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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - Uncle Tom's Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe

CHAPTER 39




The Stratagem



“The way of the wicked is as darkness; he knoweth not at what he
stumbleth.”

THE garret of the house that Legree occupied, like most other garrets, was a
great, desolate space, dusty, hung with cobwebs, and littered with cast-off lumber.
The opulent family that had inhabited the house in the days of its splendor had im-
ported a great deal of splendid furniture, some of which they had taken away with
them, while some remained standing desolate in mouldering, unoccupied rooms,
or stored away in this place. One or two immense packing-boxes, in which this
furniture was brought, stood against the sides of the garret. There was a small win-
dow there, which let in, through its dingy, dusty panes, a scanty, uncertain light
on the tall, high-backed chairs and dusty tables, that had once seen better days.

Altogether, it was a weird and ghostly place; but, ghostly as it was, it wanted
not in legends among the superstitious negroes, to increase its terrors. Some few
years before, a negro woman, who had incurred Legree’s displeasure, was con-
fined there for several weeks. What passed there, we do not say; the negroes used
to whisper darkly to each other; but it was known that the body of the unfortunate
creature was one day taken down from there, and buried: and, after that, it was
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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - Uncle Tom's Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe



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