph, and distributing a few
kicks and cuffs without much inquiry, and leaving general orders for all
to be good boys and go to sleep, left the apartment.</p>
<p>While this scene was going on in the men's sleeping-room, the reader may
be curious to take a peep at the corresponding apartment allotted to the
women. Stretched out in various attitudes over the floor, he may see
numberless sleeping forms of every shade of complexion, from the purest
ebony to white, and of all years, from childhood to old age, lying now
asleep. Here is a fine bright girl, of ten years, whose mother was sold
out yesterday, and who tonight cried herself to sleep when nobody was
looking at her. Here, a worn old negress, whose thin arms and callous
fingers tell of hard toil, waiting to be sold tomorrow, as a cast-off
article, for what can be got for her; and some forty or fifty others, with
heads variously enveloped in blankets or articles of clothing, lie
stretched around them. But, in a corner, sitting apart from the rest, are
two females of a more interesting appearance than common. One of these is
a respectably-dressed mulatto woman between forty and fifty, with soft
eyes and a gentle and pleasing physiognomy. She has on her head a
high-raised turban, made of a gay red Madras handkerchief, of the first
quality, her dress is neatly fitted, and of good material, showing that
she has been provided for with a careful hand. By her side, and nestling
closely to her, is a young girl of fifteen,—her daughter. She is a
quadroon, as may be seen from her fairer complexion, though her likeness
to her mother is quite discernible. She has the same soft, dark eye, with
longer lashes, and her curling hair is of a luxuriant brown. She also is
dressed with great neatness, and her white, delicate hands betray very
little acquaintance with servile toil. These two are to be sold tomorrow,
in the same lot with the St. Clare servants; and the gentleman to whom
they belong, and to whom the money for their sale is to be transmitted, is
a member of a Christian church in New York, who will receive the money,
and go thereafter to the sacrament of his Lord and theirs, and think no
more of it.</p>
<p>These two, whom we shall call Susan and Emmeline, had been the personal
attendants of an amiable and pious lady of New Orleans, by whom they had
been carefully and piously instructed and trained. They had been taught to
read and write, diligently instructed in the truths of religion, and their
lot had been as happy an one as in their condition it was possible to be.
But the only son of their protectress had the management of her property;
and, by carelessness and extravagance involved it to a large amount, and
at last failed. One of the largest creditors was the respectable firm of
B. & Co., in New York. B. & Co. wrote to their lawyer in New
Orleans, who attached the real estate (these two articles and a lot of
plantation hands formed the most valuable part of it), and wrote word to
that effect to New York. Brother B., being, as we have said, a Christian
man, and a resident in a free State, felt some uneasiness on the subject.
He didn't like trading in slaves and souls of men,—of course, he
didn't; but, then, there were thirty thousand dollars in the case, and
that was rather too much money to be lost for a principle; and so, after
much considering, and asking advice from those that he knew would advise
to suit him, Brother B. wrote to his lawyer to dispose of the business in
the way that seemed to him the most suitable, and remit the proceeds.</p>
<p>The day after the letter arrived in New Orleans, Susan and Emmeline were
attached, and sent to the depot to await a general auction on the
following morning; and as they glimmer faintly upon us in the moonlight
which steals through the grated window, we may listen to their
conversation. Both are weeping, but each quietly, that the other may not
hear.</p>
<p>"Mother, just lay your head on my lap, and see if you can't sleep a
little," says the girl, trying to appear calm.</p>
<p>"I haven't any heart to sleep, Em; I can't; it's the last night we may be
together!"</p>
<p>"O, mother, don't say so! perhaps we shall get sold together,—who
knows?"</p>
<p>"If 't was anybody's else case, I should say so, too, Em," said the woman;
"but I'm so feard of losin' you that I don't see anything but the danger."</p>
<p>"Why, mother, the man said we were both likely, and would sell well."</p>
<p>Susan remembered the man's looks and words. With a deadly sickness at her
heart, she remembered how he had looked at Emmeline's hands, and lifted up
her curly hair, and pronounced her a first-rate article. Susan had been
trained as a Christian, brought up in the daily reading of the Bible, and
had the same horror of her child's being sold to a life of shame that any
other Christian mother might have; but she had no hope,—no
protection.</p>
<p>"Mother, I think we might do first rate, if you could get a place as cook,
and I as chambermaid or seamstress, in some family. I dare say we shall.
Let's both look as bright and lively as we can, and tell all we can do,
and perhaps we shall," said Emmeline.</p>
<p>"I want you to brush your hair all back straight, tomorrow," said Susan.</p>
<p>"What for, mother? I don't look near so well, that way."</p>
<p>"Yes, but you'll sell better so."</p>
<p>"I don't see why!" said the child.</p>
<p>"Respectable families would be more apt to buy you, if they saw you looked
plain and decent, as if you wasn't trying to look handsome. I know their
ways better 'n you do," said Susan.</p>
<p>"Well, mother, then I will."</p>
<p>"And, Emmeline, if we shouldn't ever see each other again, after tomorrow,—if
I'm sold way up on a plantation somewhere, and you somewhere else,—always
remember how you've been brought up, and all Missis has told you; take
your Bible with you, and your hymn-book; and if you're faithful to the
Lord, he'll be faithful to you."</p>
<p>So speaks the poor soul, in sore discouragement; for she knows that
tomorrow any man, however vile and brutal, however godless and merciless,
if he only has money to pay for her, may become owner of her daughter,
body and soul; and then, how is the child to be faithful? She thinks of
all this, as she holds her daughter in her arms, and wishes that she were
not handsome and attractive. It seems almost an aggravation to her to
remember how purely and piously, how much above the ordinary lot, she has
been brought up. But she has no resort but to <i>pray</i>; and many such
prayers to God have gone up from those same trim, neatly-arranged,
respectable slave-prisons,—prayers which God has not forgotten, as a
coming day shall show; for it is written, "Who causeth one of these little
ones to offend, it were better for him that a millstone were hanged about
his neck, and that he were drowned in the depths of the sea."</p>
<p>The soft, earnest, quiet moonbeam looks in fixedly, marking the bars of
the grated windows on the prostrate, sleeping forms. The mother and
daughter are singing together a wild and melancholy dirge, common as a
funeral hymn among the slaves:</p>
<p>"O, where is weeping Mary?<br/>
O, where is weeping Mary?<br/>
'Rived in the goodly land.<br/>
She is dead and gone to Heaven;<br/>
She is dead and gone to Heaven;<br/>
'Rived in the goodly land."<br/></p>
<p>These words, sung by voices of a peculiar and melancholy sweetness, in an
air which seemed like the sighing of earthy despair after heavenly hope,
floated through the dark prison rooms with a pathetic cadence, as verse
after verse was breathed out:</p>
<p>"O, where are Paul and Silas?<br/>
O, where are Paul and Silas?<br/>
Gone to the goodly land.<br/>
They are dead and gone to Heaven;<br/>
They are dead and gone to Heaven;<br/>
'Rived in the goodly land."<br/></p>
<p>Sing on poor souls! The night is short, and the morning will part you
forever!</p>
<p>But now it is morning, and everybody is astir; and the worthy Mr. Skeggs
is busy and bright, for a lot of goods is to be fitted out for auction.
There is a brisk lookout on the toilet; injunctions passed around to every
one to put on their best face and be spry; and now all are arranged in a
circle for a last review, before they are marched up to the Bourse.</p>
<p>Mr. Skeggs, with his palmetto on and his cigar in his mouth, walks around
to put farewell touches on his wares.</p>
<p>"How's this?" he said, stepping in front of Susan and Emmeline. "Where's
your curls, gal?"</p>
<p>The girl looked timidly at her mother, who, with the smooth adroitness
common among her class, answers,</p>
<p>"I was telling her, last night, to put up her hair smooth and neat, and
not havin' it flying about in curls; looks more respectable so."</p>
<p>"Bother!" said the man, peremptorily, turning to the girl; "you go right
along, and curl yourself real smart!" He added, giving a crack to a rattan
he held in his hand, "And be back in quick time, too!"</p>
<p>"You go and help her," he added, to the mother. "Them curls may make a
hundred dollars difference in the sale of her."</p>
<p>Beneath a splendid dome were men of all nations, moving to and fro, over
the marble pave. On every side of the circular area were little tribunes,
or stations, for the use of speakers and auctioneers. Two of these, on
opposite sides of the area, were now occupied by brilliant and talented
gentlemen, enthusiastically forcing up, in English and French commingled,
the bids of connoisseurs in their various wares. A third one, on the other
side, still unoccupied, was surrounded by a group, waiting the moment of
sale to begin. And here we may recognize the St. Clare servants,—Tom,
Adolph, and others; and there, too, Susan and Emmeline, awaiting their
turn with anxious and dejected faces. Various spectators, intending to
purchase, or not intending, examining, and commenting on their various
points and faces with the same freedom that a set of jockeys discuss the
merits of a horse.</p>
<p>"Hulloa, Alf! what brings you here?" said a young exquisite, slapping the
shoulder of a sprucely-dressed young man, who was examining Adolph through
an eye-glass.</p>
<p>"Well! I was wanting a valet, and I heard that St. Clare's lot was going.
I thought I'd just look at his—"</p>
<p>"Catch me ever buying any of St. Clare's people! Spoilt niggers, every
one. Impudent as the devil!" said the other.</p>
<p>"Never fear that!" said the first. "If I get 'em, I'll soon have their
airs out of them; they'll soon find that they've another kind of master to
deal with than Monsieur St. Clare. 'Pon my word, I'll buy that fellow. I
like the shape of him."</p>
<p>"You'll find it'll take all you've got to keep him. He's deucedly
extravagant!"</p>
<p>"Yes, but my lord will find that he <i>can't</i> be extravagant with <i>me</i>.
Just let him be sent to the calaboose a few times, and thoroughly dressed
down! I'll tell you if it don't bring him to a sense of his ways! O, I'll
reform him, up hill and down,—you'll see. I buy him, that's flat!"</p>
<p>Tom had been standing wistfully examining the multitude of faces thronging
around him, for one whom he would wish to call master. And if you should
ever be under the necessity, sir, of selecting, out of two hundred men,
one who was to become your absolute owner and disposer, you would,
perhaps, realize, just as Tom did, how few there were that you would feel
at all comfortable in being made over to. Tom saw abundance of men,—great,
burly, gruff men; little, chirping, dried men; long-favored, lank, hard
men; and every variety of stubbed-looking, commonplace men, who pick up
their fellow-men as one picks up chips, putting them into the fire or a
basket with equal unconcern, according to their convenience; but he saw no
St. Clare.</p>
<p>A little before the sale commenced, a short, broad, muscular man, in a
checked shirt considerably open at the bosom, and pantaloons much the
worse for dirt and wear, elbowed his way through the crowd, like one who
is going actively into a business; and, coming up to the group, began to
examine them systematically. From the moment that Tom saw him approaching,
he felt an immediate and revolting horror at him, that increased as he
came near. He was evidently, though short, of gigantic strength. His
round, bullet head, large, light-gray eyes, with their shaggy, sandy
eyebrows, and stiff, wiry, sun-burned hair, were rather unprepossessing
items, it is to be confessed; his large, coarse mouth was distended with
tobacco, the juice of which, from time to time, he ejected from him with
great decision and explosive force; his hands were immensely large, hairy,
sun-burned, freckled, and very dirty, and garnished with long nails, in a
very foul condition. This man proceeded to a very free personal
examination of the lot. He seized Tom by the jaw, and pulled open his
mouth to inspect his teeth; made him strip up his sleeve, to show his
muscle; turned him round, made him jump and spring, to show his paces.</p>
<p>"Where was you raised?" he added, briefly, to these investigations.</p>
<p>"In Kintuck, Mas'r," said Tom, looking about, as if for deliverance.</p>
<p>"What have you done?"</p>
<p>"Had care of Mas'r's farm," said Tom.</p>
<p>"Likely story!" said the other, shortly, as he passed on. He paused a
moment before Dolph; then spitting a discharge of tobacco-juice on his
well-blacked boots, and giving a contemptuous umph, he walked on. Again he
stopped before Susan and Emmeline. He put out his heavy, dirty hand, and
drew the girl towards him; passed it over her neck and bust, felt her
arms, looked at her teeth, and then pushed her back against her mother,
whose patient face showed the suffering she had been going through at
every motion of the hideous stranger.</p>
<p>The girl was frightened, and began to cry.</p>
<p>"Stop that, you minx!" said the salesman; "no whimpering here,—the
sale is going to begin." And accordingly the sale begun.</p>
<p>Adolph was knocked off, at a good sum, to the young gentlemen who had
previously stated his intention of buying him; and the other servants of
the St. Clare lot went to various bidders.</p>
<p>"Now, up with you, boy! d'ye hear?" said the auctioneer to Tom.</p>
<p>Tom stepped upon the block, gave a few anxious looks round; all seemed
mingled in a common, indistinct noise,—the clatter of the salesman
crying off his qualifications in French and English, the quick fire of
French and English bids; and almost in a moment came the final thump of
the hammer, and the clear ring on the last syllable of the word <i>"dollars,"</i>
as the auctioneer announced his price, and Tom was made over.—He had
a master!</p>
<p>He was pushed from the block;—the short, bullet-headed man seizing
him roughly by the shoulder, pushed him to one side, saying, in a harsh
voice, "Stand there, <i>you!</i>"</p>
<p>Tom hardly realized anything; but still the bidding went on,—ratting,
clattering, now French, now English. Down goes the hammer again,—Susan
is sold! She goes down from the block, stops, looks wistfully back,—her
daughter stretches her hands towards her. She looks with agony in the face
of the man who has bought her,—a respectable middle-aged man, of
benevolent countenance.</p>
<p>"O, Mas'r, please do buy my daughter!"</p>
<p>"I'd like to, but I'm afraid I can't afford it!" said the gentleman,
looking, with painful interest, as the young girl mounted the block, and
looked around her with a frightened and timid glance.</p>
<p>The blood flushes painfully in her otherwise colorless cheek, her eye has
a feverish fire, and her mother groans to see that she looks more
beautiful than she ever saw her before. The auctioneer sees his advantage,
and expatiates volubly in mingled French and English, and bids rise in
rapid succession.</p>
<p>"I'll do anything in reason," said the benevolent-looking gentleman,
pressing in and joining with the bids. In a few moments they have run
beyond his purse. He is silent; the auctioneer grows warmer; but bids
gradually drop off. It lies now between an aristocratic old citizen and
our bullet-headed acquaintance. The citizen bids for a few turns,
contemptuously measuring his opponent; but the bullet-head has the
advantage over him, both in obstinacy and concealed length of purse, and
the controversy lasts but a moment; the hammer falls,—he has got the
girl, body and soul, unless God help her!</p>
<p>Her master is Mr. Legree, who owns a cotton plantation on the Red River.
She is pushed along into the same lot with Tom and two other men, and goes
off, weeping as she goes.</p>
<p>The benevolent gentleman is sorry; but, then, the thing happens every day!
One sees girls and mothers crying, at these sales, <i>always!</i> it can't
be helped, &c.; and he walks off, with his acquisition, in another
direction.</p>
<p>Two days after, the lawyer of the Christian firm of B. & Co., New
York, send on their money to them. On the reverse of that draft, so
obtained, let them write these words of the great Paymaster, to whom they
shall make up their account in a future day: <i>"When he maketh
inquisition for blood, he forgetteth not the cry of the humble!"</i></p>
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