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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - Uncle Tom's Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe
While this scene was going on at the tavern, Sam and Andy, in a state of high
felicitation, pursued their way home.

Sam was in the highest possible feather, and expressed his exultation by all
sorts of supernatural howls and ejaculations, by divers odd motions and contor-
tions of his whole system. Sometimes he would sit backward, with his face to the
horse’s tail and sides, and then, with a whoop and a somerset, come right side up
in his place again, and, drawing on a grave face, begin to lecture Andy in high-
sounding tones for laughing and playing the fool. Anon, slapping his sides with
his arms, he would burst forth in peals of laughter, that made the old woods ring
as they passed. With all these evolutions, he contrived to keep the horses up to the
top of their speed, until, between ten and eleven, their heels resounded on the
gravel at the end of the balcony. Mrs. Shelby flew to the railings.

“Is that you, Sam? Where are they?”

“Mas’r Haley’s a-restin’ at the tavern; he’s drefful fatigued, Missis.”

“And Eliza, Sam?”

“Wal, she’s clar ‘cross Jordan. As a body may say, in the land o’ Canaan.”

“Why, Sam, what do you mean?” said Mrs. Shelby, breathless, and almost
faint, as the possible meaning of these words came over her.

“Wal, Missis, de Lord he persarves his own. ‘Lizy’s done gone over the river
into ‘Hio, as ‘markably as if de Lord took her over in a charrit of fire and two hos-
ses.”
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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - Uncle Tom's Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe



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