Web
and Book design,
Copyright, Kellscraft Studio 1999-2024
(Return
to Web
Text-ures)
| Click
Here to return to Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl Content Page Return to the Previous Chapter |
(HOME)
|
XXXII. THE MEETING OF MOTHER AND DAUGHTER. When we arrived
in New York, I was half crazed by the crowd of coachmen calling out,
"Carriage, ma'am?" We bargained with one to take us to Sullivan
Street for twelve shillings. A burly Irishman stepped up and said, "I'll
tak' ye for sax shillings." The reduction of half the price was an object
to us, and we asked if he could take us right away. "Troth an I will,
ladies," he replied. I noticed that the hackmen smiled at each other, and
I inquired whether his conveyance was decent. "Yes, it's dacent it is, marm.
Devil a bit would I be after takin' ladies in a cab that was not dacent."
We gave him our checks. He went for the baggage, and soon reappeared, saying,
"This way, if you plase, ladies." We followed, and found our trunks
on a truck, and we were invited to take our seats on them. We told him that was
not what we bargained for, and he must take the trunks off. He swore they
should not be touched till we had paid him six shillings. In our situation it
was not prudent to attract attention, and I was about to pay him what he
required, when a man near by shook his head for me not to do it. After a great
ado we got rid of the Irishman, and had our trunks fastened on a hack. We had
been recommended to a boarding-house in Sullivan Street, and thither we drove. There
Fanny and I separated. The Anti-Slavery Society provided a home for her, and I
afterwards heard of her in prosperous circumstances. I sent for an old friend
from my part of the country, who had for some time been doing business in New
York. He came immediately. I told him I wanted to go to my daughter, and asked
him to aid me in procuring an interview. I cautioned him
not to let it be known to the family that I had just arrived from the south,
because they supposed I had been at the north seven years. He told me there was
a colored woman in Brooklyn who came from the same town I did, and I had better
go to her house, and have my daughter meet me there. I accepted the proposition
thankfully, and he agreed to escort me to Brooklyn. We crossed Fulton ferry,
went up Myrtle Avenue, and stopped at the house he designated. I was just about
to enter, when two girls passed. My friend called my attention to them. I
turned, and recognized in the eldest, Sarah, the daughter of a woman who used
to live with my grandmother, but who had left the south years ago. Surprised
and rejoiced at this unexpected meeting, I threw my arms round her, and
inquired concerning her mother. "You take
no notice of the other girl," said my friend. I turned, and there stood my
Ellen! I pressed her to my heart, then held her away from me to take a look at
her. She had changed a good deal in the two years since I parted from her.
Signs of neglect could be discerned by eyes less observing than a mother's. My
friend invited us all to go into the house; but Ellen said she had been sent of
an errand, which she would do as quickly as possible, and go home and ask Mrs.
Hobbs to let her come and see me. It was agreed that I should send for her the
next day. Her companion, Sarah, hastened to tell her mother of my arrival. When
I entered the house, I found the mistress of it absent, and I waited for her
return. Before I saw her, I heard her saying, "Where is Linda Brent? I
used to know her father and mother." Soon Sarah came with her mother. So
there was quite a company of us, all from my grandmother's neighborhood. These
friends gathered round me and questioned me eagerly. They laughed, they cried,
and they shouted. They thanked God that I had got away from my persecutors and
was safe on Long Island. It was a day of great excitement. How different from
the silent days I had passed in my dreary den! The next morning
was Sunday. My first waking thoughts were occupied with the note I was to send
to Mrs. Hobbs, the lady with whom Ellen lived. That I had recently come into
that vicinity was evident; otherwise I should have sooner inquired for my
daughter. It would not do to let them know I had just arrived from the south,
for that would involve the suspicion of my having been harbored there, and
might bring trouble, if not ruin, on several people. I like a
straightforward course, and am always reluctant to resort to subterfuges. So
far as my ways have been crooked, I charge them all upon slavery. It was that
system of violence and wrong which now left me no alternative but to enact a
falsehood. I began my note by stating that I had recently arrived from Canada,
and was very desirous to have my daughter come to see me. She came and brought
a message from Mrs. Hobbs, inviting me to her house, and assuring me that I
need not have any fears. The conversation I had with my child did not leave my
mind at ease. When I asked if she was well treated, she answered yes; but there
was no heartiness in the tone, and it seemed to me that she said it from an
unwillingness to have me troubled on her account. Before she left me, she asked
very earnestly, "Mother, when will you take me to live with you?" It
made me sad to think that I could not give her a home till I went to work and
earned the means; and that might take me a long time. When she was placed with
Mrs. Hobbs, the agreement was that she should be sent to school. She had been
there two years, and was now nine years old, and she scarcely knew her letters.
There was no excuse for this, for there were good public schools in Brooklyn,
to which she could have been sent without expense. She staid with
me till dark, and I went home with her. I was received in a friendly manner by
the family, and all agreed in saying that Ellen was a useful, good girl. Mrs.
Hobbs looked me coolly in the face, and said, "I suppose you know that my
cousin, Mr. Sands, has given her to my eldest daughter. She will make a
nice waiting-maid for her when she grows up." I did not answer a word. How
could she, who knew by experience the strength of a mother's love, and
who was perfectly aware of the relation Mr. Sands bore to my children,—how could
she look me in the face, while she thrust such a dagger into my heart? I was no longer
surprised that they had kept her in such a state of ignorance. Mr. Hobbs had
formerly been wealthy, but he had failed, and afterwards obtained a subordinate
situation in the Custom House. Perhaps they expected to return to the south
some day; and Ellen's knowledge was quite sufficient for a slave's condition. I
was impatient to go to work and earn money, that I might change the uncertain
position of my children. Mr. Sands had not kept his promise to emancipate them.
I had also been deceived about Ellen. What security had I with regard to
Benjamin? I felt that I had none. I returned to my
friend's house in an uneasy state of mind. In order to protect my children, it
was necessary that I should own myself. I called myself free, and sometimes
felt so; but I knew I was insecure. I sat down that night and wrote a civil
letter to Dr. Flint, asking him to state the lowest terms on which he would
sell me; and as I belonged by law to his daughter, I wrote to her also, making
a similar request. Since my arrival at the north I had not been unmindful of my dear brother William. I had made diligent inquiries for him, and having heard of him in Boston, I went thither. When I arrived there, I found he had gone to New Bedford. I wrote to that place, and was informed he had gone on a whaling voyage, and would not return for some months. I went back to New York to get employment near Ellen. I received an answer from Dr. Flint, which gave me no encouragement. He advised me to return and submit myself to my rightful owners, and then any request I might make would be granted. I lent this letter to a friend, who lost it; otherwise I would present a copy to my readers. |