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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - Uncle Tom's Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe
“What a shame to our country that such sights are to be seen!” said another
lady.

“O, there’s a great deal to be said on both sides of the subject,” said a genteel
woman, who sat at her stateroom door sewing, while her little girl and boy were
playing round her. “I’ve been south, and I must say I think the negroes are better
off than they would be to be free.”

“In some respects, some of them are well off, I grant,” said the lady to whose
remark she had answered. “The most dreadful part of slavery, to my mind, is its
outrages on the feelings and affections,- the separating of families, for example.”

“That is a bad thing, certainly,” said the other lady, holding up a baby’s dress
she had just completed, and looking intently on its trimmings; “but then, I fancy,
it don’t occur often.”

“O, it does,” said the first lady, eagerly; “I’ve lived many years in Kentucky
and Virginia both, and I’ve seen enough to make any one’s heart sick. Suppose,
ma’am, your two children, there, should be taken from you and sold?”

“We can’t reason from our feelings to those of this class of persons,” said the
other lady, sorting out some worsteds on her lap.

“Indeed, ma’am, you can know nothing of them, if you say so,” answered the
first lady, warmly. “I was born and brought up among them. I know they do feel,
just as keenly,- even more so, perhaps,- as we do.”
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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - Uncle Tom's Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe



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