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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Manuel Pereira, by F. C. Adams
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Manuel Pereira
+
+Author: F. C. Adams
+
+Release Date: November, 2003 [EBook #4680]
+Posting Date: January 11, 2010
+Last Updated: March 14, 2018
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MANUEL PEREIRA ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charles Aldarondo
+
+
+
+
+
+MANUEL PEREIRA
+
+or, The Sovereign Rule of South Carolina.
+
+With Views Of Southern Laws, Life, And Hospitality.
+
+By F. C. Adams.
+
+
+Written In Charleston, South Carolina. Washington, D. C.:
+
+1853.
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ CHAPTER I. THE Unlucky Ship
+ CHAPTER II. The Steward's Bravery
+ CHAPTER III. The Second Storm
+ CHAPTER IV. The Charleston Police
+ CHAPTER V. Mr. Grimshaw, the Man of the County
+ CHAPTER VI. The Janson in the Offing
+ CHAPTER VII. Arrival of the Janson
+ CHAPTER VIII. A New Dish of Secession
+ CHAPTER IX. A few Points of the Law
+ CHAPTER X. The Prospect Darkening
+ CHAPTER XI. The Sheriff's Office
+ CHAPTER XII. The Old Jail
+ CHAPTER XIII. How it is
+ CHAPTER XIV. Manuel Pereira Committed
+ CHAPTER XV. The Law's Intricacy
+ CHAPTER XVI. Plea of Just Consideration and Mistaken Constancy of the Laws
+ CHAPTER XVII. Little George, the Captain, and Mr. Grimshaw
+ CHAPTER XVIII. Little Tommy and the Police
+ CHAPTER XIX. The Next Morning, and the Mayor's Verdict
+ CHAPTER XX. Emeute among the Stewards
+ CHAPTER XXI. The Captain's Interview with Mr. Grimshaw
+ CHAPTER XXII. Copeland's Release and Manuel's close Confinement
+ CHAPTER XXIII. Imprisonment of John Paul, and John Baptiste Pamerlie
+ CHAPTER XXIV. The Janson Condemned
+ CHAPTER XXV. George the Secessionist, and his Father's Ships
+ CHAPTER XXVI. A Singular Reception
+ CHAPTER XXVII. The Habeas Corpus
+ CHAPTER XXVIII. The Captain's Departure and Manuel's Release
+ CHAPTER XXIX. Manuel's Arrival in New York
+ CHAPTER XXX. The Scene of Anguish
+ CONCLUSION
+ APPENDIX
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION.
+
+
+OUR generous friends in Georgia and South Carolina will not add among
+their assumptions that we know nothing of the South and Southern life. A
+residence of several years in those States, a connection with the press,
+and associations in public life, gave us opportunities which we did
+not lose, and have not lost sight of; and if we dipped deeper into the
+vicissitudes of life and law than they gave us credit for at the time,
+we trust they will pardon us, on the ground of interest in the welfare
+of the South.
+
+Perhaps we should say, to support the true interests of the South, we
+should and must abandon many of those errors we so strenuously supported
+in years past; and thus we have taken up the subject of our book, based
+upon the practical workings of an infamous law, which we witnessed upon
+the individual whose name forms a part of the title.
+
+Imprisoning a shipwrecked sailor, and making it a penal offence for
+a freeman to come within the limits of a republican State, whether
+voluntarily or involuntarily, seems to be considered commonplace,
+instead of barbarous in South Carolina. This may be accounted for by the
+fact that the power of a minority, created in wrong, requiring barbarous
+expedients to preserve itself intact, becomes an habitual sentiment,
+which usage makes right.
+
+This subject has been treated with indifference, even by the press,
+which has satisfied itself in discussing the abstract right as a
+question of law, rather than by disclosing the sufferings of those who
+endure the wrong and injustice. When we are called upon to support, and
+are made to suffer the penalty of laws founded in domestic fear, and
+made subservient to various grades of injustice, it becomes our duty
+to localize the wrong, and to point out the odium which attaches to the
+State that enacts such laws of oppression.
+
+A “peculiar-institution” absorbs and takes precedence of every thing;
+its protection has become a sacred element of legislative and private
+action; and fair discussion is looked upon as ominous, and proclaimed
+as incendiary. But we speak for those who owe no allegiance to
+that delicate institution; citizens to all intents and, purposes
+(notwithstanding their dark skins) of the countries to which they
+severally belong; peaceable persons, pursuing their avocations, to
+provide a respectable maintenance for their families, and worthy of the
+same protective rights claimed by the more fortunate citizens of such
+countries. In doing this we shall give a practical illustration of the
+imprisonment of four individuals in South Carolina, and ask those who
+speculate in the abstract science of State sovereignty, to reflect upon
+the issue of that lamentable injustice which inflicts punishment upon
+persons guiltless of crime. We prefer to be plain, and we know our
+Southern friends will not accuse us of misconstruction, for we have
+their interests at heart, as well as the cause of humanity, which we
+shall strive to promote, in spite of the struggles of modern barbarism,
+seeking to perpetuate itself. Fear, the inventor of such pretexts as are
+set up, and mantled in Southern modesty, must remodel its code for South
+Carolinians, before it can assert a power unknown to law, or trample
+upon the obligations of treaty, or enforce nullification of individual
+rights.
+
+CHARLESTON, S. C., July 17,1852.
+
+
+
+
+MANUEL PEREIRA.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I. THE UNLUCKY SHIP.
+
+
+
+THE British brig Janson, Thompson, master, laden with sugar, pimento,
+&c. &c. left Kingston, Jamaica, in the early part of March, in the
+present year, bound for Glasgow. The skipper, who was a genuine son
+of the “Land o' Cakes,” concluded to take the inside passage, and run
+through the gulf. This might have been questioned by seamen better
+acquainted with the windward passage; but as every Scotchman likes to
+have his own way, the advice of the first officer--an experienced salt
+in the West India waters--went to leeward. On rounding Cape Antoine, it
+was evident that a strong blow was approaching. The clouds hung their
+dark curtains in threatening blackness; and, as the sharp flashes of
+lightning inflamed the gloomy scene, the little bark seemed like a speck
+upon the bosom of the sea. It was the first mate's watch on deck. The
+wind, then blowing from the W.S.W., began to increase and veer into the
+westward; from whence it suddenly chopped into the northward. The mate
+paced the quarter wrapt in his fearnought jacket, and at every turn
+giving a glance aloft, then looking at the compass, and again to the man
+at the wheel, as if he had an instinct of what was coming.
+
+He was a fearless navigator, yet, like many others who had yielded to
+the force of habit, was deeply imbued with that prevalent superstition
+so common to sailors, which regards a particular ship as unlucky.
+Imagine an old-fashioned boatswain, with north-country features strongly
+marked, a weather-beaten face, and a painted south-wester on his head,
+and you have the “Mister Mate” of the old brig Janson.
+
+“Keep her full, my hearty. We must take in our light sails and go on
+the other tack soon. If we don't catch it before daylight, I'll miss my
+calculation. She's an unlucky old craft as ever I sailed in, and if the
+skipper a'n't mighty careful, he'll never get her across. I've sworn
+against sailing in her several times, but if I get across in her this
+time, I'll bid her good-by; and if the owners don't give me a new craft,
+they may get somebody else. We're just as sure to have bad luck as if we
+had cats and parsons aboard.”
+
+Thus saying, he descended the companion-way, and reported the appearance
+of the weather to the skipper, who arose quickly, and, consulting his
+barometer, found it had fallen to near the lowest scale. After inquiring
+the quarter of the wind, and how she headed, what sail she was carrying,
+and the probable distance from the cape, he gave orders to call all
+hands to take in the topgallant-sails, double reef the fore, and single
+reef the maintop-sails, and stow the flying-jib--dressed himself, and
+came on deck. Just as he put his head above the slide of the companion,
+and stopped for a minute with his hands resting upon the sides, a vivid
+flash of lightning hung its festoons of fire around the rigging, giving
+it the appearance of a chain of livid flame.
+
+“We'll catch the but-end of a gulf sneezer soon. Tell the boys to bear
+a hand with them sails. We must get her snug, and stand by to lay
+her under a double-reefed maintop-sail and jib, with her head to the
+northward and eastward. We may make a clear drift--chance if it lasts
+long,” said Skipper Thompson, as he stood surveying the horizon and his
+craft. Scarcely had he given the orders before the storm burst upon them
+with all its fury. Its suddenness can only be appreciated by those who
+have sailed in the West India passages, where the sudden shocks of the
+short-chopping sea acts with a tremendous strain upon the hull of a
+heavy-laden vessel. The captain ran to the windward gangway, hurrying
+his men in the discharge of their duty, and giving another order to
+clew up the coursers and foretop-sail. Just as the men had executed the
+first, and were about to pull on the clew-lines of the latter, a sudden
+gust took effect upon the bag of the sail and carried it clean from the
+bolt-ropes. The halyards were lowered and the yards properly braced
+up, while the Janson was brought to under the canvas we have before
+described. In a few minutes more the wind had increased to a gale, and,
+as the sailors say, several times the old craft “wouldn't look at it.”
+ Several times we had to put her helm up, and as many times she shipped
+those forcing cross seas which drive every thing before them, and sweep
+the decks. At length a piece of canvas was lashed to the fore-rigging
+which gave her a balance, and she rode easy until about five o'clock in
+the morning, when by a sudden broach the canvas was carried away, and a
+tremendous sharp sea boarded her forward; starting several stanchions,
+carrying away part of her starboard bulwark and rail, and simultaneously
+the foretop-gallant-mast, which snapped just above the withe. As a
+natural consequence, every thing was in the utmost confusion--the old
+hull worked in every timber. The wreck swayed to and fro, retarding the
+working of the vessel and endangering the lives of those who attempted
+to clear it from obstruction. Thus she remained for more than half an
+hour, nearly on her beam-ends, and at the mercy of each succeeding sea
+that threatened to engulf her.
+
+As daylight broke, the wind lulled, and, as usual in those waters,
+the sea soon ran down. Enabled to take the advantage of daylight,
+they commenced to clear away the wreck. In the mean time it was found
+necessary to remove the fore-hatch in order to get out some spare sails
+that had been stowed away near the forward bulkhead, instead of a more
+appropriate place. The mate, after trying the pumps in the early part of
+the gale, reported that she had started a leak; which, however, was so
+trifling as to require but one man to keep her free, until she broached,
+and carried away her topgallant-mast. The man on duty then reported
+the water increasing, and another was ordered to assist him. On an
+examination in the morning, it was found that she was strained in the
+fore-channels, and had started a but.
+
+“She's an unlucky concern, skipper,” said the mate as he brought the axe
+to take the battons off the forehatch. “A fellow might as well try to
+work a crab at low tide as to keep her to it in a blow like that. She
+minds her helm like a porpoise in the breakers. Old Davy must have put
+his mark upon her some time, but I never know'd a lucky vessel to be got
+as she was. She makes a haul on the underwriters every time she drifts
+across; for I never knew her to sail clear since I shipped in the old
+tub. If she was mine, I'd find a place for her at somebody's expense.”
+
+The sea became smooth, the water was found to have receded, the wind,
+light, had hauled to W.S.W., and Cape Antoine was judged by dead
+reckoning to bear S.S.W. about thirty miles distant. The larboard
+fore-shrouds were found to have been scorched by the lightning, which
+had completely melted the tar from the after-shroud. All hands were now
+busily employed repairing the wreck, which by two o'clock P.M. they had
+got so far completed as to stand on their course in the gulf, at the
+rate of six knots an hour.
+
+The skipper now consulted in his mind as to the expediency of making for
+Havana or proceeding on his cruise. The leak had materially diminished,
+and, like all old vessels, though she gave a good portion of work at
+the pumps, a continuation of good weather might afford an opportunity
+to shove her across. Under these feelings, he was inclined to give the
+preference to his hopes rather than yield to his fears. He considered
+the interest of all concerned--consulted his mate, but found him
+governed by his superstition, and looking upon the issue of his life
+about as certain whether he jumped overboard or “stuck by the old tub.”
+ He considered again the enormous port-charges imposed in Havana, the
+nature of his cargo in regard to tariff, should his vessel be condemned,
+and the ruinous expenses of discharging, &c. &c. together with the cost
+of repairs, providing they were ordered. All these things he considered
+with the mature deliberation of a good master, who has the general
+interests of all concerned at heart. So, if he put away for a port, in
+consideration of all concerned, his lien for general average would have
+strong ground in maritime law; yet there were circumstances connected
+with the sea-worthy condition of the craft--known to himself, if not to
+the port-wardens, and which are matters of condition between the master
+and his owners--which might, upon certain technicalities of law, give
+rise to strong objectionable points. With all these glancing before
+him, he, with commendable prudence, resolved to continue his voyage, and
+trust to kind Providence for the best.
+
+“Captain,” said the mate, as he stood viewing the prospect, with a
+marlinespike in one hand and a piece of seizing in the other--“I verily
+think, if that blow had stuck to us two hours longer, the old tub would
+a' rolled her futtocks out. Ye don't know her as well as I do. She's
+unlucky, anyhow; and always has been since she sot upon the water. I've
+seen her top-sides open like a basket when we've been trying to work her
+into port in heavy weather: and a craft that won't look nearer than
+nine points close-hauled, with a stiff breeze, ought to be sent into the
+Clyde for a coal-droger. An old vessel's a perfect pickpocket to owners;
+and if this old thing hasn't opened their purses as bad as her own
+seams, I'll miss my reckonin'. I've had a strong foreknowledge that we
+wouldn't get across in her. I saw the rats leaving in Jamaica--taking
+up their line of march, like marines on the fore. It's a sure sign. And
+then I'd a dream, which is as sure as a mainstay--never deceives me. I
+can depend on its presentiment. I have dreamed it several times, and we
+always had an awful passage. Twice we come within a bobstay of all
+goin' to Old Davy's store-house. I once escaped it, after I'd had my
+mysterious dream; but then I made the cook throw the cat overboard just
+after we left port, and 'twas all that saved us.”
+
+Thus saying, he went forward to serve a topgallant-stay that was
+stretched across the forecastle-hatch from the cat-heads, and had just
+been spliced by the men, followed by an old-fashioned sea-urchin, a
+miniature of the tar, with a mallet in his hand. The captain, although
+a firm, intelligent man, and little given to such notions of fate as
+are generally entertained by sailors, who never shake off the spiritual
+imaginings of the forecastle, displayed some discomfiture of mind at
+the strong character of the mate's misgivings. He knew him to be a good
+sailor, firm in his duty, and unmoved by peril. This he had proved on
+several occasions when sailing in other vessels, when the last ray
+of hope seemed to be gone. He approached the mate again, and with a
+pretence of making inquiries about the storage of the cargo, sounded
+him further in regard to his knowledge of the Bahamas, and with special
+reference to the port of Nassau.
+
+“Six-tenths of her timbers are as rotten as punk,” said the mate; “this
+North American timber never lasts long; the pump-wells are defective,
+and when we carry sail upon her, they don't affect the water in the
+lee-bilge, and she rolls it through her air-streaks like a whale. She'll
+damage the best cargo that ever floated, in that way. Take my word for
+it, skipper, she'll never go across the Banks; she'll roll to splinters
+as soon as she gets into them long seas; and if we get dismasted again,
+it's gone Davy.”
+
+“I know the old scow before to-day, and wouldn't shipped in her, if I
+hadn't been lime-juiced by that villanous landlord that advanced me the
+trifle. But I seen she was as deep as a luggerman's sand-barge, and I
+popped the old cat overboard, just as we rounded the point coming out
+o' Kingston harbour,” said a fine, active-looking sailor, who bore
+every trait of a royal tar, and boasted of serving five years in the
+East-India service, to his shipmate, while he continued to serve the
+stay. His words were spoken in a whisper, and not intended for the
+captain's ears. The captain overheard him, however; and, as a vessel is
+a world to those on board, the general sentiment carries its weight
+in controlling its affairs. Thus the strong feeling which prevailed on
+board could not fail to have its effect upon the captain's mind.
+
+“Well, we'll try her at any rate,” said the captain, walking aft and
+ordering the cabin-boy to bring up his glass; with which he took a sharp
+look to the southward.
+
+“I'd shape her course for a southern Yankee port. I haven't been much in
+them, but I think we'll stand a better chance there than in these ports
+where they make a speculation of wrecking, and would take a fellow's
+pea-jacket for salvage.” “We're always better under the protection of a
+consul than in a British port,” said the mate, coming aft to inform the
+skipper that they had carried away the chains of the bobstay, and that
+the bowsprit strained her in the knight-heads.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II. THE STEWARD'S BRAVERY.
+
+
+
+DURING the worst of the gale, a mulatto man, with prominent features,
+indicating more of the mestino than negro character, was moving in busy
+occupation about the deck, and lending a willing hand with the rest
+of the crew to execute the captain's orders. He was rather tall,
+well formed, of a light olive complexion, with dark, piercing eyes, a
+straight, pointed nose, and well-formed mouth. His hair, also, had none
+of that crimp so indicative of negro extraction, but lay in dark curls
+all over his head. As he answered to the captain's orders, he spoke in
+broken accents, indicating but little knowledge of the English language.
+From the manner in which the crew treated him, it was evident that he
+was an established favourite with them as well as the officers, for
+each appeared to treat him more as an equal than a menial. He laboured
+cheerfully at sailor's duty until the first sea broke over her,
+when, seeing that the caboose was in danger of being carried from the
+lashings, and swept to leeward in the mass of wreck, he ran for that
+all-important apartment, and began securing it with extra lashings. He
+worked away with an earnestness that deserved all praise; not with
+the most satisfactory effect for an angry sea immediately succeeding
+completely stripped the furnace of its woodwork, and in its force
+carried the gallant fellow among its fragments into the lee-scuppers,
+where he saved himself from going overboard only by clinging to a
+stanchion.
+
+The second mate, a burly old salt, ran to his assistance, but, before
+he reached him, our hero had recovered himself, and was making another
+attempt to reach his coppers. It seemed to him as much a pending
+necessity to save the cooking apparatus as it did the captain to save
+the ship.
+
+“He no catch me dis time,” said he to the mate, smiling as he lifted his
+drenched head from among the fragments of the wreck. “I fix a de coffee
+in him yet, please God.”
+
+After securing the remains of his cooking utensils, he might be seen
+busily employed over a little stove, arranged at the foot of the stairs
+that led to the cabin. The smoke from the funnel several times annoyed
+the captain, who laboured under the excitement consequent upon
+the confusion of the wreck and peril of his vessel, bringing forth
+remonstrances of no very pleasant character. It proved that the good
+steward was considering how he could best serve Jack's necessities;
+and while they were laboring to save the ship, lie was studiously
+endeavoring to anticipate the craving of their stomachs. For when
+daylight appeared and the storm subsided, the steward had a bountiful
+dish of hot coffee to relieve Jack's fatigued system. It was received
+with warm welcome, and many blessings were heaped upon the head of the
+steward; A good “doctor” is as essential for the interests of owners and
+crew as a good captain. So it proved in this instance, for while he had
+a careful regard for the stores, he never failed to secure the praises
+of the crew.
+
+“When I gib de stove fire, den me gib de Cap-i-tan, wid de crew, some
+good breakfas,” said he with a gleam of satisfaction.
+
+This individual, reader, was Manuel Pereira, or, as he was called by
+his shipmates, Pe-rah-re. Manuel was born in Brazil, an extract of the
+Indians and Spanish, claiming birthright of the Portuguese nation. It
+mattered but very little to Manuel where he was born, for he had been
+so long tossed about in his hardy vocation that he had almost become
+alienated from the affections of birthplace. He had sailed so long under
+the protection of the main-jack of old England that he had formed a
+stronger allegiance to that country than to any other. He had sailed
+under it with pride, had pointed to its emblem, as if he felt secure,
+when it was unfurled, that the register-ticket which that government had
+given him was a covenant between it and himself; that it was a ticket to
+incite him to good behavior in a foreign country; and that the flag was
+sure to protect his rights, and insure, from the government to which
+he sailed respect and hospitality. He had sailed around the world
+under it--visited savage and semi-civilized nations--had received
+the hospitality of cannibals, had joined in the merry dance with the
+Otaheitian, had eaten fruits with the Hottentots, shared the coarse
+morsel of the Greenlander, been twice chased by the Patagonians--but
+what shall we say?--he was imprisoned, for the olive tints of his color,
+in a land where not only civilization rules in its brightest conquests,
+but chivalry and honor sound its fame within the lanes, streets, and
+court-yards. Echo asks, Where--where? We will tell the reader. That flag
+which had waved over him so long and in so many of his wayfarings--that
+flag which had so long boasted its rule upon the wave, and had protected
+him among the savage and the civilized, found a spot upon this wonderful
+globe where it ceased to do so, unless he could change his skin.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III. THE SECOND STORM.
+
+
+
+ON the fourth night succeeding the perilous position of the Janson off
+Cape Antoine, the brig was making about seven knots, current of the gulf
+included. The sun had set beneath heavy radiant clouds, which rolled up
+like masses of inflamed matter, reflecting in a thousand mellow shades,
+and again spreading their gorgeous shadows upon the rippled surface of
+the ocean, making the picture serene and grand.
+
+As darkness quickly followed, these beautiful transparencies of a
+West-India horizon gradually changed into murky-looking monitors,
+spreading gloom in the sombre perspective. The moon was in its second
+quarter, and was rising on the earth. The mist gathered thicker and
+thicker as she ascended, until at length she became totally obscured.
+The Captain sat upon the companion-way, anxiously watching the sudden
+change that was going on overhead; and, without speaking to any one,
+rose, took a glance at the compass, and then went forward to the
+lookout, charging him to keep a sharp watch, as they were not only in a
+dangerous channel, but in the track of vessels bound into and out of the
+gulf. After this, he returned amidship, where the little miniature
+salt we have described before lay, with his face downward, upon the
+main-hatch, and ordering him to bring the lead-line, he went to leeward
+and took a cast; and after paying out about twenty-five fathoms without
+sounding, hauled aboard again. The wind was southward and light. As soon
+as he had examined the lead he walked aft and ordered the sheets eased
+and the vessel headed two points farther off. This done, he went below,
+and shaking his barometer several times, found it had begun to fall very
+fast. Taking down his coast-chart, he consulted it very studiously for
+nearly half an hour, laying off an angle with a pair of dividers and
+scale, with mathematical minuteness; after which he pricked his course
+along the surface to a given point. This was intended as his course.
+
+“Where do you make her, Captain?” said the mate, as he lay in his berth.
+
+“We must be off the Capes--we must keep a sharp look out for them
+reefs. They are so deceptive that we'll be on to them before we know it.
+There's no telling by sounding. We may get forty fathoms one minute and
+strike the next. I've heard old West-India coasters say the white water
+was the best warning,” replied the Captain.
+
+“I'm mighty afraid of that Carysfort reef, since I struck upon it in
+1845. I was in a British schooner then, bound from Kingston, Jamaica, to
+New York. We kept a bright lookout, all the way through the passage, and
+yet struck, one morning just about day-light; and, five minutes before,
+we had sounded without getting bottom. When it cleared away, that we
+could see, there was two others like ourselves. One was the ship John
+Parker, of Boston, and the other was a 'long-shoreman. We had a valuable
+cargo on board, but the craft wasn't hurt a bit; and if the skipper--who
+was a little colonial man, not much acquainted with the judicial value
+of a wrecker's services--had a' taken my advice, he wouldn't got into
+the snarl he did at Key West, where they carried him, and charged
+him thirty-six hundred dollars for the job. Yes, and a nice little
+commission to the British consul for counting the doubloons, which,
+by-the-by, Skipper, belonged to that great house of Howland &
+Aspinwalls. They were right clever fellows, and it went into the
+general average account for the relief of the underwriters' big chest,”
+ continued the mate.
+
+“We must have all hands ready at the call,” said the Captain. “It looks
+dirty overhead, and I think we're going to catch it from the north-east
+to-night. If we do, our position is not as good as before. I don't feel
+afraid of her, if we only get clear of this infernal coast,” said the
+Skipper, as he rolled up his chart, and repaired on deck again.
+
+During this time, Manuel, who, had given the crew some very acceptable
+hot cakes for supper, was sitting upon the windlass, earnestly engaged,
+with his broken English, recounting an adventure he had on the coast of
+Patagonia, a few years previous, while serving on board a whaleman, to
+a shipmate who sat at his left. It was one of those incidents which
+frequently occur to the men attached to vessels which visit that coast
+for the purpose of providing a supply of wood and water, and which would
+require too much space to relate here.
+
+“Did you run, Manuel?” said the listening shipmate.
+
+“What else did me do? If I no run, I'd not be here dis night, because
+I be make slave, or I be killed wid club. Patagonian don't care for
+flag--nor not'in' else--I trust--e my leg, an' he get to de boat jus'
+when cap-i-tan come to rescue.”
+
+“Was you on board an Englishman then, Manuel?” inquired the shipmate.
+
+“Yes, I'm always sail in English ship, because I can get protection from
+flag and consul, where I go--any part of globe,” said he.
+
+“I never liked this sailing among barbarous nations; they've no respect
+for any flag, and would just as lief imprison an Englishman or an
+American as they would a dog. They're a set of wild barbarians, and if
+they kill a fellow, there's no responsibility for it. It's like a parcel
+of wolves chasing a lamb, and there's no finding them after they've
+killed it. But they give a fellow his rights in Old England and the
+States. A man's a man there, rich or poor, and his feelings are just as
+much his own as anybody's. It's a glorious thing, this civilization,
+and if the world keeps on, there'll be no danger of a fellow's being
+imprisoned and killed among these savages. They're a cowardly set, for
+nobody but cowards are afraid of their own actions. Men neither imprison
+nor kill strangers, that don't fear the injustice of their own acts. You
+may smoke that in your pipe, Manuel, for I've heard great men say so.
+But you'd been done making dough-nuts then, Manuel, if they'd got hold
+o' you.”
+
+“Never catch Manuel among Patagonians, again; they not know what the
+flag be, nor they can't read de registrum ticket, if they know'd where
+England was,” said Manuel; and just as he was concluding the story of
+his adventure, the little sailor-boy put his arm around Manuel's
+waist, and, laying his head on his breast, fondled about him with an
+affectionate attachment. The little fellow had been a shipmate with
+Manuel on several voyages, and, through the kindness he had received
+at his hands, naturally formed an ardent attachment to him. Taking
+advantage of the good treatment, he knew how to direct his attention
+to the steward whenever he wanted a snack from the cabin-locker of that
+which was not allowed in the forecastle. After holding him for a minute,
+encircling his arm around the little fellow's shoulder, he arose,
+and saying, “I know what you want, Tommy,” proceeded to the cabin and
+brought him several little eatables that had been left at the captain's
+table.
+
+The wind now began to veer and increase, her sails kept filling aback;
+and as often as the man at the helm kept her off, the wind would baffle
+him, until finding it would be necessary to go on the other tack, or
+make some change of course, he called the Captain. The moment the latter
+put his foot upon deck, he found his previous predictions were about to
+be verified. The rustling noise of the gulf, mingling its solemn sounds
+with the petrel-like music of that foreboding wind that “whistles
+through the shrouds,” awakened the more superstitious sensations of a
+sailor's heart. The clouds had gathered their sombre folds into potent
+conclaves, while the sparkling brine in her wake, seemed like a fiery
+stream, rolling its troubled foam upon the dark waters.
+
+“Brace the yards up sharp-hard a-starboard!--and trim aft the sheets,”
+ ordered the Captain, who had previously given the order, “All hands on
+deck!”
+
+The order was scarcely executed, before the noise of the approaching
+gale was heard in the distance. All hands were ordered to shorten sail
+as quickly as possible; but before they could get aloft, it came upon
+them with such fury from E.N.E. as to carry away the foretop-mast and
+topgallant-mast, together with its sails, and the main-topgallant-mast
+with the sail. The foretop-mast, in going by the board, carried away the
+flying-jib-boom and flying-jibs. Thus the ill-fated Janson was doomed to
+another struggle for her floating existence. The sea began to rise and
+break in fearful power; the leak had already increased so, that two
+men were continually kept working the pumps. The crew, with commendable
+alacrity, cut away the wreck, which had been swaying to and fro, not
+only endangering the lives of those on board, but obstructing every
+attempt to get the vessel into any kind of working order. The main-sail
+had rent from the leash to the peak of the gaff, and was shaking into
+shreds. The starboard sheet of the maintop-sail was gone, and it had
+torn at the head from the bolt-rope, flying at every gust like the
+shreds of a muslin rag in a hail-storm. Without the government of her
+helm, she lay in the trough of the sea more like a log than a manageable
+mass. Sea after sea broke over her, carrying every thing before them
+at each pass. The officers and crew had now as much as they could do to
+retain their holds, without making any effort to save the wreck, while
+the men at the pumps could only work at each subsiding of the sea,
+and that under the disadvantage of being lashed to the frame. A more
+perilous position than that in which the old brig Janson now lay, it was
+impossible to imagine.
+
+“'Tis the worst hurricane I've ever experienced upon the West India
+coast, Captain, but it's too furious to last long; and if she don't
+go to pieces before morning, I'll give her credit for what I've always
+swore against her. She can't keep afloat though, if it hangs on another
+hour in this way,” said the mate, who, with the Captain and Manuel, had
+just made an ineffectual attempt to rig a storm stay-sail, to try
+and lay her to under it. For the mate swore by his knowledge of her
+qualities, that to put her before it, would be certain foundering. The
+gale continued with unabated fury for about two hours, and stopped about
+as suddenly as it commenced. The work of destruction was complete, for
+from her water-line to the stump of the remaining spars, the Janson
+floated a complete wreck.
+
+The captain gave orders to clear away the wreck, and get what little
+sail they could patch up, upon her, for the purpose of working her
+into the nearest port. The mate was not inclined to further the order,
+evidently laboring under the strong presentiment that she was to be
+their coffin. He advised that it was fruitless to stick by her any
+longer, or hazard an attempt to reach a port with her, in such a leaky
+and disabled condition. “If we don't abandon her, Skipper,” said he,
+“she'll abandon us. We'd better make signal for the first vessel, and
+bid the old coffin good-by.”
+
+The captain was more determined in his resolution, and instead of being
+influenced by the mate's fears, continued his order, and the men went
+to work with a cheerful willingness. None seemed more anxious to lend a
+ready hand than Manuel, for in addition to is duties as steward, he had
+worked at sail-making, and both worked at and directed the repairing of
+the sails. Those acquainted with maritime affairs can readily appreciate
+the amount of labor necessary to provide a mess with the means at hand
+that we have before described. And yet he did it to the satisfaction of
+all, and manifested a restless anxiety lest he should not make everybody
+comfortable, and particularly his little pet boy, Tommy.
+
+“We'll get a good observation at meridian, and then we shall shape our
+course for Charleston, South Carolina. We'll be more likely to reach
+it than any other southern port,” said the captain to his mate. “That
+steward, Manuel, is worth his weight in gold. If we have to abandon the
+old craft, I'll take him home; the owners respect him just as much as
+a white man; his politeness and affability could not but command such
+esteem, with a man that a'n't a fool. I never believed in making equals
+of negroes, but if Manuel was to be classed with niggers for all the
+nigger blood that's in him, seven-tenths of the inhabitants of the earth
+would go with him. I never saw such an attachment between brothers, as
+exists between him and Tommy. I verily believe that one couldn't go to
+sleep without the other. I should think they were brothers, if the
+lad wasn't English, and Manuel a Portuguese. But Manuel is as much an
+Englishman at heart as the lad, and has sailed so long under the flag
+that he seems to have a reverence for the old jack when he sees the
+bunting go up. He likes to tell that story about the Patagonians chasing
+him. I have overheard him several times, as much amused in his own
+recital as if he was listening to the quaint jokes of an old tar. But he
+swears the Patagonians will never catch him on their shores again, for
+he says he doesn't believe in making 'drum-head of man-skin,'” said the
+Captain, evidently with the intention of affecting the mate's feelings,
+and drawing his mind from its dark forebodings.
+
+“Well, Skipper, I pray for a happy deliverance,” said the mate, “but if
+we make Charleston with her, it'll be a luck that man nor mermaid ever
+thought of. I hearn a good deal o' tell about Charleston, and the Keys.
+That isn't one of the places our stewards are so 'fraid of, and where
+owners don't like to send their ships when they can find freight in
+other ports?”
+
+“I expect it is, sir; but I apprehend no such trouble with any of my
+crew,” answered the Captain promptly. “I sail under the faith of my
+nation's honor and prowess, the same as the Americans do under theirs.
+We're both respected wherever we go, and if one little State in the
+Union violates the responsibility of a great nation like that, I'm
+mistaken. Certainly, no nation in Christendom could be found, that
+wouldn't open their hearts to a shipwrecked sailor. I have too much
+faith in what I have heard of the hospitality of Southerners, to believe
+any thing of that kind.”
+
+“Talk's all very well, Skipper,” said the mate; “but my word for it, I
+know'd several ships lying in the Mersey, about three years ago, bound
+to Southern ports for cotton. White stewards worth any thing couldn't be
+had for love nor money, and the colored ones wouldn't ship for ports in
+Slaves States. The Thebis got a colored man, but the owners had to pay
+him an enormous advance, and this, too, with the knowledge of his being
+locked up the whole time he was in port; thus having to incur the
+very useless expense of supplying his place, or find boarding-house
+accommodations for the officers and crew. If it be true, what I've hearn
+'em say in the Mersey, the man doesn't only suffer in his feelings by
+some sort of confinement they have, but the owners suffer in pocket.
+But it may be, Skipper, and I'm inclined to think with you, our case is
+certainly deplorable enough to command pity instead of imprisonment. The
+government must be found cutting a dirty figure on the national picture,
+that would ill-treat sailors who had suffered as much as our boys have.
+I would hate to see Manuel shut up or ill-used. He's as brave a fellow
+as ever buckled at a handspike or rode a jib-boom. Last night, while
+in the worst of the gale, he volunteered to take Higgins's place, and,
+mounting the jib-boom, was several times buried in the sea; yet he held
+on like a bravo, and succeeded in cutting away the wreck. I thought he
+was gone once or twice, and I own I never saw more peril at sea; but if
+he hadn't effected it, the foot of the bowsprit would have strained her
+open in the eyes, and we'd all been sharks'-bait before this. The fellow
+was nearly exhausted when he came on board; says I, its gone day with
+you, old fellow; but he come to in a little while, and went cheerily to
+work again,” continued Mr. Mate, who though pleased with the Captain's
+determination to make the nearest port, seemed to dread that all would
+not be right in Charleston--that the bar was a very intricate one--water
+very shoal in the ship-channel, and though marked with three distinctive
+buoys, numbered according to their range, impossible to crops without
+a skilful pilot. The mate plead a preference for Savannah, asserting,
+according to his own knowlege, that a ship of any draft could cross
+that bar at any time of tide, and that it was a better port for the
+transaction of business.
+
+The Janson was headed for Charleston, the queen city of the sunny South,
+and, as may be expected from her disabled condition, made very slow
+progress on her course. During the gale, her stores had become damaged,
+and on the third day before making Charleston light, Manuel Pereira
+came aft, and with a sad countenance reported that the last cask of
+good water was nearly out; that the others had all been stove during
+the gale, and what remained, so brackish that it was unfit for use.
+From this time until their arrival at Charleston, they suffered those
+tortures of thirst, which only those who have endured them can estimate.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV. THE CHARLESTON POLICE.
+
+
+
+MR. DURKEE had said in Congress, that a negro was condemned to be hung
+in Charleston for resisting his master's attempts upon the chastity of
+his wife; and that such was the sympathy expressed for the negro, that
+the sheriffs offer of one thousand dollars could induce no one present
+to execute the final mandate. Now, had Mr. Durkee been better acquainted
+with that social understanding between the slave, the pretty wife, and
+his master, and the acquiescing pleasure of the slave, who in nineteen
+cases out of twenty congratulates himself on the distinguished honor, he
+would have saved himself the error of such a charge against the tenor
+of social life in Charleston. Or, had he been better acquainted with the
+character of her police, he certainly would have saved the talent of
+Mr. Aiken its sophomore display in that cumbrous defence. In the first
+place, Mr. Durkee would have known that such attempts are so common
+among the social events of the day, and so well understood by the slave,
+that instead of being resented, they are appreciated to a great extent.
+We speak from long experience and knowledge of the connection between
+a certain class of slaves and their masters. In the second place,
+Mr. Durkee would have known that any man connected with the city
+police--save its honorable mayor, to whose character we would pay all
+deference--would not for conscience' sake scruple to hang a man for five
+dollars. We make no exception for color or crime. A qualification might
+be called for, more adapted to our knowledge of it as it has existed for
+the last four or five years; but we are informed by those whose lives
+and fortunes have been spent for the moral elevation of the city police,
+that it was even worse at the time referred to.
+
+The reader may think we are making grave charges. Let us say, without
+fear of refutation, they are too well known in the community that
+tolerates them. As a mere shadow of what lays beneath the surface,
+we would refer to the only independent speech we ever listened to in
+Charleston,--except when self-laudation was the theme,--made by G. R--,
+Esq., in one of her public halls a few weeks ago. Mr. R--is a gentleman
+of moral courage and integrity, and, without fear or trembling, openly
+denounced the corruption and demoralization of the police department.
+Even the enemies of his party, knowing the facts, appreciated his
+candor as a man, while they denounced the publicity, (for his speech
+was paraded by the press,) lest the fair name of the queen city should
+suffer abroad. A beautiful farce followed this grave exposition. The
+board of aldermen, composed of fourteen men of very general standing,
+remained mum under the accusation for a long time. Its object was to
+show up the character of a class of officials, whose character and
+nefarious arts have long disgraced the city. But in order to make a
+display of his purity, Mr. C--, a gentleman entitled to high moral
+consideration, chose to make it a personal matter; yet, not content
+with a private explanation given by Mr. R--, he made a call through the
+press. Mr. R--responded in a proper and courteous manner, acknowledging
+the due respect to which Mr. C--'s private character was entitled;
+thus increasing the ambition of the board generally, who, with the
+expectation of Mr. R--making a like acknowledgment to them as a body,
+(not excepting their honorable head,) made a demand in joint-officio.
+This being duly signalized through the columns of the Courier and
+Mercury, Mr. R--met it with a response worthy of a gentleman. He
+referred them to the strongest evidence of his assertions, in the
+countenance which they gave to a class of officials too well known to
+the community for the honor of its name and the moral foundation of its
+corporate dignity. Thus ended a great municipal farce, to prolong which
+the principal performers knew would disclose the intriguing scenes of
+their secondary performers. The plot of this melo-comic concern was in
+the sequel, and turned upon the very grave fact of Mr. C--having some
+time previous withdrawn from the honorable board, to preserve some very
+delicate considerations for conscience' sake.
+
+How much spiritual consolation Mr. C--realized through the
+acknowledgment of Mr. R--, or the honorable board in joint-officio from
+the firm admonition, we leave for the secondary consideration of proper
+wives and daughters.
+
+But the reader will ask, what has this to do with poor Manuel
+Pereira,--or the imprisonment of free citizens of a friendly nation? We
+will show him that the complex system of official spoliation, and the
+misrepresentations of the police in regard to the influence of such
+persons upon the slave population, is a principal feature in its
+enforcement. To do this, we deem it essentially necessary to show the
+character of such men and the manner in which this law is carried out.
+We shall make no charges that we cannot sustain by the evidence of the
+whole city proper, and with the knowledge that truth is stronger than
+fiction.
+
+What will the reader say when we tell him that, among the leading minds
+of the city--we say leading minds, for we class those who are considered
+foremost in the mercantile sphere among them--are three brothers,
+unmarried, but with mistresses bought for the purpose, whose dark skins
+avert the tongue of scandal;--that, twice, men were sold, because of the
+beauty of their wives, to distant traders, that the brothers might cast
+off their old mistresses, and appropriate new ones to an unholy purpose;
+that these men enjoy their richly furnished mansions, are known for
+their sumptuous entertainments, set an example of mercantile honor and
+integrity, are flattered among the populace, receive the attentions of
+very fine and very virtuous ladies, wield a potential voice in the
+city government, and lead in the greatest development of internal
+improvements;--that these men even whisper high-sounding words of
+morality, and the established custom considers their example no harm
+when color is modified.
+
+What will the reader think, when we tell him that there is no
+city-marshal in Charleston, but innumerable marshalled men, supported
+by an onerous tax upon the people, to quiet the fears of a few. And
+what will they think, when we tell them that the man whose name is
+so frequently sounded through the columns of the press as the head of
+police, and applauded for his activity among thieves, is the well-known
+prince-officio of a voluptuous dwelling, where dazzling licentiousness
+fills his pockets with the spoils of allurement. This man has several
+counterparts, whose acts are no secrets to the public ear, and who turn
+their office into a mart of intrigue, and have enriched themselves upon
+the bounty of espionage and hush-money, and now assert the dignity of
+their purse. It may be asked, why are these men kept in office?--or
+have these offices become so disgraced that honest men will not deign to
+accept them? No! such is not the case. It is that moral integrity is not
+considered in its proper light, and is not valued as it should be;
+that these men have a secret influence which is well known, and are
+countenanced and retained for the weight of their control among a
+certain class; and, strange to say, that the party ex-officio make these
+demoralizing things the basis of their complaints against the “powers
+that be;” yet such is their feeble dependence, that no sooner are they
+in office than we have the repetition of the same things.
+
+Now, how far his honor is answerable for these things we must leave the
+reader to judge. The leading characteristics of his nature conflict with
+each other; his moral character is what is considered sound here; and
+truly he is entitled to much respect for his exemplary conduct, whether
+it be only exerted as an example, or the heartfelt love of Christian
+purity. Some people are pious from impulse, and become affected
+when purpose serves to make it profitable. We, however, are not so
+uncharitable as to charge such piety to our worthy head of the city
+government, but rather to a highly developed organ of the love
+of office, which has outgrown the better inclinations of his
+well-established Christianity.
+
+We must invite the reader's attention to another and still more glaring
+evidence of the demoralization of social life in Charleston. A notorious
+woman, who has kept the worst kind of a brothel for years, where harlots
+of all shades and importations break the quietude of night with their
+polluted songs, becomes so bold in her infamy that she appeals to the
+gracious considerations of the city council, (board of aldermen.) How
+is this? Why, we will tell the reader:--She remained unmolested in her
+trade of demoralization, amassed a fortune which gave her boldness,
+while her open display was considered very fine fun for the joking
+propensities of officials and gallants. With her wealth she reared a
+splendid mansion to infamy and shame, where she, and such as she,
+whose steps the wise man tells us “lead down to hell,” could sway their
+victory over the industrious poor. So public was it, that she openly
+boasted its purpose and its adaptation to the ensnaring vices of
+passion. Yes, this create in female form had spread ruin and death
+through the community, and brought the head of many a brilliant young
+man to the last stage of cast-off misery. And yet, so openly tolerated
+and countenanced by leading men are these things, that on the 31st
+of July, 1852, this mother of crime appeals to the honorable board of
+aldermen, as appeared in the “Proceedings of Council” in the Charleston
+Courier of that date, in the following manner:
+
+“Laid over until a monied quorum is present.
+
+“Letter from Mrs. G. Pieseitto, informing Council that having recessed
+her new brick building in Berresford street at least two feet, so as to
+dedicate it to the use of the citizens of Charleston, if they will pave
+with flag-stones the front of her lot, respectfully requests, that if
+accepted, the work may be done as soon as possible. Referred to the
+Aldermen, Ward No. 4.” The street is narrow and little used, except for
+purposes known to the lanterns, when honest people should sleep.
+The information might have been couched with more modesty, when the
+notoriety of the woman and the dedication of her tabernacle of vice
+was so public. How far the sensitive aldermen of the fourth ward have
+proceeded in the delicate mission, or how much champagne their modest
+consideration has cost, the public have not yet been informed. Rumor
+says every thing is favorable. We are only drawing from a few principal
+points, and shall leave the reader to draw his own inference of the
+moral complexion of our social being. We make but one more view, and
+resume our story.
+
+An office connected with the judiciary, so long held as one of high
+responsibility and honorable position, is now held merely as a medium
+of miserable speculation and espionage. It is an elective office, the
+representative holding for four years. The present incumbent was elected
+more through charity than recompense for any amiable qualities, moral
+worth, or efficient services to party ends. A more weak man could not
+have been drawn from the lowest scale of party hirelings, though he had
+abdicated the office once before to save his name and the respectability
+of the judiciary. It may be said, he was elected in pity to speculate
+on misery; and thus it proved in the case of MANUEL PEREIRA. This
+functionary was elected by a large majority. Could his moral worth have
+been taken into consideration? We should think not! For several times
+have we been pointed to two interesting girls,--or, if their color was
+not shaded, would be called young ladies--promenading the shady side of
+King street, with their faces deeply vailed, and informed who was their
+father. The mother of these innocent victims had been a mother to their
+father, had nursed him and maintained him through his adversity, and
+had lived the partner of his life and affections for many years, and
+had reared to him an interesting but fatal family. But, no sooner had
+fortune begun to shed its smiling rays, than he abandoned the one that
+had watched over him for the choice of one who could boast no more than
+a white skin.
+
+If men who fill high places live by teaching others to gratify their
+appetites and pleasures alone, instead of setting a commendable example
+for a higher state of existence, by whom can we expect that justice and
+moral worth shall be respected?
+
+Connected with the city constabulary are two men whose duty it is to
+keep a sharp lookout for all vessels arriving, and see that all negroes
+or colored seamen are committed to prison. One is a South Carolinian, by
+the name of Dusenberry, and the other an Irishman, by the name of Dunn.
+These two men, although their office is despicable in the eyes of
+many, assume more authority over a certain class of persons, who are
+unacquainted with the laws, than the mayor himself. The former is a
+man of dark, heavy features, with an assassin-like countenance, more
+inclined to look at you distrustfully than to meet you with an open
+gaze. He is rather tall and athletic, but never has been known to do any
+thing that would give him credit for bravery. Several times he has been
+on the brink of losing his office for giving too much latitude to his
+craving for perquisites; yet, by some unaccountable means, he manages
+to hold on. The other is a robust son of the Emerald Isle, with a broad,
+florid face, low forehead, short crispy hair very red, and knotted
+over his forehead. His dress is usually very slovenly and dirty, his
+shirt-collar bespotted with tobacco-juice, and tied with an old striped
+bandana handkerchief. This, taken with a very wide mouth, flat nose,
+vicious eye, and a countenance as hard as ever came from Tipperary, and
+a lame leg, which causes him to limp as he walks, gives our man Dunn the
+incarnate appearance of a fit body-grabber. A few words will suffice
+for his character. He is known to the official department, of which
+the magistrates are a constituent part, as a notorious ----l; and his
+better-half, who, by-the-way, is what is called a free-trader, meaning,
+to save the rascality of a husband, sells liquor by small portions, to
+suit the Murphys and the O'Neals. But, as it pleases our Mr. Dunn, he
+very often becomes a more than profitable customer, and may be found
+snoring out the penalty in some sequestered place, too frequently for
+his own character. Between the hours of ten and twelve in the morning,
+Dunn, if not too much incapacitated, may be seen limping his way down
+Broad street, to watch vessels arriving and departing, carrying a
+limp-cane in one hand, and a large covered whip in the other. We were
+struck with the appearance of the latter, because it was similar to
+those carried in the hands of a rough, menial class of men in Macon,
+Georgia, who called themselves marshals, under a misapplication of the
+term. Their office was to keep the negro population “straight,” and do
+the whipping when called upon, at fifty cents a head. They also did the
+whipping at the jails, and frequently made from five to six dollars a
+day at this alone; for it is not considered fashionable for a gentleman
+to whip his own negro. We noticed the universal carrying of this whip,
+when we first visited Macon, some four years ago, and were curious to
+know its purport, which was elucidated by a friend; but we have since
+seen the practical demonstrations painfully carried out. Those who
+visited Boston for the recovery of Crafts and Ellen--whose mode of
+escape is a romance in itself--were specimens of these “marshals.”
+ How they passed themselves off for gentlemen, we are at a loss to
+comprehend.
+
+During the day, the Messrs. Dusenberry and Dunn may be seen at times
+watching about the wharves, and again in low grog-shops--then pimping
+about the “Dutch beer-shops and corner-shops”--picking up, here and
+there, a hopeful-looking nigger, whom they drag off to limbo, or extort
+a bribe to let him go. Again, they act as monitors over the Dutch
+corner-shops, the keepers of which pay them large sums to save
+themselves the heavy license fine and the information docket. When they
+are no longer able to pay over hush-money, they find themselves walked
+up to the captain's office, to be dealt with according to the severe
+penalty made and provided for violating the law which prohibits the sale
+of liquor to negroes without an order. The failure to observe this law
+is visited with fine and imprisonment,--both beyond their proportionate
+deserts, when the law which governs the sale of liquor to white men is
+considered. Things are very strictly regulated by complexions in South
+Carolina. The master sets the most dissipated and immoral examples
+in his own person, and allows his children not only to exercise their
+youthful caprices, but to gratify such feelings as are pernicious to
+their moral welfare, upon his slaves. Now, the question is, that knowing
+the negro's power of imitation, ought not some allowance to be made
+for copying the errors of his master? Yet such is not the case; for the
+slightest deviation from the strictest rule of discipline brings condign
+punishment upon the head of the offender.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V. MR. GRIMSHAW, THE MAN OF THE COUNTY.
+
+
+
+ON the 22d of March last, about ten o'clock in the morning, a thin,
+spare-looking man, dressed in a black cashmeret suit, swallow-tail
+coat, loose-cut pants, a straight-breasted vest, with a very extravagant
+shirt-collar rolling over upon his coat, with a black ribbon tied at the
+throat, stood at the east corner of Broad and Meeting street, holding a
+very excited conversation with officers Dusenberry and Dunn. His
+visage was long, very dark--much more so than many of the colored
+population--with pointed nose and chin, standing in grim advance to
+each other; his face narrow, with high cheek-bones, small, peering eyes,
+contracted forehead, reclining with a sunken arch between the perceptive
+and intellectual organs--or, perhaps, we might have said, where
+those organs should have been. His countenance was full of vacant
+restlessness; and as he stared at you through his glasses, with his
+silvery gray hair hanging about his ears and neck in shaggy points,
+rolling a large quid of tobacco in his mouth, and dangling a little whip
+in his right hand, you saw the index to his office. As he raised his
+voice--which he did by twisting his mouth on one side, and working his
+chin to adjust his enormous quid--the drawling tone in which he spoke
+gave a picture not easily forgotten.
+
+“You must pay more attention to the arrivals,” said he in a commanding
+tone. “The loss of one of these fellers is a serious drawback to my
+pocket; and that British consul's using the infernalest means to destroy
+our business, that ever was. He's worse than the vilest abolitionist,
+because he thinks he's protected by that flag of their'n. If he don't
+take care, we'll tar-and-feather him; and if his government says much
+about it, she'll larn what and who South Carolina is. We can turn out
+a dozen Palmetto regiments that'd lick any thing John Bull could send
+here, and a troop o' them d--d Yankee abolitionists besides. South
+Carolina's got to show her hand yet against these fellers, afore they'll
+respect the honor and standing of her institutions. They can't send
+their navy to hurt us. And it shows that I always predicts right; for
+while these commercial fellers about the wharves are telling about
+digging out the channel, I've al'ays said they didn't think how much
+injury they were doing; for it was our very best protection in war-time.
+South Carolina can lick John Bull, single-fisted, any time; but if that
+pack of inconsiderate traders on the wharves get their own way, away
+goes our protection, and John Bull would bring his big ships in and
+blow us up. And these fellows that own ships are getting so bold, that a
+great many are beginning to side with Mathew, the consul. Yes, they even
+swear that 'tis the officials that stick to the law for the sake of the
+fees. Now, if I only knew that the consul was the means of that Nassau
+nigger getting away, I'd raise a mob, and teach him a lesson that South
+Carolinians ought to have teached him before. It took about seventeen
+dollars out of my pocket, and if I was to sue him for it, I could get
+no recompense. The next time you allow one to escape, I must place some
+other officer over the port,” said our man whom, we shall continue to
+call Mr. Grimshaw.
+
+“Sure I heard the same consul, when spakin to a gintleman, say that
+the law was only an abuse of power, to put money into the pockets of
+yourself and a few like ye. And whin meself and Flin put the irons on a
+big nigger that the captain was endeavoring to skulk by keeping him in
+the forecastle of the ship, he interfered between me and me duty, and
+began talking his balderdash about the law. Sure, with his own way, he'd
+have every nigger in the city an abolitionist in three weeks. And sure,
+Mr. Sheriff, and ye'd think they were babies, if ye'd see himself talk
+to them at the jail, and send them up things, as if they were better
+than the other criminals, and couldn't live on the jail fare,” said
+officer Dunn, who continued to pledge himself to the sheriff that the
+wharves should not be neglected, nor a hopeful English darky escape his
+vigilant eye.
+
+“For my own part, I think they're better off in jail than they would be
+on the wharf,” continued Grimshaw. “They're a worthless set, and ha'n't
+half the character that a majority of our slaves have; and instead of
+attending the captain on board, they'd be into Elliot street, spending
+their money, getting drunk, and associating with our worst niggers. And
+they all know so much about law, that they're always teaching our bad
+niggers the beauties of their government, which makes them more unhappy
+than they are. Our niggers are like a shoal of fish--when one becomes
+diseased, he spreads it among all the rest; and before you know where
+you are, they're done gone.”
+
+“They're not very profitable customers for us, Sheriff,” said
+Dusenberry. “We have a deal of watching, and a mighty smart lot of
+trouble after we get them fellows; and if we get a perquisite, it never
+amounts to much, for I seldom knew one that had money enough to treat
+as we took him up. These Britishers a'n't like us; they don't pay off in
+port and if the fellows get any thing in jail from the consul, it's by
+drib-drabs, that a'n't no good, for it all goes for liquor. And them
+criminals make a dead haul upon a black steward, as soon as he is locked
+up. But if these sympathizing fools follow up their bugbears about the
+treatment at the jail, they'll get things so that our business won't
+be worth a dollar. For my own part, I'm not so much beholdin', for I've
+made myself comfortable within the last few years, but I want my son
+to succeed me in the office. But if this consul of their'n keeps up his
+objections, appeals, and his protests in this way, and finds such men as
+his honor the district-attorney to second him with his nonsense and his
+notions, folks of our business might as well move north of Mason and
+Dixon's.”
+
+“I can wake him up to a point,” said Grimshaw, “that that abolition
+consul ha'n't learnt before; and if he'd stuck his old petition
+in Charles Sumner's breeches pocket instead of sending it to our
+legislature, he might have saved his old-womanish ideas from the
+showing' up that Myzeck gave 'em. It takes Myzeck to show these
+blue-skin Yankees how to toe the mark when they come to South Carolina.
+If South Carolina should secede, I'd say give us Myzeck and Commander to
+lead our war, and we'd be as sure to whip 'em as we won the Mexican war
+for the Federal Government. There is three things about an Englishman,
+Dusenberry, which you may mark for facts. He is self-conceited, and
+don't want to be advised;--he thinks there is no law like the law of
+England, and that the old union-jack is a pass-book of nations;--and
+he thinks everybody's bound to obey his notions of humanity and the
+dictates of his positive opinions. But what's worse than all, they've
+never seen the sovereignty of South Carolina carried out, and according
+to Consul Mathew's silly notions, they think we could be licked by a
+gun-boat.
+
+“It's no use arguing this thing, you must keep a keen eye upon the
+English niggers; and when a man pretends to dispute the right, tell him
+its 'contrary to law,' and to look at the statute-books; tell him it
+costs more to keep them than they're all worth; and if they say the law
+was never intended for foreign citizens, tell 'em its 'contrary to law.'
+South Carolina's not bound to obey the voice of the General Government,
+and what does she care for the federal courts? We'll pursue a course
+according to the law; and any thing that is contrary to it we will take
+care of for the better protection of our institutions. Now, don't let
+one pass, upon the peril of your office,” continued Mr. Grimshaw.
+
+“It's not a button I'd care for the office,” said Dunn. “Sure it's
+yerself be's makin' all the fees, and ourselves getting the paltry
+dollar; and yerself gives us as much trouble to get that as we'd be
+earning two dollars at magistrate Jiles' beyant. Sure! himself's
+liberal and doesn't be afraid to give us a division of the fees when the
+business is good. And sure ye make yer ten times the fees on an English
+nigger, and never gives us beyant the dollar,” continued he, moving off
+in high dudgeon, and swearing a stream of oaths that made the very blood
+chill. There was a covert meaning about Mr. Grimshaw's language that was
+not at all satisfactory to Mr. Dunn's Irish; especially when he knew Mr.
+Grimshaw's insincerity so well, and that, instead of being liberal, he
+pocketed a large amount of the fees, to the very conscientious benefit
+of his own dear self. The reader must remember that in Charleston, South
+Carolina, there is a large majority of men who care little for law,
+less for justice, and nothing for Christianity. Without compunction
+of conscience, and with an inherited passion to set forward the
+all-absorbing greatness of South Carolina, these men act as a check upon
+the better-disposed citizens. The more lamentable part is, that forming
+a large portion of that species of beings known as bar-room politicians,
+they actually control the elections in the city; and thus we may account
+for the character of the incumbents of office, and for the tenacity with
+which those oppressive laws are adhered to.
+
+This almost incompatible conversation between a high sheriff and two
+menial constables, may to many seem inconsistent with the dignity
+that should be observed between such functionaries. Nevertheless, all
+restraint is not only annihilated by consent, but so prominently is
+this carried out, and so well understood by that respectable class of
+citizens whose interests and feelings are for maintaining a good
+name for the city and promoting its moral integrity, that in all
+our conversation with them, we never heard one speak well of those
+functionaries or the manner in which the police regulations of the city
+were carried out.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI. THE JANSON IN THE OFFING.
+
+
+
+AFTER several days' suffering for want of wafer and fatigue of labor,
+several of the crew were reported upon the sick-list. Manuel, who had
+borne his part nobly and cheerfully, was among the number; and his loss
+was more severely felt, having done a double duty, and succeeded, as far
+as the means were at hand, in making everybody on board comfortable. He
+had attended upon those who gave up first, like a good nurse, ready
+at the call, whether night or day, and with a readiness that seemed
+pleasure to him. From the captain to the little boy Tommy, his loss
+was felt with regret; and the latter would often go into the forecastle
+where he lay, lean over him with a child-like simplicity, and smooth his
+forehead with his little hand. “Manuel! I wish poor Manuel was well!” he
+would say, and again he would lay his little hand on his head and smooth
+his hair. He would whisper encouragement in his ear; and having learned
+a smattering of Portuguese, would tell him how soon they would be in
+port, and what pleasant times they would have together.
+
+On the 21st they descried land, which proved to be Stono, about
+twenty-five miles south of Charleston. Tommy announced the news to
+Manuel, which seemed to cheer him up. His sickness was evidently caused
+by fatigue, and his recovery depended more upon rest and nourishment
+than medical treatment. That night at ten o'clock the wind came strong
+north-west, and drove the Janson some distance to sea again; and it was
+not until the morning of the 23d that she made Charleston light, and
+succeeded in working up to the bar. Signal was made for a pilot, and
+soon, a very fine cutter-looking boat, “Palmetto, No. 4,” was seen
+shooting out over the bar in the main channel. Manuel, somewhat
+recovered, had a few minutes before been assisted on deck, and through
+the captain's orders was laid upon a mattrass, stretched on the
+starboard side of the companion-way. By his side sat little Tommy,
+serving him with some nourishment.
+
+The boat was soon alongside, and the pilot, a middle-sized man, well
+dressed, with a frank, open countenance, rather florid and sun-stained,
+and a profusion of gold chain and seal dangling from his fob, came
+on board. After saluting the captain, he surveyed the weather-beaten
+condition of the craft, made several inquiries in regard to her working,
+and then said in a sang-froid manner, “Well! I reckon you've seen some
+knocking, anyhow.” Then turning again and giving some orders in regard,
+to getting more way upon her, he viewed the laborious working at the
+pumps, and walking about midships on the larboard side, took a sharp
+survey of her waist. “Don't she leak around her topsides, Captain?” said
+he.
+
+Receiving an answer in the affirmative, he gave a glance aloft, and
+then at the sky to windward; asked how long he had worked her in that
+condition, and where he took the gale. “It's a wonder she hadn't swamped
+ye before now. I'd a' beached her at the first point, if she'd bin mine;
+I'd never stand at slapping an old craft like this on. She reminds me
+of one o' these down-east sugar-box crafts what trade to Cuba,” he
+continued. Then walking across the main-hatch to the starboard side, he
+approached the men who were pumping, and after inquiring about freeing
+her, suddenly caught a glimpse of Manuel, as he lay upon the mattrass
+with his face uncovered.
+
+“Heavens! What! have you got the yellow fever on board at this season
+of the year?” he inquired of the mate, who had just come aft to inquire
+about getting some water from the pilot-boat.
+
+“No, we've had every thing else but the yellow fever; one might as well
+bin on a raft as such an infernal unlucky old tub as she is. It's the
+steward, sir--he's got a touch of a fever; but he'll soon be over it.
+He only wants rest, poor fellow! He's bin a bully at work ever since the
+first gale. He'll mend before he gets to town,” was the reply.
+
+“Ah! then you've had a double dose of it. It gives a fellow bringer off
+them capes once in a while.--The steward's a nigger, isn't he?” inquired
+the pilot.
+
+“Nigger!--not he,” said the mate. “He's a Portuguese mixed breed; a kind
+o' sun-scorched subject, like a good many of you Southerners. A nigger's
+mother never had him, you may bet your 'davie on that. There's as much
+white blood in his jacket as anybody's got, only them Portuguese are
+dark-lookin' fellers. He's no fool--his name's Manuel, a right clever
+feller, and the owners think as much of him as they do of the Skipper.”
+
+“Gammon,” said the pilot to himself. “What would he think if we were
+to show him some specimens of our white niggers in Charleston?” And
+turning, he walked past Manuel with a suspicious look, and took a
+position near the man at the wheel, where he remained for some time
+fingering the seals of his watch-chain. The Captain had gone into the
+cabin a few minutes before, and coming on deck again, walked toward the
+place where the pilot stood, and took a seat upon an old camp-stool.
+
+“Cap,” said the pilot, “ye'll have trouble with that nigger of your'n
+when ye git to town. If you want to save yerself and the owners a d--d
+site o' bother and expense, y' better keep him close when y' haul in;
+and ship him off to New York the first chance. I've seen into the mill,
+Cap, and y' better take a friend's advice.”
+
+“Nigger!” said the Captain indignantly, “what do they call niggers in
+Charleston? My steward's no more a nigger than you are!”
+
+“What, sir?” returned the pilot in a perfect rage. “Do you know the
+insulting nature of your language? Sir, if the law did not subject me,
+I would leave your vessel instantly, and hold you personally responsible
+as soon as you landed, sir.”
+
+The Captain, unconscious of the tenacity with which the chivalrous blood
+of South Carolina held language that mooted a comparison of colors,
+considered his answer; but could see nothing offensive in it.
+
+“You asked me a question, and I gave you a proper answer. If you
+consider such a man as my steward--poor fellow--a nigger, in your
+country, I'm glad that you are blessed with so many good men.”
+
+“We polishes our language, Captain, when we speak of niggers in South
+Carolina,” said the pilot. “A South Carolinian, sir, is a gentleman all
+over the world. It don't want nothin' further than the name of his State
+to insure him respect. And when foreign folks and Northerners from them
+abolition States bring free niggers into South Carolina, and then go to
+comparing them to white folks, they better be mighty careful how they
+stir about. South Carolina ought to've seceded last year, when she
+talked about it, and sent every Yankee home to make shoe-pegs. We
+wouldn't bin insulted then, as we are now. I'll tell you what it is,
+Cap,” said he, rather cooling off, “if our folks was only as spunky as
+they were in eighteen hundred and thirty-two times, them fellers what
+come here to feed upon South Carolina, put the devil in the heads of the
+niggers, and then go home again, would see stars and feel bullet-holes.”
+
+The Captain listened to the pilot's original South Carolina talk, or, as
+the pilot himself had called it, polished language, without exhibiting
+any signs of fear and trembling at its sublime dignity; yet, finding
+that the pilot had misconstrued the tenor of his answer, said, “You must
+have mistaken the intention of my reply, sir; and the different manner
+in which you appropriate its import may be attributed to a custom
+among yourselves, which makes language offensive that has no offensive
+meaning. We never carry pistols or any such playthings in my country.
+We have a moral security for our lives, and never look upon death as so
+great an enemy that we must carry deadly weapons to defend it. In fact,
+pilot,” he said in a joking manner, “they're rather cumbersome little
+bits for a feller's pocket: I'd rather carry my supper and breakfast in
+my pocket. Now tell us, who do you call niggers in South Carolina?”
+
+“Why, Captain, we call all what a'n't white folks. Our folks can
+tell 'em right smart. They can't shirk out if it's only marked by
+the seventeenth generation. You can always tell 'em by the way they
+look--they can't look you in the face, if they are ever so white. The
+law snaps 'em up once in a while, and then, if they're ever so white,
+it makes 'em prove it. I've known several cases where the doubt was in
+favor of the nigger, but he couldn't prove it, and had to stand aside
+among the darkies. Dogs take my skin, Cap, if theren't a Jew feller in
+town as white as anybody, and his father's a doctor. It got whispered
+round that he was a nigger, and the boarders where he stayed raised a
+fuss about it. The nigger's father had two of them sued for slander,
+but they proved the nigger by a quirk of law that'd make a volume bigger
+than Blackstone; and instead of the old Jew getting satisfaction, the
+judges, as a matter of policy, granted him time to procure further proof
+to show that his son wasn't a nigger. It was a very well-considered
+insinuation of the judges, but the young-un stands about A-1 with a
+prime nigger-feller.”
+
+“I should like to have 'em try me, to see whether I was a nigger or a
+white man. It must be a funny law, 'nigger or no nigger.' If a feller's
+skin won't save him, what the devil will?” said the Captain.
+
+“Why, show your mother and her generation were white, to be sure! It's
+easy enough done, and our judges are all very larned in such things--can
+tell in the twinkling of an eye,” said the pilot.
+
+“I should think the distinguishing points would be to show that their
+mother had nothing to do with a nigger. Do your judges make this a
+particular branch of jurisprudence? If they do, I'd like to know what
+they took for their text-books. If the intermixture is as complex as
+what you say, I should think some of the judges would be afraid of
+passing verdict upon their own kin.”
+
+“Not a whit!” said the pilot; “they know enough for that.”
+
+“Then you admit there's a chance. It must be an amusing affair, 'pon
+my soul! when a nice little female has to draw aside her vail before a
+court of very dignified judges, for the purpose of having her pedigree
+examined,” said the Captain.
+
+“Oh! the devil, Cap; your getting all astray--a woman nigger never has
+the advantage of the law. They always go with the niggers, ah! ha! ha!!”
+
+“But suppose they're related to some of your big-bugs. What then? Are
+your authorities so wise and generous that they make allowance for these
+things,” asked the Captain, innocently.
+
+“Oh! poh! there you're again: you must live in Charleston a year or two,
+but you'll have to be careful at first that you don't fall in love with
+some of our bright gals, and think they're white, before you know it. It
+doesn't matter seven coppers who they're got by, there's no distinction
+among niggers in Charleston. I'll put you through some of the bright
+houses when we get up, and show you some scions of our aristocracy, that
+are the very worst cases. It's a fact, Cap, these little shoots of the
+aristocracy invariably make bad niggers. If a fellow wants a real prime,
+likely nigger wench, he must get the pure African blood. As they say
+themselves, 'Wherever Buckra-man bin, make bad nigger.'”
+
+“Well, Pilot, I think we've had enough about mixed niggers for the
+present. Tell me! do you really think they'll give me trouble with my
+steward? He certainly is not a black man, and a better fellow never
+lived,” inquired the Captain earnestly.
+
+“Nothing else, Cap,” said the pilot. “It's a hard law, I tell you, and
+if our merchants and business men had a say in it, 'twouldn't last long;
+ye can't pass him off for a white man nohow, for the thing's 'contrary
+to law,' and pays so well that them contemptible land-sharks of officers
+make all the fuss about it, and never let one pass. Just take the
+infernal fees off, and nobody'd trouble themselves about the stewards.
+It all goes into old Grimshaw's pocket, and he'd skin a bolt-rope for
+the grease, and sell the steward if he could get a chance. He has sold a
+much nearer relation. I'm down upon the law, you'll see, Cap, for I know
+it plays the dickens with our business, and is a curse to the commerce
+of the port. Folks what a'n't acquainted with shipping troubles, and
+a shipowner's interests, think such things are very small affairs. But
+it's the name that affects us, and when an owner stands at every item in
+the disbursements, and a heavy bill for keeping his steward, and another
+for filling his place, or boarding-house accommodations, and then be
+deprived of his services, he makes a wry face, and either begins to
+think about another port, or making the rate of freight in proportion to
+the annoyance. It has an effect that we feel, but don't say much about.
+I'm a secessionist, but I don't believe in running mad after politics,
+and letting our commercial interests suffer.”
+
+“But what if I prove my steward a'n't a colored man?” said the Captain;
+“they surely won't give me any trouble then. It would pain my feelings
+very much to see Manuel locked up in a cell for no crime; and then to
+be deprived of his services, is more than I can stand. If I'd known it
+before, I'd suffered the torments of thirst, and put for a port farther
+north.”
+
+“It'll cost more than it's worth,” said the pilot. “Take my plain
+advice, Cap; never try that; our lawyers are lusty fellows upon fees;
+and the feller'd rot in that old nuisance of a jail afore you'd get him
+out. The process is so slow and entangled, nobody'd know how to bring
+the case, and ev'ry lawyer'd have an opinion of his own. But the worst
+of all is that it's so unpopular, you can't get a lawyer worth seven
+cents to undertake it. It would be as dangerous as an attempt to
+extricate a martyr from the burning flames. Public opinion in Charleston
+is controlled by politicians; and an attempt to move in a thing so
+unpopular would be like a man attempting to speak, with pistols and
+swords pointed to his head.”
+
+“Then it's folly to ask justice in your city, is it?” asked the Captain.
+“But your people are generous, a'n't they? and treat strangers with a
+courtesy that marks the character of every high-minded society?”
+
+“Yes!--but society in South Carolina has nothing to do with the law; our
+laws are gloriously ancient. I wish, Cap, I could only open your ideas
+to the way our folks manage their own affairs. I'm opposed to this law
+that imprisons stewards, because it affects commerce, but then our other
+laws are tip-top. It was the law that our legislature made to stop free
+niggers from coming from the abolition States to destroy the affections
+of our slaves. Some say, the construction given to it and applied to
+stewards of foreign vessels a'n't legal, and wasn't intended; but now
+it's controlled by popular will,--the stewards a'n't legislators, and
+the judges know it wouldn't be popular, and there's nobody dare meddle
+with it, for fear he may be called an abolitionist. You better take my
+advice, Cap: ship the nigger, and save yourself and Consul Mathew the
+trouble of another fuss,” continued the pilot.
+
+“That I'll never do! I've made up my mind to try it, and won't be driven
+out of a port because the people stand in fear of a harmless man. If
+they have any souls in them, they'll regard with favor a poor sailor
+driven into their port in distress. I've sailed nearly all over
+the world, and I never got among a people yet that wouldn't treat a
+shipwrecked sailor with humanity. Gracious God! I've known savages to be
+kind to poor shipwrecked sailors, and to share their food with them. I
+can't, pilot, imagine a civilization so degraded, nor a public so lost
+to common humanity, as to ill treat a man in distress. We've said enough
+about it for the present. I'll appeal to Mr. Grimshaw's feelings, when
+I get to the city; and I know, if he's a man, he'll let Manuel stay on
+board, if I pledge my honor that he won't leave the craft.”
+
+“Humph!--If you knew him as well as I do, you'd save your own feelings.
+His sympathies don't run that way,” said the pilot.
+
+The Janson had now crossed the bar, and was fast approaching Fort
+Sumpter. Manuel had overheard enough of the conversation to awaken fears
+for his own safety. Arising from the mattrass, in a manner indicating
+his feeble condition, he called Tommy, and walking forward, leaned over
+the rail near the fore-rigging, and inquired what the Captain and
+the pilot were talking about. Observing his fears, the little fellow
+endeavoured to quiet him by telling him they were talking about bad
+sailors.
+
+“I think it is me they are talking about. If they sell me for slave
+in Charleston, I'll kill myself before a week,” said he in his broken
+English.
+
+“What's that you say, Manuel?” inquired the first mate as he came along,
+clearing up the decks with the men.
+
+“Pilot tell Captain they sell me for slave in South Carolina. I'd jump
+overboard 'fore I suffer him,” said he.
+
+“Oh, poh! don't be a fool; you a'n't among Patagonians, Manuel; you
+won't have to give 'em leg for your life. They don't sell foreigners and
+outlandish men like you for slaves in Carolina--it's only black folks
+what can't clothe the'r words in plain English. Yer copper-colored hide
+wouldn't be worth a sixpence to a nigger-trader--not even to old Norman
+Gadsden, that I've heard 'em tell so much about in the Liverpool docks.
+He's a regular Jonathan Wild in nigger-dealing; his name's like a fiery
+dragon among the niggers all over the South; and I hearn our skipper say
+once when I sailed in a liner, that niggers in Charleston were so 'fraid
+of him they'd run, like young scorpions away from an old he-devil, when
+they saw him coming. He sells white niggers, as they call 'em, and
+black niggers--any thing that comes in his way, in the shape of saleable
+folks. But he won't acknowledge the corn when he goes away from home,
+and swears there's two Norman Gadsdens in Charleston; that he a'n't the
+one! When a man's ashamed of his name abroad, his trade must be very bad
+at home, or I'm no sailor,” said the mate.
+
+“Ah, my boys!” said the pilot in a quizzical manner, as he came to
+where several of the men were getting the larboard anchor ready to let
+go,--“if old Norman Gadsden gets hold of you, you're a gone sucker. A
+man what's got a bad nigger has only got to say Old Gadsden to him, and
+it's equal to fifty paddles. The mode of punishment most modern,
+and adopted in all the workhouses and places of punishment in South
+Carolina, is with the paddle, a wooden instrument in, the shape of a
+baker's peel; with a blade from three to five inches wide, and from
+eight to ten long. This is laid on the posteriors--generally by
+constables or officers connected with the police. Holes are frequently
+bored in the blade, which gives the application a sort of percussive
+effect; The pain is much more acute than with the cowhide; and several
+instances are known where a master ordered an amount of strokes beyond
+the endurance of the slave, and it proved fatal at the workhouse. They
+tell a pretty good story about the old fellow. I don't know if it's
+true, but the old fellow's rich now, and he does just what he pleases.
+It was that somebody found one of those little occasional droppings of
+the aristocracy, very well known among the secrets of the chivalry, and
+called foundlings, nicely fixed up in a basket.--It's among the secrets
+though, and mustn't be told abroad.--The finders labelled it, 'Please
+sell to the highest bidder,' and left it at his door. There was a fund
+of ominous meaning in the label; but Norman very coolly took the little
+helpless pledge under his charge, and, with the good nursing of old
+Bina, made him tell to the tune of two hundred and thirty, cash, 'fore
+he was two year old. He went by the name of Thomas Norman, the Christian
+division of his foster-father's, according to custom. The old fellow
+laughs at the joke, as he calls it, and tells 'em, when they stick it to
+him, they don't understand the practice of making money. You must keep a
+bright look out for him, Manuel--you'll know him by the niggers running
+when they see him coming.”
+
+The pilot now returned to the quarter, and commenced dilating upon the
+beauty of Charleston harbor and its tributaries, the Astley and Cooper
+Rivers--then upon the prospects of fortifications to beat the United
+States in the event of South Carolina's seceding and raising an
+independent sovereignty, composed of her best blood. The Captain
+listened to his unsolicited and uninteresting exposition of South
+Carolina's prowess in silence, now and then looking up at the pilot and
+nodding assent. He saw that the pilot was intent upon astonishing him
+with his wonderful advancement in the theory of government, and the
+important position of South Carolina. Again he looked dumbfounded, as
+much as to acknowledge the pilot's profundity, and exclaimed, “Well!
+South Carolina must be a devil of a State: every thing seems captivated
+with its greatness: I'd like to live in Carolina if I didn't get
+licked.”
+
+“By scissors! that you would, Captain; you ha'n't an idee what a mighty
+site our people can do if they're a mind to! All South Carolina wants
+is her constitutional rights, which her great men fought for in
+the Revolution. We want the freedom to protect our own rights and
+institutions--not to be insulted and robbed by the General Government
+and the abolitionists.”
+
+“Do you practice as a people upon the same principles that you ask of
+the General Government!” inquired the Captain.
+
+“Certainly, Captain, as far as it was intended for the judicious good of
+all white citizens!”
+
+“Then you claim a right for the whites, but withhold the right when it
+touches on the dark side. You'll have to lick the Federal Government, as
+you call it, for they won't cut the constitution up to suit your notions
+of black and white.” * * *
+
+“That's just the thing, Cap, and we can do it just as easy as we
+now protect our own laws, and exterminate the niggers what attempt
+insurrections. South Carolina sets an example, sir, of honor and bravery
+that can't be beat. Why, just look a-yonder, Cap: the Federal Government
+owns this 'er Fort Sumpter, and they insulted us by building it right
+in our teeth, so that they could command the harbor, block out our
+commerce, and collect the duties down here. But, Cap, this don't scare
+South Carolina nohow. We can show 'em two figures in war tactics that'd
+blow 'em to thunder. Ye see yonder!” said he, with an earnest look of
+satisfaction, pointing to the south, “That's Morris Island. We'd take
+Fort Moultrie for a breakfast spell, and then we'd put it to 'em hot
+and strong from both sides, until they'd surrender Fort Sumpter. They
+couldn't stand it from both sides. Yes, sir, they shut Fort Moultrie
+against us, and wouldn't let us have it to celebrate independence in.
+There's a smouldering flame in South Carolina that'll burst forth one
+of these days in a way that must teach the Federal Government some
+astonishing and exciting lessons. There's old Castle Pinckney, sir; we
+could keep it for a reserve, and with Generals Quattlebum and Commander,
+from Georgetown and Santee Swamp, we could raise an army of Palmetto
+regiments that would whip the Federal Government troop and gun-boat.”
+
+We have given this singular conversation of the pilot with a strange
+Captain, which at the time was taken as an isolated case of gasconade
+peculiar to the man; but which the Captain afterward found to harmonize
+in sentiment, feeling, and expression with the general character of the
+people--the only exceptions being the colored people.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII. ARRIVAL OF THE JANSON.
+
+
+
+ABOUT five o'clock on the evening of the 23d, the Janson passed Castle
+Pinckney, ran up to the wharf with the flood-tide, let go her anchor,
+and commenced warping into the dock. Her condition attracted sundry
+persons to the end of the wharf, who viewed her with a sort of
+commiseration that might have been taken for sincere feeling. The
+boarding officer had received her papers, and reported her character and
+condition, which had aroused a feeling of speculative curiosity, that
+was already beginning to spread among ship-carpenters and outfitters.
+
+Conspicuous among those gathered on the wharf was a diminutive little
+dandy, with an olive-colored frock-coat, black pants, embroidered vest,
+and an enormous shirt-collar that endangered his ears. This was secured
+around the neck with a fancy neckcloth, very tastefully set off with a
+diamond pin, He was very slender, with a narrow, feminine face,
+round popeyes--requiring the application of a pocket-glass every few
+minutes--and very fair complexion, with little positive expression of
+character in his features. His nose was pointed; his chin, projected
+and covered with innumerable little pimples, gave an irregular
+and mastiff-shaped mouth a peculiar expression. He wore a very
+highly-polished and high-heeled pair of boots, and a broad-brimmed,
+silk-smooth hat. He seemed very anxious to display the beauty of two
+diamond rings that glittered upon his delicate little fingers, made
+more conspicuous by the wristbands of his shirt. Standing in a very
+conspicuous place upon the capsill of the wharf, he would rub his hands,
+then running from one part of the wharf to another, ordering sundry
+niggers about making fast the lines, kicking one, and slapping another,
+as he stooped, with his little hand. All paid respect to him. The
+Captain viewed him with a smile of curiosity, as much as to say, “What
+important specimen of a miss in breeches is that?” But when the little
+fellow spoke, the secret was told. He gathered the inflections of his
+voice, as if he were rolling them over the little end of a thunderbolt
+in his mouth. As the vessel touched the wharf, he sprang to the corner
+and cried out at the top of his voice, “Yer' welcome to Charleston,
+Captain Thompson! Where did you get that knocking?--where are ye bound
+for?--how many days are you out?--how long has she leaked in that way?”
+ and a strain of such questions, which it would be impossible to trace,
+such was the rapidity with which he put them. The Captain answered him
+in accordance with the circumstances; and supposing him clothed with
+authority, inquired where he should find some hands to work his pumps,
+in order to relieve his men. “By-Je-w-hu! Captain, you must a' had a
+piping time, old feller. Oh! yes, you want help to work your pumps. Get
+niggers, Captain, there's lots on 'em about here. They're as thick as
+grasshoppers in a cotton-patch.”
+
+“Yes, but I want 'em now, my men are worn out; I must get some Irishmen,
+if I can't get others at once,” said the Captain, viewing his man again
+from head to foot.
+
+“Oh! don't employ Paddies, Captain; 'ta'n't popular; they don't belong
+to the secession party; Charleston's overrun with them and the Dutch!
+Why, she won't hurt to lay till to-morrow morning, and there'll be lots
+o' niggers down; they can't be out after bell-ring without a pass, and
+its difficult to find their masters after dark. Haul her up 'till she
+grounds, and she won't leak when the tide leaves her. We can go to
+the theatre and have a right good supper after, at Baker's or the St.
+Charles's. It's the way our folks live. We live to enjoy ourselves in
+South Carolina. Let the old wreck go to-night.” The little fellow seemed
+so extremely polite, and so anxious to “do the genteel attention,”
+ that the Captain entirely forgot the tenor of his conversation with the
+pilot, while his feelings changed with the prospect of such respectful
+attention; and yet he seemed at a loss how to analyze the peculiar
+character of his little, pedantic friend.
+
+“You must not think me intrusive, Captain,” said he, pulling out his
+segar-pouch and presenting it with at Chesterfieldian politeness. “It's
+a pleasure we Carolinians take in being hospitable and attentive to
+strangers. My name, sir, is--! My niggers call me Master George. Yes,
+sir! our family!--you have heard of my father probably--he belongs to
+one of the best stocks in Carolina--owns a large interest in this wharf,
+and is an extensive cotton-broker, factors, we call them here--and
+he owns a large plantation of niggers on Pee-Dee; you must visit our
+plantation. Captain, certain! before you leave the city. But you mustn't
+pay much attention to the gossip you'll hear about the city. I pledge
+you my honor, sir, it don't amount to any thing, nor has it any
+prominent place in our society.”
+
+“Really, sir,” replied the Captain, “I shall do myself the honor to
+accept of your hospitable kindness, and hope it may be my good fortune
+to reciprocate at some future day. I'm only too sorry that our wrecked
+condition affords me no opportunity to invite you to my table to-night;
+but the circumstances which you see everywhere presenting themselves are
+my best apology.”
+
+“Oh, dear me! don't mention it, I pray, Captain. Just imagine yourself
+perfectly at home. We will show you what Southern hospitality is.
+We don't go upon the Yankee system of Mr. So-and-so and
+What-do-ye-call-'um. Our feelings are in keeping with our State pride,
+which, with our extreme sensibility of honor, forbids the countenance
+of meanness. South Carolinians, sir, are at the very top of the social
+ladder--awake to every high-minded consideration of justice and right.
+We are not moved by those morbid excitements and notions that so often
+lead people away at the North. Make no unnecessary preparation, Captain,
+and I will do myself the honor to call upon you in an hour.” Thus
+saying, he shook his hand and left.
+
+The pilot had delivered his charge safe, and was about to, bid
+the Captain good-by for the night. But in order to do the thing in
+accordance with an English custom, that appears to have lost none of its
+zest in South Carolina, he was invited into the Captain's cabin to take
+a little prime old Jamaica. Manuel, who had somewhat recovered, brought
+out the case from a private locker, and setting it before them, they
+filled up, touched glasses, and drank the usual standing toast to South
+Carolina. “Pilot,” said the Captain, “who is my polite friend--he seems
+a right clever little fellow?”
+
+“Well, Captain, he's little, but he's first-rate blood, and a genuine
+sprig of the chivalry. He's a devil of a secessionist, sir. If ye were
+to hear that fellow make a stump speech on States' rights, you'd think
+him a Samson on Government. His father is the head of a good mercantile
+house here; 'twouldn't be a bad idea to consign to him. But I must bid
+you good-night, Captain; I'll call and see you to-morrow,” said the
+pilot, leaving for his home.
+
+The Janson was hauled well up the dock, and grounded on the ebb-tide.
+Manuel prepared supper for the officers and crew, while the Captain
+awaited the return of his new acquaintance. “Captain,” said Manuel,
+“I should like to go ashore to-night and take a walk, for my bones are
+sore, and I'm full of pains. I think it will do me good. You don't think
+anybody will trouble me, if I walk peaceably along?”
+
+“Nobody would trouble you if they knew you, Manuel; but I am afraid they
+will mistake you in the night. You had better keep ship until morning;
+take a good rest, and to-morrow will be a fine day--you can then take
+some exercise.”
+
+Manuel looked at the Captain as if he read something doubtful in his
+countenance, and turned away with a pitiful look of dissatisfaction.
+It seems that through his imperfect knowledge of English, he had
+misconceived the position of the celebrated Thomas Norman Gadsden, whom
+he imagined to be something like an infernal machine, made and provided
+by the good citizens of Charleston to catch bad niggers. “Nora-ma Gazine
+no catch-e me, Cap-i-tan, if me go ashore, 'case me no make trouble in
+no part de world where me sail, Oh! no, Cap-i-tan, Manuel know how to
+mine dis bisness,” said he returning again to the Captain.
+
+“Yes, yes, Manuel, but we can't let the crew go ashore 'till we get
+through the custom-house; you must content yourself to-night, and in
+the morning 'twill be all right. I'm afraid you'll get sick again-the
+night-air is very bad in this climate; old Gadsden won't trouble you. He
+don't walk about at night.”
+
+Manuel walked forward, not very well satisfied with the manner in which
+the Captain put him off. The latter felt the necessity of caution,
+fearing he might infringe upon some of the municipal regulations that
+the pilot had given him an account of, which accounted for his refusal
+Manuel sat upon the main-hatch fondling Tommy, and telling him what good
+things they would have in the morning for breakfast, and how happy they
+ought to be that they were not lost during the gales, little thinking
+that he was to be the victim of a merciless law, which would confine
+him within the iron grates of a prison before the breakfast hour in the
+morning. “I like Charleston, Tommy,” said Manuel; “it looks like one of
+our old English towns, and the houses have such pretty gardens, and the
+people they say are all so rich and live so fine. Tommy, we'll have a
+long walk and look all around it, so that we can tell the folks when we
+get home. The ship, owes me eleven pounds, and I mean to take some good
+things home for presents, to show what they have in South Carolina.”
+
+“You better buy a young nigger, and take him home as a curiosity to show
+among the Highlands. You can buy a young Sambo for any price, just
+the same as you would a leg of mutton at the butcher's; put him in
+a band-box, lug him across, and you'll make a fortune in the North
+country. But I'd rather buy a young wife, for the young niggers are
+more roguish than a lot o' snakes, and al'a's eat their heads off afore
+they're big enough to toddle. They sell gals here for niggers whiter
+than you are, Manuel; they sell 'em at auction, and then they sell corn
+to feed 'em on. Carolina's a great region of supersensual sensibility;
+they give you a wife of any color or beauty, and don't charge you much
+for her, providing you're the right stripe. What a funny thing it would
+be to show the Glasgow folks a bright specimen of a bought wife from the
+renowned State of South Carolina, with genuine aristocratic blood in her
+veins; yes, a pure descendant of the Huguenots!” said the mate, who
+was leaning over the rail where Manuel and Tommy were seated, smoking a
+segar and viewing the beautiful scenery around the harbor.
+
+“Ah!” said Manuel, “when I get a wife and live on shore, I don't want to
+buy one-it might be a dangerous bargain. Might buy the body, but not the
+soul-that's God's.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII. A NEW DISH OF SECESSION.
+
+
+
+ABOUT a quarter past eight o'clock in the evening, Master George, as he
+called himself, the little pedantic man, came skipping down the wharf.
+As soon as he approached the brig, he cried out at the top of his voice,
+“Captain! Captain!!”
+
+The Captain stepped to the gangway, and the little fellow, who had stood
+crossing and working his fingers, reached out his hand to assist him
+ashore. This done, he took the Captain's arm, and commencing a discourse
+upon the wonderful things and people of South Carolina they wended their
+way to the Charleston Theatre. The company then performing was a small
+affair, and the building itself perfectly filthy, and filled with an
+obnoxious stench. The play was a little farce, which the Captain had
+seen to much perfection in his own country, and which required some
+effort of mind to sit out its present mutilation. Yet, so highly pleased
+was Master George, that he kept up a succession of applauses at every
+grimace made by the comedian. Glad when the first piece was over, the
+Captain made a motion to adjourn to the first good bar-room and have a
+punch. It was agreed, upon the condition that the little man should “do
+the honor,” and that they should return and see the next piece out. The
+Captain, of course, yielded to the rejoinder, though it was inflicting
+a severe penalty upon his feelings. There was another piece to come yet,
+which the little fellow's appetite was as ready to devour as the first.
+The Captain, seeing this, could not refrain expressing his surprise.
+This was taken as a charge against his taste, and George immediately
+commenced a discussion upon the subject of the piece, the intention of
+the author, and the merits of the principal performers, whose proper
+adaptation he admired. The Captain knew his subject, and instead of
+contending in detail, advised him to take a peep into the theatres of
+New York and London. Not to be undone, for he was like all little men,
+who insist upon the profoundness of their own opinions, he asserted that
+it could be only the different views which individuals entertained of
+delineating character, and that the Charlestonians were proverbially
+correct in their judgment of music and dramatic performances.
+
+“I pity the judgment that would award merit to such a performance as
+that,” said the Captain.
+
+“How strange, that you Englishmen and Scotchmen always find fault with
+every thing we Americans do. Your writers manifest it in their books
+upon us and the people seem of necessity to copy from them, and echo
+their grumblings,” rejoined Master George.
+
+“You judge from the common saying, instead of a knowledge front
+observation, I fear,” said the Captain.
+
+“Lord, sir! you must not judge me by that rule. Carolinians, sir,
+always appreciate intelligent strangers, for they always exert a
+healthy influence, and never meddle with our institutions; so you see it
+wouldn't do to follow the pestilent notions of petty scribblers, lest we
+should form wrong opinions.”
+
+“But tell me,” said the Captain, “do you consider yourselves Americans
+in South Carolina?--the pilot must have led me astray.”
+
+“Americans! yes, indeed, the true blood at that, and no man of tip-top
+judgment ever questioned it. But you must mark the difference; we
+ha'n't Yankees, nor we don't believe in their infernal humbuggery
+about abolition. If it wasn't for South Carolina and Georgia, the
+New-Englanders would starve for want of our cotton and rice. It's the
+great staple what keeps the country together; and as much as they talk
+about it, just take that away, and what would the United States be? We
+South Carolinians give no symptoms or expressions of what we mean to do
+that we cannot maintain. We have been grossly insulted by the Federal
+Government, but it dar'n't come at us and just give us a chance at fair
+fight. We'd show 'em the thunder of the Palmetto, that they'd never
+trouble our sovereignty again. Captain, I pledge you my honor that if
+there wasn't so many infernal Yankees in Georgia, and she'd follow
+our lead in secession, we'd just lick the whole North. Georgia's a big
+State, but she a'n't pluck, and has no chivalry at all among her people.
+She allows such privileges to them Yankees-gives them power to control
+her manufacturing interests-and this is just what will uproot the
+foundation of their slave institution. Georgians a'n't a bit like
+us; first, they are too plebeian in their manners-have no bond of
+guardianship for their laws, and exert no restraints for the proper
+protection of good society. But, Captain, their stock has a different
+origin, and the peculiarity which now marks our character may be traced
+to the offspring of early settlement. We derived our character and
+sentiments from the Huguenots; they, from an uncharacterized class of
+coarse adventurers, whose honesty was tinctured with penal suspicion.
+This, sir, accounts for the differences so marked in our character.”
+
+The little fellow pressed this kind of conversation in the lobby of
+the theatre, and at the same time took the very particular pleasure of
+introducing the Captain to several of the young bloods, as he called
+them, while they walked to and from the boxes. At length the Captain
+found himself in a perfect hornet's nest, surrounded by vicious young
+secessionists, so perfectly nullified in the growth that they were all
+ready to shoulder muskets, pitchforks, and daggers, and to fire pistols
+at poor old Uncle Sam, if he should poke his nose in South Carolina. The
+picture presented was that of an unruly set of children dictating their
+opinions to a hoary-headed old daddy-accusing him of pragmatism, and
+threatening, if he was twice as old, they'd whip him unless he did
+as they directed. The knowledge of South Carolina's power and South
+Carolina's difficulties with the Federal Government he found so
+universally set forth as to form the atmosphere of conversation in the
+parlor, the public-house, the school and the bar-room, the lecture-room
+and the theatre.
+
+The little man extended his invitation to a party of the bloods. The
+Captain was taken by the arms in a kind of bond fellowship, and escorted
+into Baker's eating-saloon, a place adjacent to the theatre, and, to
+a man unaccustomed to the things that are in Charleston, a very rowdy
+place. This is considered by Charlestonians one of the finest places
+in the Southern country; where good suppers and secession (the
+all-engrossing subjects with Charlestonians) form the only important
+element of conversation. It may be set down as a fact, that among
+seven-tenths of the people of Charleston, the standard of a gentleman
+is measured according to his knowledge of secession and his ability
+to settle the question of hot suppers. We say nothing of that vigorous
+patriotism so often manifested in a long string of fulsome toasts that
+disgrace the columns of the Mercury and Courier.
+
+At Baker's the place was literally crowded with all kinds and
+characters, graded from the honorable judge down to the pot-boy; a
+pot-pouri of courtesy and companionship only exhibited in England on the
+near approach of elections. The reader may think this strange, but we
+can assure him that distinctions are strangely maintained; an exclusive
+arrogance being observed in private life, while a too frequent and
+general resort to bar-rooms has established plebeianism in public.
+Voices were sounding at all parts of the counter, and for as many
+different voices as many different mixtures were named. The Captain
+received a great many introductions, and almost as many invitations to
+drink; but the little man, Master George, claimed the exclusive honor,
+and keeping an eye wide awake, took the advantage of his own dimensions,
+and began working his way through a barricade of bodies and elbows,
+until he had reached the counter. His party followed close, at his
+heels. Altogether, they called for cocktails, smashes, toddies,
+cobblers, juleps, and legitimates. These disposed of, the company
+repaired to what is called a “box up-stairs.” Scarcely seated, Master
+George rang the bell with such violence that he disjointed the cord and
+tassel, and gave such an alarm that three or four darkies came poking
+their alarmed countenances through the curtains at once.
+
+“There's nothing like making the fellows mind; they've got so infernal
+independent here, and old Tom thinks so much of his young wife, that his
+niggers have begun to imitate him. One's enough at a time!” said Master
+George, with all the importance of his character. A “bright boy,” with
+his hair nicely parted on the middle of his head, and frizzed for the
+occasion, made a polite bow, while the others retired.
+
+“What have you choice for supper, to-night? We want something ripe for
+the palate-none of your leavings, now, you infernal nigger, and don't
+tell us none of your lies.”
+
+“Birds, sir, grouse, woodcock, partridge, canvas-backs, and quails;
+meats, venison, and oysters, master-did up in any shape what the
+gentlemen wish. Wines, &c., if they want,” replied the servant, without
+any of the negro dialect, at the same time making a low bow to Master
+George.
+
+“Name it! name your dishes, gentlemen! Don't be backward. I suppose
+his birds are as usual, without age to flavor them. It's perfectly
+heathenish to eat birds as they are served here: we never get a bird
+here that is sufficiently changed to suit a gentleman o' taste; their
+beef's tough, and such steak as they make is only fit for shoemakers and
+blacksmiths. I never come into the place but I think of my journey in
+France, where they know the style and taste of a gentleman, and things
+are served to suit your choice.” Thus our little friend continued
+his connoisseur remarks, to give the Captain a particular idea of
+his proficiency in the requisite qualities, age, and time of keeping
+necessary to make the adjuncts of a supper fit for a gentleman. “D--me!
+we don't know when edibles are choice, and the Yankees are perfect
+brutes in these things, and have no more taste than a cow. Our folks
+ought to all go to France for a year or two, to learn the style of
+cooking. It's perfect murder to eat a bird the very day after it's
+killed; yes, sir! no man that considers his stomach will do it,” said
+George.
+
+The servant waited impatiently-the Captain rubbed his eyes, and began
+to pour out a glass of water; and dryly said he'd no choice, which was
+responded to by the rest. It was left to Master George, and he ordered
+a bountiful supply of grouse, partridges, oyster, and champagne of
+his favourite brand-none other. There was also a billiard-room,
+reading-room, a room for more important gambling, and a bar-room,
+up-stairs. All these were well filled with very well-dressed and very
+noisy people; the latter being a very convenient place, the party sent
+to it for tipplers to fill up time.
+
+“This is but a small portion of what constitutes life in Charleston,
+Captain. We live for living's sake, and don't stand upon those blueskin
+theories of temperance and religion that Yankees do, and blame the
+Father of generations for not making the world better. I never saw
+one of them that wasn't worse than we Southerners before he'd been in
+Charleston a year, and was perfect death on niggers. Yes, sir, it's
+only the extreme goodness of the Southern people's hearts that makes the
+niggers like them so. I never saw a Northerner yet that wouldn't work
+his niggers to death in two years. D--me, sir, my servants all love
+me as if I was a prince. Have you ever been in France, sir?” said he,
+suddenly breaking off. The Captain replied in the affirmative.
+
+“Ah! then you can speak French! the most polished language known to
+refined society. I wouldn't part with my French for the world. All
+the first families in Charleston are familiar with it. It's the modern
+gentleman's curt-blanche to society here. There's no language like
+it for beauty and flexibility; but one must go to France and learn to
+acquire its grace and ease,” said he, in rapid succession, rolling
+out his words in imitation of a London sprig of the Inner Temple, and
+working his little mastiff mouth.
+
+“No, sir,” said the Captain quaintly. “I never stopped long enough in
+France to get hold of the lingo.”
+
+“God bless me, what a misfortune! and can't speak it yet, ah? Why,
+Captain, if you wanted to court a petite madmoselle, you'd be in a sad
+fix-she wouldn't understand what you were talking about and would take
+your love-pledges for gammon.”
+
+“You're mistaken there, my good fellow. Love grows on trees in France,
+and a French woman can see it before you begin to tell her about it!”
+ retorted the Captain, which brought a “Good! good! hit him again!” from
+the whole party. At this, Master George commenced reading the Captain a
+disquisition upon the best mode of acquiring the French language. Supper
+was brought-in old Tom Baker's best flourish-and the party begun to
+discuss its merits with great gusto. What the little, chivalrous fellows
+lacked in physical dimension, they made up in patriotic sentiment in
+behalf of the grand sovereignty of South Carolina, which they continued
+to pour out until a late hour, every man backing his sayings by the
+authority of the great and wonderful Calhoun.
+
+The Captain sat eating away, and seeming more disposed to enjoy the
+physical consolation of his supper than to elevate his ideas upon South
+Carolina's politics.
+
+“Now, Captain,” said Master George, in a very serious tone, after he had
+been striking his hand upon the marble table for more than an hour to
+confirm the points of his reasoning,--“what is your opinion of the great
+question at issue between the Federal Government and South Carolina?
+And what do you think of the Old Dominion? how will she stand upon the
+test-question?”
+
+The poor Captain looked confounded-took another oyster, and began to get
+his mouth in a fix, while little George worked his fingers through
+his nice curly hair, and the young bloods awaited the rejoinder with
+anxiety.
+
+“Really, sir, you have the advantage of me in your question. It is
+so much beyond my profession that I am entirely ignorant of the
+subject-therefore could not give an opinion. In truth, sir, I do
+not know the purport of the question. It has given me pleasure and
+information to listen to your conversation and the ability you displayed
+in argument, but, as a stranger, I could take no part,” replied the
+Captain very sincerely.
+
+Not content with this, Master George wished to be more direct. “It's
+the right of secession, Captain-the power to maintain the right by the
+constitution.”
+
+“Probably; but may I expose my ignorance by inquiring what is meant
+by secession? and to what it is applied so frequently?” inquired the
+Captain.
+
+“Oh! murder Captain; have you never heard of nullification times!
+Well, sir, you must be posted on the affairs of our government.” So
+he commenced an analysis of nearly an hour long, and in it gave some
+astonishing accounts of the wonderful statesmanship of Calhoun, Butler,
+and Rhett, tapering down with a perfect fire-and-thunder account of
+the military exploits of General Quattlebum and Captain Blanding. The
+Captain began to stretch and gape, for he labored under the fatigue of a
+perilous voyage, and repose was the only sovereign remedy. He felt that
+the limits of propriety were entirely overstepped, and that he would
+have reason to remember the first night spent with little George the
+secessionist.
+
+“But, Captain! my dear fellow. I see you don't understand our position
+yet. We've been insulted; yes, most rascally insulted by the Federal
+Government, and they keep it up every year. We can't get our rights. Oh!
+no, sir, there's no such thing in the knowledge of the Federal officers
+as justice for South Carolina; and you must understand, Captain, that
+she is the greatest State in the Union, and there a'n't nothing like her
+people for bravery. The political power's got North and West, the old
+constitution is being dissected to suit the abolitionists, and they're
+drawing the cordon around us faster and faster; and they're now out like
+a warrior boldly to the conquest, sounding their voices in the halls of
+Congress, appealing to human and divine power to protect their nonsense,
+and bidding defiance to our constitutional rights, Our slaves are our
+property, protected by the law of God-by that inspired and superhuman
+wisdom that founded our great and glorious constitution. Yes, sir!
+it was an institution entailed upon us by our forefathers, and a wise
+providence has provided proper laws by which we shall protect and see
+these poor miserable devils of helpless slaves, that can't take care of
+themselves, straight through.”
+
+“But how does this affect you and the Federal Government?” inquired the
+Captain.
+
+“Why, sir, most directly!” replied Master George, screwing his mouth and
+giving his head a very learned attitude. “Directly, sir!--the Federal
+Government is acquiescing in every abolition scheme that is put forward
+by that intriguing Northern compact for the establishment of new
+governments in the territories. She is granting unconstitutional
+privileges to designing politicians, whose chief aim is to uproot our
+domestic institution and destroy the allegiance of the slave to his
+master, by which the slaves would be cast upon the world unprotected,
+and we disarmed of power to protect them. Ah! sir, I tell you, of all
+fruits of the imagination that would be the most damnable, and the slave
+would be the sufferer. It would be worse for him, poor fellow; it would
+be an abuse of human power without precedent. So far as political power
+is concerned, we are nearly disarmed. The influx of population finds
+its way into the opened avenues of the North and West. And with opinions
+predisposed against our institutions, and the contaminating influence
+standing ready with open arms to embrace the great current, what can we
+expect? It's the increasing power made by foreign influx that's giving
+tone to our government. If our Southern Convention stand firm we are
+saved; but I'm fearful there's too many doubtful shadows in it that
+won't stand to the gun. That's what's always played the devil with us,”
+ said George, striking his hand upon the table. “There's no limitation to
+their interpositions, and their resolves, and their adjournments; which
+don't come up to my principles of making the issue, and standing to the
+question with our coffins on our backs. These condescensions of thought
+and feeling arise from the misconceived notions of a few, who are always
+ready to join, but never willing to march to action, and must not be
+taken as a specimen of South Carolina bravery. The Federal Government
+has become vicious and even puerile toward South Carolina; and since
+the Herculean power of the great Calhoun is gone, it treats us like a
+semi-barbarous and secluded people, mistaking our character. But we'll
+learn the Federal Government a lesson yet.”
+
+“Do not your legislators make laws for your government, or how is it
+that you express such a restive dissatisfaction? Do not the same laws
+which govern you, govern the whole of the slave States?”
+
+Little George had previously monopolized all the conversation, but at
+this juncture five or six voices broke out, each fired with a reply to
+the Captain's question; and yet the answer was of the same old stamp:
+What South Carolina had done-how she had fought and gained the Mexican
+war-how she was interested in slaves, and how she yet feared to strike
+the blow because a set of mere adventurers had got the power to vote in
+her elections, and cowards through them had got into the legislature.
+
+“Why, gentlemen, listen to me in this particular. If”--
+
+“Your oysters are getting cold, George,” interrupted a blood at his
+left, rather facetiously.
+
+“I claim the respect due a gentleman, sir! A South Carolinian will
+transgress no rules of etiquette,” said George, grasping his tumbler
+in a passionate manner and smashing it upon the marble slab, causing a
+sudden emeute in the camp. “Order! order! order!” was sounded from every
+tongue. “You mustn't be afeard, Captain,” said one of the party. “This
+is perfectly South Carolinian-just the oscillating of the champagne; it
+won't last long.”
+
+The noise was more loud than ordinary, and brought a score of people
+around to hear the trouble. George had got in high dudgeon, and it took
+several persons to hold him, while the remainder, not excepting the
+Captain, were engaged in a pacification. The scene was very extravagant
+in folly; and through the kind interposition of friends, the matter was
+settled to the honorable satisfaction of both parties-the question was
+called for-the Captain called for a legitimate, rubbed his eyes, and
+little George proceeded. “If my friend Thomas Y. Simmons, Jr., had been
+elected to the legislature he'd altered the position of things in
+South Carolina. All these corruptions would have been exposed, and
+the disparity of party would have dwindled into obscurity. Every
+true Carolinian voted for him to the hilt, but how was he defeated?
+Gentlemen, can you answer? it will be a favor highly gratifying to me to
+hear your opinions!” A voice answered, “Because he wasn't big enough!”
+ “No, sir,” said George, “it was because there was intrigue in the party,
+and the Yankee influence went to put him down. The world'll hear from
+him yet. He's my particular friend, and will stand in the halls of
+Congress as great a statesman as ever lisped a political sentiment.”
+
+George's account of his particular friend, Thomas Y. S--, Jr., was so
+extravagant, and not having heard of him before, the Captain's curiosity
+was aroused to know who he was and where he resided. We will not tax the
+reader with George's wonderful memoir of his friend, but merely inform
+him that “little Tommy Simmons,” as he is usually styled in Charleston,
+is an exact pattern of Master George, with the exception of his mouth,
+which is straight and regular; and if we may be allowed to condescend
+to the extremes, we should say that the cordwainer had done more for
+his heels. Otherwise, no daguerreotype could give a counterpart more
+correct. Tommy is a very small member of the Charleston bar, who, though
+he can seldom be seen when the court is crowded, makes a great deal of
+noise without displaying power of elucidation or legal abilities, yet
+always acquitting himself cleverly. Tommy was little George in two
+particulars-he had studied law, and was a great secessionist; and if
+George had never practised, it was only from inclination, which he
+asserted arose from a humane feeling which he never could overcome-that
+he never wished to oppress anybody. But the greatest contrast that
+the reader can picture to himself between mental and physical objects
+existed between Tommy's aspirations and the physical man. His mind was
+big enough, and so was his self-confidence, to have led the Assyrian
+and Chaldean army against the Hebrews. To this end, and to further
+the formula of his statesmanship, no sooner was he twenty-one, and
+the corner just turned, than he sounded his war-trumpet-secession or
+death!--mounted the rostrum and “stump'd it,” to sound the goodness and
+greatness of South Carolina, and total annihilation to all unbelievers
+in nullification. It was like Jonah and the whale, except the
+swallowing, which spunky Tommy promised should be his office, if the
+Federal Government didn't toe the mark. Yes, Tommy was a candidate
+for the legislature, and for the Southern Congress, (which latter was
+exclusively chivalrous;) and the reader must not be surprised when we
+tell him that he lacked but a few votes of being elected to the former.
+Such was the voice of the Charleston district.
+
+Supper had been discussed down to the fragments, and all expressed their
+satisfaction of the quantity and declined any more; but George called on
+another bottle of champagne, and insisted that the party should take
+a parting glass. The servant had begun to extinguish the lights-a
+sure sign that the success of the bar was ended for the night. George
+reprimanded the negro-the sparkling beverage was brought, glasses filled
+up, touched, and drunk with the standing toast of South Carolina.
+A motion to adjourn was made and seconded, and the party, feeling
+satisfied with their evening's recreation, moved off accordingly.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII. A FEW POINTS OF THE LAW.
+
+
+
+IN Charleston, such an adjournment at a bar-room or an eating-house,
+when parties are enjoying what is termed a “pleasant occasion,” does not
+mean an adjournment to the domestic fireside; nor are the distinctions
+between married and single men regarded, though domestic attachments
+may be considered as governing the thoughts and feelings. The practical
+definition of such an adjournment means to some place where beauty
+secludes itself to waste in shame.
+
+The party descended into the lower bar-room, which, though rather
+thinned, presented a picture of characters stimulated to the tottering
+point. A motion had been made and strongly seconded to visit the
+voluptuous house of a certain lady, which it is considered a stranger
+has not seen Charleston until he has visited. The Captain remonstrated
+against this, assuring the party that he must go to the ship and needed
+rest. Again and again they insisted, setting forth the charms and beauty
+of the denizens, but he as often declined in the most positive manner.
+Unable to move him in his resolution, one by one began to give him a
+hearty shake of the hand and bid him good-night, leaving little Master
+George to the exclusive honor of seeing him home.
+
+Standing in the centre of the room, surrounded by five or six persons
+well-dressed but very weak in the knees, was a portly-looking gentleman;
+with very florid countenance, keen dark eyes, and aquiline nose which
+he frequently fingered. There was an air of respectability about him,
+though his countenance was not marked with any particularly prominent
+feature to distinguish him from the ordinary class of respectable men.
+He spoke well, yet without taste or discrimination in his language, was
+rather bald and gray, with small head and low perceptive powers; and
+judging from the particular tone of his voice and the cant terms he
+used, we should think he had figured among the Kentucky horse-traders,
+or made stump speeches in Arkansas. His dress was inclined to the gaudy.
+He wore a flashy brown-colored frock-coat with the collar laid very far
+back, a foppish white vest exposing his shirt-bosom nearly down to
+the waistbands of his pants, which were of gray stripes. But the more
+fanciful portions of his dress were a large and costly fob-chain, which
+hung very low and supported an immense seal containing a glistening
+stone, which he seemed very fond of dangling with his left hand.
+Attached to this was a very prominently displayed black ribbon,
+answering the purpose of a guard-chain, and laid with great contrasting
+care over the bosom of his shirt. This, with a neckerchief of more
+flashy colors than Joseph's coat, and a late style Parisian hat, with
+the rim very exquisitely turned upon the sides, make up our man.
+
+He was discussing politics, with a great many sensible sayings, though
+nothing like close reasoning; and strange as it may seem, he was
+strongly opposed to the rabid views of several staggering secessionists,
+who surrounded him, and advocated the views set forth in convention by
+Mr. Butler. We remarked this more particularly, for it was about the
+only instance we witnessed of a public man being independent enough to
+denounce the fanaticism of secession. A more amusing scene than that
+presented by the attitudes-the questions in regard to South Carolina
+licking the Federal Government-the strange pomp-ribald gasconade, and
+high-sounding chivalry of the worthies, cannot be imagined. They were
+in a perfect ecstasy with themselves and South Carolina, and swore, let
+whatever come, they were ready to meet it.
+
+Little Master George seemed very anxious that the Captain should become
+acquainted with him, and commenced giving him a monstrous account of his
+distinguished abilities. “And that's not all!” said George; “he's not
+only one of the greatest characters in Charleston, or perhaps the State,
+but he's a right good fellow.”
+
+We will interrupt, by informing the reader that he was one of the good
+fellows-a numerous family in Charleston-who never use fine instruments
+when they select their company; and pay a large amount of worthy tribute
+to the liquor-dealers. There is no discriminating latitude attached
+to the good-fellow family, for its members may be found with alike
+gratifying inclinations, from the highest aristocracy to the negro
+population.
+
+“That, sir, is Col. S--e; belongs to one of the first families, sir. He
+can beat old Pettigru all hollow; his eloquence is so thrilling that
+he always reminds me of Pericles. He can beat little Thomas Y.
+Simmons, Jr., all to pieces-make the best stump speech-address a public
+assemblage, and rivet all their minds-can make a jury cry quicker than
+any other man-can clear the worst criminal that ever committed crime-and
+he's good-hearted too-can draw the most astonishing comparisons to
+confound the minds of stupid jurors, and make them believe the d--dest
+nonsense that ever man invented. Yes, sir-when he makes a speech,
+everybody goes to hear him, for he says what he pleases, and old Judge
+Withers, whose will is as arbitrary as Julius Caesar's, and has got the
+obstinacy of Tom Boyce's mule, dar'n't attempt to control the tenor of
+his plea. And he can tell the best invented story of any man in town.
+He cleared the villanous Doctor Hines once upon the color of his
+pantaloons.”
+
+George waited impatiently for the end of the political controversy,
+determined to introduce his friend to the colonel. He soon had an
+opportunity, for the colonel, finding himself beset by a set of
+unreasonable secessionists, made a sweeping declaration. “Gentlemen,”
+ said he, “let me tell you a modest fact: seven-eighths of the secession
+fire-eaters don't know what the proper meaning of government is: I
+make the charge against my own people-but it is true.” “Traitor!
+traitor!--traitor to South Carolina,” was sounded at the top of a dozen
+voices.
+
+“Then, if I am such in your opinions, I'm gratified to know that my
+feelings are my own. Good-night!”
+
+Thus saying, he withdrew from the party, and making his way for the
+door, was saluted by George, who introduced him to his friend, the
+Captain. The colonel was a very sociable, communicative man; and taking
+the Captain's arm, as they walked along, entered into an interesting
+conversation about his voyage and first visit to the city, at the same
+time displaying his good sense in not trying to force the great things
+of South Carolina into his mind.
+
+We, a few weeks afterward, had the good fortune to hear the legal
+abilities of this gentleman displayed in a plea at the bar. There were
+many good points in it, which, if not legally pointed, were said well;
+yet we should class him as belonging to the loud school.
+
+The Captain, thinking it a good opportunity to make some inquiries about
+his steward, as they proceeded, commenced in the following manner:
+
+“Your laws are very stringent in South Carolina, I believe, sir!”
+
+“Well, no sir,” said the colonel, “if we except those which govern the
+niggers; they of necessity must be so; we have had so many emeutes with
+them, that no law can be made too strict in its bearings. We have so
+many bad niggers poured in upon us, that the whole class is becoming
+corrupted.”
+
+“Your laws, of course, make a distinction between good and bad niggers,
+and free negroes?” interposed the Captain.
+
+“We make no distinction between the colors--some are as white as you
+are; but the grades are so complex that it would be impossible to make a
+sliding-scale law for any fixed complexions. The law which governs
+them is distinctive and comprehensive-made in order to shield the white
+population from their ignorance of law and evidence. We never could
+govern them in their respective spheres, unless the laws were made
+stringent in their effect. As for the free niggers, they're the greatest
+nuisance we have; it is our policy to get rid of them, and to that end
+we tax them severely. The riddance of this class of niggers would be an
+essential benefit to our slaves, as upon account of their influence our
+negro-laws are made more stringent. And the worst of it is that they
+increase faster. But we make it a principal point to get all the free
+men we can married to slaves, and the free women run off. You, that are
+accustomed to the free institutions of your country, may think some of
+these things singular at first; but you would soon become accustomed
+to them, and would really admire them when you saw how beautifully they
+worked.”
+
+“Is there no discretionary power left?” inquired the Captain. “It
+must be oppressive, if carried out; Good men-whether they be white or
+black-are entitled to the advantages due them; but where laws such as
+you describe are carried out, a good man's evidence being black, the
+intention could not be made white. Now, according to my idea of the
+law of nature, a man's merits are in his moral integrity and behaviour;
+therefore I should establish the rule that a good black man was better
+than a bad white man, and was as much entitled to the respect and
+government of law.”
+
+“Hi!--oh! Captain; it won't do to talk so in South Carolina. Just let a
+nigger imagine himself as good as a white man, and all the seven codes
+in Christendom wouldn't keep 'em under. Ah! you've got to learn a thing
+or two about niggers yet,” interrupted Master George, before the Colonel
+had time to speak.
+
+“I only speak from my observation of human nature; but I may become
+better acquainted with your laws, if I remain among you,” said the
+Captain.
+
+“As I have said before sir,” replied the Colonel, “our nigger-laws are
+such as to require a strict enforcement. If we allowed the prerogative
+of a discretionary power, it would open the way to an endless system of
+favoritism, just at the mercy and feelings of those exercising it. As it
+is now, the white or black nigger, male or female, gets the same law and
+the same penalty. We make no distinction even at the paddle-gallows. The
+paddle-gallows is a frame with two uprights, and a wrench screw at
+the top. The negro's hands are secured in iron wristlets-similar to
+handcuffs; a rope is then attached to an eye in these, and passing over
+the wrench, which being turned, the negro is raised in an agonizing
+position until the tips of his toes scarcely touch the floor. Thus
+suspended, with the skin stretched to its utmost tension, it not
+unfrequently parts at the first blow of the paddle. Sometimes the feet
+are secured, when the effect of this modern science of demonstrating the
+tension of the human body for punishment becomes more painful under the
+paddle. South Carolinians deny this mode of punishment generally, and
+never allow strangers to witness it. It is not, as some writers have
+stated, practised in Georgia, where, we are happy to say, that so far as
+punishment is conducted in a legal manner, at the jails and prisons,
+it is administered in a humane manner; and instead of turning modern
+barbarity into a science, as is, done in South Carolina, a strict
+regard for the criminal is observed. I will relate some singular facts
+connected with the strictness with which we South Carolinians carry
+out our laws. And now that we are on the spot connected with it, its
+associations are more forcibly impressed on my mind. It brings with it
+many painful remembrances, and, were we differently situated, I should
+wish the cause to be removed. But it cannot be, and we must carry out
+the law without making allowances, for in these little leniencies all
+those evils which threaten the destruction of our peculiar institution
+creep in. In fact, Captain, they are points of law upon which all our
+domestic quietude stands; and as such, we are bound to strengthen our
+means of enforcing them to the strictest letter. Our laws are founded
+upon the ancient wisdom of our forefathers, and South Carolina has never
+traduced herself or injured her legal purity. We have reduced our system
+almost to a practical science, so complete in its bearings and points
+of government as to be worthy the highest and noblest purposes of our
+country. And at the same time, such is the spirit and magnanimity of our
+people, that in framing laws to guard against the dangerous influences
+of that wing of our country that spreads its ambitious fallacies--its
+tempting attractions-shallow criticisms upon minute and isolated
+cases-redundant theories without measure or observation, and making
+a standard for the government of slaves upon foolish and capricious
+prejudices, we have been careful to preserve a conservative moderation
+toward the slave. But, to my remarks.”
+
+The party had now arrived opposite to what was formerly known as Jones's
+Hotel, where the Colonel made a halt to relate the singular case that
+had pained his feelings, though he held very tenaciously to the law as
+it was, because he believed strongly in the wisdom of the South Carolina
+judiciary.
+
+“Our first and great object is to prevent the interchange of sentiment
+between our domestic niggers, whether bond or free, and niggers who
+reside abroad or have left our State; To do this, it became imperative
+to establish a law prohibiting free negroes from coming into the State,
+and those in the State from going out, under penalty of imprisonment and
+fine, if they returned. The penalty amounted to sale upon a peon form;
+and subjected the offender to the slave system in a manner that he
+seldom retrieved himself. You will observe, Captain, the penalty is not
+desired by our people, the object being to prevent them from returning,
+and as such it must be taken in the spirit of its origin. Another very
+wise provision was made by our legislators, and which has prevented a
+great deal of suffering on the part of the slave. A few years ago, our
+wise legislature made a law to revert the power of emancipation from the
+board of magistrates where it had been very much abused, to the House
+itself. And such is the law at the present day, that no master can give
+his slaves their freedom, except by special act of the legislature, and
+that with such a multiplicity of provisions and conditions that few even
+attempt it. But I'm about to refer to cases in which some modification
+might be said to have been necessary, because in them are embodied the
+worst germs for abolition speculation.
+
+“That, Captain, is Jones's Hotel,” said the Colonel, pointing to an
+odd-looking house of antique and mixed architecture, with a large convex
+window above the hall-entrance, in the second story. This house is
+situated in Broad street, next to the aristocratic St. Michael's Church,
+one of the most public places in the city. “In years past, that house
+was kept by Jones, a free nigger. Jones was almost white, a fine
+portly-looking man, active, enterprising, intelligent, honest to the
+letter, and whose integrity and responsibility was never doubted. He
+lived in every way like a white man, and, I think, with few exceptions,
+never kept company with even bright folks. His house was unquestionably
+the best in the city, and had a widespread reputation. Few persons of
+note ever visited Charleston without putting up at Jones's, where they
+found, not only the comforts of a private house, but a table spread with
+every luxury that the county afforded. The Governor always put up at
+Jones's; and when you were travelling abroad, strangers would speak
+of the sumptuous fare at Jones's in Charleston, and the elegance and
+correctness of his house. But if his house and fare were the boast of
+Carolinians, and the remark of strangers, his civility and courteous
+attention could not be outdone. Jones continued in the popularity of his
+house for many years, reared a beautiful, intelligent, and interesting
+family; at the same time accumulated about forty thousand dollars. The
+most interesting part of his family was three beautiful daughters, the
+eldest of whom was married to a person now in New York. She was fairer
+than seven-eighths of those ladies who term themselves aristocracy in
+Charleston, and promenade King street in the afternoon.
+
+“She removed to New York with her husband, who now resides in that city,
+engaged in lucrative and respectable business. A short time after, her
+second sister-not dreaming that the law would be so stringent as to
+class her with the lowest nigger, or even lay its painful bearings
+at her door; for the family were very high-minded, and would have
+considered themselves grossly insulted to have the opprobrious name of
+nigger applied to them-paid her a visit. The public became acquainted
+with the fact, and to his surprise, Jones was informed by authority
+that upon no condition could she be allowed to return-that the law was
+imperative, and no consideration could be given to the circumstances,
+for such would be virtually destroying its validity, and furnishing a
+precedent that would be followed by innumerable cases. In spite of all
+the remonstrances which Jones could set forth, and the influence of
+several friends of high standing, he was compelled to relinquish all
+hope of his daughter's being allowed to return to the family. The
+reasoning set forth had every plausibility; but such is our respect for
+the law, that we were compelled to forego our hospitality, and maintain
+it, even though the case was painful to our feelings. Thus, you see, we
+maintain the point and spirit of the law above every thing else.
+
+“But the end is not here! A few years after this, Jones received
+a letter, that his daughter was very sick and not expected to
+live-accompanied with a desire to have the last soothing comfort of
+seeing her parents. Jones being an affectionate man, and dotingly fond
+of his children, without regarding the former admonition, immediately
+prepared himself, and left in disguise for New York. Mature
+consideration would have convinced him of the error of one so well known
+as himself trying to elude recognition.
+
+“His son-in-law, Lee, a noble fellow, kept the house, and when Jones was
+inquired for, it was reported that he was confined to his room. It would
+have been well if Jones had kept himself secluded in New York; but he
+was recognised by a Charlestonian, and, as such reports have uncommon
+wings, the news of it soon reached the authorities; when a mandate was
+issued accordingly, and Jones subjected to the fate of his daughter.
+There are many painful circumstances connected with the affair, which,
+if well told, would make quite a romance,” said the Colonel, all of
+which the Captain listened to with profound attention. “His family all
+moved to New York, and his affairs were put into the hands of attorneys
+here, for settlement, by his son-in-law, who continued the business for
+some years.”
+
+“Of course he got his property restored to him?” interrupted the
+Captain.
+
+“Most certainly, Captain! The spirit of justice is coequal with that of
+honorable law, in South Carolina,” said George, anxious to relieve the
+Colonel of the answer.
+
+“It is somewhat difficult to settle a man's business by legal process
+when the principal is not present. The law's delay and lawyers' spoils
+make time hallowed and costly,” said the Captain.
+
+“You're right there, Captain,” said the Colonel; “and I doubt-to speak
+honestly-whether Jones ever got much of his property. There's a good
+many stories told, and a great deal of mystery about it that's got to be
+explained to my mind. But you're a stranger, Captain, and it would
+not be interesting to the feelings of a Scotchman. I may give you the
+details more minutely at some future day.”
+
+“Why, Colonel!” said George, “you should be considerate in your
+statements. Remember the immense difficulty that has attended Jones's
+affairs-they're not all settled yet.”
+
+“True, George; and I'm afraid they never will be;--but there are
+some very singular appearances connected with it. I mean no personal
+disrespect toward those cousins of yours who have figured in the case.
+'Tis bad to call names, but there is a mystery about a certain member of
+our profession getting rich, when poor Jones declares he's got nothing,
+and Lee has had to give up the house,--I don't say what for.” * * *
+
+“Yes, strange things must be kept strangely secret in some parts of the
+world, and only whispered when there's no wind,” said the Captain.
+
+“But that's the only case, Captain,” said George; “and the Colonel
+was indiscreet in recounting it; for from that you may conceive wrong
+impressions of the best institutions and laws in the world. Jones was an
+old fool, led away by his nigger-like affections for them gals of his.
+He never knew when he was well off, and always wanted to be with white
+folk when he was here. 'Twould been a great deal better if he'd let
+them youngest gals gone with Pingree and Allston. They'd have made the
+tip-top mistresses--been kept like ladies, and not been bothered,
+and brought all this trouble upon their heads through these infernal
+abolitionists. I really believe the old fool thought some white man
+would marry them at one time.”
+
+“What harm would there've been in that, providing they're as white as
+anybody, and got plenty of money, and were handsome? There must be a
+singular sensibility, that I don't understand, exerting itself in your
+society,” said the Captain laconically.
+
+“Harm! You'd find out the harm. Just live in South Carolina a year or
+two. 'Tisn't the fair complexion-we don't dispute that-but it's the
+blood.”
+
+“Oh! then the legal objection,” said the Captain, “is what is so
+revolting to society, eh! It may be sown broadcast in licentiousness,
+then, and custom sustains an immoral element that is devouring the
+essential bond of society.”
+
+“Excuse me, Captain,” interrupted the Colonel. “George, you are always
+taking me upon suppositions. I only related it to the Captain in order
+to show the power and integrity of our law, and how South Carolinians
+frequently sacrifice their own interests to maintain it intact. Nothing
+could be more fatal to its vitality than to make provisions which would
+entail legal preferences. The law in regard to free niggers leaving
+the State should be looked upon in the light of protection rather than
+alienation, for it is made to protect property and society. Yet where
+a case is attended with such circumstances as that of Jones's, some
+disposition to accommodate might have been evinced without endangering
+the State's sovereignty. And I must also differ with you, George, so far
+as the girls maintained their self-respect. It was commendable in them
+to get husbands whom they could live with in the bonds of matrimony.
+My word for it, George, though I am a Southerner, and may give rein to
+improprieties at times, nothing can be more pernicious to our society
+than this destructive system of our first people in keeping mistresses.
+It's a source of misery at best, depending upon expediency instead of
+obligation, and results in bringing forth children and heirs with an
+entailed burden upon their lives, to be disowned, cast off from paternal
+rights, and left to the tender mercies of the law. We see the curse, yet
+countenance it-and while it devours domestic affections and has cankered
+the core of social obligations, we look upon it as a flowery garden as
+we pass by the wayside.. There may be but a shadow between the rightful
+heir and the doubtful son-the former may enjoy the bounty of his
+inheritance, but the latter is doomed to know not his sire nor his
+kinsman, but to suffer the doubts and fears and the dark gloom which
+broods over a bondman's life.”
+
+“By-je-w-hu! Colonel, what in scissors are you preaching about. You must
+a' got a pull too much at Bakers's. You're giving vent to real abolition
+sentiments. Exercise your knowledge of the provision that is made for
+such children. The Captain will certainly draw incorrect notions about
+us,” said George, with anxiety pictured on his countenance. He knew the
+Colonel's free, open, and frank manner of expressing himself, and feared
+lest the famous name of the chivalry should suffer from his unconscious
+disclosures.
+
+“Provisions! George, you know my feelings concerning that vice which is
+so universally practised in our community. If you know of any provision,
+it's more than I do. Perhaps you are older and have had more experience.
+'Tis the want of such a provision that is just destroying our
+institution of slavery!”
+
+At this juncture the Captain interrupted them, and begging that the
+Colonel would finish the story about Jones, said he had a few questions
+to ask them after it was through.
+
+“Well,” said the Colonel, “Jones died, I believe; but his family are as
+industrious as ever, and have made money enough to live comfortable; but
+the scamps have turned out perfect helpmates of the abolitionists, and
+make their intelligence figure at the bottom of many an escape. But
+Lee's case is as hard as Jones's. His son went to New York to see his
+grandfather, and was debarred by the same statute of limitations. Lee,
+however, was a very capable fellow, and after trying for two years, and
+finding it would be impossible to return to his father, very shrewdly
+set about some kind of business, and is now largely engaged in the
+preserve and pickle business. Lee's celebrated pickle and preserve
+establishment, New York. The father is now in this city, making a living
+for his family at something or other. He has made several efforts to
+sell out his little property, but there's some trouble about the
+title; and if he leaves it to go and see his son, he knows what the
+consequences will be; and to leave it for settlement would be to abandon
+it, to the same fate that swallowed up Jones's. Thus the son cannot come
+to visit his father, nor the father go to visit the son. This, in my
+opinion, is carrying a prohibition to an extreme point; and although
+I believe the law should be maintained, I cannot believe that any good
+arises from it upon such people as the Jones's and Lee's, from the very
+fact that they never associated with niggers. Hence, where there is
+no grounds for fear there can be no cause for action,” continued the
+Colonel.
+
+“Just what I wanted to know,” said the Captain. “As I informed you, I am
+driven into your port in distress. Charleston, as you are aware, is in
+an advantageous latitude for vessels to refit that have met with those
+disasters which, are frequent in the gulf and among the Bahamas. Thus I
+expected to find good facilities here, without any unkind feeling on the
+part of the people”--
+
+“Oh! bless me, Captain, you will find us the most hospitable people in
+the world,” said the Colonel.
+
+“But your pilot told me I would have trouble with my steward, and that
+the law would make no distinction between his being cast upon your
+shores in distress and subject to your sympathy, and his coming in
+voluntarily.”
+
+“What!” said little George. “Is he a nigger, Captain? Old Grimshaw's
+just as sure to nab him as you're a white man. He'll buy and sell a
+saint for the fees, and gives such an extended construction to the terms
+of the act that you need expect no special favor at his hands. The law's
+no fiction with him. I'm sorry, Captain: you may judge his conduct as
+an index of that of our people, and I know him so well that I fear the
+consequences.”
+
+“No!” said the Captain. “My steward is a Portuguese, a sort of mestino,
+and one of the best men that ever stepped foot aboard a vessel. He
+is willing, intelligent, always ready to do his duty, and is a great
+favorite with his shipmates, and saves his wages like a good man-but he
+is olive complexion, like a Spaniard. He has sailed under the British
+flag for a great many years, has been 'most all over the world, and is
+as much attached to the service as if he was a Londoner, and has got a
+register ticket. Nothing would pain my feelings more than to see him
+in a prison, for I think he has as proud a notion of honesty as any man
+I've seen, and I know he wouldn't commit a crime that would subject him
+to imprisonment for the world. The boys have been pestering the poor
+fellow, and telling him about some old fellow they heard the pilot speak
+about, called Norman Gadsden; they tell him if he catches him they'll
+sell him for a slave.”
+
+“The question is one about which you need give yourself no concern. Our
+people are not so inhuman but that they will shelter a castaway sailor,
+and extend those comforts which are due from all humane people. The act
+under which seamen are imprisoned is the law provided to prohibit free
+niggers from entering our port, and, in my opinion, was brought into
+life for the sake of the fees. It's no more nor less than a tax and
+restriction upon commerce, and I doubt whether it was ever the intention
+of the framers that it should be construed in this manner. However, so
+far as your steward is con-cerned, the question of how far his color
+will make him amenable to the law will never be raised; the mere
+circumstance of his being a seaman in distress, thrown upon our
+sympathies, will be all you need among our hospitable people. I'm not
+aware of a precedent, but I will guaranty his safety from a knowledge
+of the feelings of our people. Our merchants are, with few exceptions,
+opposed to the law in this sense, but such is the power and control of
+a class of inexperienced legislators, prompted by a most trifling clique
+of office-holders, that their voice has no weight. I am opposed to this
+system of dragging people into courts of law upon every pretext. It is
+practised too much in our city for the good of its name.”
+
+Upon this the Colonel and little George accompanied the Captain to his
+ship, and, expressing their heartfelt regrets at her appearance, bid
+him good-night-George promising to call upon him in the morning, and the
+Colonel charging him to give himself no trouble about his steward, that
+he would see Mr. Grimshaw that night, and make all things straight.
+
+Thus ended the Captain's first night in Charleston, and represented a
+picture from which he might have drawn conclusions somewhat different
+from the actual result. Alas! that all the good fellowship and pleasant
+associations of a people should be disgraced by an absurdity arising
+from their fears.
+
+The Colonel might have given many other instances equally as painful as
+that connected with the transportation of Jones and his family, and the
+fetters that were placed upon poor Lee. He might have instanced that
+of Malcome Brown, a wealthy, industrious, honest, high-minded, and
+straightforward man, now living at Aiken, in South Carolina. Brown
+conducts a profitable mechanical business, is unquestionably the best
+horticulturist in the State, and produces the best fruit brought to the
+Charleston market. What has he done to be degraded in the eyes of the
+law? Why is he looked upon as a dangerous citizen and his influence
+feared? Why is he refused a hearing through those laws which bad white
+men take the advantage of? He is compelled to submit to those which
+were made to govern the worst slaves! And why is he subjected to that
+injustice which gives him no voice in his own behalf when the most
+depraved whites are his accusers? Can it be the little crimp that is in
+his hair? for he has a fairer skin than those who make laws to oppress
+him. If he inhaled the free atmosphere from abroad, can it be that
+there is contagion in it, and Malcome Brown is the dreaded medium of its
+communication? And if the statement rung in our ears be true, “that
+the free colored of the North suffer while the slave is cared for and
+comfortable,” why belie ourselves? Malcome's influence is, and always
+has been, with the whites, and manifestly good in the preservation of
+order and obedience on the part of the slaves. He pursues his avocation
+with spirit and enterprise, while he is subjected to menial and
+oppressive laws. His father visited New York, and was forbidden to
+return. He appealed again and again, set forth his claims and his
+integrity to the State and her laws, but all was of no avail. He was
+hopelessly banished, as it were, from ever seeing his son again, unless
+that son would sacrifice his property and submit to perpetual banishment
+from the State. If we reflect upon the many paternal associations that
+would gladden the hearts of father and child to meet in happy affection,
+we may realize the effect of that law which makes the separation painful
+and which denies even the death-bed scene its last cheering consolation.
+
+We have conversed with poor Brown on many occasions, found him a very
+intelligent man, full of humour, and fond of relating incidents in the
+history of his family-even proud of his good credit in Charleston. He
+frequently speaks of his father and the gratifying hope of meeting him
+at some future day, when he can give vent to his feelings in bursts of
+affection. He wants his father to return and live with him, because he
+says he knows they would be more happy together. “I suppose the law was
+made in justice, and it's right for me to submit to it,” he would say
+when conversing upon its stringency; and it also seems a sort of comfort
+to him that he is not the only sufferer.
+
+If South Carolina would awake to her own interest, she would find more
+to fear from the stringency of her own laws than from the influence of a
+few men coming from abroad.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X. THE PROSPECT DARKENING.
+
+
+
+AFTER the Colonel and little George left the Captain, as we have stated
+in the foregoing chapter, he descended into the cabin, and found Manuel
+sitting upon one of the lockers, apparently in great anxiety. He,
+however, waited for the mate to speak before he addressed the
+Captain. The mate awoke and informed the Captain that a slender,
+dark-complexioned man had been aboard a few minutes after he left,
+making particular inquiries about the steward; that he spoke like an
+official man, was dressed in black clothes, and wore spectacles.
+
+“I asked him if we'd have any trouble with Manuel, and tried to make him
+understand that he wasn't a black, and that our situation might excuse
+us from any annoyance through their peculiar laws. But the old chap
+seemed mighty stupid about every thing, and talked just as if he didn't
+know any thing about nothing. 'A nigger's a nigger in South Carolina,'
+said he dryly, and inquired for a quid of tobacco, which I handed him,
+and he took one big enough for six. Said I, 'Mister, do you call a man
+a nigger what's a Portugee and a'n't black?' 'It depends on how he was
+born,' says he. 'Well, but ye can't make a white man a nigger nohow,
+whether it's in South Carolina or Scotland,' says I. 'Well, we don't
+stand upon such things here; we can show you niggers as white as you be,
+Mr. Mate,' says he. 'But, Mister, what's to do about our steward, that
+ye make yer inquiries about him; he ha'n't did nothing,' said I. 'Well,
+Mr. Mate; it's contrary to law to bring nigger stewards into our port.
+They're a bad set of fellows generally, and we claim the right to lock
+'em up to insure their good behavior and keep their bad influence away
+from our slaves. 'Tis not my office. I observed your arrival and wrecked
+condition, and merely came to take a look,' said he. 'Well now, Mister,
+our steward thinks as much of himself as anybody and wouldn't mix with
+your niggers on any account. But Mister! won't it make a difference
+because we're cast upon your shore in distress,' says I. 'Not a whit!
+it's contrary to law, and the law's got nothing to do with wind and
+weather. We love the sovereignty of our law too well to make any
+discrimination. We're a hospitable people, and always give folks plenty
+to eat, but we never allow any favors in the law. I'll call and see you
+in the morning,' said he, and away he went.”
+
+This individual was Mr. Grimshaw, the principal mover of the powers that
+be, notwithstanding he asserted that it was not his office, and that he
+just walked round to take a look.
+
+During his visit on board, Manuel was absent on board a Boston bark,
+where he met a white steward, who gave him a sad picture of the
+Charleston jail and the cruel treatment that was inflicted upon
+prisoners there by starvation. He told him that he was once put in for
+a trifling offence, and nearly starved to death before he got out.
+“You will be sure to go there, Manuel,” said he, “for they make no
+distinction; and if a man's a foreigner, and can't speak for himself,
+he'll stand no chance at all. I'd give 'em the slip afore I'd suffer
+such another punishment,” he continued.
+
+This so worked upon the poor fellow's mind, that it became a matter of
+little moment whether he jumped overboard or remained on the ship. He
+waited until the mate had concluded, and commenced appealing to the
+Captain in a most pitiful manner. The disgrace of being imprisoned
+seemed worse than the punishment; and he did not seem to comprehend
+the intention that he should be imprisoned for no crime in the United
+States, when he had sailed around the world and visited a majority of
+its ports, both barbarous and civilized, without molestation. He wanted
+the Captain to pay him off and let him leave by some vessel in the
+morning. The Captain endeavored to soothe his fears by assuring him
+that there was no danger of his being imprisoned; that the people of
+Charleston had too much good feeling in them to be cruel to a distressed
+sailor; that the power of the consul was a sufficient guarantee of
+protection. “You are not among Patagonians, Manuel,” said he. “There's
+no use of working your mind into a fever, you'll be as well taken
+care of here and be thought as much of as you would in London.” This
+assurance had the effect to soothe his mind, upon which he left the
+cabin more at ease, and went into the forecastle to turn in with his
+little companion Tommy. Men had been detailed for the pumps as soon as
+the flood-tide made, and the Captain retired to his berth.
+
+It seemed there was a mutual understanding between the pilots and
+officers in regard to the arrival of colored stewards; and the pilot,
+after leaving the vessel, went directly to Mr. Grimshaw's office and
+reported a nut for him to crack: this brought him to the wharf to “look
+around.”
+
+Early in the morning the crew were at their duty. The mate commenced
+giving orders to clear away the deck, and Manuel to make preparations
+for breakfast. He had scarcely commenced before two men, Messrs. Dunn
+and Dusenberry walked up and down the wharf for several minutes, then
+they would stand together and gaze as if to watch the approach of some
+vessel in the offing. At length, Dusenberry, seeing Manuel come to the
+gangway with a bucket in his hand, walked to her side, and, stepping on
+board, seized him by the collar, and drawing a paper from his pocket,
+said, “You're my prisoner! you must go to jail-come, be quick, sir; you
+must not stop to get your things; you must send for them after you're
+committed.”
+
+The mate and several of the crew being near, at once gathered around
+him. At the same time Dunn, who was standing at the end of the wharf
+awaiting the result, thinking Dusenberry was opposed, came to his
+assistance. The officers and crew knew the respect due to the laws too
+well to oppose any obstacles to the constables in executing their duty.
+The mate, in a very polite manner, asked as a favor that they would
+leave the man a few minutes until the Captain came on deck. They yielded
+to his solicitation after a great deal of grumbling. The arrest made a
+deep feeling among the seamen, but none felt it more than little Tommy;
+he heard the noise upon deck, and came running with tears in his eyes,
+and cried, “Oh! Manuel, why Manuel, what are they going to take you
+away for? Won't I see you again, Manuel?” The little fellow's simplicity
+touched the feelings of all present. But the lame officer, Dunn, stood
+with a pair of handcuffs in his hand, as unmoved as a stoic, while
+Dusenberry expressed his impatience, and began to push the boy away, and
+motion to march him off.
+
+“Hold a bit!” said the mate. “The Captain will be on deck in a few
+minutes; he wants a word or two with you.”
+
+“We can't stop unless we're compensated for our time. 'Tis no use to
+delay-'twon't do any good; he's a nigger to all intents and purposes. I
+know by the curl in his hair-they can't escape me, I've had too much to
+do with them!” said Dunn. “Yes, to be sure, I can tell a nigger by his
+ear, if his skin's as white as chalk!” said Dusenberry. “It's all gammon
+this bringing bright outlandish men here, and trying to pass them off
+for white folks. 'Twon't stick-you must come up and be registered, and
+you'll have a good time at the jail, my boy; there's plenty of bright
+gals in there, and you can have a wife, if you know how to do the
+courting.”
+
+The Captain now came upon deck; and began to intercede, begging that
+they would not take Manuel away until he had seen the British Consul. “I
+know I can make every thing straight. There is no occasion to imprison
+my steward-he's neither a nigger nor a bad man; and I'll pledge you my
+honor that he shall not leave the ship, or even go upon the wharf, if
+you will only allow me to see the Consul before you take any further
+action,” he continued.
+
+“That is beyond our power, sir; you must see the sheriff-you'll find him
+in his office bright and early. But you might as well put your appeal in
+your pocket, or send it to Queen Victoria, for all Consul Mathew can do
+for you. He's been kicking up a fuss for two years; but he might as well
+whistle agin a brickbat as to talk his nonsense about English niggers to
+South Carolina. He'll get tarred and feathered yet, if he a'n't mighty
+shy about his movements. Sorry, Captain, we can't accommodate you, but
+we're only actin' for the sheriff, and his orders are imperative to
+bring him right up. We must lock the fellow up. We don't make the law,
+nor we ha'n't the power to control it.” Thus saying, Dunn took a little
+key from his pocket and begun to turn it in the handcuffs.
+
+“What!” said the Captain-“don't attempt to put them things on my man,
+upon your peril. Is that the way you treat a poor shipwrecked sailor
+in South Carolina, the State of boasted hospitality? No, sir! I will
+sacrifice my life before my man shall submit to such a thing,” said the
+Captain, with his Scotch energy aroused.
+
+“Captain!” said Dunn, “we'd not be takin' the advantage of ye because
+ye're a stranger, but 'tis the law; and if we accommodates ye, sure
+it'll be at our own risk. But anyhow, Captain, ye'd be keepin' meself
+an' this gentleman a long time waiting, 'twouldn't be amiss to be giving
+us the usual perquisite. You won't miss it, and we've a great deal to do
+for small fees, that niver compinsate for the accommodation we be's to
+give everybody-an' the loss of time's the loss of money.”
+
+“Give you a perquisite!--no, indeed; I never pay for such favors. Wait a
+few moments; I will accompany you myself, if you will not take my honor
+for his good conduct on the way to prison,” continued the Captain.
+
+“Captain, sure ye needn't trouble yerself anyhow; we'll take yer honor
+that he don't run away, and if he does ye'll stand the odds at the
+sheriff's. Sure a case would niver pass Mr. Grimshaw s observation; but
+to plase ye, and considerin' the wreck, meself and Dusenberry 'll put
+him up without,” said Dunn.
+
+During the conversation, Manuel plead hard to be heard before the
+Consul, having a mistaken idea that the Consul could protect him from
+all danger; and that if he could get a hearing before him, he was sure
+to be released. The Captain shook his hand and told him to be contented
+until the Consul's office opened, when he would come to the jail and see
+him. Manuel then turned to the crew, and shaking the hands of each, took
+his little bundle in one hand, and holding little Tommy by the other,
+(who accompanied him to the head of the wharf,) was soon out of sight.
+
+But will the reader believe what was the practice of these petty
+officers? We can assure them that such instances as the one we shall
+relate are not only practised in Charleston to an unlimited extent, but
+the fact is well known to both magistrates and the public; the former
+treat it as moonshine, and the latter rail against it, but never take
+proper action.
+
+Scarcely had little Tommy left them at the head of the wharf, before
+they intimated that it would be well to consider a morning dram. To this
+end, they walked into a “Dutch corner shop,” and passing into the back
+room, gave sundry insinuations that could not be misunderstood. “Well!
+come, who pays the shot?” said Dunn, stepping up to the counter, and
+crooking his finger upon his nose at a dumpling-faced Dutchman, who
+stood behind the counter, waiting for his man to name it. The Dutchman
+was very short and very thick, leaving the impression that he had been
+very much depressed in his own country when young. He rubbed his
+hands and flirted his fingers in motion of anxiety, “Every ting vat de
+shentleman vant him--dare notin like to my zin and brondty vat him got
+mit ze zity,” said Dutchy.
+
+“Gentlemen, I should be glad to have you drink with me, if it be proper
+to ask,” said Manuel.
+
+“Oh! yes--certainly, yes!--just what we come for, something to cut
+away the cobwebs--'twouldn't do to go out in the morning fog without a
+lining,” said Dunn.
+
+“Name it! name it! shentlemen,” exclaimed the Dutchman, as he rapped his
+fingers upon the counter, and seemed impatient to draw forth his filthy
+stuff. They named their drinks, each with a different name. Manuel
+not being a Charleston graduate in the profession of mixing drinks and
+attaching slang names to them, Mr. Dusenberry undertook to instruct
+him in a choice. The Dutchman was an adept at mixing, and the “morning
+pulls” were soon set out to the extreme satisfaction of Dunn and
+Dusenberry. “All right! tip her down, my old fellow; none o' yer
+screwed faces over such liquor as that. We drink on the legitimate, in
+Charleston, and can put it down until we see stars,” said Dusenberry,
+addressing himself to Manuel, who was making a wry face, while straining
+to swallow the cut-throat stuff.
+
+Dusenberry now left Manuel in charge of Dunn, saying he was going out
+to attend to some business. Manuel drew from his pocket a quarter of a
+Colombian doubloon, and throwing it upon the counter, told the Dutchman
+to give him change. The Dutchman picked it up, turned it over several
+times, and squinting at it, inquired, in a very unpretending manner,
+what its value was. He knew already, yet this was only done to try
+Manuel. At the same moment he winked to Dunn, who, stepping up, gave
+it a significant toss upon the counter. “The divil a bit more than two
+dollars; all right, Swizer,” said he.
+
+“'Tis four dollar, West Inge-I want my change,” said Manuel, shrugging
+his shoulders. “I no want no more than my own; and no man to cheat-e
+me.”
+
+“Don't be bothering with your four dollars-sure ye a'n't in the West
+Inges now; and money's plenty in Charleston, and I can't bring up so
+much-half so much. Don't be bothering with yer West Inge nonsense. If
+ye try to raise a fuss here, I'll make the Captain suffer. Ye must learn
+that it won't do for a nigger to dispute a white man in Charleston; we'd
+twitch ye up by the same law; we'd put it to our own niggers, and ye'd
+git trised up, and about fifty paddles on yer bare butt.” The Dutchman
+put down a dollar and seventy cents, but Manuel refused to take it up;
+when this fellow, Dunn, pretending to be the friend of Manuel, held out
+his hand, and telling the bar-keeper to put another dollar, which he
+did, he passed it hurriedly into Manuel's hand, and making a pass, told
+him to put it into his pocket.
+
+It was now about good business time for the Dutchman, and his customers
+were coming in with their bottles and pots in great numbers. The place
+was a little filthy hole, very black and dirty, about twelve feet long,
+and seven feet wide, with a high board counter almost in the centre. The
+only stock-in-trade that decorated it, was a few barrels of lager beer;
+several kegs, with names to set forth the different qualities of liquors
+painted upon them; a bushel basket about half full of onions, and a few
+salt fish in a keg that stood by the door. Around the room were
+several benches similar to those in guard-houses. Upon two of them were
+stretched two ragged and filthy-looking negroes, who looked as if they
+had been spending the night in debauchery. Dunn, as if to show his
+authority, limped toward them, and commenced fledging their backs
+with his hickory stick in a most unmerciful manner, until one poor old
+fellow, with a lame hand, cried out for mercy at the top of his voice.
+
+“It's a bad business keeping these niggers here all night, Swizer-you
+know I've done the clean thing with you several times,” said Dunn,
+pointing his finger at the Dutchman; who winked, and coming from behind
+the counter, slipped something into his hand, and stepping to the door,
+assumed some threatning language against the negroes, should they ever
+came back to his store. A large portion of those who came for liquor
+were negroes, who looked as if they were parting with their last cent
+for stimulant, for they were ragged and dirty, and needed bread more
+than liquor. Their condition seemed pitiful in the extreme, and yet the
+Dutch “corner-shop keeper” actually got rich from their custom, and so
+craving was he upon their patronage, that he treated them with much more
+courtesy than his white customers.
+
+These “Dutch corner-shops” are notorious places in Charleston, and
+are discountenanced by respectable citizens, because they become the
+rendezvous of “niggers,” who get into bad habits and neglect their
+masters' or mistresses' business. Yet the keepers exert such an
+influence at elections, that the officials not only fear them, but in
+order to secure their favors, leave their rascality unmolested. Well
+might a writer in the Charleston Courier of August 31, 1852, say--
+
+“We were astonished, with many others, at the sweeping charges made in
+the resolutions passed at the HUTCHINSON meeting at Hatch's Hall,
+and were ready to enlist at once to lend our voice to turn out an
+'administration' that for two years permitted 'moral sentiment to
+be abandoned,' 'truthfulness disregarded,' 'reverence for religion
+obliterated,' 'protection to religious freedom refused,' 'licentiousness
+allowed,' 'and a due administration for vice, neglected.'” These charges
+stand unrefuted, and with but one or two exceptions, we have never
+known one of those unlawful corner shops prosecuted by the present
+administration. And those single instances only where they were driven
+to notice the most flagrant abuses.
+
+It is strictly “contrary to law in Charleston,” to sell liquor to a
+negro without an order from a white man; the penalty being fine
+and imprisonment. Yet, so flagrant has become the abuse, that it
+is notorious that hush-money is paid by a certain class of Dutch
+liquor-sellers to the officers. In nearly all the streets of Charleston,
+where there is a shanty or nook large enough to hold a counter and some
+tumblers, these wretches may be found dealing out their poisonous drugs
+to a poor, half-starved class of negroes, who resort to all kinds of
+dishonest means to get money to spend at their counters. These places
+are nearly all kept by foreigners, whose merciless avarice scruples at
+nothing, however mean. They soon become possessed of considerable means,
+and through their courtesy and subserviency to the negro-for they are
+the only class of whites that will beg his pardon, if they have offended
+him-carry on a sort of active rivalry with each other for his custom. It
+is from these miserable hells that seven-tenths of the crimes arise for
+which the poor negro is dragged to the work-house and made to suffer
+under the paddle.
+
+And yet these very men, whose connivance at vice and crime is
+disregarded by the law, rise and take position in society-not only
+entering into more respectable business-but joining in that phalanx
+who are seeking the life-blood of the old Southerner, and like a silent
+moth, working upon his decay. There is a deep significance in the answer
+so frequently given in Charleston to the interrogatory, “Who lives in
+that splendid dwelling-it seems to have been the mansion of a prince,
+but is somewhat decayed?”
+
+“Oh! bless me, yes! It was once the mansion of the So-and-sos, one of
+the first families, but they're very poor now. Mr. What-you-may-call-em
+owns it now-they say he didn't get it honestly. He kept a little
+grog-shop on the Bay, or sold bacon and whisky on the Bay, and made
+awful charges against poor So-and-so, and after a long trial in Chancery
+he got his house. He's a big fellow; now, I tell you, and is going to
+fit the house up for himself!”
+
+Dunn told Manuel to be seated, that there was no occasion for hurrying;
+it would be all right if he got to the sheriffs office at nine o'clock;
+and then commenced descanting upon the fine time he would have at the
+jail. “There's a right good lot of comrades there, me boy; ye'll have
+fiddling and dancing, plenty of gals, and a jolly time; and ye a'n't a
+criminal, ye know, so it won't be any thing at all, only keep up a stiff
+under-lip. Come, let us take another drink; I feel mighty husky this
+morning!” said he.
+
+Just at this time Dusenberry re-entered, puffing and blowing as if he
+had been engaged in a foot-race. “Another bird for old Grimshaw, at
+Commercial Wharf! I know'd she had one aboard, 'cause I seed him from
+the wharf,” said he, in perfect ecstasy, pulling out a pencil and making
+a note in a little book.
+
+“Don't be a child,” said Dunn. “Come, we have just proposed another
+drink; you join of course; ye niver says no,--eh, Duse?” They stepped to
+the counter, and Dunn, again, pointing his finger upon his nose at the
+Dutchman, who stood with his hands spread upon the counter, called for
+gin and bitters, Stoughton light. Turning to Manuel, who was sitting
+upon a bench with his head reclined upon his hand, apparently in deep
+meditation, he took him by the collar in a rude manner, and dragging him
+to the counter, said, “Come, by the pipers, rouse up your spirits, and
+don't be sulking, my old Portugee; take another O-be-joyful, and it'll
+put ye all right, and ye'll dance a hornpipe like a jim-crack.”
+
+“Excuse me, sir; I think I have taken enough; do, please, either take me
+back to my vessel, or where you are going to. This is no place for me!”
+ said Manuel.
+
+“Sure, what signifies; don't be talking your botheration here; a nigger
+musn't sauce a white man. Come, there's no use backing out; you must
+take a glass of Swizer's lager beer,” said Dunn.
+
+Manuel looked around him, and then closing up very reluctantly, the
+Dutchman filled his glass with frothy beer, and the three touched
+glasses and drank. They then retired to a bench and commenced discussing
+the propriety of some point of their official privileges, while Manuel
+was left standing at the counter.
+
+“Who pay de drink vat shu get?” inquired the Dutchman, anxious to serve
+two little niggers who had just come in with bottles in their hands.
+
+“It was our friend's treat; come, my good fellow, do the clean thing
+according to Southern science. We'll put a good word in for you to the
+jailer; you won't lose nothing by it,” said Dusenberry.
+
+“My friends, I work hard for my money, and have none to spend foolishly.
+The small amount is of little consequence, but I would much sooner make
+you a present of it, than to be drugged by pretence. I've no desire to
+indulge the propensities of others. Whatever you are going to do with
+me, do it; and let me know my fate. I am sick and fatigued, and have
+need for the doctor. Take me to a prison or where you please. I have
+done no crime; I want sleep, not punishment. Next time I shipwrecked,
+I get plank and go overboard 'fore I cum to Charleston.” So saying, he
+pulled out fifty cents and threw it upon the counter, and the Dutchman
+swept it into the drawer, as if it was all right, and “just the change.”
+
+“Shut up, you black rascal, you; you musn't talk that way in South
+Carolina; we'll have you stretched on the frame and paddled for
+insolence to a white man. D--n me, if you're in such a hurry for it,
+just come along,” said Dusenberry; and reaching his hand over to Dunn,
+took the handcuffs from him and attempted to put them on Manuel's
+wrists. The poor fellow struggled and begged for more than ten minutes,
+and was wellnigh overpowering them, when Dusenberry drew a long
+dirk-knife from his bosom, and holding it in a threatening attitude
+at his breast, uttered one of those fierce yells such as are common to
+slave-hunters, whose business it is to hunt and run down runaway niggers
+with bloodhounds. “Submit, you black villain, or I'll have your heart's
+blood; bring a rope, and we'll trise him up here. Jump, be quick,
+Swizer!” said he, addressing himself to the Dutchman. The Dutchman ran
+into the front apartment; brought out a cord similar to a clothes-line;
+and commenced to undo it.
+
+“Do you give up now?” said Dusenberry, still holding the knife pointed
+at him. Manuel was in the habit of carrying a poniard when on shore in
+foreign countries, and put his hand to his breast-pocket to feel for
+it. He remembered that he had left it in his chest, and that resistance
+would be useless against a posse giving expression to such hostility to
+him. The shackles were put upon his hands with ruffianly force.
+
+“Oh! am I a man, or am I a brute? What have I done to receive such
+treatment? May God look down upon me and forgive me my transgressions;
+for in his hands are my rights, and he will give me justice,” said
+Manuel, looking his cruel torturers in the face.
+
+“A man! No, by heavens, you're a nigger; an' it's that we'd he teaching
+you! Come, none of yer sermons here, trot off! We'll give you a
+handkerchief to cover your hands, if you're so d--d delicate about
+walking through the streets,” said Dunn, throwing him an old red
+handkerchief, and marching him along through Broad street. Dusenberry
+now left him entirely in the charge of Dunn; while, as he said, he went
+to Adger's Wharf to keep his eye on another vessel that was approaching
+the dock. The tricks of this man Dunn were well known to those,
+connected with the police and sheriff's office; but, instead of being
+displaced for his many offences, he was looked upon by them as the best
+officer upon the rolls; and in fishing for mischievous niggers he was
+held as a perfect paragon. In this instance he was not contented with
+the outrages he had inflicted upon Manuel at the Dutch grog-shop, which
+he had forced him into, but he would stop in the public street to hold
+conversation with every cove he met, and keep the poor man standing for
+public gaze, like chained innocence awaiting the nod of a villain. The
+picture would have been complete, if a monster in human form were placed
+in the foreground applying the lash, according to the statute laws of
+South Carolina.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI. THE SHERIFF'S OFFICE.
+
+
+
+IT is nine o'clock, on the morning of the 24th March, 1852. Manuel was
+marched into the sheriff's office, situated in the court-house, on the
+corner of Broad and Meeting streets. A large table stood in the centre
+of the room, covered with sundry old papers and an inkstand. At one side
+was an old sofa, bearing strong evidence of its being worn out at the
+expense of the State. A few pine-wood and painted book-stands, several
+tip-staffs, old broken-backed chairs, and last, but not least, a
+wood-sawyer's buck-saw, stood here and there in beautiful disorder
+around the room; while, as if to display the immense importance of the
+office, a “cocked” hat with the judicial sword hung conspicuously above
+the old sofa. A door opened upon the left hand, leading into the clerk's
+office, where the books and archives of the office were kept. Mr.
+Kanapeaux, the incumbent, exhibited a great deal of good feeling, which
+it would have lost the sheriff none of his reputation to pattern after,
+and kept his office in very respectable order.
+
+“Come in 'ere, Manwell, or whatever yer name is,” said Dunn, as he led
+the way into the presence of Mr. Grimshaw, the lean, haggard-looking man
+we have before described. His dark, craven features, as he sat peering
+through his glasses at the morning news, gave him the appearance of a
+man of whom little was, to be expected by those who had the misfortune
+to fall into his hands.
+
+“Ah! Dunn, you are the best officer in the city; 'pon my soul, these
+fellows can't escape you! Where did you pick up that nigger?” said he,
+with a look of satisfaction.
+
+“A fat fee case, Mr. Grimshaw, 'contrary to law;' he's a Portugee
+nigger. Never had so much trouble with a nigger in my life; I didn't
+know but the fellow was going to preach a sermon. The Captain-he belongs
+to a wrecked Englishman-wanted to come the gammon game with him, and
+pass him for a white man; but sure he couldn't come that game over
+meself and Duse, anyhow,” said Dunn.
+
+Without saying a word, Manuel stood up before his accusers, upon this
+strange charge of “contrary to law.”
+
+As he looked upon his accusers, he said, “What have I done to suffer a
+murderer's fate? Am I to be sold as a slave, because of the visitation
+of God? I have done no murder! No!--nor have I stolen in your land! and
+why did these men decoy me into”--
+
+“Silence! silence! You are in the sheriff's office,” said Dunn, pointing
+his finger at his nose. “You can't come your John Bull nigger in South
+Carolina.”
+
+This brought the sheriff's clerk to the door that led into the passage.
+“Dunn, I have warned you about these things several times; the public
+are getting wind of them; they'll bring this office into disrepute yet.
+You ought to know what effect the association of officials with these
+'corner-shop keepers' is already having in the community,” said he.
+
+“How the divil do ye know what yer talking about; sure it's his honor's
+bisniss, and not yours at all, at all,” said Dunn, addressing himself to
+Mr. Kanapeaux, and then looking at Mr. Grimshaw.
+
+“Mr. Kanapeaux, you must not interfere with the officers and their
+duty; attend to your business, and get, your book ready to register this
+nigger-boy,” said Grimshaw.
+
+“Well, now, my good fellow,” continued Grimshaw, “I dislike this
+business very much; it don't pay me enough for all the bother I have
+with it. 'Tis just a little filtering of fees, which makes the duty of
+my office exceedingly annoying. But we must respect the law. We do these
+things to protect our institutions and make them as light as possible. I
+might give you a great deal of trouble; I have the power, but I make it
+a point to consider men in your case, and we'll make you so comfortable
+that you won't think of being imprisoned. You must understand that it is
+'contrary to law' to come among our niggers in this way; it gives them
+fanciful ideas. There's such an infernal imperfect state of things as
+these abolitionists are getting every thing into, behooves us to watch
+the communications which are going on between, designing people and our
+slaves. We are a hospitable people--the world knows that--and have a
+religious respect for our laws, which we enforce without respect to
+persons. We'd like to let you go about the city, but then it's 'contrary
+to law.' Make up your mind, my good fellow, that you are among humane
+people, who will seek to benefit you among men of your class. Make
+yourself happy--and look upon me as a friend, and you will never be
+deceived. I control the jail, and my prisoners are as much attached to
+me as they would be to a father.”
+
+“It must be humanity that puts these symbols of ignominy upon my hands,”
+ said Manuel; “that confines me in a dungeon lest I should breathe a word
+of liberty to ears that know it only as a fable.”
+
+Nobody had asked him to sit down, and, feeling the effect of his
+sickness and fatigue, he turned around as if to look for something
+to rest against. “You must not sit down,--take off your hat!” said
+Grimshaw.
+
+The poor fellow made an effort, but could not effect it with the fetters
+on his hands; at which, Dunn stepped up, and snatching it from his head,
+flung it upon the floor. “You should learn manners, my good fellow,”
+ said Grimshaw, “when you come into a sheriff's office. It's a place of
+importance, and people always pay respect to it when they come into it;
+a few months in Charleston would make you as polite as our niggers.”
+
+“Had you not better take the irons off the poor fellow's hands?--he
+looks as if he was tired out,” said Mr. Kanapeaux, the clerk, who again
+came to the door and looked upon Manuel with an air of pity. The words
+of sympathy touched his feelings deeply; it was a simple word in his
+favour, so different from what he had met since he left the vessel, that
+he felt a kind friend had spoken in his behalf, and he gave way to his
+feeling in a gush of tears.
+
+“Good suggestion, Mr. Kanapeaux!” said Grimshaw. “Better take 'em off,
+Mr. Dunn; I don't think he'll give you any more difficulty. He seems
+like a 'likely fellow,' and knows, if he cuts up any nigger rascality
+in Charleston, he'll be snapped up. Now, my good fellow, put on your
+best-natured countenance, and stand as straight as a ramrod. Mr.
+Kanapeaux, get your book ready to register him,” continued Grimshaw.
+
+Manuel now stood up under a slide, and his height and general features
+were noted in the following manner, in order to appease that sovereign
+dignity of South Carolina law, which has so many strange devices to show
+its importance:--“Contrary to Law.” Violation of the Act of 1821, as
+amended, &c. &c. Manuel Pereira vs. State of South Carolina, Steward on
+board British Brig Janson, Captain Thompson. Entered 24th March, 1852.
+
+Height, 5 feet 8 1/2 inches.
+
+Complexion, light olive, (bright.)
+
+Features, sharp and aquiline.
+
+[Hair and eyes, dark and straight; the former inclined to curl.]
+
+General remarks:--Age, twenty-nine; Portuguese by birth; speaks rather
+broken, but politely; is intelligent, well formed, and good looking.
+Fees to Sheriff:
+
+To arrest, $2--Registry, $2 - $4 00 To Recog. $1.31--Constable. $1 - $2.31 To
+Commitment and discharge, $1.00
+
+$7.31
+
+Jail fees to be added when discharged.
+
+After these remarks were duly entered, and Mr. Grimshaw read another
+lecture to him on the importance of South Carolina law, and the kindness
+he would receive at his hands if he made himself con-tented, he was told
+that he could go and be committed. The poor fellow had stood up until he
+was nearly exhausted; yet, it was not enough to gratify the feelings
+of that miserable miscreant, Dunn. Scarcely had he left the sheriff's
+office, or passed two squares from the court-house, before he entered
+another Dutch grog-shop, a little more respectable in appearance-but
+not in character. They entered by a side door, which led into a back
+apartment provided with a table and two wooden settees. As Dunn entered,
+he was recognised by two negro-fellows, who were playing dominoes at the
+table. They arose and ran through the front store, into the street, as
+if some evil spirit had descended among them. The Dutchman sprang
+for the dominoes, and quickly thrust them into a tin measure which he
+secreted under the counter.
+
+“Ah! Drydez!” said Dunn; “you vagabond, you; up to the old tricks again?
+Ye Dutchmen are worse than the divil! It's meself'll make ye put a five
+for that. Come, fork it over straight, and don't be muttering yer Dutch
+lingo!”
+
+“Vat zue drink mit me dis morning? Misser Dunz' te best fellow vat comez
+in my shop,” said Drydez.
+
+“Ah! stop yer botheration, and don't be comin' yer Dutch logger over
+an Irishman! put down the five dollars, and we'll take the drinks
+presently; meself and me friend here'll drink yer health,” said Dunn,
+pointing to Manuel, who shook his head as much as to decline. The
+Dutchman now opened his drawer, and rolling a bill up in his fingers,
+passed it as if unobserved into the hands of Dunn.
+
+“Now, Drydez,” said Dunn, “if ye want to do the clean thing, put a
+couple of brandy smashes-none of your d--d Dutch cut-throat brandy-the
+best old stuff. Come, me old chuck, (turning to Manuel and pulling him
+by the Whiskers,) cheer up, another good stiff'ner will put you on your
+taps again. South Carolina's a great State, and a man what can't
+be happy in Charleston, ought to be put through by daylight by the
+abolitionists.”
+
+The Dutchman soon prepared the smashes, and supplying them with straws,
+put them upon the table, and seated chairs close at hand. “Excuse me!”
+ said Manuel, “I've drunk enough already, and should like to lie down.
+I am unwell, and feel the effect of what I have already taken. I am
+too feeble. Pray tell me how far the prison is from here, and I will go
+myself.”
+
+“Go, is it?--the divil a go ye'll go from this until ye drink the smash.
+None of yer Portugee independence here. We larn niggers the politeness
+of gintlemen in Charleston, me buck!” and seizing him by the collar,
+dragged him to the table, then grasping the tumbler with the other hand,
+he held it before his face. “Do you see that? and, bedad, ye'll drink
+it, and not be foolin', or I'd put the contents in your phiz,” said he.
+
+Manuel took the glass, while the Dutchman stood chuckling over the very
+nice piece of fun, and the spice of Mr. Dunn's wit, as he called it.
+“Vat zu make him vat'e no vants too? You doz make me laugh so ven zu
+comes 'ere, I likes to kilt myself,” said Drydez.
+
+A bright mulatto-fellow was now seen in the front store, making
+quizzical signs to the Dutchman; who understanding its signification,
+lost no time in slipping into his pocket a tumbler nearly half full of
+brandy and water; and stepping behind the division door, passed it slily
+to the mulatto, who equally as slily passed it down his throat; and
+putting a piece of money into the Dutchman's hand, stepped up to the
+counter, as if to wait for his change. “All right!” said the Dutchman,
+looking around at his shelves, and then again under the counter.
+
+“No so!” said the mulatto; “I want fourpence; you done' dat befor'
+several times; I wants my money.”
+
+“Get out of my store, or I'll kick you out,” said the Dutchman, and
+catching up a big club, ran from behind the counter and commenced
+belaboring the negro over the head in a most unmerciful manner. At this,
+the mulatto retreated into the lane, and with a volley of the vilest
+epithets, dared the Dutchman to come out, and he would whip him.
+
+Dunn ran to the scene, and ordered the negro to be off, and not use such
+language to a white man, that it was “contrary to law,” and he would
+take him to the workhouse.
+
+“Why, massa, I knows what 'em respect white men what be gemmen like
+yersef, but dat Dutchman stand da'h a'n't no gentlem', he done gone
+tieffe my money seven time; an' I whip him sure-jus' lef' him come out
+here. I doesn't care for true, and God saw me, I be whip at the wukhouse
+next minute. He tief, an' lie, an 'e cheat me.” The Dutchman stood at
+the door with the big stick in his hand-the negro in the middle of the
+lane with his fists in a pugilistic attitude, daring and threatening,
+while the limping Dunn stood by the side of the Dutchman, acting as
+a mediator. Manuel, taking advantage of the opportunity, emptied his
+tumbler down a large opening in the floor.
+
+It is a notorious fact in Charleston, that although the negro, whether
+he be a black or white one, is held in abject obedience to the white man
+proper, no matter what his grade may be, yet such is the covetous and
+condescending character of these groggery keepers, that they become
+courteous to the negro and submit to an equality of sociability. The
+negro, taking advantage of this familiarity, will use the most insulting
+and abusive language to this class of Dutchmen, who, either through
+cowardice, or fear of losing their trade, never resent it. We may say,
+in the language of Dunn, when he was asked if negroes had such liberties
+with white men in Charleston, “A nigger knows a Dutch shopkeeper better
+than he knows himself-a nigger dare not speak that way to anybody else.”
+
+The Dutchman gets a double profit from the negro, and with it diffuses
+a double vice among them, for which they have to suffer the severest
+penalty. It is strictly “contrary to law” to purchase any thing from
+a negro without a ticket to sell it, from his master. But how is this
+regarded? Why, the shopkeeper foregoes the ticket, encourages the
+warehouse negro to steal, and purchases his stealings indiscriminately,
+at about one-half their value. We might enumerate fifty different modes
+practised by “good” legal voting citizens--totally regardless of the
+law--and exerting an influence upon the negro tenfold more direful
+than that which could possibly arise from the conversation of a few
+respectable men belonging to a friendly nation.
+
+Dunn, after driving the mulatto man from the door and upbraiding the
+Dutchman for his cowardice, returned to the table, and patting Manuel
+upon the back, drank the balance of his smash, saying, “Come, me good
+fellow, we must do the thing up brown, now; we've got the Dutchman
+nailed on his own hook. We must have another horn; it's just the stuff
+in our climate; the 'Old Jug's' close by, and they'll be makin' a parson
+of you when you get there. We've had a right jolly time; and ye can't
+wet your whistle when ye're fernint the gates.”
+
+“I don't ask such favors, and will drink no more,” said Manuel.
+
+“Fill her up, Drydez! fill her up! two more smashes-best brandy and
+no mistake. You must drink another, my old chuck-we'll bring the pious
+notions out o' ye in Charleston,” said Dunn, turning around to Manuel.
+
+The Dutchman filled the glasses, and Dunn, laying his big hickory stick
+upon the counter, took one in each hand, and going directly to Manuel,
+“There, take it, and drink her off-no humbugging; yer mother niver gave
+such milk as that,” said he.
+
+“Excuse me, sir; I positively will not!” said Manuel, and no sooner had
+he lisped the words, than Dunn threw the whole contents in his face.
+Enraged at such outrageous conduct, the poor fellow could stand it no
+longer, and fetched him a blow that levelled him upon the floor.
+
+The Dutchman ran to the assistance of Dunn, and succeeded in relieving
+him from his unenviable situation. Not satisfied, however, they
+succeeded, after a hard struggle, in getting him upon the floor, when
+the Dutchman-after calling the assistance of a miserable negro, held
+him down while Dunn beat him with his stick. His cries of “Murder” and
+“Help” resounded throughout the neighbourhood, and notwithstanding they
+attempted to gag him, brought several persons to the spot. Among them
+was a well-known master builder, in Charleston-a very muscular and a
+very humane man. The rascality of Dunn was no new thing to him, for he
+had had practical demonstrations of it upon his own negroes,--who had
+been enticed into the “corner shops” for the double purpose of the
+Dutchmen getting their money, and the officers getting hush-money from
+the owner.
+
+The moment he saw Dunn, he exclaimed, “Ah! you vagabond!” and springing
+with the nimbleness of a cat, struck the Dutchman a blow that sent him
+measuring his length, into a corner among a lot of empty boxes; then
+seizing Dunn by the collar, he shook him like a puppy, and brought him
+a slap with his open hand that double-dyed his red face, and brought a
+stream of claret from his nose; while the miserable nigger, who had been
+struggling to hold Manuel down, let go his hold, and ran as if his life
+was in danger. The scene was disgusting in the extreme. Manuel arose,
+with his face cut in several places, his clothes bedaubed with filth
+from the floor, and his neck and shirt-bosom covered with blood; while
+the aghast features of Dunn, with his red, matted hair, and his glaring,
+vicious eyes, bespattered with the combined blood of his victim and his
+own nasal organ, gave him the most fiendish look imaginable.
+
+The gentleman, after reprimanding the Dutchman for keeping up these
+miserable practices, which were disgracing the community, and bringing
+suffering, starvation, and death upon the slaves, turned to Dunn, and
+addressed him. “You are a pretty officer of the law! A villain upon the
+highway-a disgrace to your color, and a stain upon those who retain
+you in office. A man who has violated the peace and every principle of
+honest duty, a man who every day merits the worst criminal punishment,
+kept in the favor of the municipal department, to pollute its very name.
+If there is a spark of honesty left in the police department, I will use
+my influence to stop your conduct. The gallows will be your doom yet.
+You must not think because you are leagued in the same traffic.”
+
+Dunn kept one of the worst and most notorious drinking-shops in
+Charleston, but, to reconcile his office with that strict requirement
+which never allowed any thing “contrary to law” in Charleston, he made
+his wife a “free trader.” This special set of South Carolina may in
+effect be classed among its many singular laws. It has an exceedingly
+accommodating effect among bankrupt husbands, and acts as a masked
+battery for innumerable sins in a business or official line. It so
+happens, once in a while, that one of the “fair free dealers” gets
+into limbo through the force of some ruthless creditor; and the “Prison
+Bounds Act,” being very delicate in its bearings, frequently taxes the
+gallantry of the chivalrous gentlemen of the Charleston bar that you are
+to go unpunished. And you, Drydez,” said he, turning to the Dutchman, “I
+shall enter you upon the information docket, as soon as I go down into
+the city.”
+
+“Zeu may tu vat zeu plas mit me-te mayor bees my friend, an' he knowz
+vot me ams. Yuz sees zel no bronty, no zin! Vot yu to mit de fine, ah?”
+ * * *
+
+“I'd like to see you do that same agin Mr.--. It wouldn't be savin'
+yerself a pace-warrant, and another for assault and battery! Sure
+magistrate Gyles is a first-rate friend of me own, and he'd not suffer
+me imposed on. The d--d nigger was obstinate and wouldn't go to jail,”
+ said Dunn in a cowardly, whimpering manner.
+
+“Oh yez, me heard mit 'im swore, vat he no go to zale!” rejoined the
+Dutchman anxiously.
+
+“Tell me none of your lies,” said he; “you are both the biggest rascals
+in town, and carry on your concerted villany as boldly as if you had
+the control of the city in your hands.” Manuel was trembling under the
+emotions of grief and revenge. His Portuguese blood would have revenged
+itself at the poniard's point, but fortunately he had left it in his
+chest. He saw that he had a friend at his hand, and with the earnestness
+of a child, resigned himself to his charge.
+
+In a few minutes quiet was produced, and the gentleman expressing a
+desire to know how the trouble originated, inquired of Manuel how it
+was brought about. But no sooner had he commenced his story, than he was
+interrupted by Dunn asserting his right, according to the laws of South
+Carolina, to make his declaration, which could not be refuted by the
+negro's statement, or even testimony at law; and in another moment
+jumped up, and taking Manuel by the collar, commanded him to come along
+to jail; and turning to the gentleman, dared him to interfere with his
+duty.
+
+“I know how you take people to jail, very well. I'll now see that you
+perform that duty properly, and not torture prisoners from place to
+place before you get there. You inflict a worse punishment in taking
+poor, helpless people to jail, than they suffer after they get there!”
+ said he; and immediately joined Manuel and walked to the jail with him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII. THE OLD JAIL.
+
+
+
+THERE are three institutions in Charleston-either of which would be
+a stain upon the name of civilization-standing as emblems of the
+time-established notions of a people, and their cherished love for
+the ancestral relics of a gone-by age. Nothing could point with more
+unerring aim than these sombre monuments do, to the distance behind the
+age that marks the thoughts and actions of the Charlestonians. They are
+the poor-house, hospital, and jail; but as the latter only pertains
+to our present subject, we prefer to speak of it alone, and leave
+the others for another occasion. The workhouse may be said to form an
+exception-that being a new building, recently erected upon a European
+plan. It is very spacious, with an extravagant exterior, surmounted
+by lofty semi-Gothic watch-towers, similar to the old castles upon the
+Rhine. So great was the opposition to building this magnificent temple
+of a workhouse, and so inconsistent, beyond the progress of the age,
+was it viewed by the “manifest ancestry,” that it caused the mayor his
+defeat at the following hustings. “Young Charleston” was rebuked for its
+daring progress, and the building is marked by the singular cognomen
+of “Hutchinson's Folly.” What is somewhat singular, this magnificent
+building is exclusively for negroes. One fact will show how progressive
+has been the science of law to govern the negro, while those to which
+the white man is subjected are such as good old England conferred upon
+them some centuries ago. For felonious and burglarious offences, a white
+man is confined in the common jail; then dragged to the market-place,
+stripped, and whipped, that the negroes may laugh “and go see buckra
+catch it;” while a negro is sent to the workhouse, confined in his cell
+for a length of time, and then whipped according to modern science,--but
+nobody sees it except by special permission. Thus the negro has the
+advantage of science and privacy.
+
+The jail is a sombre-looking building, with every mark of antiquity
+standing boldly outlined upon its exterior. It is surrounded by a
+high brick wall, and its windows are grated with double rows of bars,
+sufficiently strong for a modern penitentiary. Altogether, its dark,
+gloomy appearance strikes those who approach it, with the thought and
+association of some ancient cruelty. You enter through an iron-barred
+door, and on both sides of a narrow portal leading to the right are four
+small cells and a filthy-looking kitchen, resembling an old-fashioned
+smoke-house. These cells are the debtors'; and as we were passing out,
+after visiting a friend, a lame “molatto-fellow” with scarcely rags to
+cover his nakedness, and filthy beyond description, stood at what was
+called the kitchen door. “That poor dejected object,” said our friend,
+“is the cook. He is in for misdemeanor-one of the peculiar shades of
+it, for which a nigger is honored with the jail.” “It seems, then, that
+cooking is a punishment in Charleston, and the negro is undergoing the
+penalty,” said we. “Yes!” said our friend; “but the poor fellow has a
+sovereign consolation, which few niggers in Charleston can boast of-and
+none of the prisoners here have-he can get enough to eat.”
+
+The poor fellow held out his hand as we passed him, and said, “Massa,
+gin poor Abe a piece o' 'bacca'?” We freely gave him all in our
+possession.
+
+On the left side, after passing the main iron door, are the jailer's
+apartments. Passing through another iron door, you ascend a narrow,
+crooked stairs and reach the second story; here are some eight or nine
+miserable cells-some large and some small-badly ventilated, and entirely
+destitute of any kind of furniture: and if they are badly ventilated
+for summer, they are equally badly provided with means to warm them in
+winter. In one of these rooms were nine or ten persons, when we visited
+it; and such was the morbid stench escaping from it, that we were
+compelled to put our handkerchiefs to our faces. This floor is
+appropriated for such crimes as assault and battery; assault and
+battery, with intent to kill; refractory seamen; deserters; violating
+the statutes; suspicion of arson and murder; witnesses; all sorts of
+crimes, varying from the debtor to the positive murderer, burglar,
+and felon. We should have enumerated, among the rest, all stewards,
+(colored,) whether foreign or domestic, who are committed on that
+singular charge, “contrary to law.” And it should have been added, even
+though cast away upon our “hospitable shores.” Among all these different
+shades of criminals, there must be some very bad men. And we could
+recount three who were pointed out to us, as very dangerous men, yet
+were allowed the favor of this floor and its associations. One was
+an Irish sailor, who was sentenced to three years and nine months'
+imprisonment by the United States court, for revolt and a desperate
+attempt to murder the captain of a ship; the next was a German, a
+soldier in the United States army, sentenced to one year and eight
+months' imprisonment for killing his comrade; and the third was an
+English sailor, who killed a woman-but as she happened to be of doubtful
+character, the presiding judge of the sessions sentenced him to a light
+imprisonment, which the Governor very condescendingly pardoned after a
+few weeks.
+
+The two former acted as attendants, or deputy jailers; with the
+exception of turning the key, which privilege the jailer reserved for
+himself exclusively. The principle may seem a strange one, that places
+men confined upon such grave charges in a superior position over
+prisoners; and may be questionable with regard to the discipline itself.
+
+From this floor, another iron door opened, and a winding passage led
+into the third and upper story, where a third iron door opened into a
+vestibule, on the right and left of which were grated doors secured with
+heavy bolts and bars. These opened into narrow portals with dark, gloomy
+cells on each side. In the floor of each of these cells was a large iron
+ring-bolt, doubtless intended to chain refractory prisoners to; but we
+were informed that such prisoners were kept in close stone cells, in
+the yard, which were commonly occupied by negroes and those condemned
+to capital punishment. The ominous name of this third story was “Mount
+Rascal,” intended, no doubt, as significant of the class of prisoners
+it contained. It is said that genius is never idle: the floor of these
+cells bore some evidence of the fact in a variety of very fine specimens
+of carving and flourish work, done with a knife. Among them was a
+well-executed crucifix; with the Redeemer, on Calvary-an emblem of hope,
+showing how the man marked the weary moments of his durance. We spoke
+with many of the prisoners, and heard their different stories, some of
+which were really painful. Their crimes were variously stated, from that
+of murder, arson, and picking pockets, down to the felon who had stolen
+a pair of shoes to cover his feet; one had stolen a pair of pantaloons,
+and a little boy had stolen a few door-keys. Three boys were undergoing
+their sentence for murder. A man of genteel appearance, who had been
+sentenced to three years imprisonment, and to receive two hundred and
+twenty lashes in the market, at different periods, complained bitterly
+of the injustice of his case. Some had been flogged in the market, and
+were awaiting their time to be flogged again and discharged; and others
+were confined on suspicion, and had been kept in this close durance
+for more than six months, awaiting trial. We noticed that this worst of
+injustice, “the law's delay,” was felt worse by those confined on the
+suspicion of some paltry theft, who, even were they found guilty by a
+jury, would not have been subjected to more than one week imprisonment.
+Yet such was the adherence to that ancient system of English criminal
+jurisprudence, that it was almost impossible for the most innocent
+person to get a hearing, except at the regular sessions, “which sit
+seldom, and with large intervals between.” There is indeed a city
+court in Charleston, somewhat more modern in its jurisprudence than the
+sessions. It has its city sheriff, and its city officers, and holds its
+terms more frequently. Thus is Charleston doubly provided with sheriffs
+and officials. Both aspire to a distinct jurisdiction in civil and
+criminal cases. Prisoners seem mere shuttlecocks between the sheriffs,
+with a decided advantage in favor of the county sheriff, who is autocrat
+in rei over the jail; and any criminal who has the good fortune to get
+a hearing before the city judge, may consider himself under special
+obligation to the county sheriff for the favor.
+
+We noticed these cells were much cleaner than those below, yet there
+was a fetid smell escaping from them. This we found arose from the tubs
+being allowed to stand in the rooms, where the criminals were closely
+confined, for twenty-four hours, which, with the action of the damp,
+heated atmosphere of that climate, was of itself enough to breed
+contagion. We spoke of the want of ventilation and the noxious fumes
+that seemed almost pestilential, but they seemed to have become
+habituated to it, and told us that the rooms on the south side were
+lighter and more comfortable. Many of them spoke cheerfully, and
+endeavored to restrain their feelings, but the furrows upon their
+haggard countenances needed no tongue to utter its tale.
+
+Hunger was the great grievance of which they complained; and if
+their stories were true--and we afterward had strong proofs that they
+were--there was a wanton disregard of common humanity, and an abuse of
+power the most reprehensible. The allowance per day was a loaf of bad
+bread, weighing about nine ounces, and a pint of thin, repulsive soup,
+so nauseous that only the most necessitated appetite could be forced
+to receive it, merely to sustain animal life. This was served in a
+dirty-looking tin pan, without even a spoon to serve it. One man told us
+that he had subsisted on bread and water for nearly five weeks-that
+he had lain down to sleep in the afternoon and dreamed that he was
+devouring some wholesome nourishment to stay the cravings of his
+appetite, and awoke to grieve that it was but a dream. In this manner
+his appetite was doubly aggravated, yet he could get nothing to appease
+its wants until the next morning. To add to this cruelty, we found two
+men in close confinement, the most emaciated and abject specimens of
+humanity we have ever beheld. We asked ourselves, “Lord God! was it
+to be that humanity should descend so low?” The first was a forlorn,
+dejected-looking creature, with a downcast countenance, containing
+little of the human to mark his features. His face was covered with
+hair, and so completely matted with dirt and made fiendish by the tufts
+of coarse hair that hung over his forehead, that a thrill of horror
+invaded our feelings. He had no shoes on his feet; and a pair of ragged
+pantaloons, and the shreds of a striped shirt without sleeves, secured
+around the waist with a string, made his only clothing. In truth, he had
+scarce enough on to cover his nakedness, and that so filthy and swarming
+with vermin, that he kept his shoulders and hands busily employed; while
+his skin was so incrusted with dirt as to leave no trace of its original
+complexion. In this manner he was kept closely confined, and was more
+like a wild beast who saw none but his keepers when they came to throw
+him his feed. Whether he was kept in this manner for his dark deeds or
+to cover the shame of those who speculated upon his misery, we leave to
+the judgment of the reader.
+
+We asked this poor mortal what he had done to merit such a punishment?
+He held his head down, and motioned his fevered lips. “Speak out!” said
+we, “perhaps we can get you out.” “I had no shoes, and I took a pair
+of boots from the gentleman I worked with,” said he in a low, murmuring
+tone,
+
+“Gracious, man!” said we, “a pair of boots! and is that all you are here
+for?”
+
+“Yes, sir! he lives on the wharf, is very wealthy, and is a good man:
+'t wasn't his fault, because he tried to get me out if I'd pay for the
+boots, but they wouldn't let him.”
+
+“And how long have you been thus confined?” said we.
+
+“Better than five months-but it's because there a'n't room up stairs.
+They've been promising me some clothes for a long time, but they don't
+come,” he continued.
+
+“And how much longer have you to stop in this condition?”
+
+“Well, they say 'at court sets in October; it's somethin' like two
+months off; the grand jury'll visit the jail then, and maybe they'll
+find a bill' against me, and I'll be tried. I dont't care if they only
+don't flog me in that fish-market.”
+
+“Then you have not been tried yet? Well, may God give that man peace
+to enjoy his bounty, who would consign a poor object like thee to such
+cruelty!” said we.
+
+“I was raised in Charleston-can neither read nor write-I have no father,
+and my mother is crazy in the poor-house, and I work about the city for
+a living, when I'm out!” said he. There was food for reflection in
+this poor fellow's simple story, which we found to be correct, as
+corroborated by the jailer.
+
+“Do you get enough to eat?” we asked.
+
+“Oh no, indeed! I could eat twice as much-that's the worst on't: 't
+wouldn't be bad only for that. I git me loaf' in the mornin', and me
+soup at twelve, but I don't git nothin' to eat at night, and a feller's
+mighty hungry afore it's time to lay down,” said he.
+
+We looked around the room, and not seeing any thing to sleep upon,
+curiosity led us to ask him where he slept.
+
+“The jail allows us a blanket-that's mine in the corner: I spread it
+at night when I wants to go to bed,” he answered, quite contentedly. We
+left the poor wretch, for our feelings could withstand it no longer. The
+state of society that would thus reduce a human being, needed more pity
+than the calloused bones reduced to such a bed. His name was Bergen.
+
+The other was a young Irishman, who had been dragged to jail in his
+shirt, pantaloons, and hat, on suspicion of having stolen seven dollars
+from a comrade. He had been in jail very near four months, and in regard
+to filth and vermin was a counterpart of the other. A death-like smell,
+so offensive that we stopped upon the threshold, escaped from the room
+as soon as the door opened, enough to destroy a common constitution,
+which his emaciated limbs bore the strongest evidence of.
+
+The prisoners upon the second story were allowed the privilege of the
+yard during certain hours in the day, and the debtors at all hours in
+the day; yet, all were subjected to the same fare. In the yard were a
+number of very close cells, which, as we have said before, were kept
+for negroes, refractory criminals, and those condemned to capital
+punishment. These cells seemed to be held as a terror over the
+criminals, and well they might, for we never witnessed any thing more
+dismal for the tenement of man.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII. HOW IT IS.
+
+
+
+IT is our object to show the reader how many gross abuses of power exist
+in Charleston, and to point him to the source. In doing this, the task
+becomes a delicate one, for there are so many things we could wish were
+not so, because we know there are many good men in the community whose
+feelings are enlisted in the right, but their power is not coequal; and
+if it were, it is checked by an opposite influence.
+
+The more intelligent of the lower classes look upon the subject of
+politics in its proper light--they see the crashing effect the doctrine
+of nullification has upon their interests; yet, though their numbers
+are not few, their voice is small, and cannot sound through the channels
+that make popular influence. Thus all castes of society are governed by
+impracticable abstractions.
+
+The jail belongs to the county--the municipal authorities have no voice
+in it; and the State, in its legislative benevolence, has provided
+thirty cents a day for the maintenance of each prisoner. This small sum,
+in the State of South Carolina, where provision is extremely high, may
+be considered as a paltry pittance; but more especially so when the
+magnificent pretensions of South Carolina are taken into consideration,
+and a comparison is made between this meagre allowance and that of other
+States. Even Georgia, her sister State, and one whose plain modesty is
+really worthy of her enterprising citizens, takes a more enlightened
+view of a criminal's circumstances-allows forty-four cents a day for his
+maintenance, and treats him as if he was really a human being. But
+for this disparity and the wanton neglect of humane feelings South
+Carolinians excuse themselves upon the ground that they have no
+penitentiary; nor do they believe in that system of punishment,
+contending that it creates an improper competition with the honest
+mechanic, and gives countenance to crime, because it attempts to improve
+criminals. The common jail is made the place of confinement, while the
+whipping-post and starvation supply the correctives.
+
+The sheriff being created an absolute functionary, with unlimited
+powers to control the jail in all its varied functions, without either
+commissioners or jail-committee, what state of management may be
+expected? The court gives no specific direction as to the apartment or
+mode of confinement when sentencing a criminal; consequently, it becomes
+an established fact that the legislative confidence deposed in the
+sheriff is used as a medium of favors, to be dispensed as best suits the
+feelings or interests of the incumbent. Such power in the hands of an
+arbitrary, vindictive, or avaricious man, affords unlimited means of
+abuse, and without fear of exposure.
+
+It may be inferred from what we have said that the jailer was relax in
+his duty. This is not the case, for we have good authority that a more
+kind-hearted and benevolent man never filled the office. But his power
+was so restricted by those in absolute control, that his office became a
+mere turnkey's duty, for which he was paid the pittance of five hundred
+dollars a year or thereabouts. Thus he discharged his duty according to
+the instructions of the sheriff, who, it was well known, looked upon
+the jail as a means of speculation; and in carrying out his purposes, he
+would give very benevolent instructions in words, and at the same time
+withhold the means of carrying them out, like the very good man who
+always preached but never practised.
+
+Now, how is it? What is the regimen of this jail-prison and how is it
+provided? We will say nothing of that arduous duty which the jailer
+performs for his small sum; nor the report that the sheriff's office
+is worth fourteen thousand dollars a year: these things are too well
+established. But the law provides thirty cents a day for the prisoner's
+maintenance, which shall be received by the sheriff, who is to procure
+one pound of good bread, and one pound of good beef per day for each
+man. Now this provision is capable of a very elastic construction. The
+poor criminal is given a loaf of bad bread, costing about three cents,
+and a pound of meat, the most unwholesome and sickly in its appearance,
+costing five cents. Allowing a margin, however, and we may say the
+incumbent has a very nice profit of from eighteen to twenty cents
+per day on each prisoner. But, as no provision is made against the
+possibility of the criminal eating his meat raw, he is very delicately
+forced to an alternative which has another profitable issue for the
+sheriff; that of taking a pint of diluted water, very improperly called
+soup. Thus is carried out that ancient law of England which even she
+is now ashamed to own. Our feelings are naturally roused against the
+perpetration of such abuses upon suffering humanity. We struggle between
+a wish to speak well of her whose power it is to practise them, and an
+imperative duty that commands us to speak for those who cannot speak for
+themselves.
+
+These things could not exist if the public mind was properly
+enlightened. It is unnecessary to spend many words in exposing
+such palpable abuses, or to trace the cause of their existence and
+continuance. One cause of this is the wilful blindness and silly
+gasconade of some of those who lead and form public opinion. With South
+Carolinians, nothing is done in South Carolina that is not greater than
+ever was done in the United States-no battles were ever fought that
+South Carolina did not win-no statesman was ever equal to Mr. Calhoun-no
+confederacy would be equal to the Southern, with South Carolina at its
+head-no political doctrines contain so much vital element as secession,
+and no society in the Union is equal to South Carolina for caste and
+elegance-not excepting the worthy and learned aristocracy of Boston.
+
+A will to do as it pleases and act as it pleases, without national
+restraint, is the great drawback under which South Carolina sends forth
+her groaning tale of political distress. Let her look upon her dubious
+glory in its proper light-let her observe the rights of others, and
+found her acts in justice!--annihilate her grasping spirit, and she will
+find a power adequate to her own preservation. She can then show to the
+world that she gives encouragement to the masses, and is determined to
+persevere in that moderate and forbearing policy which creates its own
+protection, merits admiration abroad, instead of rebuke, and which
+needs no gorgeous military display to marshal peace at the point of the
+bayonet.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV. MANUEL PEREIRA COMMITTED.
+
+
+
+IT was nearly eleven o'clock as they ascended the jail steps and rang
+the bell for admittance. The jailer, a stout, rough-looking man, opened
+the iron door, and as Manuel was about to step over the stone sill, Dunn
+gave him a sudden push that sent him headlong upon the floor. “Heavens!
+what now?” inquired the jailer with a look of astonishment, and at the
+next moment Dunn raised his foot to kick Manuel in the face.
+
+“You infernal beast!” said the jailer, “you are more like a savage than
+a man-you are drunk now, you vagabond,” and jumped in between them to
+save him from the effect of the blow. As he did this, the gentleman who
+accompanied them from the “corner-shop,” as a protection against Dunn's
+cruelty, fetched Dunn a blow on the back of the neck that made him
+stagger against a door, and created such confusion as to arouse the
+whole jail. Turning to Manuel, he, with the assistance of the jailer,
+raised him from the ground and led him into the jail-office. “Mister
+jailer,” said Dunn, “the prisoner is mine until such times as you
+receipt the commitment, and I demand protection from you against this
+man. He has committed two violent assaults upon me, when I'd be doing me
+duty.”
+
+“You have violated all duty, and are more like an incarnate fiend. You
+first decoy men into rum-shops, and then you plunder and abuse them,
+because you think they are black and can get no redress. You abused that
+man unmercifully, because you knew his evidence was not valid against
+you!” said the gentleman, turning to the jailer, and giving him the
+particulars of what he saw in the “corner-shop,” and what cruelties he
+had seen practised by Dunn on former occasions.
+
+The jailer looked upon Manuel with commiseration, and handed him a chair
+to sit down on. The poor fellow was excited and fatigued, for he had
+eaten nothing that day, and been treated more like a brute than a human
+being from the time, he left the ship until he arrived at the jail. He
+readily accepted the kind offer, and commenced to tell the story of his
+treatment.
+
+“You need' not tell me,--I know too much of that man already. It has
+long been a mystery to me why he is retained in office.”--
+
+Here Dunn interrupted. “Sure it's yer master I'd obey and not yerself,
+an' I'd do what I'd plase with prisoners, and, it's his business and not
+yeers. If ye had yer way, sure you'd be makin' white men of every nigger
+that ye turned a key upon.”
+
+“Give me none of your insolence,” said the jailer. “You have no
+authority beyond my door. Your brutal treatment to prisoners has caused
+me an immense deal of trouble-more than my paltry pay would induce me
+to stay for. Suppose you were indicted for these outrages? What would be
+the result?” asked the jailer.
+
+“Sure it's meself could answer for the sheriff, without yer bothering
+yerself. I'd not work for yer, but for him; and he's yer master anyhow,
+and knows all about it. Give me the receipt, and that's all I'd ax yer.
+When a nigger don't mind me, I just makes him feel the delight of a
+hickory stick.”
+
+“Yes, if you had the shame of a man in you, you'd not make a beast of
+yourself with liquor, and treat these poor stewards as if they were
+dogs,” said the jailer.
+
+“Indeed, ye might learn a thing or two if ye was a politician like
+meself, and belonged to the secession party. An' if his honor the
+sheriff-for he's a dacent man-knew ye'd be preachin' in that shape, ye
+wouldn't keep the jail f'nent the morning. Be letting me out, and make
+much of the nigger; ye have him there.”
+
+The jailer unlocked the door and allowed him to pass out, with a
+pertinent rebuke. This was but a trifling affair in Dunn's ear, for he
+knew his master's feelings too well, and was backed by him in his most
+intolerable proceedings. Returning to the office, he looked at the
+commitment, and then again at Manuel. “This is a 'contrary to law' case,
+I see, Mr. Manuel; you are a likely fellow too, to come within that,”
+ said he.
+
+“Yes. If I understand him right, he's a shipwrecked sailor, belonging
+to a foreign vessel that was driven in here in distress,” said the
+man. “It's a hard law that imprisons a colored seaman who comes here
+voluntarily; but it seems beyond all manner of precedent to imprison
+a shipwrecked man like this, especially when he seems so respectable.
+There are no circumstances to warrant the enforcement of such a law.”
+ Thus saying, he left the jail.
+
+Be it said of the jailer, to his honor, so far as personal kindness
+went, he did his utmost--brought him water to wash himself, and gave
+him some clean clothes. After which, he was registered upon the criminal
+calendar as follows:--
+
+“March 24, 1852.--Manuel Peirire.--[Committed by] Sheriff--Sheriff.
+Crime--Contrary to law.”
+
+Now the jailer had done his duty, so far as his feelings were concerned;
+but, such were the stern requirements of the law, and his functions
+so restricted by Mr. Grimshaw, that he dare not make distinctions. He
+called Daley, one of the criminal assistants, and ordered him to show
+the prisoner his room.
+
+“Here, my boy, take yer blanket,” said Daley; and throwing him a coarse,
+filthy-looking blanket, told him to roll it up and follow him. “It's on
+the second floor we'll put ye, among the stewards; there's a nice lot
+on 'em to keep yer company, and ye'll have a jolly time, my boy.” Manuel
+followed through the second iron door until he came to a large door
+secured with heavy bolts and bars, which Daley began to withdraw and
+unlock. “Don't be takin' it amiss; it's a right good crib, savin' the'
+bed, an' it's that's the worst of it. Bad luck to old Grimshaw, an'
+himself thinks everybody's bones be's as tuf as his own,” said Daley,
+and threw open the heavy doors, sending forth those ominous prison
+sounds. “All here? Ah! yer a pretty set of lambs, as the British consul
+calls yees. Have ye ever a drop to spare?” At this, three or four
+respectable-looking black men came to the door and greeted Manuel.
+“Come, talk her out, for th' auld man'll be on the scent.” At this, one
+of the confined stewards, a tall, good-looking mulatto man, ran his hand
+into a large opening in the wall, and drew forth a little soda-bottle
+filled with Monongahela whisky. Without giving reasonable time for
+politeness, Daley seized the bottle, and putting it to his mouth, gauged
+about half its contents into his homony dept, smacked his lips,
+wiped his mouth with his cuff, and, passing the balance back, shut and
+rebolted the door, after saying, “Good luck till yees, an' I wish yees
+a merry time.” The reader may imagine what provision the State or the
+sheriff had made for the comfort of these poor men, one of whom was
+imprisoned because it was “contrary to law” to be driven into the port
+of Charleston in distress, and the rest, peaceable, unoffending citizens
+belonging to distant States and countries, and guilty of no crime, when
+we describe the room and regimen to which they were subjected. The room
+was about twenty-six feet long and ten feet wide. The brick walls were
+plastered and colored with some kind of blue wash, which, however, was
+so nearly obliterated with dirt and the damp of a southern climate, as
+to leave but little to show what its original color was. The walls were
+covered with the condensed moisture of the atmosphere, spiders hung
+their festooned network overhead, and cockroaches and ants, those
+domesticated pests of South Carolina, were running about the floor in
+swarms, and holding all legal rights to rations in superlative contempt.
+Two small apertures in the wall, about fourteen inches square, and
+double-barred with heavy flat iron, served to admit light and air. The
+reader may thus judge of its gloomy appearance, and what a miserable
+unhealthy cell it must have been in which to place men just arrived from
+sea. There was not the first vestige of furniture in the room, not;
+even a bench to sit upon, for the State, with its gracious hospitality,
+forgot that men in jail ever sit down; but it was in keeping with all
+other things that the State left to the control of its officials.
+
+“Am I to be punished in this miserable place? Why, I cannot see where
+I'm going; and have I nothing to lay down upon but the floor, and that
+creeping with live creatures?” inquired Manuel of those who were already
+inured to the hardship.
+
+“Nothing! nothing! Bring your mind to realize the worst, and forget the
+cruelty while you are suffering it; they let us out a part of the day.
+We are locked up to-day because one of the assistants stole my friend's
+liquor, and he dared to accuse him of the theft, because he was a white
+man,” said a tall, fine-looking mulatto man by the name of James Redman,
+who was steward on board a Thomastown (Maine) ship, and declared that he
+had visited Charleston on a former occasion, and by paying five dollars
+to one of the officers, remained on board of the ship unmolested.
+
+“And how long shall I have to suffer in this manner?” inquired Manuel.
+“Can I not have my own bed and clothing?”
+
+“Oh, yes,” said Redman; “you can have them, but if you bring them here,
+they'll not be worth anything when you leave; and the prisoners upon
+this floor are so starved and destitute, that necessity forces them
+to steal whatever comes in their way; and the assistants are as much
+implicated as the prisoners. You'll fare hard; but just do as we do in
+a calm, wait for the wind to blow, and pray for the best. If you say any
+thing, or grumble about it, the sheriff will order you locked, up on the
+third story, and that's worse than death itself. The first thing you do,
+make preparations for something to eat. We pay for it here, but don't
+get it; and you'd starve afore you'd eat what they give them poor white
+prisoners. They suffer worse than we do, only they have cleaner rooms.”
+
+“I pray for my deliverance from such a place as this.”
+
+His manners and appearance at once enlisted the respect of those
+present, and they immediately set to work, with all the means at hand,
+to make him comfortable. Joseph Jociquei, a young man who had been taken
+from a vessel just arrived from Rio, and was more fortunate than the
+rest, in having a mattrass, seeing Manuel's weak condition, immediately
+removed it from its place, and spreading it upon the floor, invited him
+to lay down. The invitation was as acceptable as it was kind on the
+part of Jociquei, and the poor fellow laid his weary limbs upon it, and
+almost simultaneously fell into a profound sleep. Manuel continued to
+sleep. His face and head were scarred in several places; which were
+dressed and covered with pieces of plaster that the jailer had supplied.
+His companions, for such we shall call those who were confined with him,
+sat around him, discussing the circumstances that brought him there, and
+the manner in which they could best relieve his suffering. “It's just
+as I was sarved,” said Redman. “And I'll bet that red-headed constable,
+Dunn, brought him up: and abused him in all them Dutch shops. I didn't
+know the law, and he made me give him three dollars not to put the
+handcuffs upon me, and then I had to treat him in every grog-shop we
+came to. Yes, and the last shop we were in, he throw'd liquor in me
+face, cursed the Dutchman that kept the shop, kick'd me, and tried every
+way in the world to raise a fuss. If I hadn't know'd the law here too
+well, I'd whipt him sure. I have suffered the want of that three dollars
+since I bin here. 'Twould sarved me for coffee. We have neither coffee
+nor bread to-night, for we gave our allowance of bad bread to the white
+prisoners, but we must do something to make the poor fellow comfortable.
+I know the constable has kept him all day coming up, and he'll be hungry
+as soon as he awakes.”
+
+“Won't he receive his allowance to-day like another prisoner?” inquired
+Copeland, a thick-set, well made, dark-skinned negro steward, who had
+formerly conducted a barber shop in Fleet street, Boston, but was now
+attached to the schooner Oscar Jones, Kellogg, master.
+
+“Oh! no, sir,” said Redman, “that's against the rules of the jail-every
+thing is done by rule here, even to paying for what we don't get, and
+starving the prisoners. A man that don't come in before eleven o'clock
+gets no ration until the next morning. I know, because I had a fuss with
+the jailer about it, the first day I was brought in; but he gin me a
+loaf out of his own house. The old sheriff never allows any thing done
+outside the rules, for he's tighter than a mantrap. 'T a'n't what ye
+suffers in this cell, but it's what ye don't get to eat; and if that
+poor feller a'n't got money, he'll wish himself alongside the caboose
+again 'fore he gets out.” The poor fellows were driven to the extreme of
+providing sustenance to sustain life. They mustered their little means
+together, and by giving a sum to the sheriff's black boy, (a man more
+intelligent, gentlemanly, and generous-hearted than his master,) had a
+measure of coffee, sugar, and bread brought in. Necessity was the mother
+of invention with them, for they had procured a barrel for twenty-five
+cents, and made it supply the place of a table. With a few chips that
+were brought to them by a kind-hearted colored woman that did their
+washing, and bestowed many little acts of kindness, they made a fire,
+endured the annoyance of a dense smoke from the old fire-place, and
+prepared their little supper. As soon as it was upon the table, they
+awoke Manuel, and invited him to join in their humble fare. The poor
+fellow arose, and looking around the gloomy, cavern-like place, heaved a
+deep sigh. “It's hard to be brought to this for nothing!” said he; “and
+my bones are so sore that I can scarcely move. I must see the Captain
+and consul.”
+
+“That won't do any good; you might as well keep quiet and drink your
+coffee. A prisoner that says the least in this jail is best off,”
+ returned Redman.
+
+Manuel took his bowl of coffee and a piece of bread, eating it with a
+good appetite, and asking what time they got breakfast. “It's the first
+time I was abused in a foreign country. I'm Portuguese, but a citizen of
+Great Britain, and got my protection.-When it won't save me, I'll never
+come to South Carolina again, nor sail where a flag won't protect me.
+When I go among Patagonians, I know what they do; but when I sail
+to United States or be cast away on them, I don't know what they do,
+because I expect good people.” * * *
+
+“Never mind, my good fellow,” said Redman; “cheer up, take it as a good
+sailor would a storm, and in the morning you'll get a small loaf of sour
+bread and a bucket of water for breakfast, if you go to the pump for it.
+Be careful to moderate your appetite when you breakfast according to the
+State's rules; for you must save enough to last you during the day, and
+if you can keep “banyan day,” as the Bluenose calls it, you're just the
+man for this institution, and no mistake. Come, I see you're hungry;
+drink another bowl of coffee, and eat plenty of bread; then you'll be
+all right for another good sleep.”
+
+“Yes, but I don't expect to be in here long. But tell me, do we get
+nothing more than a loaf? didn't the jail give us this supper?” he
+inquired with surprise.
+
+“Supper, indeed!--it's against the rules for prisoners to have coffee;
+that's our private fixings; but you'll get a pound of bloody neck-bone,
+they call beef, in the morning. I have twice thrown mine to the dog,
+but he doesn't seem to thank me for it; so I told the cook he needn't
+trouble his steelyards for me again.”
+
+Redman's conversation was interrupted by a noise that seemed to be a
+ring of the prison bell, and an anxious expression which Manuel gave
+utterance to, indicated that he expected somebody would come to see him.
+He was not disappointed, for a few minutes after, the bolts were heard
+to withdraw and the heavy door swung back. There, true to his charge,
+was little Tommy, in his nicest blue rig, tipped off a la man-o'-war
+touch, with his palmetto-braid hat,--a long black ribbon displayed over
+the rim,--his hair combed so slick, and his little round face and red
+cheeks so plump and full of the sailor-boy pertness, with his blue,
+braided shirt-collar laid over his jacket, and set off around the neck,
+with a black India handkerchief, secured at the throat with the joint
+of a shark's backbone. He looked the very picture and pattern of a
+Simon-Pure salt. He had wended his way through strange streets and
+lanes, with a big haversack under his arm, which Daley had relieved
+him of at the door, and brought into the room under his arm. As soon as
+Manuel caught a glimpse of him, he rose and clasped the little fellow
+in his arms with a fond embrace. No greeting could be more affecting.
+Manuel exulted at seeing his little companion; but Tommy looked grieved,
+and asked, “But what has scarred your face so, Manuel? You didn't look
+that way when you left the brig. We have had a site o' folks down to see
+us to-day.”
+
+“Oh, that's nothing!--just a little fall I got; don't tell the Captain:
+it'll all be well to-morrow.”
+
+“Here, Jack, take your knapsack; did yer bring ever a drop o' liquor for
+the steward?” said Daley, addressing himself to Tommy, and putting the
+package upon the floor.
+
+“Yes, Manuel!” said Tommy, “the Captain sent you some nice bread and
+ham, some oranges and raisins, and a bottle of nice claret,--for he was
+told by the consul that they didn't give 'em nothing to eat at the
+jail. And I had a tug with 'em, I tell you. I got lost once, and got a
+good-natured black boy to pilot me for a Victoria threepence,--but he
+did not like to carry the bundle to the jail, for fear of his master.
+Captain 'll be up first thing in the morning, if he can get away from
+business,” said the little tar, opening the haversack and pulling out
+its contents to tempt the hungry appetites of those around him.
+
+Daley very coolly took the bottle of claret by the neck, and holding it
+between himself and the light, took a lunar squint at it, as if doubting
+its contents; and then, putting it down, exclaimed, “Ah! the divil a red
+I'd give you for your claret. Sure, why didn't ye bring a token of
+good old hardware?” “Hardware! what is hardware?” inquired Manuel. “Ah!
+botheration to the bunch of yees--a drap of old whiskey, that 'd make
+the delight cum f'nent. Have ye ne'er a drap among the whole o' yees?”
+ Receiving an answer in the negative, he turned about with a Kilkenny,
+“It don't signify,” and toddled for the door, which he left open, to
+await Tommy's return. Redman knew Daley's propensity too well, and
+having ocular proof that he had wet t'other eye until it required
+more than ordinary effort to make either one stay open, he declined
+recognising his very significant hint.
+
+As soon as Daley withdrew, Manuel invited his companions to partake of
+the Captain's present, which they did with general satisfaction.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV. THE LAW'S INTRICACY.
+
+
+
+WHILE the scenes we have described in the foregoing chapter were being
+performed, several very interesting ones were going through the course
+of performance at the consul's office and other places, which we must
+describe. The British Government, in its instructions to Mr. Mathew,
+impressed upon him the necessity of being very cautious lest he should
+in any manner prejudice the interests of the local institutions within
+his consular jurisdiction; to make no requests that were incompatible
+with the local laws; but to pursue a judicious course in bringing the
+matter of Her Majesty's subjects properly to the consideration of
+the legal authorities, and to point to the true grievance; and as it
+involved a question of right affecting the interests and liberties of
+her citizens, to ask the exercise of that judicial power from which it
+had a right to expect justice. The main object was to test the question
+whether this peculiar construction given to that local law which
+prohibits free colored men from coming within the limits of the State,
+was legal in its application to those who come into its ports connected
+with the shipping interests, pursuing an honest vocation, and intending
+to leave whenever their ship was ready. The consul was censured by the
+press in several of the slaveholding States, because he dared to bring
+the matter before the local legislature. We are bound to say that Consul
+Mathew, knowing the predominant prejudices of the Carolinians, acted
+wisely in so doing. First, he knew the tenacious value they put upon
+courtesy; secondly, the point at issue between South Carolina and the
+Federal Government, (and, as a learned friend in Georgia once said,
+“Whether South Carolina belonged to the United States, or the United
+States to South Carolina;”) and thirdly, the right of State sovereignty,
+which South Carolina held to be of the first importance. To disregard
+the first, would have been considered an insult to the feelings of
+her people; and if the question had first been mooted with the Federal
+Government, the ire of South Carolinians would have been fired; the
+slur in placing her in a secondary position would have sounded the
+war-trumpet of Abolition encroachments, while the latter would have been
+considered a breach of confidence, and an unwarrantable disregard of her
+assertion of State rights. The Executive transmitted the documents to
+the Assembly, that body referred them to special committees, and the
+Messrs. Mazyck and McCready, reported as everybody in South Carolina
+expected, virtually giving the British consul a very significant
+invitation to keep his petitions in his pocket for the future, and his
+“black lambs” out of the State, or it might disturb their domesticated
+ideas. Thus was the right clearly reserved to themselves, and the
+question settled, so far as the State Legislature was concerned. The
+next course for Mr. Mathew was to appeal to the Judiciary, and should
+redress be denied, make it the medium of bringing the matter, before the
+Federal courts.
+
+We cannot forbear to say, that the strenuous opposition waged against
+this appeal of common humanity arose from political influence, supported
+by a set of ultra partisans, whose theoretical restrictions, assisted
+by the voice of the press, catered to the war-spirit of the
+abstractionists.
+
+The British consul, as the representative of his government, knowing the
+personal suffering to which the subjects of his country were subjected
+by the wretched state of the Charleston prison, and its management,
+sought to remove no restriction that might be necessary for protecting
+their dangerous institutions, but to relieve that suffering. He had
+pointed the authorities to the wretched state of the prison, and the
+inhuman regimen which existed within it; but, whether through that
+superlative carelessness which has become so materialized in the spirit
+of society--that callousness to misfortune so strongly manifested by the
+rich toward the industrious poor and the slaves-or, a contempt for
+his opinions, because he had followed out the instructions of his
+government, things went on in the same neglected manner and no attention
+was paid to them.
+
+Now, we dare assert that a large, portion of the excitement which the
+question has caused has arisen from personal suffering, consequent upon
+that wretched state of jail provisions which exists in South Carolina,
+and which, to say the least, is degrading to the spirit and character of
+a proud people. If a plea could be made, for excuse, upon the shattered
+finances of the State, we might tolerate something of the abuse. But
+this is not the case; and when its privileges become reposed in men who
+make suffering the means to serve their own interests, its existence
+becomes an outrage.
+
+A stronger evidence of the cause of these remonstrances on the part
+of the British Government, is shown by the manner in which it has been
+submitted to in Georgia. The British consul of the port of Savannah, a
+gentleman whose intelligence and humane feelings are no less remarkable
+than Mr. Mathew's, has never had occasion to call the attention of
+the Executive of Georgia to the abuse of power consequent upon the
+imprisonment of colored seamen belonging to the ships of Great Britain
+in that port. The seaman was imprisoned, consequently deprived of his
+liberty; but there was no suffering attendant beyond the loss of liberty
+during the stay of the vessel; for the imprisonment itself was a nominal
+thing; the imprisoned was well cared for; he had good, comfortable
+apartments, cleanly and well ordered, away from the criminals, and
+plenty of good, wholesome food to eat. There was even a satisfaction in
+this, for the man got what he paid for, and was treated as if he were
+really a human being. Thus, with the exception of the restriction on the
+man's liberty, and that evil, which those interested in commerce would
+reflect upon as a tax upon the marine interests of the port to support a
+municipal police, because it imposes a tax and burdensome annoyance upon
+owners for that which they have no interest in and can derive no benefit
+from, the observance of the law had more penalty in mental anxiety than
+bodily suffering. We have sometimes been at a loss to account for the
+restriction, even as it existed in Georgia, and especially when
+we consider the character of those controlling and developing the
+enterprising commercial affairs of Savannah.
+
+But we must return to South Carolina. If we view this law as a police
+regulation, it only gives us broader latitude. If a community has that
+within itself which is dangerous to its well-being, it becomes pertinent
+to inquire whether there is not an imperfect state of society existing,
+and whether this policy is not injurious to the well-being of the State.
+The evil, though it be a mortifying fact, we are bound to say, arises
+from a strange notion of caste and color, which measures sympathy
+according to complexion. There is no proof that can possibly be adduced,
+showing that colored seamen have made any infections among the slaves,
+or sought to increase the dangers of her peculiar institution.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI. PLEA OF JUST CONSIDERATION AND MISTAKEN CONSTANCY OF THE
+LAWS.
+
+
+
+THE consul's office opened at nine o'clock,--the Captain, with his
+register-case and shipping papers under his arm, presented himself to
+Mr. Mathew, handed him his papers, and reported his condition. That
+gentleman immediately set about rendering every facility to relieve his
+immediate wants and further his business. The consul was a man of plain,
+unassuming manners, frank in his expressions, and strongly imbued with
+a sense of his rights, and the faith of his Government,--willing to take
+an active part in obtaining justice, and, a deadly opponent to wrong,
+regardless of the active hostility that surrounded him. After relating
+the incidents of his voyage, and the circumstances connected with
+Manuel's being dragged to prison,--“Can it be possible that the law is
+to be carried to such an extreme?” said he, giving vent to his feelings.
+
+“Your people seem to have a strange manner of exhibiting their
+hospitality,” said the Captain, in reply.
+
+“That is true; but it will not do to appeal to the officials.” Thus
+saying, the consul prepared the certificate, and putting on his hat,
+repaired to the jail. Here he questioned Manuel upon the circumstances
+of his arrest, his birthplace, and several other things. “I am not sure
+that I can get you out, Manuel, but I will do my best; the circumstances
+of your being driven in here in distress will warrant some consideration
+in your case; yet the feeling is not favorable, and we cannot expect
+much.”
+
+From thence he proceeded to the office of Mr. Grimshaw, where he met
+that functionary, seated in all the dignity of his office.
+
+“Good morning, Mr. Consul. Another of your darkies in my place, this
+morning,” said Mr. Grimshaw.
+
+“Yes; it is upon that business I have called to see you. I think you
+could not have considered the condition of this man, nor his rights,
+or you would not have imprisoned him. Is there no way by which I can
+relieve him?” inquired the consul, expecting little at his hands, but
+venturing the effort.
+
+“Sir! I never do any thing inconsistent with my office. The law gives
+me power in these cases, and I exercise it according to my judgment. It
+makes no exceptions for shipwrecks, and I feel that you have no right to
+question me in the premises. It's contrary to law to bring niggers here;
+and if you can show that he is a white man, there's the law; but you
+must await its process.”
+
+“But do you not make exceptions?” inquired the consul. “I do not wish
+to seek his relief by process of law; that would increase expense and
+delay. I have made the request as a favor; if you cannot consider it in
+that light, I can only say my expectations are disappointed. But how is
+it that the man was abused by your officers before he was committed?”
+
+“Those are things I've nothing to do with; they are between the officers
+and your niggers. If they are stubborn, the officers must use force,
+and we have a right to iron the whole of them. Your niggers give more
+trouble than our own, and are a set of unruly fellows. We give 'em
+advantages which they don't deserve, in allowing them the yard at
+certain hours of the day. You Englishmen are never satisfied with any
+thing we do,” returned Mr. Grimshaw, with indifference, appearing to
+satisfy himself that the law gave him the right to do what he pleased in
+the premises. There seemed but one idea in his head, so far as niggers
+were concerned, nor could any mode of reasoning arouse him: to a
+consideration of any extenuating circumstances. A nigger was a nigger
+with him, whether white or black-a creature for hog, homony, and
+servitude.
+
+“I expected little and got nothing. I might have anticipated it, knowing
+the fees you make by imprisonment. I shall seek relief for the man
+through a higher tribunal, and I shall seek redress for the repeated
+abuses inflicted upon these men by your officers,” said the consul,
+turning to the door.
+
+“You can do that, sir,” said Mr. Grimshaw; “but you must remember that
+it will require white evidence to substantiate the charge. We don't take
+the testimony of your niggers.”
+
+Just as the consul left the office, he met Colonel S--entering. The
+colonel always manifested a readiness to relieve the many cases of
+oppression and persecution arising from bad laws and abused official
+duty. He had called upon Mr. Grimshaw on the morning of the arrest, and
+received from him an assurance that the case would be considered, the
+most favorable construction given to it, and every thing done for
+the man that was in his power. Notwithstanding this to show how far
+confidence could be put in such assurances, we have only to inform the
+reader that he had despatched the officers an hour previously.
+
+The colonel knew his man, and felt no hesitation at speaking his mind.
+Stepping up to him, “Mr. Grimshaw,” said he, “how do you reconcile
+your statement and assurances to me this morning with your subsequent
+conduct?”
+
+“That's my business. I act for the State, and not for you. Are you
+counsel for these niggers, that you are so anxious to set them at
+liberty among our slaves? You seem to have more interest in it than that
+interfering consul. Just let these Yankee niggers and British niggers
+out to-night, and we'd have another insurrection before morning; it's
+better to prevent than cure,” said Grimshaw.
+
+“The only insurrection would have been in your heart, for the loss of
+fees. If you did not intend what you said, why did you deceive me with
+such statements? I know the feelings of our people, as well as I do
+yours for caging people within that jail. Upon that, I intimated to the
+Captain what I thought would be the probable result, and this morning I
+proceeded to his vessel to reassure him, upon your statement. Imagine my
+mortification when he informed me that his steward had been dragged
+off to jail early in the morning, and that those two ruffians whom you
+disgrace the community with, behaved in the most outrageous manner. It
+is in your power to relieve this man, and I ask it as a favor, and on
+behalf of what I know to be the feelings of the citizens of Charleston.”
+
+“Your request, colonel,” said Mr. Grimshaw, with a little more
+complacency, “is too much in the shape of a demand. There's no
+discretion left me by the State, and if you have a power superior to
+that, you better pay the expenses of the nigger, and take the management
+into your own hands. I never allow this trifling philanthropy about
+niggers to disturb me. I could never follow out the laws of the State
+and practise it; and you better not burden yourself with it, or your
+successors may suffer for adequate means to support themselves. Now,
+sir, take my advice. It's contrary to law for them niggers to come
+here; you know our laws cannot be violated. South Carolina has a great
+interest at stake in maintaining the reputation of her laws. Don't
+excite the nigger's anxiety, and he'll be better off in jail than he
+would running about among the wenches. He won't have luxuries, but we'll
+make him comfortable, and he must suit his habits to our way of living.
+We must not set a bad example before our own niggers; the whiter they
+are the worse they are. They struggle for their existence now, and think
+they're above observing our nigger laws. We want to get rid of them, and
+you know it,” returned Grimshaw.
+
+“Yes; I know it too well, for I have had too many cases to protect them
+from being 'run off' and sold in the New Orleans market. But when you
+speak of white niggers, I suppose you mean our brightest; I dispute your
+assertion, and point you to my proof in the many men of wealth among
+them now pursuing their occupations in our city. Can you set an example
+more praiseworthy? And notwithstanding they are imposed upon by taxes,
+and many of our whites take the advantage of law to withhold the payment
+of debts contracted with them, they make no complaint. They are subject
+to the same law that restricts the blackest slave. Where is the white
+man that would not have yielded under such inequality? No! Mr. Grimshaw,
+I am as true a Southerner-born and bred-as you are; but I have the
+interests of these men at heart, because I know they are with us, and
+their interests and feelings are identical with our own. They are Native
+Americans by birth and blood, and we have no right to dispossess them
+by law of what we have given them by blood. We destroy their feelings by
+despoiling them of their rights, and by it we weaken our own cause. Give
+them the same rights and privileges that we extend to that miserable
+class of foreigners who are spreading pestilence and death over our
+social institutions, and we would have nothing to fear from them, but
+rather find them our strongest protectors. I want to see a law taking
+from that class of men the power to lord it over and abuse them.”
+
+A friend, who has resided several years in Charleston, strong in his
+feelings of Southern rights, and whose keen observation could not fail
+to detect the working of different phases of the slave institution,
+informed us that he had conversed with a great many very intelligent
+and enterprising men belonging to that large class of “bright” men in
+Charleston, and that which appeared to pain them most was the manner
+they were treated by foreigners of the lowest class; that rights which
+they had inherited by birth and blood were taken away from them; that,
+being subjected to the same law which governed the most abject slave,
+every construction of it went to degrade them, while it gave supreme
+power to the most degraded white to impose upon them, and exercise his
+vindictive feelings toward them; that no consideration being given to
+circumstances, the least deviation from the police regulations made to
+govern negroes, was taken advantage of by the petty guardmen, who either
+extorted a fee to release them, or dragged them to the police-office,
+where their oath was nothing, even if supported by testimony of their
+own color; but the guardman's word was taken as positive proof. Thus the
+laws of South Carolina forced them to be what their feelings revolted
+at. And I want to see another making it a penal offence for those men
+holding slaves for breeding purposes. Another, which humanity calls
+for louder than any other, is one to regulate their food, punish
+these grievous cases of starvation, and make the offender suffer for
+withholding proper rations.
+
+“Well-pretty well!” said Grimshaw, snapping his fingers very
+significantly. “You seem to enjoy the independence of your own opinion,
+colonel. Just prove this nigger's a white, and I'll give you a release
+for him, after paying the fees. You better move to Massachusetts, and
+preach that doctrine to William Lloyd Garrison and Abby Kelly.”
+
+“Give me none of your impudence, or your low insults. You may protect
+yourself from personal danger by your own consciousness that you are
+beneath the laws of honor; but that will not save you from what you
+deserve, if you repeat your language. Our moderation is our protection,
+while such unwise restrictions as you would enforce, fan the flame of
+danger to our own households,” said the colonel, evidently yielding
+to his impulses; while Mr. Grimshaw sat trembling, and began to make a
+slender apology, saying that the language was forced upon him, because
+the colonel had overstepped the bounds of propriety in his demands.
+
+“I'm somewhat astonished at your demand, colonel, for you don't seem
+to comprehend the law, and the imperative manner in which I'm bound
+to carry it out. Shipowners should get white stewards, if they want to
+avoid all this difficulty. I know the nature of the case, but we can't
+be accountable for storms, shipwrecks, old vessels, and all these
+things. I'll go and see the fellow to-morrow, and tell the jailer-he's
+a pattern of kindness, and that's why I got him for jailer-to give him
+good rations and keep his room clean,” said Grimshaw, getting up and
+looking among some old books that lay on a dusty shelf. At length he
+found the one, and drawing it forth, commenced brushing the dust from it
+with a dust-brush, and turning his tobacco-quid. After brushing the
+old book for a length of time, he gave it a scientific wipe with his
+coat-sleeve, again sat down, and commenced turning over its pages.
+
+“It's in here, somewhere,” said he, wetting his finger and thumb at
+every turn.
+
+“What's in there, pray? You don't think I've practised at the Charleston
+bar all my life without knowing a law which has called up so many
+questions?” inquired the colonel.
+
+“Why, the act and the amendments. I believe this is the right one. I
+a'n't practised so long, that I reckon I've lost the run of the appendix
+and everything else,” adding another stream of tobacco-spit to the
+puddle on the floor.
+
+“That's better thought than said. Perhaps you'd better get a schoolboy
+to keep his finger on it,” continued the colonel, laconically.
+
+“Well, well; but I must find it and refresh your memory. Ah! here it is,
+and it's just as binding on me as it can be. There's no mistake about
+it-it's genuine South Carolina, perfectly aboveboard.” Thus saying,
+he commenced reading to the colonel as if he was about to instruct
+a schoolboy in his rudiments. “Here it is-a very pretty specimen of
+enlightened legislation-born in the lap of freedom, cradled in a land of
+universal rights, and enforced by the strong arm of South Carolina.”
+
+“An Act for the better regulation and government of free negroes and
+persons of color, and for other purposes,” &c. &c. &c., Mr. Grimshaw
+read; but as the two first sections are really a disgrace to the
+delegated powers of man, in their aim to oppress the man of color,
+we prefer to pass to the third section, and follow Mr. Grimshaw as he
+reads:--
+
+“That if any vessel shall come into any port or harbor of this State,
+(South Carolina,) from any other State or foreign port, having on board
+any free negroes or persons of color, as cooks, stewards, or mariners,
+or in any other employment on board said vessel, such free negroes or
+persons of color shall be liable to be seized and confined in jail until
+said vessel shall clear out and depart from this State; and that when
+said vessel is ready to sail, the captain of said vessel shall be
+bound to carry away the said free negro or person of color, and pay the
+expenses of detention; and in case of his refusal or neglect to do so,
+he shall be liable to be indicted, and, on conviction thereof, shall be
+fined in a sum not less than one thousand dollars, and imprisoned not
+less than two months; and such free negroes or persons of color shall
+be deemed and taken as absolute slaves, and sold in conformity to the
+provisions of the act passed on the twentieth day of December, one
+thousand eight hundred and twenty aforesaid.'”
+
+Mr. Grimshaw's coolness in the matter became so intolerable, that the
+colonel could stand it no longer; so, getting up while Mr. Grimshaw was
+reading the law, he left the office, perfectly satisfied that further
+endeavors at that source would be fruitless.
+
+After Mr. Grimshaw had concluded, he looked up, perfectly amazed to find
+that he was enjoying the reading of the act to himself. “Had I not given
+it all the consideration of my power, and seen the correctness of the
+law, I should not have given so much importance to my opinion. But there
+it is, all in that section of the Act, and they can't find no convention
+in the world to control the Legislature of South Carolina. There's my
+principles, and all the Englishmen and Abolitionists in Christendom
+wouldn't change me. Now, I've the power, and let 'em get the nigger out
+of my place, if they can,” said Grimshaw, shutting the book, kicking
+a good-sized, peaceable-looking dog that lay under the table, and
+deliberately taking his hat and walking into the street.
+
+Here is an Act, bearing on its face the arrogant will of South Carolina,
+setting aside all constitutional rights, and denying the validity of
+stipulations made by the United States in her general commercial laws.
+She asserts her right to disregard citizenship, to make criminals of
+colored men, because they are colored, and to sell them for slaves to
+pay the expenses which she had incurred to make them such. And what is
+still worse, is, that the exercise of this misconceived and unjust law
+is so unrelentingly enforced, and so abused by those who carry it out.
+
+During this time the consul had been unremitting in his endeavors to
+procure the man's release. The mayor had no power in the premises; the
+attorney-general was not positive in regard to the extent of his power
+in such a case, though he admitted the case to be an aggravated one; the
+judges could only recognise him as a nigger, consequently must govern
+their proceedings by legislative acts. Upon the whole, he found that
+he was wasting his time, for while they all talked sympathy, they
+acted tyranny. Cold, measured words about niggers, “contrary to law,”
+ constitutional rights, inviolable laws, State sovereignty and secession,
+the necessary police regulations to protect a peculiar institution,
+and their right to enforce them, everywhere greeted his ears. There was
+about as much in it to relieve Manuel, as there would have been had a
+little bird perched upon the prison-wall and warbled its song of love to
+him while strongly secured in his cell-more tantalizing because he could
+hear the notes, but not see the songster.
+
+Notwithstanding the commendable energy of the consul, he had the
+satisfaction of knowing that several very improbable reports touching
+his course, and construing it into an interference with the institution
+of slavery, had been widely circulated, and were creating a feeling
+against him among a certain class of “fire-eating” secessionists. He was
+too well aware of the source from which they originated to awaken any
+fears, and instead of daunting his energy they only increased it, and
+brought to his aid the valuable services of the Hon. James L. Petigru, a
+gentleman of whom it is said, (notwithstanding his eminence at the
+bar,) that had it not been for his purity of character, his opinions
+in opposition to the State would have long since consigned him to a
+traitor's exile. The truth was-and much against Mr. Petigru's popularity
+in his own State-that he was a man of sound logic, practical judgment,
+and legal discrimination. Thus endowed with the requisite qualities of
+a good statesman, and pursuing a true course to create a conservative
+influence in the State, he failed to become popular beyond his legal
+sphere. Had he espoused that most popular of all doctrines in South
+Carolina-nullification and secession-and carried abstraction to
+distraction, James L. Petigru would have added another “Roman name” to
+that which has already passed from South Carolina's field of action.
+
+The consul did his duty, but effected nothing; and such was the
+opposition manifested by the officials who were interested in the spoils
+of law, and politicians who could not see any thing important beyond
+secession, that there was no prospect of it. And, as the last resort,
+he appealed to the Judiciary through the “habeas corpus,” the result of
+which we shall show in a subsequent chapter.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII. LITTLE GEORGE, THE CAPTAIN, AND MR. GRIMSHAW.
+
+
+
+THE consul had returned to his office rather discomfited at not being
+able to relieve Manuel, yet satisfied that he had placed matters in
+their proper light before the public. The Captain reported and left his
+manifest at the custom-house, after entering his protest and making the
+necessary arrangements for survey, &c. &c. And Colonel S--became so well
+satisfied of the affectation of law protectors, and that his services
+in behalf of humanity were like straws contending against a foaming
+current, that, acknowledging his regrets to the Captain, he preferred to
+make up in attention what he could not do for Manuel through the law.
+
+Little George paid his respects to the Janson between ten and eleven
+o'clock, duly dressed. “Mr. Mate, where's your skipper?” he inquired,
+with an air of consequence that put an extra pucker on his little
+twisting mouth.
+
+“Gone to jail, or to see Doctor Jones, I expect, not giving ye an ill
+answer,” replied the old mate, gruffly.
+
+“Perhaps you don't know who I am, sir. Your answer's not polite. You
+must remember, sir, you're in South Carolina, the sunny city of the
+South,” said the little secessionist.
+
+“I al'a's make my answer to suit myself. I study hard work and honesty,
+but never was known to carry a grammar in my pocket. But, my taut
+friend, I should know'd I was in South Carolina if you hadn't said a
+word about it, for no other nation under the sky would a dragged a poor
+cast-away sailor to prison because he had the misfortune to have a tawny
+hide. It's a ten-to-one, my hearty, if you don't find the skipper in
+jail, and all the rest of us, before we leave. I'm lookin' now to see
+some body-grabber coming down with a pair of handcuffs,” continued the
+mate.
+
+“What! do you mean to insult me again, Mr. Mate? Explain yourself! I'm
+not accustomed to this ironical talk!”
+
+“Well, it's something like your laws. They dragged our steward off
+to jail this morning, without judge or jury, and with about as much
+ceremony as a Smithfield policeman would a pickpocket.”
+
+“What! you don't say. Well, I was afraid of that. Our officers are
+mighty quick, but I'd hoped differently. But, sir, give my compliments
+to the Captain. Tell him I'll make the matter all right; my influence,
+sir, and my father's--he is one of the first men in the city--tells
+mightily here. I have promised my services to the Captain, and I'll see
+him through. Just pledging my word to Grimshaw will be enough to satisfy
+the judicial requisites of the law,” said George, switching his little
+cane on his trowsers.
+
+“My good fellow,” said the mate, “if you can get our steward out a
+limbo, you'll be doing us all a good turn, and we'll remember you as
+long as we pull a brace.”
+
+“You may reckon on me, Mister Mate; and if I a'n't down before six
+o'clock, my father will certainly take the matter in hand; and he and
+Mazyck belong to the secession party, and control things just as they
+please at Columbia.” So saying, George bid the old mate good morning,
+and bent his course for the head of the wharf.
+
+“There,” said the old mate, “it's just what I thought all along; I knew
+my presentiment would come true. I'll wager a crown they treat Manuel
+like a dog in that old prison, and don't get him out until he is
+mildewed; or perhaps they'll sell him for a slave a'cos he's got curly
+black hair and a yellow skin. Now I'm a hardy sailor, but I've sailed
+around the world about three times, and know something of nature. Now ye
+may note it as clear as the north star, prisons in slave countries a'n't
+fit for dogs. They may tell about their fine, fat, slick, saucy niggers,
+but a slave's a slave--his master's property, a piece of merchandise,
+his chattel, or his football-thankful for what his master may please to
+give him, and inured to suffer the want of what he withholds. Yes,
+he must have his thinking stopped by law, and his back lashed at his
+master's will, if he don't toe the mark in work. Men's habits and
+associations form their feelings and character, and it's just so with
+them fellers; they've become so accustomed to looking upon a nigger as
+a mere tool of labor--lordin' it over him, starving him, and lashing
+him-that they associate the exercise of the same feelings and actions
+with every thing connected with labor, without paying any respect to a
+poor white man's feelings,” continued the mate, addressing himself to
+his second, as they sat upon the companion, waiting for the Captain to
+come on board and give further orders.
+
+Never were words spoken with more truth. The negro is reduced to the
+lowest and worst restrictions, even by those who are considered wealthy
+planters and good masters. We say nothing of those whose abuse of their
+negroes by starvation and punishment forms the theme of complaint among
+slaveholders themselves. His food is not only the coarsest that can, be
+procured, but inadequate to support the system for the amount of labor
+required. Recourse to other means becomes necessary. This is supplied by
+giving the slave his task, which, so far as our observation extends, is
+quite sufficient for any common, laborer's day's-work. This done, his
+master is served; and as an act of kindness, (which Sambo is taught to
+appreciate as such,) he is allowed to work on his own little cultivated
+patch to raise a few things, which mass'r (in many cases) very
+condescendingly sells in the market, and returns those little comforts,
+which are so much appreciated by slaves on a plantation-tea, molasses,
+coffee, and tobacco-and now and then a little wet of whiskey. This is
+the allowance of a good man doing a good week's work, and getting two
+pounds of bacon and a peck of corn as his compensation. But, in grateful
+consideration, his good master allows him to work nights and Sundays to
+maintain himself. In this way was “Bob's bale of cotton” raised, which
+that anxious child of popular favor, the editor of the “Savannah Morning
+News,” so struggled to herald to the world as something magnificent on
+the part of the Southern slave-masters. At best, it was but a speck. If
+the many extra hours of toil that poor Bob had spent, and the hours
+of night that he had watched and nursed his plants, were taken into
+account, there would be a dark picture connected with “Bob's bale of
+cotton,” which the editor forgot to disclose.
+
+Every form of labor becomes so associated with servitude, that we may
+excuse the Southerner for those feelings which condemn those devoted
+to mechanical pursuits as beneath his caste and dignity. Arrogance and
+idleness foster extravagance, while his pride induces him to keep up a
+style of life which his means are inadequate to support. This induces
+him to subsist his slaves on the coarsest fare, and becoming hampered,
+embarrassed, and fretted in his fast-decaying circumstances, his slaves,
+one by one, suffer the penalty of his extravagance, and finally he
+himself is reduced to such a condition that he is unable to do justice
+to himself or his children any longer; his slaves are dragged from him,
+sold to the terrors of a distant sugar-plantation, and he turned out of
+doors a miserable man.
+
+We see this result every day in South Carolina; we hear the comments
+in the broadways and public places, while the attorney and bailiff's
+offices and notices tell the sad tale of poverty's wasting struggle.
+
+George, in passing from the wharf into the bay, met the Captain, who was
+shaping his course for the brig. He immediately ran up to him, and shook
+his hands with an appearance of friendship. “Captain, I'm right sorry
+to hear about your nigger. I was not prepared for such a decision on the
+part of Mr. Grimshaw, but I'm determined to have him out,” said he.
+
+“Well!” said the Captain, “I'm sorry to say, I find things very
+different from what I anticipated. My steward is imprisoned, for
+nothing, except that he is a Portuguese, and everybody insists that he's
+a nigger. Everybody talks very fine, yet nobody can do any thing; and
+every thing is left to the will of one man.”
+
+“Why, Captain, we've the best system in the world for doing business;
+you'd appreciate it after you understood it! Just come with me, and let
+me introduce you to my father. If he don't put you right, I'll stand
+convicted,” said little George.
+
+Accepting the invitation, they walked back to the “old man's”
+ counting-room. George had given the Captain such an extended account of
+his father's business and estates, that the latter had made up his
+mind to be introduced to an “India Palace' counting-room. Judge of
+his surprise, then, when George led the way into an old, dirty-looking
+counting-room, very small and dingy, containing two dilapidated high
+desks, standing against the wall. They were made of pitch pine, painted
+and grained, but so scarred and whittled as to have the appearance
+of long use and abuse. In one corner was an old-fashioned low desk,
+provided with an ink-stand, sundry pieces of blotting-paper, the
+pigeon-holes filled with loose invoices, letters, and bills of lading,
+very promiscuously huddled together; while hanging suspended on a
+large nail, driven in the side, and exposed to view, was an enormous
+dust-brush. A venerable-looking subject of some foreign country stood
+writing at one desk, a little boy at the other, and George's veritable
+“old man” at the low desk. Here and there around the floor were baskets
+and papers containing samples of sea-island and upland cotton. George
+introduced the Captain to his father with the suavity of a courtier. He
+was a grave-looking man, well dressed, and spoke in a tone that at once
+enlisted respect. Unlike George, he was a tall, well-formed man, with
+bland, yet marked features, and very gray hair. He received the Captain
+in a cold, yet dignified manner-inquired about his voyage, and who
+he had consigned to, and what steps he had taken to proceed with
+his business,--all of which the Captain answered according to the
+circumstances.
+
+“What! then you have consigned already, have you?” said little George,
+with surprise.
+
+“Oh yes,” returned the Captain, “I have left my business in the hands
+of the consul, and shall follow his directions. It's according to my
+sailing orders. But there's so much difficulty, I shouldn't wonder if I
+had to leave the port, yet!”
+
+“Not so, Captain; I'll take care of that!” said George, giving his
+father a statement of the Captain's trouble about Manuel's imprisonment,
+and begging that he would bestow his influence in behalf of his
+friend the Captain. Although George coupled his request with a seeming
+sincerity, it was evident that he felt somewhat disappointed at the
+consignment. The old gentleman looked very wise upon the subject, lifted
+his gold-framed spectacles upon his forehead, gratified his olfactory
+nerves with a pinch of snuff, and then said in a cold, measured tone,
+“Well, if he's a nigger, I see no alternative,--the circumstances may
+give a coloring of severity to the law; but my opinion has always been,
+that the construction of the law was right; and the act being
+founded upon necessity, I see no reason why we should meddle with its
+prerogative. I think the interference of the consul unwarrantable, and
+pressed upon mere technical grounds. These stories about the bad state
+of our jail, and the sufferings of criminals confined in it, arise, I
+must think, from the reports of bad prisoners. I have never been in it.
+Our people are opposed to vice, and seldom visit such a place; but the
+sheriff tells me it is comfortable enough for anybody. If this be so,
+and I have no reason to doubt his word, we can exercise our sympathy and
+kindness for his shipwrecked circumstances, and make him as comfortable
+there as we could anywhere else. There are many different opinions, I
+admit, touching the effect of this law; but I'm among those who support
+stringent measures for better protection. His color can form no excuse,
+Captain, so long as there is symptoms of the negro about him. We
+might open a wide field for metaphysical investigation, if we admitted
+exceptions upon grades of complexion; for many of our own slaves are
+as white ar the brightest woman. Consequently, when we shut the gates
+entirely, we save ourselves boundless perplexity. Nor would it be safe
+to grant an issue upon the score of intelligence, for experience has
+taught us that the most intelligent 'bright fellows' are the worst
+scamps in creating discontent among the slaves. I only speak of these
+things, Captain, in a general sense. Your man may be very good, noble,
+generous, and intelligent; and, more than all, not inclined to meddle
+with our peculiar institution,--but it would be a false principle
+to make him an exception, setting an example that would be entirely
+incompatible with our greatest interests. So far as my word will affect
+the sheriff, and enlist his better feelings in making him comfortable, I
+will use it,” said the 'old man,' again adjusting his specs.
+
+Little George seemed dumbfounded with mortification, and the Captain
+felt as though he would give a guinea to be on board his brig. It was no
+use for him to enter into the extenuating circumstance of his voyage, or
+the character of the man, Manuel. The same cold opinions about the
+law, and the faith and importance of South Carolina and her peculiar
+institutions, met his ears wherever he went. The Captain arose, took
+his hat, and bidding the old gentleman good morning, again left for his
+brig.
+
+“Don't be worried about it-I'll do what I can for you,” said the old
+man, as the Captain was leaving. George followed him into the street,
+and made a great many apologies for his father's opinions and seeming
+indifference, promising to do himself what his father did not seem
+inclined to undertake. The Captain saw no more of him during his stay in
+Charleston, and if his influence was exerted in Manuel's behalf, he did
+not feel its benefits.
+
+Business had so occupied the Captain's attention during the day, that
+he had no time to visit Manuel at the jail; and when he returned to the
+vessel, a message awaited him from the British consul. One of the seamen
+had been detailed to fill Manuel's place, who, with his dinner all
+prepared, reminded the Captain that it was awaiting him. He sat down,
+took dinner, and left to answer the consul's call. Arriving at the
+office, he found the consul had left for his hotel, and would not return
+until four o'clock. As he passed the post-office, a knot of men stood
+in front of it, apparantly in anxious discussion. Feeling that their
+conversation might be interesting to him, or have some connection with
+his case, he walked slowly back, and as he approached them, observed
+that the conversation had become more excited. The principals were Mr.
+Grimshaw, and a factor on the bay, deeply interested in shipping.
+
+“A man acting in your capacity,” said the factor, “should never make use
+of such expressions-never give encouragement to mob law. It's not only
+disgraceful to any city, but ruinous to its interests. Officials never
+should set or encourage the example. Want of order is already in the
+ascendant, and if the populace is to be led on to riot by the officials,
+what check have we? God save us from the direful effects!”
+
+“Well, perhaps I went too far,” said Mr. Grimshaw, “for I think as much
+of the name of our fair city as you do. But we ought to teach him that
+he can't pursue this open, bold, and daring course, endangering our
+institutions, because he's consul for Great Britain. I would, at all
+events, treat him as we did the Yankee HOAR from Massachusetts, and let
+the invitation be given outside of official character, to save the name;
+then, if he did not move off, I'd go for serving him as they did the
+Spanish consul, in New Orleans. These English niggers and Yankee niggers
+are fast destroying the peace of Charleston.”
+
+“You would, would you?” said another. “Then you would incite the fury
+of an ungovernable mob to endanger the man's life for carrying out the
+instructions of his government.”
+
+“That don't begin to be all that he does, for he's meddling with every
+thing, and continually making remarks about our society,” said Grimshaw,
+evidently intending to create ill feeling against the consul, and to
+make the matter as bad as possible.
+
+“Now, Mr. Grimshaw,” said the factor, “you know your jail is not fit to
+put any kind of human beings into, much less respectable men. It's
+an old Revolutionary concern, tumbling down with decay, swarming with
+insects and vermin; the rooms are damp and unhealthy, and without means
+to ventilate them; the mildew and horrible stench is enough to strike
+disease into the strongest constitution; and you aggravate men's
+appetites with food that's both insufficient and unwholesome, I know,
+because I visited a friend who was put in there on 'mesne process.'”
+
+“There is little confidence to be placed in the stories of prisoners;
+they all think they must be treated like princes, instead of considering
+that they are put there for cause, and that a jail was intended for
+punishment,” interrupted Grimshaw, anxious to change the subject of
+conversation, and displaying an habitual coldness to misfortune which
+never can see the gentleman in a prisoner.
+
+“Yes, but you must not measure men by that standard. Circumstances which
+bring them there are as different as their natures. I've known many
+good, honest, and respectable, citizens, who once enjoyed affluence in
+our community, put in there, month after month, and year after year,
+suffering the persecution of creditors and the effects of bad laws. Now
+these men would not all complain if there was no cause, and they all
+loved you, as you state. But tell me, Mr. Grimshaw, would it not be even
+safer for our institutions to make a restriction confining them to the
+wharf, which could be easily done, and with but small expense to the
+city? Niggers on the wharves could have no communication with them,
+because each is occupied in his business, and ours are too closely
+watched and driven during working hours. As soon as those hours end,
+they are bound to leave, and the danger ends. Again, those niggers who
+work on the wharves are generally good niggers, while, on the other
+hand, bad niggers are put into jail; and during the hours these stewards
+are allowed the privilege of the yard, they mix with them without
+discrimination or restraint. Their feelings, naturally excited by
+imprisonment, find relief in discoursing upon their wrongs with those of
+their own color, and making the contamination greater,” said the factor,
+who seemed inclined to view the matter in its proper light.
+
+“Oh! what sir? That would never do. You mistake a nigger's feelings
+entirely. Privileges never create respect with them. Just make a law to
+leave 'em upon the wharf, and five hundred policemen wouldn't keep 'em
+from spoiling every nigger in town, just destroying the sovereignty of
+the law, and yielding a supreme right that we have always contended
+for. It's 'contrary to law,' and we must carry out the law,” replied
+Grimshaw.
+
+“Pshaw! Talk such stuff to me! Just take away the sixteen hundred or
+two thousand dollars that you make by the law; and you'd curse it for
+a nuisance. It would become obsolete, and the poor devils of stewards
+would do what they pleased; you'd never trouble your head about
+them. Now, Grimshaw, be honest for once; tell us what you would do if
+circumstances compelled the Captain to leave that nigger boy here?”
+
+“Carry out the letter of the law; there's no alternative. But the
+Captain swears he's a white man, and that would give him an opportunity
+to prove it.”
+
+“How is he to prove it, Grimshaw? We take away the power, and then ask
+him to do what we make impossible. Then, of course, you would carry out
+the letter of the law and sell him for a slave. * * * Well, I should
+like to see the issue upon a question of that kind carried out upon an
+English nigger. It would be more of a curse upon our slave institution
+than every thing else that could be raised,” said the factor.
+
+“Gentlemen, you might as well preach abolition at once, and then the
+public would know what your sentiments were, and how to guard against
+you. I must bid you good-by.” So saying, Mr. Grimshaw twisted his
+whip, took a large quid of tobacco, and left the company to discuss the
+question among themselves.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII. LITTLE TOMMY AND THE POLICE.
+
+
+
+WE must take the reader back to the old jail, and continue our scene
+from where we left little Tommy spreading the Captain's present before
+the imprisoned stewards, whose grateful thanks were showered upon the
+head of the bestower. Kindness, be it ever so small, to a man in prison,
+is like the golden rays of the rising sun lighting up the opening day.
+They all partook of the refreshments provided for them with grateful
+spirits.
+
+It was near ten o'clock when Daley came to announce that it was time to
+close the prison, and all strangers must withdraw. Tommy had insisted
+upon stopping with Manuel during the night.
+
+This man Daley was a proverbial drunkard, a tyrant in the exercise of
+his “little brief authority,” and a notorious--. Singular as it may
+seem, considering his position, he would quarrel with the men for a
+glass of whiskey, had given the jailer more trouble than any other man,
+and been several times confined in the cells for his incorrigible vices.
+If any thing more was wanting to confirm our note, we could refer to
+Colonel Condy, the very gentlemanly United States marshal in a very rude
+manner, told him it was against the rules, and putting his hand to
+his back, pushed him out of the cell and secured the bolts. The little
+fellow felt his way through the passage and down the stairs in the dark
+until he reached the corridor, where the jailer stood awaiting to
+let him pass the outer iron-gate. “You've made a long stay, my little
+fellow. You'll have a heap o' trouble to find the wharf, at this time o'
+night. I'd o' let you stopped all night, but it's strictly against the
+sheriff's orders,” said the jailer, as, he passed into the street, at
+the same time giving him a list of imperfect directions about the course
+to proceed.
+
+The jail is in a distant and obscure part of the city, surrounded by
+narrow streets and lanes, imperfectly laid out and undefined. In leaving
+the walls of the prison, he mistook his direction, and the night being
+very dark, with a light, drizzling rain, which commenced while he was in
+the prison, the whole aspect of things seemed reversed. After travelling
+about for some time, he found himself upon a narrow strip of land that
+crossed a basin of water and led to Chisholm's mill. The different
+appearance of things here convinced him of his error. Bewildered,
+and not knowing which way to proceed, he approached a cross road, and
+sitting down upon a log, wept bitterly. He soon heard a footstep, and as
+it approached, his cares lightened. It proved to be a negro man from the
+mill.
+
+These mills are worked all night, and the poor negroes, wishing to
+follow an example which massa sets on a grand scale, save that they
+have an excuse in the fatigue of labor, will delegate some shrewd one of
+their number to proceed to a Dutch “corner-shop” in the suburbs, run the
+gauntlet of the police, and get a bottle of whiskey, When interrogated,
+they are always “going for a bottle of molasses.” They keep a keen watch
+for the police, and their cunning modes of eluding their vigilance forms
+many amusing anecdotes. They are bound to have a pass from master, or
+some white man; but if they can reach the shop in safety, the Dutchman
+will always furnish them with one to return. It not unfrequently happens
+that the guard-men are much more ignorant than the slaves. The latter
+knowing this, will endeavor to find their station and approach by it,
+taking with them either an old pass or a forged one, which the
+guard-man makes a wonderful piece of importance about examining and
+countersigning, though he can neither read nor write. Thus Sambo passes
+on to get his molasses, laughing in his sleeve to think how he “fool
+ignorant buckra.” A change of guard often forms a trap for Sambo, when
+he is lugged to the guard-house, kept all night, his master informed in
+the morning, and requested to step up and pay a fine, or Sambo's
+back catches thirty-nine, thus noting a depression of value upon the
+property. Sometimes his master pays the municipal fine, and administers
+a domestic castigation less lacerating bound into the city on the usual
+errand of procuring a little of molasses. When he first discovered
+Tommy, he started back a few paces, as if in fear; but on being told by
+Tommy that he was lost, and wanted to find his way to the wharves, he
+approached and recovering, confidence readily, volunteered to see him to
+the corner of Broad street. So, taking him by the hand, they proceeded
+together until they reached the termination of the Causeway, and were
+about to enter Tradd street, when suddenly a guard-man sprang from
+behind an old shed. The negro, recognising his white belt and tap-stick,
+made the best of his time, and set off at full speed down a narrow lane.
+The watchman proceeded close at his heels, springing his rattle at every
+step, and pouring out a volley of vile imprecations. Tommy stood for a
+few moments, but soon the cries of the negro and the beating of clubs
+broke upon his ear; he became terrified, and ran at the top of his speed
+in an opposite direction. Again he had lost his way, and seemed in a
+worse dilemma than before; he was weary and frightened, and hearing so
+many stories among the sailors about selling white children for slaves,
+and knowing the imprisonment of Manuel, which he did not comprehend,
+his feelings were excited to the highest degree. After running for a few
+minutes, he stopped to see if he could recognize his position. The first
+thing that caught his eye was the old jail, looming its sombre walls in
+the gloomy contrast of night. He followed the walls until he reached the
+main gate, and then, taking an opposite direction from his former route,
+proceeded along the street until he came to a lantern, shedding its
+feeble light upon the murky objects at the corner of a narrow lane.
+Here he stood for several minutes, not knowing which way to proceed: the
+street he was in continued but a few steps farther, and turn which ever
+way he would, darkness and obstacles rose to impede his progress. At
+length he turned down the lane, and proceeded until he came to another
+junction of streets; taking one which he thought would lead him in the
+right direction, he wandered through it and into a narrow, circuitous
+street, full of little, wretched-looking houses. A light glimmered from
+one of them, and he saw a female passing to and fro before the window.
+He approached and rapped gently upon the door. Almost simultaneously
+the light was extinguished. He stood for a few minutes, and again rapped
+louder than before; all was silent for some minutes. A drenching shower
+had commenced, adding to the already gloomy picture; and the rustling
+leaves on a tree that stood near gave an ominous sound to the excited
+feelings of the child. He listened at the door with anxiety and fear, as
+he heard whispers within; and as he was about to repeat his rapping,
+a window on the right hand was slowly raised. The female who had been
+pacing the floor protruded her head with a caution that bespoke alarm.
+Her long, black hair hanging about her shoulders, and her tawny, Indian
+countenance, with her ghost-like figure dressed in a white habiliment,
+struck him with a sort of terror that wellnigh made him run.
+
+“Who is that, at this time of night?” inquired the woman, in a low
+voice.
+
+“It's only me. I'm lost, and can't find my way to our vessel,” said
+Tommy, in a half-crying tone.
+
+“Mother,” said the woman, shutting the window, “it's only a little
+sailor-boy, a stranger, and he's wet through.”
+
+She immediately unbarred and opened the door, and invited him to come
+in. Stepping beyond the threshold, she closed the door against the
+storm, and placing a chair at the fire, told him to sit down and
+warm himself. They were mulatto half-breeds, retaining all the
+Indian features which that remnant of the tribe now in Charleston
+are distinguished by a family well known in the city, yet under the
+strictest surveillance of the police. Every thing around the little room
+denoted poverty and neatness. The withered remnant of an aged Indian
+mother lay stretched upon a bed of sickness, and the daughter, about
+nineteen years old, had been watching over her, and administering those
+comforts, which her condition required. “Why, mother, it's a'most twelve
+o'clock. I don't believe he'll come to-night.”
+
+She awaited her friend, or rather he whose mistress she had condescended
+to be, after passing from several lords. The history of this female
+remnant of beautiful Indian girls now left in Charleston, is a mournful
+one. The recollection of their noble sires, when contrasted with their
+present unhappy associations, affords a sad subject for reflection and
+“this little boy can stop till morning in our room up-stairs,” said she,
+looking up at an old Connecticut clock that adorned the mantel-piece.
+
+“Oh! I could not stay all night. The mate would be uneasy about me, and
+might send the crew to look for me. I'm just as thankful, but I couldn't
+stop,” said Tommy.
+
+“But you never can find the bay on such a night as this; and I've no
+pass, or I would show you into Broad street, and then you could find the
+way. I am afraid of the guardmen, and if they caught me and took me to
+the station, my friend would abuse me awfully,” said Angeline, for
+such was her name; and she laid her hand upon his arm to feel his wet
+clothes.
+
+He now arose from the chair, and putting on his hat, she followed him to
+the door and directed him how to proceed to find Broad street.
+
+He proceeded according to her directions, and soon found it. Now, he
+thought, he was all right; but the wind had increased to a gale, and
+having a full sweep through the street, it was as much as he could do to
+resist it. He had scarcely reached half the distance of the street when
+it came in such sudden gusts that he was forced to seek a refuge against
+its fury in the recess of a door. He sat down upon a step, and buttoning
+his little jacket around him, rested his head upon his knees, and
+while waiting for the storm to abate, fell into a deep sleep. From this
+situation he was suddenly aroused by a guardman, who seized him by the
+collar, and giving him an unmerciful twitch, brought, him headlong upon
+the sidewalk.
+
+“What are you at here? Ah! another miserable vagrant, I suppose. We'll
+take care of such rascals as you; come with me. We'll larn ye to be
+round stealing at this time o' night.”
+
+“No, sir! no, sir! I didn't do nothing”--
+
+“Shut up! None of your lyin' to a policeman, you young rascal. I don't
+want to hear, nor I won't stand your infernal lies.”
+
+“Oh do, mister, let me tell you all about it, and I know you won't hurt
+me. I'm only going to the vessel, if you'll show me the way,” said the
+little fellow imploringly.
+
+“Stop yer noise, ye lying young thief, you. Ye wouldn't be prowling
+about at this time o' night if ye belonged to a vessel. 'Pon me soul,
+I believe yer a nigger. Come to the light,” said the guardman, dragging
+him up to a lamp near by. “Well, you a'n't a nigger, I reckon, but yer a
+strolling vagrant, and that's worse,” he continued, after examining his
+face very minutely. So, dragging him to the guardhouse as he would a
+dog, and thrusting him into a sort of barrack-room, the captain of the
+guard and several officials soon gathered around him to inquire the
+difficulty. The officers listened to the guardman's story, with perfect
+confidence in every thing he said, but refused to allow the little
+fellow to reply in his own behalf. “I watched him for a long time, saw
+him fumbling about people's doors, and then go to sleep in Mr. T--'s
+recess. These boys are gettin' to be the very mischief-most dangerous
+fellows we have to deal with,” said the policeman.
+
+“Oh, no! I was only goin' to the brig, and got turned round. I've been
+more than two hours trying to find my way in the storm. I'm sure I a'n't
+done no harm. If ye'll only let me tell my story,” said Tommy.
+
+“Shut up! We want no stories till morning. The mayor will settle your
+hash to-morrow; and if you belong to a ship, you can tell him all about
+it; but you'll have the costs to pay anyhow. Just lay down upon that
+bench, and you can sleep there till morning; that's better than
+loafing about the streets,” said the captain of the guard, a large,
+portly-looking man, as he pointed Tommy to a long bench similar to those
+used in barrack-rooms.
+
+The little fellow saw it was no use to attempt a hearing, and going
+quietly to the bench, he pulled off his man-a-war hat, and laying it
+upon a chair, stretched himself out upon it, putting his little hands
+under his head to ease it from the hard boards.
+
+But he was not destined to sleep long in this position, for a loud,
+groaning noise at the door, broke upon their ears though the pelting
+fury of the storm, like one in agonizing distress.
+
+“Heavens! what is that!” said the captain of the guard, suddenly
+starting from his seat, and running for the door, followed by the
+whole posse. The groans grew louder and more death-like in their
+sound, accompanied by strange voices, giving utterance to horrible
+imprecations, and a dragging upon the floor. The large door opened, and
+what a sight presented itself! Three huge monsters, with side-arms on,
+dragged in the poor negro who proffered to show Tommy into Broad street.
+His clothes were nearly torn from his back, besmeared with mud, from
+head to foot, and his face cut and mangled in the most shocking manner.
+His head, neck, and shoulders, were covered with a gore of blood, and
+still it kept oozing from his mouth and the cuts on his head. They
+dragged him in as if he was a dying dog that had been beaten with a
+club, and threw him into a corner, upon the floor, with just about as
+much unconcern.
+
+“Oh! massa! massa! kill me, massa, den 'em stop sufferin'!” said the
+poor fellow, in a painful murmur, raising his shackled hands to his
+head, and grasping the heavy chain that secured his neck, in the agony
+of pain.
+
+“What has he done?” inquired the officer.
+
+“Resisted the guard, and ran when we told him to stop!” responded a trio
+of voices. “Yes, and attempted to get into a house. Ah! you vagabond
+you; that's the way we serve niggers like you!--Attempt to run again,
+will you? I'll knock your infernal daylights out, you nigger you,” said
+one of the party.
+
+“It does seem tome that you might have taken him, and brought him up
+with less severity,” said the officer.
+
+“What else could we do, sure? Didn't we catch him prowling about with
+a white fellow, and he runn'd till we couldn't get him. Indeed it was
+nothing good they were after, and it's the like o' them that bees doing
+all the mischief beyant the city.”
+
+“An' 'imself, too, struck Muldown two pokes, 'efore he lave de hancuffs
+be pat upon him, at all!” said another of the guardmen; and then turning
+around, caught a glimpse of poor little Tommy, who had been standing up
+near a desk, during the scene, nearly “frightened out of his wits.”
+
+“By the pipers,--what! and is't here ye are? The same that was with
+himself beyant! Come here, you spalpeen you. Wasn't ye the same what
+runn'd whin we bees spaken to that nigger?” said the same guardman,
+taking hold of Tommy's arm, and drawing him nearer the light.
+
+“Yes, he was coming along with me, to show me”--
+
+“Stop!--you know you are going to lie already. Better lock 'em both up
+for the night, and let them be sent up in the morning,” said another.
+
+“Then you won't let me speak for myself--”
+
+“Hush, sir!” interrupted the officer; “you can tell your story in the
+morning! but take care you are not a vagrant. If it's proved that
+you were with that nigger at the improper hour, you'll get your back
+scarred. Come, you have owned it, and I must lock you up.”
+
+Without attempting to wash the blood off the negro, or dress his wounds,
+they unlocked the handcuffs, and loosened the chain from his neck,
+handling him with less feeling than they would a dumb brute. Relieved of
+his chains, they ordered him to get up.
+
+The poor creature looked up imploringly, as if to beg them to spare his
+life, for he was too weak to speak. He held up his hands, drenched with
+blood, while beneath his head was a pool of gore that had streamed from
+his mounds. “None of your infernal humbuggery-you could run fast enough.
+Just get up, and be spry about it, or I'll help you with the cowhide,”
+ said the officer, calling to one of the guardmen to bring it to him. He
+now made an effort, and had got upon his knees, when the guardman that
+seemed foremost in his brutality fetched him a kick with his heavy boots
+in the side, that again felled him to the ground with a deep groan.
+
+“Oh-tut! that will not do. You mus'n't kill the nigger; his master will
+come for him in the morning,” said the officer, stooping down and taking
+hold of his arm with his left hand, while holding a cowhide in his
+right. “Come, my boy, you must get up and go into the lock-up,” he
+continued.
+
+“Massa! oh, good massa, do-don't! I's most dead now, wha'for ye no
+lef me whare a be?” said he in a whining manner; and making a second
+attempt, fell back upon the floor, at which two of them seized him by
+the shoulders, and dragging him into a long, dark, cell-like room, threw
+him violently upon the floor. Then returning to the room, the officer
+took Tommy by the arm, and marching him into the same room, shut the
+door to smother his cries. The little fellow was so frightened, that he
+burst into an excitement of tears. The room was dark, and as gloomy as
+a cavern. He could neither lie down, sleep, nor console himself. He
+thought of Manuel, only to envy his lot, and would gladly have shared
+his imprisonment, to be relieved from such a horrible situation. Morning
+was to bring, perhaps, worse terrors. He thought of the happy scenes
+of his rustic home in Dunakade, and his poor parents, but nothing could
+relieve the anguish of his feelings. And then, how could he get word to
+his Captain? If they were so cruel to him now, he could not expect them
+to be less so in the morning. In this manner, he sat down upon the floor
+with the poor negro, and, if he could do nothing more, sympathized with
+his feelings. The poor negro murmured and groaned in a manner that would
+have enlisted the feelings of a Patagonian; and in this way he continued
+until about three o'clock in the morning, when his moaning became so
+loud and pitiful, that the officer of the guard came to the door with an
+attendant, and unbolting it, entered with a lantern in his hand. He held
+the light toward his face, and inquired what he was making such a noise
+about? “Oh! good massa, good massa, do send for docta; ma head got a
+pile o' cuts on him,” said he, putting his hand to his head. The officer
+passed the lantern to his attendant, and after putting a pair of gloves
+on his hands, began to feel his head, turn aside his torn clothes, and
+wipe the dirt from the places where the blood seemed to be clotted.
+“Good gracious! I didn't conjecture that you were cut so bad. Here, my
+good fellow, (addressing himself to Tommy,) hold the lantern. Michael,
+go get a pail of water, and some cloths,” said he, very suddenly
+becoming awakened to the real condition of the man, after he had
+exhibited a coldness that bordered on brutality.
+
+Water and cloths were soon brought. The attendant, Michael, commenced
+to strip his clothes off, but the poor fellow was so sore that he
+screeched, in the greatest agony, every time he attempted to touch him.
+“Be easy,” said the officer, “he's hurt pretty badly. He must a' been
+mighty refractory, or they'd never beaten him in this manner,” he
+continued, opening a roll of adhesive plaster, and cutting it into
+strips. After washing, him with water and whiskey, they dressed
+his wounds with the plaster, and bound his head with an old silk
+handkerchief which they found in his pocket, after which they left the
+light burning and retired.
+
+After they retired, Tommy inquired of the negro how they came to keep
+him so long, before they brought him to the guard-house? It proved, that
+as soon as they came up with him, the first one knocked him down with a
+club; and they all at once commenced beating him with their bludgeons,
+and continued until they had satisfied their mad fury. And while he lay
+groaning in the streets, they left one of their number in charge, while
+the others proceeded to get handcuffs and chains, in which they bound
+him, and dragged him, as it were, the distance of four squares to the
+guard-house. What a sublime picture for the meditations of a people who
+boast of their bravery and generosity!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX. THE NEXT MORNING, AND THE MAYOR'S VERDICT.
+
+
+
+SHORTLY after daylight, Tommy fell into a dozing sleep, from which he
+was awakened by the mustering of the prisoners who had been brought up
+during the night, and were to appear before the mayor at nine o'clock.
+A few minutes before eight o'clock, an officer opened the cell-door, and
+they were ordered to march out into a long room. In this room they found
+all the prisoners gathered. There were three blacks and five whites,
+who had been arrested on different charges; and as the mayor's court was
+merely a tribunal of commitment-not judgment-if the charges upon which
+the prisoners were brought up were sustained-which they generally were,
+because the policeman who made the arrest was the important witness,
+they were committed to await the tardy process of the law.
+
+Considerable uneasiness had been felt on board of the Janson for Tommy,
+and the Captain suggested that he might have got astray among the dark
+lanes of the city, and that the mate had better send some of the crew
+to look for him. The mate, better acquainted with Tommy's feelings and
+attachment for Manuel than he was with the rules of the prison and Mr.
+Grimshaw's arbitrary orders, assured the Captain that such a course
+would be entirely unnecessary, for he knew when he left that he would
+stop all night with Manuel. This quieted the Captain's apprehensions,
+and he said no more about it until he sat down to breakfast. “I miss
+Tommy amazingly,” said the Captain. “If he stopped all night, he should
+be here by this time. I think some one had better be sent to the jail
+to inquire for him.” Just as he arose from the table, one of the crew
+announced at the companion that a person on deck wished to see the
+Captain. On going up, he found a policeman, who informed him that a
+little boy had been arrested as a vagrant in the street, last night, and
+when brought before the mayor a few minutes ago, stated that he belonged
+to his vessel, and the mayor had despatched him to notify the master.
+“Circumstances are suspicious; he was seen in company with a negro of
+very bad habits; but if you can identify the boy, you had better come
+quick, or he'll be sent to jail, and you'll have some trouble to get him
+out,” said the messenger, giving the Captain a description of the boy.
+
+“Oh yes!” said the Captain, “that's my Tommy. I verily believe they'll
+have us all in jail before we get away from the port.” Numerous
+appointments engrossed his time, and he had promised to meet the consul
+at an early hour that morning. Notwithstanding this, he gave a few
+orders to the mate about getting the hatches ready and receiving
+the port-wardens, and then immediately repaired to the all-important
+guard-house. He was just in time to receive the mortifying intelligence
+that the mayor's court had concluded its sitting, and to see little
+Tommy, with a pair of handcuffs on his hand, in the act of being
+committed to jail by a Dutch constable. He stopped the constable, and
+being told that his honor was yet in the room, put a couple of dollars
+into his hand to await his intercession. Another fortunate circumstance
+favored him; just as he stopped the constable, he saw his friend,
+Colonel S--, approaching. The colonel saw there was trouble, and with
+his usual, characteristic kindness, hastened up and volunteered his
+services.
+
+We must now return to the arraignment, as it proceeded after the
+messenger had been despatched.
+
+The negro confined with Tommy presented a wretched picture when brought
+into the light room among the other prisoners. His head was so swollen
+that no trace of feature was left in his face. Cuts and gashes were
+marked with plaster all over his neck and face; his head tied up with
+an old red handkerchief; his eyes, what could be seen of them, more like
+balls of blood than organs of sight; while the whiskey and water with
+which his head had been washed, had mixed with the blood upon his
+clothes, and only served to make its appearance more disgusting.
+Altogether, a more pitiful object never was presented to human sight.
+
+Some minutes before the clock struck nine, an intelligent-looking
+gentleman, very well dressed, and portly in his appearance, entered
+the room. He was evidently kindly disposed, but one of those men whose
+feelings prompt them to get through business with despatch, rather
+than inquire into the circumstances of aggravated cases. He held a
+consultation with the officer for some minutes with reference to the
+prisoners. After which he mounted a little tribune, and addressing a
+few words to the white prisoners, (a person who acted the part of clerk
+announced court by rapping upon a desk with a little mallet,) inquired
+whether the officers had notified the owners of the negroes. Being
+informed that they had, he proceeded with the negroes first. One, by
+some good fortune, was taken away by his master, who paid the usual
+fee to swell the city treasury; another was sentenced to receive twenty
+paddles on the frame at the workhouse; and the third, the man we have
+described, being brought forward, weak with the loss of blood, leaned
+his hand upon the back of a chair. “Stand up straight!” said the
+officer, in a commanding tone.
+
+“Now, my boy, this is twice you have been before this court. Your master
+has left you to the mercy of the law, and given strict orders to the
+police in the event that you were caught a third time. Your crime is
+worse now, for you were caught in company with that white boy-probably
+on some errand of villany, prowling about the streets after drum-beat.
+I shall, in consideration of the facts here stated by the police, whose
+evidence I am bound to recognise, sentence you to nineteen paddles on
+the frame, and to be committed to jail, in accordance with your master's
+orders, there to await his further directions.
+
+“Arraign the white prisoners according to the roll, Mr.--. Have you sent
+a message to the Captain about that boy?” inquired the mayor.
+
+“No, yer honor; but I will send at once,” said the officer, stepping
+into the passage and calling an attendant.
+
+The little fellow was arraigned first. He stood up before the mayor
+while the ruffianly policeman who arrested him preferred the charges
+and swore to them, adding as much to give coloring as possible. “Now, my
+man, let me hear what you have got to say for yourself. I have sent for
+your captain,” said the mayor, looking as if he really felt pity for the
+little fellow.
+
+He commenced to tell his simple story, but soon became so convulsed with
+tears that he could proceed no further. “I only went to the jail to see
+Manuel, the steward, and I got lost, and begged the black man to show me
+the way”--said he, sobbing.
+
+“Well, I have heard enough,” said the mayor, interrupting him. “You
+could not have been at the jail at that time o' night-impossible. It
+was after hours-contrary to rules-and only makes the matter worse for
+yourself. You can stand aside, and if the Captain comes before court
+is through, we will see further; if not, you must be committed as a
+vagrant. I'm afraid of you young strollers.”
+
+The officer of the guard, as if the poor boy's feelings were not already
+sufficiently harassed, took him by the arm, and pushing him into a
+corner, said, “There, you young scamp, sit down. You'll get your deserts
+when you get to the jail.”
+
+He sat down, but could not restrain his feelings. The presence of the
+Captain was his only hope. He saw the prisoners arraigned one by one,
+and join him as they were ordered for committal. He was handcuffed like
+the rest, and delivered to the constable. The reader can imagine the
+smile of gladness that welcomed the Captain's timely appearance. The
+latter's exhibition of feeling, and the simple exclamation of the
+child's joy, formed a striking picture of that fondness which a loving
+child manifests when meeting its parents after a long absence.
+
+“Take the irons off that child,” said the colonel to the constable. “A
+man like you should not put such symbols of ignominy upon a youth like
+that.”
+
+“I would do any thing to oblige you, colonel; but I cannot without
+orders from the mayor,” returned the man, very civilly.
+
+“I'll see that you do, very quick,” rejoined the colonel, impatiently;
+and taking the little fellow by the arm in a compassionate manner, led
+him back into the presence of the mayor, followed by the Captain.
+
+“I want to know what you are committing this lad for,” said the colonel,
+setting his hat upon the table, while his face flushed with indignation.
+
+“Vagrancy, and caught prowling about the streets with a negro at
+midnight. That is the charge, colonel,” replied the mayor, with
+particular condescension and suavity.
+
+“Was there any proof adduced to substantiate that fact?”
+
+“None but the policeman's; you know we are bound to take that as prima
+facie.”
+
+“Then it was entirely ex parte. But you know the character of these
+policemen, and the many aggravated circumstances that have arisen from
+their false testimony. I wish to cast no disrespect, your honor; but
+really they will swear to any thing for a fee, while their unscrupulous
+bribery has become so glaring, that it is a disgrace to our police
+system. Have you heard the boy's story?” said the colonel.
+
+“Well, he began to tell a crooked story, so full of admissions, and then
+made such a blubbering about it, that I couldn't make head or tail of
+it.”
+
+“Well, here is the Captain of his vessel, a friend of mine, whom I
+esteem a gentleman-for all captains ought to be gentlemen, not excepting
+Georgia captains and majors,” said the colonel, jocosely, turning round
+and introducing the Captain to his honor. “Now, your honor, you will
+indulge me by listening to the little fellow's story, which will be
+corroborated in its material points by the statements of the Captain,
+which, I trust, will be sufficient; if not, we shall recur to the
+jailer.”
+
+“It will be sufficient. I am only sorry there has been so much trouble
+about it,” said the mayor.
+
+The boy now commenced to tell his story, which the mayor listened
+to with all learned attention. No sooner had Tommy finished, and the
+Captain arose to confirm his statements, than the mayor declared himself
+satisfied, apologized for the trouble it had caused, and discharged the
+boy upon paying the costs, the amount of which the colonel took from his
+pocket and threw upon the table. Thus was Tommy's joy complete; not
+so the poor negro whose ill luck he shared. This high-sounding mayor's
+court was like Caesar's court, with the exceptions in Caesar's favor.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX. EMEUTE AMONG THE STEWARDS.
+
+
+
+SEVERAL days had passed ere we again introduce the reader to the cell of
+the imprisoned stewards. The captain of the Janson had been assured by
+Mr. Grimshaw that every thing was comfortable at the jail, and Manuel
+would be well cared for. Confiding in this, the activity of the consul
+to bring the matter before the proper authorities-and the manner
+in which his own time was engrossed with his business-left him no
+opportunity to visit Manuel at the jail. Tommy and one of the sailors
+had carried him his hammock, and a few things from the ship's stores;
+and with this exception, they had but little to eat for several days.
+Copeland had but a few days more to remain, and, together with those who
+were with him, had exhausted their means, in providing from day to
+day, during their imprisonment. The poor woman who did their washing,
+a generous-hearted mulatto, had brought them many things, for which she
+asked no compensation. Her name was Jane Bee, and when the rules of the
+jail made every man his own washerwoman, she frequently washed for those
+who had nothing to pay her. But her means were small, and she worked
+hard for a small pittance, and had nothing to bring them for several
+days. They were forced to take the allowance of bread, but could not
+muster resolution to eat the sickly meat.
+
+Those who had suffered from it before, took it as a natural consequence,
+looking to the time of their release, as if it was to bring a happy
+change in their lives. But Manuel felt that it was an unprecedented
+outrage upon his feelings, and was determined to remonstrate against
+it. He knocked loudly at the door, and some of the prisoners hearing it,
+reported to the jailer, who sent Daley to answer it. As soon as the door
+was opened, he rushed past, and succeeded in gaining the iron door that
+opened into the vestibule, where he could converse with the Jailer,
+through the grating, before Daley could stop him.
+
+The jailer seeing him at the grating, anticipated his complaint. “Well,
+Pereira,--what's the matter up-stairs?” said he.
+
+“For God's sake, jailer, what am I put in here for-to starve? We cannot
+eat the meat you send us, and we have had little else than bread and
+water for three days. Do give us something to eat, and charge it to
+consul, or Captain, an' I'll pay it from my wages when I get out, if I
+ever do,” said he.
+
+“My dear fellow!” said the jailer, “no one knows your case better than
+I do; but I am poor, and the restrictions which I am under allow me
+no privileges. You had all better take your meat in the morning-if you
+won't take soup-and try to cook it, or get Jane to do it for you. I
+will give you some coffee and bread from my own table, to-night, and you
+better say as little about it as possible, for if Grimshaw hears it, he
+may lock you up.”
+
+“Do, I shall be very thankful, for we are really suffering from hunger,
+in our cell, and I pay you when I get money from Captain,” said Manuel,
+manifesting his thankfulness at the jailer's kindness.
+
+“I will send it up in a few minutes, but you needn't trouble yourself
+about pay-I wouldn't accept it!” said the jailer; and as good as his
+word, he sent them up a nice bowl of coffee for each, and some bread,
+butter, and cheese. They partook of the humble fare, with many thanks to
+the donor. Having despatched it, they seated themselves upon the
+floor, around the faint glimmer of a tin lamp, while Copeland read
+the twentieth and twenty-first chapters of the Acts of the Apostles.
+Copeland was a pious negro, and his behaviour during his imprisonment
+enlisted the respect of every one in jail. Singular as the taste may
+seem, he had his corner in the cell decorated with little framed
+prints. Among them we noticed one of the crucifixion, and another of the
+Madonna. After reading the chapters, they retired to their hard beds.
+About nine o'clock the next morning, Daley came to the door with a piece
+of neck meat, so tainted and bloody that its smell and looks more than
+satisfied the stomach.
+
+“Here it is, boys,” said he; “yer four pound, but ye's better take soup,
+cos ye'll niver cook that bone, anyhow.”
+
+“Do you think we're like dogs, to eat such filth as that? No! I'd rather
+starve!” said Manuel.
+
+“Indeed, an' ye'll larn to ate any thing win ye'd be here a month. But
+be dad, if ye don't watch number one about here, ye's won't get much
+nohow,” replied Daley, dropping the bloody neck upon the floor, and
+walking out.
+
+“Better take it,” said Copeland. “There's no choice, and hunger don't
+stand for dainties, especially in this jail, where everybody is famished
+for punishment. If we don't eat it, we can give it to some of the poor
+prisoners up-stairs.”
+
+“While I have good ship-owners, and a good Captain, I never will eat
+such stuff as that; oh! no,” returned Manuel.
+
+The meat was laid in a corner for the benefit of the flies; and when
+dinner time arrived, the same hard extreme arrived with it-bread and
+water. And nobody seemed to have any anxieties on their behalf; for two
+of them had written notes to their Captains, on the day previous, but
+they remained in the office for want of a messenger to carry them.
+Fortunately, Jane called upon them in the afternoon, and brought a nice
+dish of rice and another of homony.
+
+We will here insert a letter we received from a very worthy friend, who,
+though he had done much for the Charleston people, and been repaid
+in persecutions, was thrown into jail for a paltry debt by a ruthless
+creditor. Cleared by a jury of twelve men, he was held in confinement
+through the wretched imperfection of South Carolina law, to await nearly
+twelve months for the sitting of the “Appeal Court,” more to appease the
+vindictiveness of his enemies than to satisfy justice, for it was well
+understood that he did not owe the debt. His letter speaks for itself.
+Charleston Jail, March 31, '52.
+
+MY DEAR FRIEND,--I could not account for your absence during the last
+few days, until this morning, when Mr. F***** called upon me for a few
+moments, and from him I learnt that you had been quite unwell. If you
+are about to-morrow, do call upon me; for a more dreary place, or one
+where less regard is paid to the calls of humanity, cannot be found
+among the nations of the earth.
+
+Such is the ordinary condition of suffering within this establishment,
+that men, and even women, are forced to all kinds of extremes to
+sustain life; and, to speak what experience has taught me, crime is more
+increased than reduced by this wretched system. There seems to be little
+distinction among the prisoners, and no means to observe it, except in
+what is called Mount Rascal on the third story. Pilfering is so common,
+that you cannot leave your room without locking your door. The jailer
+is a good, kind-hearted old man, very often giving from his own table to
+relieve the wants of debtors, many of whom repay him with ingratitude. I
+have suffered many privations from shipwreck and cold, but never until
+I came to South Carolina was I compelled to endure imprisonment and
+subsist several days upon bread and water.
+
+Talk about chivalry and hospitality! How many men could join with me and
+ask, “Where is it?” But why should I demur, when I see those abroad who
+have been driven from this State to seek bread; when I hear the many
+voices without tell of struggling to live, for want of system in
+mechanical employment, and when I look upon several within these sombre
+walls who are even worse than me. Here is a physician, with a wife
+and large family, committed for a debt which he was unable to pay.
+His father's name stands among the foremost of the State--a General of
+distinction, who offered his life for her in time of war, and whose name
+honors her triumphs, and has since graced the councils of state.
+
+General Hammond, whose name occupies such a conspicuous place in the
+military history of South Carolina. The father's enthusiasm for his
+country's cause led him to sacrifice his all, and by it he entailed
+misfortune upon his descendants. When I consider the case of Shannon,
+whose eleven years and seven months' imprisonment for debt, as it
+was called, but which eventually proved to be a question turning upon
+technicalities of law, gave him, body and soul, to the vindictiveness of
+a persecutor, whose unrelenting malignity was kept up during that long
+space of time. It was merely a breach of limitation between merchants,
+the rights of which should be governed by commercial custom. Shannon
+had, amassed about twenty thousand dollars by hard industry; his health
+was waning, and he resolved to retire with it to his native county.
+The gem proved too glaring for the lynx eye of a “true Carolinian,”
+ who persuaded him to invest his money in cotton. Moved by flattering
+inducements, he authorized a factor to purchase for him upon certain
+restrictions, which, unfortunately for himself, were not drawn up with
+regard to legal enforcement-one of those singular instruments between a
+merchant and an inexperienced man which a professional quibbler can
+take advantage of. Cotton was at the tip-top, and very soon Shannon
+was presented with an account of purchase, and draft so far beyond his
+limits, that he demurred, and rejected the purchase entirely; but some
+plot should be laid to entrap him. The factor undertook the force
+game, notified him that the cotton was held subject to his order, and
+protested the draft for the appearance of straightforwardness. Cotton
+shortly fell to the other extreme, the lot was “shoved up” for sale on
+Shannon's account, Shannon was sued for the balance, held to bail, and
+in default committed to prison. His confinement and endurance of it
+would form a strange chapter in the history of imprisonment for debt.
+Carrying his money with him, he closed the door of his cell, and neither
+went out nor would allow any one but the priest to enter for more than
+three years; and for eleven years and seven months he paced the room
+upon a diagonal line from corner to corner, until he wore the first
+flooring, of two-and-a-quarter-inch pine, entirely through.
+
+I might go on and tell of many others, whose poverty was well known,
+and yet suffered years of imprisonment for debt; but I find I have
+digressed. I must relate an amusing affair which took place this morning
+between Manuel Pereira, the steward of the English brig Janson, which
+put into this port in distress, and the jailer. He is the man about whom
+so much talk and little feeling has been enlisted--a fine, well-made,
+generous-hearted Portuguese. He is olive-complexioned--as light as many
+of the Carolinians--intelligent and obliging, and evidently unaccustomed
+to such treatment as he receives here.
+
+Manuel appeared before the jailer's office this morning with two junks
+of disgusting-looking meat, the neck-bones, tainted and bloody, in each
+hand. His Portuguese ire was up. “Mister Poulnot, what you call dis? In
+South Carolina you feed man on him, ah? In my country, ah yes! we feed
+him to dog. What you call him? May-be somethin' what me no know him. In
+South Carolina, prison sailor when he shipwreck, starve him on nosin',
+den tell him eat this, ah! I sails 'round ze world, but never savage man
+gives me like zat to eat! No, I starve 'fore I eat him, be gar! Zar,
+you take him,” said he, throwing the pieces of meat upon the floor in
+disdain.
+
+“Meat! Yes, it's what's sent here for us. You mustn't grumble at me;
+enter your complaints to the sheriff, when he comes,” said the jailer,
+with an expression of mortification on his countenance.
+
+“Meat, ah! You call dat meat in South Carolina? I call him bull-neck,
+not fit for dog in my country. I see, when Capitan come, vat he do,”
+ said Manuel, turning about and going to his room in a great excitement.
+
+“You'd better be careful how you talk, or you may get locked up when the
+sheriff comes.”
+
+It seems that the Captain had received a note from him, addressed by one
+of the white prisoners on the same floor, and reached the jail just as
+Manuel had ascended the stairs. He rang the bell and requested to see
+Manuel.
+
+“Manuel Pereira?” inquired the jailer.
+
+“Yes,” said the Captain, “he is my steward.”
+
+He heard the Captain's voice, and immediately returned to the lobby. The
+tears ran down his cheeks as soon as he saw his old protector. “Well,
+Manuel, I am glad to see you, but sorry that it is in imprisonment.
+Tell me what is the matter. Don't they use you well here?” inquired the
+Captain.
+
+Stepping within the office door, he caught up the pieces of meat, and
+bringing them out in his hands, held them up. “There, Capitan, that
+no fit for man, is it?” said he. “Law send me prison, but law no give
+not'ing to eat. What I do dat people treat me so? Ah, Capitan, bull
+neck, by gar, yes-bull born in South Carolina, wid two neck. Ils sont
+reduits l'extremit,” said he, concluding with broken French.
+
+“That cannot be; it's against the law to kill bulls in South Carolina,”
+ interrupted the jailer jocosely.
+
+“Must be. I swear he bull-neck, 'cas he cum every day just like him.
+Bull born wid one neck no cum so many. What I get for breakfast,
+Capitan, ah?--piece bad bread. What I get for dinner, ah?--bull-neck.
+Yes, what I get for supper, too?--piece bread and bucket o' water.
+May-be he bad, may be he good, just so he come. You think I live on dat,
+Capitan?” said he, in reply to the Captain's questions.
+
+The Captain felt incensed at such treatment, and excused himself for not
+calling before; yet he could not suppress a smile that stole upon his
+countenance in consequence of Manuel's quaint earnestness.
+
+“That is certainly strange fare for a human being; but the supper
+seems rather a comical one. Did you drink the bucket of water, Manuel?”
+ inquired the Captain, retaining a sober face.
+
+“Capitan, you know me too well for dat. I not ask 'em nozin' what he no
+get, but I want my coffee for suppe'. I no eat him like zat,” throwing
+the putrid meat upon the floor again.
+
+“Hi, hi! That won't do in this jail. You're dirtying up all my floor,”
+ said the jailer, calling a negro boy and ordering him to carry the
+bull-necks, as Manuel called them, into the kitchen.
+
+“You call him dirt, ah, Miser Jailer? Capitan, just come my room; I
+shown him,” said Manuel, leading the way up-stairs, and the Captain
+followed. A sight at the cell was enough, while the sickly stench forbid
+him to enter beyond the threshold. He promised Manuel that he would
+provide for him in future, and turning about suddenly, retreated into
+the lower lobby.
+
+“Jailer, what does all this mean? Do you allow men to starve in a land
+of plenty, and to suffer in a cell like that?” asked the Captain in a
+peremptory tone.
+
+“I feel for the men, but you must enter your complaints to the
+sheriff-the ration of the jail is entirely in his hands.”
+
+“But have you no voice in it, by which you can alleviate their
+situation?”
+
+“Not the least! My duty is to keep every thing-every thing to rights,
+as far as people are committed. You will find the sheriff in his office,
+any time between this and two o'clock,” said the jailer. And the Captain
+left as suddenly as he came.
+
+You will think I have written you an essay, instead of a letter inviting
+you to come and see me. Accept it for its intention, and excuse the
+circumstances. Your obedient servant,
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI. THE CAPTAIN'S INTERVIEW WITH MR. GRIMSHAW.
+
+
+
+THE appearance of things at the jail was forlorn in the extreme.
+The Captain knew the integrity of Manuel, and not only believed his
+statement, but saw the positive proofs to confirm them. He repaired to
+the sheriff's office, and inquiring for that functionary, was pointed to
+Mr. Grimshaw, who sat in his large chair, with his feet upon the table,
+puffing the fumes of a very fine-flavored Havana, as unconcerned as
+if he was lord in sovereignty over every thing about the city. “I am
+captain of the Janson, and have called to inquire about my steward?”
+ said the Captain.
+
+“Ah! yes,--you have a nigger fellow in jail. Oh! by-the-by, that's the
+one there was so much fuss about, isn't it?” said Mr. Grimshaw, looking
+up.
+
+“It is an imperative duty on me to seek the comfort of my officers
+and crew,” said the Captain. “I received a note from my steward, this
+morning,--here it is, (handing him the note,) you can read it. He
+requested me to call upon him at the jail, where I lost no time in
+going, and found what he stated there to be too true. How is it! From
+the great liberality of tone which everywhere met my ears when I first
+arrived, I was led to believe that he would be made comfortable; and
+that the mere confinement was the only feature of the law that was a
+grievance. Now I find that to be the only tolerable part of it. When a
+man has committed no crime, and is imprisoned to satisfy a caprice
+of public feeling, it should be accompanied with the most favoring
+attendants. To couple it with the most disgraceful abuses, as are shown
+here, makes it exceedingly repugnant. If we pay for confining these men,
+and for their living while they are confined, in God's name let us get
+what we pay for!”
+
+The reader will observe that Mr. Grimshaw was a man of coarse manners
+and vulgar mind, with all their traces preserved on the outer man. He
+looked up at the Captain with a presumptuous frown, and then said, “Why,
+Mr. Captain, how you talk! But that kind o' talk won't do here in
+South Carolina. That nigger o' yourn gives us a mighty site of trouble,
+Captain. He doesn't seem to understand that he must be contented in
+jail, and live as the other prisoners do. He gets what the law requires,
+and if he gives us any further trouble, we shall lock him up in the
+third story.”
+
+“You cannot expect him to be contented, when you furnish the means of
+discontent. But I did not come here to argue with you, nor to ask any
+thing as a favour, but as a right. My steward has been left to suffer!
+Am I to pay for what he does not get? Or am I to pay you for the
+pretence, and still be compelled to supply him on account of the owners?
+You must excuse my feelings, for I have had enough to provoke them!”
+ returned the Captain.
+
+“That business is entirely my own! He gets what the State allows, and I
+provide. Your steward never wrote that note; it was dictated by some of
+them miserable white prisoners. I can hear no complaints upon such cases
+as them. If I were to listen to all these nonsensical complaints, it
+would waste all my time. I wish the devil had all the nigger stewards
+and their complaints; the jail's in a fuss with them all the time. I can
+hear nothing further, sir-nothing further!” said Grimshaw emphatically,
+interrupting the Captain as he attempted to speak; at which the Captain
+became so deeply incensed, that he relieved his feelings in that sort of
+plain English which a Scotchman can best bestow in telling a man what he
+thinks of his character.
+
+“You must remember, sir, you are in the office of the sheriff of the
+county-parish, I mean,--and I am, sir, entitled to proper respect.
+Begone!--avaunt! you have no right to come here and traduce my character
+in that way. You musn't take me for a parish beadle,” said Grimshaw,
+contorting the unmeaning features of his visage, and letting fly a
+stream of tobacco juice in his excitement.
+
+“If you have no laws to give me justice, you have my opinion of your
+wrongs,” returned the Captain, and taking his hat, left the office with
+the intention of returning to the jail. On reflection, he concluded
+to call upon Colonel S--, which he did, and finding him in his office,
+stated the circumstances to him.
+
+“These things are the fruits of imbecility; but I am sorry to say there
+is no relief from them. We are a curious people, and do a great many
+curious things according to law, and leave a great many things undone
+that the law and lawmakers ought to do. But I will go with you to the
+jail, and whatever my influence will effect is at your service,” said
+the Colonel, putting on his hat, and accompanying the Captain to the
+jail.
+
+Mr. Grimshaw had forestalled them, and after having given the jailer
+particular instructions to lock Manuel up if he made any further
+complaint, and to carry out his orders upon the peril of his situation,
+met them a few steps from the outer gate, on his return. “There,
+Captain!” said Grimshaw, making a sort of halt, “I have given the jailer
+particular orders in regard to your grumbling nigger!”
+
+Neither the Captain nor Colonel S--took any notice of his remarks, and
+passed on into the jail. Colonel S--interceded for the man, explaining
+the circumstances which had unfortunately brought him there, and begged
+the jailer's kind consideration in his behalf. The jailer told them what
+his orders had been, but promised to do as far as was in his power, and
+to see any thing that was sent to him safely delivered.
+
+After leaving the jail, Colonel S--proposed a walk, and they proceeded
+along a street running at right angles with the jail, until they came
+to a corner where a large brick building was in process of erection.
+The location was not in what might strictly be called “the heart of the
+city,” nor was it in the suburbs. Carpenters and masons, both black and
+white, were busily employed in their avocations, and from the distance
+all seemed fair and moving with despatch. As they approached nearer,
+cries and moans sounded upon the air, and rose high above the clatter of
+the artisans' work. The Captain quickened his pace, but the colonel,
+as if from a consciousness of the effect, halted, and would fain have
+retraced his steps. “Come!” said the Captain, “let us hasten-they are
+killing somebody!” They approached the building, and entered by an open
+door in the basement. The passage, or entry-way, was filled with all
+sorts of building materials; and on the left, another door opened into
+a long basement apartment, with loose boards laid upon the floor-joists
+overhead. Here in this dark apartment was the suffering object whose
+moans had attracted their attention. A large billet of wood, about six
+feet long and three feet square, which had the appearance of being used
+for a chopping-block, laid near. A poor negro man, apparently advanced
+in years, was stripped naked and bent over the block, in the shape of a
+horse-shoe, with his hands and feet closely pinioned to stakes, driven
+in the ground on each side. His feet were kept close together, and close
+up to the log, while he was drawn over, tight by the hands, which were
+spread open. Thus, with a rope around his neck, tied in a knot at
+the throat, with each end carried to the pinion where his hands were
+secured, his head and neck were drawn down to the tightest point. The
+very position was enough to have killed an ordinary human being in less
+than six hours. His master, a large, robust man, with a strong Irish
+brogue, started at their appearance, as if alarmed at the presence
+of intruders, while holding his hand in the attitude of administering
+another blow. “There! you infernal nigger; steal again, will you?”
+ said he, frothing at the mouth with rage--with his coat off, his
+shirt-sleeves rolled up, and his face, hands, arms and shirt-bosom so
+bespattered with blood, that a thrill of horror ran through the Captain.
+On the ground lay several pieces of hoop, broken and covered with blood,
+while he held in his hand another piece, (which he had torn from a
+lime-cask,) reeking with blood, presenting the picture of a murderer
+bestained with the blood of his victim. But the poor sufferer's
+punishment had wasted his strength,--his moans had become so faint as to
+be scarcely perceptible. His posteriors were so cut and mangled that we
+could compare them to nothing but a piece of bullock's-liver, with its
+tenacity torn by craven dogs. His body was in a profuse perspiration,
+the sweat running from his neck and shoulders, while the blood streamed
+from his bruises, down his legs, and upon some shavings on the ground.
+Just at this moment a boy brought a pail of water, and set it down close
+by the tyrant's feet. “Go away, boy!” said he, and the boy left as
+quick as possible. The Captain stood dismayed at the bloody picture.
+
+“Unmerciful man!” said the colonel in a peremptory tone; “what have you
+been doing here? You fiend of hell, let the man up! You own slaves to
+bring disgrace upon us in this manner! Epithets of contempt and disgust
+are too good for you. It is such beasts as you who are creating a
+popular hatred against us, and souring the feelings of our countrymen.
+Let the man up instantly; the very position you have him in is enough to
+kill him, and, if I'm not mistaken, you've killed him already.”
+
+“Indeed, he's me own property, and it's yerself won't lose a ha'penny if
+he's kilt. An' I'll warrant ye he's cur't of stalin' better than the man
+beyant at the wurk'o'se would be doin' if. Bad luck to the nager,
+an' it's the second time he'd be doin' that same thing,” said he, as
+unconcernedly as if he had just been killing a calf.
+
+“I'll 'your own' you, you miserable wretch! Your abuse and cruel
+treatment of your slaves is becoming a public thing; and if you a'n't
+very careful, something will be done about it before council. If
+they are your own, you must not treat them worse than dogs; they have
+feeling, if you have no compassion. Be quick! release him at once!”
+ demanded the colonel, feeling the man's wrist and head.
+
+The tyrant vent deliberately to work, unloosing the cords. This provoked
+the colonel still more, and taking his knife from his pocket, he severed
+the cords that bound his hands and feet, while as suddenly the Captain
+sprang with his knife and severed those that bound his hands and
+neck. “Stop, Captain, stop! take no part,” said the colonel, with a
+significant look.
+
+“Gintlemen, I wish yes wouldn't interfere with my own business,” said
+the master.
+
+“Take him up, you villanous wretch! I speak to you as you deserve,
+without restraint or respect,” again the colonel repeated.
+
+He called to the boy who was bringing the pail of water when they
+entered. He came forward, and taking the poor fellow by the shoulders,
+this beast in human form cried out, “Get up now, ye miserable thief,
+ye.” The poor fellow made a struggle, but as the black man raised his
+head-which seemed to hang as a dead weight-exhaustion had left him
+without strength, and he fell back among the bloody shavings like a
+mutilated mass of lifeless flesh.
+
+“None of your humbugging; yer worth a dozen dead niggers anyhow,” said
+he, taking up the pail of water and throwing nearly half of it over him;
+then passing the bucket to the black man and ordering him to get more
+water and wash him down; then to get some saltpetre and a sponge to sop
+his flesh.
+
+“Well,” said the colonel, “I have seen a good deal of cruelty to slaves,
+but this is the most beastly I have ever beheld. If you don't send for
+a doctor at once, I shall report you. That man will die, to a moral
+certainty. Now, you may depend upon what I say-if that man dies, you'll
+feel the consequences, and I shall watch you closely.”
+
+“Sure I always takes care of me own niggers, an' it's himself that won't
+be asked to do a stroke of work for a week, but have the same to git
+well in,” said the tyrant as the colonel and Captain were leaving.
+
+“God be merciful to us, and spare us from the savages of mankind. That
+scene, with its bloody accompaniment, will haunt me through life. Do
+your laws allow such things?” said the Captain, evidently excited.
+
+“To tell the truth, Captain,” said the colonel, “our laws do not reach
+them. These men own a few negroes, which, being property, they exercise
+absolute control over; a negro's testimony being invalid, gives them an
+unlimited power to abuse and inflict punishment; while, if a white man
+attempts to report such things, the cry of 'abolitionist' is raised
+against him, and so many stand ready to second the cry, that he must
+have a peculiar position if he does not prejudice his own interests
+and safety. I am sorry it is so; but it is too true, and while it
+stigmatizes the system, it works against ourselves. The evil is in the
+defects of the system, but the remedy is a problem with diverse and
+intricate workings, which, I own, are beyond my comprehension to solve.
+The reason why I spoke to you as I did when you cut the pinions from the
+man's hands, was to give you a word of precaution. That is a bad man.
+Negroes would rather be sold to a sugar plantation in Louisiana any
+time than be sold to him. He soon works them down; in two years, fine,
+healthy fellows become lame, infirm, and sickly under him; he never
+gives them a holiday, and seldom a Sunday, and half-starves them at
+that. If his feelings had been in a peculiar mood at the instant you
+cut that cord, and he had not labored under the fear of my presence, he
+would have raised a gang of his stamp, and with the circumstance of your
+being a stranger, the only alternative for your safety would have been
+in your leaving the city.”
+
+“That vagabond has beaten the poor creature so that he will die; it
+can't be otherwise,” said the Captain.
+
+“Well, no; I think not, if he is well taken care of for a week or so;
+but it's a chance if that brute gives him a week to get well. When
+proud-flesh sets in, it is very tedious; that is the reason, so far
+as the law is concerned, that the lash was abolished and the paddle
+substituted--the former mangled in the manner you saw just now, while
+the latter is more acute and bruises less. I have seen a nigger taken
+from the paddle-frame apparently motionless and lifeless, very little
+bruised, and not much blood drawn; but he would come to and go to work
+in three or four days,” said the colonel as they passed along together.
+
+We would print the name of this brute in human form, that the world
+might read it, were it not for an amiable wife and interesting family,
+whose feelings we respect. We heard the cause of this cruel torture a
+short time after, which was simply that he had stolen a few pounds
+of nails, and this fomented the demon's rage. In the manner we have
+described, this ferocious creature had kept his victim for more than two
+hours, beating him with the knotty hoops taken from lime-casks. His rage
+would move at intervals, like gusts of wind during a gale. Thus, while
+his feelings raged highest, he would vent them upon the flesh of the
+poor pinioned wretch; then he would stop, rest his arm, and pace the
+ground from wall to wall, and as soon as his passion stormed, commence
+again and strike the blows with all his power, at the same time keeping
+the black boy standing with a bucket of water in his hand ready to pour
+upon the wretch whenever signs of fainting appeared. Several times, when
+the copious shower came over him, it filled his mouth, so that his cries
+resounded with a gurgling, death-like noise, that made every sensation
+chill to hear it. During this space of time, he inflicted more than
+three hundred blows. Our information is from the man who did his
+master's bidding--poured the water--and dared not say, “Good massa,
+spare poor Jacob.” We visited the place about a month afterward, on
+a pretext of examining the basement of the building, and saw the
+unmistakable evidences of civilized torture yet remaining in the ground
+and upon the shavings that were scattered around.
+
+“Captain, you must not judge the institution of slavery by what you
+saw there; that is only one of those isolated cases so injurious in
+themselves, but for which the general character of the institution
+should not be held answerable,” said the colonel.
+
+“A system so imperfect should be revised, lest innocent men be made to
+suffer its wrongs,” said the Captain.
+
+They continued their walk through several very pretty parts of the city,
+where fine flowering gardens and well-trimmed hedges were nicely laid
+out; these, however, were not the habitations of the “old families.”
+ They occupied parts of the city designated by massive-looking old
+mansions, exhibiting an antiqueness and mixed architecture, with
+dilapidated court-yards and weather-stained walls, showing how steadfast
+was the work of decay.
+
+The colonel pointed out the many military advantages of the city, which
+would be used against Uncle Sam if he meddled with South Carolina. He
+spoke of them ironically, for he was not possessed of the secession
+monomania. He had been a personal friend of Mr. Calhoun, and knew his
+abstractions. He knew Mr. McDuffie; Hamilton, (the transcendant, of
+South Carolina fame;) Butler, of good component parts-eloquent, but
+moved by fancied wrongs; Rhett, renouncer of that vulgar name of Smith,
+who hated man because he spoke, yet would not fight because he feared
+his God; and betwixt them, a host of worthies who made revenge a motto;
+and last, but not least, great Quattlebum, whose strength and
+spirit knows no bound, and brought the champion Commander, with his
+enthusiastic devotion, to lead unfaltering forlorn hopes. But he knew
+there was deception in the political dealings of this circle of great
+names.
+
+Returning to the market, they took a social glass at Baker's, where the
+colonel took leave of the Captain; and the latter, intending to repair
+to his vessel, followed the course of the market almost to its lowest
+extreme. In one of the most public places of the market, the Captain's
+attention was attracted by a singular object of mechanism. It seemed
+so undefined in its application, that he was reminded of the old saying
+among sailors when they fall in with any indescribable thing at sea,
+that it was a “fidge-fadge, to pry the sun up with in cloudy weather.”
+ It was a large pedestal about six feet high, with a sort of platform at
+the base for persons to stand upon, supplied with two heavy rings about
+eight inches apart. It was surmounted by an apex, containing an iron
+shackle long enough for a sloop-of-war's best bower chain, and just,
+beneath it was a nicely-turned moulding. About three feet from the
+ground, and twelve inches from the pedestal, were two pieces of timber
+one above the other, with a space of some ten inches between them, the
+upper one set about five inches nearest the pedestal, also containing
+two rings, and both supported by posts in the ground. Above the whole
+was a framework, with two projecting timbers supplied with rings, and
+standing about fourteen inches in a diagonal direction above the big
+ring in the apex of the shaft. It was altogether a curious instrument,
+but it designated the civilization of the age, upon the same principle
+that a certain voyager who, on landing in a distant country, discovered
+traces of civilization in the decaying remains of an old gallows.
+
+He viewed the curious instrument for some time, and then turning to an
+old ragged negro, whose head and beard were whitened with the flour of
+age, said, “Well, old man, what do you call that?”
+
+“Why, massa, him great t'ing dat-what big old massa judge send
+buckra-man to get whip, so color foke laugh when 'e ketch 'im on de
+back, ca' bim; an' massa wid de cock-up hat on 'e head put on big vip
+jus' so,” said the old negro.
+
+It was the whipping-post, where white men, for small thefts, were
+branded with ignominy and shame.
+
+“Are you a slave, old man?” inquired the Captain.
+
+The old man turned his head aside and pulled his ragged garments, as if
+shame had stung his feelings.
+
+“Do, good massa-old Simon know ye don'e belong here-give him piece of
+'bacca,” replied the hoary-headed veteran evidently intending to evade
+the question. The Captain divided his “plug” with him, and gave him a
+quarter to get more, but not to buy whiskey. “Tank-e, massa, tank-e; he
+gone wid ole Simon long time.”
+
+“But you haven't answered my question; I asked you if you were a slave.”
+
+“Ah! massa, ye don'e know him how he is, ah ha! ha! I done gone now.
+Massa Pringle own 'im once, but 'im so old now, nobody say I own 'im,
+an' ole Simon a'n't no massa what say I his fo' bacon. I don't woff
+nofin' nohow now, 'cos I ole. When Simon young-great time 'go-den massa
+say Simon his; woff touzan' dollars; den me do eve' ting fo' massa just
+so. I prime nigga den, massa; now I woff nosin', no corn and bacon 'cept
+what 'im git from Suke-e. She free; good massa make her free,” said he.
+
+“How old are you, old man?” inquired the Captain.
+
+“Ah, Massa Stranger, ye got ole Simon da! If me know dat, den 'im
+know somefin' long time ago, what buckra-man don' larn. I con'try-born
+nigger, massa, but I know yonder Massa Pringle house fo' he built 'im.”
+ Just at this moment several pieces of cannon and other ordnance were
+being drawn past on long, low-wheeled drays. “Ah, massa, ye don'e know
+what 'em be,” said the old negro, pointing to them. “Dem wa' Massa South
+Ca'lina gwan to whip de 'Nited States wid Massa Goberna' order 'em last
+year, an 'e jus' come. Good masse gwan' to fight fo' we wid 'em.” The
+poor old man seemed to take a great interest in the pieces of ordnance
+as they passed along, and to have inherited all the pompous ideas of
+his master. The negroes about Charleston have a natural inclination for
+military tactics, and hundreds of ragged urchins, as well as old daddies
+and mammies, may be seen following the fife and drum on parade days.
+
+“Then I suppose you've a home anywhere, and a master nowhere, old man?”
+ said the Captain, shaking him by the hand, as one who had worn out his
+slavery to be disowned in the winter of life.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII. COPELAND'S RELEASE, AND MANUEL'S CLOSE CONFINEMENT.
+
+
+
+THE Captain of the Janson, finding that no dependence was to be placed
+upon the statements of the officials, after returning to his vessel,
+gave orders that Tommy should be sent to the jail every day with
+provisions for Manuel. The task was a desirable one for Tommy, and
+every day about ten o'clock he might be seen trudging to the jail with a
+haversack under his arm. There were five stewards confined in the cell,
+and for some days previous to this attention on the part of the Captain
+they had been reduced to the last stage of necessity. The quantity may
+be considered as meagre when divided among so many, but added to the
+little things brought in by Jane, and presents from several of the crew
+of the Janson, they got along. Still it was a dependence upon chance and
+charity, which any casual circumstance might affect. For several days
+they made themselves as contented and happy as the circumstances would
+admit; and always being anxious to enjoy the privilege of their time
+in the yard, they would leave their cell together, and mix with the
+prisoners of their own color under the stoop.
+
+After a few days, they found that their cell had been entered, and
+nearly all their provisions stolen. Not contented with this, the act was
+repeated for several days, and all the means they provided to detect the
+thief proved fruitless. The jailer made several searches through
+their remonstrances, but without effecting any thing. They kept their
+provisions in a little box, which they locked with a padlock; but as
+Daley had the keys of the cell, they had no means of locking the door.
+At length Manuel set a trap that proved effectual. One morning Tommy
+came puffing into the jail with a satchel over his back. “I guess Manuel
+won't feel downhearted when he sees this--do you think he will?” said
+the little fellow, as he put the satchel upon the floor and looked up
+at the jailer. “An' I've got some cigars, too, the Captain sent, in
+my pocket,” said he, nodding his head; and putting his hand into a
+side-pocket, pulled out one and handed it to the jailer.
+
+“Ah! you are a good little fellow-worth a dozen of our boys. Sit down
+and rest yourself,” said the jailer, and called a monstrous negro wench
+to bring a chair and take the satchel up to the cell. Then turning
+to the back-door, he called Manuel; and, as if conscious of Tommy's
+arrival, the rest of the stewards followed. He sprang from the chair
+as soon as he saw Manuel, and running toward him, commenced telling him
+what he had got in the satchel and at the same time pulled out a handful
+of segars that the Captain had sent for himself. Manuel led the way
+up-stairs, followed by Tommy and the train of stewards. Tommy opened the
+satchel, while Manuel laid the contents, one by one, on the table which
+necessity had found in the head of a barrel.
+
+“Now eat, my friends, eat just as much as you want, and then I'll catch
+the thief that breaks my lock and steals my meat. I catch him,” said
+Manuel. After they had all done, he locked the balance up in his box,
+and sent everybody down-stairs into the yard, first covering himself
+with two mattrasses, and giving orders to Copeland to lock the door
+after him. Every thing was ready to move at the word. In this position
+he remained for nearly half an hour. At length he heard a footstep
+approach the door, and then the lock clink. The door opened slowly, and
+the veritable Mr. Daley limped in, and taking a key from his pocket,
+unlocked the little box, and filling his tin pan, locked it, and was
+walking off as independent as a wood-sawyer, making a slight whistle to
+a watch that was stationed at the end of the passage. “It's you, is it?”
+ said Manuel, suddenly springing up and giving him a blow on the side of
+the head that sent him and the contents of the pan into a promiscuous
+pile on the floor. Daley gathered himself up and made an attempt to
+reach the door, but Manuel, fearing what might be the consequence if
+the other prisoners came to his assistance, shut the door before him and
+fastened it on the inside.
+
+“Bad luck to yer infernal eyes, will ye strike a white man, ye nager ye,
+in a country like this same?” said Daley, as he was gathering himself
+up. This incensed Manuel's feelings still more. To have insult added to
+injury, and a worthless drunkard and thief abuse him, was more than he
+could bear. He commenced according to a sailor's rule of science, and
+gave Daley a systematic threshing, which, although against the rules of
+the jail, was declared by several of the prisoners to be no more than
+he had long deserved. As may have been expected, Daley cried lustily for
+help, adding the very convenient item of murder, to make his case more
+alarming. Several persons had crowded around the door, but none could
+gain admittance. The jailer had no sooner reached the door, than (most
+unfortunately for Manuel) he was called back to the outer door, to admit
+Mr. Grimshaw, who had just rung the bell. The moment he entered, Daley's
+noise was loudest, and reached his ears before he had gained the outside
+gate. He rushed up-stairs, followed by the jailer, and demanded entrance
+at the cell door, swearing at the top of his voice that he would break
+it in with an axe if the command was not instantly obeyed.
+
+The door opened, and Manuel stood with his left hand extended at Daley.
+“Come in, gentlemen, I catch him, one rascal, what steal my provision
+every day, and I punish him, what he remember when I leave.”
+
+Daley stood trembling against the wall, bearing the marks of serious
+injury upon his face and eyes. “At it again, Daley? Ah! I thought you
+had left off them tricks!” said the jailer.
+
+Daley began to tell a three-cornered story, and to give as many possible
+excuses, with equally as many characteristic bulls in them. “I don't
+want to hear your story, Daley,” said Mr. Grimshaw. “But, Mr. Jailer, I
+command you to lock that man up in the third story,” pointing to Manuel.
+“I don't care what the circumstances are. He's given us more trouble
+than he's worth. He tried to pass himself off for a white man, but he
+couldn't come that, and now he's had the impudence to strike a white
+man; lock him up! lock him up!! and keep him locked up until further
+orders from me. I'll teach him a lesson that he never learnt before he
+came to South Carolina; and then let Consul Mathew sweat over him, and
+raise another fuss if he can.”
+
+“If he's guilty of violating the rules of the jail, Daley is guilty of
+misdemeanour, and the thieving has been aggravatingly continued. If we
+put one, we must put both up,” said the jailer.
+
+“Just obey my orders, Mr. Jailer. I will reprimand Daley to-morrow. I
+shall just go to the extent of the law with that feller,” said Grimshaw
+peremptorily.
+
+“You may lock me up in a dungeon, do with me as you will, if the power
+is yours; but my feelings are my own, and you cannot crush them. I look
+to my consul, and the country that has protected me around the world,
+and can protect me still,” said Manuel, resigning himself to the jailer,
+whose intentions he knew to be good.
+
+Poor little Tommy stood begging and crying for his friend and companion,
+for he heard Mr. Grimshaw give an imperative order to the jailer not
+to allow visitors into his cell. “Never mind, Tommy, we shall soon meet
+again, and sail companions for the old owners. Don't cry; the jailer
+will let you see me to-morrow,” said Manuel.
+
+“No, I can't do that; you heard my orders; I must obey them. I should
+like to do it, but it's out of my power,” returned the jailer, awaiting
+with a bunch of keys in his hand.
+
+Manuel turned to the little fellow, and kissing him as he would an
+affectionate child, bade him adieu, and ascended, the steps leading to
+the third story (Mount Rascal) in advance of the jailer, to be confined
+in a dark, unhealthy cell, there to await the caprice of one man.
+To describe this miserable hole would be a task too harrowing to
+our feelings. We pass it for those who will come after us. He little
+thought, when he shook the hand of his little companion, that it was the
+last time he should meet him for many months, and then only to take a
+last parting look, under the most painful circumstances. But such is the
+course of life!
+
+Copeland had received notice to hold himself in readiness, as his vessel
+would be ready for sea the next morning. He was not long in getting his
+few things in order, and when morning came he was on hand, prepared to
+bound from the iron confines of the Charleston jail, like a stag from a
+thicket. As he bade good-by to his fellow-prisoners in the morning,
+he said, “This is my last imprisonment in Charleston. I have been
+imprisoned in Savannah, but there I had plenty to eat, comfortable
+apartments, and every thing I asked for, except my liberty. Never, so
+long as I sail the water, shall I ship for such a port as this again.”
+ He requested to see Manuel, but being refused, upon the restraint of
+orders, he left the jail. It was contrary to law; and thus in pursuing
+his vocation within the limits of South-Carolina, his owners were
+made to pay the following sum, for which neither they nor the man who
+suffered the imprisonment received any compensation. “Contrary to Law.”
+ Schooner “Oscar Jones,” Captain Kelly, For William H. Copeland, Colored
+Seaman. To Sheriff of Charleston District. 1852,
+
+To Arrest, $2; Registry, $2, $4.00 To Recog. $1.31; Constable, $1, 2.31
+To Commitment and Discharge, 1.00 To 15 Days' Jail Maintenance of Wm. H.
+Copeland, at 80 cts. per day, 4.50 Received payment, $11.81 J. D--, Per
+Charles E. Kanapeaux, Clerk.
+
+God save the sovereignty of South Carolina, and let her mercy and
+hospitality be known on earth!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII. IMPRISONMENT OF JOHN PAUL, AND JOHN BAPTISTE PAMERLIE.
+
+
+
+IN order to complete the four characters, as we designed in the outset,
+we must here introduce the persons whose names fill the caption. The
+time of their imprisonment was some two months later than Manuel's
+release; but we introduce them here for the purpose of furnishing a
+clear understanding of the scenes connected with Manuel's release.
+
+John Paul was a fine-looking French negro, very dark, with
+well-developed features, and very intelligent,--what would be called in
+South Carolina, “a very prime feller.” He was steward on board of the
+French bark Senegal, Captain--. He spoke excellent French and Spanish,
+and read Latin very well,--was a Catholic, and paid particular respect
+to devotional exercises,--but unfortunately he could not speak or
+understand a word of English. In all our observation of different
+characters of colored men, we do not remember to have seen one whose
+pleasant manner, intelligence, and civility, attracted more general
+attention. But he could not comprehend the meaning of the law
+imprisoning a peaceable man without crime, and why the authorities
+should fear him, when he could not speak their language. He wanted to
+see the city-what sort of people were in it-if they bore any analogy to
+their good old forefathers in France; and whether they had inherited the
+same capricious feelings as the descendants of the same generation
+on the other side of the water. There could be no harm in that; and
+although he knew something of French socialism, he was ignorant of
+Carolina's peculiar institutions, her politics, and her fears of
+abolition, as a “Georgia cracker”
+
+A sort of semi-civilized native, wearing a peculiar homespun dress; with
+a native dialect strongly resembling many of the Yorkshire phrases. They
+are generally found located in the poorer parishes and districts, where
+their primitive-looking cabins are easily designated from that of the
+more enterprising agriculturist. But few of them can read or write,--and
+preferring the coarsest mode of life, their habits are extremely
+dissolute. Now and then one may be found owning a negro or two,--but
+a negro would rather be sold to the torments of hell, or a Louisiana
+sugar-planter, than to a Georgia cracker. You will see them approaching
+the city on market-days, with their travelling-cart, which is a
+curiosity in itself. It is a two-wheeled vehicle of the most primitive
+description, with long, rough poles for shafts or thills. Sometimes it
+is covered with a blanket, and sometimes with a white rag, under which
+are a few things for market, and the good wife, with sometimes one
+or two wee-yans; for the liege lord never fails to bring his wife to
+market, that she may see the things of the city. The dejected-looking
+frame of some scrub-breed horse or a half-starved mule is tied (for we
+can't call it harnessed) between the thills, with a few pieces of rope
+and withes; and, provided with a piece of wool-tanned sheep-skin, the
+lord of the family, with peculiar dress, a drab slouched hat over his
+eyes, and a big whip in his hand, mounts on the back of the poor animal,
+and placing his feet upon the thills to keep them down, tortures it
+through a heavy, sandy road. The horses are loaded so much beyond their
+strength, that they will stop to blow, every ten or fifteen minutes,
+while the man will sit upon their backs with perfect unconcern.
+Remonstrate with them in regard to the sufficient draught added to
+the insupportable weight upon their backs, and they will immediately
+commence demonstrating how he can draw easier when there is an immense
+weight upon his back. The husband generally exchanges his things for
+whiskey, rice, and tobacco, while the wife buys calico and knick-knacks.
+Sometimes they get “a right smart chance o' things” together, and have a
+“party at home,” which means a blow-out among themselves. Sometimes they
+have a shucking, which is a great affair, even among the little farmers
+in Upper Georgia, where, only, corn-shuckings are kept up with all the
+spice of old custom, and invitations are extended to those at a distance
+of ten or fifteen miles, who repay the compliment with their presence,
+and join in the revelry. There are two classes of the cracker in
+Georgia, according to our observation, differing somewhat in their
+dialect, but not in their habits. One is the upper, and the other the
+low country, or rather what some call the “co-u-n-try-b-o-r-n” cracker.
+The up-country cracker gives more attention to farming, inhabits what's
+known as the Cherokee country and its vicinity, and is designated by the
+sobriquet of “wire-grass man.” would be of Greek. Like his predecessors
+in confinement, he fell into the hands of the veritable Dunn, without
+the assistance of his friend Duse, as he called him; but had it not been
+for the timely appearance of a clerk in the French consul's office, who
+explained the nature of the arrest, in his native tongue, Mr. Dunn would
+have found some trouble in making the arrest. Already had the officers
+and crew of the bark gathered around him, making grimaces, and gibbering
+away like a flock of blackbirds surrounding a hawk, and just ready to
+pounce. “Don't I'se be tellin' yees what I wants wid 'im, and the divil
+a bit ye'll understand me. Why don't yees spake so a body can understand
+what yees be blatherin' about. Sure, here's the paper, an' yees won't
+read the English of it. The divil o' such a fix I was ever in before wid
+yer John o' crapue's an' yer chatter. Ye say we-we-we; sure it's but one
+I wants. Ah! whist now, captain, and don't ye be makin' a bother over
+it. Shure, did ye niver hear o' South Carolina in the wide world? An'
+ye bees travellin' all over it, and herself's such a great State, wid so
+many great gintlemen in it,” said Dunn, talking his green-island Greek
+to the Frenchman.
+
+“We, we! mon Dieu, ah!” said the Frenchman.
+
+“Ah, shure there ye are again. What would I be doin' wid de 'hole o'
+yees? It's the nager I want. Don't ye know that South Carolina don't
+allow the likes o' him to be comin ashore and playing the divil wid her
+slaves,” continued Dunn, stretching himself up on his lame leg.
+
+The clerk stepped up at this moment. “It's 'imself'll be telling yes all
+about it, for yer like a parcel of geese makin' a fuss about a goslin.”
+ Mr. Dunn had got his Corkonian blood up; and although the matter was
+explained, he saw the means at hand, and fixed his feelings for a stiff
+compensation. The clerk, after explaining to the captain, turned to John
+Paul and addressed him. As soon as he was done, John commenced to pack
+up his dunnage and get money from the captain, as if he was bound on
+an Arctic Expedition. Dunn's eyes glistened as he saw the money passing
+into Paul's hand; but he was not to be troubled with the dunnage, and
+after hurrying him a few times, marched him off. He went through the
+regular system of grog-shop sponging; but his suavity and willingness to
+acquiesce in all Mr. Dunn's demands, saved him some rough usage. There
+was this difference between John Paul and Manuel, that the former,
+not understanding the English language, mistook Dunn's deception for
+friendship, and moved by that extreme French politeness and warmth of
+feeling, which he thought doing the gentleman par excellence; while the
+latter, with a quicker perception of right and wrong, and understanding
+our language, saw the motive and disdained its nefarious object. For
+when Paul arrived at the jail he was minus a five-dollar gold-piece,
+which his very amiable official companion took particular care of, lest
+something should befall it. Poor John Paul! He was as harmless as South
+Carolina's secession and chivalry-two of the most harmless things in the
+world, not excepting Congressional duelling.
+
+As soon as he entered the jail and found that the jailer could speak
+French, he broke out in a perfect tornado of enthusiasm. “Je serai
+charm‚ de lier connaissance avec un si amiable compagnon,” said he,
+and continued in a strain so swift and unabated that it would have been
+impossible for an Englishman to have traced the inflections.
+
+The jailer called Daley, and telling him to take his blanket, the
+State's allotment, ordered him shown to his cell. Daley took the blanket
+under his arm and the keys in his hand, and Paul soon followed him
+upstairs to be introduced to his cell. “There, that's the place for
+yees. We takes the shine off all ye dandy niggers whin we gets ye here.
+Do ye see the pair of eyes in the head o' me?” said Daley, pointing to
+his blackened eyes; “an' he that done that same is in the divil's own
+place above. Now, if ye have ever a drap of whiskey, don't be keepin' it
+shy, an' it'll be tellin' ye a good many favors.”
+
+“Ah! mon Dieu! Cela fait dresser les cheveux la tete,” said Paul,
+shrugging his shoulders.
+
+“Bad luck to the word of that I'd be understandin' at all, at all. Can't
+ye spake so a body'd understand what ye'd mane?”
+
+“C'est ma grande consolation d'avoir. * * * Les Etats-Unis est une
+mod‚le de perfection republicaine,” said he, taking the blanket from
+Daley and throwing it upon the floor. He was but a poor companion for
+his fellow-prisoners, being deprived of the means to exercise his social
+qualities. He went through the same course of suffering that Manuel did;
+but, whether from inclination or necessity, bore it with more Christian
+fortitude, chanting vespers every morning, and reading the Latin service
+every evening. The lesson which Manuel taught Daley proved of great
+service to Paul, who gave Daley the jail-ration which it was impossible
+for him to eat, and was saved from his pilfering propensities. Thus,
+after John Paul had suffered thirty-five days' imprisonment, in mute
+confinement, to satisfy the majesty of South Carolina, he was released
+upon the following conditions, and taken to his vessel at early
+daylight, lest he should see the city or leave something to contaminate
+the slaves. “Contrary to law.” State vs. “Contrary to law.” French bark
+“Senegal,” Capt.--For John Paul, Colored Seaman. To Sheriff Charleston
+Dist.
+
+July 18, 1852. To Arrest, $2; Registry, $2, $4.00” “Recog. $1.31;
+Constable, $1, 2.31” “Commitment and discharge, 1.00” “35 Days'
+Maintenace of John Paul, at 30 cents per day, 10.50
+
+Recd. payment, $17.81 J. D--, S. C. D. Per Chs. E. Kanapeaux, Clerk.
+
+A very nice item of disbursements to present to the owners-a premium
+paid for the advanced civilization of South Carolina!
+
+We have merely noticed the imprisonment of John Paul, our limits
+excluding the details. We must now turn to a little, pert, saucy French
+boy, eleven years old, who spoke nothing but Creole French, and that
+as rotten as we ever heard lisped. The French bark Nouvelle Amelie,
+Gilliet, master, from Rouen, arrived in Charleston on the twenty-ninth
+of July. The captain was a fine specimen of a French gentleman. He
+stood upon the quarter-deck as she was being “breasted-in” to the wharf,
+giving orders to his men, while the little child stood at the galley
+looking at the people upon the wharf, making grimaces and pointing one
+of the crew to several things that attracted his attention. Presently
+the vessel hauled alongside of the dock, and Dusenberry, with his
+companion Dunn, who had been watching all the movements of the vessel
+from a hiding-place on the wharf, sprang out and boarded her ere she had
+touched the piles.
+
+The “nigger,” seeing Dusenberry approach him, waited until he saw his
+hand extended, and then, as if to save himself from impending danger,
+ran aft and into the cabin, screaming at the top of his voice. The crew
+began to run and move up into close quarters. The issue was an important
+one, and rested between South Carolina and the little “nigger.”
+ Dusenberry attempted to descend into the cabin. “Vat you vant wid my
+John, my Baptiste? No, you no do dat, 'z my cabin; never allow stranger
+go down 'im,” said the captain, placing himself in the companionway,
+while the little terrified nigger peeped above the combing, and rolled
+his large eyes, the white glowing in contrast, from behind the captain's
+legs. In this tempting position the little darkie, knowing he was
+protected by the captain and crew, would taunt the representative of the
+State with his bad French. Dunn stood some distance behind Dusenberry,
+upon the deck, and the mission seemed to be such a mystery to both
+captain and crew, that their presence aroused a feeling of curiosity as
+well as anxiety. Several of the sailors gathered around him, and made
+antic grimaces, pointing their fingers at him and swearing, so that
+Dunn began to be alarmed by the incomprehensible earnestness of their
+gibberish, turned pale, and retreated several steps, to the infinite
+amusement of those upon the wharf.
+
+“Vat 'e do, ah, you vant 'im? Vat you do vid 'im ven zu gets him, ah?
+Cette affaire delicate demande,” said one of the number, who was honored
+with the title of mate, and who, with a terrific black moustache and
+beard, had the power of contorting his face into the most repugnant
+grimaces. And, at the moment, he drew his sheath-knife and made a
+pretended plunge at Dunn's breast, causing him to send forth a pitiful
+yell, and retreat to the wharf with quicker movements than he ever
+thought himself capable of.
+
+“Il n'y a pas grand mal cela,” said the Frenchman, laughing at Dunn as
+he stood upon the capsill of the wharf.
+
+“Bad luck to ye, a pretty mess a murderous Frinchmin that ye are. Do
+yees be thinkin' ye'd play that trick in South Carolina? Ye'll get the
+like o' that taken out o' ye whin yer before his honor in the mornin',”
+ said Dunn.
+
+Dusenberry had stood parleying with the captain at the companion-door,
+endeavoring to make the latter understand that it was not a case which
+required the presence of the silver oar. There is a prevailing opinion
+among sailors, that no suit in Admiralty can be commenced, or seaman
+arrested while on board, without the presence of the silver oar. And
+thus acting upon this impression, the captain and officers of the
+Nouvelle Amelie contended for what they considered a right. The mate and
+crew drew closer and closer toward Dusenberry, until he became infected
+with the prevailing alarm. “Captain, I demand your protection from these
+men, in the name of the State of South Carolina,” said he.
+
+“Who he? De State Souf Ca'lina, vat I know 'bout him, ah? Bring de
+silver oar when come take my man. Il y a de la malhomme tet‚ dans sou
+proces,” said Captain Gilliet, turning to his mate.
+
+“Avaunt! avaunt!” said the big man with the large whiskers, and they all
+made a rush at Dusenberry, and drove him over the rail and back to the
+wharf, where he demanded the assistance of those anxious spectators, for
+and in the name of the State. It was a right good vaudeville comique,
+played in dialogue and pantomime. The point of the piece, which, with a
+little arrangement, might have made an excellent production, consisted
+of a misunderstanding between an Irishman and a Frenchman about South
+Carolina, and a law so peculiar that no stranger could comprehend its
+meaning at first and as neither could understand the language of the
+other, the more they explained the more confounded the object became,
+until, from piquant comique, the scene was worked into the appearance of
+a tragedy. One represented his ship, and to him his ship was his nation;
+the other represented South Carolina, and to him South Carolina was the
+United States; and the question was, which had the best right to the
+little darkie.
+
+The spectators on the wharf were not inclined to move, either not
+wishing to meddle themselves with South Carolina's affairs-wanting
+larger game to show their bravery-or some more respectable officer
+to act in command. The little darkie, seeing Dusenberry driven to the
+wharf, ran to the gangway, and protruding his head over the rail, worked
+his black phiz into a dozen pert expressions, showing his ivory,
+rolling the white of his eyes, and crooking his finger upon his nose in
+aggravating contempt.
+
+“Shure, we'll turn the guard out and take ye an' yer ship, anyhow. Why
+don't yees give the nager up dasently, an' don't be botherin'. An'
+isn't it the law of South Carolina, be dad; an' be the mortis, ye'd be
+getting' no small dale of a pinalty for the same yer doin',” said Dunn.
+
+A gentleman, who had been a silent looker-on, thinking it no more than
+proper to proffer his mediation, perceiving where the difficulty lay,
+stepped on board and introducing himself to the captain, addressed him
+in French, and explained the nature of the proceeding. The captain shook
+his head for some time, and shrugged his shoulders. “La police y est
+bien administree,” said he, with an air of politeness; and speaking to
+his mate, that officer again spoke to the men, and Dusenberry was told
+by the gentleman that he could come on board. Without further ceremony,
+he mounted the rail and made a second attempt at the young urchin,
+who screamed and ran into the cook's galley, amid the applause of the
+seamen, who made all sorts of shouts inciting him to run, crying out,
+“Run, Baptiste! run, Baptiste!” In this manner the little darkie kept
+the officer at bay for more than fifteen minutes, passing out of one
+door as the officer entered the other, to the infinite delight of the
+crew. At length his patience became wearied, and as he was about to call
+Dunn to his assistance, the captain came up, and calling the child to
+him-for such he was-delivered him up, the little fellow roaring at the
+top of his voice as the big officer carried him over the rail under
+his arm. This ended the vaudeville comique on board of the French bark
+Nouvelle Amelie, Captain Gilliet.
+
+The dignity of the State was triumphant, and the diminutive nigger was
+borne off under the arm of its representative. What a beautiful theme
+for the painter's imagination! And how mutely sublime would have been
+the picture if the pencil of a Hogarth could have touched it. The
+majesty of South Carolina carrying a child into captivity!
+
+After carrying John Baptiste about halfway up the wharf, they put him
+down, and made him “trot it” until they reached the Dutch grog-shop
+we have described in the scene with Manuel. Here they halted to take a
+“stiff'ner,” while Baptiste was ordered to sit down upon a bench, Dunn
+taking him by the collar and giving him a hearty shake, which made the
+lad bellow right lustily. “Shut up, ye whelp of a nigger, or ye'll get a
+doz for yeer tricks beyant in the ship,” said Dunn; and after remaining
+nearly an hour, arguing politics and drinking toddies, Mr. Dunn got very
+amiably fuddled, and was for having a good-natured quarrel with every
+customer that came; into the shop. He laboured under a spirit-inspired
+opinion that they must treat or fight; and accordingly would attempt to
+reduce his opinions to practical demonstrations. At length the Dutchman
+made a courteous remonstrance, but no sooner had he done it, than Dunn
+drew his hickory stick across the Dutchman's head, and levelled him upon
+the floor. The Dutchman was a double-fisted fellow, and springing up
+almost instantly, returned the compliment. Dusenberry was more sober,
+and stepped in to make a reconciliation; but before he had time to exert
+himself, the Dutchman running behind the counter, Dunn aimed another
+blow at him, which glanced from his arm and swept a tin drench, with
+a number of tumblers on it, into a smash upon the floor. This was the
+signal for a general melee, and it began in right earnest between the
+Dutch and the Irish,--for the Dutchman called the assistance of several
+kinsmen who were in the front store, and Dunn, with the assistance of
+Dusenberry, mustered recruits from among a number of his cronies, who
+were standing at a corner on the opposite side, of the street. Both came
+to the rescue, but the O'Nales and Finnegans outnumbering the Dutch,
+made a Donnybrook onset, disarming and routing their adversaries, and
+capsizing barrels, boxes, kegs, decanters, and baskets of onions, into
+one general chaos,--taking possession of the Dutchman's calabash, and
+proclaiming their victory with triumphant shouts.
+
+They had handcuffed the boy Baptiste as soon as they entered the store,
+and in the midst of the conflict he escaped without being observed, and
+ran for his vessel, handcuffed, and crying at the top of his voice. He
+reached the Nouvelle Amelie, to the consummate surprise of the officers
+and crew, and the alarm of pedestrians as he passed along the street.
+“Mon Dieu!” said the mate, and taking the little fellow to the
+windlass-bits, succeeded in severing the handcuffs with a cold-chisel,
+and sent him down into the forecastle to secrete himself.
+
+When Dunn's wild Irish had subsided, Dusenberry began to reason with him
+upon the nature of the affair, and the matter was reconciled upon the
+obligations that had previously existed, and a promise to report no
+violations of the ordinances during a specified time. Looking around,
+Dunn exclaimed, “Bad manners till ye, Swizer, what a' ye done with the
+little nager? Where did ye put him?--Be dad, Duse, he's gone beyant!”
+ An ineffectual search was made among barrels and boxes, and up the old
+chimney. “Did ye see him?” inquired Dunn, of a yellow man that had been
+watching the affray at the door, while Dusenberry continued to poke with
+his stick among the boxes and barrels.
+
+“Why, massa, I sees him when he lef de doo, but I no watch him 'till 'e
+done gone,” said the man.
+
+Dunn was despatched to the vessel in search, but every thing there was
+serious wonderment, and carried out with such French naviete, that his
+suspicions were disarmed, and he returned with perfect confidence that
+he was not there. A search was now made in all the negro-houses in the
+neighborhood; but kicks, cuts, and other abuses failed to elicit
+any information of his whereabouts. At length Dunn began to feel the
+deadening effects of the liquor, and was so muddled that he could not
+stand up; then, taking possession of a bed in one of the houses,
+he stretched himself upon it in superlative contempt of every thing
+official, and almost simultaneously fell into a profound sleep. In this
+manner he received the attention of the poor colored woman whose bed
+he occupied, and whom he had abused in searching for the boy. In this
+predicament, Dusenberry continued to search alone, and kept it up until
+sundown, when he was constrained to report the case to the sheriff,
+who suspended Mr. Dunn for a few days. The matter rested until the next
+morning, when the case of the little saucy nigger vs. South Carolina was
+renewed with fresh vigor. Then Mr. Grimshaw, accompanied by Dusenberry,
+proceeded to the barque, and there saw the boy busily engaged in the
+galley. Mr. Grimshaw went on board, followed by Duse, and approaching
+the cabin door, met the captain ascending the stairs. “Captain, I
+want that nigger boy of yourn, and you may just as well give him up
+peaceably,” said he.
+
+“Yes, monsieur,--but you no treat 'im like child wen you get 'im,”
+ said the captain. Retiring to the cabin, and bringing back the broken
+manacles in his hand, he held them up to Mr. Grimshaw, “You put such dem
+thing on child like 'im, in South Carolina, ah? What you tink 'im be,
+young nigger, ox, horse, bull, ah! what? Now you take'e him! treat him
+like man, den we no 'struct to laws wat South Carolina got,” continued
+he.
+
+Mr. Grimshaw thanked the captain, but made no reply about the manacles;
+taking them in his hand, and handing the boy over into the charge of
+Dusenberry. In a few minutes he was ushered into the sheriff's office,
+and the important points of his dimensions and features noted
+in accordance with the law. We are not advised whether the pert
+characteristics of his nature were emblazoned,--if they were, the record
+would describe a singular specimen of a frightened French darkie, more
+amusing than judicial. But John Baptiste Pamerlie passed the ordeal,
+muttering some rotten Creole, which none of the officials could
+understand, and was marched off to the jail, where the jailer acted as
+his interpreter. Being so small, he was allowed more latitude to ware
+and haul than the others, while his peculiar bon point and pert
+chatter afforded a fund of amusement for the prisoners, who made him a
+particular butt, and kept up an incessant teasing to hear him jabber.
+The second day of his imprisonment he received a loaf of bread in
+the morning, and a pint of greasy water, misnamed soup. That was the
+allowance when they did not take meat. He ran down-stairs with the pan
+in hand, raising an amusing fuss, pointing at it, and spitting out his
+Creole to the jailer. He was disputing the question of its being soup,
+and his independent manner had attracted a number of the prisoners. Just
+at the moment, the prison dog came fondling against his legs, and to
+decide the question, quick as thought, he set the pan before him; and as
+if acting upon an instinctive knowledge of the point at issue, the dog
+put his nose to it, gave a significant scent, shook his head and walked
+off, to the infinite delight of the prisoners, who sent forth a shout of
+acclamation. Baptiste left his soup, and got a prisoner, who could speak
+Creole, to send for his captain, who came on the next morning and
+made arrangements to relieve his condition from the ship's stores. The
+following day he whipped one of the jailer's boys in a fair fight; and
+on the next he killed a duck, and on the fourth he cut a white prisoner.
+Transgressing the rules of the jail in rejecting his soup-violating the
+laws of South Carolina making it a heinous offence for a negro to strike
+or insult a white person--committing murder on a duck--endeavoring to
+get up a fandango among the yard niggers, and trying the qualities of
+cold steel, in a prisoner's hand, thus exhibiting all the versatility
+of a Frenchman's genius with a youthful sang-froid, he was considered
+decidedly dangerous, and locked up for formal reform. Here he remained
+until the seventeenth of August, when it was announced that the good
+barque Nouvelle Amelie, Captain Gilliet, was ready for sea, and he
+was forthwith led to the wharf between two officers, and ordered to
+be transferred beyond the limits of the State, the Captain paying the
+following nice little bill, of costs. “Contrary to Law.” “French
+Barque Nouvelle Amelie, Captain Gilliet, from Rouen, For John Baptiste
+Pamerlie, Colored Seaman. 1852. To Sheriff of Charleston District.
+August 26th, To Arrest, $2; Registry, $2, $4.00”
+
+“Recog. 1.31; Constable, $1, 2.31”
+
+“Commitment and Discharge, 1.00”
+
+“20 days' Jail Maintenance of John Baptiste Pamerlie, at 30 cts. per
+day, $6.00
+
+“Received payment, 13.31 J. D., S. C. D. Per Charles E. Kanapeaux,
+Clerk.”
+
+Thus ended the scene. The little darkie might have said when he was in
+jail, “Je meurs de faim, et l'on ne mapport‚ rien;” and when he left,
+“Il est faufite avec les chevaliers d'industrie.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV. THE JANSON CONDEMNED.
+
+
+
+WE must now return to Manuel. He was in close confinement, through Mr.
+Grimshaw's orders. Tommy continued to bring him food from day to day,
+but was not allowed to see him. The mate and several of the crew
+were also refused admittance to him. This was carrying power to an
+unnecessary limit, and inflicting a wanton punishment without proper
+cause, at the same time exhibiting a flagrant disrespect for personal
+feelings. Tommy did not report the affair to the Captain, lest it should
+be misconstrued, and worse punishment be inflicted; but when the men
+were refused, they naturally mistrusted something, and made inquiries
+of the jailer, who readily gave them all the information in his power
+concerning the affair, and his orders. This they reported to the
+Captain, who immediately repaired to the consul's office, where he found
+Mr. Mathew reading a note which he had just received from Manuel. It
+stated his grievances in a clear and distinct manner, and begged the
+protection of that government under whose flag he sailed, but said
+nothing about his provisions. The consul, accompanied by the Captain,
+proceeded to the sheriff's office, but could get no satisfaction. “I
+never consider circumstances when prisoners violate the rules of the
+jail,--he must await my orders! but I shall keep him closely confined
+for two weeks, at least,” said Mr. Grimshaw.
+
+This incensed the consul still more, for he saw the manner in which a
+clique of officials were determined to show their arbitrary power. It
+was impossible for him to remain indifferent to this matter, affecting,
+as it did, the life and liberty of his fellow-countryman. He could
+invoke no sympathy for the man, and the extent of punishment to which
+he had been subjected was evidently excited by vindictive feelings. He
+applied for a writ of habeas corpus,--but mark the result.
+
+The Captain proceeded to the jail, and demanded to see his steward; the
+jailer hesitating at first, at length granted his permission. He found
+Manuel locked up in a little, unwholesome cell, with scarcely a glimmer
+of light to mark the distinction of day and night; and so pale and
+emaciated, that had he met him in the street he should scarcely have
+recognised him. “Gracious God! What crime could have brought such an
+excess of punishment upon you?” inquired the Captain.
+
+Manuel told him the whole story; and, added to that, the things which
+had been sent to him during the seven days he had been confined in that
+manner, had seldom reached him. He had lost his good friend Jane, and
+the many kind acts which she was wont to bestow upon him, and had been
+compelled to live upon bread and water nearly the whole time, suffering
+the most intense hunger. Upon inquiry, it was ascertained that the
+few things sent to make him comfortable had been intrusted to Daley to
+deliver, who appropriated nearly the whole of them to his own use, as a
+sort of retaliatory measure for the castigation he received from Manuel.
+He had not failed to carry him his pan of soup at twelve o'clock every
+day, but made the “choice bits” serve his own digestion. The jailer
+felt the pain of the neglect, and promised to arrange a safer process of
+forwarding his things by attending to it himself, which he did with
+all the attention in his power, when Manuel's condition became more
+tolerable. The Captain told Manuel how his affairs stood-that he should
+probably have to leave him in charge of the consul, but to keep up good
+spirits; that he would leave him plenty of means, and as soon as his
+release was effected, to make the best of his way to Scotland and join
+the old owners. And thus he left him, with a heavy heart, for Manuel did
+read in his countenance what he did not speak.
+
+The Janson had been discharged, a survey held upon the cargo, protest
+extended, and the whole sold for the benefit of whom it might concern.
+Necessary surveys were likewise held upon the hull, and finding it so
+old and strained as to be unworthy of repair, it was condemned and sold
+for the benefit of the underwriters. Thus the register “de novo” was
+given up to the consul, the men discharged, and paid off according to
+the act of William IV., which provides that each man shall receive a
+stipend to carry him to the port in Great Britain from which he shipped,
+or the consul to provide passage for him, according to his inclination,
+to proceed to a point where the voyage would be completed. The consul
+adopted the best means in his power to make them all comfortable and
+satisfied with their discharge. Their several register-tickets were
+given up to them, and one by one left for his place of destination;
+Tommy and the second mate only preferring to remain and seek some
+new voyage. The old chief mate seemed to congratulate himself in the
+condemnation of the unlucky Janson. He shipped on board an English ship,
+laden with cotton and naval stores, and just ready for sea. When he
+came on board to take a farewell of the Captain, he stood upon deck, and
+looking up at the dismantled spars, said, “Skipper, a shadow may save
+a body after all. I've always had a presentment that this unlucky old
+thing would serve us a trick. I says to meself that night in the Gulf,
+'Well, old craft, yer goin' to turn yer old ribs into a coffin, at
+last,' but I'll praise the bridge that carries me safe over, because
+I've an affection for the old thing after all, and can't part without
+saying God bless her, for it's an honest death to die in debt to the
+underwriters. I hope her old bones will rest in peace on terra-firma.
+Good-by, Captain,--remember me to Manuel; and let us forget our troubles
+in Charleston by keeping away from it.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV. GEORGE THE SECESSIONIST, AND HIS FATHER'S SHIPS.
+
+
+
+AS we have said, the second mate and little Tommy remained to seek
+new voyages. Such was the fact with the second mate; but Tommy
+had contracted a violent cold on the night he was locked up in the
+guard-house, and had been a subject for the medicine-chest for some
+time; and this, with his ardent attachment for Manuel, and hopes to
+join him again as a sailing companion, was the chief inducement for his
+remaining. The Captain gave them accommodations in the cabin so long as
+he had possession of the ship, which afforded the means of saving their
+money, of which Tommy had much need; for notwithstanding he received a
+nice present from the consul, and another from the Captain, which, added
+to the few dollars that were coming to him for wages, made him feel
+purse-proud, though it was far from being adequate to sustain him any
+length of time, or to protect him against any sudden adversity.
+
+The Captain had not seen little George, the secessionist, since his
+assurance that he would make every thing right with Mr. Grimshaw,
+and have Manuel out in less than twenty-four hours. It was now the
+fourteenth of April, and the signs of his getting out were not so good
+as they were on the first day he was committed, for the vessel being
+condemned, if the law was carried to the strictest literal construction,
+Manuel would be tied up among the human things that are articles of
+merchandise in South Carolina. He was passing from the wharf to the
+consul's office about ten o'clock in the morning, when he was suddenly
+surprised in the street by little George, who shook his hand as if he
+had been an old friend just returned after a long absence. He made
+all the apologies in the world for being called away suddenly, and
+consequently, unable to render that attention to his business which his
+feelings had prompted. Like all secessionists, George was very fiery and
+transitory in his feelings. He expressed unmeasurable surprise when the
+Captain told him the condition of his man in the old jail. “You don't
+say that men are restricted like that in Charleston? Well, now, I never
+was in that jail, but it's unsuited to the hospitality of our society,”
+ said he.
+
+“Your prison groans with abuses, and yet your people never hear them,”
+ replied the Captain.
+
+George seemed anxious to change the subject, and commenced giving the
+Captain a description of his journey to the plantation, his hunting and
+fishing, his enjoyments, and the fat, saucy, slick niggers, the fine
+corn and bacon they had, and what they said about massa, ending with an
+endless encomium of the “old man's” old whiskey, and how he ripened it
+to give it smoothness and flavor. His description of the plantation and
+the niggers was truly wonderful, tantalizing the Captain's imagination
+with the beauties of a growing principality in itself. “We have just
+got a new vessel added to our ships, and she sails for the Pedee this
+afternoon. We got the right stripe of a captain, but we have made him
+adopt conditions to be true to the secession party. As soon as I get
+another man, we'll despatch her in grand style, and no mistake.”
+
+The Captain thought of his second mate, and suggested him at once. “Just
+the chap. My old man would like him, I know,” said George, and they
+returned directly to the Janson, where they found the second mate
+lashing his dunnage. The proposition was made and readily accepted.
+Again the Captain parted with little George, leaving him to take the
+mate to his father's office, while he pursued his business at the
+consul's.
+
+George led the mate into the office. “Here, father, here's a man to
+go in our vessel,” said he. The old man looked upon him with a serene
+importance, as if he was fettered with his own greatness.
+
+“My shipping interests are becoming very extensive, my man; I own the
+whole of four schooners, and a share in the greatest steamship afloat-I
+mean screw-ship, the South Carolina--you've heard of her, I suppose?”
+ said the old man.
+
+Jack stood up with his hat in his hand, thinking over what he meant by
+big interests, and “reckoning he hadn't seen the establishment of them
+ship-owners about Prince's Dock, what owned more ships apiece than there
+were days in the month.”
+
+“Now, my man,” continued the old man, “I'm mighty strict about my
+discipline, for I want every man to do his duty for the interests of the
+owners. But how many dollars do you want a month, my man?”
+
+“Nothing less than four pounds starling; that's twenty dollars your
+currency, if I reckon right,” said Jack, giving his hat a twirl upon the
+floor.
+
+“Wh-e-w! you belong to the independent sailors. You'll come down from
+that afore you get a ship in this port. Why, I can get a good, prime
+nigger feller sailor for eight dollars a month and his feed.”
+
+Jack concluded not to sail in any of the old man's big ships, and said,
+“Yes, I joined them a long time ago, and I ha'n't regretted it, neither;
+wouldn't pull a bow-line a penny less. I don't like drogging, no-how.
+Good morning, sir,” said he, putting on his hat and backing out of the
+door.
+
+“I wish you'd a' taken a chance with my father, old fellow; he'd a' made
+you captain afore a year,” said George, as he was leaving the door.
+
+“The like o' that don't signify. I've been skipper in the West Ingie
+trade years ago. There isn't much difference between a nigger and
+a schooner's captain,” said Jack, as he walked off to the Janson,
+preparatory to taking lodgings ashore.
+
+That afternoon about five o'clock, a loud noise was heard on board a
+little schooner, of about sixty tons' register, that lay in a bend of
+the wharf a few lengths ahead of the Janson. Captain Thompson and his
+second mate were seated on a locker in the cabin, conversing upon the
+prospects ahead, when the noise became so loud that they ran upon deck
+to witness the scene.
+
+George stood upon the capsill of the wharf, with mortification pictured
+in his countenance. “Well, captain, you needn't make so much noise about
+it; your conduct is decidedly ungentlemanly. If you don't wish to sail
+in father's employ, leave like a gentleman,” said George, pulling up the
+corners of his shirt-collar.
+
+It was the great craft that George had distended upon, and the veritable
+captain of the right stripe, who promised to toe the mark according to
+secession principles, but made no stipulations for the nigger feed that
+was the cause of the excitement. The captain, a Baltimore coaster, and
+accustomed to good feed in his vessels at home, had been induced by a
+large representations to take charge of the craft and run her in the
+Pedee trade, bringing rice to Charleston. On being told the craft was
+all ready for sea, he repaired on board, and, to his chagrin, found
+two black men for a crew, and a most ungainly old wench, seven shades
+blacker than Egyptian darkness, for a cook. This was imposition enough
+to arouse his feelings, for but one of the men knew any thing about
+a vessel; but on examining the stores, the reader may judge of his
+feelings, if he have any idea of supplying a vessel in a Northern
+port, when we tell him that all and singular the stores consisted of
+a shoulder of rusty Western bacon, a half-bushel of rice, and a jug of
+molasses; and this was to proceed the distance of a hundred miles, But
+to add to the ridiculous farce of that South Carolina notion, when he
+remonstrated with them, he was very indifferently told that it was what
+they always provided for their work-people.
+
+“Take your' little jebacca-boat and go to thunder with her,” said the
+captain, commencing to pick up his duds.
+
+“Why, captain, I lent you my gun, and we always expect our captains to
+make fresh provision of game as you run up the river,” said George.
+
+“Fresh provisions, the devil!” said the captain. “I've enough to do to
+mind my duty, without hunting my living as I pursue my voyage, like
+a hungry dog. We don't do business on your nigger-allowance system in
+Maryland.” And here we leave him, getting one of the negroes to carry
+his things back to his boarding-house.
+
+A few days after the occurrence we have narrated above little Tommy,
+somewhat recovered from his cold, shipped on board a little centre-board
+schooner, called the Three Sisters, bound to the Edisto River for a
+cargo of rice. The captain, a little, stubby man, rather good looking,
+and well dressed, was making his maiden voyage as captain of a South
+Carolina craft. He was “South Carolina born,” but, like many others of
+his kind, had been forced to seek his advancement in a distant State,
+through the influence of those formidable opinions which exiles the
+genius of the poor in South Carolina. For ten years he had sailed out of
+the port of Boston, had held the position of mate on two Indian voyages
+under the well-known Captain Nott, and had sailed with Captain Albert
+Brown, and received his recommendation, yet this was not enough to
+qualify him for the nautical ideas of a pompous South Carolinian.
+
+Tommy got his baggage on board, and before leaving, made another attempt
+at the jail to see his friend Manuel. He presented himself to the
+jailer, and told him how much he wanted to see his old friend before he
+left. The jailer's orders were imperative. He was told if he came next
+week he would see him; that he would then be released, and allowed to
+occupy the cell on the second floor with the other stewards. Recognising
+one of the stewards that had joined with them when they enjoyed their
+social feelings around the festive barrel, he walked into the piazza to
+meet him and bid him good-by. While he stood shaking hands with him, the
+poor negro.
+
+The name of this poor fellow was George Fairchild. After being sent
+to the workhouse to receive twenty blows with the paddle when he was
+scarcely able to stand, he was taken down from the frame and supported
+to the jail, where he remained several weeks, fed at a cost of eighteen
+cents a day. His crime was “going for whiskey at night,” and the third
+offence; but there were a variety of pleadings in his favor. His master
+worked his negroes to the very last tension of their strength, and
+exposed their appetites to all sorts of temptation, especially those who
+worked in the night-gang. His master flogged him once, while he was in
+the jail, himself, giving him about forty stripes with a raw hide on the
+bare back: not satisfying his feelings with this, he concluded to send
+him to New Orleans. He had an affectionate wife and child, who were
+forbidden to see him. His master ordered that he should be sent to the
+workhouse and receive thirty-nine paddles before leaving, and on the
+morning he was to be shipped, his distressed wife, hearing the sad news,
+came to the jail; but notwithstanding the entreaties of several debtors,
+the jailer could not allow her to come in, but granted, as a favor,
+that she should speak with him through the grated door. The cries and
+lamentations of that poor woman, as she stood upon the outside, holding
+her bond-offspring in her arms, taking a last sorrowing farewell of him
+who was so dearly cherished and beloved, would have melted a heart of
+stone. She could not embrace him, but waited until he was led out to
+torture, when she threw her arms around him, and was dragged away by a
+ruffian's hand.
+
+Poor George Fairchild! We heard him moaning under the acute pain of the
+paddle, and saw him thrust into a cart like a dog, to be shipped as a
+bale of merchandise for a distant port, who had suffered with him in the
+guard-house came up and saluted him with a friendly recognition. Some
+two weeks had passed since the occurrence, and yet his head presented
+the effects of bruising, and was bandaged with a cloth. “Good young
+massa, do give me a' fo' pence, for Is'e mose starve,” he said in a
+suppliant tone. Tommy put his hand into his pocket, and drawing out a
+quarter, passed it to the poor fellow, and received his thanks. Leaving
+a message for Manuel that he would be sure to call and see him when
+he returned, he passed from the house of misery and proceeded to his
+vessel.
+
+The captain of the schooner had been engaged by parties in Charleston,
+who simply acted as agents for the owners. He had been moved to return
+to Charleston by those feelings which are so inherent in our nature,
+inspiring a feeling for the place of its nativity, and recalling the
+early associations of childhood. Each longing fancy pointed back again,
+and back he came, to further fortune on his native soil. His crew, with
+the exception of Tommy, consisted of three good, active negroes, one of
+whom acted as pilot on the Edisto River. Accustomed to the provisioning
+of Boston ships, he had paid no attention to his supplies; for, in
+fact, he only took charge of the little craft as an accommodation to the
+agents, and with the promise of a large vessel as soon as he returned;
+and sailing with a fine stiff breeze, he was far outside the light when
+the doctor announced dinner. “What have you got that's good, old chap?”
+ said he to the cook.
+
+“Fust stripe, Massa Cap'en. A right good chance o' homony and bacon
+fry,” returned the negro.
+
+“Homony and what? Nothing else but that?”
+
+“Why, massa! gracious, dat what Massa Whaley give all he cap'en, an' he
+tink 'em fust-rate,” said the negro.
+
+As they were the only whites on board, the captain took little Tommy
+into the cabin with him to sit at the same table; but there was too much
+truth in the negro's statement, and instead of sitting down to one of
+those nice dinners which are spread in Boston ships, both great and
+small, there, on a little piece of pine board, swung with a preventer,
+was a plate of black homony covered with a few pieces of fried pork, so
+rank and oily as to be really repulsive to a common stomach. Beside
+it was an earthen mug, containing about a pint of molasses, which was
+bedaubed on the outside to show its quality. The captain looked at it
+for a minute, and then taking up the iron spoon which stood in it, and
+letting one or two spoonfuls drop back, said, “Old daddie, where are all
+your stores? Fetch them out here.”
+
+“Gih, massa! here 'em is; 'e's jus' as Massa Stoney give 'em,” said the
+negro, drawing forth a piece of rusty and tainted bacon, weighing about
+fifteen pounds, and, in spots, perfectly alive with motion; about a
+half-bushel of corn-grits; and a small keg of molasses, with a piece of
+leather attached to the bung.
+
+“Is that all?” inquired the captain peremptorily.
+
+“Yes, massa, he all w'at 'em got now, but git more at Massa Whaley
+plantation win 'em git da.”
+
+“Throw it overboard, such stinking stuff; it'll breed pestilence on
+board,” said the captain to the negro, (who stood holding the spoiled
+bacon in his hand, with the destructive macalia dropping on the floor,)
+at the same time applying his foot to the table, and making wreck of
+hog, homony, molasses, and plates.
+
+“Gih-e-wh-ew! Massa, I trow 'im o'board, Massa Whaley scratch 'em back,
+sartin. He tink 'em fust-rate. Plantation nigger on'y gits bacon twice
+week, Massa Cap'en,” said he, picking up the wreck and carrying it upon
+deck, where it was devoured with great gusto by the negroes, who fully
+appreciated the happy God-send.
+
+The captain had provided a little private store of crackers, cheese,
+segars, and a bottle of brandy, and turning to his trunk, he opened it
+and drew them out one by one, passing the crackers and cheese to
+Tommy, and imbibing a little of the deacon himself, thus satisfying
+the cravings of nature. Night came on; they were crossing the bar and
+approaching the outlet of the Edisto, which was broad in sight;
+but there was neither coffee nor tea on board, and no prospect of
+supper-nothing but a resort to the crackers and cheese remained, the
+stock of which had already diminished so fast, that what was left was
+treasured among the things too choice to be eaten without limitation.
+They reached the entrance, and after ascending a few miles, came to
+anchor under a jut of wood that formed a bend in the river. The baying
+of dogs during the night intimated the vicinity of a settlement near,
+and in the morning the captain sent one of the negroes on shore for a
+bottle of milk. “Massa, dat man what live yonder ha'n't much no-how,
+alwa's makes 'em pay seven-pence,” said the negro. Sure enough it was
+true; notwithstanding he was a planter of some property, he made the
+smallest things turn to profit, and would charge vessels going up the
+river twelve and a half cents per bottle for milk.
+
+The captain had spent a restless night, and found himself blotched with
+innumerable chinch-bites; and on examining the berths and lockers, he
+found them swarming in piles. Calling one of the black men, he commenced
+overhauling them, and drew out a perfect storehouse of rubbish, which
+must have been deposited there, without molestation, from the day the
+vessel was launched up to the present time, as varied in its kinds as
+the stock of a Jew-shop, and rotten with age. About nine o'clock they
+got under weigh again, and proceeding about twenty miles with a fair
+wind and tide, they came to another point in the river, on which a
+concourse of men had assembled, armed to the teeth with guns, rifles,
+and knives. As he passed up, they were holding parley with a man and boy
+in a canoe a few rods from the shore. At every few minutes they
+would point their rifles at him, and with threatening gestures, swear
+vengeance against him if he attempted to land. The captain, being
+excited by the precarious situation of the man and his boy, and anxious
+to ascertain the particulars, let go his anchor and “came to” a few
+lengths above.
+
+Scarcely had his anchor brought up than he was hailed from the shore by
+a rough-looking man, who appeared to be chief in the manouvre, and who
+proved to be no less a personage than a Mr. S--k, a wealthy planter.
+
+“Don't take that man on board of your vessel, at the peril of your life,
+captain. He's an abolitionist,” said he, accompanying his imperative
+command with a very Southern rotation of oaths.
+
+The man paddled his canoe on the outside of the vessel, and begged the
+captain “for God's sake to take him on board and protect him; that an
+excitement had been gotten up against him very unjustly, and he would
+explain the circumstances if he would allow him to come on board.”
+
+“Come on board,” said the captain. “Let you be abolitionist or what you
+will, humanity will not let me see you driven out to sea in that manner;
+you would be swamped before you crossed the bar.”
+
+He came on board, trembling and wet, the little boy handing up a couple
+of carpet-bags, and following him. No sooner had he done so, than three
+or four balls whizzed past the captain's head, causing him to retreat to
+the cabin. A few minutes intervened, and he returned to the deck.
+
+“Lower your boat and come on shore immediately,” they cried out.
+
+The captain, not at all daunted, lowered his boat and went on shore.
+“Now, gentlemen, what do you want with me?” said he, when S--k stepped
+forward, and the following dialogue ensued:--
+
+“Who owns that vessel, and what right have you to harbor a d--d
+abolitionist?”
+
+“I don't know who owns the vessel; I know that I sail her, and the
+laws of God and man demand that I shall not pass a man in distress,
+especially upon the water. He protests that he is not, and never was
+an abolitionist; offers to prove it if you will hear him, and only asks
+that you allow him to take away his property,” rejoined the captain.
+
+“What! then you are an abolitionist yourself?”
+
+“No, sir. I'm a Southern-born man, raised in Charleston, where my father
+was raised before me.”
+
+“So much, so good; but just turn that d--d scoundrel ashore as quick
+as seventy, or we'll tie your vessel up and report you to the Executive
+Committee, and stop your getting on more freight on the Edisto.”
+
+“That I shall not do. You should have patience to investigate these
+things, and not allow your feelings to become so excited. If I turn
+him and his son adrift, I'm answerable for their lives if any accident
+should occur to them,” rejoined the captain.
+
+“Are you a secessionist, captain, or what are your political principles?
+You seem determined to protect abolitionists. That scoundrel has been
+associating with a nigger, and eating at his house ever since he has
+been here.”
+
+“Yes, yes, and we'll be d--d if he isn't an abolitionist,” joined in
+a dozen voices, “for he dined at Bill Webster's last Sunday on a
+wild-turkey. Nobody but an infernal abolitionist would dine with a
+nigger.”
+
+“As for politics, I never had much to do with them, and care as little
+about secession as I do about theology; but I like to see men act
+reasonably. If you want any thing more of me, you will find me at
+Colonel Whaley's plantation to-morrow.” Thus saying, he stepped into
+his boat and returned on board of his vessel. Just as he was getting
+under-weigh again, whiz! whiz! whiz! came three shots, one in quick
+succession after the other, the last taking effect and piercing the
+crown of his hat, at which they retired out of sight. Fearing a return,
+he worked his vessel about two miles farther up and came to anchor on
+the other side of the channel, where he waited the return of the tide,
+and had an opportunity to put his affrighted passengers on board a
+schooner that was passing down, bound to Charleston.
+
+The secret of such an outrage is told in a few words. The man was a
+timber-getter from the vicinity of New Bedford, Massachusetts, who, with
+his son, a lad about sixteen years of age, had spent several winters
+in the vicinity of the Edisto, getting live-oak, what he considered
+a laudable enterprise. He purchased the timber on the stump of the
+inhabitants, at a price which left him very little profit, and had also
+been charged an exorbitant price for every thing he got, whether
+labor or provisions; and so far had that feeling of South Carolina's
+self-sufficiency been carried out against him in all its cold
+repulsiveness, that he found much more honesty and true hospitality
+under the roof of a poor colored man. This so enraged some of the
+planters, that they proclaimed against him, and that mad-dog cry of
+abolitionist was raised against him. His horse and buggy, books and
+papers were packed up and sent to Charleston-not, however, without
+some of the most important of the latter being lost. His business was
+destroyed, and he and his child taken by force, put into a little canoe
+with one or two carpet-bags, and sent adrift. In this manner they had
+followed him two miles down the river, he begging to be allowed
+the privilege of settling his business and leave respectably-they
+threatening to shoot him if he attempted to near the shore, or was
+caught in the vicinity. This was his position when the captain found
+him. He proceeded to Charleston, and laid his case before James L.
+Petigru, Esq., United States District Attorney, and, upon his advice,
+returned to the scene of “war on the banks of the Edisto,” to arrange
+his business; but no sooner had he made his appearance than he was
+thrown into prison, and there remained when we last heard of him.
+
+This is one of the many cases which afford matter for exciting comment
+for the editors of the Charleston Mercury and the Courier, and which
+reflect no honor on a people who thus set law and order at defiance.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI. A SINGULAR RECEPTION.
+
+
+
+IT was about ten o'clock on the night of the fifteenth of April when the
+schooner “Three Sisters” lay anchored close alongside of a dark jungle
+of clustering brakes that hung their luxuriant foliage upon the bosom
+of the stream. The captain sat upon a little box near the quarter,
+apparently contemplating the scene, for there was a fairy-like beauty
+in its dark windings, mellowed by the shadowing foliage that skirted
+its borders in mournful grandeur, while stars twinkled on the sombre
+surface.
+
+The tide had just turned, and little Tommy, who had rolled himself up in
+a blanket and laid down close to the captain, suddenly arose. “Captain,
+did you hear that?” said he.
+
+“Hark! there it is again,” said the captain. “Go and call the men,--we
+must get under weigh.”
+
+It was a rustling noise among the brakes; and when little Tommy went
+forward to call the men, two balls came whistling over the quarter, and
+then a loud rustling noise indicated that persons were retreating. The
+captain retired to the cabin and took Tommy with him, giving orders to
+the negro pilot to stand to the deck, get her anchor up, and let her
+drift up stream with the tide, determined that if they shot any person,
+it should be the negroes, for whose value they would be held answerable.
+Thus she drifted up the stream, and the next morning was at the creek at
+Colonel Whaley's plantation.
+
+A number of ragged negroes came down to the bank in high glee at the
+arrival, and making sundry inquiries about corn and bacon. One old
+patriarchal subject cried out to the pilot, “Ah, Cesar, I 'now'd ye wah
+cumin'. Massa, an' young Massa Aleck, bin promis' bacon mor' den week,
+gess he cum' now.”
+
+“Got sum corn, but ven ye gets bacon out o' dis craf' ye kotch wesel,
+dat a'n't got no hair on 'im,” said Cesar.
+
+The scene around was any thing but promising-disappointing to the
+captain's exalted ideas of Colonel Whaley's magnificent plantation. The
+old farm-house was a barrack-like building, dilapidated, and showing no
+signs of having lately furnished a job for the painter, and standing in
+an arena surrounded by an enclosure of rough slats. Close examination
+disclosed fragments of gardening in the arena, but they showed the
+unmistakable evidences of carelessness. At a short distance from this
+was a cluster of dirty-looking negro-huts, raised a few feet from the
+ground on palmetto piles, and strung along from them to the brink of the
+river were numerous half-starved cattle and hogs, the latter rooting up
+the sod.
+
+It was now nearly slack water, on a high flood, and the schooner lay
+just above the bend of the creek. Presently a large, portly-looking
+man, dressed like as Yorkshire farmer, came, to the bank, and in a
+stentorious voice ordered the captain to haul into the creek at once!
+The manner in which the order was given rather taxed the captain's
+feelings, yet he immediately set his men to work heaving up the anchor
+and carrying out “a line” to warp her in. But that slow motion with
+which negroes execute all orders, caused some delay, and no sooner had
+he, begun to heave on the line than the tide set strong ebb and carried
+him upon the lower point, where a strong eddy, made by the receding
+water from the creek, and the strong undertow in the river, baffled all
+his exertions. There she stuck, and all the warps and tow-lines of a
+seventy-four, hove by the combined strength of the plantation, would
+not have started her. When the tide left, she careened over toward the
+river, for there was no means at hand to shore her up.
+
+One of the drivers went up and reported “Massa captain got 'im ship
+ashore,” and down came Colonel Whaley, with all the pomp of seven lord
+mayors in his countenance. “What sort of a feller are you to command
+a ship? I'd whip the worst nigger on the plantation, if he couldn't do
+better than that. Rig a raft out and let me come o' board that vessel!”
+ said he, accompanying his demands with a volley of vile imprecations
+that would have disgraced St. Giles'.
+
+“Do you know who you're talking to? You mus'n't take me for a nigger,
+sir! I know my duty, if you don't good manners,” rejoined the captain.
+
+“Do you know who owns that ship? you impudent feller, you! Take the
+sails off her, immediately-at once! or I'll shoot you, by heavens!” he
+bawled out again.
+
+“Why didn't you say mud-scow? Call such a thing as this a ship? I don't
+care who owns her, I only know it's a disgrace to sail her; but I've got
+the papers, and you may help yourself. When you pay me for my time, and
+give me something for myself and these men to eat, you may take your old
+jebac--car-boat,--but you don't put a foot aboard her till you do!”
+
+This made the colonel rage worse. “I'll teach you a lesson how you
+disobey my orders. Go get my rifle, Zeke,” said the colonel, turning to
+an old negro who stood close by. And then calling to the men on board,
+he ordered them to take charge of the vessel and take the sails off her
+at once.
+
+“Don't you move a hand to unbend a sail, Cesar! I don't know that man
+ashore there. This vessel is mine until further orders from the persons
+who shipped me,” rejoined the captain with an imperative demand to his
+men.
+
+“Why, la! massa, he own em dis ere vessel, an' he shoot em sartin if we
+done do him; ye done know dat massa, as I does,” said Cesar.
+
+“Don't touch a hand to those sails, I command one and all of you.
+There's two can play at shooting, and I'll shoot you if you disobey my
+orders.” Then turning to those on shore, he warned them that he would
+shoot the first nigger that attempted to make a raft to come on board.
+The reader will observe that the poor negroes were in a worse dilemma
+than the captain; goaded on the one side by a ruthless master, who
+claims ownership and demands the execution of his orders, while on
+the other extreme the hired master proclaims his right, and warns
+them against the peril of varying one iota from his commands. Here the
+clashing feelings of arbitrary men come together, which have placed many
+a good negro in that complex position, that he would be punished by one
+master for doing that which he would have been punished by the other if
+he had left undone.
+
+It may be said to the colonel's credit, he did not return, rifle in
+hand, nor did the captain see him afterward; but a young gentleman, a
+son, who represented the father, came to the bank about an hour after
+the occurrence, and making a lame apology for his father's temper,
+requested the captain to come on shore. The latter had concluded to
+await the return of the tide, run the vessel back to Charleston, report
+his reception, and deliver the vessel up to the agents; but on further
+consideration, there was nothing to eat on board, and what could he do?
+He went on shore, and held a parley with the young man, whom he found
+much more inclined to respect his color. “Your father took me for a
+nigger, and as such he presumed upon the dignity of his plantation. Now
+I know my duty, and have sailed in the finest ships and with the best
+masters in the country. All I want is proper respect, something to eat,
+what there is coming to me, and my passage paid back to Charleston by
+land. No! I will not even request so much as that; give me something to
+eat, and my passage to Charleston, and you may do what you please with
+the vessel, but I shall deliver the papers to nobody but the persons who
+shipped me. And I shall want you to see this little boy attended to, for
+he's quite sick now,” said the captain, pointing to Tommy, and calling
+him to him.
+
+“Oh yes,” replied the young man, “we'll take care of the little fellow,
+and see him sent safely back,” and took leave, promising to have another
+interview in the afternoon. About twelve o'clock a negro boy came to the
+vessel with a tin pan covered with a towel, and presenting it to Cesar,
+for “massa cap'en and buckra boy.” Cesar brought it aft and set it upon
+the companion. It contained some rice, a piece of bacon, corn-cake, and
+three sweet-potatoes.
+
+“Coarse fare, but I can get along with it. Come Tommy, I guess you're
+hungry, as well as myself,” said the captain, and they sat down, and
+soon demolished the feast of Southern hospitality. About five o'clock in
+the evening, the young man not making his appearance, the Captain sent
+Tommy ashore to inquire for him at the house, telling him (in order
+to test their feelings) that he could stop and get his supper. Tommy
+clambered ashore, and up the bank wending his way to the house. The
+young man made his appearance, offering an apology for his delay and
+inattention, saying the presence of some very particular friends from
+Beaufort was the cause. “My father, you are aware, owns this vessel,
+captain!--You got a good dinner, to-day, by-the-by,” said he.
+
+“Yes, we got along with it, but could have eaten more,” rejoined the
+captain.
+
+“Ah! bless me, that was the nigger's fault. These niggers are such
+uncertain creatures, you must watch 'em over the least thing. Well now,
+captain, my father has sent you five dollars to pay your passage to
+Charleston!”
+
+“Well, that's a small amount, but I'll try and get along with it, rather
+than stop here, at any rate,” said the captain, taking the bill and
+twisting it into his pocket, and giving particular charges in regard
+to taking care of the boy. That night, a little after sundown, he took
+passage in a downward-bound coaster, bid a long good-by to the Edisto
+and Colonel Whaley's plantation, and arrived in Charleston the next
+night. On the following morning he presented himself to the agents, who
+generously paid him, all his demands, and expressed their regrets at the
+circumstance. Acting upon the smart of feeling, the captain enclosed the
+five-dollar bill and returned it to the sovereign Colonel Whaley.
+
+The Savannah Republican, of the 11th September, says-“We have been
+kindly furnished with the particulars of a duel which came off at Major
+Stark's plantation, opposite this city, yesterday morning, between
+Colonel E. M. Whaley, and E. E. Jenkins, of South Carolina.” Another
+paper stated that “after a single exchange of shot, * * * * the affair
+terminated, but without a reconciliation.” The same Colonel Whaley!
+Either 'of these journals might have give particulars more grievous,
+and equally as expressive of Southern life. They might have described
+a beautiful wife, a Northern lady, fleeing with her two children,
+to escape the abuses of a faithless husband-taking shelter in the
+Charleston Hotel, and befriended by Mr. Jenkins and another young man,
+whose name we shall not mention-and that famous establishment surrounded
+by the police on a Sabbath night, to guard its entrances-and she dragged
+forth, and carried back to the home of unhappiness.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII. THE HABEAS CORPUS.
+
+
+
+THE Captain of the Janson had settled his business, and was anxious
+to return home. He had done all in his power for Manuel, and
+notwithstanding the able exertions of the consul were combined with his,
+he had effected nothing to relieve him. The law was imperative, and if
+followed out, there was no alternative for him, except upon the ground
+of his proving himself entitled to a white man's privileges. To do
+this would require an endless routine of law, which would increase his
+anxiety and suffering twofold. Mr. Grimshaw had been heard to say, that
+if an habeas corpus were sued out, he should stand upon the technicality
+of an act of the legislature, refuse to answer the summons or give the
+man up. No, he would himself stand the test upon the point of right to
+the habeas corpus, and if he was committed for refusing to deliver up
+the prisoner, he would take advantage of another act of the legislature,
+and after remaining a length of time in jail, demand his release
+according to the statutes. So far was Mr. Grimshaw impressed with his
+own important position in the matter, and of the course which he should
+pursue, that he several times told the prisoners that he should be a
+prisoner among them in a few days, to partake of the same fare.
+
+Judge Withers, however, saved him the necessity of such important
+trouble. To those acquainted with Judge Withers it would be needless to
+dwell upon the traits of his character. To those who are not, we can
+say that his were feelings founded upon interest-moving in the foremost
+elements of secession-arbitrary, self-willed, and easily swayed by
+prejudice-a man known to the public and the bar for his frigidity, bound
+in his own opinions, and yielding second to the wishes and principles of
+none-fearful of his popularity as a judge, yet devoid of those sterling
+principles which deep jurists bring to their aid when considering
+important questions, where life or liberty is at stake-a mind that
+would rather reinstate monarchy than spread the blessings of a free
+government. What ground have we here to hope for a favorable issue?
+
+Thus when the consul applied for the writ of habeas corpus, the right
+was denied him, notwithstanding the subject was heir-inherent to all the
+rights of citizenship and protection, which the laws of his own nation
+could clothe him with. To show how this matter was treated by the
+press-though we are happy to say the feelings of the mercantile
+community are not reflected in it-we copy the leader from the “Southern
+Standard,” a journal published in Charleston, the editor of which
+professes to represent the conservative views of a diminutive minority.
+Here it is:--
+
+“CHARLESTON, APRIL 23, 1852. “Colored Seamen and State Rights.
+
+“Our readers have not forgotten the correspondence which some time
+since took place between His Excellency Governor Means and Her British
+Majesty's Consul, Mr. Mathew. We published in the Standard, of the 5th
+December last, the very temperate, dignified, and well-argued report of
+Mr. Mazyck, chairman of the special committee of the Senate, to whom
+had been referred the message of the Governor, transmitting the
+correspondence. In our issue of the 16th December, we gave to our
+readers the able report of Mr. McCready, on behalf of the committee of
+the other house, on the same subject.
+
+“We have now to call the attention of the public to the fact, that the
+practical issue has been made, by which the validity of the laws in
+regard to colored seamen arriving in our port is to be submitted to the
+judicial tribunals of the country. For ourselves we have no fears for
+the credit of the State in such a controversy. The right of the State
+to control, by her own legislation, the whole subject-matter, can, as we
+think, by a full discussion, be established upon a basis which, in the
+South at least, will never hereafter be questioned. If there be defects
+in the details of the regulations enacted, the consideration of them is
+now precluded, when the issue presented is the right of the State to act
+at all times in the premises.
+
+“The writ of habeas corpus was applied for before Judge Withers, during
+the term of the court which has just closed, by the British consul,
+through his counsel, Mr. Petigru, in behalf of one Manuel Pereira,
+a colored sailor, who claims to be a Portuguese subject, articled to
+service on board an English brig driven into this port by stress of
+weather; the said Manuel Pereira being then in jail under the provisions
+of the act of the legislature of this State, passed in 1835, emendatory
+of the previous acts on the subject. Judge Withers, in compliance with
+the requirements of the act of 1844, refused the writ of habeas corpus,
+and notice of appeal has been given. Thus is the issue upon us.
+
+“We have but one regret in the matter, and that is that the case made is
+one where the party asking his liberty has been driven into our harbor
+involuntarily. Great Britain, it is true, is the last power which
+should complain on this account, with her own example in the case of the
+Enterprise before her eyes; but we do not, we confess, like this feature
+of the law. We have no doubt, however, that this fact being brought to
+the notice of the executive, he will interfere promptly to release the
+individual in the present case, provided the party petitions for the
+purpose, and engages at once to leave the State. But we shall see
+nothing of this. Mr. Manuel Pereira, like another John Wilkes, is to
+have settled in his person great questions of constitutional liberty.
+The posterity which in after times shall read of his voluntary martyrdom
+and heroic self-sacrifice in the cause of suffering humanity, must be
+somewhat better informed than Mr. Pereira himself; for we observe that
+his clerkly skill did not reach the point of enabling him to subscribe
+his name to the petition for habeas corpus, which is to figure so
+conspicuously in future history, it being more primitively witnessed by
+his 'mark.'”
+
+An appeal was taken from this refusal, and carried before the appeal
+court, sitting at Columbia, the capital of the State. How was this
+treated? Without enlisting common respect, it sustained the opinion
+of Judge Withers, who was one of its constituted members. Under such a
+state of things, where all the avenues to right and justice were clogged
+by a popular will that set itself above law or justice, where is the
+unprejudiced mind that will charge improper motives in asking justice of
+the highest judicial tribunal in the country.
+
+In the year 1445, a petition was presented, or entered on the rolls of
+the British Parliament, from the commons of two neighboring counties,
+praying the abatement of a nuisance which promised fearful interruptions
+to the peace and quiet of their hamlets, in consequence of the number of
+attorneys having increased from eight to twenty-four, setting forth that
+attorneys were dangerous to the peace and happiness of a community, and
+praying that there should be no more than six attorneys for each county.
+The king granted the petition, adding a clause which left it subject
+to the approval of the judges. Time works mighty contrasts. If those
+peaceable old commoners could have seen a picture of the nineteenth
+century, with its judiciary dotted upon the surface, they would
+certainly have put the world down as a very unhappy place. The people
+of Charleston might now inquire why they have so much law and so little
+justice?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII. THE CAPTAIN'S DEPARTURE AND MANUEL'S RELEASE.
+
+
+
+AFTER remaining nearly three weeks in close confinement in a cell on
+the third story, Manuel was allowed to come down and resume his position
+among the stewards, in the “steward's cell.” There was a sad change of
+faces. But one of those he left was there; and he, poor fellow, was so
+changed as to be but a wreck of what he was when Manuel was confined in
+the cell.
+
+After little Tommy left, the Captain deposited a sum of money with
+the jailer to supply Manuel's wants. The jailer performed his duty
+faithfully, but the fund was soon exhausted, and Manuel was forced to
+appeal to his consul. With the care for its citizens that marks the
+course of that government, and the characteristic kindness of its
+representative in Charleston, the appeal was promptly responded to.
+The consul attended him in person, and even provided from his own purse
+things necessary to make him comfortable. We could not but admire the
+nobleness of many acts bestowed upon this humble citizen through the
+consul, showing the attachment and faith of a government to its humblest
+subject. The question now was, would the Executive release him? Mr.
+Grimshaw had interposed strong objections, and made unwarrantable
+statements in regard to his having been abandoned by his captain,
+the heavy expenses incurred to maintain the man, and questioning the
+validity of the British consul's right to protect him. Under the effect
+of these representations, the prospect began to darken, and Manuel
+became more discontented, and anxiously awaited the result.
+
+In this position, a petition was despatched to the Executive, asking
+that the man might be released, on the faith of the British Government
+that all expenses be paid, and he immediately sent beyond the limits of
+the State.
+
+But we must return and take leave of Captain Thompson, before we receive
+the answer to the petition. The day fixed for his departure had arrived.
+He had all his papers collected, and arose early to take his accustomed
+walk through the market. It was a little after seven o'clock, and as he
+approached the singular piece of wood-work that we have described in
+a previous chapter as the Charleston Whipping-post, he saw a crowd
+collected around it, and negroes running to the scene, crying out,
+“Buckra gwine to get whip! buckra get 'e back scratch!” &c. &c. He
+quickened his pace, and, arriving at the scene, elbowed his way through
+an immense crowd until he came to where he had a fair view. Here,
+exposed to view, were six respectably dressed white men, to be whipped
+according to the laws of South Carolina, which flog in the market
+for petty theft. Five of them were chained together, and the other
+scientifically secured to the machine, with his bare back exposed,
+and Mr. Grimshaw (dressed with his hat and sword of office to make the
+dignity of the punishment appropriate) laying on the stripes with a big
+whip, and raising on tip-toe at each blow to add force, making the flesh
+follow the lash. Standing around were about a dozen huge constables
+with long-pointed tipstaffs in their hands, while two others assisted
+in chaining and unchaining the prisoners. The spectacle was a barbarous
+one, opening a wide field for reflection. It was said that this
+barbarous mode of punishment was kept up as an example for the negroes.
+It certainly is a very singular mode of inspiring respect for the laws.
+
+He had heard much of T. Norman Gadsden, whose fame sounded for being the
+greatest negro-seller in the country, yet he had not seen him, though he
+had witnessed several negro-sales at other places. On looking over the
+papers after breakfast, his eye caught a flaming advertisement with “T.
+Norman Gadsden's sale of negroes” at the head. There were plantation
+negroes, coachmen, house-servants, mechanics, children of all ages, with
+descriptions as various as the kinds. Below the rest, and set out with
+a glowing delineation, was a description of a remarkably fine young
+sempstress, very bright and very intelligent, sold for no fault. The
+notice should have added an exception, that the owner was going to get
+married.
+
+He repaired to the place at the time designated, and found them selling
+an old plantation-negro, dressed in ragged, gray clothes, who, after a
+few bids, was knocked down for three hundred and fifty dollars. “We will
+give tip-top titles to everything we sell here to-day; and, gentlemen,
+we shall now offer you the prettiest wench in town. She is too
+well-known for me to say more,” said the notorious auctioneer.
+
+A number of the first citizens were present, and among them the Captain
+recognised Colonel S--, who approached and began to descant upon the
+sale of the woman. “It's a d--d shame to sell that girl, and that fellow
+ought to be hung up,” said he, meaning the owner; and upon this he
+commenced giving a history of the poor girl.
+
+“Where is she? Bring her along! Lord! gentlemen, her very curls are
+enough to start a bid of fifteen hundred,” said the auctioneer.
+
+“Go it, Gadsden, you're a trump,” rejoined a number of voices.
+
+The poor girl moved to the stand, pale and trembling, as if she was
+stepping upon the scaffold, and saw her executioners around her. She was
+very fair and beautiful-there was something even in her graceful motions
+that enlisted admiration. Here she stood almost motionless for a few
+moments.
+
+“Gentlemen, I ought to charge all of you sevenpence a sight for looking
+at her,” said the auctioneer. She smiled at the remark, but it was the
+smile of pain.
+
+“Why don't you sell the girl, and not be dogging her feelings in this
+manner?” said Colonel S--.
+
+Bids continued in rapid succession from eleven hundred up to thirteen
+hundred and forty. A well-known trader from New Orleans stood behind
+one of the city brokers, motioning him at every bid, and she was knocked
+down to him. We learned her history and know the sequel.
+
+The Captain watched her with mingled feelings, and would fain have said,
+“Good God! and why art thou a slave?”
+
+The history of that unfortunate beauty may be comprehended in a few
+words, leaving the reader to draw the details from his imagination. Her
+mother was a fine mulatto slave, with about a quarter Indian blood. She
+was the mistress of a celebrated gentleman in Charleston, who ranked
+among the first families, to whom she bore three beautiful children, the
+second of which is the one before us. Her father, although he could not
+acknowledge her, prized her highly, and unquestionably never intended
+that she should be considered a slave. Alice, for such was her name,
+felt the shame of her position. She knew her father, and was proud to
+descant upon his honor and rank, yet must either associate with negroes
+or nobody, for it would be the death of caste for a white woman, however
+mean, to associate with her. At the age of sixteen she became attached
+to a young gentleman of high standing but moderate means, and lived
+with him as his mistress. Her father, whose death is well known, died
+suddenly away from home. On administering on his estate, it proved that
+instead of being wealthy, as was supposed, he was insolvent, and the
+creditors insisting upon the children being sold. Alice was purchased
+by compromise with the administrator, and retained by her lord under a
+mortgage, the interest and premium on which he had regularly paid for
+more than four years. Now that he was about to get married, the excuse
+of the mortgage was the best pretext in the world to get rid of her.
+
+The Captain turned from the scene with feelings that left deep
+impressions upon his mind, and that afternoon took his departure for his
+Scottish home.
+
+Time passed heavily at the jail, and day after day Manuel awaited his
+fate with anxiety. At every tap of the prison-bell he would spring to
+the door and listen, asserting that he heard the consul's voice in every
+passing sound. Day after day the consul would call upon him and quiet
+his fears, reassuring him that he was safe and should not be sold as
+a slave. At length, on the seventeenth day of May, after nearly two
+months' imprisonment, the glad news was received that Manuel Pereira
+was not to be sold, according to the statutes, but to be released upon
+payment of all costs, &c. &c., and immediately sent beyond the limits
+of the State. We leave it to the reader's fancy, to picture the scene of
+joy on the reception of the news in the “stewards' cell.”
+
+The consul lost no time in arranging his affairs for him, and at five
+o'clock on the afternoon of the 17th of May, 1852, Manuel Pereira,
+a poor, shipwrecked mariner, who, by the dispensation of an all-wise
+Providence, was cast upon the shores of South Carolina, and imprisoned
+because hospitality to him was “contrary to law,” was led forth, pale
+and emaciated, by two constables, thrust into a closely covered vehicle,
+and driven at full speed to the steamboat then awaiting to depart for
+New York. This is but a faint glimpse, of the suffering to which colored
+stewards are subjected in the Charleston jail.
+
+There were no less than sixty-three cases of colored seamen imprisoned
+on this charge of “contrary to law,” during the calendar year ending
+on the twelfth of September, 1852. And now that abuses had become so
+glaring, a few gentlemen made a representation of the wretched prison
+regimen to his Excellency, Governor Means, who, as if just awoke from
+a dream that had lasted a generation, addressed a letter to the
+Attorney-General, dated on the seventh of September, 1852, requesting a
+statement in regard to the jail-how many prisoners there were confined
+on the twelfth day of September, under sentence and awaiting trial,
+the nature of offences, who committed by, and how long they had awaited
+trial; what the cost of the jail was, how much was paid by prisoners,
+and how much by the State, &c. &c. In that statement, the number of
+colored seamen was, for reasons best known to Mr. Grimshaw, kept out of
+the statement; so also was the difference between thirty cents and eight
+cents a day, paid for the ration for each man. The real statement showed
+a bounty to the sheriff of fourteen hundred and sixty-three dollars on'
+the provisions alone-a sad premium upon misery. Now add to this a medium
+amount for each of these sixty-three sailors, and we have between eight
+and nine hundred dollars more, which, with sundry jail-fees and other
+cribbage-money, makes the Charleston jail a nice little appendage to
+the sheriff's office, and will fully account for the tenacity with which
+those functionaries cling to the “old system.”
+
+We conclude the bills by giving Manuel's as it stands upon the
+books:--“Contrary to law.” British brig “Janson,” Capt. Thompson. For
+Manuel Pereira, Colored Seaman. 1852. To Sheriff of Charleston District.
+
+May 15th. To Arrest, $2; Register, $2, $4.00” “Recog., $1.31; Constable,
+$1, 2.31” “Commitment and Discharge, 1.00” “52 Days' Maintenance of
+Manuel Pereira, at 30 cents per day, 15.60
+
+$22.81 Rec' payment, J. D--, S. C. D. Per Chs. Kanapeaux, Clerk.
+
+This amount is exclusive of all the long scale of law charges and
+attorney's fees that were incurred, and is entirely the perquisite of
+the sheriff.
+
+Now, notwithstanding that high-sounding clamor about the laws of
+South Carolina, which every South Carolinian, in the redundance of his
+feelings, strives to impress you with the sovereignty of its justice,
+its sacred rights, and its pre-eminent reputation, we never were in a
+country or community where the privileges of a certain class were so
+much abused. Every thing is made to conserve popular favor, giving to
+those in influence power to do what they please with a destitute class,
+whether they be white or black. Official departments are turned into
+depots for miserable espionage, where the most unjust schemes are
+practised upon those whose voices cannot be heard in their own defence.
+A magistrate is clothed with, or assumes a power that is almost
+absolute, committing them without a hearing, and leaving them to waste
+in jail; then releasing them before the court sits, and charging the
+fees to the State; or releasing the poor prisoner on receiving “black
+mail” for the kindness; giving one man a peace-warrant to oppress
+another whom he knows cannot get bail; and where a man has served
+out the penalty of the crime for which he was committed, give a
+peace-warrant to his adversary that he may continue to vent his spleen
+upon him. In this manner, we have known a man who had served seven
+months' imprisonment for assault and battery, by an understanding
+between the magistrate and the plaintiff, continued in jail for several
+years upon a peace-warrant, issued by the magistrate from time to time,
+until at length he shot himself in jail. The man was a peaceable man,
+and of a social temperament. He had been offered the alternative of
+leaving the State, but he scorned to accept it. To show that we are
+correct in what we say respecting some of the Charleston officials, we
+insert an article which appeared in the Charleston Courier of Sept. 1,
+1852:--[For the Courier.]
+
+“Many of the quiet and moral portion of our community can form no
+adequate conception of the extent to which those who sell liquor,
+and otherwise trade with our slaves, are now plying their illegal
+and demoralizing traffic. At no period within our recollection has it
+prevailed to such an alarming extent; at no period has its influence
+upon our slave population been more palpable or more dangerous; at no
+period has the municipal administration been so wilfully blind to these
+corrupt practices, or so lenient and forgiving when such practices are
+exposed.”
+
+* * * *
+
+“We have heard it intimated that when General Schnierle is a candidate
+for the mayoralty, they are regularly assessed for means to defray the
+expenses of the canvass. Instances are not wanting where amounts of
+money are paid monthly to General Schnierle's police as a reward for
+shutting their eyes and closing their lips when unlawful proceedings are
+in progress. We have at this moment in our possession a certificate from
+a citizen, sworn to before Mr. Giles, the magistrate, declaring that he,
+the deponent, heard one of the city police-officers (Sharlock) make a
+demand for money upon one of these shop-keepers, and promised that if
+he would pay him five dollars at stated intervals, 'none of the
+police-officers would trouble him.' This affidavit can be seen, if
+inquired for, at this office. Thus bribery is added to guilt, and those
+who should enforce the laws are made auxiliaries in their violation.
+Said one of these slave-destroyers to us, 'General Schnierle suits us
+very well. I have no trouble with General Schnierle'--remarks at once
+repugnant and suggestive. * * * We are told by one, that Mr. Hutchinson,
+when in power, fined him heavily (and, as he thought, unjustly)
+for selling liquor to a slave; hence he would not vote for him. An
+additional reason for this animosity toward Mr. Hutchinson arises from
+the fact that the names of offenders were always published during that
+gentleman's administration, while under that of General Schnierle they
+are screened from public view. On any Sunday evening, light may be seen
+in the shops of these dealers. If the passer-by will for a few moments
+stay his course, he will witness the ingress and egress of negroes; if
+he approach the door, he will hear noise as of card-playing and revelry
+within. And this is carried on unblushingly; is not confined to a shop
+here and a shop there, but may be observed throughout the city. The
+writer of this article, some Sundays since, witnessed from his upper
+window a scene of revelry and gambling in one of these drinking-shops,
+which will scarcely be credited. A party of negroes were seen around
+a card-table, with money beside them, engaged in betting; glasses
+of liquor were on the table, from which they ever and anon regaled
+themselves with all the nonchalance and affected mannerism of the most
+fashionable blades of the beau monde.
+
+“This may not be a 'desecration of the Sabbath' by the municipal
+authorities themselves, but they are assuredly responsible for its
+profanation. Appointed to guard the public morals, they are assuredly
+censurable if licentiousness is suffered to run its wild career
+unnoticed and unchecked. We do not ask to be believed. We would prefer
+to have skeptical rather than credulous readers. We should prefer that
+all would arise from the perusal of this article in doubt, and determine
+to examine for themselves. We believe in the strength and sufficiency of
+ocular proof, and court investigation.
+
+* * *
+
+“We are abundantly repaid if we succeed in arousing public attention to
+the alarming and dangerous condition of our city. * * * Let inquiry be
+entered into. We boldly challenge it. It will lead to other and more
+astonishing developments than those we have revealed. (Signed)
+
+“A RESPONSIBLE CITIZEN.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX. MANUEL'S ARRIVAL IN NEW YORK.
+
+
+
+WHEN we left Manuel, he was being hurried on board the steamship, as if
+he was a bale of infected goods. Through the kindness of the clerk in
+the consul's office, he was provided with a little box of stores to
+supply his wants on the passage, as it was known that he would have to
+“go forward.” He soon found himself gliding over Charleston bar, and
+took a last look of what to him had been the city of injustice. On the
+afternoon of the second day, he was sitting upon the forward deck
+eating an orange that had been given to him by the steward of the ship,
+probably as a token of sympathy for his sickly appearance, when a number
+of passengers, acting upon the information of the clerk of the ship,
+gathered around him. One gentleman from Philadelphia, who seemed to take
+more interest in the man than any other of the passengers, expressed his
+indignation in no measured terms, that such a man should be imprisoned
+as a slave. “Take care,” said a bystander, “there's a good many
+Southerners on board.”
+
+“I don't care if every slaveholder in the South was on board, holding
+a knife at my throat; I'm on the broad ocean, where God spreads the
+breezes of freedom that man cannot enslave,” said he, sitting down
+beside Manuel, and getting him to recount the details of his shipwreck
+and imprisonment. The number increased around him, and all listened with
+attention until he had concluded. One of the spectators asked him if
+he would have something good to eat? but he declined, pulling out the
+little box that the consul had sent him, and, opening it before them,
+showed it to be well-stored with little delicacies.
+
+The Philadelphian motioned that they take up a subscription for him, and
+almost simultaneously took his hat off and began to pass it around;
+but Manuel, mistaking the motive, told them that he never yet sought
+charity-that the consul had paid him his wages, and he had money enough
+to get home. But if he did not accept their contributions, he had their
+sympathies and their good wishes, which were more prized by him, because
+they were contrasted with the cold hospitality he had suffered in
+Charleston.
+
+On the morning of the twentieth he arrived in New York. Here things wore
+a different aspect. There were no constables fettering him with irons,
+aggravating his feelings, and dragging him to a miseerable cell overrun
+with vermin. He had no scientific ordeal of the statutes to pass
+through, requiring the measure of his form and features; and he was a
+man again, with life and liberty, and the dark dread of the oppressor's
+power far from him. He went to his comfortable boarding-house, and laid
+his weary limbs down to rest, thanking God that he could now sleep
+in peace, and awake to liberty. His system was so reduced that he was
+unable to do duty, although he was anxious to proceed on his way to join
+the old owners, but wanted to work his way in the capacity of steward.
+Thus he remained in New York more than four weeks, gaining vigor and
+strength, and with a lingering hope that he should meet his little
+companion.
+
+On the twenty-first of June, being well recruited, he sailed for
+Liverpool, and after a remarkably calm passage of thirty-four days,
+arrived in the Mersey, and in forty-eight hours more the ship was safely
+within the Princess' Dock, and all hands ready to go on shore. In the
+same dock was a ship taking in cargo and passengers for Charleston,
+South Carolina. Manuel went on board, and found, in conversation with
+the steward, that she had sailed from that port on the 23d of May. A
+short conversation disclosed that they had been old shipmates from the
+Thames, on board of the Indiaman, Lord William Bentick, and were on
+board of that ship when an unfortunate circumstance occurred to her on
+entering a British North American port, many years ago. Here they sat
+recounting the many adventures through which they had passed since
+that period, the ships they had sailed in, the sufferings they had gone
+through, and the narrow escapes they had had for their lives, until past
+midnight. Manuel wound up by giving a detailed account of his sufferings
+in Charleston.
+
+“What!” said the steward of the Charleston ship, “then you must have
+known our cabin-boy, he belonged to the same vessel!”
+
+“What was his name?” inquired Manuel.
+
+“Tommy Ward! and as nice a little fellow as ever served the cabin; poor
+little fellow, we could hardly get him across.”
+
+“Gracious! that's my Tommy,” said Manuel. “Where is he? He loves me as
+he does his life, and would run to me as a child would to its father.
+Little as he is, he has been a friend through my severest trials, and a
+companion in my pleasures.”
+
+“Ah, poor child! I'm afraid you wouldn't know him now. He has suffered
+much since you saw him.”
+
+“Is he not aboard? Where can I find him?” inquired Manuel, hastily.
+
+“No, he is not aboard; he is at the hospital in Dennison street. Go
+there to-morrow, and you will find him.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX. THE SCENE OF ANGUISH.
+
+
+
+WE are sorry, that having traced the details of our narrative as they
+occurred, without adding for dramatic effect, we are constrained to
+conclude with a picture at once painful and harrowing to the feelings.
+We do this that we may be sustained by records, in what we have stated,
+rather than give one of those more popular conclusions which restore
+happiness and relieve the reader's feelings.
+
+Manuel retired to his berth, full of meditation. His little companion
+was before him, pictured in his child-like innocence and playfulness. He
+saw him in the youthful zeal and freshness of the night when he brought
+the well-laden haversack into his dreary cell, and which kind act was
+repaid by a night of suffering in the guard-house. There was too much of
+life and buoyancy in the picture his imagination called up, to reconcile
+the belief that any thing serious had befallen him; and yet the man
+spoke in a manner that aroused the intensity of his feelings. It was a
+whisper full of fearful forebodings, and filled his mind with anxious
+expectation. He could not sleep-the anxiety of his feelings had
+awakened a nervvous restlessness that awaited the return of morning with
+impatience.
+
+Morning came. He proceeded to the hospital and rang the bell. An aged
+gentleman came to the door, and to his questions about Tommy being
+there, answered in the affirmative, and called an attendant to show him
+the ward in which the little sufferer lay. He followed the attendant,
+and after ascending several flights of stairs and following a dark,
+narrow passage nearly to its end, was shown into a small, single-room on
+the right. The result was suggestive in the very atmosphere, which had
+a singular effect upon the senses. The room, newly-whitewashed, was
+darkened by a green curtain tacked over the frame of the window.
+Standing near the window were two wooden-stools and a little table, upon
+which burned the faint light of a small taper, arranged in a cup of oil,
+and shedding its feeble flickers on the evidences of a sick-chamber.
+There, on a little, narrow cot, lay the death-like form of his once
+joyous companion, with the old nurse sitting beside him, watching his
+last pulsation. Her arm encircled his head, while his raven locks curled
+over his forehead, and shadowed the beauty of innocence even in death.
+
+“Is he there? is he there?” inquired Manuel in a low tone. At the same
+time a low, gurgling noise sounded in his ears. The nurse started to
+her feet as if to inquire for what he came. “He is my companion-my
+companion,” said Manuel.
+
+It was enough. The woman recognised the object of the little sufferer's
+anxiety. “Ah! it is Manuel. How often he has called that name for the
+last week!” said she.
+
+He ran to the bedside and grasped his little fleshless hand as it lay
+upon the white sheet, bathing his cold brow with kisses of grief. Life
+was gone-the spirit had winged its way to the God who gave it. Thus
+closed the life of poor Tommy Ward. He died as one resting in a calm
+sleep, far from the boisterous sound of the ocean's tempest, with God's
+love to shield his spirit in another and brighter world.
+
+
+
+
+CONCLUSION.
+
+
+
+IN a preceding chapter, we left the poor boy on the plantation of
+Colonel Whaley, affected by a pulmonary disease, the seeds of which were
+planted on the night he was confined in the guard-house, and the signs
+of gradual decay evinced their symptoms. After Captain Williams--for
+such was the name of the captain of the Three Sisters--left the
+plantation, no person appeared to care for him, and on the second day he
+was attacked with a fever, and sent to one of the negro cabins, where an
+old mulatto woman took care of him and nursed him as well as her scanty
+means would admit. The fever continued for seven days, when he
+became convalescent and able to walk out; but feeling that he was an
+incumbrance to those around him, he packed his clothes into a little
+bundle and started for Charleston on foot. He reached that city after
+four days' travelling over a heavy, sandy road, subsisting upon the
+charity of poor negroes, whom he found much more ready to supply his
+wants than the opulent planters. One night he, was compelled to make
+a pillow of his little bundle, and lay down in a corn-shed, where the
+planter, aroused by the noise of his dogs, which were confined in a
+kennel, came with a lantern and two negroes and discovered him. At first
+he ordered him off, and threatened to set the dogs upon him if he
+did not instantly comply with the order; but his miserable appearance
+affected the planter, and before he had gone twenty rods one of the
+negroes overtook him, and said his master had sent him to bring him
+back. He returned, and the negro made him a coarse bed in his cabin, and
+gave him some homony and milk.
+
+His hopes to see Manuel had buoyed him up through every fatigue, but
+when he arrived, and was informed at the jail that Manuel had left three
+days before, his disappointment was extreme. A few days after he shipped
+as cabin-boy on board a ship ready for sea and bound to Liverpool.
+Scarcely half-way across, he was compelled to resign himself to the
+sick-list. The disease had struck deep into his system, and was rapidly
+wasting him away. The sailors, one by one in turns, watched over him
+with tenderness and care. As soon as the ship arrived, he was sent
+to the hospital, and there he breathed his last as Manuel entered the
+sick-chamber. We leave Manuel and a few of his shipmates following his
+remains to the last resting-place of man.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX.
+
+SINCE the foregoing was written, Governor Means, in his message to the
+Legislature of South Carolina, refers to the laws under which “colored
+seamen” are imprisoned. We make the subjoined extract, showing that
+he insists upon its being continued in force, on the ground of
+“self-preservation”--a right which ship-owners will please regard for
+the protection of their own interests:--
+
+“I feel it my duty to call your attention to certain proceedings
+which have grown out of the enforcement of that law of our State which
+requires the Sheriff of Charleston to seize and imprison colored seamen
+who are brought to that port. You will remember that the British Consul
+addressed a communication to the legislature in December, 1850, on the
+subject of a modification of this law. A committee was appointed by
+the House and Senate to report upon it at the next session of the
+legislature. These committees reported adverse to any modification. On
+the 24th March, 1852, Manuel Pereira was imprisoned in accordance with
+the law alluded to. The vessel in which he sailed was driven into the
+port of Charleston in distress. This was looked upon as a favorable case
+upon which to make an issue, as so strong an element of sympathy was
+connected with it. Accordingly, a motion was made before Judge
+Withers for a writ of 'habeas corpus,' which was refused by him. These
+proceedings were instituted by the British Consul, it is said, under
+instructions from his government, to test the constitutionality of
+the Act. I think it here proper to state, that Pereira was at perfect
+liberty to depart at any moment that he could get a vessel to transport
+him beyond the limits of the State. In truth, in consideration of the
+fact that his coming into the State was involuntary, the Sheriff of
+Charleston, with his characteristic kindness, procured for him a place
+in a ship about to sail for Liverpool. Early in April, Pereira was
+actually released, and on his way to the ship, having himself signed the
+shipping articles, when, by interposition of the British Consul, he was
+again consigned to the custody of the sheriff. A few days after this,
+the British Consul insisted no longer on his detention, but voluntarily
+paid his passage to New York. This was looked upon as an abandonment of
+that case. The statement of Mr. Yates, together with the letter of the
+British Consul, are herewith transmitted.
+
+“While these proceedings were pending, the Sheriff of Charleston had
+my instructions not to give up the prisoners even if a writ of habeas
+corpus had been granted. I considered that the 'Act of 1844,' entitled,
+'An Act more effectually to prevent negroes and other persons of color
+from entering into this State, and for other purposes,' made it my duty
+to do so.
+
+“On the 19th May, Reuben Roberts, a colored seaman, a native of Nassau,
+arrived in the steamer Clyde, from Baracoa. The Sheriff of Charleston,
+in conformity with the law of the State, which has been in force
+since 1823, arrested and lodged him in the district jail, where he was
+detained until the 26th of May, when, the Clyde being ready to sail,
+Roberts was put on board, and sailed the same day.
+
+“On the 9th of June, a writ in trespass, for assault and false
+imprisonment, from the Federal Court, was served upon Sheriff Yates,
+laying the damage at $4000.
+
+“The Act of 1844, I take it, was intended to prevent all interference
+on the part of any power on the face of the earth, with the execution of
+this police regulation, which is so essential to the peace and safety of
+our community. Had the legislature which passed it ever dreamed that the
+sheriff was to be subjected to the annoyance of being dragged before the
+Federal Court for doing his duty under a law of the State, I am sure it
+would have provided for his protection. As no such provision has been
+made for so unexpected a contingency, I recommend that you so amend this
+Act of 1844, that it may meet any case that may arise.
+
+“It is certainly wrong to tolerate this interference with the
+laws enacted for the protection of our institution. In the general
+distribution of power between the Federal and State Governments, the
+right to make their own police regulations was clearly reserved to
+the States. In fact, it is nothing more nor less than the right of
+self-preservation-a right which is above all constitutions, and above
+all laws, and one which never was, nor never will be, abandoned by a
+people who are worthy to be free. It is a right which has never yet been
+attempted to be denied to any people, except to us.
+
+“The complaint against this law is very strange, and the attempt to
+bring us in conflict with the General Government on account of it, is
+still more remarkable; when, so far from its being at variance with the
+laws of the United States, it is only requiring the State authorities to
+enforce an Act of Congress, approved February 28th, 1803, entitled, An
+Act to prevent the importation of certain persons into certain States,
+where, by the laws thereof, their importation is prohibited. By
+referring to this Act, you will see that the plaintiff in the action
+alluded to was prohibited by it from entering into this State. I deem
+it unnecessary, however, to enter fully into the argument. If any doubt
+should be entertained by you, as to its constitutionality, I beg leave
+to refer to the able opinion of the Hon. J. McPherson Berrien, delivered
+at the time he was Attorney-General of the United States, which I
+herewith send you.
+
+“On the subject of the modification of this law, I am free to say,
+that when Her B. M.'s Government, through its consul, made a respectful
+request to our legislature to that effect, I was anxious that it should
+be made. It was with pleasure that I transmitted his first communication
+to the last legislature. I would have made a recommendation of its
+modification a special point in my first message, but that I thought it
+indelicate to do so, as the matter was already before the legislature,
+and committees had been appointed to report upon it. Another reason for
+the neglect of this recommendation, was the then excited state of
+party politics, which might have precluded the possibility of a calm
+consideration of the subject. But for the proceedings instituted in the
+premises, I would even now recommend a modification of the law, so as to
+require captains to confine their colored seamen to their vessels, and
+to prevent their landing under heavy penalties. For while I think the
+State has a perfect right to pass whatever laws on this subject it may
+deem necessary for its safety, yet the spirit of the age requires that
+while they should be so formed as to be adequate to our protection,
+they should be at the same time as little offensive as possible to other
+nations with whom we have friendly relations. But since an attempt has
+been made to defy our laws, and bring us in conflict with the Federal
+Government, on a subject upon which we are so justly sensitive, our own
+self-respect demands that we should not abate one jot or tittle of that
+law, which was enacted to protect us from the influence of ignorant
+incendiaries.”
+
+We are under many obligations to Governor Means for his remarks upon
+this subject. We esteem his character too highly to entertain an
+idea that he would knowingly make an incorrect statement; but, with a
+knowledge of the facts, we can assure him that he was misled by those
+whom he depended upon for information. And also, though his name
+deserves to stand pre-eminent among the good men of Carolina, for
+recurring to that frightful state of things which exists in the
+Charleston prison, that he did not receive a correct statement in regard
+to it. In this want, his remarks lose much of their value. Subjects and
+grievances exist there which he should know most of, and yet he knows
+least, because he intrusts them to the caretakers, who make abuses their
+medium of profit.
+
+Under the influence of that exceedingly suspicious, and yet exceedingly
+credulous characteristic of a people, few know the power that is working
+beneath the sunshine of South Carolina, and those who do, stand upon
+that slaveworn ostentation which considers it beneath notice.
+
+We have no interest nor feeling beyond that of humanity, and a right
+to expose the mendacity of those who have power to exercise it over the
+prisoners in Charleston. That mendacity has existed too long for the
+honor of that community, and for the feelings of those who have suffered
+under it.
+
+It may be true that this case was considered a favorable one to try the
+issue upon, but no elements of sympathy were sought by the consul.
+That functionary to whom the Governor has attributed “characteristic
+kindness,” said, in our presence, and we have the testimony of others
+to confirm what we say, that if Judge Withers had granted the habeas
+corpus, he would not have given up the prisoner, but rather gone to
+jail and suffered the same regimen with the prisoners. Had he tried the
+accommodations, he would have found the “profits” more than necessary to
+appease common hunger.
+
+The Governor says, “Pereira was at liberty to depart at any moment that
+he could get a vessel to transport him beyond the limits of the State.”
+ How are we to reconcile this with the following sentence, which appears
+in the next paragraph:--“While these proceedings were pending,” (meaning
+the action instituted by the consul to release the prisoner,) “the
+sheriff of Charleston had my instructions not to give up the prisoner,
+even if a writ of habeas corpus had been granted?” According to this,
+the sheriff assumed a power independent of and above the Governor's
+prerogative. We have attempted to picture the force of this in our
+work, and to show that there are official abuses cloaked by an honorable
+dishonesty, which dignifies the business of the local factor and vendor
+of human property, and which should be stayed by the power of the
+Executive.
+
+The singular fact presents itself, that while Judge Withers was
+deliberating upon the question of granting the “habeas corpus,” the
+proceedings pending, and the Governor's instructions to the contrary
+before him, the sheriff takes it upon himself to smuggle the prisoner
+out of port. Now what was the object of this Secret and concerted
+movement? Was it “kindness” on the part of that functionary, who has
+grasped every pretence to enforce this law? We think not. The reader
+will not require any extended comments from us to explain the motive;
+yet we witnessed it, and cannot leave it without a few remarks.
+
+It is well known that it has been the aim of that functionary, whose
+“characteristic kindness” has not failed to escape the Governor's
+notice, to thwart the consul in all his proceedings. In this instance,
+he engaged the services of a “shipping master” as a pretext, and with
+him was about to send the man away when his presence was essential to
+test his right to the habeas corpus, and at this very time, more than
+two months wages, due him from the owners, lay in the hands of the
+consul, ready to be paid on his release.
+
+The nefarious design speaks for itself.
+
+The consul was informed of the proceeding, and very properly refused
+to submit to such a violation of authority, intended to annul his
+proceedings. He preferred to await the “test,” demanding the prisoner's
+release through the proper authorities. That release, instead of being
+“a few days after this,” as the message sets forth, was-not effected
+until the fifteenth of May.
+
+Let the Governor institute an inquiry into the treatment of these men
+by the officials, and the prison regimen, and he will find the truth
+of what we have said. Public opinion will not credit his award of
+“characteristic kindness” to those who set up a paltry pretext as an
+apology for their wrong-doing.
+
+If men are to be imprisoned upon this singular construction of law,
+(which is no less than arming the fears of South Carolina,) is it any
+more than just to ask that she should pay for it, instead of imposing
+it upon innocent persons? Or, to say the least, to make such comfortable
+provision for them as is made in the port of Savannah, and give them
+what they pay for, instead of charging thirty cents a day for their
+board, and making twenty-two of that profit?
+
+Had the Governor referred to the “characteristic kindness” of the
+jailer, his remarks would have been bestowed upon a worthy man, who has
+been a father to those unfortunates who chanced within the turn of his
+key.
+
+In another part of his message, commenting upon the existence of
+disgraceful criminal laws, the management and wretched state of prisons,
+he says, “The attorney-general, at my request, has drawn up a report
+on the subject of prisons and prison discipline.” Now, if such were the
+facts, the reports would be very imperfect to be drawn up by one who
+never visits the prisons.
+
+We are well aware that he called for this report, and further, that the
+attorney-general, in a letter to the sheriff, (of which we have a copy,)
+propounded numerous questions in regard to the jail, calling for a
+statement in full, particularly the amount of fees paid to certain
+functionaries; those charged to the State, and the average number of
+prisoners per month, from Sept. 1851, to Sept. 1852, &c. &c. That letter
+was transmitted to the jailer-a man whose character and integrity is
+well known, and above reproach in Charleston-with a request that he
+would make out his report. He drew up his report in accordance with the
+calendar and the facts, but that report was not submitted. Why was it
+not submitted? Simply because it showed the profit of starving men in
+South Carolina prisons.
+
+We have the evidence in our possession, and can show the Executive that
+he has been misled. We only ask him to call for the original statement,
+made out in the jailer's handwriting, and compare it with the calendar;
+and when he has done that, let us ask, Why the average of prisoners per
+month does not correspond? and why the enormous amount of fees accruing
+from upward of fifty “colored seamen,” imprisoned during the year, and
+entered upon the calendar “contrary to law,” was not included?
+
+It is a very unhealthy state of things, to say the least; but as the
+sheriff considers it his own, perhaps we have no right to meddle with
+it.
+
+All this clamor about the bad influence of “colored seamen” is kept up
+by a set of mendicant officials who harvest upon the fees, and falls
+to naught, when, at certain hours of the day during their imprisonment,
+they are allowed to associate with “bad niggers,” committed for criminal
+offences and sale. If their presence is “dangerous,” it certainly would
+be more dangerous in its connection with criminals of the feared class.
+
+Take away the fees--the mercantile community will not murmur, and
+the official gentry will neither abuse nor trouble themselves about
+enforcing the law to imprison freemen.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Manuel Pereira, by F. C. Adams
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MANUEL PEREIRA ***
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Manuel Pereira, by F. C. Adams
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Manuel Pereira
+
+Author: F. C. Adams
+
+Release Date: November, 2003 [EBook #4680]
+Posting Date: January 11, 2010
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MANUEL PEREIRA ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charles Aldarondo
+
+
+
+
+
+MANUEL PEREIRA
+
+or, The Sovereign Rule of South Carolina.
+
+With Views Of Southern Laws, Life, And Hospitality.
+
+By F. C. Adams.
+
+
+Written In Charleston, South Carolina. Washington, D. C.:
+
+1853.
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ CHAPTER I. THE Unlucky Ship
+ CHAPTER II. The Steward's Bravery
+ CHAPTER III. The Second Storm
+ CHAPTER IV. The Charleston Police
+ CHAPTER V. Mr. Grimshaw, the Man of the County
+ CHAPTER VI. The Janson in the Offing
+ CHAPTER VII. Arrival of the Janson
+ CHAPTER VIII. A New Dish of Secession
+ CHAPTER IX. A few Points of the Law
+ CHAPTER X. The Prospect Darkening
+ CHAPTER XI. The Sheriff's Office
+ CHAPTER XII. The Old Jail
+ CHAPTER XIII. How it is
+ CHAPTER XIV. Manuel Pereira Committed
+ CHAPTER XV. The Law's Intricacy
+ CHAPTER XVI. Plea of Just Consideration and Mistaken Constancy of the Laws
+ CHAPTER XVII. Little George, the Captain, and Mr. Grimshaw
+ CHAPTER XVIII. Little Tommy and the Police
+ CHAPTER XIX. The Next Morning, and the Mayor's Verdict
+ CHAPTER XX. Emeute among the Stewards
+ CHAPTER XXI. The Captain's Interview with Mr. Grimshaw
+ CHAPTER XXII. Copeland's Release and Manuel's close Confinement
+ CHAPTER XXIII. Imprisonment of John Paul, and John Baptiste Pamerlie
+ CHAPTER XXIV. The Janson Condemned
+ CHAPTER XXV. George the Secessionist, and his Father's Ships
+ CHAPTER XXVI. A Singular Reception
+ CHAPTER XXVII. The Habeas Corpus
+ CHAPTER XXVIII. The Captain's Departure and Manuel's Release
+ CHAPTER XXIX. Manuel's Arrival in New York
+ CHAPTER XXX. The Scene of Anguish
+ CONCLUSION
+ APPENDIX
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION.
+
+
+OUR generous friends in Georgia and South Carolina will not add among
+their assumptions that we know nothing of the South and Southern life. A
+residence of several years in those States, a connection with the press,
+and associations in public life, gave us opportunities which we did
+not lose, and have not lost sight of; and if we dipped deeper into the
+vicissitudes of life and law than they gave us credit for at the time,
+we trust they will pardon us, on the ground of interest in the welfare
+of the South.
+
+Perhaps we should say, to support the true interests of the South, we
+should and must abandon many of those errors we so strenuously supported
+in years past; and thus we have taken up the subject of our book, based
+upon the practical workings of an infamous law, which we witnessed upon
+the individual whose name forms a part of the title.
+
+Imprisoning a shipwrecked sailor, and making it a penal offence for
+a freeman to come within the limits of a republican State, whether
+voluntarily or involuntarily, seems to be considered commonplace,
+instead of barbarous in South Carolina. This may be accounted for by the
+fact that the power of a minority, created in wrong, requiring barbarous
+expedients to preserve itself intact, becomes an habitual sentiment,
+which usage makes right.
+
+This subject has been treated with indifference, even by the press,
+which has satisfied itself in discussing the abstract right as a
+question of law, rather than by disclosing the sufferings of those who
+endure the wrong and injustice. When we are called upon to support, and
+are made to suffer the penalty of laws founded in domestic fear, and
+made subservient to various grades of injustice, it becomes our duty
+to localize the wrong, and to point out the odium which attaches to the
+State that enacts such laws of oppression.
+
+A "peculiar-institution" absorbs and takes precedence of every thing;
+its protection has become a sacred element of legislative and private
+action; and fair discussion is looked upon as ominous, and proclaimed
+as incendiary. But we speak for those who owe no allegiance to
+that delicate institution; citizens to all intents and, purposes
+(notwithstanding their dark skins) of the countries to which they
+severally belong; peaceable persons, pursuing their avocations, to
+provide a respectable maintenance for their families, and worthy of the
+same protective rights claimed by the more fortunate citizens of such
+countries. In doing this we shall give a practical illustration of the
+imprisonment of four individuals in South Carolina, and ask those who
+speculate in the abstract science of State sovereignty, to reflect upon
+the issue of that lamentable injustice which inflicts punishment upon
+persons guiltless of crime. We prefer to be plain, and we know our
+Southern friends will not accuse us of misconstruction, for we have
+their interests at heart, as well as the cause of humanity, which we
+shall strive to promote, in spite of the struggles of modern barbarism,
+seeking to perpetuate itself. Fear, the inventor of such pretexts as are
+set up, and mantled in Southern modesty, must remodel its code for South
+Carolinians, before it can assert a power unknown to law, or trample
+upon the obligations of treaty, or enforce nullification of individual
+rights.
+
+CHARLESTON, S. C., July 17,1852.
+
+
+
+
+MANUEL PEREIRA.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I. THE UNLUCKY SHIP.
+
+
+
+THE British brig Janson, Thompson, master, laden with sugar, pimento,
+&c. &c. left Kingston, Jamaica, in the early part of March, in the
+present year, bound for Glasgow. The skipper, who was a genuine son
+of the "Land o' Cakes," concluded to take the inside passage, and run
+through the gulf. This might have been questioned by seamen better
+acquainted with the windward passage; but as every Scotchman likes to
+have his own way, the advice of the first officer--an experienced salt
+in the West India waters--went to leeward. On rounding Cape Antoine, it
+was evident that a strong blow was approaching. The clouds hung their
+dark curtains in threatening blackness; and, as the sharp flashes of
+lightning inflamed the gloomy scene, the little bark seemed like a speck
+upon the bosom of the sea. It was the first mate's watch on deck. The
+wind, then blowing from the W.S.W., began to increase and veer into the
+westward; from whence it suddenly chopped into the northward. The mate
+paced the quarter wrapt in his fearnought jacket, and at every turn
+giving a glance aloft, then looking at the compass, and again to the man
+at the wheel, as if he had an instinct of what was coming.
+
+He was a fearless navigator, yet, like many others who had yielded to
+the force of habit, was deeply imbued with that prevalent superstition
+so common to sailors, which regards a particular ship as unlucky.
+Imagine an old-fashioned boatswain, with north-country features strongly
+marked, a weather-beaten face, and a painted south-wester on his head,
+and you have the "Mister Mate" of the old brig Janson.
+
+"Keep her full, my hearty. We must take in our light sails and go on
+the other tack soon. If we don't catch it before daylight, I'll miss my
+calculation. She's an unlucky old craft as ever I sailed in, and if the
+skipper a'n't mighty careful, he'll never get her across. I've sworn
+against sailing in her several times, but if I get across in her this
+time, I'll bid her good-by; and if the owners don't give me a new craft,
+they may get somebody else. We're just as sure to have bad luck as if we
+had cats and parsons aboard."
+
+Thus saying, he descended the companion-way, and reported the appearance
+of the weather to the skipper, who arose quickly, and, consulting his
+barometer, found it had fallen to near the lowest scale. After inquiring
+the quarter of the wind, and how she headed, what sail she was carrying,
+and the probable distance from the cape, he gave orders to call all
+hands to take in the topgallant-sails, double reef the fore, and single
+reef the maintop-sails, and stow the flying-jib--dressed himself, and
+came on deck. Just as he put his head above the slide of the companion,
+and stopped for a minute with his hands resting upon the sides, a vivid
+flash of lightning hung its festoons of fire around the rigging, giving
+it the appearance of a chain of livid flame.
+
+"We'll catch the but-end of a gulf sneezer soon. Tell the boys to bear
+a hand with them sails. We must get her snug, and stand by to lay
+her under a double-reefed maintop-sail and jib, with her head to the
+northward and eastward. We may make a clear drift--chance if it lasts
+long," said Skipper Thompson, as he stood surveying the horizon and his
+craft. Scarcely had he given the orders before the storm burst upon them
+with all its fury. Its suddenness can only be appreciated by those who
+have sailed in the West India passages, where the sudden shocks of the
+short-chopping sea acts with a tremendous strain upon the hull of a
+heavy-laden vessel. The captain ran to the windward gangway, hurrying
+his men in the discharge of their duty, and giving another order to
+clew up the coursers and foretop-sail. Just as the men had executed the
+first, and were about to pull on the clew-lines of the latter, a sudden
+gust took effect upon the bag of the sail and carried it clean from the
+bolt-ropes. The halyards were lowered and the yards properly braced
+up, while the Janson was brought to under the canvas we have before
+described. In a few minutes more the wind had increased to a gale, and,
+as the sailors say, several times the old craft "wouldn't look at it."
+Several times we had to put her helm up, and as many times she shipped
+those forcing cross seas which drive every thing before them, and sweep
+the decks. At length a piece of canvas was lashed to the fore-rigging
+which gave her a balance, and she rode easy until about five o'clock in
+the morning, when by a sudden broach the canvas was carried away, and a
+tremendous sharp sea boarded her forward; starting several stanchions,
+carrying away part of her starboard bulwark and rail, and simultaneously
+the foretop-gallant-mast, which snapped just above the withe. As a
+natural consequence, every thing was in the utmost confusion--the old
+hull worked in every timber. The wreck swayed to and fro, retarding the
+working of the vessel and endangering the lives of those who attempted
+to clear it from obstruction. Thus she remained for more than half an
+hour, nearly on her beam-ends, and at the mercy of each succeeding sea
+that threatened to engulf her.
+
+As daylight broke, the wind lulled, and, as usual in those waters,
+the sea soon ran down. Enabled to take the advantage of daylight,
+they commenced to clear away the wreck. In the mean time it was found
+necessary to remove the fore-hatch in order to get out some spare sails
+that had been stowed away near the forward bulkhead, instead of a more
+appropriate place. The mate, after trying the pumps in the early part of
+the gale, reported that she had started a leak; which, however, was so
+trifling as to require but one man to keep her free, until she broached,
+and carried away her topgallant-mast. The man on duty then reported
+the water increasing, and another was ordered to assist him. On an
+examination in the morning, it was found that she was strained in the
+fore-channels, and had started a but.
+
+"She's an unlucky concern, skipper," said the mate as he brought the axe
+to take the battons off the forehatch. "A fellow might as well try to
+work a crab at low tide as to keep her to it in a blow like that. She
+minds her helm like a porpoise in the breakers. Old Davy must have put
+his mark upon her some time, but I never know'd a lucky vessel to be got
+as she was. She makes a haul on the underwriters every time she drifts
+across; for I never knew her to sail clear since I shipped in the old
+tub. If she was mine, I'd find a place for her at somebody's expense."
+
+The sea became smooth, the water was found to have receded, the wind,
+light, had hauled to W.S.W., and Cape Antoine was judged by dead
+reckoning to bear S.S.W. about thirty miles distant. The larboard
+fore-shrouds were found to have been scorched by the lightning, which
+had completely melted the tar from the after-shroud. All hands were now
+busily employed repairing the wreck, which by two o'clock P.M. they had
+got so far completed as to stand on their course in the gulf, at the
+rate of six knots an hour.
+
+The skipper now consulted in his mind as to the expediency of making for
+Havana or proceeding on his cruise. The leak had materially diminished,
+and, like all old vessels, though she gave a good portion of work at
+the pumps, a continuation of good weather might afford an opportunity
+to shove her across. Under these feelings, he was inclined to give the
+preference to his hopes rather than yield to his fears. He considered
+the interest of all concerned--consulted his mate, but found him
+governed by his superstition, and looking upon the issue of his life
+about as certain whether he jumped overboard or "stuck by the old tub."
+He considered again the enormous port-charges imposed in Havana, the
+nature of his cargo in regard to tariff, should his vessel be condemned,
+and the ruinous expenses of discharging, &c. &c. together with the cost
+of repairs, providing they were ordered. All these things he considered
+with the mature deliberation of a good master, who has the general
+interests of all concerned at heart. So, if he put away for a port, in
+consideration of all concerned, his lien for general average would have
+strong ground in maritime law; yet there were circumstances connected
+with the sea-worthy condition of the craft--known to himself, if not to
+the port-wardens, and which are matters of condition between the master
+and his owners--which might, upon certain technicalities of law, give
+rise to strong objectionable points. With all these glancing before
+him, he, with commendable prudence, resolved to continue his voyage, and
+trust to kind Providence for the best.
+
+"Captain," said the mate, as he stood viewing the prospect, with a
+marlinespike in one hand and a piece of seizing in the other--"I verily
+think, if that blow had stuck to us two hours longer, the old tub would
+a' rolled her futtocks out. Ye don't know her as well as I do. She's
+unlucky, anyhow; and always has been since she sot upon the water. I've
+seen her top-sides open like a basket when we've been trying to work her
+into port in heavy weather: and a craft that won't look nearer than
+nine points close-hauled, with a stiff breeze, ought to be sent into the
+Clyde for a coal-droger. An old vessel's a perfect pickpocket to owners;
+and if this old thing hasn't opened their purses as bad as her own
+seams, I'll miss my reckonin'. I've had a strong foreknowledge that we
+wouldn't get across in her. I saw the rats leaving in Jamaica--taking
+up their line of march, like marines on the fore. It's a sure sign. And
+then I'd a dream, which is as sure as a mainstay--never deceives me. I
+can depend on its presentiment. I have dreamed it several times, and we
+always had an awful passage. Twice we come within a bobstay of all
+goin' to Old Davy's store-house. I once escaped it, after I'd had my
+mysterious dream; but then I made the cook throw the cat overboard just
+after we left port, and 'twas all that saved us."
+
+Thus saying, he went forward to serve a topgallant-stay that was
+stretched across the forecastle-hatch from the cat-heads, and had just
+been spliced by the men, followed by an old-fashioned sea-urchin, a
+miniature of the tar, with a mallet in his hand. The captain, although
+a firm, intelligent man, and little given to such notions of fate as
+are generally entertained by sailors, who never shake off the spiritual
+imaginings of the forecastle, displayed some discomfiture of mind at
+the strong character of the mate's misgivings. He knew him to be a good
+sailor, firm in his duty, and unmoved by peril. This he had proved on
+several occasions when sailing in other vessels, when the last ray
+of hope seemed to be gone. He approached the mate again, and with a
+pretence of making inquiries about the storage of the cargo, sounded
+him further in regard to his knowledge of the Bahamas, and with special
+reference to the port of Nassau.
+
+"Six-tenths of her timbers are as rotten as punk," said the mate; "this
+North American timber never lasts long; the pump-wells are defective,
+and when we carry sail upon her, they don't affect the water in the
+lee-bilge, and she rolls it through her air-streaks like a whale. She'll
+damage the best cargo that ever floated, in that way. Take my word for
+it, skipper, she'll never go across the Banks; she'll roll to splinters
+as soon as she gets into them long seas; and if we get dismasted again,
+it's gone Davy."
+
+"I know the old scow before to-day, and wouldn't shipped in her, if I
+hadn't been lime-juiced by that villanous landlord that advanced me the
+trifle. But I seen she was as deep as a luggerman's sand-barge, and I
+popped the old cat overboard, just as we rounded the point coming out
+o' Kingston harbour," said a fine, active-looking sailor, who bore
+every trait of a royal tar, and boasted of serving five years in the
+East-India service, to his shipmate, while he continued to serve the
+stay. His words were spoken in a whisper, and not intended for the
+captain's ears. The captain overheard him, however; and, as a vessel is
+a world to those on board, the general sentiment carries its weight
+in controlling its affairs. Thus the strong feeling which prevailed on
+board could not fail to have its effect upon the captain's mind.
+
+"Well, we'll try her at any rate," said the captain, walking aft and
+ordering the cabin-boy to bring up his glass; with which he took a sharp
+look to the southward.
+
+"I'd shape her course for a southern Yankee port. I haven't been much in
+them, but I think we'll stand a better chance there than in these ports
+where they make a speculation of wrecking, and would take a fellow's
+pea-jacket for salvage." "We're always better under the protection of a
+consul than in a British port," said the mate, coming aft to inform the
+skipper that they had carried away the chains of the bobstay, and that
+the bowsprit strained her in the knight-heads.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II. THE STEWARD'S BRAVERY.
+
+
+
+DURING the worst of the gale, a mulatto man, with prominent features,
+indicating more of the mestino than negro character, was moving in busy
+occupation about the deck, and lending a willing hand with the rest
+of the crew to execute the captain's orders. He was rather tall,
+well formed, of a light olive complexion, with dark, piercing eyes, a
+straight, pointed nose, and well-formed mouth. His hair, also, had none
+of that crimp so indicative of negro extraction, but lay in dark curls
+all over his head. As he answered to the captain's orders, he spoke in
+broken accents, indicating but little knowledge of the English language.
+From the manner in which the crew treated him, it was evident that he
+was an established favourite with them as well as the officers, for
+each appeared to treat him more as an equal than a menial. He laboured
+cheerfully at sailor's duty until the first sea broke over her,
+when, seeing that the caboose was in danger of being carried from the
+lashings, and swept to leeward in the mass of wreck, he ran for that
+all-important apartment, and began securing it with extra lashings. He
+worked away with an earnestness that deserved all praise; not with
+the most satisfactory effect for an angry sea immediately succeeding
+completely stripped the furnace of its woodwork, and in its force
+carried the gallant fellow among its fragments into the lee-scuppers,
+where he saved himself from going overboard only by clinging to a
+stanchion.
+
+The second mate, a burly old salt, ran to his assistance, but, before
+he reached him, our hero had recovered himself, and was making another
+attempt to reach his coppers. It seemed to him as much a pending
+necessity to save the cooking apparatus as it did the captain to save
+the ship.
+
+"He no catch me dis time," said he to the mate, smiling as he lifted his
+drenched head from among the fragments of the wreck. "I fix a de coffee
+in him yet, please God."
+
+After securing the remains of his cooking utensils, he might be seen
+busily employed over a little stove, arranged at the foot of the stairs
+that led to the cabin. The smoke from the funnel several times annoyed
+the captain, who laboured under the excitement consequent upon
+the confusion of the wreck and peril of his vessel, bringing forth
+remonstrances of no very pleasant character. It proved that the good
+steward was considering how he could best serve Jack's necessities;
+and while they were laboring to save the ship, lie was studiously
+endeavoring to anticipate the craving of their stomachs. For when
+daylight appeared and the storm subsided, the steward had a bountiful
+dish of hot coffee to relieve Jack's fatigued system. It was received
+with warm welcome, and many blessings were heaped upon the head of the
+steward; A good "doctor" is as essential for the interests of owners and
+crew as a good captain. So it proved in this instance, for while he had
+a careful regard for the stores, he never failed to secure the praises
+of the crew.
+
+"When I gib de stove fire, den me gib de Cap-i-tan, wid de crew, some
+good breakfas," said he with a gleam of satisfaction.
+
+This individual, reader, was Manuel Pereira, or, as he was called by
+his shipmates, Pe-rah-re. Manuel was born in Brazil, an extract of the
+Indians and Spanish, claiming birthright of the Portuguese nation. It
+mattered but very little to Manuel where he was born, for he had been
+so long tossed about in his hardy vocation that he had almost become
+alienated from the affections of birthplace. He had sailed so long under
+the protection of the main-jack of old England that he had formed a
+stronger allegiance to that country than to any other. He had sailed
+under it with pride, had pointed to its emblem, as if he felt secure,
+when it was unfurled, that the register-ticket which that government had
+given him was a covenant between it and himself; that it was a ticket to
+incite him to good behavior in a foreign country; and that the flag was
+sure to protect his rights, and insure, from the government to which
+he sailed respect and hospitality. He had sailed around the world
+under it--visited savage and semi-civilized nations--had received
+the hospitality of cannibals, had joined in the merry dance with the
+Otaheitian, had eaten fruits with the Hottentots, shared the coarse
+morsel of the Greenlander, been twice chased by the Patagonians--but
+what shall we say?--he was imprisoned, for the olive tints of his color,
+in a land where not only civilization rules in its brightest conquests,
+but chivalry and honor sound its fame within the lanes, streets, and
+court-yards. Echo asks, Where--where? We will tell the reader. That flag
+which had waved over him so long and in so many of his wayfarings--that
+flag which had so long boasted its rule upon the wave, and had protected
+him among the savage and the civilized, found a spot upon this wonderful
+globe where it ceased to do so, unless he could change his skin.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III. THE SECOND STORM.
+
+
+
+ON the fourth night succeeding the perilous position of the Janson off
+Cape Antoine, the brig was making about seven knots, current of the gulf
+included. The sun had set beneath heavy radiant clouds, which rolled up
+like masses of inflamed matter, reflecting in a thousand mellow shades,
+and again spreading their gorgeous shadows upon the rippled surface of
+the ocean, making the picture serene and grand.
+
+As darkness quickly followed, these beautiful transparencies of a
+West-India horizon gradually changed into murky-looking monitors,
+spreading gloom in the sombre perspective. The moon was in its second
+quarter, and was rising on the earth. The mist gathered thicker and
+thicker as she ascended, until at length she became totally obscured.
+The Captain sat upon the companion-way, anxiously watching the sudden
+change that was going on overhead; and, without speaking to any one,
+rose, took a glance at the compass, and then went forward to the
+lookout, charging him to keep a sharp watch, as they were not only in a
+dangerous channel, but in the track of vessels bound into and out of the
+gulf. After this, he returned amidship, where the little miniature
+salt we have described before lay, with his face downward, upon the
+main-hatch, and ordering him to bring the lead-line, he went to leeward
+and took a cast; and after paying out about twenty-five fathoms without
+sounding, hauled aboard again. The wind was southward and light. As soon
+as he had examined the lead he walked aft and ordered the sheets eased
+and the vessel headed two points farther off. This done, he went below,
+and shaking his barometer several times, found it had begun to fall very
+fast. Taking down his coast-chart, he consulted it very studiously for
+nearly half an hour, laying off an angle with a pair of dividers and
+scale, with mathematical minuteness; after which he pricked his course
+along the surface to a given point. This was intended as his course.
+
+"Where do you make her, Captain?" said the mate, as he lay in his berth.
+
+"We must be off the Capes--we must keep a sharp look out for them
+reefs. They are so deceptive that we'll be on to them before we know it.
+There's no telling by sounding. We may get forty fathoms one minute and
+strike the next. I've heard old West-India coasters say the white water
+was the best warning," replied the Captain.
+
+"I'm mighty afraid of that Carysfort reef, since I struck upon it in
+1845. I was in a British schooner then, bound from Kingston, Jamaica, to
+New York. We kept a bright lookout, all the way through the passage, and
+yet struck, one morning just about day-light; and, five minutes before,
+we had sounded without getting bottom. When it cleared away, that we
+could see, there was two others like ourselves. One was the ship John
+Parker, of Boston, and the other was a 'long-shoreman. We had a valuable
+cargo on board, but the craft wasn't hurt a bit; and if the skipper--who
+was a little colonial man, not much acquainted with the judicial value
+of a wrecker's services--had a' taken my advice, he wouldn't got into
+the snarl he did at Key West, where they carried him, and charged
+him thirty-six hundred dollars for the job. Yes, and a nice little
+commission to the British consul for counting the doubloons, which,
+by-the-by, Skipper, belonged to that great house of Howland &
+Aspinwalls. They were right clever fellows, and it went into the
+general average account for the relief of the underwriters' big chest,"
+continued the mate.
+
+"We must have all hands ready at the call," said the Captain. "It looks
+dirty overhead, and I think we're going to catch it from the north-east
+to-night. If we do, our position is not as good as before. I don't feel
+afraid of her, if we only get clear of this infernal coast," said the
+Skipper, as he rolled up his chart, and repaired on deck again.
+
+During this time, Manuel, who, had given the crew some very acceptable
+hot cakes for supper, was sitting upon the windlass, earnestly engaged,
+with his broken English, recounting an adventure he had on the coast of
+Patagonia, a few years previous, while serving on board a whaleman, to
+a shipmate who sat at his left. It was one of those incidents which
+frequently occur to the men attached to vessels which visit that coast
+for the purpose of providing a supply of wood and water, and which would
+require too much space to relate here.
+
+"Did you run, Manuel?" said the listening shipmate.
+
+"What else did me do? If I no run, I'd not be here dis night, because
+I be make slave, or I be killed wid club. Patagonian don't care for
+flag--nor not'in' else--I trust--e my leg, an' he get to de boat jus'
+when cap-i-tan come to rescue."
+
+"Was you on board an Englishman then, Manuel?" inquired the shipmate.
+
+"Yes, I'm always sail in English ship, because I can get protection from
+flag and consul, where I go--any part of globe," said he.
+
+"I never liked this sailing among barbarous nations; they've no respect
+for any flag, and would just as lief imprison an Englishman or an
+American as they would a dog. They're a set of wild barbarians, and if
+they kill a fellow, there's no responsibility for it. It's like a parcel
+of wolves chasing a lamb, and there's no finding them after they've
+killed it. But they give a fellow his rights in Old England and the
+States. A man's a man there, rich or poor, and his feelings are just as
+much his own as anybody's. It's a glorious thing, this civilization,
+and if the world keeps on, there'll be no danger of a fellow's being
+imprisoned and killed among these savages. They're a cowardly set, for
+nobody but cowards are afraid of their own actions. Men neither imprison
+nor kill strangers, that don't fear the injustice of their own acts. You
+may smoke that in your pipe, Manuel, for I've heard great men say so.
+But you'd been done making dough-nuts then, Manuel, if they'd got hold
+o' you."
+
+"Never catch Manuel among Patagonians, again; they not know what the
+flag be, nor they can't read de registrum ticket, if they know'd where
+England was," said Manuel; and just as he was concluding the story of
+his adventure, the little sailor-boy put his arm around Manuel's
+waist, and, laying his head on his breast, fondled about him with an
+affectionate attachment. The little fellow had been a shipmate with
+Manuel on several voyages, and, through the kindness he had received
+at his hands, naturally formed an ardent attachment to him. Taking
+advantage of the good treatment, he knew how to direct his attention
+to the steward whenever he wanted a snack from the cabin-locker of that
+which was not allowed in the forecastle. After holding him for a minute,
+encircling his arm around the little fellow's shoulder, he arose,
+and saying, "I know what you want, Tommy," proceeded to the cabin and
+brought him several little eatables that had been left at the captain's
+table.
+
+The wind now began to veer and increase, her sails kept filling aback;
+and as often as the man at the helm kept her off, the wind would baffle
+him, until finding it would be necessary to go on the other tack, or
+make some change of course, he called the Captain. The moment the latter
+put his foot upon deck, he found his previous predictions were about to
+be verified. The rustling noise of the gulf, mingling its solemn sounds
+with the petrel-like music of that foreboding wind that "whistles
+through the shrouds," awakened the more superstitious sensations of a
+sailor's heart. The clouds had gathered their sombre folds into potent
+conclaves, while the sparkling brine in her wake, seemed like a fiery
+stream, rolling its troubled foam upon the dark waters.
+
+"Brace the yards up sharp-hard a-starboard!--and trim aft the sheets,"
+ordered the Captain, who had previously given the order, "All hands on
+deck!"
+
+The order was scarcely executed, before the noise of the approaching
+gale was heard in the distance. All hands were ordered to shorten sail
+as quickly as possible; but before they could get aloft, it came upon
+them with such fury from E.N.E. as to carry away the foretop-mast and
+topgallant-mast, together with its sails, and the main-topgallant-mast
+with the sail. The foretop-mast, in going by the board, carried away the
+flying-jib-boom and flying-jibs. Thus the ill-fated Janson was doomed to
+another struggle for her floating existence. The sea began to rise and
+break in fearful power; the leak had already increased so, that two
+men were continually kept working the pumps. The crew, with commendable
+alacrity, cut away the wreck, which had been swaying to and fro, not
+only endangering the lives of those on board, but obstructing every
+attempt to get the vessel into any kind of working order. The main-sail
+had rent from the leash to the peak of the gaff, and was shaking into
+shreds. The starboard sheet of the maintop-sail was gone, and it had
+torn at the head from the bolt-rope, flying at every gust like the
+shreds of a muslin rag in a hail-storm. Without the government of her
+helm, she lay in the trough of the sea more like a log than a manageable
+mass. Sea after sea broke over her, carrying every thing before them
+at each pass. The officers and crew had now as much as they could do to
+retain their holds, without making any effort to save the wreck, while
+the men at the pumps could only work at each subsiding of the sea,
+and that under the disadvantage of being lashed to the frame. A more
+perilous position than that in which the old brig Janson now lay, it was
+impossible to imagine.
+
+"'Tis the worst hurricane I've ever experienced upon the West India
+coast, Captain, but it's too furious to last long; and if she don't
+go to pieces before morning, I'll give her credit for what I've always
+swore against her. She can't keep afloat though, if it hangs on another
+hour in this way," said the mate, who, with the Captain and Manuel, had
+just made an ineffectual attempt to rig a storm stay-sail, to try
+and lay her to under it. For the mate swore by his knowledge of her
+qualities, that to put her before it, would be certain foundering. The
+gale continued with unabated fury for about two hours, and stopped about
+as suddenly as it commenced. The work of destruction was complete, for
+from her water-line to the stump of the remaining spars, the Janson
+floated a complete wreck.
+
+The captain gave orders to clear away the wreck, and get what little
+sail they could patch up, upon her, for the purpose of working her
+into the nearest port. The mate was not inclined to further the order,
+evidently laboring under the strong presentiment that she was to be
+their coffin. He advised that it was fruitless to stick by her any
+longer, or hazard an attempt to reach a port with her, in such a leaky
+and disabled condition. "If we don't abandon her, Skipper," said he,
+"she'll abandon us. We'd better make signal for the first vessel, and
+bid the old coffin good-by."
+
+The captain was more determined in his resolution, and instead of being
+influenced by the mate's fears, continued his order, and the men went
+to work with a cheerful willingness. None seemed more anxious to lend a
+ready hand than Manuel, for in addition to is duties as steward, he had
+worked at sail-making, and both worked at and directed the repairing of
+the sails. Those acquainted with maritime affairs can readily appreciate
+the amount of labor necessary to provide a mess with the means at hand
+that we have before described. And yet he did it to the satisfaction of
+all, and manifested a restless anxiety lest he should not make everybody
+comfortable, and particularly his little pet boy, Tommy.
+
+"We'll get a good observation at meridian, and then we shall shape our
+course for Charleston, South Carolina. We'll be more likely to reach
+it than any other southern port," said the captain to his mate. "That
+steward, Manuel, is worth his weight in gold. If we have to abandon the
+old craft, I'll take him home; the owners respect him just as much as
+a white man; his politeness and affability could not but command such
+esteem, with a man that a'n't a fool. I never believed in making equals
+of negroes, but if Manuel was to be classed with niggers for all the
+nigger blood that's in him, seven-tenths of the inhabitants of the earth
+would go with him. I never saw such an attachment between brothers, as
+exists between him and Tommy. I verily believe that one couldn't go to
+sleep without the other. I should think they were brothers, if the
+lad wasn't English, and Manuel a Portuguese. But Manuel is as much an
+Englishman at heart as the lad, and has sailed so long under the flag
+that he seems to have a reverence for the old jack when he sees the
+bunting go up. He likes to tell that story about the Patagonians chasing
+him. I have overheard him several times, as much amused in his own
+recital as if he was listening to the quaint jokes of an old tar. But he
+swears the Patagonians will never catch him on their shores again, for
+he says he doesn't believe in making 'drum-head of man-skin,'" said the
+Captain, evidently with the intention of affecting the mate's feelings,
+and drawing his mind from its dark forebodings.
+
+"Well, Skipper, I pray for a happy deliverance," said the mate, "but if
+we make Charleston with her, it'll be a luck that man nor mermaid ever
+thought of. I hearn a good deal o' tell about Charleston, and the Keys.
+That isn't one of the places our stewards are so 'fraid of, and where
+owners don't like to send their ships when they can find freight in
+other ports?"
+
+"I expect it is, sir; but I apprehend no such trouble with any of my
+crew," answered the Captain promptly. "I sail under the faith of my
+nation's honor and prowess, the same as the Americans do under theirs.
+We're both respected wherever we go, and if one little State in the
+Union violates the responsibility of a great nation like that, I'm
+mistaken. Certainly, no nation in Christendom could be found, that
+wouldn't open their hearts to a shipwrecked sailor. I have too much
+faith in what I have heard of the hospitality of Southerners, to believe
+any thing of that kind."
+
+"Talk's all very well, Skipper," said the mate; "but my word for it, I
+know'd several ships lying in the Mersey, about three years ago, bound
+to Southern ports for cotton. White stewards worth any thing couldn't be
+had for love nor money, and the colored ones wouldn't ship for ports in
+Slaves States. The Thebis got a colored man, but the owners had to pay
+him an enormous advance, and this, too, with the knowledge of his being
+locked up the whole time he was in port; thus having to incur the
+very useless expense of supplying his place, or find boarding-house
+accommodations for the officers and crew. If it be true, what I've hearn
+'em say in the Mersey, the man doesn't only suffer in his feelings by
+some sort of confinement they have, but the owners suffer in pocket.
+But it may be, Skipper, and I'm inclined to think with you, our case is
+certainly deplorable enough to command pity instead of imprisonment. The
+government must be found cutting a dirty figure on the national picture,
+that would ill-treat sailors who had suffered as much as our boys have.
+I would hate to see Manuel shut up or ill-used. He's as brave a fellow
+as ever buckled at a handspike or rode a jib-boom. Last night, while
+in the worst of the gale, he volunteered to take Higgins's place, and,
+mounting the jib-boom, was several times buried in the sea; yet he held
+on like a bravo, and succeeded in cutting away the wreck. I thought he
+was gone once or twice, and I own I never saw more peril at sea; but if
+he hadn't effected it, the foot of the bowsprit would have strained her
+open in the eyes, and we'd all been sharks'-bait before this. The fellow
+was nearly exhausted when he came on board; says I, its gone day with
+you, old fellow; but he come to in a little while, and went cheerily to
+work again," continued Mr. Mate, who though pleased with the Captain's
+determination to make the nearest port, seemed to dread that all would
+not be right in Charleston--that the bar was a very intricate one--water
+very shoal in the ship-channel, and though marked with three distinctive
+buoys, numbered according to their range, impossible to crops without
+a skilful pilot. The mate plead a preference for Savannah, asserting,
+according to his own knowlege, that a ship of any draft could cross
+that bar at any time of tide, and that it was a better port for the
+transaction of business.
+
+The Janson was headed for Charleston, the queen city of the sunny South,
+and, as may be expected from her disabled condition, made very slow
+progress on her course. During the gale, her stores had become damaged,
+and on the third day before making Charleston light, Manuel Pereira
+came aft, and with a sad countenance reported that the last cask of
+good water was nearly out; that the others had all been stove during
+the gale, and what remained, so brackish that it was unfit for use.
+From this time until their arrival at Charleston, they suffered those
+tortures of thirst, which only those who have endured them can estimate.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV. THE CHARLESTON POLICE.
+
+
+
+MR. DURKEE had said in Congress, that a negro was condemned to be hung
+in Charleston for resisting his master's attempts upon the chastity of
+his wife; and that such was the sympathy expressed for the negro, that
+the sheriffs offer of one thousand dollars could induce no one present
+to execute the final mandate. Now, had Mr. Durkee been better acquainted
+with that social understanding between the slave, the pretty wife, and
+his master, and the acquiescing pleasure of the slave, who in nineteen
+cases out of twenty congratulates himself on the distinguished honor, he
+would have saved himself the error of such a charge against the tenor
+of social life in Charleston. Or, had he been better acquainted with the
+character of her police, he certainly would have saved the talent of
+Mr. Aiken its sophomore display in that cumbrous defence. In the first
+place, Mr. Durkee would have known that such attempts are so common
+among the social events of the day, and so well understood by the slave,
+that instead of being resented, they are appreciated to a great extent.
+We speak from long experience and knowledge of the connection between
+a certain class of slaves and their masters. In the second place,
+Mr. Durkee would have known that any man connected with the city
+police--save its honorable mayor, to whose character we would pay all
+deference--would not for conscience' sake scruple to hang a man for five
+dollars. We make no exception for color or crime. A qualification might
+be called for, more adapted to our knowledge of it as it has existed for
+the last four or five years; but we are informed by those whose lives
+and fortunes have been spent for the moral elevation of the city police,
+that it was even worse at the time referred to.
+
+The reader may think we are making grave charges. Let us say, without
+fear of refutation, they are too well known in the community that
+tolerates them. As a mere shadow of what lays beneath the surface,
+we would refer to the only independent speech we ever listened to in
+Charleston,--except when self-laudation was the theme,--made by G. R--,
+Esq., in one of her public halls a few weeks ago. Mr. R--is a gentleman
+of moral courage and integrity, and, without fear or trembling, openly
+denounced the corruption and demoralization of the police department.
+Even the enemies of his party, knowing the facts, appreciated his
+candor as a man, while they denounced the publicity, (for his speech
+was paraded by the press,) lest the fair name of the queen city should
+suffer abroad. A beautiful farce followed this grave exposition. The
+board of aldermen, composed of fourteen men of very general standing,
+remained mum under the accusation for a long time. Its object was to
+show up the character of a class of officials, whose character and
+nefarious arts have long disgraced the city. But in order to make a
+display of his purity, Mr. C--, a gentleman entitled to high moral
+consideration, chose to make it a personal matter; yet, not content
+with a private explanation given by Mr. R--, he made a call through the
+press. Mr. R--responded in a proper and courteous manner, acknowledging
+the due respect to which Mr. C--'s private character was entitled;
+thus increasing the ambition of the board generally, who, with the
+expectation of Mr. R--making a like acknowledgment to them as a body,
+(not excepting their honorable head,) made a demand in joint-officio.
+This being duly signalized through the columns of the Courier and
+Mercury, Mr. R--met it with a response worthy of a gentleman. He
+referred them to the strongest evidence of his assertions, in the
+countenance which they gave to a class of officials too well known to
+the community for the honor of its name and the moral foundation of its
+corporate dignity. Thus ended a great municipal farce, to prolong which
+the principal performers knew would disclose the intriguing scenes of
+their secondary performers. The plot of this melo-comic concern was in
+the sequel, and turned upon the very grave fact of Mr. C--having some
+time previous withdrawn from the honorable board, to preserve some very
+delicate considerations for conscience' sake.
+
+How much spiritual consolation Mr. C--realized through the
+acknowledgment of Mr. R--, or the honorable board in joint-officio from
+the firm admonition, we leave for the secondary consideration of proper
+wives and daughters.
+
+But the reader will ask, what has this to do with poor Manuel
+Pereira,--or the imprisonment of free citizens of a friendly nation? We
+will show him that the complex system of official spoliation, and the
+misrepresentations of the police in regard to the influence of such
+persons upon the slave population, is a principal feature in its
+enforcement. To do this, we deem it essentially necessary to show the
+character of such men and the manner in which this law is carried out.
+We shall make no charges that we cannot sustain by the evidence of the
+whole city proper, and with the knowledge that truth is stronger than
+fiction.
+
+What will the reader say when we tell him that, among the leading minds
+of the city--we say leading minds, for we class those who are considered
+foremost in the mercantile sphere among them--are three brothers,
+unmarried, but with mistresses bought for the purpose, whose dark skins
+avert the tongue of scandal;--that, twice, men were sold, because of the
+beauty of their wives, to distant traders, that the brothers might cast
+off their old mistresses, and appropriate new ones to an unholy purpose;
+that these men enjoy their richly furnished mansions, are known for
+their sumptuous entertainments, set an example of mercantile honor and
+integrity, are flattered among the populace, receive the attentions of
+very fine and very virtuous ladies, wield a potential voice in the
+city government, and lead in the greatest development of internal
+improvements;--that these men even whisper high-sounding words of
+morality, and the established custom considers their example no harm
+when color is modified.
+
+What will the reader think, when we tell him that there is no
+city-marshal in Charleston, but innumerable marshalled men, supported
+by an onerous tax upon the people, to quiet the fears of a few. And
+what will they think, when we tell them that the man whose name is
+so frequently sounded through the columns of the press as the head of
+police, and applauded for his activity among thieves, is the well-known
+prince-officio of a voluptuous dwelling, where dazzling licentiousness
+fills his pockets with the spoils of allurement. This man has several
+counterparts, whose acts are no secrets to the public ear, and who turn
+their office into a mart of intrigue, and have enriched themselves upon
+the bounty of espionage and hush-money, and now assert the dignity of
+their purse. It may be asked, why are these men kept in office?--or
+have these offices become so disgraced that honest men will not deign to
+accept them? No! such is not the case. It is that moral integrity is not
+considered in its proper light, and is not valued as it should be;
+that these men have a secret influence which is well known, and are
+countenanced and retained for the weight of their control among a
+certain class; and, strange to say, that the party ex-officio make these
+demoralizing things the basis of their complaints against the "powers
+that be;" yet such is their feeble dependence, that no sooner are they
+in office than we have the repetition of the same things.
+
+Now, how far his honor is answerable for these things we must leave the
+reader to judge. The leading characteristics of his nature conflict with
+each other; his moral character is what is considered sound here; and
+truly he is entitled to much respect for his exemplary conduct, whether
+it be only exerted as an example, or the heartfelt love of Christian
+purity. Some people are pious from impulse, and become affected
+when purpose serves to make it profitable. We, however, are not so
+uncharitable as to charge such piety to our worthy head of the city
+government, but rather to a highly developed organ of the love
+of office, which has outgrown the better inclinations of his
+well-established Christianity.
+
+We must invite the reader's attention to another and still more glaring
+evidence of the demoralization of social life in Charleston. A notorious
+woman, who has kept the worst kind of a brothel for years, where harlots
+of all shades and importations break the quietude of night with their
+polluted songs, becomes so bold in her infamy that she appeals to the
+gracious considerations of the city council, (board of aldermen.) How
+is this? Why, we will tell the reader:--She remained unmolested in her
+trade of demoralization, amassed a fortune which gave her boldness,
+while her open display was considered very fine fun for the joking
+propensities of officials and gallants. With her wealth she reared a
+splendid mansion to infamy and shame, where she, and such as she,
+whose steps the wise man tells us "lead down to hell," could sway their
+victory over the industrious poor. So public was it, that she openly
+boasted its purpose and its adaptation to the ensnaring vices of
+passion. Yes, this create in female form had spread ruin and death
+through the community, and brought the head of many a brilliant young
+man to the last stage of cast-off misery. And yet, so openly tolerated
+and countenanced by leading men are these things, that on the 31st
+of July, 1852, this mother of crime appeals to the honorable board of
+aldermen, as appeared in the "Proceedings of Council" in the Charleston
+Courier of that date, in the following manner:
+
+"Laid over until a monied quorum is present.
+
+"Letter from Mrs. G. Pieseitto, informing Council that having recessed
+her new brick building in Berresford street at least two feet, so as to
+dedicate it to the use of the citizens of Charleston, if they will pave
+with flag-stones the front of her lot, respectfully requests, that if
+accepted, the work may be done as soon as possible. Referred to the
+Aldermen, Ward No. 4." The street is narrow and little used, except for
+purposes known to the lanterns, when honest people should sleep.
+The information might have been couched with more modesty, when the
+notoriety of the woman and the dedication of her tabernacle of vice
+was so public. How far the sensitive aldermen of the fourth ward have
+proceeded in the delicate mission, or how much champagne their modest
+consideration has cost, the public have not yet been informed. Rumor
+says every thing is favorable. We are only drawing from a few principal
+points, and shall leave the reader to draw his own inference of the
+moral complexion of our social being. We make but one more view, and
+resume our story.
+
+An office connected with the judiciary, so long held as one of high
+responsibility and honorable position, is now held merely as a medium
+of miserable speculation and espionage. It is an elective office, the
+representative holding for four years. The present incumbent was elected
+more through charity than recompense for any amiable qualities, moral
+worth, or efficient services to party ends. A more weak man could not
+have been drawn from the lowest scale of party hirelings, though he had
+abdicated the office once before to save his name and the respectability
+of the judiciary. It may be said, he was elected in pity to speculate
+on misery; and thus it proved in the case of MANUEL PEREIRA. This
+functionary was elected by a large majority. Could his moral worth have
+been taken into consideration? We should think not! For several times
+have we been pointed to two interesting girls,--or, if their color was
+not shaded, would be called young ladies--promenading the shady side of
+King street, with their faces deeply vailed, and informed who was their
+father. The mother of these innocent victims had been a mother to their
+father, had nursed him and maintained him through his adversity, and
+had lived the partner of his life and affections for many years, and
+had reared to him an interesting but fatal family. But, no sooner had
+fortune begun to shed its smiling rays, than he abandoned the one that
+had watched over him for the choice of one who could boast no more than
+a white skin.
+
+If men who fill high places live by teaching others to gratify their
+appetites and pleasures alone, instead of setting a commendable example
+for a higher state of existence, by whom can we expect that justice and
+moral worth shall be respected?
+
+Connected with the city constabulary are two men whose duty it is to
+keep a sharp lookout for all vessels arriving, and see that all negroes
+or colored seamen are committed to prison. One is a South Carolinian, by
+the name of Dusenberry, and the other an Irishman, by the name of Dunn.
+These two men, although their office is despicable in the eyes of
+many, assume more authority over a certain class of persons, who are
+unacquainted with the laws, than the mayor himself. The former is a
+man of dark, heavy features, with an assassin-like countenance, more
+inclined to look at you distrustfully than to meet you with an open
+gaze. He is rather tall and athletic, but never has been known to do any
+thing that would give him credit for bravery. Several times he has been
+on the brink of losing his office for giving too much latitude to his
+craving for perquisites; yet, by some unaccountable means, he manages
+to hold on. The other is a robust son of the Emerald Isle, with a broad,
+florid face, low forehead, short crispy hair very red, and knotted
+over his forehead. His dress is usually very slovenly and dirty, his
+shirt-collar bespotted with tobacco-juice, and tied with an old striped
+bandana handkerchief. This, taken with a very wide mouth, flat nose,
+vicious eye, and a countenance as hard as ever came from Tipperary, and
+a lame leg, which causes him to limp as he walks, gives our man Dunn the
+incarnate appearance of a fit body-grabber. A few words will suffice
+for his character. He is known to the official department, of which
+the magistrates are a constituent part, as a notorious ----l; and his
+better-half, who, by-the-way, is what is called a free-trader, meaning,
+to save the rascality of a husband, sells liquor by small portions, to
+suit the Murphys and the O'Neals. But, as it pleases our Mr. Dunn, he
+very often becomes a more than profitable customer, and may be found
+snoring out the penalty in some sequestered place, too frequently for
+his own character. Between the hours of ten and twelve in the morning,
+Dunn, if not too much incapacitated, may be seen limping his way down
+Broad street, to watch vessels arriving and departing, carrying a
+limp-cane in one hand, and a large covered whip in the other. We were
+struck with the appearance of the latter, because it was similar to
+those carried in the hands of a rough, menial class of men in Macon,
+Georgia, who called themselves marshals, under a misapplication of the
+term. Their office was to keep the negro population "straight," and do
+the whipping when called upon, at fifty cents a head. They also did the
+whipping at the jails, and frequently made from five to six dollars a
+day at this alone; for it is not considered fashionable for a gentleman
+to whip his own negro. We noticed the universal carrying of this whip,
+when we first visited Macon, some four years ago, and were curious to
+know its purport, which was elucidated by a friend; but we have since
+seen the practical demonstrations painfully carried out. Those who
+visited Boston for the recovery of Crafts and Ellen--whose mode of
+escape is a romance in itself--were specimens of these "marshals."
+How they passed themselves off for gentlemen, we are at a loss to
+comprehend.
+
+During the day, the Messrs. Dusenberry and Dunn may be seen at times
+watching about the wharves, and again in low grog-shops--then pimping
+about the "Dutch beer-shops and corner-shops"--picking up, here and
+there, a hopeful-looking nigger, whom they drag off to limbo, or extort
+a bribe to let him go. Again, they act as monitors over the Dutch
+corner-shops, the keepers of which pay them large sums to save
+themselves the heavy license fine and the information docket. When they
+are no longer able to pay over hush-money, they find themselves walked
+up to the captain's office, to be dealt with according to the severe
+penalty made and provided for violating the law which prohibits the sale
+of liquor to negroes without an order. The failure to observe this law
+is visited with fine and imprisonment,--both beyond their proportionate
+deserts, when the law which governs the sale of liquor to white men is
+considered. Things are very strictly regulated by complexions in South
+Carolina. The master sets the most dissipated and immoral examples
+in his own person, and allows his children not only to exercise their
+youthful caprices, but to gratify such feelings as are pernicious to
+their moral welfare, upon his slaves. Now, the question is, that knowing
+the negro's power of imitation, ought not some allowance to be made
+for copying the errors of his master? Yet such is not the case; for the
+slightest deviation from the strictest rule of discipline brings condign
+punishment upon the head of the offender.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V. MR. GRIMSHAW, THE MAN OF THE COUNTY.
+
+
+
+ON the 22d of March last, about ten o'clock in the morning, a thin,
+spare-looking man, dressed in a black cashmeret suit, swallow-tail
+coat, loose-cut pants, a straight-breasted vest, with a very extravagant
+shirt-collar rolling over upon his coat, with a black ribbon tied at the
+throat, stood at the east corner of Broad and Meeting street, holding a
+very excited conversation with officers Dusenberry and Dunn. His
+visage was long, very dark--much more so than many of the colored
+population--with pointed nose and chin, standing in grim advance to
+each other; his face narrow, with high cheek-bones, small, peering eyes,
+contracted forehead, reclining with a sunken arch between the perceptive
+and intellectual organs--or, perhaps, we might have said, where
+those organs should have been. His countenance was full of vacant
+restlessness; and as he stared at you through his glasses, with his
+silvery gray hair hanging about his ears and neck in shaggy points,
+rolling a large quid of tobacco in his mouth, and dangling a little whip
+in his right hand, you saw the index to his office. As he raised his
+voice--which he did by twisting his mouth on one side, and working his
+chin to adjust his enormous quid--the drawling tone in which he spoke
+gave a picture not easily forgotten.
+
+"You must pay more attention to the arrivals," said he in a commanding
+tone. "The loss of one of these fellers is a serious drawback to my
+pocket; and that British consul's using the infernalest means to destroy
+our business, that ever was. He's worse than the vilest abolitionist,
+because he thinks he's protected by that flag of their'n. If he don't
+take care, we'll tar-and-feather him; and if his government says much
+about it, she'll larn what and who South Carolina is. We can turn out
+a dozen Palmetto regiments that'd lick any thing John Bull could send
+here, and a troop o' them d--d Yankee abolitionists besides. South
+Carolina's got to show her hand yet against these fellers, afore they'll
+respect the honor and standing of her institutions. They can't send
+their navy to hurt us. And it shows that I always predicts right; for
+while these commercial fellers about the wharves are telling about
+digging out the channel, I've al'ays said they didn't think how much
+injury they were doing; for it was our very best protection in war-time.
+South Carolina can lick John Bull, single-fisted, any time; but if that
+pack of inconsiderate traders on the wharves get their own way, away
+goes our protection, and John Bull would bring his big ships in and
+blow us up. And these fellows that own ships are getting so bold, that a
+great many are beginning to side with Mathew, the consul. Yes, they even
+swear that 'tis the officials that stick to the law for the sake of the
+fees. Now, if I only knew that the consul was the means of that Nassau
+nigger getting away, I'd raise a mob, and teach him a lesson that South
+Carolinians ought to have teached him before. It took about seventeen
+dollars out of my pocket, and if I was to sue him for it, I could get
+no recompense. The next time you allow one to escape, I must place some
+other officer over the port," said our man whom, we shall continue to
+call Mr. Grimshaw.
+
+"Sure I heard the same consul, when spakin to a gintleman, say that
+the law was only an abuse of power, to put money into the pockets of
+yourself and a few like ye. And whin meself and Flin put the irons on a
+big nigger that the captain was endeavoring to skulk by keeping him in
+the forecastle of the ship, he interfered between me and me duty, and
+began talking his balderdash about the law. Sure, with his own way, he'd
+have every nigger in the city an abolitionist in three weeks. And sure,
+Mr. Sheriff, and ye'd think they were babies, if ye'd see himself talk
+to them at the jail, and send them up things, as if they were better
+than the other criminals, and couldn't live on the jail fare," said
+officer Dunn, who continued to pledge himself to the sheriff that the
+wharves should not be neglected, nor a hopeful English darky escape his
+vigilant eye.
+
+"For my own part, I think they're better off in jail than they would be
+on the wharf," continued Grimshaw. "They're a worthless set, and ha'n't
+half the character that a majority of our slaves have; and instead of
+attending the captain on board, they'd be into Elliot street, spending
+their money, getting drunk, and associating with our worst niggers. And
+they all know so much about law, that they're always teaching our bad
+niggers the beauties of their government, which makes them more unhappy
+than they are. Our niggers are like a shoal of fish--when one becomes
+diseased, he spreads it among all the rest; and before you know where
+you are, they're done gone."
+
+"They're not very profitable customers for us, Sheriff," said
+Dusenberry. "We have a deal of watching, and a mighty smart lot of
+trouble after we get them fellows; and if we get a perquisite, it never
+amounts to much, for I seldom knew one that had money enough to treat
+as we took him up. These Britishers a'n't like us; they don't pay off in
+port and if the fellows get any thing in jail from the consul, it's by
+drib-drabs, that a'n't no good, for it all goes for liquor. And them
+criminals make a dead haul upon a black steward, as soon as he is locked
+up. But if these sympathizing fools follow up their bugbears about the
+treatment at the jail, they'll get things so that our business won't
+be worth a dollar. For my own part, I'm not so much beholdin', for I've
+made myself comfortable within the last few years, but I want my son
+to succeed me in the office. But if this consul of their'n keeps up his
+objections, appeals, and his protests in this way, and finds such men as
+his honor the district-attorney to second him with his nonsense and his
+notions, folks of our business might as well move north of Mason and
+Dixon's."
+
+"I can wake him up to a point," said Grimshaw, "that that abolition
+consul ha'n't learnt before; and if he'd stuck his old petition
+in Charles Sumner's breeches pocket instead of sending it to our
+legislature, he might have saved his old-womanish ideas from the
+showing' up that Myzeck gave 'em. It takes Myzeck to show these
+blue-skin Yankees how to toe the mark when they come to South Carolina.
+If South Carolina should secede, I'd say give us Myzeck and Commander to
+lead our war, and we'd be as sure to whip 'em as we won the Mexican war
+for the Federal Government. There is three things about an Englishman,
+Dusenberry, which you may mark for facts. He is self-conceited, and
+don't want to be advised;--he thinks there is no law like the law of
+England, and that the old union-jack is a pass-book of nations;--and
+he thinks everybody's bound to obey his notions of humanity and the
+dictates of his positive opinions. But what's worse than all, they've
+never seen the sovereignty of South Carolina carried out, and according
+to Consul Mathew's silly notions, they think we could be licked by a
+gun-boat.
+
+"It's no use arguing this thing, you must keep a keen eye upon the
+English niggers; and when a man pretends to dispute the right, tell him
+its 'contrary to law,' and to look at the statute-books; tell him it
+costs more to keep them than they're all worth; and if they say the law
+was never intended for foreign citizens, tell 'em its 'contrary to law.'
+South Carolina's not bound to obey the voice of the General Government,
+and what does she care for the federal courts? We'll pursue a course
+according to the law; and any thing that is contrary to it we will take
+care of for the better protection of our institutions. Now, don't let
+one pass, upon the peril of your office," continued Mr. Grimshaw.
+
+"It's not a button I'd care for the office," said Dunn. "Sure it's
+yerself be's makin' all the fees, and ourselves getting the paltry
+dollar; and yerself gives us as much trouble to get that as we'd be
+earning two dollars at magistrate Jiles' beyant. Sure! himself's
+liberal and doesn't be afraid to give us a division of the fees when the
+business is good. And sure ye make yer ten times the fees on an English
+nigger, and never gives us beyant the dollar," continued he, moving off
+in high dudgeon, and swearing a stream of oaths that made the very blood
+chill. There was a covert meaning about Mr. Grimshaw's language that was
+not at all satisfactory to Mr. Dunn's Irish; especially when he knew Mr.
+Grimshaw's insincerity so well, and that, instead of being liberal, he
+pocketed a large amount of the fees, to the very conscientious benefit
+of his own dear self. The reader must remember that in Charleston, South
+Carolina, there is a large majority of men who care little for law,
+less for justice, and nothing for Christianity. Without compunction
+of conscience, and with an inherited passion to set forward the
+all-absorbing greatness of South Carolina, these men act as a check upon
+the better-disposed citizens. The more lamentable part is, that forming
+a large portion of that species of beings known as bar-room politicians,
+they actually control the elections in the city; and thus we may account
+for the character of the incumbents of office, and for the tenacity with
+which those oppressive laws are adhered to.
+
+This almost incompatible conversation between a high sheriff and two
+menial constables, may to many seem inconsistent with the dignity
+that should be observed between such functionaries. Nevertheless, all
+restraint is not only annihilated by consent, but so prominently is
+this carried out, and so well understood by that respectable class of
+citizens whose interests and feelings are for maintaining a good
+name for the city and promoting its moral integrity, that in all
+our conversation with them, we never heard one speak well of those
+functionaries or the manner in which the police regulations of the city
+were carried out.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI. THE JANSON IN THE OFFING.
+
+
+
+AFTER several days' suffering for want of wafer and fatigue of labor,
+several of the crew were reported upon the sick-list. Manuel, who had
+borne his part nobly and cheerfully, was among the number; and his loss
+was more severely felt, having done a double duty, and succeeded, as far
+as the means were at hand, in making everybody on board comfortable. He
+had attended upon those who gave up first, like a good nurse, ready
+at the call, whether night or day, and with a readiness that seemed
+pleasure to him. From the captain to the little boy Tommy, his loss
+was felt with regret; and the latter would often go into the forecastle
+where he lay, lean over him with a child-like simplicity, and smooth his
+forehead with his little hand. "Manuel! I wish poor Manuel was well!" he
+would say, and again he would lay his little hand on his head and smooth
+his hair. He would whisper encouragement in his ear; and having learned
+a smattering of Portuguese, would tell him how soon they would be in
+port, and what pleasant times they would have together.
+
+On the 21st they descried land, which proved to be Stono, about
+twenty-five miles south of Charleston. Tommy announced the news to
+Manuel, which seemed to cheer him up. His sickness was evidently caused
+by fatigue, and his recovery depended more upon rest and nourishment
+than medical treatment. That night at ten o'clock the wind came strong
+north-west, and drove the Janson some distance to sea again; and it was
+not until the morning of the 23d that she made Charleston light, and
+succeeded in working up to the bar. Signal was made for a pilot, and
+soon, a very fine cutter-looking boat, "Palmetto, No. 4," was seen
+shooting out over the bar in the main channel. Manuel, somewhat
+recovered, had a few minutes before been assisted on deck, and through
+the captain's orders was laid upon a mattrass, stretched on the
+starboard side of the companion-way. By his side sat little Tommy,
+serving him with some nourishment.
+
+The boat was soon alongside, and the pilot, a middle-sized man, well
+dressed, with a frank, open countenance, rather florid and sun-stained,
+and a profusion of gold chain and seal dangling from his fob, came
+on board. After saluting the captain, he surveyed the weather-beaten
+condition of the craft, made several inquiries in regard to her working,
+and then said in a sang-froid manner, "Well! I reckon you've seen some
+knocking, anyhow." Then turning again and giving some orders in regard,
+to getting more way upon her, he viewed the laborious working at the
+pumps, and walking about midships on the larboard side, took a sharp
+survey of her waist. "Don't she leak around her topsides, Captain?" said
+he.
+
+Receiving an answer in the affirmative, he gave a glance aloft, and
+then at the sky to windward; asked how long he had worked her in that
+condition, and where he took the gale. "It's a wonder she hadn't swamped
+ye before now. I'd a' beached her at the first point, if she'd bin mine;
+I'd never stand at slapping an old craft like this on. She reminds me
+of one o' these down-east sugar-box crafts what trade to Cuba," he
+continued. Then walking across the main-hatch to the starboard side, he
+approached the men who were pumping, and after inquiring about freeing
+her, suddenly caught a glimpse of Manuel, as he lay upon the mattrass
+with his face uncovered.
+
+"Heavens! What! have you got the yellow fever on board at this season
+of the year?" he inquired of the mate, who had just come aft to inquire
+about getting some water from the pilot-boat.
+
+"No, we've had every thing else but the yellow fever; one might as well
+bin on a raft as such an infernal unlucky old tub as she is. It's the
+steward, sir--he's got a touch of a fever; but he'll soon be over it.
+He only wants rest, poor fellow! He's bin a bully at work ever since the
+first gale. He'll mend before he gets to town," was the reply.
+
+"Ah! then you've had a double dose of it. It gives a fellow bringer off
+them capes once in a while.--The steward's a nigger, isn't he?" inquired
+the pilot.
+
+"Nigger!--not he," said the mate. "He's a Portuguese mixed breed; a kind
+o' sun-scorched subject, like a good many of you Southerners. A nigger's
+mother never had him, you may bet your 'davie on that. There's as much
+white blood in his jacket as anybody's got, only them Portuguese are
+dark-lookin' fellers. He's no fool--his name's Manuel, a right clever
+feller, and the owners think as much of him as they do of the Skipper."
+
+"Gammon," said the pilot to himself. "What would he think if we were
+to show him some specimens of our white niggers in Charleston?" And
+turning, he walked past Manuel with a suspicious look, and took a
+position near the man at the wheel, where he remained for some time
+fingering the seals of his watch-chain. The Captain had gone into the
+cabin a few minutes before, and coming on deck again, walked toward the
+place where the pilot stood, and took a seat upon an old camp-stool.
+
+"Cap," said the pilot, "ye'll have trouble with that nigger of your'n
+when ye git to town. If you want to save yerself and the owners a d--d
+site o' bother and expense, y' better keep him close when y' haul in;
+and ship him off to New York the first chance. I've seen into the mill,
+Cap, and y' better take a friend's advice."
+
+"Nigger!" said the Captain indignantly, "what do they call niggers in
+Charleston? My steward's no more a nigger than you are!"
+
+"What, sir?" returned the pilot in a perfect rage. "Do you know the
+insulting nature of your language? Sir, if the law did not subject me,
+I would leave your vessel instantly, and hold you personally responsible
+as soon as you landed, sir."
+
+The Captain, unconscious of the tenacity with which the chivalrous blood
+of South Carolina held language that mooted a comparison of colors,
+considered his answer; but could see nothing offensive in it.
+
+"You asked me a question, and I gave you a proper answer. If you
+consider such a man as my steward--poor fellow--a nigger, in your
+country, I'm glad that you are blessed with so many good men."
+
+"We polishes our language, Captain, when we speak of niggers in South
+Carolina," said the pilot. "A South Carolinian, sir, is a gentleman all
+over the world. It don't want nothin' further than the name of his State
+to insure him respect. And when foreign folks and Northerners from them
+abolition States bring free niggers into South Carolina, and then go to
+comparing them to white folks, they better be mighty careful how they
+stir about. South Carolina ought to've seceded last year, when she
+talked about it, and sent every Yankee home to make shoe-pegs. We
+wouldn't bin insulted then, as we are now. I'll tell you what it is,
+Cap," said he, rather cooling off, "if our folks was only as spunky as
+they were in eighteen hundred and thirty-two times, them fellers what
+come here to feed upon South Carolina, put the devil in the heads of the
+niggers, and then go home again, would see stars and feel bullet-holes."
+
+The Captain listened to the pilot's original South Carolina talk, or, as
+the pilot himself had called it, polished language, without exhibiting
+any signs of fear and trembling at its sublime dignity; yet, finding
+that the pilot had misconstrued the tenor of his answer, said, "You must
+have mistaken the intention of my reply, sir; and the different manner
+in which you appropriate its import may be attributed to a custom
+among yourselves, which makes language offensive that has no offensive
+meaning. We never carry pistols or any such playthings in my country.
+We have a moral security for our lives, and never look upon death as so
+great an enemy that we must carry deadly weapons to defend it. In fact,
+pilot," he said in a joking manner, "they're rather cumbersome little
+bits for a feller's pocket: I'd rather carry my supper and breakfast in
+my pocket. Now tell us, who do you call niggers in South Carolina?"
+
+"Why, Captain, we call all what a'n't white folks. Our folks can
+tell 'em right smart. They can't shirk out if it's only marked by
+the seventeenth generation. You can always tell 'em by the way they
+look--they can't look you in the face, if they are ever so white. The
+law snaps 'em up once in a while, and then, if they're ever so white,
+it makes 'em prove it. I've known several cases where the doubt was in
+favor of the nigger, but he couldn't prove it, and had to stand aside
+among the darkies. Dogs take my skin, Cap, if theren't a Jew feller in
+town as white as anybody, and his father's a doctor. It got whispered
+round that he was a nigger, and the boarders where he stayed raised a
+fuss about it. The nigger's father had two of them sued for slander,
+but they proved the nigger by a quirk of law that'd make a volume bigger
+than Blackstone; and instead of the old Jew getting satisfaction, the
+judges, as a matter of policy, granted him time to procure further proof
+to show that his son wasn't a nigger. It was a very well-considered
+insinuation of the judges, but the young-un stands about A-1 with a
+prime nigger-feller."
+
+"I should like to have 'em try me, to see whether I was a nigger or a
+white man. It must be a funny law, 'nigger or no nigger.' If a feller's
+skin won't save him, what the devil will?" said the Captain.
+
+"Why, show your mother and her generation were white, to be sure! It's
+easy enough done, and our judges are all very larned in such things--can
+tell in the twinkling of an eye," said the pilot.
+
+"I should think the distinguishing points would be to show that their
+mother had nothing to do with a nigger. Do your judges make this a
+particular branch of jurisprudence? If they do, I'd like to know what
+they took for their text-books. If the intermixture is as complex as
+what you say, I should think some of the judges would be afraid of
+passing verdict upon their own kin."
+
+"Not a whit!" said the pilot; "they know enough for that."
+
+"Then you admit there's a chance. It must be an amusing affair, 'pon
+my soul! when a nice little female has to draw aside her vail before a
+court of very dignified judges, for the purpose of having her pedigree
+examined," said the Captain.
+
+"Oh! the devil, Cap; your getting all astray--a woman nigger never has
+the advantage of the law. They always go with the niggers, ah! ha! ha!!"
+
+"But suppose they're related to some of your big-bugs. What then? Are
+your authorities so wise and generous that they make allowance for these
+things," asked the Captain, innocently.
+
+"Oh! poh! there you're again: you must live in Charleston a year or two,
+but you'll have to be careful at first that you don't fall in love with
+some of our bright gals, and think they're white, before you know it. It
+doesn't matter seven coppers who they're got by, there's no distinction
+among niggers in Charleston. I'll put you through some of the bright
+houses when we get up, and show you some scions of our aristocracy, that
+are the very worst cases. It's a fact, Cap, these little shoots of the
+aristocracy invariably make bad niggers. If a fellow wants a real prime,
+likely nigger wench, he must get the pure African blood. As they say
+themselves, 'Wherever Buckra-man bin, make bad nigger.'"
+
+"Well, Pilot, I think we've had enough about mixed niggers for the
+present. Tell me! do you really think they'll give me trouble with my
+steward? He certainly is not a black man, and a better fellow never
+lived," inquired the Captain earnestly.
+
+"Nothing else, Cap," said the pilot. "It's a hard law, I tell you, and
+if our merchants and business men had a say in it, 'twouldn't last long;
+ye can't pass him off for a white man nohow, for the thing's 'contrary
+to law,' and pays so well that them contemptible land-sharks of officers
+make all the fuss about it, and never let one pass. Just take the
+infernal fees off, and nobody'd trouble themselves about the stewards.
+It all goes into old Grimshaw's pocket, and he'd skin a bolt-rope for
+the grease, and sell the steward if he could get a chance. He has sold a
+much nearer relation. I'm down upon the law, you'll see, Cap, for I know
+it plays the dickens with our business, and is a curse to the commerce
+of the port. Folks what a'n't acquainted with shipping troubles, and
+a shipowner's interests, think such things are very small affairs. But
+it's the name that affects us, and when an owner stands at every item in
+the disbursements, and a heavy bill for keeping his steward, and another
+for filling his place, or boarding-house accommodations, and then be
+deprived of his services, he makes a wry face, and either begins to
+think about another port, or making the rate of freight in proportion to
+the annoyance. It has an effect that we feel, but don't say much about.
+I'm a secessionist, but I don't believe in running mad after politics,
+and letting our commercial interests suffer."
+
+"But what if I prove my steward a'n't a colored man?" said the Captain;
+"they surely won't give me any trouble then. It would pain my feelings
+very much to see Manuel locked up in a cell for no crime; and then to
+be deprived of his services, is more than I can stand. If I'd known it
+before, I'd suffered the torments of thirst, and put for a port farther
+north."
+
+"It'll cost more than it's worth," said the pilot. "Take my plain
+advice, Cap; never try that; our lawyers are lusty fellows upon fees;
+and the feller'd rot in that old nuisance of a jail afore you'd get him
+out. The process is so slow and entangled, nobody'd know how to bring
+the case, and ev'ry lawyer'd have an opinion of his own. But the worst
+of all is that it's so unpopular, you can't get a lawyer worth seven
+cents to undertake it. It would be as dangerous as an attempt to
+extricate a martyr from the burning flames. Public opinion in Charleston
+is controlled by politicians; and an attempt to move in a thing so
+unpopular would be like a man attempting to speak, with pistols and
+swords pointed to his head."
+
+"Then it's folly to ask justice in your city, is it?" asked the Captain.
+"But your people are generous, a'n't they? and treat strangers with a
+courtesy that marks the character of every high-minded society?"
+
+"Yes!--but society in South Carolina has nothing to do with the law; our
+laws are gloriously ancient. I wish, Cap, I could only open your ideas
+to the way our folks manage their own affairs. I'm opposed to this law
+that imprisons stewards, because it affects commerce, but then our other
+laws are tip-top. It was the law that our legislature made to stop free
+niggers from coming from the abolition States to destroy the affections
+of our slaves. Some say, the construction given to it and applied to
+stewards of foreign vessels a'n't legal, and wasn't intended; but now
+it's controlled by popular will,--the stewards a'n't legislators, and
+the judges know it wouldn't be popular, and there's nobody dare meddle
+with it, for fear he may be called an abolitionist. You better take my
+advice, Cap: ship the nigger, and save yourself and Consul Mathew the
+trouble of another fuss," continued the pilot.
+
+"That I'll never do! I've made up my mind to try it, and won't be driven
+out of a port because the people stand in fear of a harmless man. If
+they have any souls in them, they'll regard with favor a poor sailor
+driven into their port in distress. I've sailed nearly all over
+the world, and I never got among a people yet that wouldn't treat a
+shipwrecked sailor with humanity. Gracious God! I've known savages to be
+kind to poor shipwrecked sailors, and to share their food with them. I
+can't, pilot, imagine a civilization so degraded, nor a public so lost
+to common humanity, as to ill treat a man in distress. We've said enough
+about it for the present. I'll appeal to Mr. Grimshaw's feelings, when
+I get to the city; and I know, if he's a man, he'll let Manuel stay on
+board, if I pledge my honor that he won't leave the craft."
+
+"Humph!--If you knew him as well as I do, you'd save your own feelings.
+His sympathies don't run that way," said the pilot.
+
+The Janson had now crossed the bar, and was fast approaching Fort
+Sumpter. Manuel had overheard enough of the conversation to awaken fears
+for his own safety. Arising from the mattrass, in a manner indicating
+his feeble condition, he called Tommy, and walking forward, leaned over
+the rail near the fore-rigging, and inquired what the Captain and
+the pilot were talking about. Observing his fears, the little fellow
+endeavoured to quiet him by telling him they were talking about bad
+sailors.
+
+"I think it is me they are talking about. If they sell me for slave
+in Charleston, I'll kill myself before a week," said he in his broken
+English.
+
+"What's that you say, Manuel?" inquired the first mate as he came along,
+clearing up the decks with the men.
+
+"Pilot tell Captain they sell me for slave in South Carolina. I'd jump
+overboard 'fore I suffer him," said he.
+
+"Oh, poh! don't be a fool; you a'n't among Patagonians, Manuel; you
+won't have to give 'em leg for your life. They don't sell foreigners and
+outlandish men like you for slaves in Carolina--it's only black folks
+what can't clothe the'r words in plain English. Yer copper-colored hide
+wouldn't be worth a sixpence to a nigger-trader--not even to old Norman
+Gadsden, that I've heard 'em tell so much about in the Liverpool docks.
+He's a regular Jonathan Wild in nigger-dealing; his name's like a fiery
+dragon among the niggers all over the South; and I hearn our skipper say
+once when I sailed in a liner, that niggers in Charleston were so 'fraid
+of him they'd run, like young scorpions away from an old he-devil, when
+they saw him coming. He sells white niggers, as they call 'em, and
+black niggers--any thing that comes in his way, in the shape of saleable
+folks. But he won't acknowledge the corn when he goes away from home,
+and swears there's two Norman Gadsdens in Charleston; that he a'n't the
+one! When a man's ashamed of his name abroad, his trade must be very bad
+at home, or I'm no sailor," said the mate.
+
+"Ah, my boys!" said the pilot in a quizzical manner, as he came to
+where several of the men were getting the larboard anchor ready to let
+go,--"if old Norman Gadsden gets hold of you, you're a gone sucker. A
+man what's got a bad nigger has only got to say Old Gadsden to him, and
+it's equal to fifty paddles. The mode of punishment most modern,
+and adopted in all the workhouses and places of punishment in South
+Carolina, is with the paddle, a wooden instrument in, the shape of a
+baker's peel; with a blade from three to five inches wide, and from
+eight to ten long. This is laid on the posteriors--generally by
+constables or officers connected with the police. Holes are frequently
+bored in the blade, which gives the application a sort of percussive
+effect; The pain is much more acute than with the cowhide; and several
+instances are known where a master ordered an amount of strokes beyond
+the endurance of the slave, and it proved fatal at the workhouse. They
+tell a pretty good story about the old fellow. I don't know if it's
+true, but the old fellow's rich now, and he does just what he pleases.
+It was that somebody found one of those little occasional droppings of
+the aristocracy, very well known among the secrets of the chivalry, and
+called foundlings, nicely fixed up in a basket.--It's among the secrets
+though, and mustn't be told abroad.--The finders labelled it, 'Please
+sell to the highest bidder,' and left it at his door. There was a fund
+of ominous meaning in the label; but Norman very coolly took the little
+helpless pledge under his charge, and, with the good nursing of old
+Bina, made him tell to the tune of two hundred and thirty, cash, 'fore
+he was two year old. He went by the name of Thomas Norman, the Christian
+division of his foster-father's, according to custom. The old fellow
+laughs at the joke, as he calls it, and tells 'em, when they stick it to
+him, they don't understand the practice of making money. You must keep a
+bright look out for him, Manuel--you'll know him by the niggers running
+when they see him coming."
+
+The pilot now returned to the quarter, and commenced dilating upon the
+beauty of Charleston harbor and its tributaries, the Astley and Cooper
+Rivers--then upon the prospects of fortifications to beat the United
+States in the event of South Carolina's seceding and raising an
+independent sovereignty, composed of her best blood. The Captain
+listened to his unsolicited and uninteresting exposition of South
+Carolina's prowess in silence, now and then looking up at the pilot and
+nodding assent. He saw that the pilot was intent upon astonishing him
+with his wonderful advancement in the theory of government, and the
+important position of South Carolina. Again he looked dumbfounded, as
+much as to acknowledge the pilot's profundity, and exclaimed, "Well!
+South Carolina must be a devil of a State: every thing seems captivated
+with its greatness: I'd like to live in Carolina if I didn't get
+licked."
+
+"By scissors! that you would, Captain; you ha'n't an idee what a mighty
+site our people can do if they're a mind to! All South Carolina wants
+is her constitutional rights, which her great men fought for in
+the Revolution. We want the freedom to protect our own rights and
+institutions--not to be insulted and robbed by the General Government
+and the abolitionists."
+
+"Do you practice as a people upon the same principles that you ask of
+the General Government!" inquired the Captain.
+
+"Certainly, Captain, as far as it was intended for the judicious good of
+all white citizens!"
+
+"Then you claim a right for the whites, but withhold the right when it
+touches on the dark side. You'll have to lick the Federal Government, as
+you call it, for they won't cut the constitution up to suit your notions
+of black and white." * * *
+
+"That's just the thing, Cap, and we can do it just as easy as we
+now protect our own laws, and exterminate the niggers what attempt
+insurrections. South Carolina sets an example, sir, of honor and bravery
+that can't be beat. Why, just look a-yonder, Cap: the Federal Government
+owns this 'er Fort Sumpter, and they insulted us by building it right
+in our teeth, so that they could command the harbor, block out our
+commerce, and collect the duties down here. But, Cap, this don't scare
+South Carolina nohow. We can show 'em two figures in war tactics that'd
+blow 'em to thunder. Ye see yonder!" said he, with an earnest look of
+satisfaction, pointing to the south, "That's Morris Island. We'd take
+Fort Moultrie for a breakfast spell, and then we'd put it to 'em hot
+and strong from both sides, until they'd surrender Fort Sumpter. They
+couldn't stand it from both sides. Yes, sir, they shut Fort Moultrie
+against us, and wouldn't let us have it to celebrate independence in.
+There's a smouldering flame in South Carolina that'll burst forth one
+of these days in a way that must teach the Federal Government some
+astonishing and exciting lessons. There's old Castle Pinckney, sir; we
+could keep it for a reserve, and with Generals Quattlebum and Commander,
+from Georgetown and Santee Swamp, we could raise an army of Palmetto
+regiments that would whip the Federal Government troop and gun-boat."
+
+We have given this singular conversation of the pilot with a strange
+Captain, which at the time was taken as an isolated case of gasconade
+peculiar to the man; but which the Captain afterward found to harmonize
+in sentiment, feeling, and expression with the general character of the
+people--the only exceptions being the colored people.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII. ARRIVAL OF THE JANSON.
+
+
+
+ABOUT five o'clock on the evening of the 23d, the Janson passed Castle
+Pinckney, ran up to the wharf with the flood-tide, let go her anchor,
+and commenced warping into the dock. Her condition attracted sundry
+persons to the end of the wharf, who viewed her with a sort of
+commiseration that might have been taken for sincere feeling. The
+boarding officer had received her papers, and reported her character and
+condition, which had aroused a feeling of speculative curiosity, that
+was already beginning to spread among ship-carpenters and outfitters.
+
+Conspicuous among those gathered on the wharf was a diminutive little
+dandy, with an olive-colored frock-coat, black pants, embroidered vest,
+and an enormous shirt-collar that endangered his ears. This was secured
+around the neck with a fancy neckcloth, very tastefully set off with a
+diamond pin, He was very slender, with a narrow, feminine face,
+round popeyes--requiring the application of a pocket-glass every few
+minutes--and very fair complexion, with little positive expression of
+character in his features. His nose was pointed; his chin, projected
+and covered with innumerable little pimples, gave an irregular
+and mastiff-shaped mouth a peculiar expression. He wore a very
+highly-polished and high-heeled pair of boots, and a broad-brimmed,
+silk-smooth hat. He seemed very anxious to display the beauty of two
+diamond rings that glittered upon his delicate little fingers, made
+more conspicuous by the wristbands of his shirt. Standing in a very
+conspicuous place upon the capsill of the wharf, he would rub his hands,
+then running from one part of the wharf to another, ordering sundry
+niggers about making fast the lines, kicking one, and slapping another,
+as he stooped, with his little hand. All paid respect to him. The
+Captain viewed him with a smile of curiosity, as much as to say, "What
+important specimen of a miss in breeches is that?" But when the little
+fellow spoke, the secret was told. He gathered the inflections of his
+voice, as if he were rolling them over the little end of a thunderbolt
+in his mouth. As the vessel touched the wharf, he sprang to the corner
+and cried out at the top of his voice, "Yer' welcome to Charleston,
+Captain Thompson! Where did you get that knocking?--where are ye bound
+for?--how many days are you out?--how long has she leaked in that way?"
+and a strain of such questions, which it would be impossible to trace,
+such was the rapidity with which he put them. The Captain answered him
+in accordance with the circumstances; and supposing him clothed with
+authority, inquired where he should find some hands to work his pumps,
+in order to relieve his men. "By-Je-w-hu! Captain, you must a' had a
+piping time, old feller. Oh! yes, you want help to work your pumps. Get
+niggers, Captain, there's lots on 'em about here. They're as thick as
+grasshoppers in a cotton-patch."
+
+"Yes, but I want 'em now, my men are worn out; I must get some Irishmen,
+if I can't get others at once," said the Captain, viewing his man again
+from head to foot.
+
+"Oh! don't employ Paddies, Captain; 'ta'n't popular; they don't belong
+to the secession party; Charleston's overrun with them and the Dutch!
+Why, she won't hurt to lay till to-morrow morning, and there'll be lots
+o' niggers down; they can't be out after bell-ring without a pass, and
+its difficult to find their masters after dark. Haul her up 'till she
+grounds, and she won't leak when the tide leaves her. We can go to
+the theatre and have a right good supper after, at Baker's or the St.
+Charles's. It's the way our folks live. We live to enjoy ourselves in
+South Carolina. Let the old wreck go to-night." The little fellow seemed
+so extremely polite, and so anxious to "do the genteel attention,"
+that the Captain entirely forgot the tenor of his conversation with the
+pilot, while his feelings changed with the prospect of such respectful
+attention; and yet he seemed at a loss how to analyze the peculiar
+character of his little, pedantic friend.
+
+"You must not think me intrusive, Captain," said he, pulling out his
+segar-pouch and presenting it with at Chesterfieldian politeness. "It's
+a pleasure we Carolinians take in being hospitable and attentive to
+strangers. My name, sir, is--! My niggers call me Master George. Yes,
+sir! our family!--you have heard of my father probably--he belongs to
+one of the best stocks in Carolina--owns a large interest in this wharf,
+and is an extensive cotton-broker, factors, we call them here--and
+he owns a large plantation of niggers on Pee-Dee; you must visit our
+plantation. Captain, certain! before you leave the city. But you mustn't
+pay much attention to the gossip you'll hear about the city. I pledge
+you my honor, sir, it don't amount to any thing, nor has it any
+prominent place in our society."
+
+"Really, sir," replied the Captain, "I shall do myself the honor to
+accept of your hospitable kindness, and hope it may be my good fortune
+to reciprocate at some future day. I'm only too sorry that our wrecked
+condition affords me no opportunity to invite you to my table to-night;
+but the circumstances which you see everywhere presenting themselves are
+my best apology."
+
+"Oh, dear me! don't mention it, I pray, Captain. Just imagine yourself
+perfectly at home. We will show you what Southern hospitality is.
+We don't go upon the Yankee system of Mr. So-and-so and
+What-do-ye-call-'um. Our feelings are in keeping with our State pride,
+which, with our extreme sensibility of honor, forbids the countenance
+of meanness. South Carolinians, sir, are at the very top of the social
+ladder--awake to every high-minded consideration of justice and right.
+We are not moved by those morbid excitements and notions that so often
+lead people away at the North. Make no unnecessary preparation, Captain,
+and I will do myself the honor to call upon you in an hour." Thus
+saying, he shook his hand and left.
+
+The pilot had delivered his charge safe, and was about to, bid
+the Captain good-by for the night. But in order to do the thing in
+accordance with an English custom, that appears to have lost none of its
+zest in South Carolina, he was invited into the Captain's cabin to take
+a little prime old Jamaica. Manuel, who had somewhat recovered, brought
+out the case from a private locker, and setting it before them, they
+filled up, touched glasses, and drank the usual standing toast to South
+Carolina. "Pilot," said the Captain, "who is my polite friend--he seems
+a right clever little fellow?"
+
+"Well, Captain, he's little, but he's first-rate blood, and a genuine
+sprig of the chivalry. He's a devil of a secessionist, sir. If ye were
+to hear that fellow make a stump speech on States' rights, you'd think
+him a Samson on Government. His father is the head of a good mercantile
+house here; 'twouldn't be a bad idea to consign to him. But I must bid
+you good-night, Captain; I'll call and see you to-morrow," said the
+pilot, leaving for his home.
+
+The Janson was hauled well up the dock, and grounded on the ebb-tide.
+Manuel prepared supper for the officers and crew, while the Captain
+awaited the return of his new acquaintance. "Captain," said Manuel,
+"I should like to go ashore to-night and take a walk, for my bones are
+sore, and I'm full of pains. I think it will do me good. You don't think
+anybody will trouble me, if I walk peaceably along?"
+
+"Nobody would trouble you if they knew you, Manuel; but I am afraid they
+will mistake you in the night. You had better keep ship until morning;
+take a good rest, and to-morrow will be a fine day--you can then take
+some exercise."
+
+Manuel looked at the Captain as if he read something doubtful in his
+countenance, and turned away with a pitiful look of dissatisfaction.
+It seems that through his imperfect knowledge of English, he had
+misconceived the position of the celebrated Thomas Norman Gadsden, whom
+he imagined to be something like an infernal machine, made and provided
+by the good citizens of Charleston to catch bad niggers. "Nora-ma Gazine
+no catch-e me, Cap-i-tan, if me go ashore, 'case me no make trouble in
+no part de world where me sail, Oh! no, Cap-i-tan, Manuel know how to
+mine dis bisness," said he returning again to the Captain.
+
+"Yes, yes, Manuel, but we can't let the crew go ashore 'till we get
+through the custom-house; you must content yourself to-night, and in
+the morning 'twill be all right. I'm afraid you'll get sick again-the
+night-air is very bad in this climate; old Gadsden won't trouble you. He
+don't walk about at night."
+
+Manuel walked forward, not very well satisfied with the manner in which
+the Captain put him off. The latter felt the necessity of caution,
+fearing he might infringe upon some of the municipal regulations that
+the pilot had given him an account of, which accounted for his refusal
+Manuel sat upon the main-hatch fondling Tommy, and telling him what good
+things they would have in the morning for breakfast, and how happy they
+ought to be that they were not lost during the gales, little thinking
+that he was to be the victim of a merciless law, which would confine
+him within the iron grates of a prison before the breakfast hour in the
+morning. "I like Charleston, Tommy," said Manuel; "it looks like one of
+our old English towns, and the houses have such pretty gardens, and the
+people they say are all so rich and live so fine. Tommy, we'll have a
+long walk and look all around it, so that we can tell the folks when we
+get home. The ship, owes me eleven pounds, and I mean to take some good
+things home for presents, to show what they have in South Carolina."
+
+"You better buy a young nigger, and take him home as a curiosity to show
+among the Highlands. You can buy a young Sambo for any price, just
+the same as you would a leg of mutton at the butcher's; put him in
+a band-box, lug him across, and you'll make a fortune in the North
+country. But I'd rather buy a young wife, for the young niggers are
+more roguish than a lot o' snakes, and al'a's eat their heads off afore
+they're big enough to toddle. They sell gals here for niggers whiter
+than you are, Manuel; they sell 'em at auction, and then they sell corn
+to feed 'em on. Carolina's a great region of supersensual sensibility;
+they give you a wife of any color or beauty, and don't charge you much
+for her, providing you're the right stripe. What a funny thing it would
+be to show the Glasgow folks a bright specimen of a bought wife from the
+renowned State of South Carolina, with genuine aristocratic blood in her
+veins; yes, a pure descendant of the Huguenots!" said the mate, who
+was leaning over the rail where Manuel and Tommy were seated, smoking a
+segar and viewing the beautiful scenery around the harbor.
+
+"Ah!" said Manuel, "when I get a wife and live on shore, I don't want to
+buy one-it might be a dangerous bargain. Might buy the body, but not the
+soul-that's God's."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII. A NEW DISH OF SECESSION.
+
+
+
+ABOUT a quarter past eight o'clock in the evening, Master George, as he
+called himself, the little pedantic man, came skipping down the wharf.
+As soon as he approached the brig, he cried out at the top of his voice,
+"Captain! Captain!!"
+
+The Captain stepped to the gangway, and the little fellow, who had stood
+crossing and working his fingers, reached out his hand to assist him
+ashore. This done, he took the Captain's arm, and commencing a discourse
+upon the wonderful things and people of South Carolina they wended their
+way to the Charleston Theatre. The company then performing was a small
+affair, and the building itself perfectly filthy, and filled with an
+obnoxious stench. The play was a little farce, which the Captain had
+seen to much perfection in his own country, and which required some
+effort of mind to sit out its present mutilation. Yet, so highly pleased
+was Master George, that he kept up a succession of applauses at every
+grimace made by the comedian. Glad when the first piece was over, the
+Captain made a motion to adjourn to the first good bar-room and have a
+punch. It was agreed, upon the condition that the little man should "do
+the honor," and that they should return and see the next piece out. The
+Captain, of course, yielded to the rejoinder, though it was inflicting
+a severe penalty upon his feelings. There was another piece to come yet,
+which the little fellow's appetite was as ready to devour as the first.
+The Captain, seeing this, could not refrain expressing his surprise.
+This was taken as a charge against his taste, and George immediately
+commenced a discussion upon the subject of the piece, the intention of
+the author, and the merits of the principal performers, whose proper
+adaptation he admired. The Captain knew his subject, and instead of
+contending in detail, advised him to take a peep into the theatres of
+New York and London. Not to be undone, for he was like all little men,
+who insist upon the profoundness of their own opinions, he asserted that
+it could be only the different views which individuals entertained of
+delineating character, and that the Charlestonians were proverbially
+correct in their judgment of music and dramatic performances.
+
+"I pity the judgment that would award merit to such a performance as
+that," said the Captain.
+
+"How strange, that you Englishmen and Scotchmen always find fault with
+every thing we Americans do. Your writers manifest it in their books
+upon us and the people seem of necessity to copy from them, and echo
+their grumblings," rejoined Master George.
+
+"You judge from the common saying, instead of a knowledge front
+observation, I fear," said the Captain.
+
+"Lord, sir! you must not judge me by that rule. Carolinians, sir,
+always appreciate intelligent strangers, for they always exert a
+healthy influence, and never meddle with our institutions; so you see it
+wouldn't do to follow the pestilent notions of petty scribblers, lest we
+should form wrong opinions."
+
+"But tell me," said the Captain, "do you consider yourselves Americans
+in South Carolina?--the pilot must have led me astray."
+
+"Americans! yes, indeed, the true blood at that, and no man of tip-top
+judgment ever questioned it. But you must mark the difference; we
+ha'n't Yankees, nor we don't believe in their infernal humbuggery
+about abolition. If it wasn't for South Carolina and Georgia, the
+New-Englanders would starve for want of our cotton and rice. It's the
+great staple what keeps the country together; and as much as they talk
+about it, just take that away, and what would the United States be? We
+South Carolinians give no symptoms or expressions of what we mean to do
+that we cannot maintain. We have been grossly insulted by the Federal
+Government, but it dar'n't come at us and just give us a chance at fair
+fight. We'd show 'em the thunder of the Palmetto, that they'd never
+trouble our sovereignty again. Captain, I pledge you my honor that if
+there wasn't so many infernal Yankees in Georgia, and she'd follow
+our lead in secession, we'd just lick the whole North. Georgia's a big
+State, but she a'n't pluck, and has no chivalry at all among her people.
+She allows such privileges to them Yankees-gives them power to control
+her manufacturing interests-and this is just what will uproot the
+foundation of their slave institution. Georgians a'n't a bit like
+us; first, they are too plebeian in their manners-have no bond of
+guardianship for their laws, and exert no restraints for the proper
+protection of good society. But, Captain, their stock has a different
+origin, and the peculiarity which now marks our character may be traced
+to the offspring of early settlement. We derived our character and
+sentiments from the Huguenots; they, from an uncharacterized class of
+coarse adventurers, whose honesty was tinctured with penal suspicion.
+This, sir, accounts for the differences so marked in our character."
+
+The little fellow pressed this kind of conversation in the lobby of
+the theatre, and at the same time took the very particular pleasure of
+introducing the Captain to several of the young bloods, as he called
+them, while they walked to and from the boxes. At length the Captain
+found himself in a perfect hornet's nest, surrounded by vicious young
+secessionists, so perfectly nullified in the growth that they were all
+ready to shoulder muskets, pitchforks, and daggers, and to fire pistols
+at poor old Uncle Sam, if he should poke his nose in South Carolina. The
+picture presented was that of an unruly set of children dictating their
+opinions to a hoary-headed old daddy-accusing him of pragmatism, and
+threatening, if he was twice as old, they'd whip him unless he did
+as they directed. The knowledge of South Carolina's power and South
+Carolina's difficulties with the Federal Government he found so
+universally set forth as to form the atmosphere of conversation in the
+parlor, the public-house, the school and the bar-room, the lecture-room
+and the theatre.
+
+The little man extended his invitation to a party of the bloods. The
+Captain was taken by the arms in a kind of bond fellowship, and escorted
+into Baker's eating-saloon, a place adjacent to the theatre, and, to
+a man unaccustomed to the things that are in Charleston, a very rowdy
+place. This is considered by Charlestonians one of the finest places
+in the Southern country; where good suppers and secession (the
+all-engrossing subjects with Charlestonians) form the only important
+element of conversation. It may be set down as a fact, that among
+seven-tenths of the people of Charleston, the standard of a gentleman
+is measured according to his knowledge of secession and his ability
+to settle the question of hot suppers. We say nothing of that vigorous
+patriotism so often manifested in a long string of fulsome toasts that
+disgrace the columns of the Mercury and Courier.
+
+At Baker's the place was literally crowded with all kinds and
+characters, graded from the honorable judge down to the pot-boy; a
+pot-pouri of courtesy and companionship only exhibited in England on the
+near approach of elections. The reader may think this strange, but we
+can assure him that distinctions are strangely maintained; an exclusive
+arrogance being observed in private life, while a too frequent and
+general resort to bar-rooms has established plebeianism in public.
+Voices were sounding at all parts of the counter, and for as many
+different voices as many different mixtures were named. The Captain
+received a great many introductions, and almost as many invitations to
+drink; but the little man, Master George, claimed the exclusive honor,
+and keeping an eye wide awake, took the advantage of his own dimensions,
+and began working his way through a barricade of bodies and elbows,
+until he had reached the counter. His party followed close, at his
+heels. Altogether, they called for cocktails, smashes, toddies,
+cobblers, juleps, and legitimates. These disposed of, the company
+repaired to what is called a "box up-stairs." Scarcely seated, Master
+George rang the bell with such violence that he disjointed the cord and
+tassel, and gave such an alarm that three or four darkies came poking
+their alarmed countenances through the curtains at once.
+
+"There's nothing like making the fellows mind; they've got so infernal
+independent here, and old Tom thinks so much of his young wife, that his
+niggers have begun to imitate him. One's enough at a time!" said Master
+George, with all the importance of his character. A "bright boy," with
+his hair nicely parted on the middle of his head, and frizzed for the
+occasion, made a polite bow, while the others retired.
+
+"What have you choice for supper, to-night? We want something ripe for
+the palate-none of your leavings, now, you infernal nigger, and don't
+tell us none of your lies."
+
+"Birds, sir, grouse, woodcock, partridge, canvas-backs, and quails;
+meats, venison, and oysters, master-did up in any shape what the
+gentlemen wish. Wines, &c., if they want," replied the servant, without
+any of the negro dialect, at the same time making a low bow to Master
+George.
+
+"Name it! name your dishes, gentlemen! Don't be backward. I suppose
+his birds are as usual, without age to flavor them. It's perfectly
+heathenish to eat birds as they are served here: we never get a bird
+here that is sufficiently changed to suit a gentleman o' taste; their
+beef's tough, and such steak as they make is only fit for shoemakers and
+blacksmiths. I never come into the place but I think of my journey in
+France, where they know the style and taste of a gentleman, and things
+are served to suit your choice." Thus our little friend continued
+his connoisseur remarks, to give the Captain a particular idea of
+his proficiency in the requisite qualities, age, and time of keeping
+necessary to make the adjuncts of a supper fit for a gentleman. "D--me!
+we don't know when edibles are choice, and the Yankees are perfect
+brutes in these things, and have no more taste than a cow. Our folks
+ought to all go to France for a year or two, to learn the style of
+cooking. It's perfect murder to eat a bird the very day after it's
+killed; yes, sir! no man that considers his stomach will do it," said
+George.
+
+The servant waited impatiently-the Captain rubbed his eyes, and began
+to pour out a glass of water; and dryly said he'd no choice, which was
+responded to by the rest. It was left to Master George, and he ordered
+a bountiful supply of grouse, partridges, oyster, and champagne of
+his favourite brand-none other. There was also a billiard-room,
+reading-room, a room for more important gambling, and a bar-room,
+up-stairs. All these were well filled with very well-dressed and very
+noisy people; the latter being a very convenient place, the party sent
+to it for tipplers to fill up time.
+
+"This is but a small portion of what constitutes life in Charleston,
+Captain. We live for living's sake, and don't stand upon those blueskin
+theories of temperance and religion that Yankees do, and blame the
+Father of generations for not making the world better. I never saw
+one of them that wasn't worse than we Southerners before he'd been in
+Charleston a year, and was perfect death on niggers. Yes, sir, it's
+only the extreme goodness of the Southern people's hearts that makes the
+niggers like them so. I never saw a Northerner yet that wouldn't work
+his niggers to death in two years. D--me, sir, my servants all love
+me as if I was a prince. Have you ever been in France, sir?" said he,
+suddenly breaking off. The Captain replied in the affirmative.
+
+"Ah! then you can speak French! the most polished language known to
+refined society. I wouldn't part with my French for the world. All
+the first families in Charleston are familiar with it. It's the modern
+gentleman's curt-blanche to society here. There's no language like
+it for beauty and flexibility; but one must go to France and learn to
+acquire its grace and ease," said he, in rapid succession, rolling
+out his words in imitation of a London sprig of the Inner Temple, and
+working his little mastiff mouth.
+
+"No, sir," said the Captain quaintly. "I never stopped long enough in
+France to get hold of the lingo."
+
+"God bless me, what a misfortune! and can't speak it yet, ah? Why,
+Captain, if you wanted to court a petite madmoselle, you'd be in a sad
+fix-she wouldn't understand what you were talking about and would take
+your love-pledges for gammon."
+
+"You're mistaken there, my good fellow. Love grows on trees in France,
+and a French woman can see it before you begin to tell her about it!"
+retorted the Captain, which brought a "Good! good! hit him again!" from
+the whole party. At this, Master George commenced reading the Captain a
+disquisition upon the best mode of acquiring the French language. Supper
+was brought-in old Tom Baker's best flourish-and the party begun to
+discuss its merits with great gusto. What the little, chivalrous fellows
+lacked in physical dimension, they made up in patriotic sentiment in
+behalf of the grand sovereignty of South Carolina, which they continued
+to pour out until a late hour, every man backing his sayings by the
+authority of the great and wonderful Calhoun.
+
+The Captain sat eating away, and seeming more disposed to enjoy the
+physical consolation of his supper than to elevate his ideas upon South
+Carolina's politics.
+
+"Now, Captain," said Master George, in a very serious tone, after he had
+been striking his hand upon the marble table for more than an hour to
+confirm the points of his reasoning,--"what is your opinion of the great
+question at issue between the Federal Government and South Carolina?
+And what do you think of the Old Dominion? how will she stand upon the
+test-question?"
+
+The poor Captain looked confounded-took another oyster, and began to get
+his mouth in a fix, while little George worked his fingers through
+his nice curly hair, and the young bloods awaited the rejoinder with
+anxiety.
+
+"Really, sir, you have the advantage of me in your question. It is
+so much beyond my profession that I am entirely ignorant of the
+subject-therefore could not give an opinion. In truth, sir, I do
+not know the purport of the question. It has given me pleasure and
+information to listen to your conversation and the ability you displayed
+in argument, but, as a stranger, I could take no part," replied the
+Captain very sincerely.
+
+Not content with this, Master George wished to be more direct. "It's
+the right of secession, Captain-the power to maintain the right by the
+constitution."
+
+"Probably; but may I expose my ignorance by inquiring what is meant
+by secession? and to what it is applied so frequently?" inquired the
+Captain.
+
+"Oh! murder Captain; have you never heard of nullification times!
+Well, sir, you must be posted on the affairs of our government." So
+he commenced an analysis of nearly an hour long, and in it gave some
+astonishing accounts of the wonderful statesmanship of Calhoun, Butler,
+and Rhett, tapering down with a perfect fire-and-thunder account of
+the military exploits of General Quattlebum and Captain Blanding. The
+Captain began to stretch and gape, for he labored under the fatigue of a
+perilous voyage, and repose was the only sovereign remedy. He felt that
+the limits of propriety were entirely overstepped, and that he would
+have reason to remember the first night spent with little George the
+secessionist.
+
+"But, Captain! my dear fellow. I see you don't understand our position
+yet. We've been insulted; yes, most rascally insulted by the Federal
+Government, and they keep it up every year. We can't get our rights. Oh!
+no, sir, there's no such thing in the knowledge of the Federal officers
+as justice for South Carolina; and you must understand, Captain, that
+she is the greatest State in the Union, and there a'n't nothing like her
+people for bravery. The political power's got North and West, the old
+constitution is being dissected to suit the abolitionists, and they're
+drawing the cordon around us faster and faster; and they're now out like
+a warrior boldly to the conquest, sounding their voices in the halls of
+Congress, appealing to human and divine power to protect their nonsense,
+and bidding defiance to our constitutional rights, Our slaves are our
+property, protected by the law of God-by that inspired and superhuman
+wisdom that founded our great and glorious constitution. Yes, sir!
+it was an institution entailed upon us by our forefathers, and a wise
+providence has provided proper laws by which we shall protect and see
+these poor miserable devils of helpless slaves, that can't take care of
+themselves, straight through."
+
+"But how does this affect you and the Federal Government?" inquired the
+Captain.
+
+"Why, sir, most directly!" replied Master George, screwing his mouth and
+giving his head a very learned attitude. "Directly, sir!--the Federal
+Government is acquiescing in every abolition scheme that is put forward
+by that intriguing Northern compact for the establishment of new
+governments in the territories. She is granting unconstitutional
+privileges to designing politicians, whose chief aim is to uproot our
+domestic institution and destroy the allegiance of the slave to his
+master, by which the slaves would be cast upon the world unprotected,
+and we disarmed of power to protect them. Ah! sir, I tell you, of all
+fruits of the imagination that would be the most damnable, and the slave
+would be the sufferer. It would be worse for him, poor fellow; it would
+be an abuse of human power without precedent. So far as political power
+is concerned, we are nearly disarmed. The influx of population finds
+its way into the opened avenues of the North and West. And with opinions
+predisposed against our institutions, and the contaminating influence
+standing ready with open arms to embrace the great current, what can we
+expect? It's the increasing power made by foreign influx that's giving
+tone to our government. If our Southern Convention stand firm we are
+saved; but I'm fearful there's too many doubtful shadows in it that
+won't stand to the gun. That's what's always played the devil with us,"
+said George, striking his hand upon the table. "There's no limitation to
+their interpositions, and their resolves, and their adjournments; which
+don't come up to my principles of making the issue, and standing to the
+question with our coffins on our backs. These condescensions of thought
+and feeling arise from the misconceived notions of a few, who are always
+ready to join, but never willing to march to action, and must not be
+taken as a specimen of South Carolina bravery. The Federal Government
+has become vicious and even puerile toward South Carolina; and since
+the Herculean power of the great Calhoun is gone, it treats us like a
+semi-barbarous and secluded people, mistaking our character. But we'll
+learn the Federal Government a lesson yet."
+
+"Do not your legislators make laws for your government, or how is it
+that you express such a restive dissatisfaction? Do not the same laws
+which govern you, govern the whole of the slave States?"
+
+Little George had previously monopolized all the conversation, but at
+this juncture five or six voices broke out, each fired with a reply to
+the Captain's question; and yet the answer was of the same old stamp:
+What South Carolina had done-how she had fought and gained the Mexican
+war-how she was interested in slaves, and how she yet feared to strike
+the blow because a set of mere adventurers had got the power to vote in
+her elections, and cowards through them had got into the legislature.
+
+"Why, gentlemen, listen to me in this particular. If"--
+
+"Your oysters are getting cold, George," interrupted a blood at his
+left, rather facetiously.
+
+"I claim the respect due a gentleman, sir! A South Carolinian will
+transgress no rules of etiquette," said George, grasping his tumbler
+in a passionate manner and smashing it upon the marble slab, causing a
+sudden emeute in the camp. "Order! order! order!" was sounded from every
+tongue. "You mustn't be afeard, Captain," said one of the party. "This
+is perfectly South Carolinian-just the oscillating of the champagne; it
+won't last long."
+
+The noise was more loud than ordinary, and brought a score of people
+around to hear the trouble. George had got in high dudgeon, and it took
+several persons to hold him, while the remainder, not excepting the
+Captain, were engaged in a pacification. The scene was very extravagant
+in folly; and through the kind interposition of friends, the matter was
+settled to the honorable satisfaction of both parties-the question was
+called for-the Captain called for a legitimate, rubbed his eyes, and
+little George proceeded. "If my friend Thomas Y. Simmons, Jr., had been
+elected to the legislature he'd altered the position of things in
+South Carolina. All these corruptions would have been exposed, and
+the disparity of party would have dwindled into obscurity. Every
+true Carolinian voted for him to the hilt, but how was he defeated?
+Gentlemen, can you answer? it will be a favor highly gratifying to me to
+hear your opinions!" A voice answered, "Because he wasn't big enough!"
+"No, sir," said George, "it was because there was intrigue in the party,
+and the Yankee influence went to put him down. The world'll hear from
+him yet. He's my particular friend, and will stand in the halls of
+Congress as great a statesman as ever lisped a political sentiment."
+
+George's account of his particular friend, Thomas Y. S--, Jr., was so
+extravagant, and not having heard of him before, the Captain's curiosity
+was aroused to know who he was and where he resided. We will not tax the
+reader with George's wonderful memoir of his friend, but merely inform
+him that "little Tommy Simmons," as he is usually styled in Charleston,
+is an exact pattern of Master George, with the exception of his mouth,
+which is straight and regular; and if we may be allowed to condescend
+to the extremes, we should say that the cordwainer had done more for
+his heels. Otherwise, no daguerreotype could give a counterpart more
+correct. Tommy is a very small member of the Charleston bar, who, though
+he can seldom be seen when the court is crowded, makes a great deal of
+noise without displaying power of elucidation or legal abilities, yet
+always acquitting himself cleverly. Tommy was little George in two
+particulars-he had studied law, and was a great secessionist; and if
+George had never practised, it was only from inclination, which he
+asserted arose from a humane feeling which he never could overcome-that
+he never wished to oppress anybody. But the greatest contrast that
+the reader can picture to himself between mental and physical objects
+existed between Tommy's aspirations and the physical man. His mind was
+big enough, and so was his self-confidence, to have led the Assyrian
+and Chaldean army against the Hebrews. To this end, and to further
+the formula of his statesmanship, no sooner was he twenty-one, and
+the corner just turned, than he sounded his war-trumpet-secession or
+death!--mounted the rostrum and "stump'd it," to sound the goodness and
+greatness of South Carolina, and total annihilation to all unbelievers
+in nullification. It was like Jonah and the whale, except the
+swallowing, which spunky Tommy promised should be his office, if the
+Federal Government didn't toe the mark. Yes, Tommy was a candidate
+for the legislature, and for the Southern Congress, (which latter was
+exclusively chivalrous;) and the reader must not be surprised when we
+tell him that he lacked but a few votes of being elected to the former.
+Such was the voice of the Charleston district.
+
+Supper had been discussed down to the fragments, and all expressed their
+satisfaction of the quantity and declined any more; but George called on
+another bottle of champagne, and insisted that the party should take
+a parting glass. The servant had begun to extinguish the lights-a
+sure sign that the success of the bar was ended for the night. George
+reprimanded the negro-the sparkling beverage was brought, glasses filled
+up, touched, and drunk with the standing toast of South Carolina.
+A motion to adjourn was made and seconded, and the party, feeling
+satisfied with their evening's recreation, moved off accordingly.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII. A FEW POINTS OF THE LAW.
+
+
+
+IN Charleston, such an adjournment at a bar-room or an eating-house,
+when parties are enjoying what is termed a "pleasant occasion," does not
+mean an adjournment to the domestic fireside; nor are the distinctions
+between married and single men regarded, though domestic attachments
+may be considered as governing the thoughts and feelings. The practical
+definition of such an adjournment means to some place where beauty
+secludes itself to waste in shame.
+
+The party descended into the lower bar-room, which, though rather
+thinned, presented a picture of characters stimulated to the tottering
+point. A motion had been made and strongly seconded to visit the
+voluptuous house of a certain lady, which it is considered a stranger
+has not seen Charleston until he has visited. The Captain remonstrated
+against this, assuring the party that he must go to the ship and needed
+rest. Again and again they insisted, setting forth the charms and beauty
+of the denizens, but he as often declined in the most positive manner.
+Unable to move him in his resolution, one by one began to give him a
+hearty shake of the hand and bid him good-night, leaving little Master
+George to the exclusive honor of seeing him home.
+
+Standing in the centre of the room, surrounded by five or six persons
+well-dressed but very weak in the knees, was a portly-looking gentleman;
+with very florid countenance, keen dark eyes, and aquiline nose which
+he frequently fingered. There was an air of respectability about him,
+though his countenance was not marked with any particularly prominent
+feature to distinguish him from the ordinary class of respectable men.
+He spoke well, yet without taste or discrimination in his language, was
+rather bald and gray, with small head and low perceptive powers; and
+judging from the particular tone of his voice and the cant terms he
+used, we should think he had figured among the Kentucky horse-traders,
+or made stump speeches in Arkansas. His dress was inclined to the gaudy.
+He wore a flashy brown-colored frock-coat with the collar laid very far
+back, a foppish white vest exposing his shirt-bosom nearly down to
+the waistbands of his pants, which were of gray stripes. But the more
+fanciful portions of his dress were a large and costly fob-chain, which
+hung very low and supported an immense seal containing a glistening
+stone, which he seemed very fond of dangling with his left hand.
+Attached to this was a very prominently displayed black ribbon,
+answering the purpose of a guard-chain, and laid with great contrasting
+care over the bosom of his shirt. This, with a neckerchief of more
+flashy colors than Joseph's coat, and a late style Parisian hat, with
+the rim very exquisitely turned upon the sides, make up our man.
+
+He was discussing politics, with a great many sensible sayings, though
+nothing like close reasoning; and strange as it may seem, he was
+strongly opposed to the rabid views of several staggering secessionists,
+who surrounded him, and advocated the views set forth in convention by
+Mr. Butler. We remarked this more particularly, for it was about the
+only instance we witnessed of a public man being independent enough to
+denounce the fanaticism of secession. A more amusing scene than that
+presented by the attitudes-the questions in regard to South Carolina
+licking the Federal Government-the strange pomp-ribald gasconade, and
+high-sounding chivalry of the worthies, cannot be imagined. They were
+in a perfect ecstasy with themselves and South Carolina, and swore, let
+whatever come, they were ready to meet it.
+
+Little Master George seemed very anxious that the Captain should become
+acquainted with him, and commenced giving him a monstrous account of his
+distinguished abilities. "And that's not all!" said George; "he's not
+only one of the greatest characters in Charleston, or perhaps the State,
+but he's a right good fellow."
+
+We will interrupt, by informing the reader that he was one of the good
+fellows-a numerous family in Charleston-who never use fine instruments
+when they select their company; and pay a large amount of worthy tribute
+to the liquor-dealers. There is no discriminating latitude attached
+to the good-fellow family, for its members may be found with alike
+gratifying inclinations, from the highest aristocracy to the negro
+population.
+
+"That, sir, is Col. S--e; belongs to one of the first families, sir. He
+can beat old Pettigru all hollow; his eloquence is so thrilling that
+he always reminds me of Pericles. He can beat little Thomas Y.
+Simmons, Jr., all to pieces-make the best stump speech-address a public
+assemblage, and rivet all their minds-can make a jury cry quicker than
+any other man-can clear the worst criminal that ever committed crime-and
+he's good-hearted too-can draw the most astonishing comparisons to
+confound the minds of stupid jurors, and make them believe the d--dest
+nonsense that ever man invented. Yes, sir-when he makes a speech,
+everybody goes to hear him, for he says what he pleases, and old Judge
+Withers, whose will is as arbitrary as Julius Caesar's, and has got the
+obstinacy of Tom Boyce's mule, dar'n't attempt to control the tenor of
+his plea. And he can tell the best invented story of any man in town.
+He cleared the villanous Doctor Hines once upon the color of his
+pantaloons."
+
+George waited impatiently for the end of the political controversy,
+determined to introduce his friend to the colonel. He soon had an
+opportunity, for the colonel, finding himself beset by a set of
+unreasonable secessionists, made a sweeping declaration. "Gentlemen,"
+said he, "let me tell you a modest fact: seven-eighths of the secession
+fire-eaters don't know what the proper meaning of government is: I
+make the charge against my own people-but it is true." "Traitor!
+traitor!--traitor to South Carolina," was sounded at the top of a dozen
+voices.
+
+"Then, if I am such in your opinions, I'm gratified to know that my
+feelings are my own. Good-night!"
+
+Thus saying, he withdrew from the party, and making his way for the
+door, was saluted by George, who introduced him to his friend, the
+Captain. The colonel was a very sociable, communicative man; and taking
+the Captain's arm, as they walked along, entered into an interesting
+conversation about his voyage and first visit to the city, at the same
+time displaying his good sense in not trying to force the great things
+of South Carolina into his mind.
+
+We, a few weeks afterward, had the good fortune to hear the legal
+abilities of this gentleman displayed in a plea at the bar. There were
+many good points in it, which, if not legally pointed, were said well;
+yet we should class him as belonging to the loud school.
+
+The Captain, thinking it a good opportunity to make some inquiries about
+his steward, as they proceeded, commenced in the following manner:
+
+"Your laws are very stringent in South Carolina, I believe, sir!"
+
+"Well, no sir," said the colonel, "if we except those which govern the
+niggers; they of necessity must be so; we have had so many emeutes with
+them, that no law can be made too strict in its bearings. We have so
+many bad niggers poured in upon us, that the whole class is becoming
+corrupted."
+
+"Your laws, of course, make a distinction between good and bad niggers,
+and free negroes?" interposed the Captain.
+
+"We make no distinction between the colors--some are as white as you
+are; but the grades are so complex that it would be impossible to make a
+sliding-scale law for any fixed complexions. The law which governs
+them is distinctive and comprehensive-made in order to shield the white
+population from their ignorance of law and evidence. We never could
+govern them in their respective spheres, unless the laws were made
+stringent in their effect. As for the free niggers, they're the greatest
+nuisance we have; it is our policy to get rid of them, and to that end
+we tax them severely. The riddance of this class of niggers would be an
+essential benefit to our slaves, as upon account of their influence our
+negro-laws are made more stringent. And the worst of it is that they
+increase faster. But we make it a principal point to get all the free
+men we can married to slaves, and the free women run off. You, that are
+accustomed to the free institutions of your country, may think some of
+these things singular at first; but you would soon become accustomed
+to them, and would really admire them when you saw how beautifully they
+worked."
+
+"Is there no discretionary power left?" inquired the Captain. "It
+must be oppressive, if carried out; Good men-whether they be white or
+black-are entitled to the advantages due them; but where laws such as
+you describe are carried out, a good man's evidence being black, the
+intention could not be made white. Now, according to my idea of the
+law of nature, a man's merits are in his moral integrity and behaviour;
+therefore I should establish the rule that a good black man was better
+than a bad white man, and was as much entitled to the respect and
+government of law."
+
+"Hi!--oh! Captain; it won't do to talk so in South Carolina. Just let a
+nigger imagine himself as good as a white man, and all the seven codes
+in Christendom wouldn't keep 'em under. Ah! you've got to learn a thing
+or two about niggers yet," interrupted Master George, before the Colonel
+had time to speak.
+
+"I only speak from my observation of human nature; but I may become
+better acquainted with your laws, if I remain among you," said the
+Captain.
+
+"As I have said before sir," replied the Colonel, "our nigger-laws are
+such as to require a strict enforcement. If we allowed the prerogative
+of a discretionary power, it would open the way to an endless system of
+favoritism, just at the mercy and feelings of those exercising it. As it
+is now, the white or black nigger, male or female, gets the same law and
+the same penalty. We make no distinction even at the paddle-gallows. The
+paddle-gallows is a frame with two uprights, and a wrench screw at
+the top. The negro's hands are secured in iron wristlets-similar to
+handcuffs; a rope is then attached to an eye in these, and passing over
+the wrench, which being turned, the negro is raised in an agonizing
+position until the tips of his toes scarcely touch the floor. Thus
+suspended, with the skin stretched to its utmost tension, it not
+unfrequently parts at the first blow of the paddle. Sometimes the feet
+are secured, when the effect of this modern science of demonstrating the
+tension of the human body for punishment becomes more painful under the
+paddle. South Carolinians deny this mode of punishment generally, and
+never allow strangers to witness it. It is not, as some writers have
+stated, practised in Georgia, where, we are happy to say, that so far as
+punishment is conducted in a legal manner, at the jails and prisons,
+it is administered in a humane manner; and instead of turning modern
+barbarity into a science, as is, done in South Carolina, a strict
+regard for the criminal is observed. I will relate some singular facts
+connected with the strictness with which we South Carolinians carry
+out our laws. And now that we are on the spot connected with it, its
+associations are more forcibly impressed on my mind. It brings with it
+many painful remembrances, and, were we differently situated, I should
+wish the cause to be removed. But it cannot be, and we must carry out
+the law without making allowances, for in these little leniencies all
+those evils which threaten the destruction of our peculiar institution
+creep in. In fact, Captain, they are points of law upon which all our
+domestic quietude stands; and as such, we are bound to strengthen our
+means of enforcing them to the strictest letter. Our laws are founded
+upon the ancient wisdom of our forefathers, and South Carolina has never
+traduced herself or injured her legal purity. We have reduced our system
+almost to a practical science, so complete in its bearings and points
+of government as to be worthy the highest and noblest purposes of our
+country. And at the same time, such is the spirit and magnanimity of our
+people, that in framing laws to guard against the dangerous influences
+of that wing of our country that spreads its ambitious fallacies--its
+tempting attractions-shallow criticisms upon minute and isolated
+cases-redundant theories without measure or observation, and making
+a standard for the government of slaves upon foolish and capricious
+prejudices, we have been careful to preserve a conservative moderation
+toward the slave. But, to my remarks."
+
+The party had now arrived opposite to what was formerly known as Jones's
+Hotel, where the Colonel made a halt to relate the singular case that
+had pained his feelings, though he held very tenaciously to the law as
+it was, because he believed strongly in the wisdom of the South Carolina
+judiciary.
+
+"Our first and great object is to prevent the interchange of sentiment
+between our domestic niggers, whether bond or free, and niggers who
+reside abroad or have left our State; To do this, it became imperative
+to establish a law prohibiting free negroes from coming into the State,
+and those in the State from going out, under penalty of imprisonment and
+fine, if they returned. The penalty amounted to sale upon a peon form;
+and subjected the offender to the slave system in a manner that he
+seldom retrieved himself. You will observe, Captain, the penalty is not
+desired by our people, the object being to prevent them from returning,
+and as such it must be taken in the spirit of its origin. Another very
+wise provision was made by our legislators, and which has prevented a
+great deal of suffering on the part of the slave. A few years ago, our
+wise legislature made a law to revert the power of emancipation from the
+board of magistrates where it had been very much abused, to the House
+itself. And such is the law at the present day, that no master can give
+his slaves their freedom, except by special act of the legislature, and
+that with such a multiplicity of provisions and conditions that few even
+attempt it. But I'm about to refer to cases in which some modification
+might be said to have been necessary, because in them are embodied the
+worst germs for abolition speculation.
+
+"That, Captain, is Jones's Hotel," said the Colonel, pointing to an
+odd-looking house of antique and mixed architecture, with a large convex
+window above the hall-entrance, in the second story. This house is
+situated in Broad street, next to the aristocratic St. Michael's Church,
+one of the most public places in the city. "In years past, that house
+was kept by Jones, a free nigger. Jones was almost white, a fine
+portly-looking man, active, enterprising, intelligent, honest to the
+letter, and whose integrity and responsibility was never doubted. He
+lived in every way like a white man, and, I think, with few exceptions,
+never kept company with even bright folks. His house was unquestionably
+the best in the city, and had a widespread reputation. Few persons of
+note ever visited Charleston without putting up at Jones's, where they
+found, not only the comforts of a private house, but a table spread with
+every luxury that the county afforded. The Governor always put up at
+Jones's; and when you were travelling abroad, strangers would speak
+of the sumptuous fare at Jones's in Charleston, and the elegance and
+correctness of his house. But if his house and fare were the boast of
+Carolinians, and the remark of strangers, his civility and courteous
+attention could not be outdone. Jones continued in the popularity of his
+house for many years, reared a beautiful, intelligent, and interesting
+family; at the same time accumulated about forty thousand dollars. The
+most interesting part of his family was three beautiful daughters, the
+eldest of whom was married to a person now in New York. She was fairer
+than seven-eighths of those ladies who term themselves aristocracy in
+Charleston, and promenade King street in the afternoon.
+
+"She removed to New York with her husband, who now resides in that city,
+engaged in lucrative and respectable business. A short time after, her
+second sister-not dreaming that the law would be so stringent as to
+class her with the lowest nigger, or even lay its painful bearings
+at her door; for the family were very high-minded, and would have
+considered themselves grossly insulted to have the opprobrious name of
+nigger applied to them-paid her a visit. The public became acquainted
+with the fact, and to his surprise, Jones was informed by authority
+that upon no condition could she be allowed to return-that the law was
+imperative, and no consideration could be given to the circumstances,
+for such would be virtually destroying its validity, and furnishing a
+precedent that would be followed by innumerable cases. In spite of all
+the remonstrances which Jones could set forth, and the influence of
+several friends of high standing, he was compelled to relinquish all
+hope of his daughter's being allowed to return to the family. The
+reasoning set forth had every plausibility; but such is our respect for
+the law, that we were compelled to forego our hospitality, and maintain
+it, even though the case was painful to our feelings. Thus, you see, we
+maintain the point and spirit of the law above every thing else.
+
+"But the end is not here! A few years after this, Jones received
+a letter, that his daughter was very sick and not expected to
+live-accompanied with a desire to have the last soothing comfort of
+seeing her parents. Jones being an affectionate man, and dotingly fond
+of his children, without regarding the former admonition, immediately
+prepared himself, and left in disguise for New York. Mature
+consideration would have convinced him of the error of one so well known
+as himself trying to elude recognition.
+
+"His son-in-law, Lee, a noble fellow, kept the house, and when Jones was
+inquired for, it was reported that he was confined to his room. It would
+have been well if Jones had kept himself secluded in New York; but he
+was recognised by a Charlestonian, and, as such reports have uncommon
+wings, the news of it soon reached the authorities; when a mandate was
+issued accordingly, and Jones subjected to the fate of his daughter.
+There are many painful circumstances connected with the affair, which,
+if well told, would make quite a romance," said the Colonel, all of
+which the Captain listened to with profound attention. "His family all
+moved to New York, and his affairs were put into the hands of attorneys
+here, for settlement, by his son-in-law, who continued the business for
+some years."
+
+"Of course he got his property restored to him?" interrupted the
+Captain.
+
+"Most certainly, Captain! The spirit of justice is coequal with that of
+honorable law, in South Carolina," said George, anxious to relieve the
+Colonel of the answer.
+
+"It is somewhat difficult to settle a man's business by legal process
+when the principal is not present. The law's delay and lawyers' spoils
+make time hallowed and costly," said the Captain.
+
+"You're right there, Captain," said the Colonel; "and I doubt-to speak
+honestly-whether Jones ever got much of his property. There's a good
+many stories told, and a great deal of mystery about it that's got to be
+explained to my mind. But you're a stranger, Captain, and it would
+not be interesting to the feelings of a Scotchman. I may give you the
+details more minutely at some future day."
+
+"Why, Colonel!" said George, "you should be considerate in your
+statements. Remember the immense difficulty that has attended Jones's
+affairs-they're not all settled yet."
+
+"True, George; and I'm afraid they never will be;--but there are
+some very singular appearances connected with it. I mean no personal
+disrespect toward those cousins of yours who have figured in the case.
+'Tis bad to call names, but there is a mystery about a certain member of
+our profession getting rich, when poor Jones declares he's got nothing,
+and Lee has had to give up the house,--I don't say what for." * * *
+
+"Yes, strange things must be kept strangely secret in some parts of the
+world, and only whispered when there's no wind," said the Captain.
+
+"But that's the only case, Captain," said George; "and the Colonel
+was indiscreet in recounting it; for from that you may conceive wrong
+impressions of the best institutions and laws in the world. Jones was an
+old fool, led away by his nigger-like affections for them gals of his.
+He never knew when he was well off, and always wanted to be with white
+folk when he was here. 'Twould been a great deal better if he'd let
+them youngest gals gone with Pingree and Allston. They'd have made the
+tip-top mistresses--been kept like ladies, and not been bothered,
+and brought all this trouble upon their heads through these infernal
+abolitionists. I really believe the old fool thought some white man
+would marry them at one time."
+
+"What harm would there've been in that, providing they're as white as
+anybody, and got plenty of money, and were handsome? There must be a
+singular sensibility, that I don't understand, exerting itself in your
+society," said the Captain laconically.
+
+"Harm! You'd find out the harm. Just live in South Carolina a year or
+two. 'Tisn't the fair complexion-we don't dispute that-but it's the
+blood."
+
+"Oh! then the legal objection," said the Captain, "is what is so
+revolting to society, eh! It may be sown broadcast in licentiousness,
+then, and custom sustains an immoral element that is devouring the
+essential bond of society."
+
+"Excuse me, Captain," interrupted the Colonel. "George, you are always
+taking me upon suppositions. I only related it to the Captain in order
+to show the power and integrity of our law, and how South Carolinians
+frequently sacrifice their own interests to maintain it intact. Nothing
+could be more fatal to its vitality than to make provisions which would
+entail legal preferences. The law in regard to free niggers leaving
+the State should be looked upon in the light of protection rather than
+alienation, for it is made to protect property and society. Yet where
+a case is attended with such circumstances as that of Jones's, some
+disposition to accommodate might have been evinced without endangering
+the State's sovereignty. And I must also differ with you, George, so far
+as the girls maintained their self-respect. It was commendable in them
+to get husbands whom they could live with in the bonds of matrimony.
+My word for it, George, though I am a Southerner, and may give rein to
+improprieties at times, nothing can be more pernicious to our society
+than this destructive system of our first people in keeping mistresses.
+It's a source of misery at best, depending upon expediency instead of
+obligation, and results in bringing forth children and heirs with an
+entailed burden upon their lives, to be disowned, cast off from paternal
+rights, and left to the tender mercies of the law. We see the curse, yet
+countenance it-and while it devours domestic affections and has cankered
+the core of social obligations, we look upon it as a flowery garden as
+we pass by the wayside.. There may be but a shadow between the rightful
+heir and the doubtful son-the former may enjoy the bounty of his
+inheritance, but the latter is doomed to know not his sire nor his
+kinsman, but to suffer the doubts and fears and the dark gloom which
+broods over a bondman's life."
+
+"By-je-w-hu! Colonel, what in scissors are you preaching about. You must
+a' got a pull too much at Bakers's. You're giving vent to real abolition
+sentiments. Exercise your knowledge of the provision that is made for
+such children. The Captain will certainly draw incorrect notions about
+us," said George, with anxiety pictured on his countenance. He knew the
+Colonel's free, open, and frank manner of expressing himself, and feared
+lest the famous name of the chivalry should suffer from his unconscious
+disclosures.
+
+"Provisions! George, you know my feelings concerning that vice which is
+so universally practised in our community. If you know of any provision,
+it's more than I do. Perhaps you are older and have had more experience.
+'Tis the want of such a provision that is just destroying our
+institution of slavery!"
+
+At this juncture the Captain interrupted them, and begging that the
+Colonel would finish the story about Jones, said he had a few questions
+to ask them after it was through.
+
+"Well," said the Colonel, "Jones died, I believe; but his family are as
+industrious as ever, and have made money enough to live comfortable; but
+the scamps have turned out perfect helpmates of the abolitionists, and
+make their intelligence figure at the bottom of many an escape. But
+Lee's case is as hard as Jones's. His son went to New York to see his
+grandfather, and was debarred by the same statute of limitations. Lee,
+however, was a very capable fellow, and after trying for two years, and
+finding it would be impossible to return to his father, very shrewdly
+set about some kind of business, and is now largely engaged in the
+preserve and pickle business. Lee's celebrated pickle and preserve
+establishment, New York. The father is now in this city, making a living
+for his family at something or other. He has made several efforts to
+sell out his little property, but there's some trouble about the
+title; and if he leaves it to go and see his son, he knows what the
+consequences will be; and to leave it for settlement would be to abandon
+it, to the same fate that swallowed up Jones's. Thus the son cannot come
+to visit his father, nor the father go to visit the son. This, in my
+opinion, is carrying a prohibition to an extreme point; and although
+I believe the law should be maintained, I cannot believe that any good
+arises from it upon such people as the Jones's and Lee's, from the very
+fact that they never associated with niggers. Hence, where there is
+no grounds for fear there can be no cause for action," continued the
+Colonel.
+
+"Just what I wanted to know," said the Captain. "As I informed you, I am
+driven into your port in distress. Charleston, as you are aware, is in
+an advantageous latitude for vessels to refit that have met with those
+disasters which, are frequent in the gulf and among the Bahamas. Thus I
+expected to find good facilities here, without any unkind feeling on the
+part of the people"--
+
+"Oh! bless me, Captain, you will find us the most hospitable people in
+the world," said the Colonel.
+
+"But your pilot told me I would have trouble with my steward, and that
+the law would make no distinction between his being cast upon your
+shores in distress and subject to your sympathy, and his coming in
+voluntarily."
+
+"What!" said little George. "Is he a nigger, Captain? Old Grimshaw's
+just as sure to nab him as you're a white man. He'll buy and sell a
+saint for the fees, and gives such an extended construction to the terms
+of the act that you need expect no special favor at his hands. The law's
+no fiction with him. I'm sorry, Captain: you may judge his conduct as
+an index of that of our people, and I know him so well that I fear the
+consequences."
+
+"No!" said the Captain. "My steward is a Portuguese, a sort of mestino,
+and one of the best men that ever stepped foot aboard a vessel. He
+is willing, intelligent, always ready to do his duty, and is a great
+favorite with his shipmates, and saves his wages like a good man-but he
+is olive complexion, like a Spaniard. He has sailed under the British
+flag for a great many years, has been 'most all over the world, and is
+as much attached to the service as if he was a Londoner, and has got a
+register ticket. Nothing would pain my feelings more than to see him
+in a prison, for I think he has as proud a notion of honesty as any man
+I've seen, and I know he wouldn't commit a crime that would subject him
+to imprisonment for the world. The boys have been pestering the poor
+fellow, and telling him about some old fellow they heard the pilot speak
+about, called Norman Gadsden; they tell him if he catches him they'll
+sell him for a slave."
+
+"The question is one about which you need give yourself no concern. Our
+people are not so inhuman but that they will shelter a castaway sailor,
+and extend those comforts which are due from all humane people. The act
+under which seamen are imprisoned is the law provided to prohibit free
+niggers from entering our port, and, in my opinion, was brought into
+life for the sake of the fees. It's no more nor less than a tax and
+restriction upon commerce, and I doubt whether it was ever the intention
+of the framers that it should be construed in this manner. However, so
+far as your steward is con-cerned, the question of how far his color
+will make him amenable to the law will never be raised; the mere
+circumstance of his being a seaman in distress, thrown upon our
+sympathies, will be all you need among our hospitable people. I'm not
+aware of a precedent, but I will guaranty his safety from a knowledge
+of the feelings of our people. Our merchants are, with few exceptions,
+opposed to the law in this sense, but such is the power and control of
+a class of inexperienced legislators, prompted by a most trifling clique
+of office-holders, that their voice has no weight. I am opposed to this
+system of dragging people into courts of law upon every pretext. It is
+practised too much in our city for the good of its name."
+
+Upon this the Colonel and little George accompanied the Captain to his
+ship, and, expressing their heartfelt regrets at her appearance, bid
+him good-night-George promising to call upon him in the morning, and the
+Colonel charging him to give himself no trouble about his steward, that
+he would see Mr. Grimshaw that night, and make all things straight.
+
+Thus ended the Captain's first night in Charleston, and represented a
+picture from which he might have drawn conclusions somewhat different
+from the actual result. Alas! that all the good fellowship and pleasant
+associations of a people should be disgraced by an absurdity arising
+from their fears.
+
+The Colonel might have given many other instances equally as painful as
+that connected with the transportation of Jones and his family, and the
+fetters that were placed upon poor Lee. He might have instanced that
+of Malcome Brown, a wealthy, industrious, honest, high-minded, and
+straightforward man, now living at Aiken, in South Carolina. Brown
+conducts a profitable mechanical business, is unquestionably the best
+horticulturist in the State, and produces the best fruit brought to the
+Charleston market. What has he done to be degraded in the eyes of the
+law? Why is he looked upon as a dangerous citizen and his influence
+feared? Why is he refused a hearing through those laws which bad white
+men take the advantage of? He is compelled to submit to those which
+were made to govern the worst slaves! And why is he subjected to that
+injustice which gives him no voice in his own behalf when the most
+depraved whites are his accusers? Can it be the little crimp that is in
+his hair? for he has a fairer skin than those who make laws to oppress
+him. If he inhaled the free atmosphere from abroad, can it be that
+there is contagion in it, and Malcome Brown is the dreaded medium of its
+communication? And if the statement rung in our ears be true, "that
+the free colored of the North suffer while the slave is cared for and
+comfortable," why belie ourselves? Malcome's influence is, and always
+has been, with the whites, and manifestly good in the preservation of
+order and obedience on the part of the slaves. He pursues his avocation
+with spirit and enterprise, while he is subjected to menial and
+oppressive laws. His father visited New York, and was forbidden to
+return. He appealed again and again, set forth his claims and his
+integrity to the State and her laws, but all was of no avail. He was
+hopelessly banished, as it were, from ever seeing his son again, unless
+that son would sacrifice his property and submit to perpetual banishment
+from the State. If we reflect upon the many paternal associations that
+would gladden the hearts of father and child to meet in happy affection,
+we may realize the effect of that law which makes the separation painful
+and which denies even the death-bed scene its last cheering consolation.
+
+We have conversed with poor Brown on many occasions, found him a very
+intelligent man, full of humour, and fond of relating incidents in the
+history of his family-even proud of his good credit in Charleston. He
+frequently speaks of his father and the gratifying hope of meeting him
+at some future day, when he can give vent to his feelings in bursts of
+affection. He wants his father to return and live with him, because he
+says he knows they would be more happy together. "I suppose the law was
+made in justice, and it's right for me to submit to it," he would say
+when conversing upon its stringency; and it also seems a sort of comfort
+to him that he is not the only sufferer.
+
+If South Carolina would awake to her own interest, she would find more
+to fear from the stringency of her own laws than from the influence of a
+few men coming from abroad.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X. THE PROSPECT DARKENING.
+
+
+
+AFTER the Colonel and little George left the Captain, as we have stated
+in the foregoing chapter, he descended into the cabin, and found Manuel
+sitting upon one of the lockers, apparently in great anxiety. He,
+however, waited for the mate to speak before he addressed the
+Captain. The mate awoke and informed the Captain that a slender,
+dark-complexioned man had been aboard a few minutes after he left,
+making particular inquiries about the steward; that he spoke like an
+official man, was dressed in black clothes, and wore spectacles.
+
+"I asked him if we'd have any trouble with Manuel, and tried to make him
+understand that he wasn't a black, and that our situation might excuse
+us from any annoyance through their peculiar laws. But the old chap
+seemed mighty stupid about every thing, and talked just as if he didn't
+know any thing about nothing. 'A nigger's a nigger in South Carolina,'
+said he dryly, and inquired for a quid of tobacco, which I handed him,
+and he took one big enough for six. Said I, 'Mister, do you call a man
+a nigger what's a Portugee and a'n't black?' 'It depends on how he was
+born,' says he. 'Well, but ye can't make a white man a nigger nohow,
+whether it's in South Carolina or Scotland,' says I. 'Well, we don't
+stand upon such things here; we can show you niggers as white as you be,
+Mr. Mate,' says he. 'But, Mister, what's to do about our steward, that
+ye make yer inquiries about him; he ha'n't did nothing,' said I. 'Well,
+Mr. Mate; it's contrary to law to bring nigger stewards into our port.
+They're a bad set of fellows generally, and we claim the right to lock
+'em up to insure their good behavior and keep their bad influence away
+from our slaves. 'Tis not my office. I observed your arrival and wrecked
+condition, and merely came to take a look,' said he. 'Well now, Mister,
+our steward thinks as much of himself as anybody and wouldn't mix with
+your niggers on any account. But Mister! won't it make a difference
+because we're cast upon your shore in distress,' says I. 'Not a whit!
+it's contrary to law, and the law's got nothing to do with wind and
+weather. We love the sovereignty of our law too well to make any
+discrimination. We're a hospitable people, and always give folks plenty
+to eat, but we never allow any favors in the law. I'll call and see you
+in the morning,' said he, and away he went."
+
+This individual was Mr. Grimshaw, the principal mover of the powers that
+be, notwithstanding he asserted that it was not his office, and that he
+just walked round to take a look.
+
+During his visit on board, Manuel was absent on board a Boston bark,
+where he met a white steward, who gave him a sad picture of the
+Charleston jail and the cruel treatment that was inflicted upon
+prisoners there by starvation. He told him that he was once put in for
+a trifling offence, and nearly starved to death before he got out.
+"You will be sure to go there, Manuel," said he, "for they make no
+distinction; and if a man's a foreigner, and can't speak for himself,
+he'll stand no chance at all. I'd give 'em the slip afore I'd suffer
+such another punishment," he continued.
+
+This so worked upon the poor fellow's mind, that it became a matter of
+little moment whether he jumped overboard or remained on the ship. He
+waited until the mate had concluded, and commenced appealing to the
+Captain in a most pitiful manner. The disgrace of being imprisoned
+seemed worse than the punishment; and he did not seem to comprehend
+the intention that he should be imprisoned for no crime in the United
+States, when he had sailed around the world and visited a majority of
+its ports, both barbarous and civilized, without molestation. He wanted
+the Captain to pay him off and let him leave by some vessel in the
+morning. The Captain endeavored to soothe his fears by assuring him
+that there was no danger of his being imprisoned; that the people of
+Charleston had too much good feeling in them to be cruel to a distressed
+sailor; that the power of the consul was a sufficient guarantee of
+protection. "You are not among Patagonians, Manuel," said he. "There's
+no use of working your mind into a fever, you'll be as well taken
+care of here and be thought as much of as you would in London." This
+assurance had the effect to soothe his mind, upon which he left the
+cabin more at ease, and went into the forecastle to turn in with his
+little companion Tommy. Men had been detailed for the pumps as soon as
+the flood-tide made, and the Captain retired to his berth.
+
+It seemed there was a mutual understanding between the pilots and
+officers in regard to the arrival of colored stewards; and the pilot,
+after leaving the vessel, went directly to Mr. Grimshaw's office and
+reported a nut for him to crack: this brought him to the wharf to "look
+around."
+
+Early in the morning the crew were at their duty. The mate commenced
+giving orders to clear away the deck, and Manuel to make preparations
+for breakfast. He had scarcely commenced before two men, Messrs. Dunn
+and Dusenberry walked up and down the wharf for several minutes, then
+they would stand together and gaze as if to watch the approach of some
+vessel in the offing. At length, Dusenberry, seeing Manuel come to the
+gangway with a bucket in his hand, walked to her side, and, stepping on
+board, seized him by the collar, and drawing a paper from his pocket,
+said, "You're my prisoner! you must go to jail-come, be quick, sir; you
+must not stop to get your things; you must send for them after you're
+committed."
+
+The mate and several of the crew being near, at once gathered around
+him. At the same time Dunn, who was standing at the end of the wharf
+awaiting the result, thinking Dusenberry was opposed, came to his
+assistance. The officers and crew knew the respect due to the laws too
+well to oppose any obstacles to the constables in executing their duty.
+The mate, in a very polite manner, asked as a favor that they would
+leave the man a few minutes until the Captain came on deck. They yielded
+to his solicitation after a great deal of grumbling. The arrest made a
+deep feeling among the seamen, but none felt it more than little Tommy;
+he heard the noise upon deck, and came running with tears in his eyes,
+and cried, "Oh! Manuel, why Manuel, what are they going to take you
+away for? Won't I see you again, Manuel?" The little fellow's simplicity
+touched the feelings of all present. But the lame officer, Dunn, stood
+with a pair of handcuffs in his hand, as unmoved as a stoic, while
+Dusenberry expressed his impatience, and began to push the boy away, and
+motion to march him off.
+
+"Hold a bit!" said the mate. "The Captain will be on deck in a few
+minutes; he wants a word or two with you."
+
+"We can't stop unless we're compensated for our time. 'Tis no use to
+delay-'twon't do any good; he's a nigger to all intents and purposes. I
+know by the curl in his hair-they can't escape me, I've had too much to
+do with them!" said Dunn. "Yes, to be sure, I can tell a nigger by his
+ear, if his skin's as white as chalk!" said Dusenberry. "It's all gammon
+this bringing bright outlandish men here, and trying to pass them off
+for white folks. 'Twon't stick-you must come up and be registered, and
+you'll have a good time at the jail, my boy; there's plenty of bright
+gals in there, and you can have a wife, if you know how to do the
+courting."
+
+The Captain now came upon deck; and began to intercede, begging that
+they would not take Manuel away until he had seen the British Consul. "I
+know I can make every thing straight. There is no occasion to imprison
+my steward-he's neither a nigger nor a bad man; and I'll pledge you my
+honor that he shall not leave the ship, or even go upon the wharf, if
+you will only allow me to see the Consul before you take any further
+action," he continued.
+
+"That is beyond our power, sir; you must see the sheriff-you'll find him
+in his office bright and early. But you might as well put your appeal in
+your pocket, or send it to Queen Victoria, for all Consul Mathew can do
+for you. He's been kicking up a fuss for two years; but he might as well
+whistle agin a brickbat as to talk his nonsense about English niggers to
+South Carolina. He'll get tarred and feathered yet, if he a'n't mighty
+shy about his movements. Sorry, Captain, we can't accommodate you, but
+we're only actin' for the sheriff, and his orders are imperative to
+bring him right up. We must lock the fellow up. We don't make the law,
+nor we ha'n't the power to control it." Thus saying, Dunn took a little
+key from his pocket and begun to turn it in the handcuffs.
+
+"What!" said the Captain-"don't attempt to put them things on my man,
+upon your peril. Is that the way you treat a poor shipwrecked sailor
+in South Carolina, the State of boasted hospitality? No, sir! I will
+sacrifice my life before my man shall submit to such a thing," said the
+Captain, with his Scotch energy aroused.
+
+"Captain!" said Dunn, "we'd not be takin' the advantage of ye because
+ye're a stranger, but 'tis the law; and if we accommodates ye, sure
+it'll be at our own risk. But anyhow, Captain, ye'd be keepin' meself
+an' this gentleman a long time waiting, 'twouldn't be amiss to be giving
+us the usual perquisite. You won't miss it, and we've a great deal to do
+for small fees, that niver compinsate for the accommodation we be's to
+give everybody-an' the loss of time's the loss of money."
+
+"Give you a perquisite!--no, indeed; I never pay for such favors. Wait a
+few moments; I will accompany you myself, if you will not take my honor
+for his good conduct on the way to prison," continued the Captain.
+
+"Captain, sure ye needn't trouble yerself anyhow; we'll take yer honor
+that he don't run away, and if he does ye'll stand the odds at the
+sheriff's. Sure a case would niver pass Mr. Grimshaw s observation; but
+to plase ye, and considerin' the wreck, meself and Dusenberry 'll put
+him up without," said Dunn.
+
+During the conversation, Manuel plead hard to be heard before the
+Consul, having a mistaken idea that the Consul could protect him from
+all danger; and that if he could get a hearing before him, he was sure
+to be released. The Captain shook his hand and told him to be contented
+until the Consul's office opened, when he would come to the jail and see
+him. Manuel then turned to the crew, and shaking the hands of each, took
+his little bundle in one hand, and holding little Tommy by the other,
+(who accompanied him to the head of the wharf,) was soon out of sight.
+
+But will the reader believe what was the practice of these petty
+officers? We can assure them that such instances as the one we shall
+relate are not only practised in Charleston to an unlimited extent, but
+the fact is well known to both magistrates and the public; the former
+treat it as moonshine, and the latter rail against it, but never take
+proper action.
+
+Scarcely had little Tommy left them at the head of the wharf, before
+they intimated that it would be well to consider a morning dram. To this
+end, they walked into a "Dutch corner shop," and passing into the back
+room, gave sundry insinuations that could not be misunderstood. "Well!
+come, who pays the shot?" said Dunn, stepping up to the counter, and
+crooking his finger upon his nose at a dumpling-faced Dutchman, who
+stood behind the counter, waiting for his man to name it. The Dutchman
+was very short and very thick, leaving the impression that he had been
+very much depressed in his own country when young. He rubbed his
+hands and flirted his fingers in motion of anxiety, "Every ting vat de
+shentleman vant him--dare notin like to my zin and brondty vat him got
+mit ze zity," said Dutchy.
+
+"Gentlemen, I should be glad to have you drink with me, if it be proper
+to ask," said Manuel.
+
+"Oh! yes--certainly, yes!--just what we come for, something to cut
+away the cobwebs--'twouldn't do to go out in the morning fog without a
+lining," said Dunn.
+
+"Name it! name it! shentlemen," exclaimed the Dutchman, as he rapped his
+fingers upon the counter, and seemed impatient to draw forth his filthy
+stuff. They named their drinks, each with a different name. Manuel
+not being a Charleston graduate in the profession of mixing drinks and
+attaching slang names to them, Mr. Dusenberry undertook to instruct
+him in a choice. The Dutchman was an adept at mixing, and the "morning
+pulls" were soon set out to the extreme satisfaction of Dunn and
+Dusenberry. "All right! tip her down, my old fellow; none o' yer
+screwed faces over such liquor as that. We drink on the legitimate, in
+Charleston, and can put it down until we see stars," said Dusenberry,
+addressing himself to Manuel, who was making a wry face, while straining
+to swallow the cut-throat stuff.
+
+Dusenberry now left Manuel in charge of Dunn, saying he was going out
+to attend to some business. Manuel drew from his pocket a quarter of a
+Colombian doubloon, and throwing it upon the counter, told the Dutchman
+to give him change. The Dutchman picked it up, turned it over several
+times, and squinting at it, inquired, in a very unpretending manner,
+what its value was. He knew already, yet this was only done to try
+Manuel. At the same moment he winked to Dunn, who, stepping up, gave
+it a significant toss upon the counter. "The divil a bit more than two
+dollars; all right, Swizer," said he.
+
+"'Tis four dollar, West Inge-I want my change," said Manuel, shrugging
+his shoulders. "I no want no more than my own; and no man to cheat-e
+me."
+
+"Don't be bothering with your four dollars-sure ye a'n't in the West
+Inges now; and money's plenty in Charleston, and I can't bring up so
+much-half so much. Don't be bothering with yer West Inge nonsense. If
+ye try to raise a fuss here, I'll make the Captain suffer. Ye must learn
+that it won't do for a nigger to dispute a white man in Charleston; we'd
+twitch ye up by the same law; we'd put it to our own niggers, and ye'd
+git trised up, and about fifty paddles on yer bare butt." The Dutchman
+put down a dollar and seventy cents, but Manuel refused to take it up;
+when this fellow, Dunn, pretending to be the friend of Manuel, held out
+his hand, and telling the bar-keeper to put another dollar, which he
+did, he passed it hurriedly into Manuel's hand, and making a pass, told
+him to put it into his pocket.
+
+It was now about good business time for the Dutchman, and his customers
+were coming in with their bottles and pots in great numbers. The place
+was a little filthy hole, very black and dirty, about twelve feet long,
+and seven feet wide, with a high board counter almost in the centre. The
+only stock-in-trade that decorated it, was a few barrels of lager beer;
+several kegs, with names to set forth the different qualities of liquors
+painted upon them; a bushel basket about half full of onions, and a few
+salt fish in a keg that stood by the door. Around the room were
+several benches similar to those in guard-houses. Upon two of them were
+stretched two ragged and filthy-looking negroes, who looked as if they
+had been spending the night in debauchery. Dunn, as if to show his
+authority, limped toward them, and commenced fledging their backs
+with his hickory stick in a most unmerciful manner, until one poor old
+fellow, with a lame hand, cried out for mercy at the top of his voice.
+
+"It's a bad business keeping these niggers here all night, Swizer-you
+know I've done the clean thing with you several times," said Dunn,
+pointing his finger at the Dutchman; who winked, and coming from behind
+the counter, slipped something into his hand, and stepping to the door,
+assumed some threatning language against the negroes, should they ever
+came back to his store. A large portion of those who came for liquor
+were negroes, who looked as if they were parting with their last cent
+for stimulant, for they were ragged and dirty, and needed bread more
+than liquor. Their condition seemed pitiful in the extreme, and yet the
+Dutch "corner-shop keeper" actually got rich from their custom, and so
+craving was he upon their patronage, that he treated them with much more
+courtesy than his white customers.
+
+These "Dutch corner-shops" are notorious places in Charleston, and
+are discountenanced by respectable citizens, because they become the
+rendezvous of "niggers," who get into bad habits and neglect their
+masters' or mistresses' business. Yet the keepers exert such an
+influence at elections, that the officials not only fear them, but in
+order to secure their favors, leave their rascality unmolested. Well
+might a writer in the Charleston Courier of August 31, 1852, say--
+
+"We were astonished, with many others, at the sweeping charges made in
+the resolutions passed at the HUTCHINSON meeting at Hatch's Hall,
+and were ready to enlist at once to lend our voice to turn out an
+'administration' that for two years permitted 'moral sentiment to
+be abandoned,' 'truthfulness disregarded,' 'reverence for religion
+obliterated,' 'protection to religious freedom refused,' 'licentiousness
+allowed,' 'and a due administration for vice, neglected.'" These charges
+stand unrefuted, and with but one or two exceptions, we have never
+known one of those unlawful corner shops prosecuted by the present
+administration. And those single instances only where they were driven
+to notice the most flagrant abuses.
+
+It is strictly "contrary to law in Charleston," to sell liquor to a
+negro without an order from a white man; the penalty being fine
+and imprisonment. Yet, so flagrant has become the abuse, that it
+is notorious that hush-money is paid by a certain class of Dutch
+liquor-sellers to the officers. In nearly all the streets of Charleston,
+where there is a shanty or nook large enough to hold a counter and some
+tumblers, these wretches may be found dealing out their poisonous drugs
+to a poor, half-starved class of negroes, who resort to all kinds of
+dishonest means to get money to spend at their counters. These places
+are nearly all kept by foreigners, whose merciless avarice scruples at
+nothing, however mean. They soon become possessed of considerable means,
+and through their courtesy and subserviency to the negro-for they are
+the only class of whites that will beg his pardon, if they have offended
+him-carry on a sort of active rivalry with each other for his custom. It
+is from these miserable hells that seven-tenths of the crimes arise for
+which the poor negro is dragged to the work-house and made to suffer
+under the paddle.
+
+And yet these very men, whose connivance at vice and crime is
+disregarded by the law, rise and take position in society-not only
+entering into more respectable business-but joining in that phalanx
+who are seeking the life-blood of the old Southerner, and like a silent
+moth, working upon his decay. There is a deep significance in the answer
+so frequently given in Charleston to the interrogatory, "Who lives in
+that splendid dwelling-it seems to have been the mansion of a prince,
+but is somewhat decayed?"
+
+"Oh! bless me, yes! It was once the mansion of the So-and-sos, one of
+the first families, but they're very poor now. Mr. What-you-may-call-em
+owns it now-they say he didn't get it honestly. He kept a little
+grog-shop on the Bay, or sold bacon and whisky on the Bay, and made
+awful charges against poor So-and-so, and after a long trial in Chancery
+he got his house. He's a big fellow; now, I tell you, and is going to
+fit the house up for himself!"
+
+Dunn told Manuel to be seated, that there was no occasion for hurrying;
+it would be all right if he got to the sheriffs office at nine o'clock;
+and then commenced descanting upon the fine time he would have at the
+jail. "There's a right good lot of comrades there, me boy; ye'll have
+fiddling and dancing, plenty of gals, and a jolly time; and ye a'n't a
+criminal, ye know, so it won't be any thing at all, only keep up a stiff
+under-lip. Come, let us take another drink; I feel mighty husky this
+morning!" said he.
+
+Just at this time Dusenberry re-entered, puffing and blowing as if he
+had been engaged in a foot-race. "Another bird for old Grimshaw, at
+Commercial Wharf! I know'd she had one aboard, 'cause I seed him from
+the wharf," said he, in perfect ecstasy, pulling out a pencil and making
+a note in a little book.
+
+"Don't be a child," said Dunn. "Come, we have just proposed another
+drink; you join of course; ye niver says no,--eh, Duse?" They stepped to
+the counter, and Dunn, again, pointing his finger upon his nose at the
+Dutchman, who stood with his hands spread upon the counter, called for
+gin and bitters, Stoughton light. Turning to Manuel, who was sitting
+upon a bench with his head reclined upon his hand, apparently in deep
+meditation, he took him by the collar in a rude manner, and dragging him
+to the counter, said, "Come, by the pipers, rouse up your spirits, and
+don't be sulking, my old Portugee; take another O-be-joyful, and it'll
+put ye all right, and ye'll dance a hornpipe like a jim-crack."
+
+"Excuse me, sir; I think I have taken enough; do, please, either take me
+back to my vessel, or where you are going to. This is no place for me!"
+said Manuel.
+
+"Sure, what signifies; don't be talking your botheration here; a nigger
+musn't sauce a white man. Come, there's no use backing out; you must
+take a glass of Swizer's lager beer," said Dunn.
+
+Manuel looked around him, and then closing up very reluctantly, the
+Dutchman filled his glass with frothy beer, and the three touched
+glasses and drank. They then retired to a bench and commenced discussing
+the propriety of some point of their official privileges, while Manuel
+was left standing at the counter.
+
+"Who pay de drink vat shu get?" inquired the Dutchman, anxious to serve
+two little niggers who had just come in with bottles in their hands.
+
+"It was our friend's treat; come, my good fellow, do the clean thing
+according to Southern science. We'll put a good word in for you to the
+jailer; you won't lose nothing by it," said Dusenberry.
+
+"My friends, I work hard for my money, and have none to spend foolishly.
+The small amount is of little consequence, but I would much sooner make
+you a present of it, than to be drugged by pretence. I've no desire to
+indulge the propensities of others. Whatever you are going to do with
+me, do it; and let me know my fate. I am sick and fatigued, and have
+need for the doctor. Take me to a prison or where you please. I have
+done no crime; I want sleep, not punishment. Next time I shipwrecked,
+I get plank and go overboard 'fore I cum to Charleston." So saying, he
+pulled out fifty cents and threw it upon the counter, and the Dutchman
+swept it into the drawer, as if it was all right, and "just the change."
+
+"Shut up, you black rascal, you; you musn't talk that way in South
+Carolina; we'll have you stretched on the frame and paddled for
+insolence to a white man. D--n me, if you're in such a hurry for it,
+just come along," said Dusenberry; and reaching his hand over to Dunn,
+took the handcuffs from him and attempted to put them on Manuel's
+wrists. The poor fellow struggled and begged for more than ten minutes,
+and was wellnigh overpowering them, when Dusenberry drew a long
+dirk-knife from his bosom, and holding it in a threatening attitude
+at his breast, uttered one of those fierce yells such as are common to
+slave-hunters, whose business it is to hunt and run down runaway niggers
+with bloodhounds. "Submit, you black villain, or I'll have your heart's
+blood; bring a rope, and we'll trise him up here. Jump, be quick,
+Swizer!" said he, addressing himself to the Dutchman. The Dutchman ran
+into the front apartment; brought out a cord similar to a clothes-line;
+and commenced to undo it.
+
+"Do you give up now?" said Dusenberry, still holding the knife pointed
+at him. Manuel was in the habit of carrying a poniard when on shore in
+foreign countries, and put his hand to his breast-pocket to feel for
+it. He remembered that he had left it in his chest, and that resistance
+would be useless against a posse giving expression to such hostility to
+him. The shackles were put upon his hands with ruffianly force.
+
+"Oh! am I a man, or am I a brute? What have I done to receive such
+treatment? May God look down upon me and forgive me my transgressions;
+for in his hands are my rights, and he will give me justice," said
+Manuel, looking his cruel torturers in the face.
+
+"A man! No, by heavens, you're a nigger; an' it's that we'd he teaching
+you! Come, none of yer sermons here, trot off! We'll give you a
+handkerchief to cover your hands, if you're so d--d delicate about
+walking through the streets," said Dunn, throwing him an old red
+handkerchief, and marching him along through Broad street. Dusenberry
+now left him entirely in the charge of Dunn; while, as he said, he went
+to Adger's Wharf to keep his eye on another vessel that was approaching
+the dock. The tricks of this man Dunn were well known to those,
+connected with the police and sheriff's office; but, instead of being
+displaced for his many offences, he was looked upon by them as the best
+officer upon the rolls; and in fishing for mischievous niggers he was
+held as a perfect paragon. In this instance he was not contented with
+the outrages he had inflicted upon Manuel at the Dutch grog-shop, which
+he had forced him into, but he would stop in the public street to hold
+conversation with every cove he met, and keep the poor man standing for
+public gaze, like chained innocence awaiting the nod of a villain. The
+picture would have been complete, if a monster in human form were placed
+in the foreground applying the lash, according to the statute laws of
+South Carolina.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI. THE SHERIFF'S OFFICE.
+
+
+
+IT is nine o'clock, on the morning of the 24th March, 1852. Manuel was
+marched into the sheriff's office, situated in the court-house, on the
+corner of Broad and Meeting streets. A large table stood in the centre
+of the room, covered with sundry old papers and an inkstand. At one side
+was an old sofa, bearing strong evidence of its being worn out at the
+expense of the State. A few pine-wood and painted book-stands, several
+tip-staffs, old broken-backed chairs, and last, but not least, a
+wood-sawyer's buck-saw, stood here and there in beautiful disorder
+around the room; while, as if to display the immense importance of the
+office, a "cocked" hat with the judicial sword hung conspicuously above
+the old sofa. A door opened upon the left hand, leading into the clerk's
+office, where the books and archives of the office were kept. Mr.
+Kanapeaux, the incumbent, exhibited a great deal of good feeling, which
+it would have lost the sheriff none of his reputation to pattern after,
+and kept his office in very respectable order.
+
+"Come in 'ere, Manwell, or whatever yer name is," said Dunn, as he led
+the way into the presence of Mr. Grimshaw, the lean, haggard-looking man
+we have before described. His dark, craven features, as he sat peering
+through his glasses at the morning news, gave him the appearance of a
+man of whom little was, to be expected by those who had the misfortune
+to fall into his hands.
+
+"Ah! Dunn, you are the best officer in the city; 'pon my soul, these
+fellows can't escape you! Where did you pick up that nigger?" said he,
+with a look of satisfaction.
+
+"A fat fee case, Mr. Grimshaw, 'contrary to law;' he's a Portugee
+nigger. Never had so much trouble with a nigger in my life; I didn't
+know but the fellow was going to preach a sermon. The Captain-he belongs
+to a wrecked Englishman-wanted to come the gammon game with him, and
+pass him for a white man; but sure he couldn't come that game over
+meself and Duse, anyhow," said Dunn.
+
+Without saying a word, Manuel stood up before his accusers, upon this
+strange charge of "contrary to law."
+
+As he looked upon his accusers, he said, "What have I done to suffer a
+murderer's fate? Am I to be sold as a slave, because of the visitation
+of God? I have done no murder! No!--nor have I stolen in your land! and
+why did these men decoy me into"--
+
+"Silence! silence! You are in the sheriff's office," said Dunn, pointing
+his finger at his nose. "You can't come your John Bull nigger in South
+Carolina."
+
+This brought the sheriff's clerk to the door that led into the passage.
+"Dunn, I have warned you about these things several times; the public
+are getting wind of them; they'll bring this office into disrepute yet.
+You ought to know what effect the association of officials with these
+'corner-shop keepers' is already having in the community," said he.
+
+"How the divil do ye know what yer talking about; sure it's his honor's
+bisniss, and not yours at all, at all," said Dunn, addressing himself to
+Mr. Kanapeaux, and then looking at Mr. Grimshaw.
+
+"Mr. Kanapeaux, you must not interfere with the officers and their
+duty; attend to your business, and get, your book ready to register this
+nigger-boy," said Grimshaw.
+
+"Well, now, my good fellow," continued Grimshaw, "I dislike this
+business very much; it don't pay me enough for all the bother I have
+with it. 'Tis just a little filtering of fees, which makes the duty of
+my office exceedingly annoying. But we must respect the law. We do these
+things to protect our institutions and make them as light as possible. I
+might give you a great deal of trouble; I have the power, but I make it
+a point to consider men in your case, and we'll make you so comfortable
+that you won't think of being imprisoned. You must understand that it is
+'contrary to law' to come among our niggers in this way; it gives them
+fanciful ideas. There's such an infernal imperfect state of things as
+these abolitionists are getting every thing into, behooves us to watch
+the communications which are going on between, designing people and our
+slaves. We are a hospitable people--the world knows that--and have a
+religious respect for our laws, which we enforce without respect to
+persons. We'd like to let you go about the city, but then it's 'contrary
+to law.' Make up your mind, my good fellow, that you are among humane
+people, who will seek to benefit you among men of your class. Make
+yourself happy--and look upon me as a friend, and you will never be
+deceived. I control the jail, and my prisoners are as much attached to
+me as they would be to a father."
+
+"It must be humanity that puts these symbols of ignominy upon my hands,"
+said Manuel; "that confines me in a dungeon lest I should breathe a word
+of liberty to ears that know it only as a fable."
+
+Nobody had asked him to sit down, and, feeling the effect of his
+sickness and fatigue, he turned around as if to look for something
+to rest against. "You must not sit down,--take off your hat!" said
+Grimshaw.
+
+The poor fellow made an effort, but could not effect it with the fetters
+on his hands; at which, Dunn stepped up, and snatching it from his head,
+flung it upon the floor. "You should learn manners, my good fellow,"
+said Grimshaw, "when you come into a sheriff's office. It's a place of
+importance, and people always pay respect to it when they come into it;
+a few months in Charleston would make you as polite as our niggers."
+
+"Had you not better take the irons off the poor fellow's hands?--he
+looks as if he was tired out," said Mr. Kanapeaux, the clerk, who again
+came to the door and looked upon Manuel with an air of pity. The words
+of sympathy touched his feelings deeply; it was a simple word in his
+favour, so different from what he had met since he left the vessel, that
+he felt a kind friend had spoken in his behalf, and he gave way to his
+feeling in a gush of tears.
+
+"Good suggestion, Mr. Kanapeaux!" said Grimshaw. "Better take 'em off,
+Mr. Dunn; I don't think he'll give you any more difficulty. He seems
+like a 'likely fellow,' and knows, if he cuts up any nigger rascality
+in Charleston, he'll be snapped up. Now, my good fellow, put on your
+best-natured countenance, and stand as straight as a ramrod. Mr.
+Kanapeaux, get your book ready to register him," continued Grimshaw.
+
+Manuel now stood up under a slide, and his height and general features
+were noted in the following manner, in order to appease that sovereign
+dignity of South Carolina law, which has so many strange devices to show
+its importance:--"Contrary to Law." Violation of the Act of 1821, as
+amended, &c. &c. Manuel Pereira vs. State of South Carolina, Steward on
+board British Brig Janson, Captain Thompson. Entered 24th March, 1852.
+
+Height, 5 feet 8 1/2 inches.
+
+Complexion, light olive, (bright.)
+
+Features, sharp and aquiline.
+
+[Hair and eyes, dark and straight; the former inclined to curl.]
+
+General remarks:--Age, twenty-nine; Portuguese by birth; speaks rather
+broken, but politely; is intelligent, well formed, and good looking.
+Fees to Sheriff:
+
+To arrest, $2--Registry, $2 - $4 00 To Recog. $1.31--Constable. $1 - $2.31 To
+Commitment and discharge, $1.00
+
+$7.31
+
+Jail fees to be added when discharged.
+
+After these remarks were duly entered, and Mr. Grimshaw read another
+lecture to him on the importance of South Carolina law, and the kindness
+he would receive at his hands if he made himself con-tented, he was told
+that he could go and be committed. The poor fellow had stood up until he
+was nearly exhausted; yet, it was not enough to gratify the feelings
+of that miserable miscreant, Dunn. Scarcely had he left the sheriff's
+office, or passed two squares from the court-house, before he entered
+another Dutch grog-shop, a little more respectable in appearance-but
+not in character. They entered by a side door, which led into a back
+apartment provided with a table and two wooden settees. As Dunn entered,
+he was recognised by two negro-fellows, who were playing dominoes at the
+table. They arose and ran through the front store, into the street, as
+if some evil spirit had descended among them. The Dutchman sprang
+for the dominoes, and quickly thrust them into a tin measure which he
+secreted under the counter.
+
+"Ah! Drydez!" said Dunn; "you vagabond, you; up to the old tricks again?
+Ye Dutchmen are worse than the divil! It's meself'll make ye put a five
+for that. Come, fork it over straight, and don't be muttering yer Dutch
+lingo!"
+
+"Vat zue drink mit me dis morning? Misser Dunz' te best fellow vat comez
+in my shop," said Drydez.
+
+"Ah! stop yer botheration, and don't be comin' yer Dutch logger over
+an Irishman! put down the five dollars, and we'll take the drinks
+presently; meself and me friend here'll drink yer health," said Dunn,
+pointing to Manuel, who shook his head as much as to decline. The
+Dutchman now opened his drawer, and rolling a bill up in his fingers,
+passed it as if unobserved into the hands of Dunn.
+
+"Now, Drydez," said Dunn, "if ye want to do the clean thing, put a
+couple of brandy smashes-none of your d--d Dutch cut-throat brandy-the
+best old stuff. Come, me old chuck, (turning to Manuel and pulling him
+by the Whiskers,) cheer up, another good stiff'ner will put you on your
+taps again. South Carolina's a great State, and a man what can't
+be happy in Charleston, ought to be put through by daylight by the
+abolitionists."
+
+The Dutchman soon prepared the smashes, and supplying them with straws,
+put them upon the table, and seated chairs close at hand. "Excuse me!"
+said Manuel, "I've drunk enough already, and should like to lie down.
+I am unwell, and feel the effect of what I have already taken. I am
+too feeble. Pray tell me how far the prison is from here, and I will go
+myself."
+
+"Go, is it?--the divil a go ye'll go from this until ye drink the smash.
+None of yer Portugee independence here. We larn niggers the politeness
+of gintlemen in Charleston, me buck!" and seizing him by the collar,
+dragged him to the table, then grasping the tumbler with the other hand,
+he held it before his face. "Do you see that? and, bedad, ye'll drink
+it, and not be foolin', or I'd put the contents in your phiz," said he.
+
+Manuel took the glass, while the Dutchman stood chuckling over the very
+nice piece of fun, and the spice of Mr. Dunn's wit, as he called it.
+"Vat zu make him vat'e no vants too? You doz make me laugh so ven zu
+comes 'ere, I likes to kilt myself," said Drydez.
+
+A bright mulatto-fellow was now seen in the front store, making
+quizzical signs to the Dutchman; who understanding its signification,
+lost no time in slipping into his pocket a tumbler nearly half full of
+brandy and water; and stepping behind the division door, passed it slily
+to the mulatto, who equally as slily passed it down his throat; and
+putting a piece of money into the Dutchman's hand, stepped up to the
+counter, as if to wait for his change. "All right!" said the Dutchman,
+looking around at his shelves, and then again under the counter.
+
+"No so!" said the mulatto; "I want fourpence; you done' dat befor'
+several times; I wants my money."
+
+"Get out of my store, or I'll kick you out," said the Dutchman, and
+catching up a big club, ran from behind the counter and commenced
+belaboring the negro over the head in a most unmerciful manner. At this,
+the mulatto retreated into the lane, and with a volley of the vilest
+epithets, dared the Dutchman to come out, and he would whip him.
+
+Dunn ran to the scene, and ordered the negro to be off, and not use such
+language to a white man, that it was "contrary to law," and he would
+take him to the workhouse.
+
+"Why, massa, I knows what 'em respect white men what be gemmen like
+yersef, but dat Dutchman stand da'h a'n't no gentlem', he done gone
+tieffe my money seven time; an' I whip him sure-jus' lef' him come out
+here. I doesn't care for true, and God saw me, I be whip at the wukhouse
+next minute. He tief, an' lie, an 'e cheat me." The Dutchman stood at
+the door with the big stick in his hand-the negro in the middle of the
+lane with his fists in a pugilistic attitude, daring and threatening,
+while the limping Dunn stood by the side of the Dutchman, acting as
+a mediator. Manuel, taking advantage of the opportunity, emptied his
+tumbler down a large opening in the floor.
+
+It is a notorious fact in Charleston, that although the negro, whether
+he be a black or white one, is held in abject obedience to the white man
+proper, no matter what his grade may be, yet such is the covetous and
+condescending character of these groggery keepers, that they become
+courteous to the negro and submit to an equality of sociability. The
+negro, taking advantage of this familiarity, will use the most insulting
+and abusive language to this class of Dutchmen, who, either through
+cowardice, or fear of losing their trade, never resent it. We may say,
+in the language of Dunn, when he was asked if negroes had such liberties
+with white men in Charleston, "A nigger knows a Dutch shopkeeper better
+than he knows himself-a nigger dare not speak that way to anybody else."
+
+The Dutchman gets a double profit from the negro, and with it diffuses
+a double vice among them, for which they have to suffer the severest
+penalty. It is strictly "contrary to law" to purchase any thing from
+a negro without a ticket to sell it, from his master. But how is this
+regarded? Why, the shopkeeper foregoes the ticket, encourages the
+warehouse negro to steal, and purchases his stealings indiscriminately,
+at about one-half their value. We might enumerate fifty different modes
+practised by "good" legal voting citizens--totally regardless of the
+law--and exerting an influence upon the negro tenfold more direful
+than that which could possibly arise from the conversation of a few
+respectable men belonging to a friendly nation.
+
+Dunn, after driving the mulatto man from the door and upbraiding the
+Dutchman for his cowardice, returned to the table, and patting Manuel
+upon the back, drank the balance of his smash, saying, "Come, me good
+fellow, we must do the thing up brown, now; we've got the Dutchman
+nailed on his own hook. We must have another horn; it's just the stuff
+in our climate; the 'Old Jug's' close by, and they'll be makin' a parson
+of you when you get there. We've had a right jolly time; and ye can't
+wet your whistle when ye're fernint the gates."
+
+"I don't ask such favors, and will drink no more," said Manuel.
+
+"Fill her up, Drydez! fill her up! two more smashes-best brandy and
+no mistake. You must drink another, my old chuck-we'll bring the pious
+notions out o' ye in Charleston," said Dunn, turning around to Manuel.
+
+The Dutchman filled the glasses, and Dunn, laying his big hickory stick
+upon the counter, took one in each hand, and going directly to Manuel,
+"There, take it, and drink her off-no humbugging; yer mother niver gave
+such milk as that," said he.
+
+"Excuse me, sir; I positively will not!" said Manuel, and no sooner had
+he lisped the words, than Dunn threw the whole contents in his face.
+Enraged at such outrageous conduct, the poor fellow could stand it no
+longer, and fetched him a blow that levelled him upon the floor.
+
+The Dutchman ran to the assistance of Dunn, and succeeded in relieving
+him from his unenviable situation. Not satisfied, however, they
+succeeded, after a hard struggle, in getting him upon the floor, when
+the Dutchman-after calling the assistance of a miserable negro, held
+him down while Dunn beat him with his stick. His cries of "Murder" and
+"Help" resounded throughout the neighbourhood, and notwithstanding they
+attempted to gag him, brought several persons to the spot. Among them
+was a well-known master builder, in Charleston-a very muscular and a
+very humane man. The rascality of Dunn was no new thing to him, for he
+had had practical demonstrations of it upon his own negroes,--who had
+been enticed into the "corner shops" for the double purpose of the
+Dutchmen getting their money, and the officers getting hush-money from
+the owner.
+
+The moment he saw Dunn, he exclaimed, "Ah! you vagabond!" and springing
+with the nimbleness of a cat, struck the Dutchman a blow that sent him
+measuring his length, into a corner among a lot of empty boxes; then
+seizing Dunn by the collar, he shook him like a puppy, and brought him
+a slap with his open hand that double-dyed his red face, and brought a
+stream of claret from his nose; while the miserable nigger, who had been
+struggling to hold Manuel down, let go his hold, and ran as if his life
+was in danger. The scene was disgusting in the extreme. Manuel arose,
+with his face cut in several places, his clothes bedaubed with filth
+from the floor, and his neck and shirt-bosom covered with blood; while
+the aghast features of Dunn, with his red, matted hair, and his glaring,
+vicious eyes, bespattered with the combined blood of his victim and his
+own nasal organ, gave him the most fiendish look imaginable.
+
+The gentleman, after reprimanding the Dutchman for keeping up these
+miserable practices, which were disgracing the community, and bringing
+suffering, starvation, and death upon the slaves, turned to Dunn, and
+addressed him. "You are a pretty officer of the law! A villain upon the
+highway-a disgrace to your color, and a stain upon those who retain
+you in office. A man who has violated the peace and every principle of
+honest duty, a man who every day merits the worst criminal punishment,
+kept in the favor of the municipal department, to pollute its very name.
+If there is a spark of honesty left in the police department, I will use
+my influence to stop your conduct. The gallows will be your doom yet.
+You must not think because you are leagued in the same traffic."
+
+Dunn kept one of the worst and most notorious drinking-shops in
+Charleston, but, to reconcile his office with that strict requirement
+which never allowed any thing "contrary to law" in Charleston, he made
+his wife a "free trader." This special set of South Carolina may in
+effect be classed among its many singular laws. It has an exceedingly
+accommodating effect among bankrupt husbands, and acts as a masked
+battery for innumerable sins in a business or official line. It so
+happens, once in a while, that one of the "fair free dealers" gets
+into limbo through the force of some ruthless creditor; and the "Prison
+Bounds Act," being very delicate in its bearings, frequently taxes the
+gallantry of the chivalrous gentlemen of the Charleston bar that you are
+to go unpunished. And you, Drydez," said he, turning to the Dutchman, "I
+shall enter you upon the information docket, as soon as I go down into
+the city."
+
+"Zeu may tu vat zeu plas mit me-te mayor bees my friend, an' he knowz
+vot me ams. Yuz sees zel no bronty, no zin! Vot yu to mit de fine, ah?"
+* * *
+
+"I'd like to see you do that same agin Mr.--. It wouldn't be savin'
+yerself a pace-warrant, and another for assault and battery! Sure
+magistrate Gyles is a first-rate friend of me own, and he'd not suffer
+me imposed on. The d--d nigger was obstinate and wouldn't go to jail,"
+said Dunn in a cowardly, whimpering manner.
+
+"Oh yez, me heard mit 'im swore, vat he no go to zale!" rejoined the
+Dutchman anxiously.
+
+"Tell me none of your lies," said he; "you are both the biggest rascals
+in town, and carry on your concerted villany as boldly as if you had
+the control of the city in your hands." Manuel was trembling under the
+emotions of grief and revenge. His Portuguese blood would have revenged
+itself at the poniard's point, but fortunately he had left it in his
+chest. He saw that he had a friend at his hand, and with the earnestness
+of a child, resigned himself to his charge.
+
+In a few minutes quiet was produced, and the gentleman expressing a
+desire to know how the trouble originated, inquired of Manuel how it
+was brought about. But no sooner had he commenced his story, than he was
+interrupted by Dunn asserting his right, according to the laws of South
+Carolina, to make his declaration, which could not be refuted by the
+negro's statement, or even testimony at law; and in another moment
+jumped up, and taking Manuel by the collar, commanded him to come along
+to jail; and turning to the gentleman, dared him to interfere with his
+duty.
+
+"I know how you take people to jail, very well. I'll now see that you
+perform that duty properly, and not torture prisoners from place to
+place before you get there. You inflict a worse punishment in taking
+poor, helpless people to jail, than they suffer after they get there!"
+said he; and immediately joined Manuel and walked to the jail with him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII. THE OLD JAIL.
+
+
+
+THERE are three institutions in Charleston-either of which would be
+a stain upon the name of civilization-standing as emblems of the
+time-established notions of a people, and their cherished love for
+the ancestral relics of a gone-by age. Nothing could point with more
+unerring aim than these sombre monuments do, to the distance behind the
+age that marks the thoughts and actions of the Charlestonians. They are
+the poor-house, hospital, and jail; but as the latter only pertains
+to our present subject, we prefer to speak of it alone, and leave
+the others for another occasion. The workhouse may be said to form an
+exception-that being a new building, recently erected upon a European
+plan. It is very spacious, with an extravagant exterior, surmounted
+by lofty semi-Gothic watch-towers, similar to the old castles upon the
+Rhine. So great was the opposition to building this magnificent temple
+of a workhouse, and so inconsistent, beyond the progress of the age,
+was it viewed by the "manifest ancestry," that it caused the mayor his
+defeat at the following hustings. "Young Charleston" was rebuked for its
+daring progress, and the building is marked by the singular cognomen
+of "Hutchinson's Folly." What is somewhat singular, this magnificent
+building is exclusively for negroes. One fact will show how progressive
+has been the science of law to govern the negro, while those to which
+the white man is subjected are such as good old England conferred upon
+them some centuries ago. For felonious and burglarious offences, a white
+man is confined in the common jail; then dragged to the market-place,
+stripped, and whipped, that the negroes may laugh "and go see buckra
+catch it;" while a negro is sent to the workhouse, confined in his cell
+for a length of time, and then whipped according to modern science,--but
+nobody sees it except by special permission. Thus the negro has the
+advantage of science and privacy.
+
+The jail is a sombre-looking building, with every mark of antiquity
+standing boldly outlined upon its exterior. It is surrounded by a
+high brick wall, and its windows are grated with double rows of bars,
+sufficiently strong for a modern penitentiary. Altogether, its dark,
+gloomy appearance strikes those who approach it, with the thought and
+association of some ancient cruelty. You enter through an iron-barred
+door, and on both sides of a narrow portal leading to the right are four
+small cells and a filthy-looking kitchen, resembling an old-fashioned
+smoke-house. These cells are the debtors'; and as we were passing out,
+after visiting a friend, a lame "molatto-fellow" with scarcely rags to
+cover his nakedness, and filthy beyond description, stood at what was
+called the kitchen door. "That poor dejected object," said our friend,
+"is the cook. He is in for misdemeanor-one of the peculiar shades of
+it, for which a nigger is honored with the jail." "It seems, then, that
+cooking is a punishment in Charleston, and the negro is undergoing the
+penalty," said we. "Yes!" said our friend; "but the poor fellow has a
+sovereign consolation, which few niggers in Charleston can boast of-and
+none of the prisoners here have-he can get enough to eat."
+
+The poor fellow held out his hand as we passed him, and said, "Massa,
+gin poor Abe a piece o' 'bacca'?" We freely gave him all in our
+possession.
+
+On the left side, after passing the main iron door, are the jailer's
+apartments. Passing through another iron door, you ascend a narrow,
+crooked stairs and reach the second story; here are some eight or nine
+miserable cells-some large and some small-badly ventilated, and entirely
+destitute of any kind of furniture: and if they are badly ventilated
+for summer, they are equally badly provided with means to warm them in
+winter. In one of these rooms were nine or ten persons, when we visited
+it; and such was the morbid stench escaping from it, that we were
+compelled to put our handkerchiefs to our faces. This floor is
+appropriated for such crimes as assault and battery; assault and
+battery, with intent to kill; refractory seamen; deserters; violating
+the statutes; suspicion of arson and murder; witnesses; all sorts of
+crimes, varying from the debtor to the positive murderer, burglar,
+and felon. We should have enumerated, among the rest, all stewards,
+(colored,) whether foreign or domestic, who are committed on that
+singular charge, "contrary to law." And it should have been added, even
+though cast away upon our "hospitable shores." Among all these different
+shades of criminals, there must be some very bad men. And we could
+recount three who were pointed out to us, as very dangerous men, yet
+were allowed the favor of this floor and its associations. One was
+an Irish sailor, who was sentenced to three years and nine months'
+imprisonment by the United States court, for revolt and a desperate
+attempt to murder the captain of a ship; the next was a German, a
+soldier in the United States army, sentenced to one year and eight
+months' imprisonment for killing his comrade; and the third was an
+English sailor, who killed a woman-but as she happened to be of doubtful
+character, the presiding judge of the sessions sentenced him to a light
+imprisonment, which the Governor very condescendingly pardoned after a
+few weeks.
+
+The two former acted as attendants, or deputy jailers; with the
+exception of turning the key, which privilege the jailer reserved for
+himself exclusively. The principle may seem a strange one, that places
+men confined upon such grave charges in a superior position over
+prisoners; and may be questionable with regard to the discipline itself.
+
+From this floor, another iron door opened, and a winding passage led
+into the third and upper story, where a third iron door opened into a
+vestibule, on the right and left of which were grated doors secured with
+heavy bolts and bars. These opened into narrow portals with dark, gloomy
+cells on each side. In the floor of each of these cells was a large iron
+ring-bolt, doubtless intended to chain refractory prisoners to; but we
+were informed that such prisoners were kept in close stone cells, in
+the yard, which were commonly occupied by negroes and those condemned
+to capital punishment. The ominous name of this third story was "Mount
+Rascal," intended, no doubt, as significant of the class of prisoners
+it contained. It is said that genius is never idle: the floor of these
+cells bore some evidence of the fact in a variety of very fine specimens
+of carving and flourish work, done with a knife. Among them was a
+well-executed crucifix; with the Redeemer, on Calvary-an emblem of hope,
+showing how the man marked the weary moments of his durance. We spoke
+with many of the prisoners, and heard their different stories, some of
+which were really painful. Their crimes were variously stated, from that
+of murder, arson, and picking pockets, down to the felon who had stolen
+a pair of shoes to cover his feet; one had stolen a pair of pantaloons,
+and a little boy had stolen a few door-keys. Three boys were undergoing
+their sentence for murder. A man of genteel appearance, who had been
+sentenced to three years imprisonment, and to receive two hundred and
+twenty lashes in the market, at different periods, complained bitterly
+of the injustice of his case. Some had been flogged in the market, and
+were awaiting their time to be flogged again and discharged; and others
+were confined on suspicion, and had been kept in this close durance
+for more than six months, awaiting trial. We noticed that this worst of
+injustice, "the law's delay," was felt worse by those confined on the
+suspicion of some paltry theft, who, even were they found guilty by a
+jury, would not have been subjected to more than one week imprisonment.
+Yet such was the adherence to that ancient system of English criminal
+jurisprudence, that it was almost impossible for the most innocent
+person to get a hearing, except at the regular sessions, "which sit
+seldom, and with large intervals between." There is indeed a city
+court in Charleston, somewhat more modern in its jurisprudence than the
+sessions. It has its city sheriff, and its city officers, and holds its
+terms more frequently. Thus is Charleston doubly provided with sheriffs
+and officials. Both aspire to a distinct jurisdiction in civil and
+criminal cases. Prisoners seem mere shuttlecocks between the sheriffs,
+with a decided advantage in favor of the county sheriff, who is autocrat
+in rei over the jail; and any criminal who has the good fortune to get
+a hearing before the city judge, may consider himself under special
+obligation to the county sheriff for the favor.
+
+We noticed these cells were much cleaner than those below, yet there
+was a fetid smell escaping from them. This we found arose from the tubs
+being allowed to stand in the rooms, where the criminals were closely
+confined, for twenty-four hours, which, with the action of the damp,
+heated atmosphere of that climate, was of itself enough to breed
+contagion. We spoke of the want of ventilation and the noxious fumes
+that seemed almost pestilential, but they seemed to have become
+habituated to it, and told us that the rooms on the south side were
+lighter and more comfortable. Many of them spoke cheerfully, and
+endeavored to restrain their feelings, but the furrows upon their
+haggard countenances needed no tongue to utter its tale.
+
+Hunger was the great grievance of which they complained; and if
+their stories were true--and we afterward had strong proofs that they
+were--there was a wanton disregard of common humanity, and an abuse of
+power the most reprehensible. The allowance per day was a loaf of bad
+bread, weighing about nine ounces, and a pint of thin, repulsive soup,
+so nauseous that only the most necessitated appetite could be forced
+to receive it, merely to sustain animal life. This was served in a
+dirty-looking tin pan, without even a spoon to serve it. One man told us
+that he had subsisted on bread and water for nearly five weeks-that
+he had lain down to sleep in the afternoon and dreamed that he was
+devouring some wholesome nourishment to stay the cravings of his
+appetite, and awoke to grieve that it was but a dream. In this manner
+his appetite was doubly aggravated, yet he could get nothing to appease
+its wants until the next morning. To add to this cruelty, we found two
+men in close confinement, the most emaciated and abject specimens of
+humanity we have ever beheld. We asked ourselves, "Lord God! was it
+to be that humanity should descend so low?" The first was a forlorn,
+dejected-looking creature, with a downcast countenance, containing
+little of the human to mark his features. His face was covered with
+hair, and so completely matted with dirt and made fiendish by the tufts
+of coarse hair that hung over his forehead, that a thrill of horror
+invaded our feelings. He had no shoes on his feet; and a pair of ragged
+pantaloons, and the shreds of a striped shirt without sleeves, secured
+around the waist with a string, made his only clothing. In truth, he had
+scarce enough on to cover his nakedness, and that so filthy and swarming
+with vermin, that he kept his shoulders and hands busily employed; while
+his skin was so incrusted with dirt as to leave no trace of its original
+complexion. In this manner he was kept closely confined, and was more
+like a wild beast who saw none but his keepers when they came to throw
+him his feed. Whether he was kept in this manner for his dark deeds or
+to cover the shame of those who speculated upon his misery, we leave to
+the judgment of the reader.
+
+We asked this poor mortal what he had done to merit such a punishment?
+He held his head down, and motioned his fevered lips. "Speak out!" said
+we, "perhaps we can get you out." "I had no shoes, and I took a pair
+of boots from the gentleman I worked with," said he in a low, murmuring
+tone,
+
+"Gracious, man!" said we, "a pair of boots! and is that all you are here
+for?"
+
+"Yes, sir! he lives on the wharf, is very wealthy, and is a good man:
+'t wasn't his fault, because he tried to get me out if I'd pay for the
+boots, but they wouldn't let him."
+
+"And how long have you been thus confined?" said we.
+
+"Better than five months-but it's because there a'n't room up stairs.
+They've been promising me some clothes for a long time, but they don't
+come," he continued.
+
+"And how much longer have you to stop in this condition?"
+
+"Well, they say 'at court sets in October; it's somethin' like two
+months off; the grand jury'll visit the jail then, and maybe they'll
+find a bill' against me, and I'll be tried. I dont't care if they only
+don't flog me in that fish-market."
+
+"Then you have not been tried yet? Well, may God give that man peace
+to enjoy his bounty, who would consign a poor object like thee to such
+cruelty!" said we.
+
+"I was raised in Charleston-can neither read nor write-I have no father,
+and my mother is crazy in the poor-house, and I work about the city for
+a living, when I'm out!" said he. There was food for reflection in
+this poor fellow's simple story, which we found to be correct, as
+corroborated by the jailer.
+
+"Do you get enough to eat?" we asked.
+
+"Oh no, indeed! I could eat twice as much-that's the worst on't: 't
+wouldn't be bad only for that. I git me loaf' in the mornin', and me
+soup at twelve, but I don't git nothin' to eat at night, and a feller's
+mighty hungry afore it's time to lay down," said he.
+
+We looked around the room, and not seeing any thing to sleep upon,
+curiosity led us to ask him where he slept.
+
+"The jail allows us a blanket-that's mine in the corner: I spread it
+at night when I wants to go to bed," he answered, quite contentedly. We
+left the poor wretch, for our feelings could withstand it no longer. The
+state of society that would thus reduce a human being, needed more pity
+than the calloused bones reduced to such a bed. His name was Bergen.
+
+The other was a young Irishman, who had been dragged to jail in his
+shirt, pantaloons, and hat, on suspicion of having stolen seven dollars
+from a comrade. He had been in jail very near four months, and in regard
+to filth and vermin was a counterpart of the other. A death-like smell,
+so offensive that we stopped upon the threshold, escaped from the room
+as soon as the door opened, enough to destroy a common constitution,
+which his emaciated limbs bore the strongest evidence of.
+
+The prisoners upon the second story were allowed the privilege of the
+yard during certain hours in the day, and the debtors at all hours in
+the day; yet, all were subjected to the same fare. In the yard were a
+number of very close cells, which, as we have said before, were kept
+for negroes, refractory criminals, and those condemned to capital
+punishment. These cells seemed to be held as a terror over the
+criminals, and well they might, for we never witnessed any thing more
+dismal for the tenement of man.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII. HOW IT IS.
+
+
+
+IT is our object to show the reader how many gross abuses of power exist
+in Charleston, and to point him to the source. In doing this, the task
+becomes a delicate one, for there are so many things we could wish were
+not so, because we know there are many good men in the community whose
+feelings are enlisted in the right, but their power is not coequal; and
+if it were, it is checked by an opposite influence.
+
+The more intelligent of the lower classes look upon the subject of
+politics in its proper light--they see the crashing effect the doctrine
+of nullification has upon their interests; yet, though their numbers
+are not few, their voice is small, and cannot sound through the channels
+that make popular influence. Thus all castes of society are governed by
+impracticable abstractions.
+
+The jail belongs to the county--the municipal authorities have no voice
+in it; and the State, in its legislative benevolence, has provided
+thirty cents a day for the maintenance of each prisoner. This small sum,
+in the State of South Carolina, where provision is extremely high, may
+be considered as a paltry pittance; but more especially so when the
+magnificent pretensions of South Carolina are taken into consideration,
+and a comparison is made between this meagre allowance and that of other
+States. Even Georgia, her sister State, and one whose plain modesty is
+really worthy of her enterprising citizens, takes a more enlightened
+view of a criminal's circumstances-allows forty-four cents a day for his
+maintenance, and treats him as if he was really a human being. But
+for this disparity and the wanton neglect of humane feelings South
+Carolinians excuse themselves upon the ground that they have no
+penitentiary; nor do they believe in that system of punishment,
+contending that it creates an improper competition with the honest
+mechanic, and gives countenance to crime, because it attempts to improve
+criminals. The common jail is made the place of confinement, while the
+whipping-post and starvation supply the correctives.
+
+The sheriff being created an absolute functionary, with unlimited
+powers to control the jail in all its varied functions, without either
+commissioners or jail-committee, what state of management may be
+expected? The court gives no specific direction as to the apartment or
+mode of confinement when sentencing a criminal; consequently, it becomes
+an established fact that the legislative confidence deposed in the
+sheriff is used as a medium of favors, to be dispensed as best suits the
+feelings or interests of the incumbent. Such power in the hands of an
+arbitrary, vindictive, or avaricious man, affords unlimited means of
+abuse, and without fear of exposure.
+
+It may be inferred from what we have said that the jailer was relax in
+his duty. This is not the case, for we have good authority that a more
+kind-hearted and benevolent man never filled the office. But his power
+was so restricted by those in absolute control, that his office became a
+mere turnkey's duty, for which he was paid the pittance of five hundred
+dollars a year or thereabouts. Thus he discharged his duty according to
+the instructions of the sheriff, who, it was well known, looked upon
+the jail as a means of speculation; and in carrying out his purposes, he
+would give very benevolent instructions in words, and at the same time
+withhold the means of carrying them out, like the very good man who
+always preached but never practised.
+
+Now, how is it? What is the regimen of this jail-prison and how is it
+provided? We will say nothing of that arduous duty which the jailer
+performs for his small sum; nor the report that the sheriff's office
+is worth fourteen thousand dollars a year: these things are too well
+established. But the law provides thirty cents a day for the prisoner's
+maintenance, which shall be received by the sheriff, who is to procure
+one pound of good bread, and one pound of good beef per day for each
+man. Now this provision is capable of a very elastic construction. The
+poor criminal is given a loaf of bad bread, costing about three cents,
+and a pound of meat, the most unwholesome and sickly in its appearance,
+costing five cents. Allowing a margin, however, and we may say the
+incumbent has a very nice profit of from eighteen to twenty cents
+per day on each prisoner. But, as no provision is made against the
+possibility of the criminal eating his meat raw, he is very delicately
+forced to an alternative which has another profitable issue for the
+sheriff; that of taking a pint of diluted water, very improperly called
+soup. Thus is carried out that ancient law of England which even she
+is now ashamed to own. Our feelings are naturally roused against the
+perpetration of such abuses upon suffering humanity. We struggle between
+a wish to speak well of her whose power it is to practise them, and an
+imperative duty that commands us to speak for those who cannot speak for
+themselves.
+
+These things could not exist if the public mind was properly
+enlightened. It is unnecessary to spend many words in exposing
+such palpable abuses, or to trace the cause of their existence and
+continuance. One cause of this is the wilful blindness and silly
+gasconade of some of those who lead and form public opinion. With South
+Carolinians, nothing is done in South Carolina that is not greater than
+ever was done in the United States-no battles were ever fought that
+South Carolina did not win-no statesman was ever equal to Mr. Calhoun-no
+confederacy would be equal to the Southern, with South Carolina at its
+head-no political doctrines contain so much vital element as secession,
+and no society in the Union is equal to South Carolina for caste and
+elegance-not excepting the worthy and learned aristocracy of Boston.
+
+A will to do as it pleases and act as it pleases, without national
+restraint, is the great drawback under which South Carolina sends forth
+her groaning tale of political distress. Let her look upon her dubious
+glory in its proper light-let her observe the rights of others, and
+found her acts in justice!--annihilate her grasping spirit, and she will
+find a power adequate to her own preservation. She can then show to the
+world that she gives encouragement to the masses, and is determined to
+persevere in that moderate and forbearing policy which creates its own
+protection, merits admiration abroad, instead of rebuke, and which
+needs no gorgeous military display to marshal peace at the point of the
+bayonet.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV. MANUEL PEREIRA COMMITTED.
+
+
+
+IT was nearly eleven o'clock as they ascended the jail steps and rang
+the bell for admittance. The jailer, a stout, rough-looking man, opened
+the iron door, and as Manuel was about to step over the stone sill, Dunn
+gave him a sudden push that sent him headlong upon the floor. "Heavens!
+what now?" inquired the jailer with a look of astonishment, and at the
+next moment Dunn raised his foot to kick Manuel in the face.
+
+"You infernal beast!" said the jailer, "you are more like a savage than
+a man-you are drunk now, you vagabond," and jumped in between them to
+save him from the effect of the blow. As he did this, the gentleman who
+accompanied them from the "corner-shop," as a protection against Dunn's
+cruelty, fetched Dunn a blow on the back of the neck that made him
+stagger against a door, and created such confusion as to arouse the
+whole jail. Turning to Manuel, he, with the assistance of the jailer,
+raised him from the ground and led him into the jail-office. "Mister
+jailer," said Dunn, "the prisoner is mine until such times as you
+receipt the commitment, and I demand protection from you against this
+man. He has committed two violent assaults upon me, when I'd be doing me
+duty."
+
+"You have violated all duty, and are more like an incarnate fiend. You
+first decoy men into rum-shops, and then you plunder and abuse them,
+because you think they are black and can get no redress. You abused that
+man unmercifully, because you knew his evidence was not valid against
+you!" said the gentleman, turning to the jailer, and giving him the
+particulars of what he saw in the "corner-shop," and what cruelties he
+had seen practised by Dunn on former occasions.
+
+The jailer looked upon Manuel with commiseration, and handed him a chair
+to sit down on. The poor fellow was excited and fatigued, for he had
+eaten nothing that day, and been treated more like a brute than a human
+being from the time, he left the ship until he arrived at the jail. He
+readily accepted the kind offer, and commenced to tell the story of his
+treatment.
+
+"You need' not tell me,--I know too much of that man already. It has
+long been a mystery to me why he is retained in office."--
+
+Here Dunn interrupted. "Sure it's yer master I'd obey and not yerself,
+an' I'd do what I'd plase with prisoners, and, it's his business and not
+yeers. If ye had yer way, sure you'd be makin' white men of every nigger
+that ye turned a key upon."
+
+"Give me none of your insolence," said the jailer. "You have no
+authority beyond my door. Your brutal treatment to prisoners has caused
+me an immense deal of trouble-more than my paltry pay would induce me
+to stay for. Suppose you were indicted for these outrages? What would be
+the result?" asked the jailer.
+
+"Sure it's meself could answer for the sheriff, without yer bothering
+yerself. I'd not work for yer, but for him; and he's yer master anyhow,
+and knows all about it. Give me the receipt, and that's all I'd ax yer.
+When a nigger don't mind me, I just makes him feel the delight of a
+hickory stick."
+
+"Yes, if you had the shame of a man in you, you'd not make a beast of
+yourself with liquor, and treat these poor stewards as if they were
+dogs," said the jailer.
+
+"Indeed, ye might learn a thing or two if ye was a politician like
+meself, and belonged to the secession party. An' if his honor the
+sheriff-for he's a dacent man-knew ye'd be preachin' in that shape, ye
+wouldn't keep the jail f'nent the morning. Be letting me out, and make
+much of the nigger; ye have him there."
+
+The jailer unlocked the door and allowed him to pass out, with a
+pertinent rebuke. This was but a trifling affair in Dunn's ear, for he
+knew his master's feelings too well, and was backed by him in his most
+intolerable proceedings. Returning to the office, he looked at the
+commitment, and then again at Manuel. "This is a 'contrary to law' case,
+I see, Mr. Manuel; you are a likely fellow too, to come within that,"
+said he.
+
+"Yes. If I understand him right, he's a shipwrecked sailor, belonging
+to a foreign vessel that was driven in here in distress," said the
+man. "It's a hard law that imprisons a colored seaman who comes here
+voluntarily; but it seems beyond all manner of precedent to imprison
+a shipwrecked man like this, especially when he seems so respectable.
+There are no circumstances to warrant the enforcement of such a law."
+Thus saying, he left the jail.
+
+Be it said of the jailer, to his honor, so far as personal kindness
+went, he did his utmost--brought him water to wash himself, and gave
+him some clean clothes. After which, he was registered upon the criminal
+calendar as follows:--
+
+"March 24, 1852.--Manuel Peirire.--[Committed by] Sheriff--Sheriff.
+Crime--Contrary to law."
+
+Now the jailer had done his duty, so far as his feelings were concerned;
+but, such were the stern requirements of the law, and his functions
+so restricted by Mr. Grimshaw, that he dare not make distinctions. He
+called Daley, one of the criminal assistants, and ordered him to show
+the prisoner his room.
+
+"Here, my boy, take yer blanket," said Daley; and throwing him a coarse,
+filthy-looking blanket, told him to roll it up and follow him. "It's on
+the second floor we'll put ye, among the stewards; there's a nice lot
+on 'em to keep yer company, and ye'll have a jolly time, my boy." Manuel
+followed through the second iron door until he came to a large door
+secured with heavy bolts and bars, which Daley began to withdraw and
+unlock. "Don't be takin' it amiss; it's a right good crib, savin' the'
+bed, an' it's that's the worst of it. Bad luck to old Grimshaw, an'
+himself thinks everybody's bones be's as tuf as his own," said Daley,
+and threw open the heavy doors, sending forth those ominous prison
+sounds. "All here? Ah! yer a pretty set of lambs, as the British consul
+calls yees. Have ye ever a drop to spare?" At this, three or four
+respectable-looking black men came to the door and greeted Manuel.
+"Come, talk her out, for th' auld man'll be on the scent." At this, one
+of the confined stewards, a tall, good-looking mulatto man, ran his hand
+into a large opening in the wall, and drew forth a little soda-bottle
+filled with Monongahela whisky. Without giving reasonable time for
+politeness, Daley seized the bottle, and putting it to his mouth, gauged
+about half its contents into his homony dept, smacked his lips,
+wiped his mouth with his cuff, and, passing the balance back, shut and
+rebolted the door, after saying, "Good luck till yees, an' I wish yees
+a merry time." The reader may imagine what provision the State or the
+sheriff had made for the comfort of these poor men, one of whom was
+imprisoned because it was "contrary to law" to be driven into the port
+of Charleston in distress, and the rest, peaceable, unoffending citizens
+belonging to distant States and countries, and guilty of no crime, when
+we describe the room and regimen to which they were subjected. The room
+was about twenty-six feet long and ten feet wide. The brick walls were
+plastered and colored with some kind of blue wash, which, however, was
+so nearly obliterated with dirt and the damp of a southern climate, as
+to leave but little to show what its original color was. The walls were
+covered with the condensed moisture of the atmosphere, spiders hung
+their festooned network overhead, and cockroaches and ants, those
+domesticated pests of South Carolina, were running about the floor in
+swarms, and holding all legal rights to rations in superlative contempt.
+Two small apertures in the wall, about fourteen inches square, and
+double-barred with heavy flat iron, served to admit light and air. The
+reader may thus judge of its gloomy appearance, and what a miserable
+unhealthy cell it must have been in which to place men just arrived from
+sea. There was not the first vestige of furniture in the room, not;
+even a bench to sit upon, for the State, with its gracious hospitality,
+forgot that men in jail ever sit down; but it was in keeping with all
+other things that the State left to the control of its officials.
+
+"Am I to be punished in this miserable place? Why, I cannot see where
+I'm going; and have I nothing to lay down upon but the floor, and that
+creeping with live creatures?" inquired Manuel of those who were already
+inured to the hardship.
+
+"Nothing! nothing! Bring your mind to realize the worst, and forget the
+cruelty while you are suffering it; they let us out a part of the day.
+We are locked up to-day because one of the assistants stole my friend's
+liquor, and he dared to accuse him of the theft, because he was a white
+man," said a tall, fine-looking mulatto man by the name of James Redman,
+who was steward on board a Thomastown (Maine) ship, and declared that he
+had visited Charleston on a former occasion, and by paying five dollars
+to one of the officers, remained on board of the ship unmolested.
+
+"And how long shall I have to suffer in this manner?" inquired Manuel.
+"Can I not have my own bed and clothing?"
+
+"Oh, yes," said Redman; "you can have them, but if you bring them here,
+they'll not be worth anything when you leave; and the prisoners upon
+this floor are so starved and destitute, that necessity forces them
+to steal whatever comes in their way; and the assistants are as much
+implicated as the prisoners. You'll fare hard; but just do as we do in
+a calm, wait for the wind to blow, and pray for the best. If you say any
+thing, or grumble about it, the sheriff will order you locked, up on the
+third story, and that's worse than death itself. The first thing you do,
+make preparations for something to eat. We pay for it here, but don't
+get it; and you'd starve afore you'd eat what they give them poor white
+prisoners. They suffer worse than we do, only they have cleaner rooms."
+
+"I pray for my deliverance from such a place as this."
+
+His manners and appearance at once enlisted the respect of those
+present, and they immediately set to work, with all the means at hand,
+to make him comfortable. Joseph Jociquei, a young man who had been taken
+from a vessel just arrived from Rio, and was more fortunate than the
+rest, in having a mattrass, seeing Manuel's weak condition, immediately
+removed it from its place, and spreading it upon the floor, invited him
+to lay down. The invitation was as acceptable as it was kind on the
+part of Jociquei, and the poor fellow laid his weary limbs upon it, and
+almost simultaneously fell into a profound sleep. Manuel continued to
+sleep. His face and head were scarred in several places; which were
+dressed and covered with pieces of plaster that the jailer had supplied.
+His companions, for such we shall call those who were confined with him,
+sat around him, discussing the circumstances that brought him there, and
+the manner in which they could best relieve his suffering. "It's just
+as I was sarved," said Redman. "And I'll bet that red-headed constable,
+Dunn, brought him up: and abused him in all them Dutch shops. I didn't
+know the law, and he made me give him three dollars not to put the
+handcuffs upon me, and then I had to treat him in every grog-shop we
+came to. Yes, and the last shop we were in, he throw'd liquor in me
+face, cursed the Dutchman that kept the shop, kick'd me, and tried every
+way in the world to raise a fuss. If I hadn't know'd the law here too
+well, I'd whipt him sure. I have suffered the want of that three dollars
+since I bin here. 'Twould sarved me for coffee. We have neither coffee
+nor bread to-night, for we gave our allowance of bad bread to the white
+prisoners, but we must do something to make the poor fellow comfortable.
+I know the constable has kept him all day coming up, and he'll be hungry
+as soon as he awakes."
+
+"Won't he receive his allowance to-day like another prisoner?" inquired
+Copeland, a thick-set, well made, dark-skinned negro steward, who had
+formerly conducted a barber shop in Fleet street, Boston, but was now
+attached to the schooner Oscar Jones, Kellogg, master.
+
+"Oh! no, sir," said Redman, "that's against the rules of the jail-every
+thing is done by rule here, even to paying for what we don't get, and
+starving the prisoners. A man that don't come in before eleven o'clock
+gets no ration until the next morning. I know, because I had a fuss with
+the jailer about it, the first day I was brought in; but he gin me a
+loaf out of his own house. The old sheriff never allows any thing done
+outside the rules, for he's tighter than a mantrap. 'T a'n't what ye
+suffers in this cell, but it's what ye don't get to eat; and if that
+poor feller a'n't got money, he'll wish himself alongside the caboose
+again 'fore he gets out." The poor fellows were driven to the extreme of
+providing sustenance to sustain life. They mustered their little means
+together, and by giving a sum to the sheriff's black boy, (a man more
+intelligent, gentlemanly, and generous-hearted than his master,) had a
+measure of coffee, sugar, and bread brought in. Necessity was the mother
+of invention with them, for they had procured a barrel for twenty-five
+cents, and made it supply the place of a table. With a few chips that
+were brought to them by a kind-hearted colored woman that did their
+washing, and bestowed many little acts of kindness, they made a fire,
+endured the annoyance of a dense smoke from the old fire-place, and
+prepared their little supper. As soon as it was upon the table, they
+awoke Manuel, and invited him to join in their humble fare. The poor
+fellow arose, and looking around the gloomy, cavern-like place, heaved a
+deep sigh. "It's hard to be brought to this for nothing!" said he; "and
+my bones are so sore that I can scarcely move. I must see the Captain
+and consul."
+
+"That won't do any good; you might as well keep quiet and drink your
+coffee. A prisoner that says the least in this jail is best off,"
+returned Redman.
+
+Manuel took his bowl of coffee and a piece of bread, eating it with a
+good appetite, and asking what time they got breakfast. "It's the first
+time I was abused in a foreign country. I'm Portuguese, but a citizen of
+Great Britain, and got my protection.-When it won't save me, I'll never
+come to South Carolina again, nor sail where a flag won't protect me.
+When I go among Patagonians, I know what they do; but when I sail
+to United States or be cast away on them, I don't know what they do,
+because I expect good people." * * *
+
+"Never mind, my good fellow," said Redman; "cheer up, take it as a good
+sailor would a storm, and in the morning you'll get a small loaf of sour
+bread and a bucket of water for breakfast, if you go to the pump for it.
+Be careful to moderate your appetite when you breakfast according to the
+State's rules; for you must save enough to last you during the day, and
+if you can keep "banyan day," as the Bluenose calls it, you're just the
+man for this institution, and no mistake. Come, I see you're hungry;
+drink another bowl of coffee, and eat plenty of bread; then you'll be
+all right for another good sleep."
+
+"Yes, but I don't expect to be in here long. But tell me, do we get
+nothing more than a loaf? didn't the jail give us this supper?" he
+inquired with surprise.
+
+"Supper, indeed!--it's against the rules for prisoners to have coffee;
+that's our private fixings; but you'll get a pound of bloody neck-bone,
+they call beef, in the morning. I have twice thrown mine to the dog,
+but he doesn't seem to thank me for it; so I told the cook he needn't
+trouble his steelyards for me again."
+
+Redman's conversation was interrupted by a noise that seemed to be a
+ring of the prison bell, and an anxious expression which Manuel gave
+utterance to, indicated that he expected somebody would come to see him.
+He was not disappointed, for a few minutes after, the bolts were heard
+to withdraw and the heavy door swung back. There, true to his charge,
+was little Tommy, in his nicest blue rig, tipped off a la man-o'-war
+touch, with his palmetto-braid hat,--a long black ribbon displayed over
+the rim,--his hair combed so slick, and his little round face and red
+cheeks so plump and full of the sailor-boy pertness, with his blue,
+braided shirt-collar laid over his jacket, and set off around the neck,
+with a black India handkerchief, secured at the throat with the joint
+of a shark's backbone. He looked the very picture and pattern of a
+Simon-Pure salt. He had wended his way through strange streets and
+lanes, with a big haversack under his arm, which Daley had relieved
+him of at the door, and brought into the room under his arm. As soon as
+Manuel caught a glimpse of him, he rose and clasped the little fellow
+in his arms with a fond embrace. No greeting could be more affecting.
+Manuel exulted at seeing his little companion; but Tommy looked grieved,
+and asked, "But what has scarred your face so, Manuel? You didn't look
+that way when you left the brig. We have had a site o' folks down to see
+us to-day."
+
+"Oh, that's nothing!--just a little fall I got; don't tell the Captain:
+it'll all be well to-morrow."
+
+"Here, Jack, take your knapsack; did yer bring ever a drop o' liquor for
+the steward?" said Daley, addressing himself to Tommy, and putting the
+package upon the floor.
+
+"Yes, Manuel!" said Tommy, "the Captain sent you some nice bread and
+ham, some oranges and raisins, and a bottle of nice claret,--for he was
+told by the consul that they didn't give 'em nothing to eat at the
+jail. And I had a tug with 'em, I tell you. I got lost once, and got a
+good-natured black boy to pilot me for a Victoria threepence,--but he
+did not like to carry the bundle to the jail, for fear of his master.
+Captain 'll be up first thing in the morning, if he can get away from
+business," said the little tar, opening the haversack and pulling out
+its contents to tempt the hungry appetites of those around him.
+
+Daley very coolly took the bottle of claret by the neck, and holding it
+between himself and the light, took a lunar squint at it, as if doubting
+its contents; and then, putting it down, exclaimed, "Ah! the divil a red
+I'd give you for your claret. Sure, why didn't ye bring a token of
+good old hardware?" "Hardware! what is hardware?" inquired Manuel. "Ah!
+botheration to the bunch of yees--a drap of old whiskey, that 'd make
+the delight cum f'nent. Have ye ne'er a drap among the whole o' yees?"
+Receiving an answer in the negative, he turned about with a Kilkenny,
+"It don't signify," and toddled for the door, which he left open, to
+await Tommy's return. Redman knew Daley's propensity too well, and
+having ocular proof that he had wet t'other eye until it required
+more than ordinary effort to make either one stay open, he declined
+recognising his very significant hint.
+
+As soon as Daley withdrew, Manuel invited his companions to partake of
+the Captain's present, which they did with general satisfaction.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV. THE LAW'S INTRICACY.
+
+
+
+WHILE the scenes we have described in the foregoing chapter were being
+performed, several very interesting ones were going through the course
+of performance at the consul's office and other places, which we must
+describe. The British Government, in its instructions to Mr. Mathew,
+impressed upon him the necessity of being very cautious lest he should
+in any manner prejudice the interests of the local institutions within
+his consular jurisdiction; to make no requests that were incompatible
+with the local laws; but to pursue a judicious course in bringing the
+matter of Her Majesty's subjects properly to the consideration of
+the legal authorities, and to point to the true grievance; and as it
+involved a question of right affecting the interests and liberties of
+her citizens, to ask the exercise of that judicial power from which it
+had a right to expect justice. The main object was to test the question
+whether this peculiar construction given to that local law which
+prohibits free colored men from coming within the limits of the State,
+was legal in its application to those who come into its ports connected
+with the shipping interests, pursuing an honest vocation, and intending
+to leave whenever their ship was ready. The consul was censured by the
+press in several of the slaveholding States, because he dared to bring
+the matter before the local legislature. We are bound to say that Consul
+Mathew, knowing the predominant prejudices of the Carolinians, acted
+wisely in so doing. First, he knew the tenacious value they put upon
+courtesy; secondly, the point at issue between South Carolina and the
+Federal Government, (and, as a learned friend in Georgia once said,
+"Whether South Carolina belonged to the United States, or the United
+States to South Carolina;") and thirdly, the right of State sovereignty,
+which South Carolina held to be of the first importance. To disregard
+the first, would have been considered an insult to the feelings of
+her people; and if the question had first been mooted with the Federal
+Government, the ire of South Carolinians would have been fired; the
+slur in placing her in a secondary position would have sounded the
+war-trumpet of Abolition encroachments, while the latter would have been
+considered a breach of confidence, and an unwarrantable disregard of her
+assertion of State rights. The Executive transmitted the documents to
+the Assembly, that body referred them to special committees, and the
+Messrs. Mazyck and McCready, reported as everybody in South Carolina
+expected, virtually giving the British consul a very significant
+invitation to keep his petitions in his pocket for the future, and his
+"black lambs" out of the State, or it might disturb their domesticated
+ideas. Thus was the right clearly reserved to themselves, and the
+question settled, so far as the State Legislature was concerned. The
+next course for Mr. Mathew was to appeal to the Judiciary, and should
+redress be denied, make it the medium of bringing the matter, before the
+Federal courts.
+
+We cannot forbear to say, that the strenuous opposition waged against
+this appeal of common humanity arose from political influence, supported
+by a set of ultra partisans, whose theoretical restrictions, assisted
+by the voice of the press, catered to the war-spirit of the
+abstractionists.
+
+The British consul, as the representative of his government, knowing the
+personal suffering to which the subjects of his country were subjected
+by the wretched state of the Charleston prison, and its management,
+sought to remove no restriction that might be necessary for protecting
+their dangerous institutions, but to relieve that suffering. He had
+pointed the authorities to the wretched state of the prison, and the
+inhuman regimen which existed within it; but, whether through that
+superlative carelessness which has become so materialized in the spirit
+of society--that callousness to misfortune so strongly manifested by the
+rich toward the industrious poor and the slaves-or, a contempt for
+his opinions, because he had followed out the instructions of his
+government, things went on in the same neglected manner and no attention
+was paid to them.
+
+Now, we dare assert that a large, portion of the excitement which the
+question has caused has arisen from personal suffering, consequent upon
+that wretched state of jail provisions which exists in South Carolina,
+and which, to say the least, is degrading to the spirit and character of
+a proud people. If a plea could be made, for excuse, upon the shattered
+finances of the State, we might tolerate something of the abuse. But
+this is not the case; and when its privileges become reposed in men who
+make suffering the means to serve their own interests, its existence
+becomes an outrage.
+
+A stronger evidence of the cause of these remonstrances on the part
+of the British Government, is shown by the manner in which it has been
+submitted to in Georgia. The British consul of the port of Savannah, a
+gentleman whose intelligence and humane feelings are no less remarkable
+than Mr. Mathew's, has never had occasion to call the attention of
+the Executive of Georgia to the abuse of power consequent upon the
+imprisonment of colored seamen belonging to the ships of Great Britain
+in that port. The seaman was imprisoned, consequently deprived of his
+liberty; but there was no suffering attendant beyond the loss of liberty
+during the stay of the vessel; for the imprisonment itself was a nominal
+thing; the imprisoned was well cared for; he had good, comfortable
+apartments, cleanly and well ordered, away from the criminals, and
+plenty of good, wholesome food to eat. There was even a satisfaction in
+this, for the man got what he paid for, and was treated as if he were
+really a human being. Thus, with the exception of the restriction on the
+man's liberty, and that evil, which those interested in commerce would
+reflect upon as a tax upon the marine interests of the port to support a
+municipal police, because it imposes a tax and burdensome annoyance upon
+owners for that which they have no interest in and can derive no benefit
+from, the observance of the law had more penalty in mental anxiety than
+bodily suffering. We have sometimes been at a loss to account for the
+restriction, even as it existed in Georgia, and especially when
+we consider the character of those controlling and developing the
+enterprising commercial affairs of Savannah.
+
+But we must return to South Carolina. If we view this law as a police
+regulation, it only gives us broader latitude. If a community has that
+within itself which is dangerous to its well-being, it becomes pertinent
+to inquire whether there is not an imperfect state of society existing,
+and whether this policy is not injurious to the well-being of the State.
+The evil, though it be a mortifying fact, we are bound to say, arises
+from a strange notion of caste and color, which measures sympathy
+according to complexion. There is no proof that can possibly be adduced,
+showing that colored seamen have made any infections among the slaves,
+or sought to increase the dangers of her peculiar institution.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI. PLEA OF JUST CONSIDERATION AND MISTAKEN CONSTANCY OF THE
+LAWS.
+
+
+
+THE consul's office opened at nine o'clock,--the Captain, with his
+register-case and shipping papers under his arm, presented himself to
+Mr. Mathew, handed him his papers, and reported his condition. That
+gentleman immediately set about rendering every facility to relieve his
+immediate wants and further his business. The consul was a man of plain,
+unassuming manners, frank in his expressions, and strongly imbued with
+a sense of his rights, and the faith of his Government,--willing to take
+an active part in obtaining justice, and, a deadly opponent to wrong,
+regardless of the active hostility that surrounded him. After relating
+the incidents of his voyage, and the circumstances connected with
+Manuel's being dragged to prison,--"Can it be possible that the law is
+to be carried to such an extreme?" said he, giving vent to his feelings.
+
+"Your people seem to have a strange manner of exhibiting their
+hospitality," said the Captain, in reply.
+
+"That is true; but it will not do to appeal to the officials." Thus
+saying, the consul prepared the certificate, and putting on his hat,
+repaired to the jail. Here he questioned Manuel upon the circumstances
+of his arrest, his birthplace, and several other things. "I am not sure
+that I can get you out, Manuel, but I will do my best; the circumstances
+of your being driven in here in distress will warrant some consideration
+in your case; yet the feeling is not favorable, and we cannot expect
+much."
+
+From thence he proceeded to the office of Mr. Grimshaw, where he met
+that functionary, seated in all the dignity of his office.
+
+"Good morning, Mr. Consul. Another of your darkies in my place, this
+morning," said Mr. Grimshaw.
+
+"Yes; it is upon that business I have called to see you. I think you
+could not have considered the condition of this man, nor his rights,
+or you would not have imprisoned him. Is there no way by which I can
+relieve him?" inquired the consul, expecting little at his hands, but
+venturing the effort.
+
+"Sir! I never do any thing inconsistent with my office. The law gives
+me power in these cases, and I exercise it according to my judgment. It
+makes no exceptions for shipwrecks, and I feel that you have no right to
+question me in the premises. It's contrary to law to bring niggers here;
+and if you can show that he is a white man, there's the law; but you
+must await its process."
+
+"But do you not make exceptions?" inquired the consul. "I do not wish
+to seek his relief by process of law; that would increase expense and
+delay. I have made the request as a favor; if you cannot consider it in
+that light, I can only say my expectations are disappointed. But how is
+it that the man was abused by your officers before he was committed?"
+
+"Those are things I've nothing to do with; they are between the officers
+and your niggers. If they are stubborn, the officers must use force,
+and we have a right to iron the whole of them. Your niggers give more
+trouble than our own, and are a set of unruly fellows. We give 'em
+advantages which they don't deserve, in allowing them the yard at
+certain hours of the day. You Englishmen are never satisfied with any
+thing we do," returned Mr. Grimshaw, with indifference, appearing to
+satisfy himself that the law gave him the right to do what he pleased in
+the premises. There seemed but one idea in his head, so far as niggers
+were concerned, nor could any mode of reasoning arouse him: to a
+consideration of any extenuating circumstances. A nigger was a nigger
+with him, whether white or black-a creature for hog, homony, and
+servitude.
+
+"I expected little and got nothing. I might have anticipated it, knowing
+the fees you make by imprisonment. I shall seek relief for the man
+through a higher tribunal, and I shall seek redress for the repeated
+abuses inflicted upon these men by your officers," said the consul,
+turning to the door.
+
+"You can do that, sir," said Mr. Grimshaw; "but you must remember that
+it will require white evidence to substantiate the charge. We don't take
+the testimony of your niggers."
+
+Just as the consul left the office, he met Colonel S--entering. The
+colonel always manifested a readiness to relieve the many cases of
+oppression and persecution arising from bad laws and abused official
+duty. He had called upon Mr. Grimshaw on the morning of the arrest, and
+received from him an assurance that the case would be considered, the
+most favorable construction given to it, and every thing done for
+the man that was in his power. Notwithstanding this to show how far
+confidence could be put in such assurances, we have only to inform the
+reader that he had despatched the officers an hour previously.
+
+The colonel knew his man, and felt no hesitation at speaking his mind.
+Stepping up to him, "Mr. Grimshaw," said he, "how do you reconcile
+your statement and assurances to me this morning with your subsequent
+conduct?"
+
+"That's my business. I act for the State, and not for you. Are you
+counsel for these niggers, that you are so anxious to set them at
+liberty among our slaves? You seem to have more interest in it than that
+interfering consul. Just let these Yankee niggers and British niggers
+out to-night, and we'd have another insurrection before morning; it's
+better to prevent than cure," said Grimshaw.
+
+"The only insurrection would have been in your heart, for the loss of
+fees. If you did not intend what you said, why did you deceive me with
+such statements? I know the feelings of our people, as well as I do
+yours for caging people within that jail. Upon that, I intimated to the
+Captain what I thought would be the probable result, and this morning I
+proceeded to his vessel to reassure him, upon your statement. Imagine my
+mortification when he informed me that his steward had been dragged
+off to jail early in the morning, and that those two ruffians whom you
+disgrace the community with, behaved in the most outrageous manner. It
+is in your power to relieve this man, and I ask it as a favor, and on
+behalf of what I know to be the feelings of the citizens of Charleston."
+
+"Your request, colonel," said Mr. Grimshaw, with a little more
+complacency, "is too much in the shape of a demand. There's no
+discretion left me by the State, and if you have a power superior to
+that, you better pay the expenses of the nigger, and take the management
+into your own hands. I never allow this trifling philanthropy about
+niggers to disturb me. I could never follow out the laws of the State
+and practise it; and you better not burden yourself with it, or your
+successors may suffer for adequate means to support themselves. Now,
+sir, take my advice. It's contrary to law for them niggers to come
+here; you know our laws cannot be violated. South Carolina has a great
+interest at stake in maintaining the reputation of her laws. Don't
+excite the nigger's anxiety, and he'll be better off in jail than he
+would running about among the wenches. He won't have luxuries, but we'll
+make him comfortable, and he must suit his habits to our way of living.
+We must not set a bad example before our own niggers; the whiter they
+are the worse they are. They struggle for their existence now, and think
+they're above observing our nigger laws. We want to get rid of them, and
+you know it," returned Grimshaw.
+
+"Yes; I know it too well, for I have had too many cases to protect them
+from being 'run off' and sold in the New Orleans market. But when you
+speak of white niggers, I suppose you mean our brightest; I dispute your
+assertion, and point you to my proof in the many men of wealth among
+them now pursuing their occupations in our city. Can you set an example
+more praiseworthy? And notwithstanding they are imposed upon by taxes,
+and many of our whites take the advantage of law to withhold the payment
+of debts contracted with them, they make no complaint. They are subject
+to the same law that restricts the blackest slave. Where is the white
+man that would not have yielded under such inequality? No! Mr. Grimshaw,
+I am as true a Southerner-born and bred-as you are; but I have the
+interests of these men at heart, because I know they are with us, and
+their interests and feelings are identical with our own. They are Native
+Americans by birth and blood, and we have no right to dispossess them
+by law of what we have given them by blood. We destroy their feelings by
+despoiling them of their rights, and by it we weaken our own cause. Give
+them the same rights and privileges that we extend to that miserable
+class of foreigners who are spreading pestilence and death over our
+social institutions, and we would have nothing to fear from them, but
+rather find them our strongest protectors. I want to see a law taking
+from that class of men the power to lord it over and abuse them."
+
+A friend, who has resided several years in Charleston, strong in his
+feelings of Southern rights, and whose keen observation could not fail
+to detect the working of different phases of the slave institution,
+informed us that he had conversed with a great many very intelligent
+and enterprising men belonging to that large class of "bright" men in
+Charleston, and that which appeared to pain them most was the manner
+they were treated by foreigners of the lowest class; that rights which
+they had inherited by birth and blood were taken away from them; that,
+being subjected to the same law which governed the most abject slave,
+every construction of it went to degrade them, while it gave supreme
+power to the most degraded white to impose upon them, and exercise his
+vindictive feelings toward them; that no consideration being given to
+circumstances, the least deviation from the police regulations made to
+govern negroes, was taken advantage of by the petty guardmen, who either
+extorted a fee to release them, or dragged them to the police-office,
+where their oath was nothing, even if supported by testimony of their
+own color; but the guardman's word was taken as positive proof. Thus the
+laws of South Carolina forced them to be what their feelings revolted
+at. And I want to see another making it a penal offence for those men
+holding slaves for breeding purposes. Another, which humanity calls
+for louder than any other, is one to regulate their food, punish
+these grievous cases of starvation, and make the offender suffer for
+withholding proper rations.
+
+"Well-pretty well!" said Grimshaw, snapping his fingers very
+significantly. "You seem to enjoy the independence of your own opinion,
+colonel. Just prove this nigger's a white, and I'll give you a release
+for him, after paying the fees. You better move to Massachusetts, and
+preach that doctrine to William Lloyd Garrison and Abby Kelly."
+
+"Give me none of your impudence, or your low insults. You may protect
+yourself from personal danger by your own consciousness that you are
+beneath the laws of honor; but that will not save you from what you
+deserve, if you repeat your language. Our moderation is our protection,
+while such unwise restrictions as you would enforce, fan the flame of
+danger to our own households," said the colonel, evidently yielding
+to his impulses; while Mr. Grimshaw sat trembling, and began to make a
+slender apology, saying that the language was forced upon him, because
+the colonel had overstepped the bounds of propriety in his demands.
+
+"I'm somewhat astonished at your demand, colonel, for you don't seem
+to comprehend the law, and the imperative manner in which I'm bound
+to carry it out. Shipowners should get white stewards, if they want to
+avoid all this difficulty. I know the nature of the case, but we can't
+be accountable for storms, shipwrecks, old vessels, and all these
+things. I'll go and see the fellow to-morrow, and tell the jailer-he's
+a pattern of kindness, and that's why I got him for jailer-to give him
+good rations and keep his room clean," said Grimshaw, getting up and
+looking among some old books that lay on a dusty shelf. At length he
+found the one, and drawing it forth, commenced brushing the dust from it
+with a dust-brush, and turning his tobacco-quid. After brushing the
+old book for a length of time, he gave it a scientific wipe with his
+coat-sleeve, again sat down, and commenced turning over its pages.
+
+"It's in here, somewhere," said he, wetting his finger and thumb at
+every turn.
+
+"What's in there, pray? You don't think I've practised at the Charleston
+bar all my life without knowing a law which has called up so many
+questions?" inquired the colonel.
+
+"Why, the act and the amendments. I believe this is the right one. I
+a'n't practised so long, that I reckon I've lost the run of the appendix
+and everything else," adding another stream of tobacco-spit to the
+puddle on the floor.
+
+"That's better thought than said. Perhaps you'd better get a schoolboy
+to keep his finger on it," continued the colonel, laconically.
+
+"Well, well; but I must find it and refresh your memory. Ah! here it is,
+and it's just as binding on me as it can be. There's no mistake about
+it-it's genuine South Carolina, perfectly aboveboard." Thus saying,
+he commenced reading to the colonel as if he was about to instruct
+a schoolboy in his rudiments. "Here it is-a very pretty specimen of
+enlightened legislation-born in the lap of freedom, cradled in a land of
+universal rights, and enforced by the strong arm of South Carolina."
+
+"An Act for the better regulation and government of free negroes and
+persons of color, and for other purposes," &c. &c. &c., Mr. Grimshaw
+read; but as the two first sections are really a disgrace to the
+delegated powers of man, in their aim to oppress the man of color,
+we prefer to pass to the third section, and follow Mr. Grimshaw as he
+reads:--
+
+"That if any vessel shall come into any port or harbor of this State,
+(South Carolina,) from any other State or foreign port, having on board
+any free negroes or persons of color, as cooks, stewards, or mariners,
+or in any other employment on board said vessel, such free negroes or
+persons of color shall be liable to be seized and confined in jail until
+said vessel shall clear out and depart from this State; and that when
+said vessel is ready to sail, the captain of said vessel shall be
+bound to carry away the said free negro or person of color, and pay the
+expenses of detention; and in case of his refusal or neglect to do so,
+he shall be liable to be indicted, and, on conviction thereof, shall be
+fined in a sum not less than one thousand dollars, and imprisoned not
+less than two months; and such free negroes or persons of color shall
+be deemed and taken as absolute slaves, and sold in conformity to the
+provisions of the act passed on the twentieth day of December, one
+thousand eight hundred and twenty aforesaid.'"
+
+Mr. Grimshaw's coolness in the matter became so intolerable, that the
+colonel could stand it no longer; so, getting up while Mr. Grimshaw was
+reading the law, he left the office, perfectly satisfied that further
+endeavors at that source would be fruitless.
+
+After Mr. Grimshaw had concluded, he looked up, perfectly amazed to find
+that he was enjoying the reading of the act to himself. "Had I not given
+it all the consideration of my power, and seen the correctness of the
+law, I should not have given so much importance to my opinion. But there
+it is, all in that section of the Act, and they can't find no convention
+in the world to control the Legislature of South Carolina. There's my
+principles, and all the Englishmen and Abolitionists in Christendom
+wouldn't change me. Now, I've the power, and let 'em get the nigger out
+of my place, if they can," said Grimshaw, shutting the book, kicking
+a good-sized, peaceable-looking dog that lay under the table, and
+deliberately taking his hat and walking into the street.
+
+Here is an Act, bearing on its face the arrogant will of South Carolina,
+setting aside all constitutional rights, and denying the validity of
+stipulations made by the United States in her general commercial laws.
+She asserts her right to disregard citizenship, to make criminals of
+colored men, because they are colored, and to sell them for slaves to
+pay the expenses which she had incurred to make them such. And what is
+still worse, is, that the exercise of this misconceived and unjust law
+is so unrelentingly enforced, and so abused by those who carry it out.
+
+During this time the consul had been unremitting in his endeavors to
+procure the man's release. The mayor had no power in the premises; the
+attorney-general was not positive in regard to the extent of his power
+in such a case, though he admitted the case to be an aggravated one; the
+judges could only recognise him as a nigger, consequently must govern
+their proceedings by legislative acts. Upon the whole, he found that
+he was wasting his time, for while they all talked sympathy, they
+acted tyranny. Cold, measured words about niggers, "contrary to law,"
+constitutional rights, inviolable laws, State sovereignty and secession,
+the necessary police regulations to protect a peculiar institution,
+and their right to enforce them, everywhere greeted his ears. There was
+about as much in it to relieve Manuel, as there would have been had a
+little bird perched upon the prison-wall and warbled its song of love to
+him while strongly secured in his cell-more tantalizing because he could
+hear the notes, but not see the songster.
+
+Notwithstanding the commendable energy of the consul, he had the
+satisfaction of knowing that several very improbable reports touching
+his course, and construing it into an interference with the institution
+of slavery, had been widely circulated, and were creating a feeling
+against him among a certain class of "fire-eating" secessionists. He was
+too well aware of the source from which they originated to awaken any
+fears, and instead of daunting his energy they only increased it, and
+brought to his aid the valuable services of the Hon. James L. Petigru, a
+gentleman of whom it is said, (notwithstanding his eminence at the
+bar,) that had it not been for his purity of character, his opinions
+in opposition to the State would have long since consigned him to a
+traitor's exile. The truth was-and much against Mr. Petigru's popularity
+in his own State-that he was a man of sound logic, practical judgment,
+and legal discrimination. Thus endowed with the requisite qualities of
+a good statesman, and pursuing a true course to create a conservative
+influence in the State, he failed to become popular beyond his legal
+sphere. Had he espoused that most popular of all doctrines in South
+Carolina-nullification and secession-and carried abstraction to
+distraction, James L. Petigru would have added another "Roman name" to
+that which has already passed from South Carolina's field of action.
+
+The consul did his duty, but effected nothing; and such was the
+opposition manifested by the officials who were interested in the spoils
+of law, and politicians who could not see any thing important beyond
+secession, that there was no prospect of it. And, as the last resort,
+he appealed to the Judiciary through the "habeas corpus," the result of
+which we shall show in a subsequent chapter.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII. LITTLE GEORGE, THE CAPTAIN, AND MR. GRIMSHAW.
+
+
+
+THE consul had returned to his office rather discomfited at not being
+able to relieve Manuel, yet satisfied that he had placed matters in
+their proper light before the public. The Captain reported and left his
+manifest at the custom-house, after entering his protest and making the
+necessary arrangements for survey, &c. &c. And Colonel S--became so well
+satisfied of the affectation of law protectors, and that his services
+in behalf of humanity were like straws contending against a foaming
+current, that, acknowledging his regrets to the Captain, he preferred to
+make up in attention what he could not do for Manuel through the law.
+
+Little George paid his respects to the Janson between ten and eleven
+o'clock, duly dressed. "Mr. Mate, where's your skipper?" he inquired,
+with an air of consequence that put an extra pucker on his little
+twisting mouth.
+
+"Gone to jail, or to see Doctor Jones, I expect, not giving ye an ill
+answer," replied the old mate, gruffly.
+
+"Perhaps you don't know who I am, sir. Your answer's not polite. You
+must remember, sir, you're in South Carolina, the sunny city of the
+South," said the little secessionist.
+
+"I al'a's make my answer to suit myself. I study hard work and honesty,
+but never was known to carry a grammar in my pocket. But, my taut
+friend, I should know'd I was in South Carolina if you hadn't said a
+word about it, for no other nation under the sky would a dragged a poor
+cast-away sailor to prison because he had the misfortune to have a tawny
+hide. It's a ten-to-one, my hearty, if you don't find the skipper in
+jail, and all the rest of us, before we leave. I'm lookin' now to see
+some body-grabber coming down with a pair of handcuffs," continued the
+mate.
+
+"What! do you mean to insult me again, Mr. Mate? Explain yourself! I'm
+not accustomed to this ironical talk!"
+
+"Well, it's something like your laws. They dragged our steward off
+to jail this morning, without judge or jury, and with about as much
+ceremony as a Smithfield policeman would a pickpocket."
+
+"What! you don't say. Well, I was afraid of that. Our officers are
+mighty quick, but I'd hoped differently. But, sir, give my compliments
+to the Captain. Tell him I'll make the matter all right; my influence,
+sir, and my father's--he is one of the first men in the city--tells
+mightily here. I have promised my services to the Captain, and I'll see
+him through. Just pledging my word to Grimshaw will be enough to satisfy
+the judicial requisites of the law," said George, switching his little
+cane on his trowsers.
+
+"My good fellow," said the mate, "if you can get our steward out a
+limbo, you'll be doing us all a good turn, and we'll remember you as
+long as we pull a brace."
+
+"You may reckon on me, Mister Mate; and if I a'n't down before six
+o'clock, my father will certainly take the matter in hand; and he and
+Mazyck belong to the secession party, and control things just as they
+please at Columbia." So saying, George bid the old mate good morning,
+and bent his course for the head of the wharf.
+
+"There," said the old mate, "it's just what I thought all along; I knew
+my presentiment would come true. I'll wager a crown they treat Manuel
+like a dog in that old prison, and don't get him out until he is
+mildewed; or perhaps they'll sell him for a slave a'cos he's got curly
+black hair and a yellow skin. Now I'm a hardy sailor, but I've sailed
+around the world about three times, and know something of nature. Now ye
+may note it as clear as the north star, prisons in slave countries a'n't
+fit for dogs. They may tell about their fine, fat, slick, saucy niggers,
+but a slave's a slave--his master's property, a piece of merchandise,
+his chattel, or his football-thankful for what his master may please to
+give him, and inured to suffer the want of what he withholds. Yes,
+he must have his thinking stopped by law, and his back lashed at his
+master's will, if he don't toe the mark in work. Men's habits and
+associations form their feelings and character, and it's just so with
+them fellers; they've become so accustomed to looking upon a nigger as
+a mere tool of labor--lordin' it over him, starving him, and lashing
+him-that they associate the exercise of the same feelings and actions
+with every thing connected with labor, without paying any respect to a
+poor white man's feelings," continued the mate, addressing himself to
+his second, as they sat upon the companion, waiting for the Captain to
+come on board and give further orders.
+
+Never were words spoken with more truth. The negro is reduced to the
+lowest and worst restrictions, even by those who are considered wealthy
+planters and good masters. We say nothing of those whose abuse of their
+negroes by starvation and punishment forms the theme of complaint among
+slaveholders themselves. His food is not only the coarsest that can, be
+procured, but inadequate to support the system for the amount of labor
+required. Recourse to other means becomes necessary. This is supplied by
+giving the slave his task, which, so far as our observation extends, is
+quite sufficient for any common, laborer's day's-work. This done, his
+master is served; and as an act of kindness, (which Sambo is taught to
+appreciate as such,) he is allowed to work on his own little cultivated
+patch to raise a few things, which mass'r (in many cases) very
+condescendingly sells in the market, and returns those little comforts,
+which are so much appreciated by slaves on a plantation-tea, molasses,
+coffee, and tobacco-and now and then a little wet of whiskey. This is
+the allowance of a good man doing a good week's work, and getting two
+pounds of bacon and a peck of corn as his compensation. But, in grateful
+consideration, his good master allows him to work nights and Sundays to
+maintain himself. In this way was "Bob's bale of cotton" raised, which
+that anxious child of popular favor, the editor of the "Savannah Morning
+News," so struggled to herald to the world as something magnificent on
+the part of the Southern slave-masters. At best, it was but a speck. If
+the many extra hours of toil that poor Bob had spent, and the hours
+of night that he had watched and nursed his plants, were taken into
+account, there would be a dark picture connected with "Bob's bale of
+cotton," which the editor forgot to disclose.
+
+Every form of labor becomes so associated with servitude, that we may
+excuse the Southerner for those feelings which condemn those devoted
+to mechanical pursuits as beneath his caste and dignity. Arrogance and
+idleness foster extravagance, while his pride induces him to keep up a
+style of life which his means are inadequate to support. This induces
+him to subsist his slaves on the coarsest fare, and becoming hampered,
+embarrassed, and fretted in his fast-decaying circumstances, his slaves,
+one by one, suffer the penalty of his extravagance, and finally he
+himself is reduced to such a condition that he is unable to do justice
+to himself or his children any longer; his slaves are dragged from him,
+sold to the terrors of a distant sugar-plantation, and he turned out of
+doors a miserable man.
+
+We see this result every day in South Carolina; we hear the comments
+in the broadways and public places, while the attorney and bailiff's
+offices and notices tell the sad tale of poverty's wasting struggle.
+
+George, in passing from the wharf into the bay, met the Captain, who was
+shaping his course for the brig. He immediately ran up to him, and shook
+his hands with an appearance of friendship. "Captain, I'm right sorry
+to hear about your nigger. I was not prepared for such a decision on the
+part of Mr. Grimshaw, but I'm determined to have him out," said he.
+
+"Well!" said the Captain, "I'm sorry to say, I find things very
+different from what I anticipated. My steward is imprisoned, for
+nothing, except that he is a Portuguese, and everybody insists that he's
+a nigger. Everybody talks very fine, yet nobody can do any thing; and
+every thing is left to the will of one man."
+
+"Why, Captain, we've the best system in the world for doing business;
+you'd appreciate it after you understood it! Just come with me, and let
+me introduce you to my father. If he don't put you right, I'll stand
+convicted," said little George.
+
+Accepting the invitation, they walked back to the "old man's"
+counting-room. George had given the Captain such an extended account of
+his father's business and estates, that the latter had made up his
+mind to be introduced to an "India Palace' counting-room. Judge of
+his surprise, then, when George led the way into an old, dirty-looking
+counting-room, very small and dingy, containing two dilapidated high
+desks, standing against the wall. They were made of pitch pine, painted
+and grained, but so scarred and whittled as to have the appearance
+of long use and abuse. In one corner was an old-fashioned low desk,
+provided with an ink-stand, sundry pieces of blotting-paper, the
+pigeon-holes filled with loose invoices, letters, and bills of lading,
+very promiscuously huddled together; while hanging suspended on a
+large nail, driven in the side, and exposed to view, was an enormous
+dust-brush. A venerable-looking subject of some foreign country stood
+writing at one desk, a little boy at the other, and George's veritable
+"old man" at the low desk. Here and there around the floor were baskets
+and papers containing samples of sea-island and upland cotton. George
+introduced the Captain to his father with the suavity of a courtier. He
+was a grave-looking man, well dressed, and spoke in a tone that at once
+enlisted respect. Unlike George, he was a tall, well-formed man, with
+bland, yet marked features, and very gray hair. He received the Captain
+in a cold, yet dignified manner-inquired about his voyage, and who
+he had consigned to, and what steps he had taken to proceed with
+his business,--all of which the Captain answered according to the
+circumstances.
+
+"What! then you have consigned already, have you?" said little George,
+with surprise.
+
+"Oh yes," returned the Captain, "I have left my business in the hands
+of the consul, and shall follow his directions. It's according to my
+sailing orders. But there's so much difficulty, I shouldn't wonder if I
+had to leave the port, yet!"
+
+"Not so, Captain; I'll take care of that!" said George, giving his
+father a statement of the Captain's trouble about Manuel's imprisonment,
+and begging that he would bestow his influence in behalf of his
+friend the Captain. Although George coupled his request with a seeming
+sincerity, it was evident that he felt somewhat disappointed at the
+consignment. The old gentleman looked very wise upon the subject, lifted
+his gold-framed spectacles upon his forehead, gratified his olfactory
+nerves with a pinch of snuff, and then said in a cold, measured tone,
+"Well, if he's a nigger, I see no alternative,--the circumstances may
+give a coloring of severity to the law; but my opinion has always been,
+that the construction of the law was right; and the act being
+founded upon necessity, I see no reason why we should meddle with its
+prerogative. I think the interference of the consul unwarrantable, and
+pressed upon mere technical grounds. These stories about the bad state
+of our jail, and the sufferings of criminals confined in it, arise, I
+must think, from the reports of bad prisoners. I have never been in it.
+Our people are opposed to vice, and seldom visit such a place; but the
+sheriff tells me it is comfortable enough for anybody. If this be so,
+and I have no reason to doubt his word, we can exercise our sympathy and
+kindness for his shipwrecked circumstances, and make him as comfortable
+there as we could anywhere else. There are many different opinions, I
+admit, touching the effect of this law; but I'm among those who support
+stringent measures for better protection. His color can form no excuse,
+Captain, so long as there is symptoms of the negro about him. We
+might open a wide field for metaphysical investigation, if we admitted
+exceptions upon grades of complexion; for many of our own slaves are
+as white ar the brightest woman. Consequently, when we shut the gates
+entirely, we save ourselves boundless perplexity. Nor would it be safe
+to grant an issue upon the score of intelligence, for experience has
+taught us that the most intelligent 'bright fellows' are the worst
+scamps in creating discontent among the slaves. I only speak of these
+things, Captain, in a general sense. Your man may be very good, noble,
+generous, and intelligent; and, more than all, not inclined to meddle
+with our peculiar institution,--but it would be a false principle
+to make him an exception, setting an example that would be entirely
+incompatible with our greatest interests. So far as my word will affect
+the sheriff, and enlist his better feelings in making him comfortable, I
+will use it," said the 'old man,' again adjusting his specs.
+
+Little George seemed dumbfounded with mortification, and the Captain
+felt as though he would give a guinea to be on board his brig. It was no
+use for him to enter into the extenuating circumstance of his voyage, or
+the character of the man, Manuel. The same cold opinions about the
+law, and the faith and importance of South Carolina and her peculiar
+institutions, met his ears wherever he went. The Captain arose, took
+his hat, and bidding the old gentleman good morning, again left for his
+brig.
+
+"Don't be worried about it-I'll do what I can for you," said the old
+man, as the Captain was leaving. George followed him into the street,
+and made a great many apologies for his father's opinions and seeming
+indifference, promising to do himself what his father did not seem
+inclined to undertake. The Captain saw no more of him during his stay in
+Charleston, and if his influence was exerted in Manuel's behalf, he did
+not feel its benefits.
+
+Business had so occupied the Captain's attention during the day, that
+he had no time to visit Manuel at the jail; and when he returned to the
+vessel, a message awaited him from the British consul. One of the seamen
+had been detailed to fill Manuel's place, who, with his dinner all
+prepared, reminded the Captain that it was awaiting him. He sat down,
+took dinner, and left to answer the consul's call. Arriving at the
+office, he found the consul had left for his hotel, and would not return
+until four o'clock. As he passed the post-office, a knot of men stood
+in front of it, apparantly in anxious discussion. Feeling that their
+conversation might be interesting to him, or have some connection with
+his case, he walked slowly back, and as he approached them, observed
+that the conversation had become more excited. The principals were Mr.
+Grimshaw, and a factor on the bay, deeply interested in shipping.
+
+"A man acting in your capacity," said the factor, "should never make use
+of such expressions-never give encouragement to mob law. It's not only
+disgraceful to any city, but ruinous to its interests. Officials never
+should set or encourage the example. Want of order is already in the
+ascendant, and if the populace is to be led on to riot by the officials,
+what check have we? God save us from the direful effects!"
+
+"Well, perhaps I went too far," said Mr. Grimshaw, "for I think as much
+of the name of our fair city as you do. But we ought to teach him that
+he can't pursue this open, bold, and daring course, endangering our
+institutions, because he's consul for Great Britain. I would, at all
+events, treat him as we did the Yankee HOAR from Massachusetts, and let
+the invitation be given outside of official character, to save the name;
+then, if he did not move off, I'd go for serving him as they did the
+Spanish consul, in New Orleans. These English niggers and Yankee niggers
+are fast destroying the peace of Charleston."
+
+"You would, would you?" said another. "Then you would incite the fury
+of an ungovernable mob to endanger the man's life for carrying out the
+instructions of his government."
+
+"That don't begin to be all that he does, for he's meddling with every
+thing, and continually making remarks about our society," said Grimshaw,
+evidently intending to create ill feeling against the consul, and to
+make the matter as bad as possible.
+
+"Now, Mr. Grimshaw," said the factor, "you know your jail is not fit to
+put any kind of human beings into, much less respectable men. It's
+an old Revolutionary concern, tumbling down with decay, swarming with
+insects and vermin; the rooms are damp and unhealthy, and without means
+to ventilate them; the mildew and horrible stench is enough to strike
+disease into the strongest constitution; and you aggravate men's
+appetites with food that's both insufficient and unwholesome, I know,
+because I visited a friend who was put in there on 'mesne process.'"
+
+"There is little confidence to be placed in the stories of prisoners;
+they all think they must be treated like princes, instead of considering
+that they are put there for cause, and that a jail was intended for
+punishment," interrupted Grimshaw, anxious to change the subject of
+conversation, and displaying an habitual coldness to misfortune which
+never can see the gentleman in a prisoner.
+
+"Yes, but you must not measure men by that standard. Circumstances which
+bring them there are as different as their natures. I've known many
+good, honest, and respectable, citizens, who once enjoyed affluence in
+our community, put in there, month after month, and year after year,
+suffering the persecution of creditors and the effects of bad laws. Now
+these men would not all complain if there was no cause, and they all
+loved you, as you state. But tell me, Mr. Grimshaw, would it not be even
+safer for our institutions to make a restriction confining them to the
+wharf, which could be easily done, and with but small expense to the
+city? Niggers on the wharves could have no communication with them,
+because each is occupied in his business, and ours are too closely
+watched and driven during working hours. As soon as those hours end,
+they are bound to leave, and the danger ends. Again, those niggers who
+work on the wharves are generally good niggers, while, on the other
+hand, bad niggers are put into jail; and during the hours these stewards
+are allowed the privilege of the yard, they mix with them without
+discrimination or restraint. Their feelings, naturally excited by
+imprisonment, find relief in discoursing upon their wrongs with those of
+their own color, and making the contamination greater," said the factor,
+who seemed inclined to view the matter in its proper light.
+
+"Oh! what sir? That would never do. You mistake a nigger's feelings
+entirely. Privileges never create respect with them. Just make a law to
+leave 'em upon the wharf, and five hundred policemen wouldn't keep 'em
+from spoiling every nigger in town, just destroying the sovereignty of
+the law, and yielding a supreme right that we have always contended
+for. It's 'contrary to law,' and we must carry out the law," replied
+Grimshaw.
+
+"Pshaw! Talk such stuff to me! Just take away the sixteen hundred or
+two thousand dollars that you make by the law; and you'd curse it for
+a nuisance. It would become obsolete, and the poor devils of stewards
+would do what they pleased; you'd never trouble your head about
+them. Now, Grimshaw, be honest for once; tell us what you would do if
+circumstances compelled the Captain to leave that nigger boy here?"
+
+"Carry out the letter of the law; there's no alternative. But the
+Captain swears he's a white man, and that would give him an opportunity
+to prove it."
+
+"How is he to prove it, Grimshaw? We take away the power, and then ask
+him to do what we make impossible. Then, of course, you would carry out
+the letter of the law and sell him for a slave. * * * Well, I should
+like to see the issue upon a question of that kind carried out upon an
+English nigger. It would be more of a curse upon our slave institution
+than every thing else that could be raised," said the factor.
+
+"Gentlemen, you might as well preach abolition at once, and then the
+public would know what your sentiments were, and how to guard against
+you. I must bid you good-by." So saying, Mr. Grimshaw twisted his
+whip, took a large quid of tobacco, and left the company to discuss the
+question among themselves.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII. LITTLE TOMMY AND THE POLICE.
+
+
+
+WE must take the reader back to the old jail, and continue our scene
+from where we left little Tommy spreading the Captain's present before
+the imprisoned stewards, whose grateful thanks were showered upon the
+head of the bestower. Kindness, be it ever so small, to a man in prison,
+is like the golden rays of the rising sun lighting up the opening day.
+They all partook of the refreshments provided for them with grateful
+spirits.
+
+It was near ten o'clock when Daley came to announce that it was time to
+close the prison, and all strangers must withdraw. Tommy had insisted
+upon stopping with Manuel during the night.
+
+This man Daley was a proverbial drunkard, a tyrant in the exercise of
+his "little brief authority," and a notorious--. Singular as it may
+seem, considering his position, he would quarrel with the men for a
+glass of whiskey, had given the jailer more trouble than any other man,
+and been several times confined in the cells for his incorrigible vices.
+If any thing more was wanting to confirm our note, we could refer to
+Colonel Condy, the very gentlemanly United States marshal in a very rude
+manner, told him it was against the rules, and putting his hand to
+his back, pushed him out of the cell and secured the bolts. The little
+fellow felt his way through the passage and down the stairs in the dark
+until he reached the corridor, where the jailer stood awaiting to
+let him pass the outer iron-gate. "You've made a long stay, my little
+fellow. You'll have a heap o' trouble to find the wharf, at this time o'
+night. I'd o' let you stopped all night, but it's strictly against the
+sheriff's orders," said the jailer, as, he passed into the street, at
+the same time giving him a list of imperfect directions about the course
+to proceed.
+
+The jail is in a distant and obscure part of the city, surrounded by
+narrow streets and lanes, imperfectly laid out and undefined. In leaving
+the walls of the prison, he mistook his direction, and the night being
+very dark, with a light, drizzling rain, which commenced while he was in
+the prison, the whole aspect of things seemed reversed. After travelling
+about for some time, he found himself upon a narrow strip of land that
+crossed a basin of water and led to Chisholm's mill. The different
+appearance of things here convinced him of his error. Bewildered,
+and not knowing which way to proceed, he approached a cross road, and
+sitting down upon a log, wept bitterly. He soon heard a footstep, and as
+it approached, his cares lightened. It proved to be a negro man from the
+mill.
+
+These mills are worked all night, and the poor negroes, wishing to
+follow an example which massa sets on a grand scale, save that they
+have an excuse in the fatigue of labor, will delegate some shrewd one of
+their number to proceed to a Dutch "corner-shop" in the suburbs, run the
+gauntlet of the police, and get a bottle of whiskey, When interrogated,
+they are always "going for a bottle of molasses." They keep a keen watch
+for the police, and their cunning modes of eluding their vigilance forms
+many amusing anecdotes. They are bound to have a pass from master, or
+some white man; but if they can reach the shop in safety, the Dutchman
+will always furnish them with one to return. It not unfrequently happens
+that the guard-men are much more ignorant than the slaves. The latter
+knowing this, will endeavor to find their station and approach by it,
+taking with them either an old pass or a forged one, which the
+guard-man makes a wonderful piece of importance about examining and
+countersigning, though he can neither read nor write. Thus Sambo passes
+on to get his molasses, laughing in his sleeve to think how he "fool
+ignorant buckra." A change of guard often forms a trap for Sambo, when
+he is lugged to the guard-house, kept all night, his master informed in
+the morning, and requested to step up and pay a fine, or Sambo's
+back catches thirty-nine, thus noting a depression of value upon the
+property. Sometimes his master pays the municipal fine, and administers
+a domestic castigation less lacerating bound into the city on the usual
+errand of procuring a little of molasses. When he first discovered
+Tommy, he started back a few paces, as if in fear; but on being told by
+Tommy that he was lost, and wanted to find his way to the wharves, he
+approached and recovering, confidence readily, volunteered to see him to
+the corner of Broad street. So, taking him by the hand, they proceeded
+together until they reached the termination of the Causeway, and were
+about to enter Tradd street, when suddenly a guard-man sprang from
+behind an old shed. The negro, recognising his white belt and tap-stick,
+made the best of his time, and set off at full speed down a narrow lane.
+The watchman proceeded close at his heels, springing his rattle at every
+step, and pouring out a volley of vile imprecations. Tommy stood for a
+few moments, but soon the cries of the negro and the beating of clubs
+broke upon his ear; he became terrified, and ran at the top of his speed
+in an opposite direction. Again he had lost his way, and seemed in a
+worse dilemma than before; he was weary and frightened, and hearing so
+many stories among the sailors about selling white children for slaves,
+and knowing the imprisonment of Manuel, which he did not comprehend,
+his feelings were excited to the highest degree. After running for a few
+minutes, he stopped to see if he could recognize his position. The first
+thing that caught his eye was the old jail, looming its sombre walls in
+the gloomy contrast of night. He followed the walls until he reached the
+main gate, and then, taking an opposite direction from his former route,
+proceeded along the street until he came to a lantern, shedding its
+feeble light upon the murky objects at the corner of a narrow lane.
+Here he stood for several minutes, not knowing which way to proceed: the
+street he was in continued but a few steps farther, and turn which ever
+way he would, darkness and obstacles rose to impede his progress. At
+length he turned down the lane, and proceeded until he came to another
+junction of streets; taking one which he thought would lead him in the
+right direction, he wandered through it and into a narrow, circuitous
+street, full of little, wretched-looking houses. A light glimmered from
+one of them, and he saw a female passing to and fro before the window.
+He approached and rapped gently upon the door. Almost simultaneously
+the light was extinguished. He stood for a few minutes, and again rapped
+louder than before; all was silent for some minutes. A drenching shower
+had commenced, adding to the already gloomy picture; and the rustling
+leaves on a tree that stood near gave an ominous sound to the excited
+feelings of the child. He listened at the door with anxiety and fear, as
+he heard whispers within; and as he was about to repeat his rapping,
+a window on the right hand was slowly raised. The female who had been
+pacing the floor protruded her head with a caution that bespoke alarm.
+Her long, black hair hanging about her shoulders, and her tawny, Indian
+countenance, with her ghost-like figure dressed in a white habiliment,
+struck him with a sort of terror that wellnigh made him run.
+
+"Who is that, at this time of night?" inquired the woman, in a low
+voice.
+
+"It's only me. I'm lost, and can't find my way to our vessel," said
+Tommy, in a half-crying tone.
+
+"Mother," said the woman, shutting the window, "it's only a little
+sailor-boy, a stranger, and he's wet through."
+
+She immediately unbarred and opened the door, and invited him to come
+in. Stepping beyond the threshold, she closed the door against the
+storm, and placing a chair at the fire, told him to sit down and
+warm himself. They were mulatto half-breeds, retaining all the
+Indian features which that remnant of the tribe now in Charleston
+are distinguished by a family well known in the city, yet under the
+strictest surveillance of the police. Every thing around the little room
+denoted poverty and neatness. The withered remnant of an aged Indian
+mother lay stretched upon a bed of sickness, and the daughter, about
+nineteen years old, had been watching over her, and administering those
+comforts, which her condition required. "Why, mother, it's a'most twelve
+o'clock. I don't believe he'll come to-night."
+
+She awaited her friend, or rather he whose mistress she had condescended
+to be, after passing from several lords. The history of this female
+remnant of beautiful Indian girls now left in Charleston, is a mournful
+one. The recollection of their noble sires, when contrasted with their
+present unhappy associations, affords a sad subject for reflection and
+"this little boy can stop till morning in our room up-stairs," said she,
+looking up at an old Connecticut clock that adorned the mantel-piece.
+
+"Oh! I could not stay all night. The mate would be uneasy about me, and
+might send the crew to look for me. I'm just as thankful, but I couldn't
+stop," said Tommy.
+
+"But you never can find the bay on such a night as this; and I've no
+pass, or I would show you into Broad street, and then you could find the
+way. I am afraid of the guardmen, and if they caught me and took me to
+the station, my friend would abuse me awfully," said Angeline, for
+such was her name; and she laid her hand upon his arm to feel his wet
+clothes.
+
+He now arose from the chair, and putting on his hat, she followed him to
+the door and directed him how to proceed to find Broad street.
+
+He proceeded according to her directions, and soon found it. Now, he
+thought, he was all right; but the wind had increased to a gale, and
+having a full sweep through the street, it was as much as he could do to
+resist it. He had scarcely reached half the distance of the street when
+it came in such sudden gusts that he was forced to seek a refuge against
+its fury in the recess of a door. He sat down upon a step, and buttoning
+his little jacket around him, rested his head upon his knees, and
+while waiting for the storm to abate, fell into a deep sleep. From this
+situation he was suddenly aroused by a guardman, who seized him by the
+collar, and giving him an unmerciful twitch, brought, him headlong upon
+the sidewalk.
+
+"What are you at here? Ah! another miserable vagrant, I suppose. We'll
+take care of such rascals as you; come with me. We'll larn ye to be
+round stealing at this time o' night."
+
+"No, sir! no, sir! I didn't do nothing"--
+
+"Shut up! None of your lyin' to a policeman, you young rascal. I don't
+want to hear, nor I won't stand your infernal lies."
+
+"Oh do, mister, let me tell you all about it, and I know you won't hurt
+me. I'm only going to the vessel, if you'll show me the way," said the
+little fellow imploringly.
+
+"Stop yer noise, ye lying young thief, you. Ye wouldn't be prowling
+about at this time o' night if ye belonged to a vessel. 'Pon me soul,
+I believe yer a nigger. Come to the light," said the guardman, dragging
+him up to a lamp near by. "Well, you a'n't a nigger, I reckon, but yer a
+strolling vagrant, and that's worse," he continued, after examining his
+face very minutely. So, dragging him to the guardhouse as he would a
+dog, and thrusting him into a sort of barrack-room, the captain of the
+guard and several officials soon gathered around him to inquire the
+difficulty. The officers listened to the guardman's story, with perfect
+confidence in every thing he said, but refused to allow the little
+fellow to reply in his own behalf. "I watched him for a long time, saw
+him fumbling about people's doors, and then go to sleep in Mr. T--'s
+recess. These boys are gettin' to be the very mischief-most dangerous
+fellows we have to deal with," said the policeman.
+
+"Oh, no! I was only goin' to the brig, and got turned round. I've been
+more than two hours trying to find my way in the storm. I'm sure I a'n't
+done no harm. If ye'll only let me tell my story," said Tommy.
+
+"Shut up! We want no stories till morning. The mayor will settle your
+hash to-morrow; and if you belong to a ship, you can tell him all about
+it; but you'll have the costs to pay anyhow. Just lay down upon that
+bench, and you can sleep there till morning; that's better than
+loafing about the streets," said the captain of the guard, a large,
+portly-looking man, as he pointed Tommy to a long bench similar to those
+used in barrack-rooms.
+
+The little fellow saw it was no use to attempt a hearing, and going
+quietly to the bench, he pulled off his man-a-war hat, and laying it
+upon a chair, stretched himself out upon it, putting his little hands
+under his head to ease it from the hard boards.
+
+But he was not destined to sleep long in this position, for a loud,
+groaning noise at the door, broke upon their ears though the pelting
+fury of the storm, like one in agonizing distress.
+
+"Heavens! what is that!" said the captain of the guard, suddenly
+starting from his seat, and running for the door, followed by the
+whole posse. The groans grew louder and more death-like in their
+sound, accompanied by strange voices, giving utterance to horrible
+imprecations, and a dragging upon the floor. The large door opened, and
+what a sight presented itself! Three huge monsters, with side-arms on,
+dragged in the poor negro who proffered to show Tommy into Broad street.
+His clothes were nearly torn from his back, besmeared with mud, from
+head to foot, and his face cut and mangled in the most shocking manner.
+His head, neck, and shoulders, were covered with a gore of blood, and
+still it kept oozing from his mouth and the cuts on his head. They
+dragged him in as if he was a dying dog that had been beaten with a
+club, and threw him into a corner, upon the floor, with just about as
+much unconcern.
+
+"Oh! massa! massa! kill me, massa, den 'em stop sufferin'!" said the
+poor fellow, in a painful murmur, raising his shackled hands to his
+head, and grasping the heavy chain that secured his neck, in the agony
+of pain.
+
+"What has he done?" inquired the officer.
+
+"Resisted the guard, and ran when we told him to stop!" responded a trio
+of voices. "Yes, and attempted to get into a house. Ah! you vagabond
+you; that's the way we serve niggers like you!--Attempt to run again,
+will you? I'll knock your infernal daylights out, you nigger you," said
+one of the party.
+
+"It does seem tome that you might have taken him, and brought him up
+with less severity," said the officer.
+
+"What else could we do, sure? Didn't we catch him prowling about with
+a white fellow, and he runn'd till we couldn't get him. Indeed it was
+nothing good they were after, and it's the like o' them that bees doing
+all the mischief beyant the city."
+
+"An' 'imself, too, struck Muldown two pokes, 'efore he lave de hancuffs
+be pat upon him, at all!" said another of the guardmen; and then turning
+around, caught a glimpse of poor little Tommy, who had been standing up
+near a desk, during the scene, nearly "frightened out of his wits."
+
+"By the pipers,--what! and is't here ye are? The same that was with
+himself beyant! Come here, you spalpeen you. Wasn't ye the same what
+runn'd whin we bees spaken to that nigger?" said the same guardman,
+taking hold of Tommy's arm, and drawing him nearer the light.
+
+"Yes, he was coming along with me, to show me"--
+
+"Stop!--you know you are going to lie already. Better lock 'em both up
+for the night, and let them be sent up in the morning," said another.
+
+"Then you won't let me speak for myself--"
+
+"Hush, sir!" interrupted the officer; "you can tell your story in the
+morning! but take care you are not a vagrant. If it's proved that
+you were with that nigger at the improper hour, you'll get your back
+scarred. Come, you have owned it, and I must lock you up."
+
+Without attempting to wash the blood off the negro, or dress his wounds,
+they unlocked the handcuffs, and loosened the chain from his neck,
+handling him with less feeling than they would a dumb brute. Relieved of
+his chains, they ordered him to get up.
+
+The poor creature looked up imploringly, as if to beg them to spare his
+life, for he was too weak to speak. He held up his hands, drenched with
+blood, while beneath his head was a pool of gore that had streamed from
+his mounds. "None of your infernal humbuggery-you could run fast enough.
+Just get up, and be spry about it, or I'll help you with the cowhide,"
+said the officer, calling to one of the guardmen to bring it to him. He
+now made an effort, and had got upon his knees, when the guardman that
+seemed foremost in his brutality fetched him a kick with his heavy boots
+in the side, that again felled him to the ground with a deep groan.
+
+"Oh-tut! that will not do. You mus'n't kill the nigger; his master will
+come for him in the morning," said the officer, stooping down and taking
+hold of his arm with his left hand, while holding a cowhide in his
+right. "Come, my boy, you must get up and go into the lock-up," he
+continued.
+
+"Massa! oh, good massa, do-don't! I's most dead now, wha'for ye no
+lef me whare a be?" said he in a whining manner; and making a second
+attempt, fell back upon the floor, at which two of them seized him by
+the shoulders, and dragging him into a long, dark, cell-like room, threw
+him violently upon the floor. Then returning to the room, the officer
+took Tommy by the arm, and marching him into the same room, shut the
+door to smother his cries. The little fellow was so frightened, that he
+burst into an excitement of tears. The room was dark, and as gloomy as
+a cavern. He could neither lie down, sleep, nor console himself. He
+thought of Manuel, only to envy his lot, and would gladly have shared
+his imprisonment, to be relieved from such a horrible situation. Morning
+was to bring, perhaps, worse terrors. He thought of the happy scenes
+of his rustic home in Dunakade, and his poor parents, but nothing could
+relieve the anguish of his feelings. And then, how could he get word to
+his Captain? If they were so cruel to him now, he could not expect them
+to be less so in the morning. In this manner, he sat down upon the floor
+with the poor negro, and, if he could do nothing more, sympathized with
+his feelings. The poor negro murmured and groaned in a manner that would
+have enlisted the feelings of a Patagonian; and in this way he continued
+until about three o'clock in the morning, when his moaning became so
+loud and pitiful, that the officer of the guard came to the door with an
+attendant, and unbolting it, entered with a lantern in his hand. He held
+the light toward his face, and inquired what he was making such a noise
+about? "Oh! good massa, good massa, do send for docta; ma head got a
+pile o' cuts on him," said he, putting his hand to his head. The officer
+passed the lantern to his attendant, and after putting a pair of gloves
+on his hands, began to feel his head, turn aside his torn clothes, and
+wipe the dirt from the places where the blood seemed to be clotted.
+"Good gracious! I didn't conjecture that you were cut so bad. Here, my
+good fellow, (addressing himself to Tommy,) hold the lantern. Michael,
+go get a pail of water, and some cloths," said he, very suddenly
+becoming awakened to the real condition of the man, after he had
+exhibited a coldness that bordered on brutality.
+
+Water and cloths were soon brought. The attendant, Michael, commenced
+to strip his clothes off, but the poor fellow was so sore that he
+screeched, in the greatest agony, every time he attempted to touch him.
+"Be easy," said the officer, "he's hurt pretty badly. He must a' been
+mighty refractory, or they'd never beaten him in this manner," he
+continued, opening a roll of adhesive plaster, and cutting it into
+strips. After washing, him with water and whiskey, they dressed
+his wounds with the plaster, and bound his head with an old silk
+handkerchief which they found in his pocket, after which they left the
+light burning and retired.
+
+After they retired, Tommy inquired of the negro how they came to keep
+him so long, before they brought him to the guard-house? It proved, that
+as soon as they came up with him, the first one knocked him down with a
+club; and they all at once commenced beating him with their bludgeons,
+and continued until they had satisfied their mad fury. And while he lay
+groaning in the streets, they left one of their number in charge, while
+the others proceeded to get handcuffs and chains, in which they bound
+him, and dragged him, as it were, the distance of four squares to the
+guard-house. What a sublime picture for the meditations of a people who
+boast of their bravery and generosity!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX. THE NEXT MORNING, AND THE MAYOR'S VERDICT.
+
+
+
+SHORTLY after daylight, Tommy fell into a dozing sleep, from which he
+was awakened by the mustering of the prisoners who had been brought up
+during the night, and were to appear before the mayor at nine o'clock.
+A few minutes before eight o'clock, an officer opened the cell-door, and
+they were ordered to march out into a long room. In this room they found
+all the prisoners gathered. There were three blacks and five whites,
+who had been arrested on different charges; and as the mayor's court was
+merely a tribunal of commitment-not judgment-if the charges upon which
+the prisoners were brought up were sustained-which they generally were,
+because the policeman who made the arrest was the important witness,
+they were committed to await the tardy process of the law.
+
+Considerable uneasiness had been felt on board of the Janson for Tommy,
+and the Captain suggested that he might have got astray among the dark
+lanes of the city, and that the mate had better send some of the crew
+to look for him. The mate, better acquainted with Tommy's feelings and
+attachment for Manuel than he was with the rules of the prison and Mr.
+Grimshaw's arbitrary orders, assured the Captain that such a course
+would be entirely unnecessary, for he knew when he left that he would
+stop all night with Manuel. This quieted the Captain's apprehensions,
+and he said no more about it until he sat down to breakfast. "I miss
+Tommy amazingly," said the Captain. "If he stopped all night, he should
+be here by this time. I think some one had better be sent to the jail
+to inquire for him." Just as he arose from the table, one of the crew
+announced at the companion that a person on deck wished to see the
+Captain. On going up, he found a policeman, who informed him that a
+little boy had been arrested as a vagrant in the street, last night, and
+when brought before the mayor a few minutes ago, stated that he belonged
+to his vessel, and the mayor had despatched him to notify the master.
+"Circumstances are suspicious; he was seen in company with a negro of
+very bad habits; but if you can identify the boy, you had better come
+quick, or he'll be sent to jail, and you'll have some trouble to get him
+out," said the messenger, giving the Captain a description of the boy.
+
+"Oh yes!" said the Captain, "that's my Tommy. I verily believe they'll
+have us all in jail before we get away from the port." Numerous
+appointments engrossed his time, and he had promised to meet the consul
+at an early hour that morning. Notwithstanding this, he gave a few
+orders to the mate about getting the hatches ready and receiving
+the port-wardens, and then immediately repaired to the all-important
+guard-house. He was just in time to receive the mortifying intelligence
+that the mayor's court had concluded its sitting, and to see little
+Tommy, with a pair of handcuffs on his hand, in the act of being
+committed to jail by a Dutch constable. He stopped the constable, and
+being told that his honor was yet in the room, put a couple of dollars
+into his hand to await his intercession. Another fortunate circumstance
+favored him; just as he stopped the constable, he saw his friend,
+Colonel S--, approaching. The colonel saw there was trouble, and with
+his usual, characteristic kindness, hastened up and volunteered his
+services.
+
+We must now return to the arraignment, as it proceeded after the
+messenger had been despatched.
+
+The negro confined with Tommy presented a wretched picture when brought
+into the light room among the other prisoners. His head was so swollen
+that no trace of feature was left in his face. Cuts and gashes were
+marked with plaster all over his neck and face; his head tied up with
+an old red handkerchief; his eyes, what could be seen of them, more like
+balls of blood than organs of sight; while the whiskey and water with
+which his head had been washed, had mixed with the blood upon his
+clothes, and only served to make its appearance more disgusting.
+Altogether, a more pitiful object never was presented to human sight.
+
+Some minutes before the clock struck nine, an intelligent-looking
+gentleman, very well dressed, and portly in his appearance, entered
+the room. He was evidently kindly disposed, but one of those men whose
+feelings prompt them to get through business with despatch, rather
+than inquire into the circumstances of aggravated cases. He held a
+consultation with the officer for some minutes with reference to the
+prisoners. After which he mounted a little tribune, and addressing a
+few words to the white prisoners, (a person who acted the part of clerk
+announced court by rapping upon a desk with a little mallet,) inquired
+whether the officers had notified the owners of the negroes. Being
+informed that they had, he proceeded with the negroes first. One, by
+some good fortune, was taken away by his master, who paid the usual
+fee to swell the city treasury; another was sentenced to receive twenty
+paddles on the frame at the workhouse; and the third, the man we have
+described, being brought forward, weak with the loss of blood, leaned
+his hand upon the back of a chair. "Stand up straight!" said the
+officer, in a commanding tone.
+
+"Now, my boy, this is twice you have been before this court. Your master
+has left you to the mercy of the law, and given strict orders to the
+police in the event that you were caught a third time. Your crime is
+worse now, for you were caught in company with that white boy-probably
+on some errand of villany, prowling about the streets after drum-beat.
+I shall, in consideration of the facts here stated by the police, whose
+evidence I am bound to recognise, sentence you to nineteen paddles on
+the frame, and to be committed to jail, in accordance with your master's
+orders, there to await his further directions.
+
+"Arraign the white prisoners according to the roll, Mr.--. Have you sent
+a message to the Captain about that boy?" inquired the mayor.
+
+"No, yer honor; but I will send at once," said the officer, stepping
+into the passage and calling an attendant.
+
+The little fellow was arraigned first. He stood up before the mayor
+while the ruffianly policeman who arrested him preferred the charges
+and swore to them, adding as much to give coloring as possible. "Now, my
+man, let me hear what you have got to say for yourself. I have sent for
+your captain," said the mayor, looking as if he really felt pity for the
+little fellow.
+
+He commenced to tell his simple story, but soon became so convulsed with
+tears that he could proceed no further. "I only went to the jail to see
+Manuel, the steward, and I got lost, and begged the black man to show me
+the way"--said he, sobbing.
+
+"Well, I have heard enough," said the mayor, interrupting him. "You
+could not have been at the jail at that time o' night-impossible. It
+was after hours-contrary to rules-and only makes the matter worse for
+yourself. You can stand aside, and if the Captain comes before court
+is through, we will see further; if not, you must be committed as a
+vagrant. I'm afraid of you young strollers."
+
+The officer of the guard, as if the poor boy's feelings were not already
+sufficiently harassed, took him by the arm, and pushing him into a
+corner, said, "There, you young scamp, sit down. You'll get your deserts
+when you get to the jail."
+
+He sat down, but could not restrain his feelings. The presence of the
+Captain was his only hope. He saw the prisoners arraigned one by one,
+and join him as they were ordered for committal. He was handcuffed like
+the rest, and delivered to the constable. The reader can imagine the
+smile of gladness that welcomed the Captain's timely appearance. The
+latter's exhibition of feeling, and the simple exclamation of the
+child's joy, formed a striking picture of that fondness which a loving
+child manifests when meeting its parents after a long absence.
+
+"Take the irons off that child," said the colonel to the constable. "A
+man like you should not put such symbols of ignominy upon a youth like
+that."
+
+"I would do any thing to oblige you, colonel; but I cannot without
+orders from the mayor," returned the man, very civilly.
+
+"I'll see that you do, very quick," rejoined the colonel, impatiently;
+and taking the little fellow by the arm in a compassionate manner, led
+him back into the presence of the mayor, followed by the Captain.
+
+"I want to know what you are committing this lad for," said the colonel,
+setting his hat upon the table, while his face flushed with indignation.
+
+"Vagrancy, and caught prowling about the streets with a negro at
+midnight. That is the charge, colonel," replied the mayor, with
+particular condescension and suavity.
+
+"Was there any proof adduced to substantiate that fact?"
+
+"None but the policeman's; you know we are bound to take that as prima
+facie."
+
+"Then it was entirely ex parte. But you know the character of these
+policemen, and the many aggravated circumstances that have arisen from
+their false testimony. I wish to cast no disrespect, your honor; but
+really they will swear to any thing for a fee, while their unscrupulous
+bribery has become so glaring, that it is a disgrace to our police
+system. Have you heard the boy's story?" said the colonel.
+
+"Well, he began to tell a crooked story, so full of admissions, and then
+made such a blubbering about it, that I couldn't make head or tail of
+it."
+
+"Well, here is the Captain of his vessel, a friend of mine, whom I
+esteem a gentleman-for all captains ought to be gentlemen, not excepting
+Georgia captains and majors," said the colonel, jocosely, turning round
+and introducing the Captain to his honor. "Now, your honor, you will
+indulge me by listening to the little fellow's story, which will be
+corroborated in its material points by the statements of the Captain,
+which, I trust, will be sufficient; if not, we shall recur to the
+jailer."
+
+"It will be sufficient. I am only sorry there has been so much trouble
+about it," said the mayor.
+
+The boy now commenced to tell his story, which the mayor listened
+to with all learned attention. No sooner had Tommy finished, and the
+Captain arose to confirm his statements, than the mayor declared himself
+satisfied, apologized for the trouble it had caused, and discharged the
+boy upon paying the costs, the amount of which the colonel took from his
+pocket and threw upon the table. Thus was Tommy's joy complete; not
+so the poor negro whose ill luck he shared. This high-sounding mayor's
+court was like Caesar's court, with the exceptions in Caesar's favor.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX. EMEUTE AMONG THE STEWARDS.
+
+
+
+SEVERAL days had passed ere we again introduce the reader to the cell of
+the imprisoned stewards. The captain of the Janson had been assured by
+Mr. Grimshaw that every thing was comfortable at the jail, and Manuel
+would be well cared for. Confiding in this, the activity of the consul
+to bring the matter before the proper authorities-and the manner
+in which his own time was engrossed with his business-left him no
+opportunity to visit Manuel at the jail. Tommy and one of the sailors
+had carried him his hammock, and a few things from the ship's stores;
+and with this exception, they had but little to eat for several days.
+Copeland had but a few days more to remain, and, together with those who
+were with him, had exhausted their means, in providing from day to
+day, during their imprisonment. The poor woman who did their washing,
+a generous-hearted mulatto, had brought them many things, for which she
+asked no compensation. Her name was Jane Bee, and when the rules of the
+jail made every man his own washerwoman, she frequently washed for those
+who had nothing to pay her. But her means were small, and she worked
+hard for a small pittance, and had nothing to bring them for several
+days. They were forced to take the allowance of bread, but could not
+muster resolution to eat the sickly meat.
+
+Those who had suffered from it before, took it as a natural consequence,
+looking to the time of their release, as if it was to bring a happy
+change in their lives. But Manuel felt that it was an unprecedented
+outrage upon his feelings, and was determined to remonstrate against
+it. He knocked loudly at the door, and some of the prisoners hearing it,
+reported to the jailer, who sent Daley to answer it. As soon as the door
+was opened, he rushed past, and succeeded in gaining the iron door that
+opened into the vestibule, where he could converse with the Jailer,
+through the grating, before Daley could stop him.
+
+The jailer seeing him at the grating, anticipated his complaint. "Well,
+Pereira,--what's the matter up-stairs?" said he.
+
+"For God's sake, jailer, what am I put in here for-to starve? We cannot
+eat the meat you send us, and we have had little else than bread and
+water for three days. Do give us something to eat, and charge it to
+consul, or Captain, an' I'll pay it from my wages when I get out, if I
+ever do," said he.
+
+"My dear fellow!" said the jailer, "no one knows your case better than
+I do; but I am poor, and the restrictions which I am under allow me
+no privileges. You had all better take your meat in the morning-if you
+won't take soup-and try to cook it, or get Jane to do it for you. I
+will give you some coffee and bread from my own table, to-night, and you
+better say as little about it as possible, for if Grimshaw hears it, he
+may lock you up."
+
+"Do, I shall be very thankful, for we are really suffering from hunger,
+in our cell, and I pay you when I get money from Captain," said Manuel,
+manifesting his thankfulness at the jailer's kindness.
+
+"I will send it up in a few minutes, but you needn't trouble yourself
+about pay-I wouldn't accept it!" said the jailer; and as good as his
+word, he sent them up a nice bowl of coffee for each, and some bread,
+butter, and cheese. They partook of the humble fare, with many thanks to
+the donor. Having despatched it, they seated themselves upon the
+floor, around the faint glimmer of a tin lamp, while Copeland read
+the twentieth and twenty-first chapters of the Acts of the Apostles.
+Copeland was a pious negro, and his behaviour during his imprisonment
+enlisted the respect of every one in jail. Singular as the taste may
+seem, he had his corner in the cell decorated with little framed
+prints. Among them we noticed one of the crucifixion, and another of the
+Madonna. After reading the chapters, they retired to their hard beds.
+About nine o'clock the next morning, Daley came to the door with a piece
+of neck meat, so tainted and bloody that its smell and looks more than
+satisfied the stomach.
+
+"Here it is, boys," said he; "yer four pound, but ye's better take soup,
+cos ye'll niver cook that bone, anyhow."
+
+"Do you think we're like dogs, to eat such filth as that? No! I'd rather
+starve!" said Manuel.
+
+"Indeed, an' ye'll larn to ate any thing win ye'd be here a month. But
+be dad, if ye don't watch number one about here, ye's won't get much
+nohow," replied Daley, dropping the bloody neck upon the floor, and
+walking out.
+
+"Better take it," said Copeland. "There's no choice, and hunger don't
+stand for dainties, especially in this jail, where everybody is famished
+for punishment. If we don't eat it, we can give it to some of the poor
+prisoners up-stairs."
+
+"While I have good ship-owners, and a good Captain, I never will eat
+such stuff as that; oh! no," returned Manuel.
+
+The meat was laid in a corner for the benefit of the flies; and when
+dinner time arrived, the same hard extreme arrived with it-bread and
+water. And nobody seemed to have any anxieties on their behalf; for two
+of them had written notes to their Captains, on the day previous, but
+they remained in the office for want of a messenger to carry them.
+Fortunately, Jane called upon them in the afternoon, and brought a nice
+dish of rice and another of homony.
+
+We will here insert a letter we received from a very worthy friend, who,
+though he had done much for the Charleston people, and been repaid
+in persecutions, was thrown into jail for a paltry debt by a ruthless
+creditor. Cleared by a jury of twelve men, he was held in confinement
+through the wretched imperfection of South Carolina law, to await nearly
+twelve months for the sitting of the "Appeal Court," more to appease the
+vindictiveness of his enemies than to satisfy justice, for it was well
+understood that he did not owe the debt. His letter speaks for itself.
+Charleston Jail, March 31, '52.
+
+MY DEAR FRIEND,--I could not account for your absence during the last
+few days, until this morning, when Mr. F***** called upon me for a few
+moments, and from him I learnt that you had been quite unwell. If you
+are about to-morrow, do call upon me; for a more dreary place, or one
+where less regard is paid to the calls of humanity, cannot be found
+among the nations of the earth.
+
+Such is the ordinary condition of suffering within this establishment,
+that men, and even women, are forced to all kinds of extremes to
+sustain life; and, to speak what experience has taught me, crime is more
+increased than reduced by this wretched system. There seems to be little
+distinction among the prisoners, and no means to observe it, except in
+what is called Mount Rascal on the third story. Pilfering is so common,
+that you cannot leave your room without locking your door. The jailer
+is a good, kind-hearted old man, very often giving from his own table to
+relieve the wants of debtors, many of whom repay him with ingratitude. I
+have suffered many privations from shipwreck and cold, but never until
+I came to South Carolina was I compelled to endure imprisonment and
+subsist several days upon bread and water.
+
+Talk about chivalry and hospitality! How many men could join with me and
+ask, "Where is it?" But why should I demur, when I see those abroad who
+have been driven from this State to seek bread; when I hear the many
+voices without tell of struggling to live, for want of system in
+mechanical employment, and when I look upon several within these sombre
+walls who are even worse than me. Here is a physician, with a wife
+and large family, committed for a debt which he was unable to pay.
+His father's name stands among the foremost of the State--a General of
+distinction, who offered his life for her in time of war, and whose name
+honors her triumphs, and has since graced the councils of state.
+
+General Hammond, whose name occupies such a conspicuous place in the
+military history of South Carolina. The father's enthusiasm for his
+country's cause led him to sacrifice his all, and by it he entailed
+misfortune upon his descendants. When I consider the case of Shannon,
+whose eleven years and seven months' imprisonment for debt, as it
+was called, but which eventually proved to be a question turning upon
+technicalities of law, gave him, body and soul, to the vindictiveness of
+a persecutor, whose unrelenting malignity was kept up during that long
+space of time. It was merely a breach of limitation between merchants,
+the rights of which should be governed by commercial custom. Shannon
+had, amassed about twenty thousand dollars by hard industry; his health
+was waning, and he resolved to retire with it to his native county.
+The gem proved too glaring for the lynx eye of a "true Carolinian,"
+who persuaded him to invest his money in cotton. Moved by flattering
+inducements, he authorized a factor to purchase for him upon certain
+restrictions, which, unfortunately for himself, were not drawn up with
+regard to legal enforcement-one of those singular instruments between a
+merchant and an inexperienced man which a professional quibbler can
+take advantage of. Cotton was at the tip-top, and very soon Shannon
+was presented with an account of purchase, and draft so far beyond his
+limits, that he demurred, and rejected the purchase entirely; but some
+plot should be laid to entrap him. The factor undertook the force
+game, notified him that the cotton was held subject to his order, and
+protested the draft for the appearance of straightforwardness. Cotton
+shortly fell to the other extreme, the lot was "shoved up" for sale on
+Shannon's account, Shannon was sued for the balance, held to bail, and
+in default committed to prison. His confinement and endurance of it
+would form a strange chapter in the history of imprisonment for debt.
+Carrying his money with him, he closed the door of his cell, and neither
+went out nor would allow any one but the priest to enter for more than
+three years; and for eleven years and seven months he paced the room
+upon a diagonal line from corner to corner, until he wore the first
+flooring, of two-and-a-quarter-inch pine, entirely through.
+
+I might go on and tell of many others, whose poverty was well known,
+and yet suffered years of imprisonment for debt; but I find I have
+digressed. I must relate an amusing affair which took place this morning
+between Manuel Pereira, the steward of the English brig Janson, which
+put into this port in distress, and the jailer. He is the man about whom
+so much talk and little feeling has been enlisted--a fine, well-made,
+generous-hearted Portuguese. He is olive-complexioned--as light as many
+of the Carolinians--intelligent and obliging, and evidently unaccustomed
+to such treatment as he receives here.
+
+Manuel appeared before the jailer's office this morning with two junks
+of disgusting-looking meat, the neck-bones, tainted and bloody, in each
+hand. His Portuguese ire was up. "Mister Poulnot, what you call dis? In
+South Carolina you feed man on him, ah? In my country, ah yes! we feed
+him to dog. What you call him? May-be somethin' what me no know him. In
+South Carolina, prison sailor when he shipwreck, starve him on nosin',
+den tell him eat this, ah! I sails 'round ze world, but never savage man
+gives me like zat to eat! No, I starve 'fore I eat him, be gar! Zar,
+you take him," said he, throwing the pieces of meat upon the floor in
+disdain.
+
+"Meat! Yes, it's what's sent here for us. You mustn't grumble at me;
+enter your complaints to the sheriff, when he comes," said the jailer,
+with an expression of mortification on his countenance.
+
+"Meat, ah! You call dat meat in South Carolina? I call him bull-neck,
+not fit for dog in my country. I see, when Capitan come, vat he do,"
+said Manuel, turning about and going to his room in a great excitement.
+
+"You'd better be careful how you talk, or you may get locked up when the
+sheriff comes."
+
+It seems that the Captain had received a note from him, addressed by one
+of the white prisoners on the same floor, and reached the jail just as
+Manuel had ascended the stairs. He rang the bell and requested to see
+Manuel.
+
+"Manuel Pereira?" inquired the jailer.
+
+"Yes," said the Captain, "he is my steward."
+
+He heard the Captain's voice, and immediately returned to the lobby. The
+tears ran down his cheeks as soon as he saw his old protector. "Well,
+Manuel, I am glad to see you, but sorry that it is in imprisonment.
+Tell me what is the matter. Don't they use you well here?" inquired the
+Captain.
+
+Stepping within the office door, he caught up the pieces of meat, and
+bringing them out in his hands, held them up. "There, Capitan, that
+no fit for man, is it?" said he. "Law send me prison, but law no give
+not'ing to eat. What I do dat people treat me so? Ah, Capitan, bull
+neck, by gar, yes-bull born in South Carolina, wid two neck. Ils sont
+reduits l'extremit," said he, concluding with broken French.
+
+"That cannot be; it's against the law to kill bulls in South Carolina,"
+interrupted the jailer jocosely.
+
+"Must be. I swear he bull-neck, 'cas he cum every day just like him.
+Bull born wid one neck no cum so many. What I get for breakfast,
+Capitan, ah?--piece bad bread. What I get for dinner, ah?--bull-neck.
+Yes, what I get for supper, too?--piece bread and bucket o' water.
+May-be he bad, may be he good, just so he come. You think I live on dat,
+Capitan?" said he, in reply to the Captain's questions.
+
+The Captain felt incensed at such treatment, and excused himself for not
+calling before; yet he could not suppress a smile that stole upon his
+countenance in consequence of Manuel's quaint earnestness.
+
+"That is certainly strange fare for a human being; but the supper
+seems rather a comical one. Did you drink the bucket of water, Manuel?"
+inquired the Captain, retaining a sober face.
+
+"Capitan, you know me too well for dat. I not ask 'em nozin' what he no
+get, but I want my coffee for suppe'. I no eat him like zat," throwing
+the putrid meat upon the floor again.
+
+"Hi, hi! That won't do in this jail. You're dirtying up all my floor,"
+said the jailer, calling a negro boy and ordering him to carry the
+bull-necks, as Manuel called them, into the kitchen.
+
+"You call him dirt, ah, Miser Jailer? Capitan, just come my room; I
+shown him," said Manuel, leading the way up-stairs, and the Captain
+followed. A sight at the cell was enough, while the sickly stench forbid
+him to enter beyond the threshold. He promised Manuel that he would
+provide for him in future, and turning about suddenly, retreated into
+the lower lobby.
+
+"Jailer, what does all this mean? Do you allow men to starve in a land
+of plenty, and to suffer in a cell like that?" asked the Captain in a
+peremptory tone.
+
+"I feel for the men, but you must enter your complaints to the
+sheriff-the ration of the jail is entirely in his hands."
+
+"But have you no voice in it, by which you can alleviate their
+situation?"
+
+"Not the least! My duty is to keep every thing-every thing to rights,
+as far as people are committed. You will find the sheriff in his office,
+any time between this and two o'clock," said the jailer. And the Captain
+left as suddenly as he came.
+
+You will think I have written you an essay, instead of a letter inviting
+you to come and see me. Accept it for its intention, and excuse the
+circumstances. Your obedient servant,
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI. THE CAPTAIN'S INTERVIEW WITH MR. GRIMSHAW.
+
+
+
+THE appearance of things at the jail was forlorn in the extreme.
+The Captain knew the integrity of Manuel, and not only believed his
+statement, but saw the positive proofs to confirm them. He repaired to
+the sheriff's office, and inquiring for that functionary, was pointed to
+Mr. Grimshaw, who sat in his large chair, with his feet upon the table,
+puffing the fumes of a very fine-flavored Havana, as unconcerned as
+if he was lord in sovereignty over every thing about the city. "I am
+captain of the Janson, and have called to inquire about my steward?"
+said the Captain.
+
+"Ah! yes,--you have a nigger fellow in jail. Oh! by-the-by, that's the
+one there was so much fuss about, isn't it?" said Mr. Grimshaw, looking
+up.
+
+"It is an imperative duty on me to seek the comfort of my officers
+and crew," said the Captain. "I received a note from my steward, this
+morning,--here it is, (handing him the note,) you can read it. He
+requested me to call upon him at the jail, where I lost no time in
+going, and found what he stated there to be too true. How is it! From
+the great liberality of tone which everywhere met my ears when I first
+arrived, I was led to believe that he would be made comfortable; and
+that the mere confinement was the only feature of the law that was a
+grievance. Now I find that to be the only tolerable part of it. When a
+man has committed no crime, and is imprisoned to satisfy a caprice
+of public feeling, it should be accompanied with the most favoring
+attendants. To couple it with the most disgraceful abuses, as are shown
+here, makes it exceedingly repugnant. If we pay for confining these men,
+and for their living while they are confined, in God's name let us get
+what we pay for!"
+
+The reader will observe that Mr. Grimshaw was a man of coarse manners
+and vulgar mind, with all their traces preserved on the outer man. He
+looked up at the Captain with a presumptuous frown, and then said, "Why,
+Mr. Captain, how you talk! But that kind o' talk won't do here in
+South Carolina. That nigger o' yourn gives us a mighty site of trouble,
+Captain. He doesn't seem to understand that he must be contented in
+jail, and live as the other prisoners do. He gets what the law requires,
+and if he gives us any further trouble, we shall lock him up in the
+third story."
+
+"You cannot expect him to be contented, when you furnish the means of
+discontent. But I did not come here to argue with you, nor to ask any
+thing as a favour, but as a right. My steward has been left to suffer!
+Am I to pay for what he does not get? Or am I to pay you for the
+pretence, and still be compelled to supply him on account of the owners?
+You must excuse my feelings, for I have had enough to provoke them!"
+returned the Captain.
+
+"That business is entirely my own! He gets what the State allows, and I
+provide. Your steward never wrote that note; it was dictated by some of
+them miserable white prisoners. I can hear no complaints upon such cases
+as them. If I were to listen to all these nonsensical complaints, it
+would waste all my time. I wish the devil had all the nigger stewards
+and their complaints; the jail's in a fuss with them all the time. I can
+hear nothing further, sir-nothing further!" said Grimshaw emphatically,
+interrupting the Captain as he attempted to speak; at which the Captain
+became so deeply incensed, that he relieved his feelings in that sort of
+plain English which a Scotchman can best bestow in telling a man what he
+thinks of his character.
+
+"You must remember, sir, you are in the office of the sheriff of the
+county-parish, I mean,--and I am, sir, entitled to proper respect.
+Begone!--avaunt! you have no right to come here and traduce my character
+in that way. You musn't take me for a parish beadle," said Grimshaw,
+contorting the unmeaning features of his visage, and letting fly a
+stream of tobacco juice in his excitement.
+
+"If you have no laws to give me justice, you have my opinion of your
+wrongs," returned the Captain, and taking his hat, left the office with
+the intention of returning to the jail. On reflection, he concluded
+to call upon Colonel S--, which he did, and finding him in his office,
+stated the circumstances to him.
+
+"These things are the fruits of imbecility; but I am sorry to say there
+is no relief from them. We are a curious people, and do a great many
+curious things according to law, and leave a great many things undone
+that the law and lawmakers ought to do. But I will go with you to the
+jail, and whatever my influence will effect is at your service," said
+the Colonel, putting on his hat, and accompanying the Captain to the
+jail.
+
+Mr. Grimshaw had forestalled them, and after having given the jailer
+particular instructions to lock Manuel up if he made any further
+complaint, and to carry out his orders upon the peril of his situation,
+met them a few steps from the outer gate, on his return. "There,
+Captain!" said Grimshaw, making a sort of halt, "I have given the jailer
+particular orders in regard to your grumbling nigger!"
+
+Neither the Captain nor Colonel S--took any notice of his remarks, and
+passed on into the jail. Colonel S--interceded for the man, explaining
+the circumstances which had unfortunately brought him there, and begged
+the jailer's kind consideration in his behalf. The jailer told them what
+his orders had been, but promised to do as far as was in his power, and
+to see any thing that was sent to him safely delivered.
+
+After leaving the jail, Colonel S--proposed a walk, and they proceeded
+along a street running at right angles with the jail, until they came
+to a corner where a large brick building was in process of erection.
+The location was not in what might strictly be called "the heart of the
+city," nor was it in the suburbs. Carpenters and masons, both black and
+white, were busily employed in their avocations, and from the distance
+all seemed fair and moving with despatch. As they approached nearer,
+cries and moans sounded upon the air, and rose high above the clatter of
+the artisans' work. The Captain quickened his pace, but the colonel,
+as if from a consciousness of the effect, halted, and would fain have
+retraced his steps. "Come!" said the Captain, "let us hasten-they are
+killing somebody!" They approached the building, and entered by an open
+door in the basement. The passage, or entry-way, was filled with all
+sorts of building materials; and on the left, another door opened into
+a long basement apartment, with loose boards laid upon the floor-joists
+overhead. Here in this dark apartment was the suffering object whose
+moans had attracted their attention. A large billet of wood, about six
+feet long and three feet square, which had the appearance of being used
+for a chopping-block, laid near. A poor negro man, apparently advanced
+in years, was stripped naked and bent over the block, in the shape of a
+horse-shoe, with his hands and feet closely pinioned to stakes, driven
+in the ground on each side. His feet were kept close together, and close
+up to the log, while he was drawn over, tight by the hands, which were
+spread open. Thus, with a rope around his neck, tied in a knot at
+the throat, with each end carried to the pinion where his hands were
+secured, his head and neck were drawn down to the tightest point. The
+very position was enough to have killed an ordinary human being in less
+than six hours. His master, a large, robust man, with a strong Irish
+brogue, started at their appearance, as if alarmed at the presence
+of intruders, while holding his hand in the attitude of administering
+another blow. "There! you infernal nigger; steal again, will you?"
+said he, frothing at the mouth with rage--with his coat off, his
+shirt-sleeves rolled up, and his face, hands, arms and shirt-bosom so
+bespattered with blood, that a thrill of horror ran through the Captain.
+On the ground lay several pieces of hoop, broken and covered with blood,
+while he held in his hand another piece, (which he had torn from a
+lime-cask,) reeking with blood, presenting the picture of a murderer
+bestained with the blood of his victim. But the poor sufferer's
+punishment had wasted his strength,--his moans had become so faint as to
+be scarcely perceptible. His posteriors were so cut and mangled that we
+could compare them to nothing but a piece of bullock's-liver, with its
+tenacity torn by craven dogs. His body was in a profuse perspiration,
+the sweat running from his neck and shoulders, while the blood streamed
+from his bruises, down his legs, and upon some shavings on the ground.
+Just at this moment a boy brought a pail of water, and set it down close
+by the tyrant's feet. "Go away, boy!" said he, and the boy left as
+quick as possible. The Captain stood dismayed at the bloody picture.
+
+"Unmerciful man!" said the colonel in a peremptory tone; "what have you
+been doing here? You fiend of hell, let the man up! You own slaves to
+bring disgrace upon us in this manner! Epithets of contempt and disgust
+are too good for you. It is such beasts as you who are creating a
+popular hatred against us, and souring the feelings of our countrymen.
+Let the man up instantly; the very position you have him in is enough to
+kill him, and, if I'm not mistaken, you've killed him already."
+
+"Indeed, he's me own property, and it's yerself won't lose a ha'penny if
+he's kilt. An' I'll warrant ye he's cur't of stalin' better than the man
+beyant at the wurk'o'se would be doin' if. Bad luck to the nager,
+an' it's the second time he'd be doin' that same thing," said he, as
+unconcernedly as if he had just been killing a calf.
+
+"I'll 'your own' you, you miserable wretch! Your abuse and cruel
+treatment of your slaves is becoming a public thing; and if you a'n't
+very careful, something will be done about it before council. If
+they are your own, you must not treat them worse than dogs; they have
+feeling, if you have no compassion. Be quick! release him at once!"
+demanded the colonel, feeling the man's wrist and head.
+
+The tyrant vent deliberately to work, unloosing the cords. This provoked
+the colonel still more, and taking his knife from his pocket, he severed
+the cords that bound his hands and feet, while as suddenly the Captain
+sprang with his knife and severed those that bound his hands and
+neck. "Stop, Captain, stop! take no part," said the colonel, with a
+significant look.
+
+"Gintlemen, I wish yes wouldn't interfere with my own business," said
+the master.
+
+"Take him up, you villanous wretch! I speak to you as you deserve,
+without restraint or respect," again the colonel repeated.
+
+He called to the boy who was bringing the pail of water when they
+entered. He came forward, and taking the poor fellow by the shoulders,
+this beast in human form cried out, "Get up now, ye miserable thief,
+ye." The poor fellow made a struggle, but as the black man raised his
+head-which seemed to hang as a dead weight-exhaustion had left him
+without strength, and he fell back among the bloody shavings like a
+mutilated mass of lifeless flesh.
+
+"None of your humbugging; yer worth a dozen dead niggers anyhow," said
+he, taking up the pail of water and throwing nearly half of it over him;
+then passing the bucket to the black man and ordering him to get more
+water and wash him down; then to get some saltpetre and a sponge to sop
+his flesh.
+
+"Well," said the colonel, "I have seen a good deal of cruelty to slaves,
+but this is the most beastly I have ever beheld. If you don't send for
+a doctor at once, I shall report you. That man will die, to a moral
+certainty. Now, you may depend upon what I say-if that man dies, you'll
+feel the consequences, and I shall watch you closely."
+
+"Sure I always takes care of me own niggers, an' it's himself that won't
+be asked to do a stroke of work for a week, but have the same to git
+well in," said the tyrant as the colonel and Captain were leaving.
+
+"God be merciful to us, and spare us from the savages of mankind. That
+scene, with its bloody accompaniment, will haunt me through life. Do
+your laws allow such things?" said the Captain, evidently excited.
+
+"To tell the truth, Captain," said the colonel, "our laws do not reach
+them. These men own a few negroes, which, being property, they exercise
+absolute control over; a negro's testimony being invalid, gives them an
+unlimited power to abuse and inflict punishment; while, if a white man
+attempts to report such things, the cry of 'abolitionist' is raised
+against him, and so many stand ready to second the cry, that he must
+have a peculiar position if he does not prejudice his own interests
+and safety. I am sorry it is so; but it is too true, and while it
+stigmatizes the system, it works against ourselves. The evil is in the
+defects of the system, but the remedy is a problem with diverse and
+intricate workings, which, I own, are beyond my comprehension to solve.
+The reason why I spoke to you as I did when you cut the pinions from the
+man's hands, was to give you a word of precaution. That is a bad man.
+Negroes would rather be sold to a sugar plantation in Louisiana any
+time than be sold to him. He soon works them down; in two years, fine,
+healthy fellows become lame, infirm, and sickly under him; he never
+gives them a holiday, and seldom a Sunday, and half-starves them at
+that. If his feelings had been in a peculiar mood at the instant you
+cut that cord, and he had not labored under the fear of my presence, he
+would have raised a gang of his stamp, and with the circumstance of your
+being a stranger, the only alternative for your safety would have been
+in your leaving the city."
+
+"That vagabond has beaten the poor creature so that he will die; it
+can't be otherwise," said the Captain.
+
+"Well, no; I think not, if he is well taken care of for a week or so;
+but it's a chance if that brute gives him a week to get well. When
+proud-flesh sets in, it is very tedious; that is the reason, so far
+as the law is concerned, that the lash was abolished and the paddle
+substituted--the former mangled in the manner you saw just now, while
+the latter is more acute and bruises less. I have seen a nigger taken
+from the paddle-frame apparently motionless and lifeless, very little
+bruised, and not much blood drawn; but he would come to and go to work
+in three or four days," said the colonel as they passed along together.
+
+We would print the name of this brute in human form, that the world
+might read it, were it not for an amiable wife and interesting family,
+whose feelings we respect. We heard the cause of this cruel torture a
+short time after, which was simply that he had stolen a few pounds
+of nails, and this fomented the demon's rage. In the manner we have
+described, this ferocious creature had kept his victim for more than two
+hours, beating him with the knotty hoops taken from lime-casks. His rage
+would move at intervals, like gusts of wind during a gale. Thus, while
+his feelings raged highest, he would vent them upon the flesh of the
+poor pinioned wretch; then he would stop, rest his arm, and pace the
+ground from wall to wall, and as soon as his passion stormed, commence
+again and strike the blows with all his power, at the same time keeping
+the black boy standing with a bucket of water in his hand ready to pour
+upon the wretch whenever signs of fainting appeared. Several times, when
+the copious shower came over him, it filled his mouth, so that his cries
+resounded with a gurgling, death-like noise, that made every sensation
+chill to hear it. During this space of time, he inflicted more than
+three hundred blows. Our information is from the man who did his
+master's bidding--poured the water--and dared not say, "Good massa,
+spare poor Jacob." We visited the place about a month afterward, on
+a pretext of examining the basement of the building, and saw the
+unmistakable evidences of civilized torture yet remaining in the ground
+and upon the shavings that were scattered around.
+
+"Captain, you must not judge the institution of slavery by what you
+saw there; that is only one of those isolated cases so injurious in
+themselves, but for which the general character of the institution
+should not be held answerable," said the colonel.
+
+"A system so imperfect should be revised, lest innocent men be made to
+suffer its wrongs," said the Captain.
+
+They continued their walk through several very pretty parts of the city,
+where fine flowering gardens and well-trimmed hedges were nicely laid
+out; these, however, were not the habitations of the "old families."
+They occupied parts of the city designated by massive-looking old
+mansions, exhibiting an antiqueness and mixed architecture, with
+dilapidated court-yards and weather-stained walls, showing how steadfast
+was the work of decay.
+
+The colonel pointed out the many military advantages of the city, which
+would be used against Uncle Sam if he meddled with South Carolina. He
+spoke of them ironically, for he was not possessed of the secession
+monomania. He had been a personal friend of Mr. Calhoun, and knew his
+abstractions. He knew Mr. McDuffie; Hamilton, (the transcendant, of
+South Carolina fame;) Butler, of good component parts-eloquent, but
+moved by fancied wrongs; Rhett, renouncer of that vulgar name of Smith,
+who hated man because he spoke, yet would not fight because he feared
+his God; and betwixt them, a host of worthies who made revenge a motto;
+and last, but not least, great Quattlebum, whose strength and
+spirit knows no bound, and brought the champion Commander, with his
+enthusiastic devotion, to lead unfaltering forlorn hopes. But he knew
+there was deception in the political dealings of this circle of great
+names.
+
+Returning to the market, they took a social glass at Baker's, where the
+colonel took leave of the Captain; and the latter, intending to repair
+to his vessel, followed the course of the market almost to its lowest
+extreme. In one of the most public places of the market, the Captain's
+attention was attracted by a singular object of mechanism. It seemed
+so undefined in its application, that he was reminded of the old saying
+among sailors when they fall in with any indescribable thing at sea,
+that it was a "fidge-fadge, to pry the sun up with in cloudy weather."
+It was a large pedestal about six feet high, with a sort of platform at
+the base for persons to stand upon, supplied with two heavy rings about
+eight inches apart. It was surmounted by an apex, containing an iron
+shackle long enough for a sloop-of-war's best bower chain, and just,
+beneath it was a nicely-turned moulding. About three feet from the
+ground, and twelve inches from the pedestal, were two pieces of timber
+one above the other, with a space of some ten inches between them, the
+upper one set about five inches nearest the pedestal, also containing
+two rings, and both supported by posts in the ground. Above the whole
+was a framework, with two projecting timbers supplied with rings, and
+standing about fourteen inches in a diagonal direction above the big
+ring in the apex of the shaft. It was altogether a curious instrument,
+but it designated the civilization of the age, upon the same principle
+that a certain voyager who, on landing in a distant country, discovered
+traces of civilization in the decaying remains of an old gallows.
+
+He viewed the curious instrument for some time, and then turning to an
+old ragged negro, whose head and beard were whitened with the flour of
+age, said, "Well, old man, what do you call that?"
+
+"Why, massa, him great t'ing dat-what big old massa judge send
+buckra-man to get whip, so color foke laugh when 'e ketch 'im on de
+back, ca' bim; an' massa wid de cock-up hat on 'e head put on big vip
+jus' so," said the old negro.
+
+It was the whipping-post, where white men, for small thefts, were
+branded with ignominy and shame.
+
+"Are you a slave, old man?" inquired the Captain.
+
+The old man turned his head aside and pulled his ragged garments, as if
+shame had stung his feelings.
+
+"Do, good massa-old Simon know ye don'e belong here-give him piece of
+'bacca," replied the hoary-headed veteran evidently intending to evade
+the question. The Captain divided his "plug" with him, and gave him a
+quarter to get more, but not to buy whiskey. "Tank-e, massa, tank-e; he
+gone wid ole Simon long time."
+
+"But you haven't answered my question; I asked you if you were a slave."
+
+"Ah! massa, ye don'e know him how he is, ah ha! ha! I done gone now.
+Massa Pringle own 'im once, but 'im so old now, nobody say I own 'im,
+an' ole Simon a'n't no massa what say I his fo' bacon. I don't woff
+nofin' nohow now, 'cos I ole. When Simon young-great time 'go-den massa
+say Simon his; woff touzan' dollars; den me do eve' ting fo' massa just
+so. I prime nigga den, massa; now I woff nosin', no corn and bacon 'cept
+what 'im git from Suke-e. She free; good massa make her free," said he.
+
+"How old are you, old man?" inquired the Captain.
+
+"Ah, Massa Stranger, ye got ole Simon da! If me know dat, den 'im
+know somefin' long time ago, what buckra-man don' larn. I con'try-born
+nigger, massa, but I know yonder Massa Pringle house fo' he built 'im."
+Just at this moment several pieces of cannon and other ordnance were
+being drawn past on long, low-wheeled drays. "Ah, massa, ye don'e know
+what 'em be," said the old negro, pointing to them. "Dem wa' Massa South
+Ca'lina gwan to whip de 'Nited States wid Massa Goberna' order 'em last
+year, an 'e jus' come. Good masse gwan' to fight fo' we wid 'em." The
+poor old man seemed to take a great interest in the pieces of ordnance
+as they passed along, and to have inherited all the pompous ideas of
+his master. The negroes about Charleston have a natural inclination for
+military tactics, and hundreds of ragged urchins, as well as old daddies
+and mammies, may be seen following the fife and drum on parade days.
+
+"Then I suppose you've a home anywhere, and a master nowhere, old man?"
+said the Captain, shaking him by the hand, as one who had worn out his
+slavery to be disowned in the winter of life.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII. COPELAND'S RELEASE, AND MANUEL'S CLOSE CONFINEMENT.
+
+
+
+THE Captain of the Janson, finding that no dependence was to be placed
+upon the statements of the officials, after returning to his vessel,
+gave orders that Tommy should be sent to the jail every day with
+provisions for Manuel. The task was a desirable one for Tommy, and
+every day about ten o'clock he might be seen trudging to the jail with a
+haversack under his arm. There were five stewards confined in the cell,
+and for some days previous to this attention on the part of the Captain
+they had been reduced to the last stage of necessity. The quantity may
+be considered as meagre when divided among so many, but added to the
+little things brought in by Jane, and presents from several of the crew
+of the Janson, they got along. Still it was a dependence upon chance and
+charity, which any casual circumstance might affect. For several days
+they made themselves as contented and happy as the circumstances would
+admit; and always being anxious to enjoy the privilege of their time
+in the yard, they would leave their cell together, and mix with the
+prisoners of their own color under the stoop.
+
+After a few days, they found that their cell had been entered, and
+nearly all their provisions stolen. Not contented with this, the act was
+repeated for several days, and all the means they provided to detect the
+thief proved fruitless. The jailer made several searches through
+their remonstrances, but without effecting any thing. They kept their
+provisions in a little box, which they locked with a padlock; but as
+Daley had the keys of the cell, they had no means of locking the door.
+At length Manuel set a trap that proved effectual. One morning Tommy
+came puffing into the jail with a satchel over his back. "I guess Manuel
+won't feel downhearted when he sees this--do you think he will?" said
+the little fellow, as he put the satchel upon the floor and looked up
+at the jailer. "An' I've got some cigars, too, the Captain sent, in
+my pocket," said he, nodding his head; and putting his hand into a
+side-pocket, pulled out one and handed it to the jailer.
+
+"Ah! you are a good little fellow-worth a dozen of our boys. Sit down
+and rest yourself," said the jailer, and called a monstrous negro wench
+to bring a chair and take the satchel up to the cell. Then turning
+to the back-door, he called Manuel; and, as if conscious of Tommy's
+arrival, the rest of the stewards followed. He sprang from the chair
+as soon as he saw Manuel, and running toward him, commenced telling him
+what he had got in the satchel and at the same time pulled out a handful
+of segars that the Captain had sent for himself. Manuel led the way
+up-stairs, followed by Tommy and the train of stewards. Tommy opened the
+satchel, while Manuel laid the contents, one by one, on the table which
+necessity had found in the head of a barrel.
+
+"Now eat, my friends, eat just as much as you want, and then I'll catch
+the thief that breaks my lock and steals my meat. I catch him," said
+Manuel. After they had all done, he locked the balance up in his box,
+and sent everybody down-stairs into the yard, first covering himself
+with two mattrasses, and giving orders to Copeland to lock the door
+after him. Every thing was ready to move at the word. In this position
+he remained for nearly half an hour. At length he heard a footstep
+approach the door, and then the lock clink. The door opened slowly, and
+the veritable Mr. Daley limped in, and taking a key from his pocket,
+unlocked the little box, and filling his tin pan, locked it, and was
+walking off as independent as a wood-sawyer, making a slight whistle to
+a watch that was stationed at the end of the passage. "It's you, is it?"
+said Manuel, suddenly springing up and giving him a blow on the side of
+the head that sent him and the contents of the pan into a promiscuous
+pile on the floor. Daley gathered himself up and made an attempt to
+reach the door, but Manuel, fearing what might be the consequence if
+the other prisoners came to his assistance, shut the door before him and
+fastened it on the inside.
+
+"Bad luck to yer infernal eyes, will ye strike a white man, ye nager ye,
+in a country like this same?" said Daley, as he was gathering himself
+up. This incensed Manuel's feelings still more. To have insult added to
+injury, and a worthless drunkard and thief abuse him, was more than he
+could bear. He commenced according to a sailor's rule of science, and
+gave Daley a systematic threshing, which, although against the rules of
+the jail, was declared by several of the prisoners to be no more than
+he had long deserved. As may have been expected, Daley cried lustily for
+help, adding the very convenient item of murder, to make his case more
+alarming. Several persons had crowded around the door, but none could
+gain admittance. The jailer had no sooner reached the door, than (most
+unfortunately for Manuel) he was called back to the outer door, to admit
+Mr. Grimshaw, who had just rung the bell. The moment he entered, Daley's
+noise was loudest, and reached his ears before he had gained the outside
+gate. He rushed up-stairs, followed by the jailer, and demanded entrance
+at the cell door, swearing at the top of his voice that he would break
+it in with an axe if the command was not instantly obeyed.
+
+The door opened, and Manuel stood with his left hand extended at Daley.
+"Come in, gentlemen, I catch him, one rascal, what steal my provision
+every day, and I punish him, what he remember when I leave."
+
+Daley stood trembling against the wall, bearing the marks of serious
+injury upon his face and eyes. "At it again, Daley? Ah! I thought you
+had left off them tricks!" said the jailer.
+
+Daley began to tell a three-cornered story, and to give as many possible
+excuses, with equally as many characteristic bulls in them. "I don't
+want to hear your story, Daley," said Mr. Grimshaw. "But, Mr. Jailer, I
+command you to lock that man up in the third story," pointing to Manuel.
+"I don't care what the circumstances are. He's given us more trouble
+than he's worth. He tried to pass himself off for a white man, but he
+couldn't come that, and now he's had the impudence to strike a white
+man; lock him up! lock him up!! and keep him locked up until further
+orders from me. I'll teach him a lesson that he never learnt before he
+came to South Carolina; and then let Consul Mathew sweat over him, and
+raise another fuss if he can."
+
+"If he's guilty of violating the rules of the jail, Daley is guilty of
+misdemeanour, and the thieving has been aggravatingly continued. If we
+put one, we must put both up," said the jailer.
+
+"Just obey my orders, Mr. Jailer. I will reprimand Daley to-morrow. I
+shall just go to the extent of the law with that feller," said Grimshaw
+peremptorily.
+
+"You may lock me up in a dungeon, do with me as you will, if the power
+is yours; but my feelings are my own, and you cannot crush them. I look
+to my consul, and the country that has protected me around the world,
+and can protect me still," said Manuel, resigning himself to the jailer,
+whose intentions he knew to be good.
+
+Poor little Tommy stood begging and crying for his friend and companion,
+for he heard Mr. Grimshaw give an imperative order to the jailer not
+to allow visitors into his cell. "Never mind, Tommy, we shall soon meet
+again, and sail companions for the old owners. Don't cry; the jailer
+will let you see me to-morrow," said Manuel.
+
+"No, I can't do that; you heard my orders; I must obey them. I should
+like to do it, but it's out of my power," returned the jailer, awaiting
+with a bunch of keys in his hand.
+
+Manuel turned to the little fellow, and kissing him as he would an
+affectionate child, bade him adieu, and ascended, the steps leading to
+the third story (Mount Rascal) in advance of the jailer, to be confined
+in a dark, unhealthy cell, there to await the caprice of one man.
+To describe this miserable hole would be a task too harrowing to
+our feelings. We pass it for those who will come after us. He little
+thought, when he shook the hand of his little companion, that it was the
+last time he should meet him for many months, and then only to take a
+last parting look, under the most painful circumstances. But such is the
+course of life!
+
+Copeland had received notice to hold himself in readiness, as his vessel
+would be ready for sea the next morning. He was not long in getting his
+few things in order, and when morning came he was on hand, prepared to
+bound from the iron confines of the Charleston jail, like a stag from a
+thicket. As he bade good-by to his fellow-prisoners in the morning,
+he said, "This is my last imprisonment in Charleston. I have been
+imprisoned in Savannah, but there I had plenty to eat, comfortable
+apartments, and every thing I asked for, except my liberty. Never, so
+long as I sail the water, shall I ship for such a port as this again."
+He requested to see Manuel, but being refused, upon the restraint of
+orders, he left the jail. It was contrary to law; and thus in pursuing
+his vocation within the limits of South-Carolina, his owners were
+made to pay the following sum, for which neither they nor the man who
+suffered the imprisonment received any compensation. "Contrary to Law."
+Schooner "Oscar Jones," Captain Kelly, For William H. Copeland, Colored
+Seaman. To Sheriff of Charleston District. 1852,
+
+To Arrest, $2; Registry, $2, $4.00 To Recog. $1.31; Constable, $1, 2.31
+To Commitment and Discharge, 1.00 To 15 Days' Jail Maintenance of Wm. H.
+Copeland, at 80 cts. per day, 4.50 Received payment, $11.81 J. D--, Per
+Charles E. Kanapeaux, Clerk.
+
+God save the sovereignty of South Carolina, and let her mercy and
+hospitality be known on earth!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII. IMPRISONMENT OF JOHN PAUL, AND JOHN BAPTISTE PAMERLIE.
+
+
+
+IN order to complete the four characters, as we designed in the outset,
+we must here introduce the persons whose names fill the caption. The
+time of their imprisonment was some two months later than Manuel's
+release; but we introduce them here for the purpose of furnishing a
+clear understanding of the scenes connected with Manuel's release.
+
+John Paul was a fine-looking French negro, very dark, with
+well-developed features, and very intelligent,--what would be called in
+South Carolina, "a very prime feller." He was steward on board of the
+French bark Senegal, Captain--. He spoke excellent French and Spanish,
+and read Latin very well,--was a Catholic, and paid particular respect
+to devotional exercises,--but unfortunately he could not speak or
+understand a word of English. In all our observation of different
+characters of colored men, we do not remember to have seen one whose
+pleasant manner, intelligence, and civility, attracted more general
+attention. But he could not comprehend the meaning of the law
+imprisoning a peaceable man without crime, and why the authorities
+should fear him, when he could not speak their language. He wanted to
+see the city-what sort of people were in it-if they bore any analogy to
+their good old forefathers in France; and whether they had inherited the
+same capricious feelings as the descendants of the same generation
+on the other side of the water. There could be no harm in that; and
+although he knew something of French socialism, he was ignorant of
+Carolina's peculiar institutions, her politics, and her fears of
+abolition, as a "Georgia cracker"
+
+A sort of semi-civilized native, wearing a peculiar homespun dress; with
+a native dialect strongly resembling many of the Yorkshire phrases. They
+are generally found located in the poorer parishes and districts, where
+their primitive-looking cabins are easily designated from that of the
+more enterprising agriculturist. But few of them can read or write,--and
+preferring the coarsest mode of life, their habits are extremely
+dissolute. Now and then one may be found owning a negro or two,--but
+a negro would rather be sold to the torments of hell, or a Louisiana
+sugar-planter, than to a Georgia cracker. You will see them approaching
+the city on market-days, with their travelling-cart, which is a
+curiosity in itself. It is a two-wheeled vehicle of the most primitive
+description, with long, rough poles for shafts or thills. Sometimes it
+is covered with a blanket, and sometimes with a white rag, under which
+are a few things for market, and the good wife, with sometimes one
+or two wee-yans; for the liege lord never fails to bring his wife to
+market, that she may see the things of the city. The dejected-looking
+frame of some scrub-breed horse or a half-starved mule is tied (for we
+can't call it harnessed) between the thills, with a few pieces of rope
+and withes; and, provided with a piece of wool-tanned sheep-skin, the
+lord of the family, with peculiar dress, a drab slouched hat over his
+eyes, and a big whip in his hand, mounts on the back of the poor animal,
+and placing his feet upon the thills to keep them down, tortures it
+through a heavy, sandy road. The horses are loaded so much beyond their
+strength, that they will stop to blow, every ten or fifteen minutes,
+while the man will sit upon their backs with perfect unconcern.
+Remonstrate with them in regard to the sufficient draught added to
+the insupportable weight upon their backs, and they will immediately
+commence demonstrating how he can draw easier when there is an immense
+weight upon his back. The husband generally exchanges his things for
+whiskey, rice, and tobacco, while the wife buys calico and knick-knacks.
+Sometimes they get "a right smart chance o' things" together, and have a
+"party at home," which means a blow-out among themselves. Sometimes they
+have a shucking, which is a great affair, even among the little farmers
+in Upper Georgia, where, only, corn-shuckings are kept up with all the
+spice of old custom, and invitations are extended to those at a distance
+of ten or fifteen miles, who repay the compliment with their presence,
+and join in the revelry. There are two classes of the cracker in
+Georgia, according to our observation, differing somewhat in their
+dialect, but not in their habits. One is the upper, and the other the
+low country, or rather what some call the "co-u-n-try-b-o-r-n" cracker.
+The up-country cracker gives more attention to farming, inhabits what's
+known as the Cherokee country and its vicinity, and is designated by the
+sobriquet of "wire-grass man." would be of Greek. Like his predecessors
+in confinement, he fell into the hands of the veritable Dunn, without
+the assistance of his friend Duse, as he called him; but had it not been
+for the timely appearance of a clerk in the French consul's office, who
+explained the nature of the arrest, in his native tongue, Mr. Dunn would
+have found some trouble in making the arrest. Already had the officers
+and crew of the bark gathered around him, making grimaces, and gibbering
+away like a flock of blackbirds surrounding a hawk, and just ready to
+pounce. "Don't I'se be tellin' yees what I wants wid 'im, and the divil
+a bit ye'll understand me. Why don't yees spake so a body can understand
+what yees be blatherin' about. Sure, here's the paper, an' yees won't
+read the English of it. The divil o' such a fix I was ever in before wid
+yer John o' crapue's an' yer chatter. Ye say we-we-we; sure it's but one
+I wants. Ah! whist now, captain, and don't ye be makin' a bother over
+it. Shure, did ye niver hear o' South Carolina in the wide world? An'
+ye bees travellin' all over it, and herself's such a great State, wid so
+many great gintlemen in it," said Dunn, talking his green-island Greek
+to the Frenchman.
+
+"We, we! mon Dieu, ah!" said the Frenchman.
+
+"Ah, shure there ye are again. What would I be doin' wid de 'hole o'
+yees? It's the nager I want. Don't ye know that South Carolina don't
+allow the likes o' him to be comin ashore and playing the divil wid her
+slaves," continued Dunn, stretching himself up on his lame leg.
+
+The clerk stepped up at this moment. "It's 'imself'll be telling yes all
+about it, for yer like a parcel of geese makin' a fuss about a goslin."
+Mr. Dunn had got his Corkonian blood up; and although the matter was
+explained, he saw the means at hand, and fixed his feelings for a stiff
+compensation. The clerk, after explaining to the captain, turned to John
+Paul and addressed him. As soon as he was done, John commenced to pack
+up his dunnage and get money from the captain, as if he was bound on
+an Arctic Expedition. Dunn's eyes glistened as he saw the money passing
+into Paul's hand; but he was not to be troubled with the dunnage, and
+after hurrying him a few times, marched him off. He went through the
+regular system of grog-shop sponging; but his suavity and willingness to
+acquiesce in all Mr. Dunn's demands, saved him some rough usage. There
+was this difference between John Paul and Manuel, that the former,
+not understanding the English language, mistook Dunn's deception for
+friendship, and moved by that extreme French politeness and warmth of
+feeling, which he thought doing the gentleman par excellence; while the
+latter, with a quicker perception of right and wrong, and understanding
+our language, saw the motive and disdained its nefarious object. For
+when Paul arrived at the jail he was minus a five-dollar gold-piece,
+which his very amiable official companion took particular care of, lest
+something should befall it. Poor John Paul! He was as harmless as South
+Carolina's secession and chivalry-two of the most harmless things in the
+world, not excepting Congressional duelling.
+
+As soon as he entered the jail and found that the jailer could speak
+French, he broke out in a perfect tornado of enthusiasm. "Je serai
+charm de lier connaissance avec un si amiable compagnon," said he,
+and continued in a strain so swift and unabated that it would have been
+impossible for an Englishman to have traced the inflections.
+
+The jailer called Daley, and telling him to take his blanket, the
+State's allotment, ordered him shown to his cell. Daley took the blanket
+under his arm and the keys in his hand, and Paul soon followed him
+upstairs to be introduced to his cell. "There, that's the place for
+yees. We takes the shine off all ye dandy niggers whin we gets ye here.
+Do ye see the pair of eyes in the head o' me?" said Daley, pointing to
+his blackened eyes; "an' he that done that same is in the divil's own
+place above. Now, if ye have ever a drap of whiskey, don't be keepin' it
+shy, an' it'll be tellin' ye a good many favors."
+
+"Ah! mon Dieu! Cela fait dresser les cheveux la tete," said Paul,
+shrugging his shoulders.
+
+"Bad luck to the word of that I'd be understandin' at all, at all. Can't
+ye spake so a body'd understand what ye'd mane?"
+
+"C'est ma grande consolation d'avoir. * * * Les Etats-Unis est une
+modle de perfection republicaine," said he, taking the blanket from
+Daley and throwing it upon the floor. He was but a poor companion for
+his fellow-prisoners, being deprived of the means to exercise his social
+qualities. He went through the same course of suffering that Manuel did;
+but, whether from inclination or necessity, bore it with more Christian
+fortitude, chanting vespers every morning, and reading the Latin service
+every evening. The lesson which Manuel taught Daley proved of great
+service to Paul, who gave Daley the jail-ration which it was impossible
+for him to eat, and was saved from his pilfering propensities. Thus,
+after John Paul had suffered thirty-five days' imprisonment, in mute
+confinement, to satisfy the majesty of South Carolina, he was released
+upon the following conditions, and taken to his vessel at early
+daylight, lest he should see the city or leave something to contaminate
+the slaves. "Contrary to law." State vs. "Contrary to law." French bark
+"Senegal," Capt.--For John Paul, Colored Seaman. To Sheriff Charleston
+Dist.
+
+July 18, 1852. To Arrest, $2; Registry, $2, $4.00" "Recog. $1.31;
+Constable, $1, 2.31" "Commitment and discharge, 1.00" "35 Days'
+Maintenace of John Paul, at 30 cents per day, 10.50
+
+Recd. payment, $17.81 J. D--, S. C. D. Per Chs. E. Kanapeaux, Clerk.
+
+A very nice item of disbursements to present to the owners-a premium
+paid for the advanced civilization of South Carolina!
+
+We have merely noticed the imprisonment of John Paul, our limits
+excluding the details. We must now turn to a little, pert, saucy French
+boy, eleven years old, who spoke nothing but Creole French, and that
+as rotten as we ever heard lisped. The French bark Nouvelle Amelie,
+Gilliet, master, from Rouen, arrived in Charleston on the twenty-ninth
+of July. The captain was a fine specimen of a French gentleman. He
+stood upon the quarter-deck as she was being "breasted-in" to the wharf,
+giving orders to his men, while the little child stood at the galley
+looking at the people upon the wharf, making grimaces and pointing one
+of the crew to several things that attracted his attention. Presently
+the vessel hauled alongside of the dock, and Dusenberry, with his
+companion Dunn, who had been watching all the movements of the vessel
+from a hiding-place on the wharf, sprang out and boarded her ere she had
+touched the piles.
+
+The "nigger," seeing Dusenberry approach him, waited until he saw his
+hand extended, and then, as if to save himself from impending danger,
+ran aft and into the cabin, screaming at the top of his voice. The crew
+began to run and move up into close quarters. The issue was an important
+one, and rested between South Carolina and the little "nigger."
+Dusenberry attempted to descend into the cabin. "Vat you vant wid my
+John, my Baptiste? No, you no do dat, 'z my cabin; never allow stranger
+go down 'im," said the captain, placing himself in the companionway,
+while the little terrified nigger peeped above the combing, and rolled
+his large eyes, the white glowing in contrast, from behind the captain's
+legs. In this tempting position the little darkie, knowing he was
+protected by the captain and crew, would taunt the representative of the
+State with his bad French. Dunn stood some distance behind Dusenberry,
+upon the deck, and the mission seemed to be such a mystery to both
+captain and crew, that their presence aroused a feeling of curiosity as
+well as anxiety. Several of the sailors gathered around him, and made
+antic grimaces, pointing their fingers at him and swearing, so that
+Dunn began to be alarmed by the incomprehensible earnestness of their
+gibberish, turned pale, and retreated several steps, to the infinite
+amusement of those upon the wharf.
+
+"Vat 'e do, ah, you vant 'im? Vat you do vid 'im ven zu gets him, ah?
+Cette affaire delicate demande," said one of the number, who was honored
+with the title of mate, and who, with a terrific black moustache and
+beard, had the power of contorting his face into the most repugnant
+grimaces. And, at the moment, he drew his sheath-knife and made a
+pretended plunge at Dunn's breast, causing him to send forth a pitiful
+yell, and retreat to the wharf with quicker movements than he ever
+thought himself capable of.
+
+"Il n'y a pas grand mal cela," said the Frenchman, laughing at Dunn as
+he stood upon the capsill of the wharf.
+
+"Bad luck to ye, a pretty mess a murderous Frinchmin that ye are. Do
+yees be thinkin' ye'd play that trick in South Carolina? Ye'll get the
+like o' that taken out o' ye whin yer before his honor in the mornin',"
+said Dunn.
+
+Dusenberry had stood parleying with the captain at the companion-door,
+endeavoring to make the latter understand that it was not a case which
+required the presence of the silver oar. There is a prevailing opinion
+among sailors, that no suit in Admiralty can be commenced, or seaman
+arrested while on board, without the presence of the silver oar. And
+thus acting upon this impression, the captain and officers of the
+Nouvelle Amelie contended for what they considered a right. The mate and
+crew drew closer and closer toward Dusenberry, until he became infected
+with the prevailing alarm. "Captain, I demand your protection from these
+men, in the name of the State of South Carolina," said he.
+
+"Who he? De State Souf Ca'lina, vat I know 'bout him, ah? Bring de
+silver oar when come take my man. Il y a de la malhomme tet dans sou
+proces," said Captain Gilliet, turning to his mate.
+
+"Avaunt! avaunt!" said the big man with the large whiskers, and they all
+made a rush at Dusenberry, and drove him over the rail and back to the
+wharf, where he demanded the assistance of those anxious spectators, for
+and in the name of the State. It was a right good vaudeville comique,
+played in dialogue and pantomime. The point of the piece, which, with a
+little arrangement, might have made an excellent production, consisted
+of a misunderstanding between an Irishman and a Frenchman about South
+Carolina, and a law so peculiar that no stranger could comprehend its
+meaning at first and as neither could understand the language of the
+other, the more they explained the more confounded the object became,
+until, from piquant comique, the scene was worked into the appearance of
+a tragedy. One represented his ship, and to him his ship was his nation;
+the other represented South Carolina, and to him South Carolina was the
+United States; and the question was, which had the best right to the
+little darkie.
+
+The spectators on the wharf were not inclined to move, either not
+wishing to meddle themselves with South Carolina's affairs-wanting
+larger game to show their bravery-or some more respectable officer
+to act in command. The little darkie, seeing Dusenberry driven to the
+wharf, ran to the gangway, and protruding his head over the rail, worked
+his black phiz into a dozen pert expressions, showing his ivory,
+rolling the white of his eyes, and crooking his finger upon his nose in
+aggravating contempt.
+
+"Shure, we'll turn the guard out and take ye an' yer ship, anyhow. Why
+don't yees give the nager up dasently, an' don't be botherin'. An'
+isn't it the law of South Carolina, be dad; an' be the mortis, ye'd be
+getting' no small dale of a pinalty for the same yer doin'," said Dunn.
+
+A gentleman, who had been a silent looker-on, thinking it no more than
+proper to proffer his mediation, perceiving where the difficulty lay,
+stepped on board and introducing himself to the captain, addressed him
+in French, and explained the nature of the proceeding. The captain shook
+his head for some time, and shrugged his shoulders. "La police y est
+bien administree," said he, with an air of politeness; and speaking to
+his mate, that officer again spoke to the men, and Dusenberry was told
+by the gentleman that he could come on board. Without further ceremony,
+he mounted the rail and made a second attempt at the young urchin,
+who screamed and ran into the cook's galley, amid the applause of the
+seamen, who made all sorts of shouts inciting him to run, crying out,
+"Run, Baptiste! run, Baptiste!" In this manner the little darkie kept
+the officer at bay for more than fifteen minutes, passing out of one
+door as the officer entered the other, to the infinite delight of the
+crew. At length his patience became wearied, and as he was about to call
+Dunn to his assistance, the captain came up, and calling the child to
+him-for such he was-delivered him up, the little fellow roaring at the
+top of his voice as the big officer carried him over the rail under
+his arm. This ended the vaudeville comique on board of the French bark
+Nouvelle Amelie, Captain Gilliet.
+
+The dignity of the State was triumphant, and the diminutive nigger was
+borne off under the arm of its representative. What a beautiful theme
+for the painter's imagination! And how mutely sublime would have been
+the picture if the pencil of a Hogarth could have touched it. The
+majesty of South Carolina carrying a child into captivity!
+
+After carrying John Baptiste about halfway up the wharf, they put him
+down, and made him "trot it" until they reached the Dutch grog-shop
+we have described in the scene with Manuel. Here they halted to take a
+"stiff'ner," while Baptiste was ordered to sit down upon a bench, Dunn
+taking him by the collar and giving him a hearty shake, which made the
+lad bellow right lustily. "Shut up, ye whelp of a nigger, or ye'll get a
+doz for yeer tricks beyant in the ship," said Dunn; and after remaining
+nearly an hour, arguing politics and drinking toddies, Mr. Dunn got very
+amiably fuddled, and was for having a good-natured quarrel with every
+customer that came; into the shop. He laboured under a spirit-inspired
+opinion that they must treat or fight; and accordingly would attempt to
+reduce his opinions to practical demonstrations. At length the Dutchman
+made a courteous remonstrance, but no sooner had he done it, than Dunn
+drew his hickory stick across the Dutchman's head, and levelled him upon
+the floor. The Dutchman was a double-fisted fellow, and springing up
+almost instantly, returned the compliment. Dusenberry was more sober,
+and stepped in to make a reconciliation; but before he had time to exert
+himself, the Dutchman running behind the counter, Dunn aimed another
+blow at him, which glanced from his arm and swept a tin drench, with
+a number of tumblers on it, into a smash upon the floor. This was the
+signal for a general melee, and it began in right earnest between the
+Dutch and the Irish,--for the Dutchman called the assistance of several
+kinsmen who were in the front store, and Dunn, with the assistance of
+Dusenberry, mustered recruits from among a number of his cronies, who
+were standing at a corner on the opposite side, of the street. Both came
+to the rescue, but the O'Nales and Finnegans outnumbering the Dutch,
+made a Donnybrook onset, disarming and routing their adversaries, and
+capsizing barrels, boxes, kegs, decanters, and baskets of onions, into
+one general chaos,--taking possession of the Dutchman's calabash, and
+proclaiming their victory with triumphant shouts.
+
+They had handcuffed the boy Baptiste as soon as they entered the store,
+and in the midst of the conflict he escaped without being observed, and
+ran for his vessel, handcuffed, and crying at the top of his voice. He
+reached the Nouvelle Amelie, to the consummate surprise of the officers
+and crew, and the alarm of pedestrians as he passed along the street.
+"Mon Dieu!" said the mate, and taking the little fellow to the
+windlass-bits, succeeded in severing the handcuffs with a cold-chisel,
+and sent him down into the forecastle to secrete himself.
+
+When Dunn's wild Irish had subsided, Dusenberry began to reason with him
+upon the nature of the affair, and the matter was reconciled upon the
+obligations that had previously existed, and a promise to report no
+violations of the ordinances during a specified time. Looking around,
+Dunn exclaimed, "Bad manners till ye, Swizer, what a' ye done with the
+little nager? Where did ye put him?--Be dad, Duse, he's gone beyant!"
+An ineffectual search was made among barrels and boxes, and up the old
+chimney. "Did ye see him?" inquired Dunn, of a yellow man that had been
+watching the affray at the door, while Dusenberry continued to poke with
+his stick among the boxes and barrels.
+
+"Why, massa, I sees him when he lef de doo, but I no watch him 'till 'e
+done gone," said the man.
+
+Dunn was despatched to the vessel in search, but every thing there was
+serious wonderment, and carried out with such French naviete, that his
+suspicions were disarmed, and he returned with perfect confidence that
+he was not there. A search was now made in all the negro-houses in the
+neighborhood; but kicks, cuts, and other abuses failed to elicit
+any information of his whereabouts. At length Dunn began to feel the
+deadening effects of the liquor, and was so muddled that he could not
+stand up; then, taking possession of a bed in one of the houses,
+he stretched himself upon it in superlative contempt of every thing
+official, and almost simultaneously fell into a profound sleep. In this
+manner he received the attention of the poor colored woman whose bed
+he occupied, and whom he had abused in searching for the boy. In this
+predicament, Dusenberry continued to search alone, and kept it up until
+sundown, when he was constrained to report the case to the sheriff,
+who suspended Mr. Dunn for a few days. The matter rested until the next
+morning, when the case of the little saucy nigger vs. South Carolina was
+renewed with fresh vigor. Then Mr. Grimshaw, accompanied by Dusenberry,
+proceeded to the barque, and there saw the boy busily engaged in the
+galley. Mr. Grimshaw went on board, followed by Duse, and approaching
+the cabin door, met the captain ascending the stairs. "Captain, I
+want that nigger boy of yourn, and you may just as well give him up
+peaceably," said he.
+
+"Yes, monsieur,--but you no treat 'im like child wen you get 'im,"
+said the captain. Retiring to the cabin, and bringing back the broken
+manacles in his hand, he held them up to Mr. Grimshaw, "You put such dem
+thing on child like 'im, in South Carolina, ah? What you tink 'im be,
+young nigger, ox, horse, bull, ah! what? Now you take'e him! treat him
+like man, den we no 'struct to laws wat South Carolina got," continued
+he.
+
+Mr. Grimshaw thanked the captain, but made no reply about the manacles;
+taking them in his hand, and handing the boy over into the charge of
+Dusenberry. In a few minutes he was ushered into the sheriff's office,
+and the important points of his dimensions and features noted
+in accordance with the law. We are not advised whether the pert
+characteristics of his nature were emblazoned,--if they were, the record
+would describe a singular specimen of a frightened French darkie, more
+amusing than judicial. But John Baptiste Pamerlie passed the ordeal,
+muttering some rotten Creole, which none of the officials could
+understand, and was marched off to the jail, where the jailer acted as
+his interpreter. Being so small, he was allowed more latitude to ware
+and haul than the others, while his peculiar bon point and pert
+chatter afforded a fund of amusement for the prisoners, who made him a
+particular butt, and kept up an incessant teasing to hear him jabber.
+The second day of his imprisonment he received a loaf of bread in
+the morning, and a pint of greasy water, misnamed soup. That was the
+allowance when they did not take meat. He ran down-stairs with the pan
+in hand, raising an amusing fuss, pointing at it, and spitting out his
+Creole to the jailer. He was disputing the question of its being soup,
+and his independent manner had attracted a number of the prisoners. Just
+at the moment, the prison dog came fondling against his legs, and to
+decide the question, quick as thought, he set the pan before him; and as
+if acting upon an instinctive knowledge of the point at issue, the dog
+put his nose to it, gave a significant scent, shook his head and walked
+off, to the infinite delight of the prisoners, who sent forth a shout of
+acclamation. Baptiste left his soup, and got a prisoner, who could speak
+Creole, to send for his captain, who came on the next morning and
+made arrangements to relieve his condition from the ship's stores. The
+following day he whipped one of the jailer's boys in a fair fight; and
+on the next he killed a duck, and on the fourth he cut a white prisoner.
+Transgressing the rules of the jail in rejecting his soup-violating the
+laws of South Carolina making it a heinous offence for a negro to strike
+or insult a white person--committing murder on a duck--endeavoring to
+get up a fandango among the yard niggers, and trying the qualities of
+cold steel, in a prisoner's hand, thus exhibiting all the versatility
+of a Frenchman's genius with a youthful sang-froid, he was considered
+decidedly dangerous, and locked up for formal reform. Here he remained
+until the seventeenth of August, when it was announced that the good
+barque Nouvelle Amelie, Captain Gilliet, was ready for sea, and he
+was forthwith led to the wharf between two officers, and ordered to
+be transferred beyond the limits of the State, the Captain paying the
+following nice little bill, of costs. "Contrary to Law." "French
+Barque Nouvelle Amelie, Captain Gilliet, from Rouen, For John Baptiste
+Pamerlie, Colored Seaman. 1852. To Sheriff of Charleston District.
+August 26th, To Arrest, $2; Registry, $2, $4.00"
+
+"Recog. 1.31; Constable, $1, 2.31"
+
+"Commitment and Discharge, 1.00"
+
+"20 days' Jail Maintenance of John Baptiste Pamerlie, at 30 cts. per
+day, $6.00
+
+"Received payment, 13.31 J. D., S. C. D. Per Charles E. Kanapeaux,
+Clerk."
+
+Thus ended the scene. The little darkie might have said when he was in
+jail, "Je meurs de faim, et l'on ne mapport rien;" and when he left,
+"Il est faufite avec les chevaliers d'industrie."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV. THE JANSON CONDEMNED.
+
+
+
+WE must now return to Manuel. He was in close confinement, through Mr.
+Grimshaw's orders. Tommy continued to bring him food from day to day,
+but was not allowed to see him. The mate and several of the crew
+were also refused admittance to him. This was carrying power to an
+unnecessary limit, and inflicting a wanton punishment without proper
+cause, at the same time exhibiting a flagrant disrespect for personal
+feelings. Tommy did not report the affair to the Captain, lest it should
+be misconstrued, and worse punishment be inflicted; but when the men
+were refused, they naturally mistrusted something, and made inquiries
+of the jailer, who readily gave them all the information in his power
+concerning the affair, and his orders. This they reported to the
+Captain, who immediately repaired to the consul's office, where he found
+Mr. Mathew reading a note which he had just received from Manuel. It
+stated his grievances in a clear and distinct manner, and begged the
+protection of that government under whose flag he sailed, but said
+nothing about his provisions. The consul, accompanied by the Captain,
+proceeded to the sheriff's office, but could get no satisfaction. "I
+never consider circumstances when prisoners violate the rules of the
+jail,--he must await my orders! but I shall keep him closely confined
+for two weeks, at least," said Mr. Grimshaw.
+
+This incensed the consul still more, for he saw the manner in which a
+clique of officials were determined to show their arbitrary power. It
+was impossible for him to remain indifferent to this matter, affecting,
+as it did, the life and liberty of his fellow-countryman. He could
+invoke no sympathy for the man, and the extent of punishment to which
+he had been subjected was evidently excited by vindictive feelings. He
+applied for a writ of habeas corpus,--but mark the result.
+
+The Captain proceeded to the jail, and demanded to see his steward; the
+jailer hesitating at first, at length granted his permission. He found
+Manuel locked up in a little, unwholesome cell, with scarcely a glimmer
+of light to mark the distinction of day and night; and so pale and
+emaciated, that had he met him in the street he should scarcely have
+recognised him. "Gracious God! What crime could have brought such an
+excess of punishment upon you?" inquired the Captain.
+
+Manuel told him the whole story; and, added to that, the things which
+had been sent to him during the seven days he had been confined in that
+manner, had seldom reached him. He had lost his good friend Jane, and
+the many kind acts which she was wont to bestow upon him, and had been
+compelled to live upon bread and water nearly the whole time, suffering
+the most intense hunger. Upon inquiry, it was ascertained that the
+few things sent to make him comfortable had been intrusted to Daley to
+deliver, who appropriated nearly the whole of them to his own use, as a
+sort of retaliatory measure for the castigation he received from Manuel.
+He had not failed to carry him his pan of soup at twelve o'clock every
+day, but made the "choice bits" serve his own digestion. The jailer
+felt the pain of the neglect, and promised to arrange a safer process of
+forwarding his things by attending to it himself, which he did with
+all the attention in his power, when Manuel's condition became more
+tolerable. The Captain told Manuel how his affairs stood-that he should
+probably have to leave him in charge of the consul, but to keep up good
+spirits; that he would leave him plenty of means, and as soon as his
+release was effected, to make the best of his way to Scotland and join
+the old owners. And thus he left him, with a heavy heart, for Manuel did
+read in his countenance what he did not speak.
+
+The Janson had been discharged, a survey held upon the cargo, protest
+extended, and the whole sold for the benefit of whom it might concern.
+Necessary surveys were likewise held upon the hull, and finding it so
+old and strained as to be unworthy of repair, it was condemned and sold
+for the benefit of the underwriters. Thus the register "de novo" was
+given up to the consul, the men discharged, and paid off according to
+the act of William IV., which provides that each man shall receive a
+stipend to carry him to the port in Great Britain from which he shipped,
+or the consul to provide passage for him, according to his inclination,
+to proceed to a point where the voyage would be completed. The consul
+adopted the best means in his power to make them all comfortable and
+satisfied with their discharge. Their several register-tickets were
+given up to them, and one by one left for his place of destination;
+Tommy and the second mate only preferring to remain and seek some
+new voyage. The old chief mate seemed to congratulate himself in the
+condemnation of the unlucky Janson. He shipped on board an English ship,
+laden with cotton and naval stores, and just ready for sea. When he
+came on board to take a farewell of the Captain, he stood upon deck, and
+looking up at the dismantled spars, said, "Skipper, a shadow may save
+a body after all. I've always had a presentment that this unlucky old
+thing would serve us a trick. I says to meself that night in the Gulf,
+'Well, old craft, yer goin' to turn yer old ribs into a coffin, at
+last,' but I'll praise the bridge that carries me safe over, because
+I've an affection for the old thing after all, and can't part without
+saying God bless her, for it's an honest death to die in debt to the
+underwriters. I hope her old bones will rest in peace on terra-firma.
+Good-by, Captain,--remember me to Manuel; and let us forget our troubles
+in Charleston by keeping away from it."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV. GEORGE THE SECESSIONIST, AND HIS FATHER'S SHIPS.
+
+
+
+AS we have said, the second mate and little Tommy remained to seek
+new voyages. Such was the fact with the second mate; but Tommy
+had contracted a violent cold on the night he was locked up in the
+guard-house, and had been a subject for the medicine-chest for some
+time; and this, with his ardent attachment for Manuel, and hopes to
+join him again as a sailing companion, was the chief inducement for his
+remaining. The Captain gave them accommodations in the cabin so long as
+he had possession of the ship, which afforded the means of saving their
+money, of which Tommy had much need; for notwithstanding he received a
+nice present from the consul, and another from the Captain, which, added
+to the few dollars that were coming to him for wages, made him feel
+purse-proud, though it was far from being adequate to sustain him any
+length of time, or to protect him against any sudden adversity.
+
+The Captain had not seen little George, the secessionist, since his
+assurance that he would make every thing right with Mr. Grimshaw,
+and have Manuel out in less than twenty-four hours. It was now the
+fourteenth of April, and the signs of his getting out were not so good
+as they were on the first day he was committed, for the vessel being
+condemned, if the law was carried to the strictest literal construction,
+Manuel would be tied up among the human things that are articles of
+merchandise in South Carolina. He was passing from the wharf to the
+consul's office about ten o'clock in the morning, when he was suddenly
+surprised in the street by little George, who shook his hand as if he
+had been an old friend just returned after a long absence. He made
+all the apologies in the world for being called away suddenly, and
+consequently, unable to render that attention to his business which his
+feelings had prompted. Like all secessionists, George was very fiery and
+transitory in his feelings. He expressed unmeasurable surprise when the
+Captain told him the condition of his man in the old jail. "You don't
+say that men are restricted like that in Charleston? Well, now, I never
+was in that jail, but it's unsuited to the hospitality of our society,"
+said he.
+
+"Your prison groans with abuses, and yet your people never hear them,"
+replied the Captain.
+
+George seemed anxious to change the subject, and commenced giving the
+Captain a description of his journey to the plantation, his hunting and
+fishing, his enjoyments, and the fat, saucy, slick niggers, the fine
+corn and bacon they had, and what they said about massa, ending with an
+endless encomium of the "old man's" old whiskey, and how he ripened it
+to give it smoothness and flavor. His description of the plantation and
+the niggers was truly wonderful, tantalizing the Captain's imagination
+with the beauties of a growing principality in itself. "We have just
+got a new vessel added to our ships, and she sails for the Pedee this
+afternoon. We got the right stripe of a captain, but we have made him
+adopt conditions to be true to the secession party. As soon as I get
+another man, we'll despatch her in grand style, and no mistake."
+
+The Captain thought of his second mate, and suggested him at once. "Just
+the chap. My old man would like him, I know," said George, and they
+returned directly to the Janson, where they found the second mate
+lashing his dunnage. The proposition was made and readily accepted.
+Again the Captain parted with little George, leaving him to take the
+mate to his father's office, while he pursued his business at the
+consul's.
+
+George led the mate into the office. "Here, father, here's a man to
+go in our vessel," said he. The old man looked upon him with a serene
+importance, as if he was fettered with his own greatness.
+
+"My shipping interests are becoming very extensive, my man; I own the
+whole of four schooners, and a share in the greatest steamship afloat-I
+mean screw-ship, the South Carolina--you've heard of her, I suppose?"
+said the old man.
+
+Jack stood up with his hat in his hand, thinking over what he meant by
+big interests, and "reckoning he hadn't seen the establishment of them
+ship-owners about Prince's Dock, what owned more ships apiece than there
+were days in the month."
+
+"Now, my man," continued the old man, "I'm mighty strict about my
+discipline, for I want every man to do his duty for the interests of the
+owners. But how many dollars do you want a month, my man?"
+
+"Nothing less than four pounds starling; that's twenty dollars your
+currency, if I reckon right," said Jack, giving his hat a twirl upon the
+floor.
+
+"Wh-e-w! you belong to the independent sailors. You'll come down from
+that afore you get a ship in this port. Why, I can get a good, prime
+nigger feller sailor for eight dollars a month and his feed."
+
+Jack concluded not to sail in any of the old man's big ships, and said,
+"Yes, I joined them a long time ago, and I ha'n't regretted it, neither;
+wouldn't pull a bow-line a penny less. I don't like drogging, no-how.
+Good morning, sir," said he, putting on his hat and backing out of the
+door.
+
+"I wish you'd a' taken a chance with my father, old fellow; he'd a' made
+you captain afore a year," said George, as he was leaving the door.
+
+"The like o' that don't signify. I've been skipper in the West Ingie
+trade years ago. There isn't much difference between a nigger and
+a schooner's captain," said Jack, as he walked off to the Janson,
+preparatory to taking lodgings ashore.
+
+That afternoon about five o'clock, a loud noise was heard on board a
+little schooner, of about sixty tons' register, that lay in a bend of
+the wharf a few lengths ahead of the Janson. Captain Thompson and his
+second mate were seated on a locker in the cabin, conversing upon the
+prospects ahead, when the noise became so loud that they ran upon deck
+to witness the scene.
+
+George stood upon the capsill of the wharf, with mortification pictured
+in his countenance. "Well, captain, you needn't make so much noise about
+it; your conduct is decidedly ungentlemanly. If you don't wish to sail
+in father's employ, leave like a gentleman," said George, pulling up the
+corners of his shirt-collar.
+
+It was the great craft that George had distended upon, and the veritable
+captain of the right stripe, who promised to toe the mark according to
+secession principles, but made no stipulations for the nigger feed that
+was the cause of the excitement. The captain, a Baltimore coaster, and
+accustomed to good feed in his vessels at home, had been induced by a
+large representations to take charge of the craft and run her in the
+Pedee trade, bringing rice to Charleston. On being told the craft was
+all ready for sea, he repaired on board, and, to his chagrin, found
+two black men for a crew, and a most ungainly old wench, seven shades
+blacker than Egyptian darkness, for a cook. This was imposition enough
+to arouse his feelings, for but one of the men knew any thing about
+a vessel; but on examining the stores, the reader may judge of his
+feelings, if he have any idea of supplying a vessel in a Northern
+port, when we tell him that all and singular the stores consisted of
+a shoulder of rusty Western bacon, a half-bushel of rice, and a jug of
+molasses; and this was to proceed the distance of a hundred miles, But
+to add to the ridiculous farce of that South Carolina notion, when he
+remonstrated with them, he was very indifferently told that it was what
+they always provided for their work-people.
+
+"Take your' little jebacca-boat and go to thunder with her," said the
+captain, commencing to pick up his duds.
+
+"Why, captain, I lent you my gun, and we always expect our captains to
+make fresh provision of game as you run up the river," said George.
+
+"Fresh provisions, the devil!" said the captain. "I've enough to do to
+mind my duty, without hunting my living as I pursue my voyage, like
+a hungry dog. We don't do business on your nigger-allowance system in
+Maryland." And here we leave him, getting one of the negroes to carry
+his things back to his boarding-house.
+
+A few days after the occurrence we have narrated above little Tommy,
+somewhat recovered from his cold, shipped on board a little centre-board
+schooner, called the Three Sisters, bound to the Edisto River for a
+cargo of rice. The captain, a little, stubby man, rather good looking,
+and well dressed, was making his maiden voyage as captain of a South
+Carolina craft. He was "South Carolina born," but, like many others of
+his kind, had been forced to seek his advancement in a distant State,
+through the influence of those formidable opinions which exiles the
+genius of the poor in South Carolina. For ten years he had sailed out of
+the port of Boston, had held the position of mate on two Indian voyages
+under the well-known Captain Nott, and had sailed with Captain Albert
+Brown, and received his recommendation, yet this was not enough to
+qualify him for the nautical ideas of a pompous South Carolinian.
+
+Tommy got his baggage on board, and before leaving, made another attempt
+at the jail to see his friend Manuel. He presented himself to the
+jailer, and told him how much he wanted to see his old friend before he
+left. The jailer's orders were imperative. He was told if he came next
+week he would see him; that he would then be released, and allowed to
+occupy the cell on the second floor with the other stewards. Recognising
+one of the stewards that had joined with them when they enjoyed their
+social feelings around the festive barrel, he walked into the piazza to
+meet him and bid him good-by. While he stood shaking hands with him, the
+poor negro.
+
+The name of this poor fellow was George Fairchild. After being sent
+to the workhouse to receive twenty blows with the paddle when he was
+scarcely able to stand, he was taken down from the frame and supported
+to the jail, where he remained several weeks, fed at a cost of eighteen
+cents a day. His crime was "going for whiskey at night," and the third
+offence; but there were a variety of pleadings in his favor. His master
+worked his negroes to the very last tension of their strength, and
+exposed their appetites to all sorts of temptation, especially those who
+worked in the night-gang. His master flogged him once, while he was in
+the jail, himself, giving him about forty stripes with a raw hide on the
+bare back: not satisfying his feelings with this, he concluded to send
+him to New Orleans. He had an affectionate wife and child, who were
+forbidden to see him. His master ordered that he should be sent to the
+workhouse and receive thirty-nine paddles before leaving, and on the
+morning he was to be shipped, his distressed wife, hearing the sad news,
+came to the jail; but notwithstanding the entreaties of several debtors,
+the jailer could not allow her to come in, but granted, as a favor,
+that she should speak with him through the grated door. The cries and
+lamentations of that poor woman, as she stood upon the outside, holding
+her bond-offspring in her arms, taking a last sorrowing farewell of him
+who was so dearly cherished and beloved, would have melted a heart of
+stone. She could not embrace him, but waited until he was led out to
+torture, when she threw her arms around him, and was dragged away by a
+ruffian's hand.
+
+Poor George Fairchild! We heard him moaning under the acute pain of the
+paddle, and saw him thrust into a cart like a dog, to be shipped as a
+bale of merchandise for a distant port, who had suffered with him in the
+guard-house came up and saluted him with a friendly recognition. Some
+two weeks had passed since the occurrence, and yet his head presented
+the effects of bruising, and was bandaged with a cloth. "Good young
+massa, do give me a' fo' pence, for Is'e mose starve," he said in a
+suppliant tone. Tommy put his hand into his pocket, and drawing out a
+quarter, passed it to the poor fellow, and received his thanks. Leaving
+a message for Manuel that he would be sure to call and see him when
+he returned, he passed from the house of misery and proceeded to his
+vessel.
+
+The captain of the schooner had been engaged by parties in Charleston,
+who simply acted as agents for the owners. He had been moved to return
+to Charleston by those feelings which are so inherent in our nature,
+inspiring a feeling for the place of its nativity, and recalling the
+early associations of childhood. Each longing fancy pointed back again,
+and back he came, to further fortune on his native soil. His crew, with
+the exception of Tommy, consisted of three good, active negroes, one of
+whom acted as pilot on the Edisto River. Accustomed to the provisioning
+of Boston ships, he had paid no attention to his supplies; for, in
+fact, he only took charge of the little craft as an accommodation to the
+agents, and with the promise of a large vessel as soon as he returned;
+and sailing with a fine stiff breeze, he was far outside the light when
+the doctor announced dinner. "What have you got that's good, old chap?"
+said he to the cook.
+
+"Fust stripe, Massa Cap'en. A right good chance o' homony and bacon
+fry," returned the negro.
+
+"Homony and what? Nothing else but that?"
+
+"Why, massa! gracious, dat what Massa Whaley give all he cap'en, an' he
+tink 'em fust-rate," said the negro.
+
+As they were the only whites on board, the captain took little Tommy
+into the cabin with him to sit at the same table; but there was too much
+truth in the negro's statement, and instead of sitting down to one of
+those nice dinners which are spread in Boston ships, both great and
+small, there, on a little piece of pine board, swung with a preventer,
+was a plate of black homony covered with a few pieces of fried pork, so
+rank and oily as to be really repulsive to a common stomach. Beside
+it was an earthen mug, containing about a pint of molasses, which was
+bedaubed on the outside to show its quality. The captain looked at it
+for a minute, and then taking up the iron spoon which stood in it, and
+letting one or two spoonfuls drop back, said, "Old daddie, where are all
+your stores? Fetch them out here."
+
+"Gih, massa! here 'em is; 'e's jus' as Massa Stoney give 'em," said the
+negro, drawing forth a piece of rusty and tainted bacon, weighing about
+fifteen pounds, and, in spots, perfectly alive with motion; about a
+half-bushel of corn-grits; and a small keg of molasses, with a piece of
+leather attached to the bung.
+
+"Is that all?" inquired the captain peremptorily.
+
+"Yes, massa, he all w'at 'em got now, but git more at Massa Whaley
+plantation win 'em git da."
+
+"Throw it overboard, such stinking stuff; it'll breed pestilence on
+board," said the captain to the negro, (who stood holding the spoiled
+bacon in his hand, with the destructive macalia dropping on the floor,)
+at the same time applying his foot to the table, and making wreck of
+hog, homony, molasses, and plates.
+
+"Gih-e-wh-ew! Massa, I trow 'im o'board, Massa Whaley scratch 'em back,
+sartin. He tink 'em fust-rate. Plantation nigger on'y gits bacon twice
+week, Massa Cap'en," said he, picking up the wreck and carrying it upon
+deck, where it was devoured with great gusto by the negroes, who fully
+appreciated the happy God-send.
+
+The captain had provided a little private store of crackers, cheese,
+segars, and a bottle of brandy, and turning to his trunk, he opened it
+and drew them out one by one, passing the crackers and cheese to
+Tommy, and imbibing a little of the deacon himself, thus satisfying
+the cravings of nature. Night came on; they were crossing the bar and
+approaching the outlet of the Edisto, which was broad in sight;
+but there was neither coffee nor tea on board, and no prospect of
+supper-nothing but a resort to the crackers and cheese remained, the
+stock of which had already diminished so fast, that what was left was
+treasured among the things too choice to be eaten without limitation.
+They reached the entrance, and after ascending a few miles, came to
+anchor under a jut of wood that formed a bend in the river. The baying
+of dogs during the night intimated the vicinity of a settlement near,
+and in the morning the captain sent one of the negroes on shore for a
+bottle of milk. "Massa, dat man what live yonder ha'n't much no-how,
+alwa's makes 'em pay seven-pence," said the negro. Sure enough it was
+true; notwithstanding he was a planter of some property, he made the
+smallest things turn to profit, and would charge vessels going up the
+river twelve and a half cents per bottle for milk.
+
+The captain had spent a restless night, and found himself blotched with
+innumerable chinch-bites; and on examining the berths and lockers, he
+found them swarming in piles. Calling one of the black men, he commenced
+overhauling them, and drew out a perfect storehouse of rubbish, which
+must have been deposited there, without molestation, from the day the
+vessel was launched up to the present time, as varied in its kinds as
+the stock of a Jew-shop, and rotten with age. About nine o'clock they
+got under weigh again, and proceeding about twenty miles with a fair
+wind and tide, they came to another point in the river, on which a
+concourse of men had assembled, armed to the teeth with guns, rifles,
+and knives. As he passed up, they were holding parley with a man and boy
+in a canoe a few rods from the shore. At every few minutes they
+would point their rifles at him, and with threatening gestures, swear
+vengeance against him if he attempted to land. The captain, being
+excited by the precarious situation of the man and his boy, and anxious
+to ascertain the particulars, let go his anchor and "came to" a few
+lengths above.
+
+Scarcely had his anchor brought up than he was hailed from the shore by
+a rough-looking man, who appeared to be chief in the manouvre, and who
+proved to be no less a personage than a Mr. S--k, a wealthy planter.
+
+"Don't take that man on board of your vessel, at the peril of your life,
+captain. He's an abolitionist," said he, accompanying his imperative
+command with a very Southern rotation of oaths.
+
+The man paddled his canoe on the outside of the vessel, and begged the
+captain "for God's sake to take him on board and protect him; that an
+excitement had been gotten up against him very unjustly, and he would
+explain the circumstances if he would allow him to come on board."
+
+"Come on board," said the captain. "Let you be abolitionist or what you
+will, humanity will not let me see you driven out to sea in that manner;
+you would be swamped before you crossed the bar."
+
+He came on board, trembling and wet, the little boy handing up a couple
+of carpet-bags, and following him. No sooner had he done so, than three
+or four balls whizzed past the captain's head, causing him to retreat to
+the cabin. A few minutes intervened, and he returned to the deck.
+
+"Lower your boat and come on shore immediately," they cried out.
+
+The captain, not at all daunted, lowered his boat and went on shore.
+"Now, gentlemen, what do you want with me?" said he, when S--k stepped
+forward, and the following dialogue ensued:--
+
+"Who owns that vessel, and what right have you to harbor a d--d
+abolitionist?"
+
+"I don't know who owns the vessel; I know that I sail her, and the
+laws of God and man demand that I shall not pass a man in distress,
+especially upon the water. He protests that he is not, and never was
+an abolitionist; offers to prove it if you will hear him, and only asks
+that you allow him to take away his property," rejoined the captain.
+
+"What! then you are an abolitionist yourself?"
+
+"No, sir. I'm a Southern-born man, raised in Charleston, where my father
+was raised before me."
+
+"So much, so good; but just turn that d--d scoundrel ashore as quick
+as seventy, or we'll tie your vessel up and report you to the Executive
+Committee, and stop your getting on more freight on the Edisto."
+
+"That I shall not do. You should have patience to investigate these
+things, and not allow your feelings to become so excited. If I turn
+him and his son adrift, I'm answerable for their lives if any accident
+should occur to them," rejoined the captain.
+
+"Are you a secessionist, captain, or what are your political principles?
+You seem determined to protect abolitionists. That scoundrel has been
+associating with a nigger, and eating at his house ever since he has
+been here."
+
+"Yes, yes, and we'll be d--d if he isn't an abolitionist," joined in
+a dozen voices, "for he dined at Bill Webster's last Sunday on a
+wild-turkey. Nobody but an infernal abolitionist would dine with a
+nigger."
+
+"As for politics, I never had much to do with them, and care as little
+about secession as I do about theology; but I like to see men act
+reasonably. If you want any thing more of me, you will find me at
+Colonel Whaley's plantation to-morrow." Thus saying, he stepped into
+his boat and returned on board of his vessel. Just as he was getting
+under-weigh again, whiz! whiz! whiz! came three shots, one in quick
+succession after the other, the last taking effect and piercing the
+crown of his hat, at which they retired out of sight. Fearing a return,
+he worked his vessel about two miles farther up and came to anchor on
+the other side of the channel, where he waited the return of the tide,
+and had an opportunity to put his affrighted passengers on board a
+schooner that was passing down, bound to Charleston.
+
+The secret of such an outrage is told in a few words. The man was a
+timber-getter from the vicinity of New Bedford, Massachusetts, who, with
+his son, a lad about sixteen years of age, had spent several winters
+in the vicinity of the Edisto, getting live-oak, what he considered
+a laudable enterprise. He purchased the timber on the stump of the
+inhabitants, at a price which left him very little profit, and had also
+been charged an exorbitant price for every thing he got, whether
+labor or provisions; and so far had that feeling of South Carolina's
+self-sufficiency been carried out against him in all its cold
+repulsiveness, that he found much more honesty and true hospitality
+under the roof of a poor colored man. This so enraged some of the
+planters, that they proclaimed against him, and that mad-dog cry of
+abolitionist was raised against him. His horse and buggy, books and
+papers were packed up and sent to Charleston-not, however, without
+some of the most important of the latter being lost. His business was
+destroyed, and he and his child taken by force, put into a little canoe
+with one or two carpet-bags, and sent adrift. In this manner they had
+followed him two miles down the river, he begging to be allowed
+the privilege of settling his business and leave respectably-they
+threatening to shoot him if he attempted to near the shore, or was
+caught in the vicinity. This was his position when the captain found
+him. He proceeded to Charleston, and laid his case before James L.
+Petigru, Esq., United States District Attorney, and, upon his advice,
+returned to the scene of "war on the banks of the Edisto," to arrange
+his business; but no sooner had he made his appearance than he was
+thrown into prison, and there remained when we last heard of him.
+
+This is one of the many cases which afford matter for exciting comment
+for the editors of the Charleston Mercury and the Courier, and which
+reflect no honor on a people who thus set law and order at defiance.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI. A SINGULAR RECEPTION.
+
+
+
+IT was about ten o'clock on the night of the fifteenth of April when the
+schooner "Three Sisters" lay anchored close alongside of a dark jungle
+of clustering brakes that hung their luxuriant foliage upon the bosom
+of the stream. The captain sat upon a little box near the quarter,
+apparently contemplating the scene, for there was a fairy-like beauty
+in its dark windings, mellowed by the shadowing foliage that skirted
+its borders in mournful grandeur, while stars twinkled on the sombre
+surface.
+
+The tide had just turned, and little Tommy, who had rolled himself up in
+a blanket and laid down close to the captain, suddenly arose. "Captain,
+did you hear that?" said he.
+
+"Hark! there it is again," said the captain. "Go and call the men,--we
+must get under weigh."
+
+It was a rustling noise among the brakes; and when little Tommy went
+forward to call the men, two balls came whistling over the quarter, and
+then a loud rustling noise indicated that persons were retreating. The
+captain retired to the cabin and took Tommy with him, giving orders to
+the negro pilot to stand to the deck, get her anchor up, and let her
+drift up stream with the tide, determined that if they shot any person,
+it should be the negroes, for whose value they would be held answerable.
+Thus she drifted up the stream, and the next morning was at the creek at
+Colonel Whaley's plantation.
+
+A number of ragged negroes came down to the bank in high glee at the
+arrival, and making sundry inquiries about corn and bacon. One old
+patriarchal subject cried out to the pilot, "Ah, Cesar, I 'now'd ye wah
+cumin'. Massa, an' young Massa Aleck, bin promis' bacon mor' den week,
+gess he cum' now."
+
+"Got sum corn, but ven ye gets bacon out o' dis craf' ye kotch wesel,
+dat a'n't got no hair on 'im," said Cesar.
+
+The scene around was any thing but promising-disappointing to the
+captain's exalted ideas of Colonel Whaley's magnificent plantation. The
+old farm-house was a barrack-like building, dilapidated, and showing no
+signs of having lately furnished a job for the painter, and standing in
+an arena surrounded by an enclosure of rough slats. Close examination
+disclosed fragments of gardening in the arena, but they showed the
+unmistakable evidences of carelessness. At a short distance from this
+was a cluster of dirty-looking negro-huts, raised a few feet from the
+ground on palmetto piles, and strung along from them to the brink of the
+river were numerous half-starved cattle and hogs, the latter rooting up
+the sod.
+
+It was now nearly slack water, on a high flood, and the schooner lay
+just above the bend of the creek. Presently a large, portly-looking
+man, dressed like as Yorkshire farmer, came, to the bank, and in a
+stentorious voice ordered the captain to haul into the creek at once!
+The manner in which the order was given rather taxed the captain's
+feelings, yet he immediately set his men to work heaving up the anchor
+and carrying out "a line" to warp her in. But that slow motion with
+which negroes execute all orders, caused some delay, and no sooner had
+he, begun to heave on the line than the tide set strong ebb and carried
+him upon the lower point, where a strong eddy, made by the receding
+water from the creek, and the strong undertow in the river, baffled all
+his exertions. There she stuck, and all the warps and tow-lines of a
+seventy-four, hove by the combined strength of the plantation, would
+not have started her. When the tide left, she careened over toward the
+river, for there was no means at hand to shore her up.
+
+One of the drivers went up and reported "Massa captain got 'im ship
+ashore," and down came Colonel Whaley, with all the pomp of seven lord
+mayors in his countenance. "What sort of a feller are you to command
+a ship? I'd whip the worst nigger on the plantation, if he couldn't do
+better than that. Rig a raft out and let me come o' board that vessel!"
+said he, accompanying his demands with a volley of vile imprecations
+that would have disgraced St. Giles'.
+
+"Do you know who you're talking to? You mus'n't take me for a nigger,
+sir! I know my duty, if you don't good manners," rejoined the captain.
+
+"Do you know who owns that ship? you impudent feller, you! Take the
+sails off her, immediately-at once! or I'll shoot you, by heavens!" he
+bawled out again.
+
+"Why didn't you say mud-scow? Call such a thing as this a ship? I don't
+care who owns her, I only know it's a disgrace to sail her; but I've got
+the papers, and you may help yourself. When you pay me for my time, and
+give me something for myself and these men to eat, you may take your old
+jebac--car-boat,--but you don't put a foot aboard her till you do!"
+
+This made the colonel rage worse. "I'll teach you a lesson how you
+disobey my orders. Go get my rifle, Zeke," said the colonel, turning to
+an old negro who stood close by. And then calling to the men on board,
+he ordered them to take charge of the vessel and take the sails off her
+at once.
+
+"Don't you move a hand to unbend a sail, Cesar! I don't know that man
+ashore there. This vessel is mine until further orders from the persons
+who shipped me," rejoined the captain with an imperative demand to his
+men.
+
+"Why, la! massa, he own em dis ere vessel, an' he shoot em sartin if we
+done do him; ye done know dat massa, as I does," said Cesar.
+
+"Don't touch a hand to those sails, I command one and all of you.
+There's two can play at shooting, and I'll shoot you if you disobey my
+orders." Then turning to those on shore, he warned them that he would
+shoot the first nigger that attempted to make a raft to come on board.
+The reader will observe that the poor negroes were in a worse dilemma
+than the captain; goaded on the one side by a ruthless master, who
+claims ownership and demands the execution of his orders, while on
+the other extreme the hired master proclaims his right, and warns
+them against the peril of varying one iota from his commands. Here the
+clashing feelings of arbitrary men come together, which have placed many
+a good negro in that complex position, that he would be punished by one
+master for doing that which he would have been punished by the other if
+he had left undone.
+
+It may be said to the colonel's credit, he did not return, rifle in
+hand, nor did the captain see him afterward; but a young gentleman, a
+son, who represented the father, came to the bank about an hour after
+the occurrence, and making a lame apology for his father's temper,
+requested the captain to come on shore. The latter had concluded to
+await the return of the tide, run the vessel back to Charleston, report
+his reception, and deliver the vessel up to the agents; but on further
+consideration, there was nothing to eat on board, and what could he do?
+He went on shore, and held a parley with the young man, whom he found
+much more inclined to respect his color. "Your father took me for a
+nigger, and as such he presumed upon the dignity of his plantation. Now
+I know my duty, and have sailed in the finest ships and with the best
+masters in the country. All I want is proper respect, something to eat,
+what there is coming to me, and my passage paid back to Charleston by
+land. No! I will not even request so much as that; give me something to
+eat, and my passage to Charleston, and you may do what you please with
+the vessel, but I shall deliver the papers to nobody but the persons who
+shipped me. And I shall want you to see this little boy attended to, for
+he's quite sick now," said the captain, pointing to Tommy, and calling
+him to him.
+
+"Oh yes," replied the young man, "we'll take care of the little fellow,
+and see him sent safely back," and took leave, promising to have another
+interview in the afternoon. About twelve o'clock a negro boy came to the
+vessel with a tin pan covered with a towel, and presenting it to Cesar,
+for "massa cap'en and buckra boy." Cesar brought it aft and set it upon
+the companion. It contained some rice, a piece of bacon, corn-cake, and
+three sweet-potatoes.
+
+"Coarse fare, but I can get along with it. Come Tommy, I guess you're
+hungry, as well as myself," said the captain, and they sat down, and
+soon demolished the feast of Southern hospitality. About five o'clock in
+the evening, the young man not making his appearance, the Captain sent
+Tommy ashore to inquire for him at the house, telling him (in order
+to test their feelings) that he could stop and get his supper. Tommy
+clambered ashore, and up the bank wending his way to the house. The
+young man made his appearance, offering an apology for his delay and
+inattention, saying the presence of some very particular friends from
+Beaufort was the cause. "My father, you are aware, owns this vessel,
+captain!--You got a good dinner, to-day, by-the-by," said he.
+
+"Yes, we got along with it, but could have eaten more," rejoined the
+captain.
+
+"Ah! bless me, that was the nigger's fault. These niggers are such
+uncertain creatures, you must watch 'em over the least thing. Well now,
+captain, my father has sent you five dollars to pay your passage to
+Charleston!"
+
+"Well, that's a small amount, but I'll try and get along with it, rather
+than stop here, at any rate," said the captain, taking the bill and
+twisting it into his pocket, and giving particular charges in regard
+to taking care of the boy. That night, a little after sundown, he took
+passage in a downward-bound coaster, bid a long good-by to the Edisto
+and Colonel Whaley's plantation, and arrived in Charleston the next
+night. On the following morning he presented himself to the agents, who
+generously paid him, all his demands, and expressed their regrets at the
+circumstance. Acting upon the smart of feeling, the captain enclosed the
+five-dollar bill and returned it to the sovereign Colonel Whaley.
+
+The Savannah Republican, of the 11th September, says-"We have been
+kindly furnished with the particulars of a duel which came off at Major
+Stark's plantation, opposite this city, yesterday morning, between
+Colonel E. M. Whaley, and E. E. Jenkins, of South Carolina." Another
+paper stated that "after a single exchange of shot, * * * * the affair
+terminated, but without a reconciliation." The same Colonel Whaley!
+Either 'of these journals might have give particulars more grievous,
+and equally as expressive of Southern life. They might have described
+a beautiful wife, a Northern lady, fleeing with her two children,
+to escape the abuses of a faithless husband-taking shelter in the
+Charleston Hotel, and befriended by Mr. Jenkins and another young man,
+whose name we shall not mention-and that famous establishment surrounded
+by the police on a Sabbath night, to guard its entrances-and she dragged
+forth, and carried back to the home of unhappiness.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII. THE HABEAS CORPUS.
+
+
+
+THE Captain of the Janson had settled his business, and was anxious
+to return home. He had done all in his power for Manuel, and
+notwithstanding the able exertions of the consul were combined with his,
+he had effected nothing to relieve him. The law was imperative, and if
+followed out, there was no alternative for him, except upon the ground
+of his proving himself entitled to a white man's privileges. To do
+this would require an endless routine of law, which would increase his
+anxiety and suffering twofold. Mr. Grimshaw had been heard to say, that
+if an habeas corpus were sued out, he should stand upon the technicality
+of an act of the legislature, refuse to answer the summons or give the
+man up. No, he would himself stand the test upon the point of right to
+the habeas corpus, and if he was committed for refusing to deliver up
+the prisoner, he would take advantage of another act of the legislature,
+and after remaining a length of time in jail, demand his release
+according to the statutes. So far was Mr. Grimshaw impressed with his
+own important position in the matter, and of the course which he should
+pursue, that he several times told the prisoners that he should be a
+prisoner among them in a few days, to partake of the same fare.
+
+Judge Withers, however, saved him the necessity of such important
+trouble. To those acquainted with Judge Withers it would be needless to
+dwell upon the traits of his character. To those who are not, we can
+say that his were feelings founded upon interest-moving in the foremost
+elements of secession-arbitrary, self-willed, and easily swayed by
+prejudice-a man known to the public and the bar for his frigidity, bound
+in his own opinions, and yielding second to the wishes and principles of
+none-fearful of his popularity as a judge, yet devoid of those sterling
+principles which deep jurists bring to their aid when considering
+important questions, where life or liberty is at stake-a mind that
+would rather reinstate monarchy than spread the blessings of a free
+government. What ground have we here to hope for a favorable issue?
+
+Thus when the consul applied for the writ of habeas corpus, the right
+was denied him, notwithstanding the subject was heir-inherent to all the
+rights of citizenship and protection, which the laws of his own nation
+could clothe him with. To show how this matter was treated by the
+press-though we are happy to say the feelings of the mercantile
+community are not reflected in it-we copy the leader from the "Southern
+Standard," a journal published in Charleston, the editor of which
+professes to represent the conservative views of a diminutive minority.
+Here it is:--
+
+"CHARLESTON, APRIL 23, 1852. "Colored Seamen and State Rights.
+
+"Our readers have not forgotten the correspondence which some time
+since took place between His Excellency Governor Means and Her British
+Majesty's Consul, Mr. Mathew. We published in the Standard, of the 5th
+December last, the very temperate, dignified, and well-argued report of
+Mr. Mazyck, chairman of the special committee of the Senate, to whom
+had been referred the message of the Governor, transmitting the
+correspondence. In our issue of the 16th December, we gave to our
+readers the able report of Mr. McCready, on behalf of the committee of
+the other house, on the same subject.
+
+"We have now to call the attention of the public to the fact, that the
+practical issue has been made, by which the validity of the laws in
+regard to colored seamen arriving in our port is to be submitted to the
+judicial tribunals of the country. For ourselves we have no fears for
+the credit of the State in such a controversy. The right of the State
+to control, by her own legislation, the whole subject-matter, can, as we
+think, by a full discussion, be established upon a basis which, in the
+South at least, will never hereafter be questioned. If there be defects
+in the details of the regulations enacted, the consideration of them is
+now precluded, when the issue presented is the right of the State to act
+at all times in the premises.
+
+"The writ of habeas corpus was applied for before Judge Withers, during
+the term of the court which has just closed, by the British consul,
+through his counsel, Mr. Petigru, in behalf of one Manuel Pereira,
+a colored sailor, who claims to be a Portuguese subject, articled to
+service on board an English brig driven into this port by stress of
+weather; the said Manuel Pereira being then in jail under the provisions
+of the act of the legislature of this State, passed in 1835, emendatory
+of the previous acts on the subject. Judge Withers, in compliance with
+the requirements of the act of 1844, refused the writ of habeas corpus,
+and notice of appeal has been given. Thus is the issue upon us.
+
+"We have but one regret in the matter, and that is that the case made is
+one where the party asking his liberty has been driven into our harbor
+involuntarily. Great Britain, it is true, is the last power which
+should complain on this account, with her own example in the case of the
+Enterprise before her eyes; but we do not, we confess, like this feature
+of the law. We have no doubt, however, that this fact being brought to
+the notice of the executive, he will interfere promptly to release the
+individual in the present case, provided the party petitions for the
+purpose, and engages at once to leave the State. But we shall see
+nothing of this. Mr. Manuel Pereira, like another John Wilkes, is to
+have settled in his person great questions of constitutional liberty.
+The posterity which in after times shall read of his voluntary martyrdom
+and heroic self-sacrifice in the cause of suffering humanity, must be
+somewhat better informed than Mr. Pereira himself; for we observe that
+his clerkly skill did not reach the point of enabling him to subscribe
+his name to the petition for habeas corpus, which is to figure so
+conspicuously in future history, it being more primitively witnessed by
+his 'mark.'"
+
+An appeal was taken from this refusal, and carried before the appeal
+court, sitting at Columbia, the capital of the State. How was this
+treated? Without enlisting common respect, it sustained the opinion
+of Judge Withers, who was one of its constituted members. Under such a
+state of things, where all the avenues to right and justice were clogged
+by a popular will that set itself above law or justice, where is the
+unprejudiced mind that will charge improper motives in asking justice of
+the highest judicial tribunal in the country.
+
+In the year 1445, a petition was presented, or entered on the rolls of
+the British Parliament, from the commons of two neighboring counties,
+praying the abatement of a nuisance which promised fearful interruptions
+to the peace and quiet of their hamlets, in consequence of the number of
+attorneys having increased from eight to twenty-four, setting forth that
+attorneys were dangerous to the peace and happiness of a community, and
+praying that there should be no more than six attorneys for each county.
+The king granted the petition, adding a clause which left it subject
+to the approval of the judges. Time works mighty contrasts. If those
+peaceable old commoners could have seen a picture of the nineteenth
+century, with its judiciary dotted upon the surface, they would
+certainly have put the world down as a very unhappy place. The people
+of Charleston might now inquire why they have so much law and so little
+justice?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII. THE CAPTAIN'S DEPARTURE AND MANUEL'S RELEASE.
+
+
+
+AFTER remaining nearly three weeks in close confinement in a cell on
+the third story, Manuel was allowed to come down and resume his position
+among the stewards, in the "steward's cell." There was a sad change of
+faces. But one of those he left was there; and he, poor fellow, was so
+changed as to be but a wreck of what he was when Manuel was confined in
+the cell.
+
+After little Tommy left, the Captain deposited a sum of money with
+the jailer to supply Manuel's wants. The jailer performed his duty
+faithfully, but the fund was soon exhausted, and Manuel was forced to
+appeal to his consul. With the care for its citizens that marks the
+course of that government, and the characteristic kindness of its
+representative in Charleston, the appeal was promptly responded to.
+The consul attended him in person, and even provided from his own purse
+things necessary to make him comfortable. We could not but admire the
+nobleness of many acts bestowed upon this humble citizen through the
+consul, showing the attachment and faith of a government to its humblest
+subject. The question now was, would the Executive release him? Mr.
+Grimshaw had interposed strong objections, and made unwarrantable
+statements in regard to his having been abandoned by his captain,
+the heavy expenses incurred to maintain the man, and questioning the
+validity of the British consul's right to protect him. Under the effect
+of these representations, the prospect began to darken, and Manuel
+became more discontented, and anxiously awaited the result.
+
+In this position, a petition was despatched to the Executive, asking
+that the man might be released, on the faith of the British Government
+that all expenses be paid, and he immediately sent beyond the limits of
+the State.
+
+But we must return and take leave of Captain Thompson, before we receive
+the answer to the petition. The day fixed for his departure had arrived.
+He had all his papers collected, and arose early to take his accustomed
+walk through the market. It was a little after seven o'clock, and as he
+approached the singular piece of wood-work that we have described in
+a previous chapter as the Charleston Whipping-post, he saw a crowd
+collected around it, and negroes running to the scene, crying out,
+"Buckra gwine to get whip! buckra get 'e back scratch!" &c. &c. He
+quickened his pace, and, arriving at the scene, elbowed his way through
+an immense crowd until he came to where he had a fair view. Here,
+exposed to view, were six respectably dressed white men, to be whipped
+according to the laws of South Carolina, which flog in the market
+for petty theft. Five of them were chained together, and the other
+scientifically secured to the machine, with his bare back exposed,
+and Mr. Grimshaw (dressed with his hat and sword of office to make the
+dignity of the punishment appropriate) laying on the stripes with a big
+whip, and raising on tip-toe at each blow to add force, making the flesh
+follow the lash. Standing around were about a dozen huge constables
+with long-pointed tipstaffs in their hands, while two others assisted
+in chaining and unchaining the prisoners. The spectacle was a barbarous
+one, opening a wide field for reflection. It was said that this
+barbarous mode of punishment was kept up as an example for the negroes.
+It certainly is a very singular mode of inspiring respect for the laws.
+
+He had heard much of T. Norman Gadsden, whose fame sounded for being the
+greatest negro-seller in the country, yet he had not seen him, though he
+had witnessed several negro-sales at other places. On looking over the
+papers after breakfast, his eye caught a flaming advertisement with "T.
+Norman Gadsden's sale of negroes" at the head. There were plantation
+negroes, coachmen, house-servants, mechanics, children of all ages, with
+descriptions as various as the kinds. Below the rest, and set out with
+a glowing delineation, was a description of a remarkably fine young
+sempstress, very bright and very intelligent, sold for no fault. The
+notice should have added an exception, that the owner was going to get
+married.
+
+He repaired to the place at the time designated, and found them selling
+an old plantation-negro, dressed in ragged, gray clothes, who, after a
+few bids, was knocked down for three hundred and fifty dollars. "We will
+give tip-top titles to everything we sell here to-day; and, gentlemen,
+we shall now offer you the prettiest wench in town. She is too
+well-known for me to say more," said the notorious auctioneer.
+
+A number of the first citizens were present, and among them the Captain
+recognised Colonel S--, who approached and began to descant upon the
+sale of the woman. "It's a d--d shame to sell that girl, and that fellow
+ought to be hung up," said he, meaning the owner; and upon this he
+commenced giving a history of the poor girl.
+
+"Where is she? Bring her along! Lord! gentlemen, her very curls are
+enough to start a bid of fifteen hundred," said the auctioneer.
+
+"Go it, Gadsden, you're a trump," rejoined a number of voices.
+
+The poor girl moved to the stand, pale and trembling, as if she was
+stepping upon the scaffold, and saw her executioners around her. She was
+very fair and beautiful-there was something even in her graceful motions
+that enlisted admiration. Here she stood almost motionless for a few
+moments.
+
+"Gentlemen, I ought to charge all of you sevenpence a sight for looking
+at her," said the auctioneer. She smiled at the remark, but it was the
+smile of pain.
+
+"Why don't you sell the girl, and not be dogging her feelings in this
+manner?" said Colonel S--.
+
+Bids continued in rapid succession from eleven hundred up to thirteen
+hundred and forty. A well-known trader from New Orleans stood behind
+one of the city brokers, motioning him at every bid, and she was knocked
+down to him. We learned her history and know the sequel.
+
+The Captain watched her with mingled feelings, and would fain have said,
+"Good God! and why art thou a slave?"
+
+The history of that unfortunate beauty may be comprehended in a few
+words, leaving the reader to draw the details from his imagination. Her
+mother was a fine mulatto slave, with about a quarter Indian blood. She
+was the mistress of a celebrated gentleman in Charleston, who ranked
+among the first families, to whom she bore three beautiful children, the
+second of which is the one before us. Her father, although he could not
+acknowledge her, prized her highly, and unquestionably never intended
+that she should be considered a slave. Alice, for such was her name,
+felt the shame of her position. She knew her father, and was proud to
+descant upon his honor and rank, yet must either associate with negroes
+or nobody, for it would be the death of caste for a white woman, however
+mean, to associate with her. At the age of sixteen she became attached
+to a young gentleman of high standing but moderate means, and lived
+with him as his mistress. Her father, whose death is well known, died
+suddenly away from home. On administering on his estate, it proved that
+instead of being wealthy, as was supposed, he was insolvent, and the
+creditors insisting upon the children being sold. Alice was purchased
+by compromise with the administrator, and retained by her lord under a
+mortgage, the interest and premium on which he had regularly paid for
+more than four years. Now that he was about to get married, the excuse
+of the mortgage was the best pretext in the world to get rid of her.
+
+The Captain turned from the scene with feelings that left deep
+impressions upon his mind, and that afternoon took his departure for his
+Scottish home.
+
+Time passed heavily at the jail, and day after day Manuel awaited his
+fate with anxiety. At every tap of the prison-bell he would spring to
+the door and listen, asserting that he heard the consul's voice in every
+passing sound. Day after day the consul would call upon him and quiet
+his fears, reassuring him that he was safe and should not be sold as
+a slave. At length, on the seventeenth day of May, after nearly two
+months' imprisonment, the glad news was received that Manuel Pereira
+was not to be sold, according to the statutes, but to be released upon
+payment of all costs, &c. &c., and immediately sent beyond the limits
+of the State. We leave it to the reader's fancy, to picture the scene of
+joy on the reception of the news in the "stewards' cell."
+
+The consul lost no time in arranging his affairs for him, and at five
+o'clock on the afternoon of the 17th of May, 1852, Manuel Pereira,
+a poor, shipwrecked mariner, who, by the dispensation of an all-wise
+Providence, was cast upon the shores of South Carolina, and imprisoned
+because hospitality to him was "contrary to law," was led forth, pale
+and emaciated, by two constables, thrust into a closely covered vehicle,
+and driven at full speed to the steamboat then awaiting to depart for
+New York. This is but a faint glimpse, of the suffering to which colored
+stewards are subjected in the Charleston jail.
+
+There were no less than sixty-three cases of colored seamen imprisoned
+on this charge of "contrary to law," during the calendar year ending
+on the twelfth of September, 1852. And now that abuses had become so
+glaring, a few gentlemen made a representation of the wretched prison
+regimen to his Excellency, Governor Means, who, as if just awoke from
+a dream that had lasted a generation, addressed a letter to the
+Attorney-General, dated on the seventh of September, 1852, requesting a
+statement in regard to the jail-how many prisoners there were confined
+on the twelfth day of September, under sentence and awaiting trial,
+the nature of offences, who committed by, and how long they had awaited
+trial; what the cost of the jail was, how much was paid by prisoners,
+and how much by the State, &c. &c. In that statement, the number of
+colored seamen was, for reasons best known to Mr. Grimshaw, kept out of
+the statement; so also was the difference between thirty cents and eight
+cents a day, paid for the ration for each man. The real statement showed
+a bounty to the sheriff of fourteen hundred and sixty-three dollars on'
+the provisions alone-a sad premium upon misery. Now add to this a medium
+amount for each of these sixty-three sailors, and we have between eight
+and nine hundred dollars more, which, with sundry jail-fees and other
+cribbage-money, makes the Charleston jail a nice little appendage to
+the sheriff's office, and will fully account for the tenacity with which
+those functionaries cling to the "old system."
+
+We conclude the bills by giving Manuel's as it stands upon the
+books:--"Contrary to law." British brig "Janson," Capt. Thompson. For
+Manuel Pereira, Colored Seaman. 1852. To Sheriff of Charleston District.
+
+May 15th. To Arrest, $2; Register, $2, $4.00" "Recog., $1.31; Constable,
+$1, 2.31" "Commitment and Discharge, 1.00" "52 Days' Maintenance of
+Manuel Pereira, at 30 cents per day, 15.60
+
+$22.81 Rec' payment, J. D--, S. C. D. Per Chs. Kanapeaux, Clerk.
+
+This amount is exclusive of all the long scale of law charges and
+attorney's fees that were incurred, and is entirely the perquisite of
+the sheriff.
+
+Now, notwithstanding that high-sounding clamor about the laws of
+South Carolina, which every South Carolinian, in the redundance of his
+feelings, strives to impress you with the sovereignty of its justice,
+its sacred rights, and its pre-eminent reputation, we never were in a
+country or community where the privileges of a certain class were so
+much abused. Every thing is made to conserve popular favor, giving to
+those in influence power to do what they please with a destitute class,
+whether they be white or black. Official departments are turned into
+depots for miserable espionage, where the most unjust schemes are
+practised upon those whose voices cannot be heard in their own defence.
+A magistrate is clothed with, or assumes a power that is almost
+absolute, committing them without a hearing, and leaving them to waste
+in jail; then releasing them before the court sits, and charging the
+fees to the State; or releasing the poor prisoner on receiving "black
+mail" for the kindness; giving one man a peace-warrant to oppress
+another whom he knows cannot get bail; and where a man has served
+out the penalty of the crime for which he was committed, give a
+peace-warrant to his adversary that he may continue to vent his spleen
+upon him. In this manner, we have known a man who had served seven
+months' imprisonment for assault and battery, by an understanding
+between the magistrate and the plaintiff, continued in jail for several
+years upon a peace-warrant, issued by the magistrate from time to time,
+until at length he shot himself in jail. The man was a peaceable man,
+and of a social temperament. He had been offered the alternative of
+leaving the State, but he scorned to accept it. To show that we are
+correct in what we say respecting some of the Charleston officials, we
+insert an article which appeared in the Charleston Courier of Sept. 1,
+1852:--[For the Courier.]
+
+"Many of the quiet and moral portion of our community can form no
+adequate conception of the extent to which those who sell liquor,
+and otherwise trade with our slaves, are now plying their illegal
+and demoralizing traffic. At no period within our recollection has it
+prevailed to such an alarming extent; at no period has its influence
+upon our slave population been more palpable or more dangerous; at no
+period has the municipal administration been so wilfully blind to these
+corrupt practices, or so lenient and forgiving when such practices are
+exposed."
+
+* * * *
+
+"We have heard it intimated that when General Schnierle is a candidate
+for the mayoralty, they are regularly assessed for means to defray the
+expenses of the canvass. Instances are not wanting where amounts of
+money are paid monthly to General Schnierle's police as a reward for
+shutting their eyes and closing their lips when unlawful proceedings are
+in progress. We have at this moment in our possession a certificate from
+a citizen, sworn to before Mr. Giles, the magistrate, declaring that he,
+the deponent, heard one of the city police-officers (Sharlock) make a
+demand for money upon one of these shop-keepers, and promised that if
+he would pay him five dollars at stated intervals, 'none of the
+police-officers would trouble him.' This affidavit can be seen, if
+inquired for, at this office. Thus bribery is added to guilt, and those
+who should enforce the laws are made auxiliaries in their violation.
+Said one of these slave-destroyers to us, 'General Schnierle suits us
+very well. I have no trouble with General Schnierle'--remarks at once
+repugnant and suggestive. * * * We are told by one, that Mr. Hutchinson,
+when in power, fined him heavily (and, as he thought, unjustly)
+for selling liquor to a slave; hence he would not vote for him. An
+additional reason for this animosity toward Mr. Hutchinson arises from
+the fact that the names of offenders were always published during that
+gentleman's administration, while under that of General Schnierle they
+are screened from public view. On any Sunday evening, light may be seen
+in the shops of these dealers. If the passer-by will for a few moments
+stay his course, he will witness the ingress and egress of negroes; if
+he approach the door, he will hear noise as of card-playing and revelry
+within. And this is carried on unblushingly; is not confined to a shop
+here and a shop there, but may be observed throughout the city. The
+writer of this article, some Sundays since, witnessed from his upper
+window a scene of revelry and gambling in one of these drinking-shops,
+which will scarcely be credited. A party of negroes were seen around
+a card-table, with money beside them, engaged in betting; glasses
+of liquor were on the table, from which they ever and anon regaled
+themselves with all the nonchalance and affected mannerism of the most
+fashionable blades of the beau monde.
+
+"This may not be a 'desecration of the Sabbath' by the municipal
+authorities themselves, but they are assuredly responsible for its
+profanation. Appointed to guard the public morals, they are assuredly
+censurable if licentiousness is suffered to run its wild career
+unnoticed and unchecked. We do not ask to be believed. We would prefer
+to have skeptical rather than credulous readers. We should prefer that
+all would arise from the perusal of this article in doubt, and determine
+to examine for themselves. We believe in the strength and sufficiency of
+ocular proof, and court investigation.
+
+* * *
+
+"We are abundantly repaid if we succeed in arousing public attention to
+the alarming and dangerous condition of our city. * * * Let inquiry be
+entered into. We boldly challenge it. It will lead to other and more
+astonishing developments than those we have revealed. (Signed)
+
+"A RESPONSIBLE CITIZEN."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX. MANUEL'S ARRIVAL IN NEW YORK.
+
+
+
+WHEN we left Manuel, he was being hurried on board the steamship, as if
+he was a bale of infected goods. Through the kindness of the clerk in
+the consul's office, he was provided with a little box of stores to
+supply his wants on the passage, as it was known that he would have to
+"go forward." He soon found himself gliding over Charleston bar, and
+took a last look of what to him had been the city of injustice. On the
+afternoon of the second day, he was sitting upon the forward deck
+eating an orange that had been given to him by the steward of the ship,
+probably as a token of sympathy for his sickly appearance, when a number
+of passengers, acting upon the information of the clerk of the ship,
+gathered around him. One gentleman from Philadelphia, who seemed to take
+more interest in the man than any other of the passengers, expressed his
+indignation in no measured terms, that such a man should be imprisoned
+as a slave. "Take care," said a bystander, "there's a good many
+Southerners on board."
+
+"I don't care if every slaveholder in the South was on board, holding
+a knife at my throat; I'm on the broad ocean, where God spreads the
+breezes of freedom that man cannot enslave," said he, sitting down
+beside Manuel, and getting him to recount the details of his shipwreck
+and imprisonment. The number increased around him, and all listened with
+attention until he had concluded. One of the spectators asked him if
+he would have something good to eat? but he declined, pulling out the
+little box that the consul had sent him, and, opening it before them,
+showed it to be well-stored with little delicacies.
+
+The Philadelphian motioned that they take up a subscription for him, and
+almost simultaneously took his hat off and began to pass it around;
+but Manuel, mistaking the motive, told them that he never yet sought
+charity-that the consul had paid him his wages, and he had money enough
+to get home. But if he did not accept their contributions, he had their
+sympathies and their good wishes, which were more prized by him, because
+they were contrasted with the cold hospitality he had suffered in
+Charleston.
+
+On the morning of the twentieth he arrived in New York. Here things wore
+a different aspect. There were no constables fettering him with irons,
+aggravating his feelings, and dragging him to a miseerable cell overrun
+with vermin. He had no scientific ordeal of the statutes to pass
+through, requiring the measure of his form and features; and he was a
+man again, with life and liberty, and the dark dread of the oppressor's
+power far from him. He went to his comfortable boarding-house, and laid
+his weary limbs down to rest, thanking God that he could now sleep
+in peace, and awake to liberty. His system was so reduced that he was
+unable to do duty, although he was anxious to proceed on his way to join
+the old owners, but wanted to work his way in the capacity of steward.
+Thus he remained in New York more than four weeks, gaining vigor and
+strength, and with a lingering hope that he should meet his little
+companion.
+
+On the twenty-first of June, being well recruited, he sailed for
+Liverpool, and after a remarkably calm passage of thirty-four days,
+arrived in the Mersey, and in forty-eight hours more the ship was safely
+within the Princess' Dock, and all hands ready to go on shore. In the
+same dock was a ship taking in cargo and passengers for Charleston,
+South Carolina. Manuel went on board, and found, in conversation with
+the steward, that she had sailed from that port on the 23d of May. A
+short conversation disclosed that they had been old shipmates from the
+Thames, on board of the Indiaman, Lord William Bentick, and were on
+board of that ship when an unfortunate circumstance occurred to her on
+entering a British North American port, many years ago. Here they sat
+recounting the many adventures through which they had passed since
+that period, the ships they had sailed in, the sufferings they had gone
+through, and the narrow escapes they had had for their lives, until past
+midnight. Manuel wound up by giving a detailed account of his sufferings
+in Charleston.
+
+"What!" said the steward of the Charleston ship, "then you must have
+known our cabin-boy, he belonged to the same vessel!"
+
+"What was his name?" inquired Manuel.
+
+"Tommy Ward! and as nice a little fellow as ever served the cabin; poor
+little fellow, we could hardly get him across."
+
+"Gracious! that's my Tommy," said Manuel. "Where is he? He loves me as
+he does his life, and would run to me as a child would to its father.
+Little as he is, he has been a friend through my severest trials, and a
+companion in my pleasures."
+
+"Ah, poor child! I'm afraid you wouldn't know him now. He has suffered
+much since you saw him."
+
+"Is he not aboard? Where can I find him?" inquired Manuel, hastily.
+
+"No, he is not aboard; he is at the hospital in Dennison street. Go
+there to-morrow, and you will find him."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX. THE SCENE OF ANGUISH.
+
+
+
+WE are sorry, that having traced the details of our narrative as they
+occurred, without adding for dramatic effect, we are constrained to
+conclude with a picture at once painful and harrowing to the feelings.
+We do this that we may be sustained by records, in what we have stated,
+rather than give one of those more popular conclusions which restore
+happiness and relieve the reader's feelings.
+
+Manuel retired to his berth, full of meditation. His little companion
+was before him, pictured in his child-like innocence and playfulness. He
+saw him in the youthful zeal and freshness of the night when he brought
+the well-laden haversack into his dreary cell, and which kind act was
+repaid by a night of suffering in the guard-house. There was too much of
+life and buoyancy in the picture his imagination called up, to reconcile
+the belief that any thing serious had befallen him; and yet the man
+spoke in a manner that aroused the intensity of his feelings. It was a
+whisper full of fearful forebodings, and filled his mind with anxious
+expectation. He could not sleep-the anxiety of his feelings had
+awakened a nervvous restlessness that awaited the return of morning with
+impatience.
+
+Morning came. He proceeded to the hospital and rang the bell. An aged
+gentleman came to the door, and to his questions about Tommy being
+there, answered in the affirmative, and called an attendant to show him
+the ward in which the little sufferer lay. He followed the attendant,
+and after ascending several flights of stairs and following a dark,
+narrow passage nearly to its end, was shown into a small, single-room on
+the right. The result was suggestive in the very atmosphere, which had
+a singular effect upon the senses. The room, newly-whitewashed, was
+darkened by a green curtain tacked over the frame of the window.
+Standing near the window were two wooden-stools and a little table, upon
+which burned the faint light of a small taper, arranged in a cup of oil,
+and shedding its feeble flickers on the evidences of a sick-chamber.
+There, on a little, narrow cot, lay the death-like form of his once
+joyous companion, with the old nurse sitting beside him, watching his
+last pulsation. Her arm encircled his head, while his raven locks curled
+over his forehead, and shadowed the beauty of innocence even in death.
+
+"Is he there? is he there?" inquired Manuel in a low tone. At the same
+time a low, gurgling noise sounded in his ears. The nurse started to
+her feet as if to inquire for what he came. "He is my companion-my
+companion," said Manuel.
+
+It was enough. The woman recognised the object of the little sufferer's
+anxiety. "Ah! it is Manuel. How often he has called that name for the
+last week!" said she.
+
+He ran to the bedside and grasped his little fleshless hand as it lay
+upon the white sheet, bathing his cold brow with kisses of grief. Life
+was gone-the spirit had winged its way to the God who gave it. Thus
+closed the life of poor Tommy Ward. He died as one resting in a calm
+sleep, far from the boisterous sound of the ocean's tempest, with God's
+love to shield his spirit in another and brighter world.
+
+
+
+
+CONCLUSION.
+
+
+
+IN a preceding chapter, we left the poor boy on the plantation of
+Colonel Whaley, affected by a pulmonary disease, the seeds of which were
+planted on the night he was confined in the guard-house, and the signs
+of gradual decay evinced their symptoms. After Captain Williams--for
+such was the name of the captain of the Three Sisters--left the
+plantation, no person appeared to care for him, and on the second day he
+was attacked with a fever, and sent to one of the negro cabins, where an
+old mulatto woman took care of him and nursed him as well as her scanty
+means would admit. The fever continued for seven days, when he
+became convalescent and able to walk out; but feeling that he was an
+incumbrance to those around him, he packed his clothes into a little
+bundle and started for Charleston on foot. He reached that city after
+four days' travelling over a heavy, sandy road, subsisting upon the
+charity of poor negroes, whom he found much more ready to supply his
+wants than the opulent planters. One night he, was compelled to make
+a pillow of his little bundle, and lay down in a corn-shed, where the
+planter, aroused by the noise of his dogs, which were confined in a
+kennel, came with a lantern and two negroes and discovered him. At first
+he ordered him off, and threatened to set the dogs upon him if he
+did not instantly comply with the order; but his miserable appearance
+affected the planter, and before he had gone twenty rods one of the
+negroes overtook him, and said his master had sent him to bring him
+back. He returned, and the negro made him a coarse bed in his cabin, and
+gave him some homony and milk.
+
+His hopes to see Manuel had buoyed him up through every fatigue, but
+when he arrived, and was informed at the jail that Manuel had left three
+days before, his disappointment was extreme. A few days after he shipped
+as cabin-boy on board a ship ready for sea and bound to Liverpool.
+Scarcely half-way across, he was compelled to resign himself to the
+sick-list. The disease had struck deep into his system, and was rapidly
+wasting him away. The sailors, one by one in turns, watched over him
+with tenderness and care. As soon as the ship arrived, he was sent
+to the hospital, and there he breathed his last as Manuel entered the
+sick-chamber. We leave Manuel and a few of his shipmates following his
+remains to the last resting-place of man.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX.
+
+SINCE the foregoing was written, Governor Means, in his message to the
+Legislature of South Carolina, refers to the laws under which "colored
+seamen" are imprisoned. We make the subjoined extract, showing that
+he insists upon its being continued in force, on the ground of
+"self-preservation"--a right which ship-owners will please regard for
+the protection of their own interests:--
+
+"I feel it my duty to call your attention to certain proceedings
+which have grown out of the enforcement of that law of our State which
+requires the Sheriff of Charleston to seize and imprison colored seamen
+who are brought to that port. You will remember that the British Consul
+addressed a communication to the legislature in December, 1850, on the
+subject of a modification of this law. A committee was appointed by
+the House and Senate to report upon it at the next session of the
+legislature. These committees reported adverse to any modification. On
+the 24th March, 1852, Manuel Pereira was imprisoned in accordance with
+the law alluded to. The vessel in which he sailed was driven into the
+port of Charleston in distress. This was looked upon as a favorable case
+upon which to make an issue, as so strong an element of sympathy was
+connected with it. Accordingly, a motion was made before Judge
+Withers for a writ of 'habeas corpus,' which was refused by him. These
+proceedings were instituted by the British Consul, it is said, under
+instructions from his government, to test the constitutionality of
+the Act. I think it here proper to state, that Pereira was at perfect
+liberty to depart at any moment that he could get a vessel to transport
+him beyond the limits of the State. In truth, in consideration of the
+fact that his coming into the State was involuntary, the Sheriff of
+Charleston, with his characteristic kindness, procured for him a place
+in a ship about to sail for Liverpool. Early in April, Pereira was
+actually released, and on his way to the ship, having himself signed the
+shipping articles, when, by interposition of the British Consul, he was
+again consigned to the custody of the sheriff. A few days after this,
+the British Consul insisted no longer on his detention, but voluntarily
+paid his passage to New York. This was looked upon as an abandonment of
+that case. The statement of Mr. Yates, together with the letter of the
+British Consul, are herewith transmitted.
+
+"While these proceedings were pending, the Sheriff of Charleston had
+my instructions not to give up the prisoners even if a writ of habeas
+corpus had been granted. I considered that the 'Act of 1844,' entitled,
+'An Act more effectually to prevent negroes and other persons of color
+from entering into this State, and for other purposes,' made it my duty
+to do so.
+
+"On the 19th May, Reuben Roberts, a colored seaman, a native of Nassau,
+arrived in the steamer Clyde, from Baracoa. The Sheriff of Charleston,
+in conformity with the law of the State, which has been in force
+since 1823, arrested and lodged him in the district jail, where he was
+detained until the 26th of May, when, the Clyde being ready to sail,
+Roberts was put on board, and sailed the same day.
+
+"On the 9th of June, a writ in trespass, for assault and false
+imprisonment, from the Federal Court, was served upon Sheriff Yates,
+laying the damage at $4000.
+
+"The Act of 1844, I take it, was intended to prevent all interference
+on the part of any power on the face of the earth, with the execution of
+this police regulation, which is so essential to the peace and safety of
+our community. Had the legislature which passed it ever dreamed that the
+sheriff was to be subjected to the annoyance of being dragged before the
+Federal Court for doing his duty under a law of the State, I am sure it
+would have provided for his protection. As no such provision has been
+made for so unexpected a contingency, I recommend that you so amend this
+Act of 1844, that it may meet any case that may arise.
+
+"It is certainly wrong to tolerate this interference with the
+laws enacted for the protection of our institution. In the general
+distribution of power between the Federal and State Governments, the
+right to make their own police regulations was clearly reserved to
+the States. In fact, it is nothing more nor less than the right of
+self-preservation-a right which is above all constitutions, and above
+all laws, and one which never was, nor never will be, abandoned by a
+people who are worthy to be free. It is a right which has never yet been
+attempted to be denied to any people, except to us.
+
+"The complaint against this law is very strange, and the attempt to
+bring us in conflict with the General Government on account of it, is
+still more remarkable; when, so far from its being at variance with the
+laws of the United States, it is only requiring the State authorities to
+enforce an Act of Congress, approved February 28th, 1803, entitled, An
+Act to prevent the importation of certain persons into certain States,
+where, by the laws thereof, their importation is prohibited. By
+referring to this Act, you will see that the plaintiff in the action
+alluded to was prohibited by it from entering into this State. I deem
+it unnecessary, however, to enter fully into the argument. If any doubt
+should be entertained by you, as to its constitutionality, I beg leave
+to refer to the able opinion of the Hon. J. McPherson Berrien, delivered
+at the time he was Attorney-General of the United States, which I
+herewith send you.
+
+"On the subject of the modification of this law, I am free to say,
+that when Her B. M.'s Government, through its consul, made a respectful
+request to our legislature to that effect, I was anxious that it should
+be made. It was with pleasure that I transmitted his first communication
+to the last legislature. I would have made a recommendation of its
+modification a special point in my first message, but that I thought it
+indelicate to do so, as the matter was already before the legislature,
+and committees had been appointed to report upon it. Another reason for
+the neglect of this recommendation, was the then excited state of
+party politics, which might have precluded the possibility of a calm
+consideration of the subject. But for the proceedings instituted in the
+premises, I would even now recommend a modification of the law, so as to
+require captains to confine their colored seamen to their vessels, and
+to prevent their landing under heavy penalties. For while I think the
+State has a perfect right to pass whatever laws on this subject it may
+deem necessary for its safety, yet the spirit of the age requires that
+while they should be so formed as to be adequate to our protection,
+they should be at the same time as little offensive as possible to other
+nations with whom we have friendly relations. But since an attempt has
+been made to defy our laws, and bring us in conflict with the Federal
+Government, on a subject upon which we are so justly sensitive, our own
+self-respect demands that we should not abate one jot or tittle of that
+law, which was enacted to protect us from the influence of ignorant
+incendiaries."
+
+We are under many obligations to Governor Means for his remarks upon
+this subject. We esteem his character too highly to entertain an
+idea that he would knowingly make an incorrect statement; but, with a
+knowledge of the facts, we can assure him that he was misled by those
+whom he depended upon for information. And also, though his name
+deserves to stand pre-eminent among the good men of Carolina, for
+recurring to that frightful state of things which exists in the
+Charleston prison, that he did not receive a correct statement in regard
+to it. In this want, his remarks lose much of their value. Subjects and
+grievances exist there which he should know most of, and yet he knows
+least, because he intrusts them to the caretakers, who make abuses their
+medium of profit.
+
+Under the influence of that exceedingly suspicious, and yet exceedingly
+credulous characteristic of a people, few know the power that is working
+beneath the sunshine of South Carolina, and those who do, stand upon
+that slaveworn ostentation which considers it beneath notice.
+
+We have no interest nor feeling beyond that of humanity, and a right
+to expose the mendacity of those who have power to exercise it over the
+prisoners in Charleston. That mendacity has existed too long for the
+honor of that community, and for the feelings of those who have suffered
+under it.
+
+It may be true that this case was considered a favorable one to try the
+issue upon, but no elements of sympathy were sought by the consul.
+That functionary to whom the Governor has attributed "characteristic
+kindness," said, in our presence, and we have the testimony of others
+to confirm what we say, that if Judge Withers had granted the habeas
+corpus, he would not have given up the prisoner, but rather gone to
+jail and suffered the same regimen with the prisoners. Had he tried the
+accommodations, he would have found the "profits" more than necessary to
+appease common hunger.
+
+The Governor says, "Pereira was at liberty to depart at any moment that
+he could get a vessel to transport him beyond the limits of the State."
+How are we to reconcile this with the following sentence, which appears
+in the next paragraph:--"While these proceedings were pending," (meaning
+the action instituted by the consul to release the prisoner,) "the
+sheriff of Charleston had my instructions not to give up the prisoner,
+even if a writ of habeas corpus had been granted?" According to this,
+the sheriff assumed a power independent of and above the Governor's
+prerogative. We have attempted to picture the force of this in our
+work, and to show that there are official abuses cloaked by an honorable
+dishonesty, which dignifies the business of the local factor and vendor
+of human property, and which should be stayed by the power of the
+Executive.
+
+The singular fact presents itself, that while Judge Withers was
+deliberating upon the question of granting the "habeas corpus," the
+proceedings pending, and the Governor's instructions to the contrary
+before him, the sheriff takes it upon himself to smuggle the prisoner
+out of port. Now what was the object of this Secret and concerted
+movement? Was it "kindness" on the part of that functionary, who has
+grasped every pretence to enforce this law? We think not. The reader
+will not require any extended comments from us to explain the motive;
+yet we witnessed it, and cannot leave it without a few remarks.
+
+It is well known that it has been the aim of that functionary, whose
+"characteristic kindness" has not failed to escape the Governor's
+notice, to thwart the consul in all his proceedings. In this instance,
+he engaged the services of a "shipping master" as a pretext, and with
+him was about to send the man away when his presence was essential to
+test his right to the habeas corpus, and at this very time, more than
+two months wages, due him from the owners, lay in the hands of the
+consul, ready to be paid on his release.
+
+The nefarious design speaks for itself.
+
+The consul was informed of the proceeding, and very properly refused
+to submit to such a violation of authority, intended to annul his
+proceedings. He preferred to await the "test," demanding the prisoner's
+release through the proper authorities. That release, instead of being
+"a few days after this," as the message sets forth, was-not effected
+until the fifteenth of May.
+
+Let the Governor institute an inquiry into the treatment of these men
+by the officials, and the prison regimen, and he will find the truth
+of what we have said. Public opinion will not credit his award of
+"characteristic kindness" to those who set up a paltry pretext as an
+apology for their wrong-doing.
+
+If men are to be imprisoned upon this singular construction of law,
+(which is no less than arming the fears of South Carolina,) is it any
+more than just to ask that she should pay for it, instead of imposing
+it upon innocent persons? Or, to say the least, to make such comfortable
+provision for them as is made in the port of Savannah, and give them
+what they pay for, instead of charging thirty cents a day for their
+board, and making twenty-two of that profit?
+
+Had the Governor referred to the "characteristic kindness" of the
+jailer, his remarks would have been bestowed upon a worthy man, who has
+been a father to those unfortunates who chanced within the turn of his
+key.
+
+In another part of his message, commenting upon the existence of
+disgraceful criminal laws, the management and wretched state of prisons,
+he says, "The attorney-general, at my request, has drawn up a report
+on the subject of prisons and prison discipline." Now, if such were the
+facts, the reports would be very imperfect to be drawn up by one who
+never visits the prisons.
+
+We are well aware that he called for this report, and further, that the
+attorney-general, in a letter to the sheriff, (of which we have a copy,)
+propounded numerous questions in regard to the jail, calling for a
+statement in full, particularly the amount of fees paid to certain
+functionaries; those charged to the State, and the average number of
+prisoners per month, from Sept. 1851, to Sept. 1852, &c. &c. That letter
+was transmitted to the jailer-a man whose character and integrity is
+well known, and above reproach in Charleston-with a request that he
+would make out his report. He drew up his report in accordance with the
+calendar and the facts, but that report was not submitted. Why was it
+not submitted? Simply because it showed the profit of starving men in
+South Carolina prisons.
+
+We have the evidence in our possession, and can show the Executive that
+he has been misled. We only ask him to call for the original statement,
+made out in the jailer's handwriting, and compare it with the calendar;
+and when he has done that, let us ask, Why the average of prisoners per
+month does not correspond? and why the enormous amount of fees accruing
+from upward of fifty "colored seamen," imprisoned during the year, and
+entered upon the calendar "contrary to law," was not included?
+
+It is a very unhealthy state of things, to say the least; but as the
+sheriff considers it his own, perhaps we have no right to meddle with
+it.
+
+All this clamor about the bad influence of "colored seamen" is kept up
+by a set of mendicant officials who harvest upon the fees, and falls
+to naught, when, at certain hours of the day during their imprisonment,
+they are allowed to associate with "bad niggers," committed for criminal
+offences and sale. If their presence is "dangerous," it certainly would
+be more dangerous in its connection with criminals of the feared class.
+
+Take away the fees--the mercantile community will not murmur, and
+the official gentry will neither abuse nor trouble themselves about
+enforcing the law to imprison freemen.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Manuel Pereira, by F. C. Adams
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+ <head>
+ <title>
+ Manuel Pereira, by F. C. Adams.
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
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+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
+ div.fig { display:block; margin:0 auto; text-align:center; }
+ div.middle { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; }
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+ text-align: right;}
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+ <body>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Manuel Pereira, by F. C. Adams
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Manuel Pereira
+
+Author: F. C. Adams
+
+Release Date: January 11, 2010 [EBook #4680]
+Last Updated: March 14, 2018
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MANUEL PEREIRA ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charles Aldarondo, and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ MANUEL PEREIRA <br /><br /> or, The Sovereign Rule of South Carolina. <br /><br />
+ With Views Of Southern Laws, Life, And Hospitality.
+ </h1>
+ <h2>
+ By F. C. Adams.
+ </h2>
+ <h4>
+ Written In Charleston, South Carolina. Washington, D. C.: <br /> <br />
+ 1853.
+ </h4>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <big><b>CONTENTS</b></big>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <a href="#link2H_INTR"> INTRODUCTION. </a><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0002"> <b>MANUEL PEREIRA.</b> </a><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE UNLUCKY SHIP <br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE STEWARD'S
+ BRAVERY <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ SECOND STORM <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ CHARLESTON POLICE <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;MR.
+ GRIMSHAW, THE MAN OF THE COUNTY <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0006">
+ CHAPTER VI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE JANSON IN THE OFFING <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;ARRIVAL OF THE JANSON
+ <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;A NEW
+ DISH OF SECESSION <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER VIII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;A
+ FEW POINTS OF THE LAW <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X.
+ </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE PROSPECT DARKENING <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0011">
+ CHAPTER XI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE SHERIFF'S OFFICE <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE OLD JAIL <br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;HOW IT IS <br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;MANUEL PEREIRA
+ COMMITTED <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ LAW'S INTRICACY <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;PLEA
+ OF JUST CONSIDERATION AND MISTAKEN CONSTANCY <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER XVII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;LITTLE GEORGE, THE
+ CAPTAIN, AND MR. GRIMSHAW <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER
+ XVIII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;LITTLE TOMMY AND THE POLICE <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER XIX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE NEXT MORNING, AND
+ THE MAYOR'S VERDICT <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER XX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;EMEUTE
+ AMONG THE STEWARDS <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0021"> CHAPTER XXI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ CAPTAIN'S INTERVIEW WITH MR. GRIMSHAW <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0022">
+ CHAPTER XXII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;COPELAND'S RELEASE, AND MANUEL'S CLOSE
+ CONFINEMENT <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0023"> CHAPTER XXIII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;IMPRISONMENT
+ OF JOHN PAUL, AND JOHN BAPTISTE PAMERLIE <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0024"> CHAPTER XXIV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE JANSON CONDEMNED
+ <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0025"> CHAPTER XXV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;GEORGE
+ THE SECESSIONIST, AND HIS FATHER'S SHIPS <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0026"> CHAPTER XXVI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;A SINGULAR RECEPTION
+ <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0027"> CHAPTER XXVII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ HABEAS CORPUS <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0028"> CHAPTER XXVIII. &nbsp;&nbsp;</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ CAPTAIN'S DEPARTURE AND MANUEL'S RELEASE <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0029"> CHAPTER XXIX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;MANUEL'S ARRIVAL IN
+ NEW YORK <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0030"> CHAPTER XXX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE
+ SCENE OF ANGUISH <br /><br /> <a href="#link2H_CONC"> CONCLUSION. </a><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2H_APPE"> APPENDIX. </a><br />
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_INTR" id="link2H_INTR">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ INTRODUCTION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ OUR generous friends in Georgia and South Carolina will not add among
+ their assumptions that we know nothing of the South and Southern life. A
+ residence of several years in those States, a connection with the press,
+ and associations in public life, gave us opportunities which we did not
+ lose, and have not lost sight of; and if we dipped deeper into the
+ vicissitudes of life and law than they gave us credit for at the time, we
+ trust they will pardon us, on the ground of interest in the welfare of the
+ South.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps we should say, to support the true interests of the South, we
+ should and must abandon many of those errors we so strenuously supported
+ in years past; and thus we have taken up the subject of our book, based
+ upon the practical workings of an infamous law, which we witnessed upon
+ the individual whose name forms a part of the title.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Imprisoning a shipwrecked sailor, and making it a penal offence for a
+ freeman to come within the limits of a republican State, whether
+ voluntarily or involuntarily, seems to be considered commonplace, instead
+ of barbarous in South Carolina. This may be accounted for by the fact that
+ the power of a minority, created in wrong, requiring barbarous expedients
+ to preserve itself intact, becomes an habitual sentiment, which usage
+ makes right.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This subject has been treated with indifference, even by the press, which
+ has satisfied itself in discussing the abstract right as a question of
+ law, rather than by disclosing the sufferings of those who endure the
+ wrong and injustice. When we are called upon to support, and are made to
+ suffer the penalty of laws founded in domestic fear, and made subservient
+ to various grades of injustice, it becomes our duty to localize the wrong,
+ and to point out the odium which attaches to the State that enacts such
+ laws of oppression.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A &ldquo;peculiar-institution&rdquo; absorbs and takes precedence of every thing; its
+ protection has become a sacred element of legislative and private action;
+ and fair discussion is looked upon as ominous, and proclaimed as
+ incendiary. But we speak for those who owe no allegiance to that delicate
+ institution; citizens to all intents and, purposes (notwithstanding their
+ dark skins) of the countries to which they severally belong; peaceable
+ persons, pursuing their avocations, to provide a respectable maintenance
+ for their families, and worthy of the same protective rights claimed by
+ the more fortunate citizens of such countries. In doing this we shall give
+ a practical illustration of the imprisonment of four individuals in South
+ Carolina, and ask those who speculate in the abstract science of State
+ sovereignty, to reflect upon the issue of that lamentable injustice which
+ inflicts punishment upon persons guiltless of crime. We prefer to be
+ plain, and we know our Southern friends will not accuse us of
+ misconstruction, for we have their interests at heart, as well as the
+ cause of humanity, which we shall strive to promote, in spite of the
+ struggles of modern barbarism, seeking to perpetuate itself. Fear, the
+ inventor of such pretexts as are set up, and mantled in Southern modesty,
+ must remodel its code for South Carolinians, before it can assert a power
+ unknown to law, or trample upon the obligations of treaty, or enforce
+ nullification of individual rights.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHARLESTON, S. C., July 17,1852.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h1>
+ MANUEL PEREIRA.
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I. THE UNLUCKY SHIP.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE British brig Janson, Thompson, master, laden with sugar, pimento,
+ &amp;c. &amp;c. left Kingston, Jamaica, in the early part of March, in the
+ present year, bound for Glasgow. The skipper, who was a genuine son of the
+ &ldquo;Land o' Cakes,&rdquo; concluded to take the inside passage, and run through the
+ gulf. This might have been questioned by seamen better acquainted with the
+ windward passage; but as every Scotchman likes to have his own way, the
+ advice of the first officer&mdash;an experienced salt in the West India
+ waters&mdash;went to leeward. On rounding Cape Antoine, it was evident
+ that a strong blow was approaching. The clouds hung their dark curtains in
+ threatening blackness; and, as the sharp flashes of lightning inflamed the
+ gloomy scene, the little bark seemed like a speck upon the bosom of the
+ sea. It was the first mate's watch on deck. The wind, then blowing from
+ the W.S.W., began to increase and veer into the westward; from whence it
+ suddenly chopped into the northward. The mate paced the quarter wrapt in
+ his fearnought jacket, and at every turn giving a glance aloft, then
+ looking at the compass, and again to the man at the wheel, as if he had an
+ instinct of what was coming.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was a fearless navigator, yet, like many others who had yielded to the
+ force of habit, was deeply imbued with that prevalent superstition so
+ common to sailors, which regards a particular ship as unlucky. Imagine an
+ old-fashioned boatswain, with north-country features strongly marked, a
+ weather-beaten face, and a painted south-wester on his head, and you have
+ the &ldquo;Mister Mate&rdquo; of the old brig Janson.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Keep her full, my hearty. We must take in our light sails and go on the
+ other tack soon. If we don't catch it before daylight, I'll miss my
+ calculation. She's an unlucky old craft as ever I sailed in, and if the
+ skipper a'n't mighty careful, he'll never get her across. I've sworn
+ against sailing in her several times, but if I get across in her this
+ time, I'll bid her good-by; and if the owners don't give me a new craft,
+ they may get somebody else. We're just as sure to have bad luck as if we
+ had cats and parsons aboard.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus saying, he descended the companion-way, and reported the appearance
+ of the weather to the skipper, who arose quickly, and, consulting his
+ barometer, found it had fallen to near the lowest scale. After inquiring
+ the quarter of the wind, and how she headed, what sail she was carrying,
+ and the probable distance from the cape, he gave orders to call all hands
+ to take in the topgallant-sails, double reef the fore, and single reef the
+ maintop-sails, and stow the flying-jib&mdash;dressed himself, and came on
+ deck. Just as he put his head above the slide of the companion, and
+ stopped for a minute with his hands resting upon the sides, a vivid flash
+ of lightning hung its festoons of fire around the rigging, giving it the
+ appearance of a chain of livid flame.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We'll catch the but-end of a gulf sneezer soon. Tell the boys to bear a
+ hand with them sails. We must get her snug, and stand by to lay her under
+ a double-reefed maintop-sail and jib, with her head to the northward and
+ eastward. We may make a clear drift&mdash;chance if it lasts long,&rdquo; said
+ Skipper Thompson, as he stood surveying the horizon and his craft.
+ Scarcely had he given the orders before the storm burst upon them with all
+ its fury. Its suddenness can only be appreciated by those who have sailed
+ in the West India passages, where the sudden shocks of the short-chopping
+ sea acts with a tremendous strain upon the hull of a heavy-laden vessel.
+ The captain ran to the windward gangway, hurrying his men in the discharge
+ of their duty, and giving another order to clew up the coursers and
+ foretop-sail. Just as the men had executed the first, and were about to
+ pull on the clew-lines of the latter, a sudden gust took effect upon the
+ bag of the sail and carried it clean from the bolt-ropes. The halyards
+ were lowered and the yards properly braced up, while the Janson was
+ brought to under the canvas we have before described. In a few minutes
+ more the wind had increased to a gale, and, as the sailors say, several
+ times the old craft &ldquo;wouldn't look at it.&rdquo; Several times we had to put her
+ helm up, and as many times she shipped those forcing cross seas which
+ drive every thing before them, and sweep the decks. At length a piece of
+ canvas was lashed to the fore-rigging which gave her a balance, and she
+ rode easy until about five o'clock in the morning, when by a sudden broach
+ the canvas was carried away, and a tremendous sharp sea boarded her
+ forward; starting several stanchions, carrying away part of her starboard
+ bulwark and rail, and simultaneously the foretop-gallant-mast, which
+ snapped just above the withe. As a natural consequence, every thing was in
+ the utmost confusion&mdash;the old hull worked in every timber. The wreck
+ swayed to and fro, retarding the working of the vessel and endangering the
+ lives of those who attempted to clear it from obstruction. Thus she
+ remained for more than half an hour, nearly on her beam-ends, and at the
+ mercy of each succeeding sea that threatened to engulf her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As daylight broke, the wind lulled, and, as usual in those waters, the sea
+ soon ran down. Enabled to take the advantage of daylight, they commenced
+ to clear away the wreck. In the mean time it was found necessary to remove
+ the fore-hatch in order to get out some spare sails that had been stowed
+ away near the forward bulkhead, instead of a more appropriate place. The
+ mate, after trying the pumps in the early part of the gale, reported that
+ she had started a leak; which, however, was so trifling as to require but
+ one man to keep her free, until she broached, and carried away her
+ topgallant-mast. The man on duty then reported the water increasing, and
+ another was ordered to assist him. On an examination in the morning, it
+ was found that she was strained in the fore-channels, and had started a
+ but.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She's an unlucky concern, skipper,&rdquo; said the mate as he brought the axe
+ to take the battons off the forehatch. &ldquo;A fellow might as well try to work
+ a crab at low tide as to keep her to it in a blow like that. She minds her
+ helm like a porpoise in the breakers. Old Davy must have put his mark upon
+ her some time, but I never know'd a lucky vessel to be got as she was. She
+ makes a haul on the underwriters every time she drifts across; for I never
+ knew her to sail clear since I shipped in the old tub. If she was mine,
+ I'd find a place for her at somebody's expense.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sea became smooth, the water was found to have receded, the wind,
+ light, had hauled to W.S.W., and Cape Antoine was judged by dead reckoning
+ to bear S.S.W. about thirty miles distant. The larboard fore-shrouds were
+ found to have been scorched by the lightning, which had completely melted
+ the tar from the after-shroud. All hands were now busily employed
+ repairing the wreck, which by two o'clock P.M. they had got so far
+ completed as to stand on their course in the gulf, at the rate of six
+ knots an hour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The skipper now consulted in his mind as to the expediency of making for
+ Havana or proceeding on his cruise. The leak had materially diminished,
+ and, like all old vessels, though she gave a good portion of work at the
+ pumps, a continuation of good weather might afford an opportunity to shove
+ her across. Under these feelings, he was inclined to give the preference
+ to his hopes rather than yield to his fears. He considered the interest of
+ all concerned&mdash;consulted his mate, but found him governed by his
+ superstition, and looking upon the issue of his life about as certain
+ whether he jumped overboard or &ldquo;stuck by the old tub.&rdquo; He considered again
+ the enormous port-charges imposed in Havana, the nature of his cargo in
+ regard to tariff, should his vessel be condemned, and the ruinous expenses
+ of discharging, &amp;c. &amp;c. together with the cost of repairs,
+ providing they were ordered. All these things he considered with the
+ mature deliberation of a good master, who has the general interests of all
+ concerned at heart. So, if he put away for a port, in consideration of all
+ concerned, his lien for general average would have strong ground in
+ maritime law; yet there were circumstances connected with the sea-worthy
+ condition of the craft&mdash;known to himself, if not to the port-wardens,
+ and which are matters of condition between the master and his owners&mdash;which
+ might, upon certain technicalities of law, give rise to strong
+ objectionable points. With all these glancing before him, he, with
+ commendable prudence, resolved to continue his voyage, and trust to kind
+ Providence for the best.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Captain,&rdquo; said the mate, as he stood viewing the prospect, with a
+ marlinespike in one hand and a piece of seizing in the other&mdash;&ldquo;I
+ verily think, if that blow had stuck to us two hours longer, the old tub
+ would a' rolled her futtocks out. Ye don't know her as well as I do. She's
+ unlucky, anyhow; and always has been since she sot upon the water. I've
+ seen her top-sides open like a basket when we've been trying to work her
+ into port in heavy weather: and a craft that won't look nearer than nine
+ points close-hauled, with a stiff breeze, ought to be sent into the Clyde
+ for a coal-droger. An old vessel's a perfect pickpocket to owners; and if
+ this old thing hasn't opened their purses as bad as her own seams, I'll
+ miss my reckonin'. I've had a strong foreknowledge that we wouldn't get
+ across in her. I saw the rats leaving in Jamaica&mdash;taking up their
+ line of march, like marines on the fore. It's a sure sign. And then I'd a
+ dream, which is as sure as a mainstay&mdash;never deceives me. I can
+ depend on its presentiment. I have dreamed it several times, and we always
+ had an awful passage. Twice we come within a bobstay of all goin' to Old
+ Davy's store-house. I once escaped it, after I'd had my mysterious dream;
+ but then I made the cook throw the cat overboard just after we left port,
+ and 'twas all that saved us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus saying, he went forward to serve a topgallant-stay that was stretched
+ across the forecastle-hatch from the cat-heads, and had just been spliced
+ by the men, followed by an old-fashioned sea-urchin, a miniature of the
+ tar, with a mallet in his hand. The captain, although a firm, intelligent
+ man, and little given to such notions of fate as are generally entertained
+ by sailors, who never shake off the spiritual imaginings of the
+ forecastle, displayed some discomfiture of mind at the strong character of
+ the mate's misgivings. He knew him to be a good sailor, firm in his duty,
+ and unmoved by peril. This he had proved on several occasions when sailing
+ in other vessels, when the last ray of hope seemed to be gone. He
+ approached the mate again, and with a pretence of making inquiries about
+ the storage of the cargo, sounded him further in regard to his knowledge
+ of the Bahamas, and with special reference to the port of Nassau.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Six-tenths of her timbers are as rotten as punk,&rdquo; said the mate; &ldquo;this
+ North American timber never lasts long; the pump-wells are defective, and
+ when we carry sail upon her, they don't affect the water in the lee-bilge,
+ and she rolls it through her air-streaks like a whale. She'll damage the
+ best cargo that ever floated, in that way. Take my word for it, skipper,
+ she'll never go across the Banks; she'll roll to splinters as soon as she
+ gets into them long seas; and if we get dismasted again, it's gone Davy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know the old scow before to-day, and wouldn't shipped in her, if I
+ hadn't been lime-juiced by that villanous landlord that advanced me the
+ trifle. But I seen she was as deep as a luggerman's sand-barge, and I
+ popped the old cat overboard, just as we rounded the point coming out o'
+ Kingston harbour,&rdquo; said a fine, active-looking sailor, who bore every
+ trait of a royal tar, and boasted of serving five years in the East-India
+ service, to his shipmate, while he continued to serve the stay. His words
+ were spoken in a whisper, and not intended for the captain's ears. The
+ captain overheard him, however; and, as a vessel is a world to those on
+ board, the general sentiment carries its weight in controlling its
+ affairs. Thus the strong feeling which prevailed on board could not fail
+ to have its effect upon the captain's mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, we'll try her at any rate,&rdquo; said the captain, walking aft and
+ ordering the cabin-boy to bring up his glass; with which he took a sharp
+ look to the southward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'd shape her course for a southern Yankee port. I haven't been much in
+ them, but I think we'll stand a better chance there than in these ports
+ where they make a speculation of wrecking, and would take a fellow's
+ pea-jacket for salvage.&rdquo; &ldquo;We're always better under the protection of a
+ consul than in a British port,&rdquo; said the mate, coming aft to inform the
+ skipper that they had carried away the chains of the bobstay, and that the
+ bowsprit strained her in the knight-heads.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II. THE STEWARD'S BRAVERY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ DURING the worst of the gale, a mulatto man, with prominent features,
+ indicating more of the mestino than negro character, was moving in busy
+ occupation about the deck, and lending a willing hand with the rest of the
+ crew to execute the captain's orders. He was rather tall, well formed, of
+ a light olive complexion, with dark, piercing eyes, a straight, pointed
+ nose, and well-formed mouth. His hair, also, had none of that crimp so
+ indicative of negro extraction, but lay in dark curls all over his head.
+ As he answered to the captain's orders, he spoke in broken accents,
+ indicating but little knowledge of the English language. From the manner
+ in which the crew treated him, it was evident that he was an established
+ favourite with them as well as the officers, for each appeared to treat
+ him more as an equal than a menial. He laboured cheerfully at sailor's
+ duty until the first sea broke over her, when, seeing that the caboose was
+ in danger of being carried from the lashings, and swept to leeward in the
+ mass of wreck, he ran for that all-important apartment, and began securing
+ it with extra lashings. He worked away with an earnestness that deserved
+ all praise; not with the most satisfactory effect for an angry sea
+ immediately succeeding completely stripped the furnace of its woodwork,
+ and in its force carried the gallant fellow among its fragments into the
+ lee-scuppers, where he saved himself from going overboard only by clinging
+ to a stanchion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The second mate, a burly old salt, ran to his assistance, but, before he
+ reached him, our hero had recovered himself, and was making another
+ attempt to reach his coppers. It seemed to him as much a pending necessity
+ to save the cooking apparatus as it did the captain to save the ship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He no catch me dis time,&rdquo; said he to the mate, smiling as he lifted his
+ drenched head from among the fragments of the wreck. &ldquo;I fix a de coffee in
+ him yet, please God.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After securing the remains of his cooking utensils, he might be seen
+ busily employed over a little stove, arranged at the foot of the stairs
+ that led to the cabin. The smoke from the funnel several times annoyed the
+ captain, who laboured under the excitement consequent upon the confusion
+ of the wreck and peril of his vessel, bringing forth remonstrances of no
+ very pleasant character. It proved that the good steward was considering
+ how he could best serve Jack's necessities; and while they were laboring
+ to save the ship, lie was studiously endeavoring to anticipate the craving
+ of their stomachs. For when daylight appeared and the storm subsided, the
+ steward had a bountiful dish of hot coffee to relieve Jack's fatigued
+ system. It was received with warm welcome, and many blessings were heaped
+ upon the head of the steward; A good &ldquo;doctor&rdquo; is as essential for the
+ interests of owners and crew as a good captain. So it proved in this
+ instance, for while he had a careful regard for the stores, he never
+ failed to secure the praises of the crew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When I gib de stove fire, den me gib de Cap-i-tan, wid de crew, some good
+ breakfas,&rdquo; said he with a gleam of satisfaction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This individual, reader, was Manuel Pereira, or, as he was called by his
+ shipmates, Pe-rah-re. Manuel was born in Brazil, an extract of the Indians
+ and Spanish, claiming birthright of the Portuguese nation. It mattered but
+ very little to Manuel where he was born, for he had been so long tossed
+ about in his hardy vocation that he had almost become alienated from the
+ affections of birthplace. He had sailed so long under the protection of
+ the main-jack of old England that he had formed a stronger allegiance to
+ that country than to any other. He had sailed under it with pride, had
+ pointed to its emblem, as if he felt secure, when it was unfurled, that
+ the register-ticket which that government had given him was a covenant
+ between it and himself; that it was a ticket to incite him to good
+ behavior in a foreign country; and that the flag was sure to protect his
+ rights, and insure, from the government to which he sailed respect and
+ hospitality. He had sailed around the world under it&mdash;visited savage
+ and semi-civilized nations&mdash;had received the hospitality of
+ cannibals, had joined in the merry dance with the Otaheitian, had eaten
+ fruits with the Hottentots, shared the coarse morsel of the Greenlander,
+ been twice chased by the Patagonians&mdash;but what shall we say?&mdash;he
+ was imprisoned, for the olive tints of his color, in a land where not only
+ civilization rules in its brightest conquests, but chivalry and honor
+ sound its fame within the lanes, streets, and court-yards. Echo asks,
+ Where&mdash;where? We will tell the reader. That flag which had waved over
+ him so long and in so many of his wayfarings&mdash;that flag which had so
+ long boasted its rule upon the wave, and had protected him among the
+ savage and the civilized, found a spot upon this wonderful globe where it
+ ceased to do so, unless he could change his skin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III. THE SECOND STORM.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ ON the fourth night succeeding the perilous position of the Janson off
+ Cape Antoine, the brig was making about seven knots, current of the gulf
+ included. The sun had set beneath heavy radiant clouds, which rolled up
+ like masses of inflamed matter, reflecting in a thousand mellow shades,
+ and again spreading their gorgeous shadows upon the rippled surface of the
+ ocean, making the picture serene and grand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As darkness quickly followed, these beautiful transparencies of a
+ West-India horizon gradually changed into murky-looking monitors,
+ spreading gloom in the sombre perspective. The moon was in its second
+ quarter, and was rising on the earth. The mist gathered thicker and
+ thicker as she ascended, until at length she became totally obscured. The
+ Captain sat upon the companion-way, anxiously watching the sudden change
+ that was going on overhead; and, without speaking to any one, rose, took a
+ glance at the compass, and then went forward to the lookout, charging him
+ to keep a sharp watch, as they were not only in a dangerous channel, but
+ in the track of vessels bound into and out of the gulf. After this, he
+ returned amidship, where the little miniature salt we have described
+ before lay, with his face downward, upon the main-hatch, and ordering him
+ to bring the lead-line, he went to leeward and took a cast; and after
+ paying out about twenty-five fathoms without sounding, hauled aboard
+ again. The wind was southward and light. As soon as he had examined the
+ lead he walked aft and ordered the sheets eased and the vessel headed two
+ points farther off. This done, he went below, and shaking his barometer
+ several times, found it had begun to fall very fast. Taking down his
+ coast-chart, he consulted it very studiously for nearly half an hour,
+ laying off an angle with a pair of dividers and scale, with mathematical
+ minuteness; after which he pricked his course along the surface to a given
+ point. This was intended as his course.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where do you make her, Captain?&rdquo; said the mate, as he lay in his berth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We must be off the Capes&mdash;we must keep a sharp look out for them
+ reefs. They are so deceptive that we'll be on to them before we know it.
+ There's no telling by sounding. We may get forty fathoms one minute and
+ strike the next. I've heard old West-India coasters say the white water
+ was the best warning,&rdquo; replied the Captain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm mighty afraid of that Carysfort reef, since I struck upon it in 1845.
+ I was in a British schooner then, bound from Kingston, Jamaica, to New
+ York. We kept a bright lookout, all the way through the passage, and yet
+ struck, one morning just about day-light; and, five minutes before, we had
+ sounded without getting bottom. When it cleared away, that we could see,
+ there was two others like ourselves. One was the ship John Parker, of
+ Boston, and the other was a 'long-shoreman. We had a valuable cargo on
+ board, but the craft wasn't hurt a bit; and if the skipper&mdash;who was a
+ little colonial man, not much acquainted with the judicial value of a
+ wrecker's services&mdash;had a' taken my advice, he wouldn't got into the
+ snarl he did at Key West, where they carried him, and charged him
+ thirty-six hundred dollars for the job. Yes, and a nice little commission
+ to the British consul for counting the doubloons, which, by-the-by,
+ Skipper, belonged to that great house of Howland &amp; Aspinwalls. They
+ were right clever fellows, and it went into the general average account
+ for the relief of the underwriters' big chest,&rdquo; continued the mate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We must have all hands ready at the call,&rdquo; said the Captain. &ldquo;It looks
+ dirty overhead, and I think we're going to catch it from the north-east
+ to-night. If we do, our position is not as good as before. I don't feel
+ afraid of her, if we only get clear of this infernal coast,&rdquo; said the
+ Skipper, as he rolled up his chart, and repaired on deck again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During this time, Manuel, who, had given the crew some very acceptable hot
+ cakes for supper, was sitting upon the windlass, earnestly engaged, with
+ his broken English, recounting an adventure he had on the coast of
+ Patagonia, a few years previous, while serving on board a whaleman, to a
+ shipmate who sat at his left. It was one of those incidents which
+ frequently occur to the men attached to vessels which visit that coast for
+ the purpose of providing a supply of wood and water, and which would
+ require too much space to relate here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did you run, Manuel?&rdquo; said the listening shipmate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What else did me do? If I no run, I'd not be here dis night, because I be
+ make slave, or I be killed wid club. Patagonian don't care for flag&mdash;nor
+ not'in' else&mdash;I trust&mdash;e my leg, an' he get to de boat jus' when
+ cap-i-tan come to rescue.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Was you on board an Englishman then, Manuel?&rdquo; inquired the shipmate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, I'm always sail in English ship, because I can get protection from
+ flag and consul, where I go&mdash;any part of globe,&rdquo; said he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I never liked this sailing among barbarous nations; they've no respect
+ for any flag, and would just as lief imprison an Englishman or an American
+ as they would a dog. They're a set of wild barbarians, and if they kill a
+ fellow, there's no responsibility for it. It's like a parcel of wolves
+ chasing a lamb, and there's no finding them after they've killed it. But
+ they give a fellow his rights in Old England and the States. A man's a man
+ there, rich or poor, and his feelings are just as much his own as
+ anybody's. It's a glorious thing, this civilization, and if the world
+ keeps on, there'll be no danger of a fellow's being imprisoned and killed
+ among these savages. They're a cowardly set, for nobody but cowards are
+ afraid of their own actions. Men neither imprison nor kill strangers, that
+ don't fear the injustice of their own acts. You may smoke that in your
+ pipe, Manuel, for I've heard great men say so. But you'd been done making
+ dough-nuts then, Manuel, if they'd got hold o' you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never catch Manuel among Patagonians, again; they not know what the flag
+ be, nor they can't read de registrum ticket, if they know'd where England
+ was,&rdquo; said Manuel; and just as he was concluding the story of his
+ adventure, the little sailor-boy put his arm around Manuel's waist, and,
+ laying his head on his breast, fondled about him with an affectionate
+ attachment. The little fellow had been a shipmate with Manuel on several
+ voyages, and, through the kindness he had received at his hands, naturally
+ formed an ardent attachment to him. Taking advantage of the good
+ treatment, he knew how to direct his attention to the steward whenever he
+ wanted a snack from the cabin-locker of that which was not allowed in the
+ forecastle. After holding him for a minute, encircling his arm around the
+ little fellow's shoulder, he arose, and saying, &ldquo;I know what you want,
+ Tommy,&rdquo; proceeded to the cabin and brought him several little eatables
+ that had been left at the captain's table.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The wind now began to veer and increase, her sails kept filling aback; and
+ as often as the man at the helm kept her off, the wind would baffle him,
+ until finding it would be necessary to go on the other tack, or make some
+ change of course, he called the Captain. The moment the latter put his
+ foot upon deck, he found his previous predictions were about to be
+ verified. The rustling noise of the gulf, mingling its solemn sounds with
+ the petrel-like music of that foreboding wind that &ldquo;whistles through the
+ shrouds,&rdquo; awakened the more superstitious sensations of a sailor's heart.
+ The clouds had gathered their sombre folds into potent conclaves, while
+ the sparkling brine in her wake, seemed like a fiery stream, rolling its
+ troubled foam upon the dark waters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Brace the yards up sharp-hard a-starboard!&mdash;and trim aft the
+ sheets,&rdquo; ordered the Captain, who had previously given the order, &ldquo;All
+ hands on deck!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The order was scarcely executed, before the noise of the approaching gale
+ was heard in the distance. All hands were ordered to shorten sail as
+ quickly as possible; but before they could get aloft, it came upon them
+ with such fury from E.N.E. as to carry away the foretop-mast and
+ topgallant-mast, together with its sails, and the main-topgallant-mast
+ with the sail. The foretop-mast, in going by the board, carried away the
+ flying-jib-boom and flying-jibs. Thus the ill-fated Janson was doomed to
+ another struggle for her floating existence. The sea began to rise and
+ break in fearful power; the leak had already increased so, that two men
+ were continually kept working the pumps. The crew, with commendable
+ alacrity, cut away the wreck, which had been swaying to and fro, not only
+ endangering the lives of those on board, but obstructing every attempt to
+ get the vessel into any kind of working order. The main-sail had rent from
+ the leash to the peak of the gaff, and was shaking into shreds. The
+ starboard sheet of the maintop-sail was gone, and it had torn at the head
+ from the bolt-rope, flying at every gust like the shreds of a muslin rag
+ in a hail-storm. Without the government of her helm, she lay in the trough
+ of the sea more like a log than a manageable mass. Sea after sea broke
+ over her, carrying every thing before them at each pass. The officers and
+ crew had now as much as they could do to retain their holds, without
+ making any effort to save the wreck, while the men at the pumps could only
+ work at each subsiding of the sea, and that under the disadvantage of
+ being lashed to the frame. A more perilous position than that in which the
+ old brig Janson now lay, it was impossible to imagine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Tis the worst hurricane I've ever experienced upon the West India coast,
+ Captain, but it's too furious to last long; and if she don't go to pieces
+ before morning, I'll give her credit for what I've always swore against
+ her. She can't keep afloat though, if it hangs on another hour in this
+ way,&rdquo; said the mate, who, with the Captain and Manuel, had just made an
+ ineffectual attempt to rig a storm stay-sail, to try and lay her to under
+ it. For the mate swore by his knowledge of her qualities, that to put her
+ before it, would be certain foundering. The gale continued with unabated
+ fury for about two hours, and stopped about as suddenly as it commenced.
+ The work of destruction was complete, for from her water-line to the stump
+ of the remaining spars, the Janson floated a complete wreck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The captain gave orders to clear away the wreck, and get what little sail
+ they could patch up, upon her, for the purpose of working her into the
+ nearest port. The mate was not inclined to further the order, evidently
+ laboring under the strong presentiment that she was to be their coffin. He
+ advised that it was fruitless to stick by her any longer, or hazard an
+ attempt to reach a port with her, in such a leaky and disabled condition.
+ &ldquo;If we don't abandon her, Skipper,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;she'll abandon us. We'd
+ better make signal for the first vessel, and bid the old coffin good-by.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The captain was more determined in his resolution, and instead of being
+ influenced by the mate's fears, continued his order, and the men went to
+ work with a cheerful willingness. None seemed more anxious to lend a ready
+ hand than Manuel, for in addition to is duties as steward, he had worked
+ at sail-making, and both worked at and directed the repairing of the
+ sails. Those acquainted with maritime affairs can readily appreciate the
+ amount of labor necessary to provide a mess with the means at hand that we
+ have before described. And yet he did it to the satisfaction of all, and
+ manifested a restless anxiety lest he should not make everybody
+ comfortable, and particularly his little pet boy, Tommy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We'll get a good observation at meridian, and then we shall shape our
+ course for Charleston, South Carolina. We'll be more likely to reach it
+ than any other southern port,&rdquo; said the captain to his mate. &ldquo;That
+ steward, Manuel, is worth his weight in gold. If we have to abandon the
+ old craft, I'll take him home; the owners respect him just as much as a
+ white man; his politeness and affability could not but command such
+ esteem, with a man that a'n't a fool. I never believed in making equals of
+ negroes, but if Manuel was to be classed with niggers for all the nigger
+ blood that's in him, seven-tenths of the inhabitants of the earth would go
+ with him. I never saw such an attachment between brothers, as exists
+ between him and Tommy. I verily believe that one couldn't go to sleep
+ without the other. I should think they were brothers, if the lad wasn't
+ English, and Manuel a Portuguese. But Manuel is as much an Englishman at
+ heart as the lad, and has sailed so long under the flag that he seems to
+ have a reverence for the old jack when he sees the bunting go up. He likes
+ to tell that story about the Patagonians chasing him. I have overheard him
+ several times, as much amused in his own recital as if he was listening to
+ the quaint jokes of an old tar. But he swears the Patagonians will never
+ catch him on their shores again, for he says he doesn't believe in making
+ 'drum-head of man-skin,'&rdquo; said the Captain, evidently with the intention
+ of affecting the mate's feelings, and drawing his mind from its dark
+ forebodings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, Skipper, I pray for a happy deliverance,&rdquo; said the mate, &ldquo;but if we
+ make Charleston with her, it'll be a luck that man nor mermaid ever
+ thought of. I hearn a good deal o' tell about Charleston, and the Keys.
+ That isn't one of the places our stewards are so 'fraid of, and where
+ owners don't like to send their ships when they can find freight in other
+ ports?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I expect it is, sir; but I apprehend no such trouble with any of my
+ crew,&rdquo; answered the Captain promptly. &ldquo;I sail under the faith of my
+ nation's honor and prowess, the same as the Americans do under theirs.
+ We're both respected wherever we go, and if one little State in the Union
+ violates the responsibility of a great nation like that, I'm mistaken.
+ Certainly, no nation in Christendom could be found, that wouldn't open
+ their hearts to a shipwrecked sailor. I have too much faith in what I have
+ heard of the hospitality of Southerners, to believe any thing of that
+ kind.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Talk's all very well, Skipper,&rdquo; said the mate; &ldquo;but my word for it, I
+ know'd several ships lying in the Mersey, about three years ago, bound to
+ Southern ports for cotton. White stewards worth any thing couldn't be had
+ for love nor money, and the colored ones wouldn't ship for ports in Slaves
+ States. The Thebis got a colored man, but the owners had to pay him an
+ enormous advance, and this, too, with the knowledge of his being locked up
+ the whole time he was in port; thus having to incur the very useless
+ expense of supplying his place, or find boarding-house accommodations for
+ the officers and crew. If it be true, what I've hearn 'em say in the
+ Mersey, the man doesn't only suffer in his feelings by some sort of
+ confinement they have, but the owners suffer in pocket. But it may be,
+ Skipper, and I'm inclined to think with you, our case is certainly
+ deplorable enough to command pity instead of imprisonment. The government
+ must be found cutting a dirty figure on the national picture, that would
+ ill-treat sailors who had suffered as much as our boys have. I would hate
+ to see Manuel shut up or ill-used. He's as brave a fellow as ever buckled
+ at a handspike or rode a jib-boom. Last night, while in the worst of the
+ gale, he volunteered to take Higgins's place, and, mounting the jib-boom,
+ was several times buried in the sea; yet he held on like a bravo, and
+ succeeded in cutting away the wreck. I thought he was gone once or twice,
+ and I own I never saw more peril at sea; but if he hadn't effected it, the
+ foot of the bowsprit would have strained her open in the eyes, and we'd
+ all been sharks'-bait before this. The fellow was nearly exhausted when he
+ came on board; says I, its gone day with you, old fellow; but he come to
+ in a little while, and went cheerily to work again,&rdquo; continued Mr. Mate,
+ who though pleased with the Captain's determination to make the nearest
+ port, seemed to dread that all would not be right in Charleston&mdash;that
+ the bar was a very intricate one&mdash;water very shoal in the
+ ship-channel, and though marked with three distinctive buoys, numbered
+ according to their range, impossible to crops without a skilful pilot. The
+ mate plead a preference for Savannah, asserting, according to his own
+ knowlege, that a ship of any draft could cross that bar at any time of
+ tide, and that it was a better port for the transaction of business.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Janson was headed for Charleston, the queen city of the sunny South,
+ and, as may be expected from her disabled condition, made very slow
+ progress on her course. During the gale, her stores had become damaged,
+ and on the third day before making Charleston light, Manuel Pereira came
+ aft, and with a sad countenance reported that the last cask of good water
+ was nearly out; that the others had all been stove during the gale, and
+ what remained, so brackish that it was unfit for use. From this time until
+ their arrival at Charleston, they suffered those tortures of thirst, which
+ only those who have endured them can estimate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV. THE CHARLESTON POLICE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ MR. DURKEE had said in Congress, that a negro was condemned to be hung in
+ Charleston for resisting his master's attempts upon the chastity of his
+ wife; and that such was the sympathy expressed for the negro, that the
+ sheriffs offer of one thousand dollars could induce no one present to
+ execute the final mandate. Now, had Mr. Durkee been better acquainted with
+ that social understanding between the slave, the pretty wife, and his
+ master, and the acquiescing pleasure of the slave, who in nineteen cases
+ out of twenty congratulates himself on the distinguished honor, he would
+ have saved himself the error of such a charge against the tenor of social
+ life in Charleston. Or, had he been better acquainted with the character
+ of her police, he certainly would have saved the talent of Mr. Aiken its
+ sophomore display in that cumbrous defence. In the first place, Mr. Durkee
+ would have known that such attempts are so common among the social events
+ of the day, and so well understood by the slave, that instead of being
+ resented, they are appreciated to a great extent. We speak from long
+ experience and knowledge of the connection between a certain class of
+ slaves and their masters. In the second place, Mr. Durkee would have known
+ that any man connected with the city police&mdash;save its honorable
+ mayor, to whose character we would pay all deference&mdash;would not for
+ conscience' sake scruple to hang a man for five dollars. We make no
+ exception for color or crime. A qualification might be called for, more
+ adapted to our knowledge of it as it has existed for the last four or five
+ years; but we are informed by those whose lives and fortunes have been
+ spent for the moral elevation of the city police, that it was even worse
+ at the time referred to.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reader may think we are making grave charges. Let us say, without fear
+ of refutation, they are too well known in the community that tolerates
+ them. As a mere shadow of what lays beneath the surface, we would refer to
+ the only independent speech we ever listened to in Charleston,&mdash;except
+ when self-laudation was the theme,&mdash;made by G. R&mdash;, Esq., in one
+ of her public halls a few weeks ago. Mr. R&mdash;is a gentleman of moral
+ courage and integrity, and, without fear or trembling, openly denounced
+ the corruption and demoralization of the police department. Even the
+ enemies of his party, knowing the facts, appreciated his candor as a man,
+ while they denounced the publicity, (for his speech was paraded by the
+ press,) lest the fair name of the queen city should suffer abroad. A
+ beautiful farce followed this grave exposition. The board of aldermen,
+ composed of fourteen men of very general standing, remained mum under the
+ accusation for a long time. Its object was to show up the character of a
+ class of officials, whose character and nefarious arts have long disgraced
+ the city. But in order to make a display of his purity, Mr. C&mdash;, a
+ gentleman entitled to high moral consideration, chose to make it a
+ personal matter; yet, not content with a private explanation given by Mr.
+ R&mdash;, he made a call through the press. Mr. R&mdash;responded in a
+ proper and courteous manner, acknowledging the due respect to which Mr. C&mdash;'s
+ private character was entitled; thus increasing the ambition of the board
+ generally, who, with the expectation of Mr. R&mdash;making a like
+ acknowledgment to them as a body, (not excepting their honorable head,)
+ made a demand in joint-officio. This being duly signalized through the
+ columns of the Courier and Mercury, Mr. R&mdash;met it with a response
+ worthy of a gentleman. He referred them to the strongest evidence of his
+ assertions, in the countenance which they gave to a class of officials too
+ well known to the community for the honor of its name and the moral
+ foundation of its corporate dignity. Thus ended a great municipal farce,
+ to prolong which the principal performers knew would disclose the
+ intriguing scenes of their secondary performers. The plot of this
+ melo-comic concern was in the sequel, and turned upon the very grave fact
+ of Mr. C&mdash;having some time previous withdrawn from the honorable
+ board, to preserve some very delicate considerations for conscience' sake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How much spiritual consolation Mr. C&mdash;realized through the
+ acknowledgment of Mr. R&mdash;, or the honorable board in joint-officio
+ from the firm admonition, we leave for the secondary consideration of
+ proper wives and daughters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the reader will ask, what has this to do with poor Manuel Pereira,&mdash;or
+ the imprisonment of free citizens of a friendly nation? We will show him
+ that the complex system of official spoliation, and the misrepresentations
+ of the police in regard to the influence of such persons upon the slave
+ population, is a principal feature in its enforcement. To do this, we deem
+ it essentially necessary to show the character of such men and the manner
+ in which this law is carried out. We shall make no charges that we cannot
+ sustain by the evidence of the whole city proper, and with the knowledge
+ that truth is stronger than fiction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What will the reader say when we tell him that, among the leading minds of
+ the city&mdash;we say leading minds, for we class those who are considered
+ foremost in the mercantile sphere among them&mdash;are three brothers,
+ unmarried, but with mistresses bought for the purpose, whose dark skins
+ avert the tongue of scandal;&mdash;that, twice, men were sold, because of
+ the beauty of their wives, to distant traders, that the brothers might
+ cast off their old mistresses, and appropriate new ones to an unholy
+ purpose; that these men enjoy their richly furnished mansions, are known
+ for their sumptuous entertainments, set an example of mercantile honor and
+ integrity, are flattered among the populace, receive the attentions of
+ very fine and very virtuous ladies, wield a potential voice in the city
+ government, and lead in the greatest development of internal improvements;&mdash;that
+ these men even whisper high-sounding words of morality, and the
+ established custom considers their example no harm when color is modified.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What will the reader think, when we tell him that there is no city-marshal
+ in Charleston, but innumerable marshalled men, supported by an onerous tax
+ upon the people, to quiet the fears of a few. And what will they think,
+ when we tell them that the man whose name is so frequently sounded through
+ the columns of the press as the head of police, and applauded for his
+ activity among thieves, is the well-known prince-officio of a voluptuous
+ dwelling, where dazzling licentiousness fills his pockets with the spoils
+ of allurement. This man has several counterparts, whose acts are no
+ secrets to the public ear, and who turn their office into a mart of
+ intrigue, and have enriched themselves upon the bounty of espionage and
+ hush-money, and now assert the dignity of their purse. It may be asked,
+ why are these men kept in office?&mdash;or have these offices become so
+ disgraced that honest men will not deign to accept them? No! such is not
+ the case. It is that moral integrity is not considered in its proper
+ light, and is not valued as it should be; that these men have a secret
+ influence which is well known, and are countenanced and retained for the
+ weight of their control among a certain class; and, strange to say, that
+ the party ex-officio make these demoralizing things the basis of their
+ complaints against the &ldquo;powers that be;&rdquo; yet such is their feeble
+ dependence, that no sooner are they in office than we have the repetition
+ of the same things.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, how far his honor is answerable for these things we must leave the
+ reader to judge. The leading characteristics of his nature conflict with
+ each other; his moral character is what is considered sound here; and
+ truly he is entitled to much respect for his exemplary conduct, whether it
+ be only exerted as an example, or the heartfelt love of Christian purity.
+ Some people are pious from impulse, and become affected when purpose
+ serves to make it profitable. We, however, are not so uncharitable as to
+ charge such piety to our worthy head of the city government, but rather to
+ a highly developed organ of the love of office, which has outgrown the
+ better inclinations of his well-established Christianity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We must invite the reader's attention to another and still more glaring
+ evidence of the demoralization of social life in Charleston. A notorious
+ woman, who has kept the worst kind of a brothel for years, where harlots
+ of all shades and importations break the quietude of night with their
+ polluted songs, becomes so bold in her infamy that she appeals to the
+ gracious considerations of the city council, (board of aldermen.) How is
+ this? Why, we will tell the reader:&mdash;She remained unmolested in her
+ trade of demoralization, amassed a fortune which gave her boldness, while
+ her open display was considered very fine fun for the joking propensities
+ of officials and gallants. With her wealth she reared a splendid mansion
+ to infamy and shame, where she, and such as she, whose steps the wise man
+ tells us &ldquo;lead down to hell,&rdquo; could sway their victory over the
+ industrious poor. So public was it, that she openly boasted its purpose
+ and its adaptation to the ensnaring vices of passion. Yes, this create in
+ female form had spread ruin and death through the community, and brought
+ the head of many a brilliant young man to the last stage of cast-off
+ misery. And yet, so openly tolerated and countenanced by leading men are
+ these things, that on the 31st of July, 1852, this mother of crime appeals
+ to the honorable board of aldermen, as appeared in the &ldquo;Proceedings of
+ Council&rdquo; in the Charleston Courier of that date, in the following manner:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Laid over until a monied quorum is present.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Letter from Mrs. G. Pieseitto, informing Council that having recessed her
+ new brick building in Berresford street at least two feet, so as to
+ dedicate it to the use of the citizens of Charleston, if they will pave
+ with flag-stones the front of her lot, respectfully requests, that if
+ accepted, the work may be done as soon as possible. Referred to the
+ Aldermen, Ward No. 4.&rdquo; The street is narrow and little used, except for
+ purposes known to the lanterns, when honest people should sleep. The
+ information might have been couched with more modesty, when the notoriety
+ of the woman and the dedication of her tabernacle of vice was so public.
+ How far the sensitive aldermen of the fourth ward have proceeded in the
+ delicate mission, or how much champagne their modest consideration has
+ cost, the public have not yet been informed. Rumor says every thing is
+ favorable. We are only drawing from a few principal points, and shall
+ leave the reader to draw his own inference of the moral complexion of our
+ social being. We make but one more view, and resume our story.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An office connected with the judiciary, so long held as one of high
+ responsibility and honorable position, is now held merely as a medium of
+ miserable speculation and espionage. It is an elective office, the
+ representative holding for four years. The present incumbent was elected
+ more through charity than recompense for any amiable qualities, moral
+ worth, or efficient services to party ends. A more weak man could not have
+ been drawn from the lowest scale of party hirelings, though he had
+ abdicated the office once before to save his name and the respectability
+ of the judiciary. It may be said, he was elected in pity to speculate on
+ misery; and thus it proved in the case of MANUEL PEREIRA. This functionary
+ was elected by a large majority. Could his moral worth have been taken
+ into consideration? We should think not! For several times have we been
+ pointed to two interesting girls,&mdash;or, if their color was not shaded,
+ would be called young ladies&mdash;promenading the shady side of King
+ street, with their faces deeply vailed, and informed who was their father.
+ The mother of these innocent victims had been a mother to their father,
+ had nursed him and maintained him through his adversity, and had lived the
+ partner of his life and affections for many years, and had reared to him
+ an interesting but fatal family. But, no sooner had fortune begun to shed
+ its smiling rays, than he abandoned the one that had watched over him for
+ the choice of one who could boast no more than a white skin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If men who fill high places live by teaching others to gratify their
+ appetites and pleasures alone, instead of setting a commendable example
+ for a higher state of existence, by whom can we expect that justice and
+ moral worth shall be respected?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Connected with the city constabulary are two men whose duty it is to keep
+ a sharp lookout for all vessels arriving, and see that all negroes or
+ colored seamen are committed to prison. One is a South Carolinian, by the
+ name of Dusenberry, and the other an Irishman, by the name of Dunn. These
+ two men, although their office is despicable in the eyes of many, assume
+ more authority over a certain class of persons, who are unacquainted with
+ the laws, than the mayor himself. The former is a man of dark, heavy
+ features, with an assassin-like countenance, more inclined to look at you
+ distrustfully than to meet you with an open gaze. He is rather tall and
+ athletic, but never has been known to do any thing that would give him
+ credit for bravery. Several times he has been on the brink of losing his
+ office for giving too much latitude to his craving for perquisites; yet,
+ by some unaccountable means, he manages to hold on. The other is a robust
+ son of the Emerald Isle, with a broad, florid face, low forehead, short
+ crispy hair very red, and knotted over his forehead. His dress is usually
+ very slovenly and dirty, his shirt-collar bespotted with tobacco-juice,
+ and tied with an old striped bandana handkerchief. This, taken with a very
+ wide mouth, flat nose, vicious eye, and a countenance as hard as ever came
+ from Tipperary, and a lame leg, which causes him to limp as he walks,
+ gives our man Dunn the incarnate appearance of a fit body-grabber. A few
+ words will suffice for his character. He is known to the official
+ department, of which the magistrates are a constituent part, as a
+ notorious &mdash;&mdash;l; and his better-half, who, by-the-way, is what
+ is called a free-trader, meaning, to save the rascality of a husband,
+ sells liquor by small portions, to suit the Murphys and the O'Neals. But,
+ as it pleases our Mr. Dunn, he very often becomes a more than profitable
+ customer, and may be found snoring out the penalty in some sequestered
+ place, too frequently for his own character. Between the hours of ten and
+ twelve in the morning, Dunn, if not too much incapacitated, may be seen
+ limping his way down Broad street, to watch vessels arriving and
+ departing, carrying a limp-cane in one hand, and a large covered whip in
+ the other. We were struck with the appearance of the latter, because it
+ was similar to those carried in the hands of a rough, menial class of men
+ in Macon, Georgia, who called themselves marshals, under a misapplication
+ of the term. Their office was to keep the negro population &ldquo;straight,&rdquo; and
+ do the whipping when called upon, at fifty cents a head. They also did the
+ whipping at the jails, and frequently made from five to six dollars a day
+ at this alone; for it is not considered fashionable for a gentleman to
+ whip his own negro. We noticed the universal carrying of this whip, when
+ we first visited Macon, some four years ago, and were curious to know its
+ purport, which was elucidated by a friend; but we have since seen the
+ practical demonstrations painfully carried out. Those who visited Boston
+ for the recovery of Crafts and Ellen&mdash;whose mode of escape is a
+ romance in itself&mdash;were specimens of these &ldquo;marshals.&rdquo; How they
+ passed themselves off for gentlemen, we are at a loss to comprehend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the day, the Messrs. Dusenberry and Dunn may be seen at times
+ watching about the wharves, and again in low grog-shops&mdash;then pimping
+ about the &ldquo;Dutch beer-shops and corner-shops&rdquo;&mdash;picking up, here and
+ there, a hopeful-looking nigger, whom they drag off to limbo, or extort a
+ bribe to let him go. Again, they act as monitors over the Dutch
+ corner-shops, the keepers of which pay them large sums to save themselves
+ the heavy license fine and the information docket. When they are no longer
+ able to pay over hush-money, they find themselves walked up to the
+ captain's office, to be dealt with according to the severe penalty made
+ and provided for violating the law which prohibits the sale of liquor to
+ negroes without an order. The failure to observe this law is visited with
+ fine and imprisonment,&mdash;both beyond their proportionate deserts, when
+ the law which governs the sale of liquor to white men is considered.
+ Things are very strictly regulated by complexions in South Carolina. The
+ master sets the most dissipated and immoral examples in his own person,
+ and allows his children not only to exercise their youthful caprices, but
+ to gratify such feelings as are pernicious to their moral welfare, upon
+ his slaves. Now, the question is, that knowing the negro's power of
+ imitation, ought not some allowance to be made for copying the errors of
+ his master? Yet such is not the case; for the slightest deviation from the
+ strictest rule of discipline brings condign punishment upon the head of
+ the offender.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V. MR. GRIMSHAW, THE MAN OF THE COUNTY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ ON the 22d of March last, about ten o'clock in the morning, a thin,
+ spare-looking man, dressed in a black cashmeret suit, swallow-tail coat,
+ loose-cut pants, a straight-breasted vest, with a very extravagant
+ shirt-collar rolling over upon his coat, with a black ribbon tied at the
+ throat, stood at the east corner of Broad and Meeting street, holding a
+ very excited conversation with officers Dusenberry and Dunn. His visage
+ was long, very dark&mdash;much more so than many of the colored population&mdash;with
+ pointed nose and chin, standing in grim advance to each other; his face
+ narrow, with high cheek-bones, small, peering eyes, contracted forehead,
+ reclining with a sunken arch between the perceptive and intellectual
+ organs&mdash;or, perhaps, we might have said, where those organs should
+ have been. His countenance was full of vacant restlessness; and as he
+ stared at you through his glasses, with his silvery gray hair hanging
+ about his ears and neck in shaggy points, rolling a large quid of tobacco
+ in his mouth, and dangling a little whip in his right hand, you saw the
+ index to his office. As he raised his voice&mdash;which he did by twisting
+ his mouth on one side, and working his chin to adjust his enormous quid&mdash;the
+ drawling tone in which he spoke gave a picture not easily forgotten.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You must pay more attention to the arrivals,&rdquo; said he in a commanding
+ tone. &ldquo;The loss of one of these fellers is a serious drawback to my
+ pocket; and that British consul's using the infernalest means to destroy
+ our business, that ever was. He's worse than the vilest abolitionist,
+ because he thinks he's protected by that flag of their'n. If he don't take
+ care, we'll tar-and-feather him; and if his government says much about it,
+ she'll larn what and who South Carolina is. We can turn out a dozen
+ Palmetto regiments that'd lick any thing John Bull could send here, and a
+ troop o' them d&mdash;d Yankee abolitionists besides. South Carolina's got
+ to show her hand yet against these fellers, afore they'll respect the
+ honor and standing of her institutions. They can't send their navy to hurt
+ us. And it shows that I always predicts right; for while these commercial
+ fellers about the wharves are telling about digging out the channel, I've
+ al'ays said they didn't think how much injury they were doing; for it was
+ our very best protection in war-time. South Carolina can lick John Bull,
+ single-fisted, any time; but if that pack of inconsiderate traders on the
+ wharves get their own way, away goes our protection, and John Bull would
+ bring his big ships in and blow us up. And these fellows that own ships
+ are getting so bold, that a great many are beginning to side with Mathew,
+ the consul. Yes, they even swear that 'tis the officials that stick to the
+ law for the sake of the fees. Now, if I only knew that the consul was the
+ means of that Nassau nigger getting away, I'd raise a mob, and teach him a
+ lesson that South Carolinians ought to have teached him before. It took
+ about seventeen dollars out of my pocket, and if I was to sue him for it,
+ I could get no recompense. The next time you allow one to escape, I must
+ place some other officer over the port,&rdquo; said our man whom, we shall
+ continue to call Mr. Grimshaw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sure I heard the same consul, when spakin to a gintleman, say that the
+ law was only an abuse of power, to put money into the pockets of yourself
+ and a few like ye. And whin meself and Flin put the irons on a big nigger
+ that the captain was endeavoring to skulk by keeping him in the forecastle
+ of the ship, he interfered between me and me duty, and began talking his
+ balderdash about the law. Sure, with his own way, he'd have every nigger
+ in the city an abolitionist in three weeks. And sure, Mr. Sheriff, and
+ ye'd think they were babies, if ye'd see himself talk to them at the jail,
+ and send them up things, as if they were better than the other criminals,
+ and couldn't live on the jail fare,&rdquo; said officer Dunn, who continued to
+ pledge himself to the sheriff that the wharves should not be neglected,
+ nor a hopeful English darky escape his vigilant eye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For my own part, I think they're better off in jail than they would be on
+ the wharf,&rdquo; continued Grimshaw. &ldquo;They're a worthless set, and ha'n't half
+ the character that a majority of our slaves have; and instead of attending
+ the captain on board, they'd be into Elliot street, spending their money,
+ getting drunk, and associating with our worst niggers. And they all know
+ so much about law, that they're always teaching our bad niggers the
+ beauties of their government, which makes them more unhappy than they are.
+ Our niggers are like a shoal of fish&mdash;when one becomes diseased, he
+ spreads it among all the rest; and before you know where you are, they're
+ done gone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They're not very profitable customers for us, Sheriff,&rdquo; said Dusenberry.
+ &ldquo;We have a deal of watching, and a mighty smart lot of trouble after we
+ get them fellows; and if we get a perquisite, it never amounts to much,
+ for I seldom knew one that had money enough to treat as we took him up.
+ These Britishers a'n't like us; they don't pay off in port and if the
+ fellows get any thing in jail from the consul, it's by drib-drabs, that
+ a'n't no good, for it all goes for liquor. And them criminals make a dead
+ haul upon a black steward, as soon as he is locked up. But if these
+ sympathizing fools follow up their bugbears about the treatment at the
+ jail, they'll get things so that our business won't be worth a dollar. For
+ my own part, I'm not so much beholdin', for I've made myself comfortable
+ within the last few years, but I want my son to succeed me in the office.
+ But if this consul of their'n keeps up his objections, appeals, and his
+ protests in this way, and finds such men as his honor the
+ district-attorney to second him with his nonsense and his notions, folks
+ of our business might as well move north of Mason and Dixon's.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can wake him up to a point,&rdquo; said Grimshaw, &ldquo;that that abolition consul
+ ha'n't learnt before; and if he'd stuck his old petition in Charles
+ Sumner's breeches pocket instead of sending it to our legislature, he
+ might have saved his old-womanish ideas from the showing' up that Myzeck
+ gave 'em. It takes Myzeck to show these blue-skin Yankees how to toe the
+ mark when they come to South Carolina. If South Carolina should secede,
+ I'd say give us Myzeck and Commander to lead our war, and we'd be as sure
+ to whip 'em as we won the Mexican war for the Federal Government. There is
+ three things about an Englishman, Dusenberry, which you may mark for
+ facts. He is self-conceited, and don't want to be advised;&mdash;he thinks
+ there is no law like the law of England, and that the old union-jack is a
+ pass-book of nations;&mdash;and he thinks everybody's bound to obey his
+ notions of humanity and the dictates of his positive opinions. But what's
+ worse than all, they've never seen the sovereignty of South Carolina
+ carried out, and according to Consul Mathew's silly notions, they think we
+ could be licked by a gun-boat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's no use arguing this thing, you must keep a keen eye upon the English
+ niggers; and when a man pretends to dispute the right, tell him its
+ 'contrary to law,' and to look at the statute-books; tell him it costs
+ more to keep them than they're all worth; and if they say the law was
+ never intended for foreign citizens, tell 'em its 'contrary to law.' South
+ Carolina's not bound to obey the voice of the General Government, and what
+ does she care for the federal courts? We'll pursue a course according to
+ the law; and any thing that is contrary to it we will take care of for the
+ better protection of our institutions. Now, don't let one pass, upon the
+ peril of your office,&rdquo; continued Mr. Grimshaw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's not a button I'd care for the office,&rdquo; said Dunn. &ldquo;Sure it's yerself
+ be's makin' all the fees, and ourselves getting the paltry dollar; and
+ yerself gives us as much trouble to get that as we'd be earning two
+ dollars at magistrate Jiles' beyant. Sure! himself's liberal and doesn't
+ be afraid to give us a division of the fees when the business is good. And
+ sure ye make yer ten times the fees on an English nigger, and never gives
+ us beyant the dollar,&rdquo; continued he, moving off in high dudgeon, and
+ swearing a stream of oaths that made the very blood chill. There was a
+ covert meaning about Mr. Grimshaw's language that was not at all
+ satisfactory to Mr. Dunn's Irish; especially when he knew Mr. Grimshaw's
+ insincerity so well, and that, instead of being liberal, he pocketed a
+ large amount of the fees, to the very conscientious benefit of his own
+ dear self. The reader must remember that in Charleston, South Carolina,
+ there is a large majority of men who care little for law, less for
+ justice, and nothing for Christianity. Without compunction of conscience,
+ and with an inherited passion to set forward the all-absorbing greatness
+ of South Carolina, these men act as a check upon the better-disposed
+ citizens. The more lamentable part is, that forming a large portion of
+ that species of beings known as bar-room politicians, they actually
+ control the elections in the city; and thus we may account for the
+ character of the incumbents of office, and for the tenacity with which
+ those oppressive laws are adhered to.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This almost incompatible conversation between a high sheriff and two
+ menial constables, may to many seem inconsistent with the dignity that
+ should be observed between such functionaries. Nevertheless, all restraint
+ is not only annihilated by consent, but so prominently is this carried
+ out, and so well understood by that respectable class of citizens whose
+ interests and feelings are for maintaining a good name for the city and
+ promoting its moral integrity, that in all our conversation with them, we
+ never heard one speak well of those functionaries or the manner in which
+ the police regulations of the city were carried out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI. THE JANSON IN THE OFFING.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ AFTER several days' suffering for want of wafer and fatigue of labor,
+ several of the crew were reported upon the sick-list. Manuel, who had
+ borne his part nobly and cheerfully, was among the number; and his loss
+ was more severely felt, having done a double duty, and succeeded, as far
+ as the means were at hand, in making everybody on board comfortable. He
+ had attended upon those who gave up first, like a good nurse, ready at the
+ call, whether night or day, and with a readiness that seemed pleasure to
+ him. From the captain to the little boy Tommy, his loss was felt with
+ regret; and the latter would often go into the forecastle where he lay,
+ lean over him with a child-like simplicity, and smooth his forehead with
+ his little hand. &ldquo;Manuel! I wish poor Manuel was well!&rdquo; he would say, and
+ again he would lay his little hand on his head and smooth his hair. He
+ would whisper encouragement in his ear; and having learned a smattering of
+ Portuguese, would tell him how soon they would be in port, and what
+ pleasant times they would have together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 21st they descried land, which proved to be Stono, about
+ twenty-five miles south of Charleston. Tommy announced the news to Manuel,
+ which seemed to cheer him up. His sickness was evidently caused by
+ fatigue, and his recovery depended more upon rest and nourishment than
+ medical treatment. That night at ten o'clock the wind came strong
+ north-west, and drove the Janson some distance to sea again; and it was
+ not until the morning of the 23d that she made Charleston light, and
+ succeeded in working up to the bar. Signal was made for a pilot, and soon,
+ a very fine cutter-looking boat, &ldquo;Palmetto, No. 4,&rdquo; was seen shooting out
+ over the bar in the main channel. Manuel, somewhat recovered, had a few
+ minutes before been assisted on deck, and through the captain's orders was
+ laid upon a mattrass, stretched on the starboard side of the
+ companion-way. By his side sat little Tommy, serving him with some
+ nourishment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boat was soon alongside, and the pilot, a middle-sized man, well
+ dressed, with a frank, open countenance, rather florid and sun-stained,
+ and a profusion of gold chain and seal dangling from his fob, came on
+ board. After saluting the captain, he surveyed the weather-beaten
+ condition of the craft, made several inquiries in regard to her working,
+ and then said in a sang-froid manner, &ldquo;Well! I reckon you've seen some
+ knocking, anyhow.&rdquo; Then turning again and giving some orders in regard, to
+ getting more way upon her, he viewed the laborious working at the pumps,
+ and walking about midships on the larboard side, took a sharp survey of
+ her waist. &ldquo;Don't she leak around her topsides, Captain?&rdquo; said he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Receiving an answer in the affirmative, he gave a glance aloft, and then
+ at the sky to windward; asked how long he had worked her in that
+ condition, and where he took the gale. &ldquo;It's a wonder she hadn't swamped
+ ye before now. I'd a' beached her at the first point, if she'd bin mine;
+ I'd never stand at slapping an old craft like this on. She reminds me of
+ one o' these down-east sugar-box crafts what trade to Cuba,&rdquo; he continued.
+ Then walking across the main-hatch to the starboard side, he approached
+ the men who were pumping, and after inquiring about freeing her, suddenly
+ caught a glimpse of Manuel, as he lay upon the mattrass with his face
+ uncovered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Heavens! What! have you got the yellow fever on board at this season of
+ the year?&rdquo; he inquired of the mate, who had just come aft to inquire about
+ getting some water from the pilot-boat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, we've had every thing else but the yellow fever; one might as well
+ bin on a raft as such an infernal unlucky old tub as she is. It's the
+ steward, sir&mdash;he's got a touch of a fever; but he'll soon be over it.
+ He only wants rest, poor fellow! He's bin a bully at work ever since the
+ first gale. He'll mend before he gets to town,&rdquo; was the reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! then you've had a double dose of it. It gives a fellow bringer off
+ them capes once in a while.&mdash;The steward's a nigger, isn't he?&rdquo;
+ inquired the pilot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nigger!&mdash;not he,&rdquo; said the mate. &ldquo;He's a Portuguese mixed breed; a
+ kind o' sun-scorched subject, like a good many of you Southerners. A
+ nigger's mother never had him, you may bet your 'davie on that. There's as
+ much white blood in his jacket as anybody's got, only them Portuguese are
+ dark-lookin' fellers. He's no fool&mdash;his name's Manuel, a right clever
+ feller, and the owners think as much of him as they do of the Skipper.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gammon,&rdquo; said the pilot to himself. &ldquo;What would he think if we were to
+ show him some specimens of our white niggers in Charleston?&rdquo; And turning,
+ he walked past Manuel with a suspicious look, and took a position near the
+ man at the wheel, where he remained for some time fingering the seals of
+ his watch-chain. The Captain had gone into the cabin a few minutes before,
+ and coming on deck again, walked toward the place where the pilot stood,
+ and took a seat upon an old camp-stool.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Cap,&rdquo; said the pilot, &ldquo;ye'll have trouble with that nigger of your'n when
+ ye git to town. If you want to save yerself and the owners a d&mdash;d
+ site o' bother and expense, y' better keep him close when y' haul in; and
+ ship him off to New York the first chance. I've seen into the mill, Cap,
+ and y' better take a friend's advice.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nigger!&rdquo; said the Captain indignantly, &ldquo;what do they call niggers in
+ Charleston? My steward's no more a nigger than you are!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What, sir?&rdquo; returned the pilot in a perfect rage. &ldquo;Do you know the
+ insulting nature of your language? Sir, if the law did not subject me, I
+ would leave your vessel instantly, and hold you personally responsible as
+ soon as you landed, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Captain, unconscious of the tenacity with which the chivalrous blood
+ of South Carolina held language that mooted a comparison of colors,
+ considered his answer; but could see nothing offensive in it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You asked me a question, and I gave you a proper answer. If you consider
+ such a man as my steward&mdash;poor fellow&mdash;a nigger, in your
+ country, I'm glad that you are blessed with so many good men.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We polishes our language, Captain, when we speak of niggers in South
+ Carolina,&rdquo; said the pilot. &ldquo;A South Carolinian, sir, is a gentleman all
+ over the world. It don't want nothin' further than the name of his State
+ to insure him respect. And when foreign folks and Northerners from them
+ abolition States bring free niggers into South Carolina, and then go to
+ comparing them to white folks, they better be mighty careful how they stir
+ about. South Carolina ought to've seceded last year, when she talked about
+ it, and sent every Yankee home to make shoe-pegs. We wouldn't bin insulted
+ then, as we are now. I'll tell you what it is, Cap,&rdquo; said he, rather
+ cooling off, &ldquo;if our folks was only as spunky as they were in eighteen
+ hundred and thirty-two times, them fellers what come here to feed upon
+ South Carolina, put the devil in the heads of the niggers, and then go
+ home again, would see stars and feel bullet-holes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Captain listened to the pilot's original South Carolina talk, or, as
+ the pilot himself had called it, polished language, without exhibiting any
+ signs of fear and trembling at its sublime dignity; yet, finding that the
+ pilot had misconstrued the tenor of his answer, said, &ldquo;You must have
+ mistaken the intention of my reply, sir; and the different manner in which
+ you appropriate its import may be attributed to a custom among yourselves,
+ which makes language offensive that has no offensive meaning. We never
+ carry pistols or any such playthings in my country. We have a moral
+ security for our lives, and never look upon death as so great an enemy
+ that we must carry deadly weapons to defend it. In fact, pilot,&rdquo; he said
+ in a joking manner, &ldquo;they're rather cumbersome little bits for a feller's
+ pocket: I'd rather carry my supper and breakfast in my pocket. Now tell
+ us, who do you call niggers in South Carolina?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, Captain, we call all what a'n't white folks. Our folks can tell 'em
+ right smart. They can't shirk out if it's only marked by the seventeenth
+ generation. You can always tell 'em by the way they look&mdash;they can't
+ look you in the face, if they are ever so white. The law snaps 'em up once
+ in a while, and then, if they're ever so white, it makes 'em prove it.
+ I've known several cases where the doubt was in favor of the nigger, but
+ he couldn't prove it, and had to stand aside among the darkies. Dogs take
+ my skin, Cap, if theren't a Jew feller in town as white as anybody, and
+ his father's a doctor. It got whispered round that he was a nigger, and
+ the boarders where he stayed raised a fuss about it. The nigger's father
+ had two of them sued for slander, but they proved the nigger by a quirk of
+ law that'd make a volume bigger than Blackstone; and instead of the old
+ Jew getting satisfaction, the judges, as a matter of policy, granted him
+ time to procure further proof to show that his son wasn't a nigger. It was
+ a very well-considered insinuation of the judges, but the young-un stands
+ about A-1 with a prime nigger-feller.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should like to have 'em try me, to see whether I was a nigger or a
+ white man. It must be a funny law, 'nigger or no nigger.' If a feller's
+ skin won't save him, what the devil will?&rdquo; said the Captain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, show your mother and her generation were white, to be sure! It's
+ easy enough done, and our judges are all very larned in such things&mdash;can
+ tell in the twinkling of an eye,&rdquo; said the pilot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should think the distinguishing points would be to show that their
+ mother had nothing to do with a nigger. Do your judges make this a
+ particular branch of jurisprudence? If they do, I'd like to know what they
+ took for their text-books. If the intermixture is as complex as what you
+ say, I should think some of the judges would be afraid of passing verdict
+ upon their own kin.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not a whit!&rdquo; said the pilot; &ldquo;they know enough for that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then you admit there's a chance. It must be an amusing affair, 'pon my
+ soul! when a nice little female has to draw aside her vail before a court
+ of very dignified judges, for the purpose of having her pedigree
+ examined,&rdquo; said the Captain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh! the devil, Cap; your getting all astray&mdash;a woman nigger never
+ has the advantage of the law. They always go with the niggers, ah! ha!
+ ha!!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But suppose they're related to some of your big-bugs. What then? Are your
+ authorities so wise and generous that they make allowance for these
+ things,&rdquo; asked the Captain, innocently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh! poh! there you're again: you must live in Charleston a year or two,
+ but you'll have to be careful at first that you don't fall in love with
+ some of our bright gals, and think they're white, before you know it. It
+ doesn't matter seven coppers who they're got by, there's no distinction
+ among niggers in Charleston. I'll put you through some of the bright
+ houses when we get up, and show you some scions of our aristocracy, that
+ are the very worst cases. It's a fact, Cap, these little shoots of the
+ aristocracy invariably make bad niggers. If a fellow wants a real prime,
+ likely nigger wench, he must get the pure African blood. As they say
+ themselves, 'Wherever Buckra-man bin, make bad nigger.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, Pilot, I think we've had enough about mixed niggers for the
+ present. Tell me! do you really think they'll give me trouble with my
+ steward? He certainly is not a black man, and a better fellow never
+ lived,&rdquo; inquired the Captain earnestly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nothing else, Cap,&rdquo; said the pilot. &ldquo;It's a hard law, I tell you, and if
+ our merchants and business men had a say in it, 'twouldn't last long; ye
+ can't pass him off for a white man nohow, for the thing's 'contrary to
+ law,' and pays so well that them contemptible land-sharks of officers make
+ all the fuss about it, and never let one pass. Just take the infernal fees
+ off, and nobody'd trouble themselves about the stewards. It all goes into
+ old Grimshaw's pocket, and he'd skin a bolt-rope for the grease, and sell
+ the steward if he could get a chance. He has sold a much nearer relation.
+ I'm down upon the law, you'll see, Cap, for I know it plays the dickens
+ with our business, and is a curse to the commerce of the port. Folks what
+ a'n't acquainted with shipping troubles, and a shipowner's interests,
+ think such things are very small affairs. But it's the name that affects
+ us, and when an owner stands at every item in the disbursements, and a
+ heavy bill for keeping his steward, and another for filling his place, or
+ boarding-house accommodations, and then be deprived of his services, he
+ makes a wry face, and either begins to think about another port, or making
+ the rate of freight in proportion to the annoyance. It has an effect that
+ we feel, but don't say much about. I'm a secessionist, but I don't believe
+ in running mad after politics, and letting our commercial interests
+ suffer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But what if I prove my steward a'n't a colored man?&rdquo; said the Captain;
+ &ldquo;they surely won't give me any trouble then. It would pain my feelings
+ very much to see Manuel locked up in a cell for no crime; and then to be
+ deprived of his services, is more than I can stand. If I'd known it
+ before, I'd suffered the torments of thirst, and put for a port farther
+ north.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It'll cost more than it's worth,&rdquo; said the pilot. &ldquo;Take my plain advice,
+ Cap; never try that; our lawyers are lusty fellows upon fees; and the
+ feller'd rot in that old nuisance of a jail afore you'd get him out. The
+ process is so slow and entangled, nobody'd know how to bring the case, and
+ ev'ry lawyer'd have an opinion of his own. But the worst of all is that
+ it's so unpopular, you can't get a lawyer worth seven cents to undertake
+ it. It would be as dangerous as an attempt to extricate a martyr from the
+ burning flames. Public opinion in Charleston is controlled by politicians;
+ and an attempt to move in a thing so unpopular would be like a man
+ attempting to speak, with pistols and swords pointed to his head.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then it's folly to ask justice in your city, is it?&rdquo; asked the Captain.
+ &ldquo;But your people are generous, a'n't they? and treat strangers with a
+ courtesy that marks the character of every high-minded society?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes!&mdash;but society in South Carolina has nothing to do with the law;
+ our laws are gloriously ancient. I wish, Cap, I could only open your ideas
+ to the way our folks manage their own affairs. I'm opposed to this law
+ that imprisons stewards, because it affects commerce, but then our other
+ laws are tip-top. It was the law that our legislature made to stop free
+ niggers from coming from the abolition States to destroy the affections of
+ our slaves. Some say, the construction given to it and applied to stewards
+ of foreign vessels a'n't legal, and wasn't intended; but now it's
+ controlled by popular will,&mdash;the stewards a'n't legislators, and the
+ judges know it wouldn't be popular, and there's nobody dare meddle with
+ it, for fear he may be called an abolitionist. You better take my advice,
+ Cap: ship the nigger, and save yourself and Consul Mathew the trouble of
+ another fuss,&rdquo; continued the pilot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That I'll never do! I've made up my mind to try it, and won't be driven
+ out of a port because the people stand in fear of a harmless man. If they
+ have any souls in them, they'll regard with favor a poor sailor driven
+ into their port in distress. I've sailed nearly all over the world, and I
+ never got among a people yet that wouldn't treat a shipwrecked sailor with
+ humanity. Gracious God! I've known savages to be kind to poor shipwrecked
+ sailors, and to share their food with them. I can't, pilot, imagine a
+ civilization so degraded, nor a public so lost to common humanity, as to
+ ill treat a man in distress. We've said enough about it for the present.
+ I'll appeal to Mr. Grimshaw's feelings, when I get to the city; and I
+ know, if he's a man, he'll let Manuel stay on board, if I pledge my honor
+ that he won't leave the craft.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Humph!&mdash;If you knew him as well as I do, you'd save your own
+ feelings. His sympathies don't run that way,&rdquo; said the pilot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Janson had now crossed the bar, and was fast approaching Fort Sumpter.
+ Manuel had overheard enough of the conversation to awaken fears for his
+ own safety. Arising from the mattrass, in a manner indicating his feeble
+ condition, he called Tommy, and walking forward, leaned over the rail near
+ the fore-rigging, and inquired what the Captain and the pilot were talking
+ about. Observing his fears, the little fellow endeavoured to quiet him by
+ telling him they were talking about bad sailors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think it is me they are talking about. If they sell me for slave in
+ Charleston, I'll kill myself before a week,&rdquo; said he in his broken
+ English.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What's that you say, Manuel?&rdquo; inquired the first mate as he came along,
+ clearing up the decks with the men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pilot tell Captain they sell me for slave in South Carolina. I'd jump
+ overboard 'fore I suffer him,&rdquo; said he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, poh! don't be a fool; you a'n't among Patagonians, Manuel; you won't
+ have to give 'em leg for your life. They don't sell foreigners and
+ outlandish men like you for slaves in Carolina&mdash;it's only black folks
+ what can't clothe the'r words in plain English. Yer copper-colored hide
+ wouldn't be worth a sixpence to a nigger-trader&mdash;not even to old
+ Norman Gadsden, that I've heard 'em tell so much about in the Liverpool
+ docks. He's a regular Jonathan Wild in nigger-dealing; his name's like a
+ fiery dragon among the niggers all over the South; and I hearn our skipper
+ say once when I sailed in a liner, that niggers in Charleston were so
+ 'fraid of him they'd run, like young scorpions away from an old he-devil,
+ when they saw him coming. He sells white niggers, as they call 'em, and
+ black niggers&mdash;any thing that comes in his way, in the shape of
+ saleable folks. But he won't acknowledge the corn when he goes away from
+ home, and swears there's two Norman Gadsdens in Charleston; that he a'n't
+ the one! When a man's ashamed of his name abroad, his trade must be very
+ bad at home, or I'm no sailor,&rdquo; said the mate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, my boys!&rdquo; said the pilot in a quizzical manner, as he came to where
+ several of the men were getting the larboard anchor ready to let go,&mdash;&ldquo;if
+ old Norman Gadsden gets hold of you, you're a gone sucker. A man what's
+ got a bad nigger has only got to say Old Gadsden to him, and it's equal to
+ fifty paddles. The mode of punishment most modern, and adopted in all the
+ workhouses and places of punishment in South Carolina, is with the paddle,
+ a wooden instrument in, the shape of a baker's peel; with a blade from
+ three to five inches wide, and from eight to ten long. This is laid on the
+ posteriors&mdash;generally by constables or officers connected with the
+ police. Holes are frequently bored in the blade, which gives the
+ application a sort of percussive effect; The pain is much more acute than
+ with the cowhide; and several instances are known where a master ordered
+ an amount of strokes beyond the endurance of the slave, and it proved
+ fatal at the workhouse. They tell a pretty good story about the old
+ fellow. I don't know if it's true, but the old fellow's rich now, and he
+ does just what he pleases. It was that somebody found one of those little
+ occasional droppings of the aristocracy, very well known among the secrets
+ of the chivalry, and called foundlings, nicely fixed up in a basket.&mdash;It's
+ among the secrets though, and mustn't be told abroad.&mdash;The finders
+ labelled it, 'Please sell to the highest bidder,' and left it at his door.
+ There was a fund of ominous meaning in the label; but Norman very coolly
+ took the little helpless pledge under his charge, and, with the good
+ nursing of old Bina, made him tell to the tune of two hundred and thirty,
+ cash, 'fore he was two year old. He went by the name of Thomas Norman, the
+ Christian division of his foster-father's, according to custom. The old
+ fellow laughs at the joke, as he calls it, and tells 'em, when they stick
+ it to him, they don't understand the practice of making money. You must
+ keep a bright look out for him, Manuel&mdash;you'll know him by the
+ niggers running when they see him coming.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The pilot now returned to the quarter, and commenced dilating upon the
+ beauty of Charleston harbor and its tributaries, the Astley and Cooper
+ Rivers&mdash;then upon the prospects of fortifications to beat the United
+ States in the event of South Carolina's seceding and raising an
+ independent sovereignty, composed of her best blood. The Captain listened
+ to his unsolicited and uninteresting exposition of South Carolina's
+ prowess in silence, now and then looking up at the pilot and nodding
+ assent. He saw that the pilot was intent upon astonishing him with his
+ wonderful advancement in the theory of government, and the important
+ position of South Carolina. Again he looked dumbfounded, as much as to
+ acknowledge the pilot's profundity, and exclaimed, &ldquo;Well! South Carolina
+ must be a devil of a State: every thing seems captivated with its
+ greatness: I'd like to live in Carolina if I didn't get licked.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By scissors! that you would, Captain; you ha'n't an idee what a mighty
+ site our people can do if they're a mind to! All South Carolina wants is
+ her constitutional rights, which her great men fought for in the
+ Revolution. We want the freedom to protect our own rights and institutions&mdash;not
+ to be insulted and robbed by the General Government and the
+ abolitionists.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you practice as a people upon the same principles that you ask of the
+ General Government!&rdquo; inquired the Captain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly, Captain, as far as it was intended for the judicious good of
+ all white citizens!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then you claim a right for the whites, but withhold the right when it
+ touches on the dark side. You'll have to lick the Federal Government, as
+ you call it, for they won't cut the constitution up to suit your notions
+ of black and white.&rdquo; * * *
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That's just the thing, Cap, and we can do it just as easy as we now
+ protect our own laws, and exterminate the niggers what attempt
+ insurrections. South Carolina sets an example, sir, of honor and bravery
+ that can't be beat. Why, just look a-yonder, Cap: the Federal Government
+ owns this 'er Fort Sumpter, and they insulted us by building it right in
+ our teeth, so that they could command the harbor, block out our commerce,
+ and collect the duties down here. But, Cap, this don't scare South
+ Carolina nohow. We can show 'em two figures in war tactics that'd blow 'em
+ to thunder. Ye see yonder!&rdquo; said he, with an earnest look of satisfaction,
+ pointing to the south, &ldquo;That's Morris Island. We'd take Fort Moultrie for
+ a breakfast spell, and then we'd put it to 'em hot and strong from both
+ sides, until they'd surrender Fort Sumpter. They couldn't stand it from
+ both sides. Yes, sir, they shut Fort Moultrie against us, and wouldn't let
+ us have it to celebrate independence in. There's a smouldering flame in
+ South Carolina that'll burst forth one of these days in a way that must
+ teach the Federal Government some astonishing and exciting lessons.
+ There's old Castle Pinckney, sir; we could keep it for a reserve, and with
+ Generals Quattlebum and Commander, from Georgetown and Santee Swamp, we
+ could raise an army of Palmetto regiments that would whip the Federal
+ Government troop and gun-boat.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have given this singular conversation of the pilot with a strange
+ Captain, which at the time was taken as an isolated case of gasconade
+ peculiar to the man; but which the Captain afterward found to harmonize in
+ sentiment, feeling, and expression with the general character of the
+ people&mdash;the only exceptions being the colored people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII. ARRIVAL OF THE JANSON.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ ABOUT five o'clock on the evening of the 23d, the Janson passed Castle
+ Pinckney, ran up to the wharf with the flood-tide, let go her anchor, and
+ commenced warping into the dock. Her condition attracted sundry persons to
+ the end of the wharf, who viewed her with a sort of commiseration that
+ might have been taken for sincere feeling. The boarding officer had
+ received her papers, and reported her character and condition, which had
+ aroused a feeling of speculative curiosity, that was already beginning to
+ spread among ship-carpenters and outfitters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Conspicuous among those gathered on the wharf was a diminutive little
+ dandy, with an olive-colored frock-coat, black pants, embroidered vest,
+ and an enormous shirt-collar that endangered his ears. This was secured
+ around the neck with a fancy neckcloth, very tastefully set off with a
+ diamond pin, He was very slender, with a narrow, feminine face, round
+ popeyes&mdash;requiring the application of a pocket-glass every few
+ minutes&mdash;and very fair complexion, with little positive expression of
+ character in his features. His nose was pointed; his chin, projected and
+ covered with innumerable little pimples, gave an irregular and
+ mastiff-shaped mouth a peculiar expression. He wore a very highly-polished
+ and high-heeled pair of boots, and a broad-brimmed, silk-smooth hat. He
+ seemed very anxious to display the beauty of two diamond rings that
+ glittered upon his delicate little fingers, made more conspicuous by the
+ wristbands of his shirt. Standing in a very conspicuous place upon the
+ capsill of the wharf, he would rub his hands, then running from one part
+ of the wharf to another, ordering sundry niggers about making fast the
+ lines, kicking one, and slapping another, as he stooped, with his little
+ hand. All paid respect to him. The Captain viewed him with a smile of
+ curiosity, as much as to say, &ldquo;What important specimen of a miss in
+ breeches is that?&rdquo; But when the little fellow spoke, the secret was told.
+ He gathered the inflections of his voice, as if he were rolling them over
+ the little end of a thunderbolt in his mouth. As the vessel touched the
+ wharf, he sprang to the corner and cried out at the top of his voice,
+ &ldquo;Yer' welcome to Charleston, Captain Thompson! Where did you get that
+ knocking?&mdash;where are ye bound for?&mdash;how many days are you out?&mdash;how
+ long has she leaked in that way?&rdquo; and a strain of such questions, which it
+ would be impossible to trace, such was the rapidity with which he put
+ them. The Captain answered him in accordance with the circumstances; and
+ supposing him clothed with authority, inquired where he should find some
+ hands to work his pumps, in order to relieve his men. &ldquo;By-Je-w-hu!
+ Captain, you must a' had a piping time, old feller. Oh! yes, you want help
+ to work your pumps. Get niggers, Captain, there's lots on 'em about here.
+ They're as thick as grasshoppers in a cotton-patch.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, but I want 'em now, my men are worn out; I must get some Irishmen,
+ if I can't get others at once,&rdquo; said the Captain, viewing his man again
+ from head to foot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh! don't employ Paddies, Captain; 'ta'n't popular; they don't belong to
+ the secession party; Charleston's overrun with them and the Dutch! Why,
+ she won't hurt to lay till to-morrow morning, and there'll be lots o'
+ niggers down; they can't be out after bell-ring without a pass, and its
+ difficult to find their masters after dark. Haul her up 'till she grounds,
+ and she won't leak when the tide leaves her. We can go to the theatre and
+ have a right good supper after, at Baker's or the St. Charles's. It's the
+ way our folks live. We live to enjoy ourselves in South Carolina. Let the
+ old wreck go to-night.&rdquo; The little fellow seemed so extremely polite, and
+ so anxious to &ldquo;do the genteel attention,&rdquo; that the Captain entirely forgot
+ the tenor of his conversation with the pilot, while his feelings changed
+ with the prospect of such respectful attention; and yet he seemed at a
+ loss how to analyze the peculiar character of his little, pedantic friend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You must not think me intrusive, Captain,&rdquo; said he, pulling out his
+ segar-pouch and presenting it with at Chesterfieldian politeness. &ldquo;It's a
+ pleasure we Carolinians take in being hospitable and attentive to
+ strangers. My name, sir, is&mdash;! My niggers call me Master George. Yes,
+ sir! our family!&mdash;you have heard of my father probably&mdash;he
+ belongs to one of the best stocks in Carolina&mdash;owns a large interest
+ in this wharf, and is an extensive cotton-broker, factors, we call them
+ here&mdash;and he owns a large plantation of niggers on Pee-Dee; you must
+ visit our plantation. Captain, certain! before you leave the city. But you
+ mustn't pay much attention to the gossip you'll hear about the city. I
+ pledge you my honor, sir, it don't amount to any thing, nor has it any
+ prominent place in our society.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Really, sir,&rdquo; replied the Captain, &ldquo;I shall do myself the honor to accept
+ of your hospitable kindness, and hope it may be my good fortune to
+ reciprocate at some future day. I'm only too sorry that our wrecked
+ condition affords me no opportunity to invite you to my table to-night;
+ but the circumstances which you see everywhere presenting themselves are
+ my best apology.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, dear me! don't mention it, I pray, Captain. Just imagine yourself
+ perfectly at home. We will show you what Southern hospitality is. We don't
+ go upon the Yankee system of Mr. So-and-so and What-do-ye-call-'um. Our
+ feelings are in keeping with our State pride, which, with our extreme
+ sensibility of honor, forbids the countenance of meanness. South
+ Carolinians, sir, are at the very top of the social ladder&mdash;awake to
+ every high-minded consideration of justice and right. We are not moved by
+ those morbid excitements and notions that so often lead people away at the
+ North. Make no unnecessary preparation, Captain, and I will do myself the
+ honor to call upon you in an hour.&rdquo; Thus saying, he shook his hand and
+ left.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The pilot had delivered his charge safe, and was about to, bid the Captain
+ good-by for the night. But in order to do the thing in accordance with an
+ English custom, that appears to have lost none of its zest in South
+ Carolina, he was invited into the Captain's cabin to take a little prime
+ old Jamaica. Manuel, who had somewhat recovered, brought out the case from
+ a private locker, and setting it before them, they filled up, touched
+ glasses, and drank the usual standing toast to South Carolina. &ldquo;Pilot,&rdquo;
+ said the Captain, &ldquo;who is my polite friend&mdash;he seems a right clever
+ little fellow?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, Captain, he's little, but he's first-rate blood, and a genuine
+ sprig of the chivalry. He's a devil of a secessionist, sir. If ye were to
+ hear that fellow make a stump speech on States' rights, you'd think him a
+ Samson on Government. His father is the head of a good mercantile house
+ here; 'twouldn't be a bad idea to consign to him. But I must bid you
+ good-night, Captain; I'll call and see you to-morrow,&rdquo; said the pilot,
+ leaving for his home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Janson was hauled well up the dock, and grounded on the ebb-tide.
+ Manuel prepared supper for the officers and crew, while the Captain
+ awaited the return of his new acquaintance. &ldquo;Captain,&rdquo; said Manuel, &ldquo;I
+ should like to go ashore to-night and take a walk, for my bones are sore,
+ and I'm full of pains. I think it will do me good. You don't think anybody
+ will trouble me, if I walk peaceably along?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nobody would trouble you if they knew you, Manuel; but I am afraid they
+ will mistake you in the night. You had better keep ship until morning;
+ take a good rest, and to-morrow will be a fine day&mdash;you can then take
+ some exercise.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Manuel looked at the Captain as if he read something doubtful in his
+ countenance, and turned away with a pitiful look of dissatisfaction. It
+ seems that through his imperfect knowledge of English, he had misconceived
+ the position of the celebrated Thomas Norman Gadsden, whom he imagined to
+ be something like an infernal machine, made and provided by the good
+ citizens of Charleston to catch bad niggers. &ldquo;Nora-ma Gazine no catch-e
+ me, Cap-i-tan, if me go ashore, 'case me no make trouble in no part de
+ world where me sail, Oh! no, Cap-i-tan, Manuel know how to mine dis
+ bisness,&rdquo; said he returning again to the Captain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, yes, Manuel, but we can't let the crew go ashore 'till we get
+ through the custom-house; you must content yourself to-night, and in the
+ morning 'twill be all right. I'm afraid you'll get sick again-the
+ night-air is very bad in this climate; old Gadsden won't trouble you. He
+ don't walk about at night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Manuel walked forward, not very well satisfied with the manner in which
+ the Captain put him off. The latter felt the necessity of caution, fearing
+ he might infringe upon some of the municipal regulations that the pilot
+ had given him an account of, which accounted for his refusal Manuel sat
+ upon the main-hatch fondling Tommy, and telling him what good things they
+ would have in the morning for breakfast, and how happy they ought to be
+ that they were not lost during the gales, little thinking that he was to
+ be the victim of a merciless law, which would confine him within the iron
+ grates of a prison before the breakfast hour in the morning. &ldquo;I like
+ Charleston, Tommy,&rdquo; said Manuel; &ldquo;it looks like one of our old English
+ towns, and the houses have such pretty gardens, and the people they say
+ are all so rich and live so fine. Tommy, we'll have a long walk and look
+ all around it, so that we can tell the folks when we get home. The ship,
+ owes me eleven pounds, and I mean to take some good things home for
+ presents, to show what they have in South Carolina.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You better buy a young nigger, and take him home as a curiosity to show
+ among the Highlands. You can buy a young Sambo for any price, just the
+ same as you would a leg of mutton at the butcher's; put him in a band-box,
+ lug him across, and you'll make a fortune in the North country. But I'd
+ rather buy a young wife, for the young niggers are more roguish than a lot
+ o' snakes, and al'a's eat their heads off afore they're big enough to
+ toddle. They sell gals here for niggers whiter than you are, Manuel; they
+ sell 'em at auction, and then they sell corn to feed 'em on. Carolina's a
+ great region of supersensual sensibility; they give you a wife of any
+ color or beauty, and don't charge you much for her, providing you're the
+ right stripe. What a funny thing it would be to show the Glasgow folks a
+ bright specimen of a bought wife from the renowned State of South
+ Carolina, with genuine aristocratic blood in her veins; yes, a pure
+ descendant of the Huguenots!&rdquo; said the mate, who was leaning over the rail
+ where Manuel and Tommy were seated, smoking a segar and viewing the
+ beautiful scenery around the harbor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; said Manuel, &ldquo;when I get a wife and live on shore, I don't want to
+ buy one-it might be a dangerous bargain. Might buy the body, but not the
+ soul-that's God's.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII. A NEW DISH OF SECESSION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ ABOUT a quarter past eight o'clock in the evening, Master George, as he
+ called himself, the little pedantic man, came skipping down the wharf. As
+ soon as he approached the brig, he cried out at the top of his voice,
+ &ldquo;Captain! Captain!!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Captain stepped to the gangway, and the little fellow, who had stood
+ crossing and working his fingers, reached out his hand to assist him
+ ashore. This done, he took the Captain's arm, and commencing a discourse
+ upon the wonderful things and people of South Carolina they wended their
+ way to the Charleston Theatre. The company then performing was a small
+ affair, and the building itself perfectly filthy, and filled with an
+ obnoxious stench. The play was a little farce, which the Captain had seen
+ to much perfection in his own country, and which required some effort of
+ mind to sit out its present mutilation. Yet, so highly pleased was Master
+ George, that he kept up a succession of applauses at every grimace made by
+ the comedian. Glad when the first piece was over, the Captain made a
+ motion to adjourn to the first good bar-room and have a punch. It was
+ agreed, upon the condition that the little man should &ldquo;do the honor,&rdquo; and
+ that they should return and see the next piece out. The Captain, of
+ course, yielded to the rejoinder, though it was inflicting a severe
+ penalty upon his feelings. There was another piece to come yet, which the
+ little fellow's appetite was as ready to devour as the first. The Captain,
+ seeing this, could not refrain expressing his surprise. This was taken as
+ a charge against his taste, and George immediately commenced a discussion
+ upon the subject of the piece, the intention of the author, and the merits
+ of the principal performers, whose proper adaptation he admired. The
+ Captain knew his subject, and instead of contending in detail, advised him
+ to take a peep into the theatres of New York and London. Not to be undone,
+ for he was like all little men, who insist upon the profoundness of their
+ own opinions, he asserted that it could be only the different views which
+ individuals entertained of delineating character, and that the
+ Charlestonians were proverbially correct in their judgment of music and
+ dramatic performances.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I pity the judgment that would award merit to such a performance as
+ that,&rdquo; said the Captain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How strange, that you Englishmen and Scotchmen always find fault with
+ every thing we Americans do. Your writers manifest it in their books upon
+ us and the people seem of necessity to copy from them, and echo their
+ grumblings,&rdquo; rejoined Master George.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You judge from the common saying, instead of a knowledge front
+ observation, I fear,&rdquo; said the Captain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lord, sir! you must not judge me by that rule. Carolinians, sir, always
+ appreciate intelligent strangers, for they always exert a healthy
+ influence, and never meddle with our institutions; so you see it wouldn't
+ do to follow the pestilent notions of petty scribblers, lest we should
+ form wrong opinions.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But tell me,&rdquo; said the Captain, &ldquo;do you consider yourselves Americans in
+ South Carolina?&mdash;the pilot must have led me astray.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Americans! yes, indeed, the true blood at that, and no man of tip-top
+ judgment ever questioned it. But you must mark the difference; we ha'n't
+ Yankees, nor we don't believe in their infernal humbuggery about
+ abolition. If it wasn't for South Carolina and Georgia, the New-Englanders
+ would starve for want of our cotton and rice. It's the great staple what
+ keeps the country together; and as much as they talk about it, just take
+ that away, and what would the United States be? We South Carolinians give
+ no symptoms or expressions of what we mean to do that we cannot maintain.
+ We have been grossly insulted by the Federal Government, but it dar'n't
+ come at us and just give us a chance at fair fight. We'd show 'em the
+ thunder of the Palmetto, that they'd never trouble our sovereignty again.
+ Captain, I pledge you my honor that if there wasn't so many infernal
+ Yankees in Georgia, and she'd follow our lead in secession, we'd just lick
+ the whole North. Georgia's a big State, but she a'n't pluck, and has no
+ chivalry at all among her people. She allows such privileges to them
+ Yankees-gives them power to control her manufacturing interests-and this
+ is just what will uproot the foundation of their slave institution.
+ Georgians a'n't a bit like us; first, they are too plebeian in their
+ manners-have no bond of guardianship for their laws, and exert no
+ restraints for the proper protection of good society. But, Captain, their
+ stock has a different origin, and the peculiarity which now marks our
+ character may be traced to the offspring of early settlement. We derived
+ our character and sentiments from the Huguenots; they, from an
+ uncharacterized class of coarse adventurers, whose honesty was tinctured
+ with penal suspicion. This, sir, accounts for the differences so marked in
+ our character.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little fellow pressed this kind of conversation in the lobby of the
+ theatre, and at the same time took the very particular pleasure of
+ introducing the Captain to several of the young bloods, as he called them,
+ while they walked to and from the boxes. At length the Captain found
+ himself in a perfect hornet's nest, surrounded by vicious young
+ secessionists, so perfectly nullified in the growth that they were all
+ ready to shoulder muskets, pitchforks, and daggers, and to fire pistols at
+ poor old Uncle Sam, if he should poke his nose in South Carolina. The
+ picture presented was that of an unruly set of children dictating their
+ opinions to a hoary-headed old daddy-accusing him of pragmatism, and
+ threatening, if he was twice as old, they'd whip him unless he did as they
+ directed. The knowledge of South Carolina's power and South Carolina's
+ difficulties with the Federal Government he found so universally set forth
+ as to form the atmosphere of conversation in the parlor, the public-house,
+ the school and the bar-room, the lecture-room and the theatre.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little man extended his invitation to a party of the bloods. The
+ Captain was taken by the arms in a kind of bond fellowship, and escorted
+ into Baker's eating-saloon, a place adjacent to the theatre, and, to a man
+ unaccustomed to the things that are in Charleston, a very rowdy place.
+ This is considered by Charlestonians one of the finest places in the
+ Southern country; where good suppers and secession (the all-engrossing
+ subjects with Charlestonians) form the only important element of
+ conversation. It may be set down as a fact, that among seven-tenths of the
+ people of Charleston, the standard of a gentleman is measured according to
+ his knowledge of secession and his ability to settle the question of hot
+ suppers. We say nothing of that vigorous patriotism so often manifested in
+ a long string of fulsome toasts that disgrace the columns of the Mercury
+ and Courier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Baker's the place was literally crowded with all kinds and characters,
+ graded from the honorable judge down to the pot-boy; a pot-pouri of
+ courtesy and companionship only exhibited in England on the near approach
+ of elections. The reader may think this strange, but we can assure him
+ that distinctions are strangely maintained; an exclusive arrogance being
+ observed in private life, while a too frequent and general resort to
+ bar-rooms has established plebeianism in public. Voices were sounding at
+ all parts of the counter, and for as many different voices as many
+ different mixtures were named. The Captain received a great many
+ introductions, and almost as many invitations to drink; but the little
+ man, Master George, claimed the exclusive honor, and keeping an eye wide
+ awake, took the advantage of his own dimensions, and began working his way
+ through a barricade of bodies and elbows, until he had reached the
+ counter. His party followed close, at his heels. Altogether, they called
+ for cocktails, smashes, toddies, cobblers, juleps, and legitimates. These
+ disposed of, the company repaired to what is called a &ldquo;box up-stairs.&rdquo;
+ Scarcely seated, Master George rang the bell with such violence that he
+ disjointed the cord and tassel, and gave such an alarm that three or four
+ darkies came poking their alarmed countenances through the curtains at
+ once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There's nothing like making the fellows mind; they've got so infernal
+ independent here, and old Tom thinks so much of his young wife, that his
+ niggers have begun to imitate him. One's enough at a time!&rdquo; said Master
+ George, with all the importance of his character. A &ldquo;bright boy,&rdquo; with his
+ hair nicely parted on the middle of his head, and frizzed for the
+ occasion, made a polite bow, while the others retired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What have you choice for supper, to-night? We want something ripe for the
+ palate-none of your leavings, now, you infernal nigger, and don't tell us
+ none of your lies.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Birds, sir, grouse, woodcock, partridge, canvas-backs, and quails; meats,
+ venison, and oysters, master-did up in any shape what the gentlemen wish.
+ Wines, &amp;c., if they want,&rdquo; replied the servant, without any of the
+ negro dialect, at the same time making a low bow to Master George.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Name it! name your dishes, gentlemen! Don't be backward. I suppose his
+ birds are as usual, without age to flavor them. It's perfectly heathenish
+ to eat birds as they are served here: we never get a bird here that is
+ sufficiently changed to suit a gentleman o' taste; their beef's tough, and
+ such steak as they make is only fit for shoemakers and blacksmiths. I
+ never come into the place but I think of my journey in France, where they
+ know the style and taste of a gentleman, and things are served to suit
+ your choice.&rdquo; Thus our little friend continued his connoisseur remarks, to
+ give the Captain a particular idea of his proficiency in the requisite
+ qualities, age, and time of keeping necessary to make the adjuncts of a
+ supper fit for a gentleman. &ldquo;D&mdash;me! we don't know when edibles are
+ choice, and the Yankees are perfect brutes in these things, and have no
+ more taste than a cow. Our folks ought to all go to France for a year or
+ two, to learn the style of cooking. It's perfect murder to eat a bird the
+ very day after it's killed; yes, sir! no man that considers his stomach
+ will do it,&rdquo; said George.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The servant waited impatiently-the Captain rubbed his eyes, and began to
+ pour out a glass of water; and dryly said he'd no choice, which was
+ responded to by the rest. It was left to Master George, and he ordered a
+ bountiful supply of grouse, partridges, oyster, and champagne of his
+ favourite brand-none other. There was also a billiard-room, reading-room,
+ a room for more important gambling, and a bar-room, up-stairs. All these
+ were well filled with very well-dressed and very noisy people; the latter
+ being a very convenient place, the party sent to it for tipplers to fill
+ up time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is but a small portion of what constitutes life in Charleston,
+ Captain. We live for living's sake, and don't stand upon those blueskin
+ theories of temperance and religion that Yankees do, and blame the Father
+ of generations for not making the world better. I never saw one of them
+ that wasn't worse than we Southerners before he'd been in Charleston a
+ year, and was perfect death on niggers. Yes, sir, it's only the extreme
+ goodness of the Southern people's hearts that makes the niggers like them
+ so. I never saw a Northerner yet that wouldn't work his niggers to death
+ in two years. D&mdash;me, sir, my servants all love me as if I was a
+ prince. Have you ever been in France, sir?&rdquo; said he, suddenly breaking
+ off. The Captain replied in the affirmative.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! then you can speak French! the most polished language known to
+ refined society. I wouldn't part with my French for the world. All the
+ first families in Charleston are familiar with it. It's the modern
+ gentleman's curt-blanche to society here. There's no language like it for
+ beauty and flexibility; but one must go to France and learn to acquire its
+ grace and ease,&rdquo; said he, in rapid succession, rolling out his words in
+ imitation of a London sprig of the Inner Temple, and working his little
+ mastiff mouth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, sir,&rdquo; said the Captain quaintly. &ldquo;I never stopped long enough in
+ France to get hold of the lingo.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;God bless me, what a misfortune! and can't speak it yet, ah? Why,
+ Captain, if you wanted to court a petite madmoselle, you'd be in a sad
+ fix-she wouldn't understand what you were talking about and would take
+ your love-pledges for gammon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You're mistaken there, my good fellow. Love grows on trees in France, and
+ a French woman can see it before you begin to tell her about it!&rdquo; retorted
+ the Captain, which brought a &ldquo;Good! good! hit him again!&rdquo; from the whole
+ party. At this, Master George commenced reading the Captain a disquisition
+ upon the best mode of acquiring the French language. Supper was brought-in
+ old Tom Baker's best flourish-and the party begun to discuss its merits
+ with great gusto. What the little, chivalrous fellows lacked in physical
+ dimension, they made up in patriotic sentiment in behalf of the grand
+ sovereignty of South Carolina, which they continued to pour out until a
+ late hour, every man backing his sayings by the authority of the great and
+ wonderful Calhoun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Captain sat eating away, and seeming more disposed to enjoy the
+ physical consolation of his supper than to elevate his ideas upon South
+ Carolina's politics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, Captain,&rdquo; said Master George, in a very serious tone, after he had
+ been striking his hand upon the marble table for more than an hour to
+ confirm the points of his reasoning,&mdash;&ldquo;what is your opinion of the
+ great question at issue between the Federal Government and South Carolina?
+ And what do you think of the Old Dominion? how will she stand upon the
+ test-question?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The poor Captain looked confounded-took another oyster, and began to get
+ his mouth in a fix, while little George worked his fingers through his
+ nice curly hair, and the young bloods awaited the rejoinder with anxiety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Really, sir, you have the advantage of me in your question. It is so much
+ beyond my profession that I am entirely ignorant of the subject-therefore
+ could not give an opinion. In truth, sir, I do not know the purport of the
+ question. It has given me pleasure and information to listen to your
+ conversation and the ability you displayed in argument, but, as a
+ stranger, I could take no part,&rdquo; replied the Captain very sincerely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not content with this, Master George wished to be more direct. &ldquo;It's the
+ right of secession, Captain-the power to maintain the right by the
+ constitution.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Probably; but may I expose my ignorance by inquiring what is meant by
+ secession? and to what it is applied so frequently?&rdquo; inquired the Captain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh! murder Captain; have you never heard of nullification times! Well,
+ sir, you must be posted on the affairs of our government.&rdquo; So he commenced
+ an analysis of nearly an hour long, and in it gave some astonishing
+ accounts of the wonderful statesmanship of Calhoun, Butler, and Rhett,
+ tapering down with a perfect fire-and-thunder account of the military
+ exploits of General Quattlebum and Captain Blanding. The Captain began to
+ stretch and gape, for he labored under the fatigue of a perilous voyage,
+ and repose was the only sovereign remedy. He felt that the limits of
+ propriety were entirely overstepped, and that he would have reason to
+ remember the first night spent with little George the secessionist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, Captain! my dear fellow. I see you don't understand our position
+ yet. We've been insulted; yes, most rascally insulted by the Federal
+ Government, and they keep it up every year. We can't get our rights. Oh!
+ no, sir, there's no such thing in the knowledge of the Federal officers as
+ justice for South Carolina; and you must understand, Captain, that she is
+ the greatest State in the Union, and there a'n't nothing like her people
+ for bravery. The political power's got North and West, the old
+ constitution is being dissected to suit the abolitionists, and they're
+ drawing the cordon around us faster and faster; and they're now out like a
+ warrior boldly to the conquest, sounding their voices in the halls of
+ Congress, appealing to human and divine power to protect their nonsense,
+ and bidding defiance to our constitutional rights, Our slaves are our
+ property, protected by the law of God-by that inspired and superhuman
+ wisdom that founded our great and glorious constitution. Yes, sir! it was
+ an institution entailed upon us by our forefathers, and a wise providence
+ has provided proper laws by which we shall protect and see these poor
+ miserable devils of helpless slaves, that can't take care of themselves,
+ straight through.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But how does this affect you and the Federal Government?&rdquo; inquired the
+ Captain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, sir, most directly!&rdquo; replied Master George, screwing his mouth and
+ giving his head a very learned attitude. &ldquo;Directly, sir!&mdash;the Federal
+ Government is acquiescing in every abolition scheme that is put forward by
+ that intriguing Northern compact for the establishment of new governments
+ in the territories. She is granting unconstitutional privileges to
+ designing politicians, whose chief aim is to uproot our domestic
+ institution and destroy the allegiance of the slave to his master, by
+ which the slaves would be cast upon the world unprotected, and we disarmed
+ of power to protect them. Ah! sir, I tell you, of all fruits of the
+ imagination that would be the most damnable, and the slave would be the
+ sufferer. It would be worse for him, poor fellow; it would be an abuse of
+ human power without precedent. So far as political power is concerned, we
+ are nearly disarmed. The influx of population finds its way into the
+ opened avenues of the North and West. And with opinions predisposed
+ against our institutions, and the contaminating influence standing ready
+ with open arms to embrace the great current, what can we expect? It's the
+ increasing power made by foreign influx that's giving tone to our
+ government. If our Southern Convention stand firm we are saved; but I'm
+ fearful there's too many doubtful shadows in it that won't stand to the
+ gun. That's what's always played the devil with us,&rdquo; said George, striking
+ his hand upon the table. &ldquo;There's no limitation to their interpositions,
+ and their resolves, and their adjournments; which don't come up to my
+ principles of making the issue, and standing to the question with our
+ coffins on our backs. These condescensions of thought and feeling arise
+ from the misconceived notions of a few, who are always ready to join, but
+ never willing to march to action, and must not be taken as a specimen of
+ South Carolina bravery. The Federal Government has become vicious and even
+ puerile toward South Carolina; and since the Herculean power of the great
+ Calhoun is gone, it treats us like a semi-barbarous and secluded people,
+ mistaking our character. But we'll learn the Federal Government a lesson
+ yet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do not your legislators make laws for your government, or how is it that
+ you express such a restive dissatisfaction? Do not the same laws which
+ govern you, govern the whole of the slave States?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Little George had previously monopolized all the conversation, but at this
+ juncture five or six voices broke out, each fired with a reply to the
+ Captain's question; and yet the answer was of the same old stamp: What
+ South Carolina had done-how she had fought and gained the Mexican war-how
+ she was interested in slaves, and how she yet feared to strike the blow
+ because a set of mere adventurers had got the power to vote in her
+ elections, and cowards through them had got into the legislature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, gentlemen, listen to me in this particular. If&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your oysters are getting cold, George,&rdquo; interrupted a blood at his left,
+ rather facetiously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I claim the respect due a gentleman, sir! A South Carolinian will
+ transgress no rules of etiquette,&rdquo; said George, grasping his tumbler in a
+ passionate manner and smashing it upon the marble slab, causing a sudden
+ emeute in the camp. &ldquo;Order! order! order!&rdquo; was sounded from every tongue.
+ &ldquo;You mustn't be afeard, Captain,&rdquo; said one of the party. &ldquo;This is
+ perfectly South Carolinian-just the oscillating of the champagne; it won't
+ last long.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The noise was more loud than ordinary, and brought a score of people
+ around to hear the trouble. George had got in high dudgeon, and it took
+ several persons to hold him, while the remainder, not excepting the
+ Captain, were engaged in a pacification. The scene was very extravagant in
+ folly; and through the kind interposition of friends, the matter was
+ settled to the honorable satisfaction of both parties-the question was
+ called for-the Captain called for a legitimate, rubbed his eyes, and
+ little George proceeded. &ldquo;If my friend Thomas Y. Simmons, Jr., had been
+ elected to the legislature he'd altered the position of things in South
+ Carolina. All these corruptions would have been exposed, and the disparity
+ of party would have dwindled into obscurity. Every true Carolinian voted
+ for him to the hilt, but how was he defeated? Gentlemen, can you answer?
+ it will be a favor highly gratifying to me to hear your opinions!&rdquo; A voice
+ answered, &ldquo;Because he wasn't big enough!&rdquo; &ldquo;No, sir,&rdquo; said George, &ldquo;it was
+ because there was intrigue in the party, and the Yankee influence went to
+ put him down. The world'll hear from him yet. He's my particular friend,
+ and will stand in the halls of Congress as great a statesman as ever
+ lisped a political sentiment.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ George's account of his particular friend, Thomas Y. S&mdash;, Jr., was so
+ extravagant, and not having heard of him before, the Captain's curiosity
+ was aroused to know who he was and where he resided. We will not tax the
+ reader with George's wonderful memoir of his friend, but merely inform him
+ that &ldquo;little Tommy Simmons,&rdquo; as he is usually styled in Charleston, is an
+ exact pattern of Master George, with the exception of his mouth, which is
+ straight and regular; and if we may be allowed to condescend to the
+ extremes, we should say that the cordwainer had done more for his heels.
+ Otherwise, no daguerreotype could give a counterpart more correct. Tommy
+ is a very small member of the Charleston bar, who, though he can seldom be
+ seen when the court is crowded, makes a great deal of noise without
+ displaying power of elucidation or legal abilities, yet always acquitting
+ himself cleverly. Tommy was little George in two particulars-he had
+ studied law, and was a great secessionist; and if George had never
+ practised, it was only from inclination, which he asserted arose from a
+ humane feeling which he never could overcome-that he never wished to
+ oppress anybody. But the greatest contrast that the reader can picture to
+ himself between mental and physical objects existed between Tommy's
+ aspirations and the physical man. His mind was big enough, and so was his
+ self-confidence, to have led the Assyrian and Chaldean army against the
+ Hebrews. To this end, and to further the formula of his statesmanship, no
+ sooner was he twenty-one, and the corner just turned, than he sounded his
+ war-trumpet-secession or death!&mdash;mounted the rostrum and &ldquo;stump'd
+ it,&rdquo; to sound the goodness and greatness of South Carolina, and total
+ annihilation to all unbelievers in nullification. It was like Jonah and
+ the whale, except the swallowing, which spunky Tommy promised should be
+ his office, if the Federal Government didn't toe the mark. Yes, Tommy was
+ a candidate for the legislature, and for the Southern Congress, (which
+ latter was exclusively chivalrous;) and the reader must not be surprised
+ when we tell him that he lacked but a few votes of being elected to the
+ former. Such was the voice of the Charleston district.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Supper had been discussed down to the fragments, and all expressed their
+ satisfaction of the quantity and declined any more; but George called on
+ another bottle of champagne, and insisted that the party should take a
+ parting glass. The servant had begun to extinguish the lights-a sure sign
+ that the success of the bar was ended for the night. George reprimanded
+ the negro-the sparkling beverage was brought, glasses filled up, touched,
+ and drunk with the standing toast of South Carolina. A motion to adjourn
+ was made and seconded, and the party, feeling satisfied with their
+ evening's recreation, moved off accordingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII. A FEW POINTS OF THE LAW.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ IN Charleston, such an adjournment at a bar-room or an eating-house, when
+ parties are enjoying what is termed a &ldquo;pleasant occasion,&rdquo; does not mean
+ an adjournment to the domestic fireside; nor are the distinctions between
+ married and single men regarded, though domestic attachments may be
+ considered as governing the thoughts and feelings. The practical
+ definition of such an adjournment means to some place where beauty
+ secludes itself to waste in shame.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The party descended into the lower bar-room, which, though rather thinned,
+ presented a picture of characters stimulated to the tottering point. A
+ motion had been made and strongly seconded to visit the voluptuous house
+ of a certain lady, which it is considered a stranger has not seen
+ Charleston until he has visited. The Captain remonstrated against this,
+ assuring the party that he must go to the ship and needed rest. Again and
+ again they insisted, setting forth the charms and beauty of the denizens,
+ but he as often declined in the most positive manner. Unable to move him
+ in his resolution, one by one began to give him a hearty shake of the hand
+ and bid him good-night, leaving little Master George to the exclusive
+ honor of seeing him home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Standing in the centre of the room, surrounded by five or six persons
+ well-dressed but very weak in the knees, was a portly-looking gentleman;
+ with very florid countenance, keen dark eyes, and aquiline nose which he
+ frequently fingered. There was an air of respectability about him, though
+ his countenance was not marked with any particularly prominent feature to
+ distinguish him from the ordinary class of respectable men. He spoke well,
+ yet without taste or discrimination in his language, was rather bald and
+ gray, with small head and low perceptive powers; and judging from the
+ particular tone of his voice and the cant terms he used, we should think
+ he had figured among the Kentucky horse-traders, or made stump speeches in
+ Arkansas. His dress was inclined to the gaudy. He wore a flashy
+ brown-colored frock-coat with the collar laid very far back, a foppish
+ white vest exposing his shirt-bosom nearly down to the waistbands of his
+ pants, which were of gray stripes. But the more fanciful portions of his
+ dress were a large and costly fob-chain, which hung very low and supported
+ an immense seal containing a glistening stone, which he seemed very fond
+ of dangling with his left hand. Attached to this was a very prominently
+ displayed black ribbon, answering the purpose of a guard-chain, and laid
+ with great contrasting care over the bosom of his shirt. This, with a
+ neckerchief of more flashy colors than Joseph's coat, and a late style
+ Parisian hat, with the rim very exquisitely turned upon the sides, make up
+ our man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was discussing politics, with a great many sensible sayings, though
+ nothing like close reasoning; and strange as it may seem, he was strongly
+ opposed to the rabid views of several staggering secessionists, who
+ surrounded him, and advocated the views set forth in convention by Mr.
+ Butler. We remarked this more particularly, for it was about the only
+ instance we witnessed of a public man being independent enough to denounce
+ the fanaticism of secession. A more amusing scene than that presented by
+ the attitudes-the questions in regard to South Carolina licking the
+ Federal Government-the strange pomp-ribald gasconade, and high-sounding
+ chivalry of the worthies, cannot be imagined. They were in a perfect
+ ecstasy with themselves and South Carolina, and swore, let whatever come,
+ they were ready to meet it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Little Master George seemed very anxious that the Captain should become
+ acquainted with him, and commenced giving him a monstrous account of his
+ distinguished abilities. &ldquo;And that's not all!&rdquo; said George; &ldquo;he's not only
+ one of the greatest characters in Charleston, or perhaps the State, but
+ he's a right good fellow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We will interrupt, by informing the reader that he was one of the good
+ fellows-a numerous family in Charleston-who never use fine instruments
+ when they select their company; and pay a large amount of worthy tribute
+ to the liquor-dealers. There is no discriminating latitude attached to the
+ good-fellow family, for its members may be found with alike gratifying
+ inclinations, from the highest aristocracy to the negro population.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That, sir, is Col. S&mdash;e; belongs to one of the first families, sir.
+ He can beat old Pettigru all hollow; his eloquence is so thrilling that he
+ always reminds me of Pericles. He can beat little Thomas Y. Simmons, Jr.,
+ all to pieces-make the best stump speech-address a public assemblage, and
+ rivet all their minds-can make a jury cry quicker than any other man-can
+ clear the worst criminal that ever committed crime-and he's good-hearted
+ too-can draw the most astonishing comparisons to confound the minds of
+ stupid jurors, and make them believe the d&mdash;dest nonsense that ever
+ man invented. Yes, sir-when he makes a speech, everybody goes to hear him,
+ for he says what he pleases, and old Judge Withers, whose will is as
+ arbitrary as Julius Caesar's, and has got the obstinacy of Tom Boyce's
+ mule, dar'n't attempt to control the tenor of his plea. And he can tell
+ the best invented story of any man in town. He cleared the villanous
+ Doctor Hines once upon the color of his pantaloons.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ George waited impatiently for the end of the political controversy,
+ determined to introduce his friend to the colonel. He soon had an
+ opportunity, for the colonel, finding himself beset by a set of
+ unreasonable secessionists, made a sweeping declaration. &ldquo;Gentlemen,&rdquo; said
+ he, &ldquo;let me tell you a modest fact: seven-eighths of the secession
+ fire-eaters don't know what the proper meaning of government is: I make
+ the charge against my own people-but it is true.&rdquo; &ldquo;Traitor! traitor!&mdash;traitor
+ to South Carolina,&rdquo; was sounded at the top of a dozen voices.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then, if I am such in your opinions, I'm gratified to know that my
+ feelings are my own. Good-night!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus saying, he withdrew from the party, and making his way for the door,
+ was saluted by George, who introduced him to his friend, the Captain. The
+ colonel was a very sociable, communicative man; and taking the Captain's
+ arm, as they walked along, entered into an interesting conversation about
+ his voyage and first visit to the city, at the same time displaying his
+ good sense in not trying to force the great things of South Carolina into
+ his mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We, a few weeks afterward, had the good fortune to hear the legal
+ abilities of this gentleman displayed in a plea at the bar. There were
+ many good points in it, which, if not legally pointed, were said well; yet
+ we should class him as belonging to the loud school.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Captain, thinking it a good opportunity to make some inquiries about
+ his steward, as they proceeded, commenced in the following manner:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your laws are very stringent in South Carolina, I believe, sir!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, no sir,&rdquo; said the colonel, &ldquo;if we except those which govern the
+ niggers; they of necessity must be so; we have had so many emeutes with
+ them, that no law can be made too strict in its bearings. We have so many
+ bad niggers poured in upon us, that the whole class is becoming
+ corrupted.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your laws, of course, make a distinction between good and bad niggers,
+ and free negroes?&rdquo; interposed the Captain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We make no distinction between the colors&mdash;some are as white as you
+ are; but the grades are so complex that it would be impossible to make a
+ sliding-scale law for any fixed complexions. The law which governs them is
+ distinctive and comprehensive-made in order to shield the white population
+ from their ignorance of law and evidence. We never could govern them in
+ their respective spheres, unless the laws were made stringent in their
+ effect. As for the free niggers, they're the greatest nuisance we have; it
+ is our policy to get rid of them, and to that end we tax them severely.
+ The riddance of this class of niggers would be an essential benefit to our
+ slaves, as upon account of their influence our negro-laws are made more
+ stringent. And the worst of it is that they increase faster. But we make
+ it a principal point to get all the free men we can married to slaves, and
+ the free women run off. You, that are accustomed to the free institutions
+ of your country, may think some of these things singular at first; but you
+ would soon become accustomed to them, and would really admire them when
+ you saw how beautifully they worked.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is there no discretionary power left?&rdquo; inquired the Captain. &ldquo;It must be
+ oppressive, if carried out; Good men-whether they be white or black-are
+ entitled to the advantages due them; but where laws such as you describe
+ are carried out, a good man's evidence being black, the intention could
+ not be made white. Now, according to my idea of the law of nature, a man's
+ merits are in his moral integrity and behaviour; therefore I should
+ establish the rule that a good black man was better than a bad white man,
+ and was as much entitled to the respect and government of law.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hi!&mdash;oh! Captain; it won't do to talk so in South Carolina. Just let
+ a nigger imagine himself as good as a white man, and all the seven codes
+ in Christendom wouldn't keep 'em under. Ah! you've got to learn a thing or
+ two about niggers yet,&rdquo; interrupted Master George, before the Colonel had
+ time to speak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I only speak from my observation of human nature; but I may become better
+ acquainted with your laws, if I remain among you,&rdquo; said the Captain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As I have said before sir,&rdquo; replied the Colonel, &ldquo;our nigger-laws are
+ such as to require a strict enforcement. If we allowed the prerogative of
+ a discretionary power, it would open the way to an endless system of
+ favoritism, just at the mercy and feelings of those exercising it. As it
+ is now, the white or black nigger, male or female, gets the same law and
+ the same penalty. We make no distinction even at the paddle-gallows. The
+ paddle-gallows is a frame with two uprights, and a wrench screw at the
+ top. The negro's hands are secured in iron wristlets-similar to handcuffs;
+ a rope is then attached to an eye in these, and passing over the wrench,
+ which being turned, the negro is raised in an agonizing position until the
+ tips of his toes scarcely touch the floor. Thus suspended, with the skin
+ stretched to its utmost tension, it not unfrequently parts at the first
+ blow of the paddle. Sometimes the feet are secured, when the effect of
+ this modern science of demonstrating the tension of the human body for
+ punishment becomes more painful under the paddle. South Carolinians deny
+ this mode of punishment generally, and never allow strangers to witness
+ it. It is not, as some writers have stated, practised in Georgia, where,
+ we are happy to say, that so far as punishment is conducted in a legal
+ manner, at the jails and prisons, it is administered in a humane manner;
+ and instead of turning modern barbarity into a science, as is, done in
+ South Carolina, a strict regard for the criminal is observed. I will
+ relate some singular facts connected with the strictness with which we
+ South Carolinians carry out our laws. And now that we are on the spot
+ connected with it, its associations are more forcibly impressed on my
+ mind. It brings with it many painful remembrances, and, were we
+ differently situated, I should wish the cause to be removed. But it cannot
+ be, and we must carry out the law without making allowances, for in these
+ little leniencies all those evils which threaten the destruction of our
+ peculiar institution creep in. In fact, Captain, they are points of law
+ upon which all our domestic quietude stands; and as such, we are bound to
+ strengthen our means of enforcing them to the strictest letter. Our laws
+ are founded upon the ancient wisdom of our forefathers, and South Carolina
+ has never traduced herself or injured her legal purity. We have reduced
+ our system almost to a practical science, so complete in its bearings and
+ points of government as to be worthy the highest and noblest purposes of
+ our country. And at the same time, such is the spirit and magnanimity of
+ our people, that in framing laws to guard against the dangerous influences
+ of that wing of our country that spreads its ambitious fallacies&mdash;its
+ tempting attractions-shallow criticisms upon minute and isolated
+ cases-redundant theories without measure or observation, and making a
+ standard for the government of slaves upon foolish and capricious
+ prejudices, we have been careful to preserve a conservative moderation
+ toward the slave. But, to my remarks.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The party had now arrived opposite to what was formerly known as Jones's
+ Hotel, where the Colonel made a halt to relate the singular case that had
+ pained his feelings, though he held very tenaciously to the law as it was,
+ because he believed strongly in the wisdom of the South Carolina
+ judiciary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Our first and great object is to prevent the interchange of sentiment
+ between our domestic niggers, whether bond or free, and niggers who reside
+ abroad or have left our State; To do this, it became imperative to
+ establish a law prohibiting free negroes from coming into the State, and
+ those in the State from going out, under penalty of imprisonment and fine,
+ if they returned. The penalty amounted to sale upon a peon form; and
+ subjected the offender to the slave system in a manner that he seldom
+ retrieved himself. You will observe, Captain, the penalty is not desired
+ by our people, the object being to prevent them from returning, and as
+ such it must be taken in the spirit of its origin. Another very wise
+ provision was made by our legislators, and which has prevented a great
+ deal of suffering on the part of the slave. A few years ago, our wise
+ legislature made a law to revert the power of emancipation from the board
+ of magistrates where it had been very much abused, to the House itself.
+ And such is the law at the present day, that no master can give his slaves
+ their freedom, except by special act of the legislature, and that with
+ such a multiplicity of provisions and conditions that few even attempt it.
+ But I'm about to refer to cases in which some modification might be said
+ to have been necessary, because in them are embodied the worst germs for
+ abolition speculation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That, Captain, is Jones's Hotel,&rdquo; said the Colonel, pointing to an
+ odd-looking house of antique and mixed architecture, with a large convex
+ window above the hall-entrance, in the second story. This house is
+ situated in Broad street, next to the aristocratic St. Michael's Church,
+ one of the most public places in the city. &ldquo;In years past, that house was
+ kept by Jones, a free nigger. Jones was almost white, a fine
+ portly-looking man, active, enterprising, intelligent, honest to the
+ letter, and whose integrity and responsibility was never doubted. He lived
+ in every way like a white man, and, I think, with few exceptions, never
+ kept company with even bright folks. His house was unquestionably the best
+ in the city, and had a widespread reputation. Few persons of note ever
+ visited Charleston without putting up at Jones's, where they found, not
+ only the comforts of a private house, but a table spread with every luxury
+ that the county afforded. The Governor always put up at Jones's; and when
+ you were travelling abroad, strangers would speak of the sumptuous fare at
+ Jones's in Charleston, and the elegance and correctness of his house. But
+ if his house and fare were the boast of Carolinians, and the remark of
+ strangers, his civility and courteous attention could not be outdone.
+ Jones continued in the popularity of his house for many years, reared a
+ beautiful, intelligent, and interesting family; at the same time
+ accumulated about forty thousand dollars. The most interesting part of his
+ family was three beautiful daughters, the eldest of whom was married to a
+ person now in New York. She was fairer than seven-eighths of those ladies
+ who term themselves aristocracy in Charleston, and promenade King street
+ in the afternoon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She removed to New York with her husband, who now resides in that city,
+ engaged in lucrative and respectable business. A short time after, her
+ second sister-not dreaming that the law would be so stringent as to class
+ her with the lowest nigger, or even lay its painful bearings at her door;
+ for the family were very high-minded, and would have considered themselves
+ grossly insulted to have the opprobrious name of nigger applied to
+ them-paid her a visit. The public became acquainted with the fact, and to
+ his surprise, Jones was informed by authority that upon no condition could
+ she be allowed to return-that the law was imperative, and no consideration
+ could be given to the circumstances, for such would be virtually
+ destroying its validity, and furnishing a precedent that would be followed
+ by innumerable cases. In spite of all the remonstrances which Jones could
+ set forth, and the influence of several friends of high standing, he was
+ compelled to relinquish all hope of his daughter's being allowed to return
+ to the family. The reasoning set forth had every plausibility; but such is
+ our respect for the law, that we were compelled to forego our hospitality,
+ and maintain it, even though the case was painful to our feelings. Thus,
+ you see, we maintain the point and spirit of the law above every thing
+ else.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But the end is not here! A few years after this, Jones received a letter,
+ that his daughter was very sick and not expected to live-accompanied with
+ a desire to have the last soothing comfort of seeing her parents. Jones
+ being an affectionate man, and dotingly fond of his children, without
+ regarding the former admonition, immediately prepared himself, and left in
+ disguise for New York. Mature consideration would have convinced him of
+ the error of one so well known as himself trying to elude recognition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;His son-in-law, Lee, a noble fellow, kept the house, and when Jones was
+ inquired for, it was reported that he was confined to his room. It would
+ have been well if Jones had kept himself secluded in New York; but he was
+ recognised by a Charlestonian, and, as such reports have uncommon wings,
+ the news of it soon reached the authorities; when a mandate was issued
+ accordingly, and Jones subjected to the fate of his daughter. There are
+ many painful circumstances connected with the affair, which, if well told,
+ would make quite a romance,&rdquo; said the Colonel, all of which the Captain
+ listened to with profound attention. &ldquo;His family all moved to New York,
+ and his affairs were put into the hands of attorneys here, for settlement,
+ by his son-in-law, who continued the business for some years.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course he got his property restored to him?&rdquo; interrupted the Captain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Most certainly, Captain! The spirit of justice is coequal with that of
+ honorable law, in South Carolina,&rdquo; said George, anxious to relieve the
+ Colonel of the answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is somewhat difficult to settle a man's business by legal process when
+ the principal is not present. The law's delay and lawyers' spoils make
+ time hallowed and costly,&rdquo; said the Captain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You're right there, Captain,&rdquo; said the Colonel; &ldquo;and I doubt-to speak
+ honestly-whether Jones ever got much of his property. There's a good many
+ stories told, and a great deal of mystery about it that's got to be
+ explained to my mind. But you're a stranger, Captain, and it would not be
+ interesting to the feelings of a Scotchman. I may give you the details
+ more minutely at some future day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, Colonel!&rdquo; said George, &ldquo;you should be considerate in your
+ statements. Remember the immense difficulty that has attended Jones's
+ affairs-they're not all settled yet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True, George; and I'm afraid they never will be;&mdash;but there are some
+ very singular appearances connected with it. I mean no personal disrespect
+ toward those cousins of yours who have figured in the case. 'Tis bad to
+ call names, but there is a mystery about a certain member of our
+ profession getting rich, when poor Jones declares he's got nothing, and
+ Lee has had to give up the house,&mdash;I don't say what for.&rdquo; * * *
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, strange things must be kept strangely secret in some parts of the
+ world, and only whispered when there's no wind,&rdquo; said the Captain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But that's the only case, Captain,&rdquo; said George; &ldquo;and the Colonel was
+ indiscreet in recounting it; for from that you may conceive wrong
+ impressions of the best institutions and laws in the world. Jones was an
+ old fool, led away by his nigger-like affections for them gals of his. He
+ never knew when he was well off, and always wanted to be with white folk
+ when he was here. 'Twould been a great deal better if he'd let them
+ youngest gals gone with Pingree and Allston. They'd have made the tip-top
+ mistresses&mdash;been kept like ladies, and not been bothered, and brought
+ all this trouble upon their heads through these infernal abolitionists. I
+ really believe the old fool thought some white man would marry them at one
+ time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What harm would there've been in that, providing they're as white as
+ anybody, and got plenty of money, and were handsome? There must be a
+ singular sensibility, that I don't understand, exerting itself in your
+ society,&rdquo; said the Captain laconically.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Harm! You'd find out the harm. Just live in South Carolina a year or two.
+ 'Tisn't the fair complexion-we don't dispute that-but it's the blood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh! then the legal objection,&rdquo; said the Captain, &ldquo;is what is so revolting
+ to society, eh! It may be sown broadcast in licentiousness, then, and
+ custom sustains an immoral element that is devouring the essential bond of
+ society.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Excuse me, Captain,&rdquo; interrupted the Colonel. &ldquo;George, you are always
+ taking me upon suppositions. I only related it to the Captain in order to
+ show the power and integrity of our law, and how South Carolinians
+ frequently sacrifice their own interests to maintain it intact. Nothing
+ could be more fatal to its vitality than to make provisions which would
+ entail legal preferences. The law in regard to free niggers leaving the
+ State should be looked upon in the light of protection rather than
+ alienation, for it is made to protect property and society. Yet where a
+ case is attended with such circumstances as that of Jones's, some
+ disposition to accommodate might have been evinced without endangering the
+ State's sovereignty. And I must also differ with you, George, so far as
+ the girls maintained their self-respect. It was commendable in them to get
+ husbands whom they could live with in the bonds of matrimony. My word for
+ it, George, though I am a Southerner, and may give rein to improprieties
+ at times, nothing can be more pernicious to our society than this
+ destructive system of our first people in keeping mistresses. It's a
+ source of misery at best, depending upon expediency instead of obligation,
+ and results in bringing forth children and heirs with an entailed burden
+ upon their lives, to be disowned, cast off from paternal rights, and left
+ to the tender mercies of the law. We see the curse, yet countenance it-and
+ while it devours domestic affections and has cankered the core of social
+ obligations, we look upon it as a flowery garden as we pass by the
+ wayside.. There may be but a shadow between the rightful heir and the
+ doubtful son-the former may enjoy the bounty of his inheritance, but the
+ latter is doomed to know not his sire nor his kinsman, but to suffer the
+ doubts and fears and the dark gloom which broods over a bondman's life.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By-je-w-hu! Colonel, what in scissors are you preaching about. You must
+ a' got a pull too much at Bakers's. You're giving vent to real abolition
+ sentiments. Exercise your knowledge of the provision that is made for such
+ children. The Captain will certainly draw incorrect notions about us,&rdquo;
+ said George, with anxiety pictured on his countenance. He knew the
+ Colonel's free, open, and frank manner of expressing himself, and feared
+ lest the famous name of the chivalry should suffer from his unconscious
+ disclosures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Provisions! George, you know my feelings concerning that vice which is so
+ universally practised in our community. If you know of any provision, it's
+ more than I do. Perhaps you are older and have had more experience. 'Tis
+ the want of such a provision that is just destroying our institution of
+ slavery!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this juncture the Captain interrupted them, and begging that the
+ Colonel would finish the story about Jones, said he had a few questions to
+ ask them after it was through.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the Colonel, &ldquo;Jones died, I believe; but his family are as
+ industrious as ever, and have made money enough to live comfortable; but
+ the scamps have turned out perfect helpmates of the abolitionists, and
+ make their intelligence figure at the bottom of many an escape. But Lee's
+ case is as hard as Jones's. His son went to New York to see his
+ grandfather, and was debarred by the same statute of limitations. Lee,
+ however, was a very capable fellow, and after trying for two years, and
+ finding it would be impossible to return to his father, very shrewdly set
+ about some kind of business, and is now largely engaged in the preserve
+ and pickle business. Lee's celebrated pickle and preserve establishment,
+ New York. The father is now in this city, making a living for his family
+ at something or other. He has made several efforts to sell out his little
+ property, but there's some trouble about the title; and if he leaves it to
+ go and see his son, he knows what the consequences will be; and to leave
+ it for settlement would be to abandon it, to the same fate that swallowed
+ up Jones's. Thus the son cannot come to visit his father, nor the father
+ go to visit the son. This, in my opinion, is carrying a prohibition to an
+ extreme point; and although I believe the law should be maintained, I
+ cannot believe that any good arises from it upon such people as the
+ Jones's and Lee's, from the very fact that they never associated with
+ niggers. Hence, where there is no grounds for fear there can be no cause
+ for action,&rdquo; continued the Colonel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Just what I wanted to know,&rdquo; said the Captain. &ldquo;As I informed you, I am
+ driven into your port in distress. Charleston, as you are aware, is in an
+ advantageous latitude for vessels to refit that have met with those
+ disasters which, are frequent in the gulf and among the Bahamas. Thus I
+ expected to find good facilities here, without any unkind feeling on the
+ part of the people&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh! bless me, Captain, you will find us the most hospitable people in the
+ world,&rdquo; said the Colonel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But your pilot told me I would have trouble with my steward, and that the
+ law would make no distinction between his being cast upon your shores in
+ distress and subject to your sympathy, and his coming in voluntarily.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What!&rdquo; said little George. &ldquo;Is he a nigger, Captain? Old Grimshaw's just
+ as sure to nab him as you're a white man. He'll buy and sell a saint for
+ the fees, and gives such an extended construction to the terms of the act
+ that you need expect no special favor at his hands. The law's no fiction
+ with him. I'm sorry, Captain: you may judge his conduct as an index of
+ that of our people, and I know him so well that I fear the consequences.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No!&rdquo; said the Captain. &ldquo;My steward is a Portuguese, a sort of mestino,
+ and one of the best men that ever stepped foot aboard a vessel. He is
+ willing, intelligent, always ready to do his duty, and is a great favorite
+ with his shipmates, and saves his wages like a good man-but he is olive
+ complexion, like a Spaniard. He has sailed under the British flag for a
+ great many years, has been 'most all over the world, and is as much
+ attached to the service as if he was a Londoner, and has got a register
+ ticket. Nothing would pain my feelings more than to see him in a prison,
+ for I think he has as proud a notion of honesty as any man I've seen, and
+ I know he wouldn't commit a crime that would subject him to imprisonment
+ for the world. The boys have been pestering the poor fellow, and telling
+ him about some old fellow they heard the pilot speak about, called Norman
+ Gadsden; they tell him if he catches him they'll sell him for a slave.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The question is one about which you need give yourself no concern. Our
+ people are not so inhuman but that they will shelter a castaway sailor,
+ and extend those comforts which are due from all humane people. The act
+ under which seamen are imprisoned is the law provided to prohibit free
+ niggers from entering our port, and, in my opinion, was brought into life
+ for the sake of the fees. It's no more nor less than a tax and restriction
+ upon commerce, and I doubt whether it was ever the intention of the
+ framers that it should be construed in this manner. However, so far as
+ your steward is con-cerned, the question of how far his color will make
+ him amenable to the law will never be raised; the mere circumstance of his
+ being a seaman in distress, thrown upon our sympathies, will be all you
+ need among our hospitable people. I'm not aware of a precedent, but I will
+ guaranty his safety from a knowledge of the feelings of our people. Our
+ merchants are, with few exceptions, opposed to the law in this sense, but
+ such is the power and control of a class of inexperienced legislators,
+ prompted by a most trifling clique of office-holders, that their voice has
+ no weight. I am opposed to this system of dragging people into courts of
+ law upon every pretext. It is practised too much in our city for the good
+ of its name.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon this the Colonel and little George accompanied the Captain to his
+ ship, and, expressing their heartfelt regrets at her appearance, bid him
+ good-night-George promising to call upon him in the morning, and the
+ Colonel charging him to give himself no trouble about his steward, that he
+ would see Mr. Grimshaw that night, and make all things straight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus ended the Captain's first night in Charleston, and represented a
+ picture from which he might have drawn conclusions somewhat different from
+ the actual result. Alas! that all the good fellowship and pleasant
+ associations of a people should be disgraced by an absurdity arising from
+ their fears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Colonel might have given many other instances equally as painful as
+ that connected with the transportation of Jones and his family, and the
+ fetters that were placed upon poor Lee. He might have instanced that of
+ Malcome Brown, a wealthy, industrious, honest, high-minded, and
+ straightforward man, now living at Aiken, in South Carolina. Brown
+ conducts a profitable mechanical business, is unquestionably the best
+ horticulturist in the State, and produces the best fruit brought to the
+ Charleston market. What has he done to be degraded in the eyes of the law?
+ Why is he looked upon as a dangerous citizen and his influence feared? Why
+ is he refused a hearing through those laws which bad white men take the
+ advantage of? He is compelled to submit to those which were made to govern
+ the worst slaves! And why is he subjected to that injustice which gives
+ him no voice in his own behalf when the most depraved whites are his
+ accusers? Can it be the little crimp that is in his hair? for he has a
+ fairer skin than those who make laws to oppress him. If he inhaled the
+ free atmosphere from abroad, can it be that there is contagion in it, and
+ Malcome Brown is the dreaded medium of its communication? And if the
+ statement rung in our ears be true, &ldquo;that the free colored of the North
+ suffer while the slave is cared for and comfortable,&rdquo; why belie ourselves?
+ Malcome's influence is, and always has been, with the whites, and
+ manifestly good in the preservation of order and obedience on the part of
+ the slaves. He pursues his avocation with spirit and enterprise, while he
+ is subjected to menial and oppressive laws. His father visited New York,
+ and was forbidden to return. He appealed again and again, set forth his
+ claims and his integrity to the State and her laws, but all was of no
+ avail. He was hopelessly banished, as it were, from ever seeing his son
+ again, unless that son would sacrifice his property and submit to
+ perpetual banishment from the State. If we reflect upon the many paternal
+ associations that would gladden the hearts of father and child to meet in
+ happy affection, we may realize the effect of that law which makes the
+ separation painful and which denies even the death-bed scene its last
+ cheering consolation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have conversed with poor Brown on many occasions, found him a very
+ intelligent man, full of humour, and fond of relating incidents in the
+ history of his family-even proud of his good credit in Charleston. He
+ frequently speaks of his father and the gratifying hope of meeting him at
+ some future day, when he can give vent to his feelings in bursts of
+ affection. He wants his father to return and live with him, because he
+ says he knows they would be more happy together. &ldquo;I suppose the law was
+ made in justice, and it's right for me to submit to it,&rdquo; he would say when
+ conversing upon its stringency; and it also seems a sort of comfort to him
+ that he is not the only sufferer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If South Carolina would awake to her own interest, she would find more to
+ fear from the stringency of her own laws than from the influence of a few
+ men coming from abroad.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X. THE PROSPECT DARKENING.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ AFTER the Colonel and little George left the Captain, as we have stated in
+ the foregoing chapter, he descended into the cabin, and found Manuel
+ sitting upon one of the lockers, apparently in great anxiety. He, however,
+ waited for the mate to speak before he addressed the Captain. The mate
+ awoke and informed the Captain that a slender, dark-complexioned man had
+ been aboard a few minutes after he left, making particular inquiries about
+ the steward; that he spoke like an official man, was dressed in black
+ clothes, and wore spectacles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I asked him if we'd have any trouble with Manuel, and tried to make him
+ understand that he wasn't a black, and that our situation might excuse us
+ from any annoyance through their peculiar laws. But the old chap seemed
+ mighty stupid about every thing, and talked just as if he didn't know any
+ thing about nothing. 'A nigger's a nigger in South Carolina,' said he
+ dryly, and inquired for a quid of tobacco, which I handed him, and he took
+ one big enough for six. Said I, 'Mister, do you call a man a nigger what's
+ a Portugee and a'n't black?' 'It depends on how he was born,' says he.
+ 'Well, but ye can't make a white man a nigger nohow, whether it's in South
+ Carolina or Scotland,' says I. 'Well, we don't stand upon such things
+ here; we can show you niggers as white as you be, Mr. Mate,' says he.
+ 'But, Mister, what's to do about our steward, that ye make yer inquiries
+ about him; he ha'n't did nothing,' said I. 'Well, Mr. Mate; it's contrary
+ to law to bring nigger stewards into our port. They're a bad set of
+ fellows generally, and we claim the right to lock 'em up to insure their
+ good behavior and keep their bad influence away from our slaves. 'Tis not
+ my office. I observed your arrival and wrecked condition, and merely came
+ to take a look,' said he. 'Well now, Mister, our steward thinks as much of
+ himself as anybody and wouldn't mix with your niggers on any account. But
+ Mister! won't it make a difference because we're cast upon your shore in
+ distress,' says I. 'Not a whit! it's contrary to law, and the law's got
+ nothing to do with wind and weather. We love the sovereignty of our law
+ too well to make any discrimination. We're a hospitable people, and always
+ give folks plenty to eat, but we never allow any favors in the law. I'll
+ call and see you in the morning,' said he, and away he went.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This individual was Mr. Grimshaw, the principal mover of the powers that
+ be, notwithstanding he asserted that it was not his office, and that he
+ just walked round to take a look.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During his visit on board, Manuel was absent on board a Boston bark, where
+ he met a white steward, who gave him a sad picture of the Charleston jail
+ and the cruel treatment that was inflicted upon prisoners there by
+ starvation. He told him that he was once put in for a trifling offence,
+ and nearly starved to death before he got out. &ldquo;You will be sure to go
+ there, Manuel,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;for they make no distinction; and if a man's a
+ foreigner, and can't speak for himself, he'll stand no chance at all. I'd
+ give 'em the slip afore I'd suffer such another punishment,&rdquo; he continued.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This so worked upon the poor fellow's mind, that it became a matter of
+ little moment whether he jumped overboard or remained on the ship. He
+ waited until the mate had concluded, and commenced appealing to the
+ Captain in a most pitiful manner. The disgrace of being imprisoned seemed
+ worse than the punishment; and he did not seem to comprehend the intention
+ that he should be imprisoned for no crime in the United States, when he
+ had sailed around the world and visited a majority of its ports, both
+ barbarous and civilized, without molestation. He wanted the Captain to pay
+ him off and let him leave by some vessel in the morning. The Captain
+ endeavored to soothe his fears by assuring him that there was no danger of
+ his being imprisoned; that the people of Charleston had too much good
+ feeling in them to be cruel to a distressed sailor; that the power of the
+ consul was a sufficient guarantee of protection. &ldquo;You are not among
+ Patagonians, Manuel,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;There's no use of working your mind into a
+ fever, you'll be as well taken care of here and be thought as much of as
+ you would in London.&rdquo; This assurance had the effect to soothe his mind,
+ upon which he left the cabin more at ease, and went into the forecastle to
+ turn in with his little companion Tommy. Men had been detailed for the
+ pumps as soon as the flood-tide made, and the Captain retired to his
+ berth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seemed there was a mutual understanding between the pilots and officers
+ in regard to the arrival of colored stewards; and the pilot, after leaving
+ the vessel, went directly to Mr. Grimshaw's office and reported a nut for
+ him to crack: this brought him to the wharf to &ldquo;look around.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Early in the morning the crew were at their duty. The mate commenced
+ giving orders to clear away the deck, and Manuel to make preparations for
+ breakfast. He had scarcely commenced before two men, Messrs. Dunn and
+ Dusenberry walked up and down the wharf for several minutes, then they
+ would stand together and gaze as if to watch the approach of some vessel
+ in the offing. At length, Dusenberry, seeing Manuel come to the gangway
+ with a bucket in his hand, walked to her side, and, stepping on board,
+ seized him by the collar, and drawing a paper from his pocket, said,
+ &ldquo;You're my prisoner! you must go to jail-come, be quick, sir; you must not
+ stop to get your things; you must send for them after you're committed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mate and several of the crew being near, at once gathered around him.
+ At the same time Dunn, who was standing at the end of the wharf awaiting
+ the result, thinking Dusenberry was opposed, came to his assistance. The
+ officers and crew knew the respect due to the laws too well to oppose any
+ obstacles to the constables in executing their duty. The mate, in a very
+ polite manner, asked as a favor that they would leave the man a few
+ minutes until the Captain came on deck. They yielded to his solicitation
+ after a great deal of grumbling. The arrest made a deep feeling among the
+ seamen, but none felt it more than little Tommy; he heard the noise upon
+ deck, and came running with tears in his eyes, and cried, &ldquo;Oh! Manuel, why
+ Manuel, what are they going to take you away for? Won't I see you again,
+ Manuel?&rdquo; The little fellow's simplicity touched the feelings of all
+ present. But the lame officer, Dunn, stood with a pair of handcuffs in his
+ hand, as unmoved as a stoic, while Dusenberry expressed his impatience,
+ and began to push the boy away, and motion to march him off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold a bit!&rdquo; said the mate. &ldquo;The Captain will be on deck in a few
+ minutes; he wants a word or two with you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We can't stop unless we're compensated for our time. 'Tis no use to
+ delay-'twon't do any good; he's a nigger to all intents and purposes. I
+ know by the curl in his hair-they can't escape me, I've had too much to do
+ with them!&rdquo; said Dunn. &ldquo;Yes, to be sure, I can tell a nigger by his ear,
+ if his skin's as white as chalk!&rdquo; said Dusenberry. &ldquo;It's all gammon this
+ bringing bright outlandish men here, and trying to pass them off for white
+ folks. 'Twon't stick-you must come up and be registered, and you'll have a
+ good time at the jail, my boy; there's plenty of bright gals in there, and
+ you can have a wife, if you know how to do the courting.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Captain now came upon deck; and began to intercede, begging that they
+ would not take Manuel away until he had seen the British Consul. &ldquo;I know I
+ can make every thing straight. There is no occasion to imprison my
+ steward-he's neither a nigger nor a bad man; and I'll pledge you my honor
+ that he shall not leave the ship, or even go upon the wharf, if you will
+ only allow me to see the Consul before you take any further action,&rdquo; he
+ continued.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is beyond our power, sir; you must see the sheriff-you'll find him
+ in his office bright and early. But you might as well put your appeal in
+ your pocket, or send it to Queen Victoria, for all Consul Mathew can do
+ for you. He's been kicking up a fuss for two years; but he might as well
+ whistle agin a brickbat as to talk his nonsense about English niggers to
+ South Carolina. He'll get tarred and feathered yet, if he a'n't mighty shy
+ about his movements. Sorry, Captain, we can't accommodate you, but we're
+ only actin' for the sheriff, and his orders are imperative to bring him
+ right up. We must lock the fellow up. We don't make the law, nor we ha'n't
+ the power to control it.&rdquo; Thus saying, Dunn took a little key from his
+ pocket and begun to turn it in the handcuffs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What!&rdquo; said the Captain-&ldquo;don't attempt to put them things on my man, upon
+ your peril. Is that the way you treat a poor shipwrecked sailor in South
+ Carolina, the State of boasted hospitality? No, sir! I will sacrifice my
+ life before my man shall submit to such a thing,&rdquo; said the Captain, with
+ his Scotch energy aroused.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Captain!&rdquo; said Dunn, &ldquo;we'd not be takin' the advantage of ye because
+ ye're a stranger, but 'tis the law; and if we accommodates ye, sure it'll
+ be at our own risk. But anyhow, Captain, ye'd be keepin' meself an' this
+ gentleman a long time waiting, 'twouldn't be amiss to be giving us the
+ usual perquisite. You won't miss it, and we've a great deal to do for
+ small fees, that niver compinsate for the accommodation we be's to give
+ everybody-an' the loss of time's the loss of money.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Give you a perquisite!&mdash;no, indeed; I never pay for such favors.
+ Wait a few moments; I will accompany you myself, if you will not take my
+ honor for his good conduct on the way to prison,&rdquo; continued the Captain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Captain, sure ye needn't trouble yerself anyhow; we'll take yer honor
+ that he don't run away, and if he does ye'll stand the odds at the
+ sheriff's. Sure a case would niver pass Mr. Grimshaw s observation; but to
+ plase ye, and considerin' the wreck, meself and Dusenberry 'll put him up
+ without,&rdquo; said Dunn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the conversation, Manuel plead hard to be heard before the Consul,
+ having a mistaken idea that the Consul could protect him from all danger;
+ and that if he could get a hearing before him, he was sure to be released.
+ The Captain shook his hand and told him to be contented until the Consul's
+ office opened, when he would come to the jail and see him. Manuel then
+ turned to the crew, and shaking the hands of each, took his little bundle
+ in one hand, and holding little Tommy by the other, (who accompanied him
+ to the head of the wharf,) was soon out of sight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But will the reader believe what was the practice of these petty officers?
+ We can assure them that such instances as the one we shall relate are not
+ only practised in Charleston to an unlimited extent, but the fact is well
+ known to both magistrates and the public; the former treat it as
+ moonshine, and the latter rail against it, but never take proper action.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scarcely had little Tommy left them at the head of the wharf, before they
+ intimated that it would be well to consider a morning dram. To this end,
+ they walked into a &ldquo;Dutch corner shop,&rdquo; and passing into the back room,
+ gave sundry insinuations that could not be misunderstood. &ldquo;Well! come, who
+ pays the shot?&rdquo; said Dunn, stepping up to the counter, and crooking his
+ finger upon his nose at a dumpling-faced Dutchman, who stood behind the
+ counter, waiting for his man to name it. The Dutchman was very short and
+ very thick, leaving the impression that he had been very much depressed in
+ his own country when young. He rubbed his hands and flirted his fingers in
+ motion of anxiety, &ldquo;Every ting vat de shentleman vant him&mdash;dare notin
+ like to my zin and brondty vat him got mit ze zity,&rdquo; said Dutchy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gentlemen, I should be glad to have you drink with me, if it be proper to
+ ask,&rdquo; said Manuel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh! yes&mdash;certainly, yes!&mdash;just what we come for, something to
+ cut away the cobwebs&mdash;'twouldn't do to go out in the morning fog
+ without a lining,&rdquo; said Dunn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Name it! name it! shentlemen,&rdquo; exclaimed the Dutchman, as he rapped his
+ fingers upon the counter, and seemed impatient to draw forth his filthy
+ stuff. They named their drinks, each with a different name. Manuel not
+ being a Charleston graduate in the profession of mixing drinks and
+ attaching slang names to them, Mr. Dusenberry undertook to instruct him in
+ a choice. The Dutchman was an adept at mixing, and the &ldquo;morning pulls&rdquo;
+ were soon set out to the extreme satisfaction of Dunn and Dusenberry. &ldquo;All
+ right! tip her down, my old fellow; none o' yer screwed faces over such
+ liquor as that. We drink on the legitimate, in Charleston, and can put it
+ down until we see stars,&rdquo; said Dusenberry, addressing himself to Manuel,
+ who was making a wry face, while straining to swallow the cut-throat
+ stuff.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dusenberry now left Manuel in charge of Dunn, saying he was going out to
+ attend to some business. Manuel drew from his pocket a quarter of a
+ Colombian doubloon, and throwing it upon the counter, told the Dutchman to
+ give him change. The Dutchman picked it up, turned it over several times,
+ and squinting at it, inquired, in a very unpretending manner, what its
+ value was. He knew already, yet this was only done to try Manuel. At the
+ same moment he winked to Dunn, who, stepping up, gave it a significant
+ toss upon the counter. &ldquo;The divil a bit more than two dollars; all right,
+ Swizer,&rdquo; said he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Tis four dollar, West Inge-I want my change,&rdquo; said Manuel, shrugging his
+ shoulders. &ldquo;I no want no more than my own; and no man to cheat-e me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't be bothering with your four dollars-sure ye a'n't in the West Inges
+ now; and money's plenty in Charleston, and I can't bring up so much-half
+ so much. Don't be bothering with yer West Inge nonsense. If ye try to
+ raise a fuss here, I'll make the Captain suffer. Ye must learn that it
+ won't do for a nigger to dispute a white man in Charleston; we'd twitch ye
+ up by the same law; we'd put it to our own niggers, and ye'd git trised
+ up, and about fifty paddles on yer bare butt.&rdquo; The Dutchman put down a
+ dollar and seventy cents, but Manuel refused to take it up; when this
+ fellow, Dunn, pretending to be the friend of Manuel, held out his hand,
+ and telling the bar-keeper to put another dollar, which he did, he passed
+ it hurriedly into Manuel's hand, and making a pass, told him to put it
+ into his pocket.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was now about good business time for the Dutchman, and his customers
+ were coming in with their bottles and pots in great numbers. The place was
+ a little filthy hole, very black and dirty, about twelve feet long, and
+ seven feet wide, with a high board counter almost in the centre. The only
+ stock-in-trade that decorated it, was a few barrels of lager beer; several
+ kegs, with names to set forth the different qualities of liquors painted
+ upon them; a bushel basket about half full of onions, and a few salt fish
+ in a keg that stood by the door. Around the room were several benches
+ similar to those in guard-houses. Upon two of them were stretched two
+ ragged and filthy-looking negroes, who looked as if they had been spending
+ the night in debauchery. Dunn, as if to show his authority, limped toward
+ them, and commenced fledging their backs with his hickory stick in a most
+ unmerciful manner, until one poor old fellow, with a lame hand, cried out
+ for mercy at the top of his voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's a bad business keeping these niggers here all night, Swizer-you know
+ I've done the clean thing with you several times,&rdquo; said Dunn, pointing his
+ finger at the Dutchman; who winked, and coming from behind the counter,
+ slipped something into his hand, and stepping to the door, assumed some
+ threatning language against the negroes, should they ever came back to his
+ store. A large portion of those who came for liquor were negroes, who
+ looked as if they were parting with their last cent for stimulant, for
+ they were ragged and dirty, and needed bread more than liquor. Their
+ condition seemed pitiful in the extreme, and yet the Dutch &ldquo;corner-shop
+ keeper&rdquo; actually got rich from their custom, and so craving was he upon
+ their patronage, that he treated them with much more courtesy than his
+ white customers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These &ldquo;Dutch corner-shops&rdquo; are notorious places in Charleston, and are
+ discountenanced by respectable citizens, because they become the
+ rendezvous of &ldquo;niggers,&rdquo; who get into bad habits and neglect their
+ masters' or mistresses' business. Yet the keepers exert such an influence
+ at elections, that the officials not only fear them, but in order to
+ secure their favors, leave their rascality unmolested. Well might a writer
+ in the Charleston Courier of August 31, 1852, say&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We were astonished, with many others, at the sweeping charges made in the
+ resolutions passed at the HUTCHINSON meeting at Hatch's Hall, and were
+ ready to enlist at once to lend our voice to turn out an 'administration'
+ that for two years permitted 'moral sentiment to be abandoned,'
+ 'truthfulness disregarded,' 'reverence for religion obliterated,'
+ 'protection to religious freedom refused,' 'licentiousness allowed,' 'and
+ a due administration for vice, neglected.'&rdquo; These charges stand unrefuted,
+ and with but one or two exceptions, we have never known one of those
+ unlawful corner shops prosecuted by the present administration. And those
+ single instances only where they were driven to notice the most flagrant
+ abuses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is strictly &ldquo;contrary to law in Charleston,&rdquo; to sell liquor to a negro
+ without an order from a white man; the penalty being fine and
+ imprisonment. Yet, so flagrant has become the abuse, that it is notorious
+ that hush-money is paid by a certain class of Dutch liquor-sellers to the
+ officers. In nearly all the streets of Charleston, where there is a shanty
+ or nook large enough to hold a counter and some tumblers, these wretches
+ may be found dealing out their poisonous drugs to a poor, half-starved
+ class of negroes, who resort to all kinds of dishonest means to get money
+ to spend at their counters. These places are nearly all kept by
+ foreigners, whose merciless avarice scruples at nothing, however mean.
+ They soon become possessed of considerable means, and through their
+ courtesy and subserviency to the negro-for they are the only class of
+ whites that will beg his pardon, if they have offended him-carry on a sort
+ of active rivalry with each other for his custom. It is from these
+ miserable hells that seven-tenths of the crimes arise for which the poor
+ negro is dragged to the work-house and made to suffer under the paddle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And yet these very men, whose connivance at vice and crime is disregarded
+ by the law, rise and take position in society-not only entering into more
+ respectable business-but joining in that phalanx who are seeking the
+ life-blood of the old Southerner, and like a silent moth, working upon his
+ decay. There is a deep significance in the answer so frequently given in
+ Charleston to the interrogatory, &ldquo;Who lives in that splendid dwelling-it
+ seems to have been the mansion of a prince, but is somewhat decayed?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh! bless me, yes! It was once the mansion of the So-and-sos, one of the
+ first families, but they're very poor now. Mr. What-you-may-call-em owns
+ it now-they say he didn't get it honestly. He kept a little grog-shop on
+ the Bay, or sold bacon and whisky on the Bay, and made awful charges
+ against poor So-and-so, and after a long trial in Chancery he got his
+ house. He's a big fellow; now, I tell you, and is going to fit the house
+ up for himself!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dunn told Manuel to be seated, that there was no occasion for hurrying; it
+ would be all right if he got to the sheriffs office at nine o'clock; and
+ then commenced descanting upon the fine time he would have at the jail.
+ &ldquo;There's a right good lot of comrades there, me boy; ye'll have fiddling
+ and dancing, plenty of gals, and a jolly time; and ye a'n't a criminal, ye
+ know, so it won't be any thing at all, only keep up a stiff under-lip.
+ Come, let us take another drink; I feel mighty husky this morning!&rdquo; said
+ he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just at this time Dusenberry re-entered, puffing and blowing as if he had
+ been engaged in a foot-race. &ldquo;Another bird for old Grimshaw, at Commercial
+ Wharf! I know'd she had one aboard, 'cause I seed him from the wharf,&rdquo;
+ said he, in perfect ecstasy, pulling out a pencil and making a note in a
+ little book.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't be a child,&rdquo; said Dunn. &ldquo;Come, we have just proposed another drink;
+ you join of course; ye niver says no,&mdash;eh, Duse?&rdquo; They stepped to the
+ counter, and Dunn, again, pointing his finger upon his nose at the
+ Dutchman, who stood with his hands spread upon the counter, called for gin
+ and bitters, Stoughton light. Turning to Manuel, who was sitting upon a
+ bench with his head reclined upon his hand, apparently in deep meditation,
+ he took him by the collar in a rude manner, and dragging him to the
+ counter, said, &ldquo;Come, by the pipers, rouse up your spirits, and don't be
+ sulking, my old Portugee; take another O-be-joyful, and it'll put ye all
+ right, and ye'll dance a hornpipe like a jim-crack.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Excuse me, sir; I think I have taken enough; do, please, either take me
+ back to my vessel, or where you are going to. This is no place for me!&rdquo;
+ said Manuel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sure, what signifies; don't be talking your botheration here; a nigger
+ musn't sauce a white man. Come, there's no use backing out; you must take
+ a glass of Swizer's lager beer,&rdquo; said Dunn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Manuel looked around him, and then closing up very reluctantly, the
+ Dutchman filled his glass with frothy beer, and the three touched glasses
+ and drank. They then retired to a bench and commenced discussing the
+ propriety of some point of their official privileges, while Manuel was
+ left standing at the counter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who pay de drink vat shu get?&rdquo; inquired the Dutchman, anxious to serve
+ two little niggers who had just come in with bottles in their hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was our friend's treat; come, my good fellow, do the clean thing
+ according to Southern science. We'll put a good word in for you to the
+ jailer; you won't lose nothing by it,&rdquo; said Dusenberry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My friends, I work hard for my money, and have none to spend foolishly.
+ The small amount is of little consequence, but I would much sooner make
+ you a present of it, than to be drugged by pretence. I've no desire to
+ indulge the propensities of others. Whatever you are going to do with me,
+ do it; and let me know my fate. I am sick and fatigued, and have need for
+ the doctor. Take me to a prison or where you please. I have done no crime;
+ I want sleep, not punishment. Next time I shipwrecked, I get plank and go
+ overboard 'fore I cum to Charleston.&rdquo; So saying, he pulled out fifty cents
+ and threw it upon the counter, and the Dutchman swept it into the drawer,
+ as if it was all right, and &ldquo;just the change.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Shut up, you black rascal, you; you musn't talk that way in South
+ Carolina; we'll have you stretched on the frame and paddled for insolence
+ to a white man. D&mdash;n me, if you're in such a hurry for it, just come
+ along,&rdquo; said Dusenberry; and reaching his hand over to Dunn, took the
+ handcuffs from him and attempted to put them on Manuel's wrists. The poor
+ fellow struggled and begged for more than ten minutes, and was wellnigh
+ overpowering them, when Dusenberry drew a long dirk-knife from his bosom,
+ and holding it in a threatening attitude at his breast, uttered one of
+ those fierce yells such as are common to slave-hunters, whose business it
+ is to hunt and run down runaway niggers with bloodhounds. &ldquo;Submit, you
+ black villain, or I'll have your heart's blood; bring a rope, and we'll
+ trise him up here. Jump, be quick, Swizer!&rdquo; said he, addressing himself to
+ the Dutchman. The Dutchman ran into the front apartment; brought out a
+ cord similar to a clothes-line; and commenced to undo it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you give up now?&rdquo; said Dusenberry, still holding the knife pointed at
+ him. Manuel was in the habit of carrying a poniard when on shore in
+ foreign countries, and put his hand to his breast-pocket to feel for it.
+ He remembered that he had left it in his chest, and that resistance would
+ be useless against a posse giving expression to such hostility to him. The
+ shackles were put upon his hands with ruffianly force.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh! am I a man, or am I a brute? What have I done to receive such
+ treatment? May God look down upon me and forgive me my transgressions; for
+ in his hands are my rights, and he will give me justice,&rdquo; said Manuel,
+ looking his cruel torturers in the face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A man! No, by heavens, you're a nigger; an' it's that we'd he teaching
+ you! Come, none of yer sermons here, trot off! We'll give you a
+ handkerchief to cover your hands, if you're so d&mdash;d delicate about
+ walking through the streets,&rdquo; said Dunn, throwing him an old red
+ handkerchief, and marching him along through Broad street. Dusenberry now
+ left him entirely in the charge of Dunn; while, as he said, he went to
+ Adger's Wharf to keep his eye on another vessel that was approaching the
+ dock. The tricks of this man Dunn were well known to those, connected with
+ the police and sheriff's office; but, instead of being displaced for his
+ many offences, he was looked upon by them as the best officer upon the
+ rolls; and in fishing for mischievous niggers he was held as a perfect
+ paragon. In this instance he was not contented with the outrages he had
+ inflicted upon Manuel at the Dutch grog-shop, which he had forced him
+ into, but he would stop in the public street to hold conversation with
+ every cove he met, and keep the poor man standing for public gaze, like
+ chained innocence awaiting the nod of a villain. The picture would have
+ been complete, if a monster in human form were placed in the foreground
+ applying the lash, according to the statute laws of South Carolina.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI. THE SHERIFF'S OFFICE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ IT is nine o'clock, on the morning of the 24th March, 1852. Manuel was
+ marched into the sheriff's office, situated in the court-house, on the
+ corner of Broad and Meeting streets. A large table stood in the centre of
+ the room, covered with sundry old papers and an inkstand. At one side was
+ an old sofa, bearing strong evidence of its being worn out at the expense
+ of the State. A few pine-wood and painted book-stands, several tip-staffs,
+ old broken-backed chairs, and last, but not least, a wood-sawyer's
+ buck-saw, stood here and there in beautiful disorder around the room;
+ while, as if to display the immense importance of the office, a &ldquo;cocked&rdquo;
+ hat with the judicial sword hung conspicuously above the old sofa. A door
+ opened upon the left hand, leading into the clerk's office, where the
+ books and archives of the office were kept. Mr. Kanapeaux, the incumbent,
+ exhibited a great deal of good feeling, which it would have lost the
+ sheriff none of his reputation to pattern after, and kept his office in
+ very respectable order.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come in 'ere, Manwell, or whatever yer name is,&rdquo; said Dunn, as he led the
+ way into the presence of Mr. Grimshaw, the lean, haggard-looking man we
+ have before described. His dark, craven features, as he sat peering
+ through his glasses at the morning news, gave him the appearance of a man
+ of whom little was, to be expected by those who had the misfortune to fall
+ into his hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! Dunn, you are the best officer in the city; 'pon my soul, these
+ fellows can't escape you! Where did you pick up that nigger?&rdquo; said he,
+ with a look of satisfaction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A fat fee case, Mr. Grimshaw, 'contrary to law;' he's a Portugee nigger.
+ Never had so much trouble with a nigger in my life; I didn't know but the
+ fellow was going to preach a sermon. The Captain-he belongs to a wrecked
+ Englishman-wanted to come the gammon game with him, and pass him for a
+ white man; but sure he couldn't come that game over meself and Duse,
+ anyhow,&rdquo; said Dunn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without saying a word, Manuel stood up before his accusers, upon this
+ strange charge of &ldquo;contrary to law.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he looked upon his accusers, he said, &ldquo;What have I done to suffer a
+ murderer's fate? Am I to be sold as a slave, because of the visitation of
+ God? I have done no murder! No!&mdash;nor have I stolen in your land! and
+ why did these men decoy me into&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Silence! silence! You are in the sheriff's office,&rdquo; said Dunn, pointing
+ his finger at his nose. &ldquo;You can't come your John Bull nigger in South
+ Carolina.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This brought the sheriff's clerk to the door that led into the passage.
+ &ldquo;Dunn, I have warned you about these things several times; the public are
+ getting wind of them; they'll bring this office into disrepute yet. You
+ ought to know what effect the association of officials with these
+ 'corner-shop keepers' is already having in the community,&rdquo; said he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How the divil do ye know what yer talking about; sure it's his honor's
+ bisniss, and not yours at all, at all,&rdquo; said Dunn, addressing himself to
+ Mr. Kanapeaux, and then looking at Mr. Grimshaw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Kanapeaux, you must not interfere with the officers and their duty;
+ attend to your business, and get, your book ready to register this
+ nigger-boy,&rdquo; said Grimshaw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, now, my good fellow,&rdquo; continued Grimshaw, &ldquo;I dislike this business
+ very much; it don't pay me enough for all the bother I have with it. 'Tis
+ just a little filtering of fees, which makes the duty of my office
+ exceedingly annoying. But we must respect the law. We do these things to
+ protect our institutions and make them as light as possible. I might give
+ you a great deal of trouble; I have the power, but I make it a point to
+ consider men in your case, and we'll make you so comfortable that you
+ won't think of being imprisoned. You must understand that it is 'contrary
+ to law' to come among our niggers in this way; it gives them fanciful
+ ideas. There's such an infernal imperfect state of things as these
+ abolitionists are getting every thing into, behooves us to watch the
+ communications which are going on between, designing people and our
+ slaves. We are a hospitable people&mdash;the world knows that&mdash;and
+ have a religious respect for our laws, which we enforce without respect to
+ persons. We'd like to let you go about the city, but then it's 'contrary
+ to law.' Make up your mind, my good fellow, that you are among humane
+ people, who will seek to benefit you among men of your class. Make
+ yourself happy&mdash;and look upon me as a friend, and you will never be
+ deceived. I control the jail, and my prisoners are as much attached to me
+ as they would be to a father.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It must be humanity that puts these symbols of ignominy upon my hands,&rdquo;
+ said Manuel; &ldquo;that confines me in a dungeon lest I should breathe a word
+ of liberty to ears that know it only as a fable.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nobody had asked him to sit down, and, feeling the effect of his sickness
+ and fatigue, he turned around as if to look for something to rest against.
+ &ldquo;You must not sit down,&mdash;take off your hat!&rdquo; said Grimshaw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The poor fellow made an effort, but could not effect it with the fetters
+ on his hands; at which, Dunn stepped up, and snatching it from his head,
+ flung it upon the floor. &ldquo;You should learn manners, my good fellow,&rdquo; said
+ Grimshaw, &ldquo;when you come into a sheriff's office. It's a place of
+ importance, and people always pay respect to it when they come into it; a
+ few months in Charleston would make you as polite as our niggers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Had you not better take the irons off the poor fellow's hands?&mdash;he
+ looks as if he was tired out,&rdquo; said Mr. Kanapeaux, the clerk, who again
+ came to the door and looked upon Manuel with an air of pity. The words of
+ sympathy touched his feelings deeply; it was a simple word in his favour,
+ so different from what he had met since he left the vessel, that he felt a
+ kind friend had spoken in his behalf, and he gave way to his feeling in a
+ gush of tears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good suggestion, Mr. Kanapeaux!&rdquo; said Grimshaw. &ldquo;Better take 'em off, Mr.
+ Dunn; I don't think he'll give you any more difficulty. He seems like a
+ 'likely fellow,' and knows, if he cuts up any nigger rascality in
+ Charleston, he'll be snapped up. Now, my good fellow, put on your
+ best-natured countenance, and stand as straight as a ramrod. Mr.
+ Kanapeaux, get your book ready to register him,&rdquo; continued Grimshaw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Manuel now stood up under a slide, and his height and general features
+ were noted in the following manner, in order to appease that sovereign
+ dignity of South Carolina law, which has so many strange devices to show
+ its importance:&mdash;&ldquo;Contrary to Law.&rdquo; Violation of the Act of 1821, as
+ amended, &amp;c. &amp;c. Manuel Pereira vs. State of South Carolina,
+ Steward on board British Brig Janson, Captain Thompson. Entered 24th
+ March, 1852.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Height, 5 feet 8 1/2 inches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Complexion, light olive, (bright.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Features, sharp and aquiline.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [Hair and eyes, dark and straight; the former inclined to curl.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ General remarks:&mdash;Age, twenty-nine; Portuguese by birth; speaks
+ rather broken, but politely; is intelligent, well formed, and good
+ looking. Fees to Sheriff:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To arrest, $2&mdash;Registry, $2 - $4 00 To Recog. $1.31&mdash;Constable.
+ $1 - $2.31 To Commitment and discharge, $1.00
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ $7.31
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jail fees to be added when discharged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After these remarks were duly entered, and Mr. Grimshaw read another
+ lecture to him on the importance of South Carolina law, and the kindness
+ he would receive at his hands if he made himself con-tented, he was told
+ that he could go and be committed. The poor fellow had stood up until he
+ was nearly exhausted; yet, it was not enough to gratify the feelings of
+ that miserable miscreant, Dunn. Scarcely had he left the sheriff's office,
+ or passed two squares from the court-house, before he entered another
+ Dutch grog-shop, a little more respectable in appearance-but not in
+ character. They entered by a side door, which led into a back apartment
+ provided with a table and two wooden settees. As Dunn entered, he was
+ recognised by two negro-fellows, who were playing dominoes at the table.
+ They arose and ran through the front store, into the street, as if some
+ evil spirit had descended among them. The Dutchman sprang for the
+ dominoes, and quickly thrust them into a tin measure which he secreted
+ under the counter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! Drydez!&rdquo; said Dunn; &ldquo;you vagabond, you; up to the old tricks again?
+ Ye Dutchmen are worse than the divil! It's meself'll make ye put a five
+ for that. Come, fork it over straight, and don't be muttering yer Dutch
+ lingo!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Vat zue drink mit me dis morning? Misser Dunz' te best fellow vat comez
+ in my shop,&rdquo; said Drydez.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! stop yer botheration, and don't be comin' yer Dutch logger over an
+ Irishman! put down the five dollars, and we'll take the drinks presently;
+ meself and me friend here'll drink yer health,&rdquo; said Dunn, pointing to
+ Manuel, who shook his head as much as to decline. The Dutchman now opened
+ his drawer, and rolling a bill up in his fingers, passed it as if
+ unobserved into the hands of Dunn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, Drydez,&rdquo; said Dunn, &ldquo;if ye want to do the clean thing, put a couple
+ of brandy smashes-none of your d&mdash;d Dutch cut-throat brandy-the best
+ old stuff. Come, me old chuck, (turning to Manuel and pulling him by the
+ Whiskers,) cheer up, another good stiff'ner will put you on your taps
+ again. South Carolina's a great State, and a man what can't be happy in
+ Charleston, ought to be put through by daylight by the abolitionists.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Dutchman soon prepared the smashes, and supplying them with straws,
+ put them upon the table, and seated chairs close at hand. &ldquo;Excuse me!&rdquo;
+ said Manuel, &ldquo;I've drunk enough already, and should like to lie down. I am
+ unwell, and feel the effect of what I have already taken. I am too feeble.
+ Pray tell me how far the prison is from here, and I will go myself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go, is it?&mdash;the divil a go ye'll go from this until ye drink the
+ smash. None of yer Portugee independence here. We larn niggers the
+ politeness of gintlemen in Charleston, me buck!&rdquo; and seizing him by the
+ collar, dragged him to the table, then grasping the tumbler with the other
+ hand, he held it before his face. &ldquo;Do you see that? and, bedad, ye'll
+ drink it, and not be foolin', or I'd put the contents in your phiz,&rdquo; said
+ he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Manuel took the glass, while the Dutchman stood chuckling over the very
+ nice piece of fun, and the spice of Mr. Dunn's wit, as he called it. &ldquo;Vat
+ zu make him vat'e no vants too? You doz make me laugh so ven zu comes
+ 'ere, I likes to kilt myself,&rdquo; said Drydez.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A bright mulatto-fellow was now seen in the front store, making quizzical
+ signs to the Dutchman; who understanding its signification, lost no time
+ in slipping into his pocket a tumbler nearly half full of brandy and
+ water; and stepping behind the division door, passed it slily to the
+ mulatto, who equally as slily passed it down his throat; and putting a
+ piece of money into the Dutchman's hand, stepped up to the counter, as if
+ to wait for his change. &ldquo;All right!&rdquo; said the Dutchman, looking around at
+ his shelves, and then again under the counter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No so!&rdquo; said the mulatto; &ldquo;I want fourpence; you done' dat befor' several
+ times; I wants my money.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Get out of my store, or I'll kick you out,&rdquo; said the Dutchman, and
+ catching up a big club, ran from behind the counter and commenced
+ belaboring the negro over the head in a most unmerciful manner. At this,
+ the mulatto retreated into the lane, and with a volley of the vilest
+ epithets, dared the Dutchman to come out, and he would whip him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dunn ran to the scene, and ordered the negro to be off, and not use such
+ language to a white man, that it was &ldquo;contrary to law,&rdquo; and he would take
+ him to the workhouse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, massa, I knows what 'em respect white men what be gemmen like
+ yersef, but dat Dutchman stand da'h a'n't no gentlem', he done gone tieffe
+ my money seven time; an' I whip him sure-jus' lef' him come out here. I
+ doesn't care for true, and God saw me, I be whip at the wukhouse next
+ minute. He tief, an' lie, an 'e cheat me.&rdquo; The Dutchman stood at the door
+ with the big stick in his hand-the negro in the middle of the lane with
+ his fists in a pugilistic attitude, daring and threatening, while the
+ limping Dunn stood by the side of the Dutchman, acting as a mediator.
+ Manuel, taking advantage of the opportunity, emptied his tumbler down a
+ large opening in the floor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is a notorious fact in Charleston, that although the negro, whether he
+ be a black or white one, is held in abject obedience to the white man
+ proper, no matter what his grade may be, yet such is the covetous and
+ condescending character of these groggery keepers, that they become
+ courteous to the negro and submit to an equality of sociability. The
+ negro, taking advantage of this familiarity, will use the most insulting
+ and abusive language to this class of Dutchmen, who, either through
+ cowardice, or fear of losing their trade, never resent it. We may say, in
+ the language of Dunn, when he was asked if negroes had such liberties with
+ white men in Charleston, &ldquo;A nigger knows a Dutch shopkeeper better than he
+ knows himself-a nigger dare not speak that way to anybody else.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Dutchman gets a double profit from the negro, and with it diffuses a
+ double vice among them, for which they have to suffer the severest
+ penalty. It is strictly &ldquo;contrary to law&rdquo; to purchase any thing from a
+ negro without a ticket to sell it, from his master. But how is this
+ regarded? Why, the shopkeeper foregoes the ticket, encourages the
+ warehouse negro to steal, and purchases his stealings indiscriminately, at
+ about one-half their value. We might enumerate fifty different modes
+ practised by &ldquo;good&rdquo; legal voting citizens&mdash;totally regardless of the
+ law&mdash;and exerting an influence upon the negro tenfold more direful
+ than that which could possibly arise from the conversation of a few
+ respectable men belonging to a friendly nation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dunn, after driving the mulatto man from the door and upbraiding the
+ Dutchman for his cowardice, returned to the table, and patting Manuel upon
+ the back, drank the balance of his smash, saying, &ldquo;Come, me good fellow,
+ we must do the thing up brown, now; we've got the Dutchman nailed on his
+ own hook. We must have another horn; it's just the stuff in our climate;
+ the 'Old Jug's' close by, and they'll be makin' a parson of you when you
+ get there. We've had a right jolly time; and ye can't wet your whistle
+ when ye're fernint the gates.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't ask such favors, and will drink no more,&rdquo; said Manuel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fill her up, Drydez! fill her up! two more smashes-best brandy and no
+ mistake. You must drink another, my old chuck-we'll bring the pious
+ notions out o' ye in Charleston,&rdquo; said Dunn, turning around to Manuel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Dutchman filled the glasses, and Dunn, laying his big hickory stick
+ upon the counter, took one in each hand, and going directly to Manuel,
+ &ldquo;There, take it, and drink her off-no humbugging; yer mother niver gave
+ such milk as that,&rdquo; said he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Excuse me, sir; I positively will not!&rdquo; said Manuel, and no sooner had he
+ lisped the words, than Dunn threw the whole contents in his face. Enraged
+ at such outrageous conduct, the poor fellow could stand it no longer, and
+ fetched him a blow that levelled him upon the floor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Dutchman ran to the assistance of Dunn, and succeeded in relieving him
+ from his unenviable situation. Not satisfied, however, they succeeded,
+ after a hard struggle, in getting him upon the floor, when the
+ Dutchman-after calling the assistance of a miserable negro, held him down
+ while Dunn beat him with his stick. His cries of &ldquo;Murder&rdquo; and &ldquo;Help&rdquo;
+ resounded throughout the neighbourhood, and notwithstanding they attempted
+ to gag him, brought several persons to the spot. Among them was a
+ well-known master builder, in Charleston-a very muscular and a very humane
+ man. The rascality of Dunn was no new thing to him, for he had had
+ practical demonstrations of it upon his own negroes,&mdash;who had been
+ enticed into the &ldquo;corner shops&rdquo; for the double purpose of the Dutchmen
+ getting their money, and the officers getting hush-money from the owner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The moment he saw Dunn, he exclaimed, &ldquo;Ah! you vagabond!&rdquo; and springing
+ with the nimbleness of a cat, struck the Dutchman a blow that sent him
+ measuring his length, into a corner among a lot of empty boxes; then
+ seizing Dunn by the collar, he shook him like a puppy, and brought him a
+ slap with his open hand that double-dyed his red face, and brought a
+ stream of claret from his nose; while the miserable nigger, who had been
+ struggling to hold Manuel down, let go his hold, and ran as if his life
+ was in danger. The scene was disgusting in the extreme. Manuel arose, with
+ his face cut in several places, his clothes bedaubed with filth from the
+ floor, and his neck and shirt-bosom covered with blood; while the aghast
+ features of Dunn, with his red, matted hair, and his glaring, vicious
+ eyes, bespattered with the combined blood of his victim and his own nasal
+ organ, gave him the most fiendish look imaginable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The gentleman, after reprimanding the Dutchman for keeping up these
+ miserable practices, which were disgracing the community, and bringing
+ suffering, starvation, and death upon the slaves, turned to Dunn, and
+ addressed him. &ldquo;You are a pretty officer of the law! A villain upon the
+ highway-a disgrace to your color, and a stain upon those who retain you in
+ office. A man who has violated the peace and every principle of honest
+ duty, a man who every day merits the worst criminal punishment, kept in
+ the favor of the municipal department, to pollute its very name. If there
+ is a spark of honesty left in the police department, I will use my
+ influence to stop your conduct. The gallows will be your doom yet. You
+ must not think because you are leagued in the same traffic.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dunn kept one of the worst and most notorious drinking-shops in
+ Charleston, but, to reconcile his office with that strict requirement
+ which never allowed any thing &ldquo;contrary to law&rdquo; in Charleston, he made his
+ wife a &ldquo;free trader.&rdquo; This special set of South Carolina may in effect be
+ classed among its many singular laws. It has an exceedingly accommodating
+ effect among bankrupt husbands, and acts as a masked battery for
+ innumerable sins in a business or official line. It so happens, once in a
+ while, that one of the &ldquo;fair free dealers&rdquo; gets into limbo through the
+ force of some ruthless creditor; and the &ldquo;Prison Bounds Act,&rdquo; being very
+ delicate in its bearings, frequently taxes the gallantry of the chivalrous
+ gentlemen of the Charleston bar that you are to go unpunished. And you,
+ Drydez,&rdquo; said he, turning to the Dutchman, &ldquo;I shall enter you upon the
+ information docket, as soon as I go down into the city.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Zeu may tu vat zeu plas mit me-te mayor bees my friend, an' he knowz vot
+ me ams. Yuz sees zel no bronty, no zin! Vot yu to mit de fine, ah?&rdquo; * * *
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'd like to see you do that same agin Mr.&mdash;. It wouldn't be savin'
+ yerself a pace-warrant, and another for assault and battery! Sure
+ magistrate Gyles is a first-rate friend of me own, and he'd not suffer me
+ imposed on. The d&mdash;d nigger was obstinate and wouldn't go to jail,&rdquo;
+ said Dunn in a cowardly, whimpering manner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh yez, me heard mit 'im swore, vat he no go to zale!&rdquo; rejoined the
+ Dutchman anxiously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tell me none of your lies,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;you are both the biggest rascals in
+ town, and carry on your concerted villany as boldly as if you had the
+ control of the city in your hands.&rdquo; Manuel was trembling under the
+ emotions of grief and revenge. His Portuguese blood would have revenged
+ itself at the poniard's point, but fortunately he had left it in his
+ chest. He saw that he had a friend at his hand, and with the earnestness
+ of a child, resigned himself to his charge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a few minutes quiet was produced, and the gentleman expressing a desire
+ to know how the trouble originated, inquired of Manuel how it was brought
+ about. But no sooner had he commenced his story, than he was interrupted
+ by Dunn asserting his right, according to the laws of South Carolina, to
+ make his declaration, which could not be refuted by the negro's statement,
+ or even testimony at law; and in another moment jumped up, and taking
+ Manuel by the collar, commanded him to come along to jail; and turning to
+ the gentleman, dared him to interfere with his duty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know how you take people to jail, very well. I'll now see that you
+ perform that duty properly, and not torture prisoners from place to place
+ before you get there. You inflict a worse punishment in taking poor,
+ helpless people to jail, than they suffer after they get there!&rdquo; said he;
+ and immediately joined Manuel and walked to the jail with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII. THE OLD JAIL.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THERE are three institutions in Charleston-either of which would be a
+ stain upon the name of civilization-standing as emblems of the
+ time-established notions of a people, and their cherished love for the
+ ancestral relics of a gone-by age. Nothing could point with more unerring
+ aim than these sombre monuments do, to the distance behind the age that
+ marks the thoughts and actions of the Charlestonians. They are the
+ poor-house, hospital, and jail; but as the latter only pertains to our
+ present subject, we prefer to speak of it alone, and leave the others for
+ another occasion. The workhouse may be said to form an exception-that
+ being a new building, recently erected upon a European plan. It is very
+ spacious, with an extravagant exterior, surmounted by lofty semi-Gothic
+ watch-towers, similar to the old castles upon the Rhine. So great was the
+ opposition to building this magnificent temple of a workhouse, and so
+ inconsistent, beyond the progress of the age, was it viewed by the
+ &ldquo;manifest ancestry,&rdquo; that it caused the mayor his defeat at the following
+ hustings. &ldquo;Young Charleston&rdquo; was rebuked for its daring progress, and the
+ building is marked by the singular cognomen of &ldquo;Hutchinson's Folly.&rdquo; What
+ is somewhat singular, this magnificent building is exclusively for
+ negroes. One fact will show how progressive has been the science of law to
+ govern the negro, while those to which the white man is subjected are such
+ as good old England conferred upon them some centuries ago. For felonious
+ and burglarious offences, a white man is confined in the common jail; then
+ dragged to the market-place, stripped, and whipped, that the negroes may
+ laugh &ldquo;and go see buckra catch it;&rdquo; while a negro is sent to the
+ workhouse, confined in his cell for a length of time, and then whipped
+ according to modern science,&mdash;but nobody sees it except by special
+ permission. Thus the negro has the advantage of science and privacy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The jail is a sombre-looking building, with every mark of antiquity
+ standing boldly outlined upon its exterior. It is surrounded by a high
+ brick wall, and its windows are grated with double rows of bars,
+ sufficiently strong for a modern penitentiary. Altogether, its dark,
+ gloomy appearance strikes those who approach it, with the thought and
+ association of some ancient cruelty. You enter through an iron-barred
+ door, and on both sides of a narrow portal leading to the right are four
+ small cells and a filthy-looking kitchen, resembling an old-fashioned
+ smoke-house. These cells are the debtors'; and as we were passing out,
+ after visiting a friend, a lame &ldquo;molatto-fellow&rdquo; with scarcely rags to
+ cover his nakedness, and filthy beyond description, stood at what was
+ called the kitchen door. &ldquo;That poor dejected object,&rdquo; said our friend, &ldquo;is
+ the cook. He is in for misdemeanor-one of the peculiar shades of it, for
+ which a nigger is honored with the jail.&rdquo; &ldquo;It seems, then, that cooking is
+ a punishment in Charleston, and the negro is undergoing the penalty,&rdquo; said
+ we. &ldquo;Yes!&rdquo; said our friend; &ldquo;but the poor fellow has a sovereign
+ consolation, which few niggers in Charleston can boast of-and none of the
+ prisoners here have-he can get enough to eat.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The poor fellow held out his hand as we passed him, and said, &ldquo;Massa, gin
+ poor Abe a piece o' 'bacca'?&rdquo; We freely gave him all in our possession.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the left side, after passing the main iron door, are the jailer's
+ apartments. Passing through another iron door, you ascend a narrow,
+ crooked stairs and reach the second story; here are some eight or nine
+ miserable cells-some large and some small-badly ventilated, and entirely
+ destitute of any kind of furniture: and if they are badly ventilated for
+ summer, they are equally badly provided with means to warm them in winter.
+ In one of these rooms were nine or ten persons, when we visited it; and
+ such was the morbid stench escaping from it, that we were compelled to put
+ our handkerchiefs to our faces. This floor is appropriated for such crimes
+ as assault and battery; assault and battery, with intent to kill;
+ refractory seamen; deserters; violating the statutes; suspicion of arson
+ and murder; witnesses; all sorts of crimes, varying from the debtor to the
+ positive murderer, burglar, and felon. We should have enumerated, among
+ the rest, all stewards, (colored,) whether foreign or domestic, who are
+ committed on that singular charge, &ldquo;contrary to law.&rdquo; And it should have
+ been added, even though cast away upon our &ldquo;hospitable shores.&rdquo; Among all
+ these different shades of criminals, there must be some very bad men. And
+ we could recount three who were pointed out to us, as very dangerous men,
+ yet were allowed the favor of this floor and its associations. One was an
+ Irish sailor, who was sentenced to three years and nine months'
+ imprisonment by the United States court, for revolt and a desperate
+ attempt to murder the captain of a ship; the next was a German, a soldier
+ in the United States army, sentenced to one year and eight months'
+ imprisonment for killing his comrade; and the third was an English sailor,
+ who killed a woman-but as she happened to be of doubtful character, the
+ presiding judge of the sessions sentenced him to a light imprisonment,
+ which the Governor very condescendingly pardoned after a few weeks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two former acted as attendants, or deputy jailers; with the exception
+ of turning the key, which privilege the jailer reserved for himself
+ exclusively. The principle may seem a strange one, that places men
+ confined upon such grave charges in a superior position over prisoners;
+ and may be questionable with regard to the discipline itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From this floor, another iron door opened, and a winding passage led into
+ the third and upper story, where a third iron door opened into a
+ vestibule, on the right and left of which were grated doors secured with
+ heavy bolts and bars. These opened into narrow portals with dark, gloomy
+ cells on each side. In the floor of each of these cells was a large iron
+ ring-bolt, doubtless intended to chain refractory prisoners to; but we
+ were informed that such prisoners were kept in close stone cells, in the
+ yard, which were commonly occupied by negroes and those condemned to
+ capital punishment. The ominous name of this third story was &ldquo;Mount
+ Rascal,&rdquo; intended, no doubt, as significant of the class of prisoners it
+ contained. It is said that genius is never idle: the floor of these cells
+ bore some evidence of the fact in a variety of very fine specimens of
+ carving and flourish work, done with a knife. Among them was a
+ well-executed crucifix; with the Redeemer, on Calvary-an emblem of hope,
+ showing how the man marked the weary moments of his durance. We spoke with
+ many of the prisoners, and heard their different stories, some of which
+ were really painful. Their crimes were variously stated, from that of
+ murder, arson, and picking pockets, down to the felon who had stolen a
+ pair of shoes to cover his feet; one had stolen a pair of pantaloons, and
+ a little boy had stolen a few door-keys. Three boys were undergoing their
+ sentence for murder. A man of genteel appearance, who had been sentenced
+ to three years imprisonment, and to receive two hundred and twenty lashes
+ in the market, at different periods, complained bitterly of the injustice
+ of his case. Some had been flogged in the market, and were awaiting their
+ time to be flogged again and discharged; and others were confined on
+ suspicion, and had been kept in this close durance for more than six
+ months, awaiting trial. We noticed that this worst of injustice, &ldquo;the
+ law's delay,&rdquo; was felt worse by those confined on the suspicion of some
+ paltry theft, who, even were they found guilty by a jury, would not have
+ been subjected to more than one week imprisonment. Yet such was the
+ adherence to that ancient system of English criminal jurisprudence, that
+ it was almost impossible for the most innocent person to get a hearing,
+ except at the regular sessions, &ldquo;which sit seldom, and with large
+ intervals between.&rdquo; There is indeed a city court in Charleston, somewhat
+ more modern in its jurisprudence than the sessions. It has its city
+ sheriff, and its city officers, and holds its terms more frequently. Thus
+ is Charleston doubly provided with sheriffs and officials. Both aspire to
+ a distinct jurisdiction in civil and criminal cases. Prisoners seem mere
+ shuttlecocks between the sheriffs, with a decided advantage in favor of
+ the county sheriff, who is autocrat in rei over the jail; and any criminal
+ who has the good fortune to get a hearing before the city judge, may
+ consider himself under special obligation to the county sheriff for the
+ favor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We noticed these cells were much cleaner than those below, yet there was a
+ fetid smell escaping from them. This we found arose from the tubs being
+ allowed to stand in the rooms, where the criminals were closely confined,
+ for twenty-four hours, which, with the action of the damp, heated
+ atmosphere of that climate, was of itself enough to breed contagion. We
+ spoke of the want of ventilation and the noxious fumes that seemed almost
+ pestilential, but they seemed to have become habituated to it, and told us
+ that the rooms on the south side were lighter and more comfortable. Many
+ of them spoke cheerfully, and endeavored to restrain their feelings, but
+ the furrows upon their haggard countenances needed no tongue to utter its
+ tale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hunger was the great grievance of which they complained; and if their
+ stories were true&mdash;and we afterward had strong proofs that they were&mdash;there
+ was a wanton disregard of common humanity, and an abuse of power the most
+ reprehensible. The allowance per day was a loaf of bad bread, weighing
+ about nine ounces, and a pint of thin, repulsive soup, so nauseous that
+ only the most necessitated appetite could be forced to receive it, merely
+ to sustain animal life. This was served in a dirty-looking tin pan,
+ without even a spoon to serve it. One man told us that he had subsisted on
+ bread and water for nearly five weeks-that he had lain down to sleep in
+ the afternoon and dreamed that he was devouring some wholesome nourishment
+ to stay the cravings of his appetite, and awoke to grieve that it was but
+ a dream. In this manner his appetite was doubly aggravated, yet he could
+ get nothing to appease its wants until the next morning. To add to this
+ cruelty, we found two men in close confinement, the most emaciated and
+ abject specimens of humanity we have ever beheld. We asked ourselves,
+ &ldquo;Lord God! was it to be that humanity should descend so low?&rdquo; The first
+ was a forlorn, dejected-looking creature, with a downcast countenance,
+ containing little of the human to mark his features. His face was covered
+ with hair, and so completely matted with dirt and made fiendish by the
+ tufts of coarse hair that hung over his forehead, that a thrill of horror
+ invaded our feelings. He had no shoes on his feet; and a pair of ragged
+ pantaloons, and the shreds of a striped shirt without sleeves, secured
+ around the waist with a string, made his only clothing. In truth, he had
+ scarce enough on to cover his nakedness, and that so filthy and swarming
+ with vermin, that he kept his shoulders and hands busily employed; while
+ his skin was so incrusted with dirt as to leave no trace of its original
+ complexion. In this manner he was kept closely confined, and was more like
+ a wild beast who saw none but his keepers when they came to throw him his
+ feed. Whether he was kept in this manner for his dark deeds or to cover
+ the shame of those who speculated upon his misery, we leave to the
+ judgment of the reader.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We asked this poor mortal what he had done to merit such a punishment? He
+ held his head down, and motioned his fevered lips. &ldquo;Speak out!&rdquo; said we,
+ &ldquo;perhaps we can get you out.&rdquo; &ldquo;I had no shoes, and I took a pair of boots
+ from the gentleman I worked with,&rdquo; said he in a low, murmuring tone,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gracious, man!&rdquo; said we, &ldquo;a pair of boots! and is that all you are here
+ for?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, sir! he lives on the wharf, is very wealthy, and is a good man: 't
+ wasn't his fault, because he tried to get me out if I'd pay for the boots,
+ but they wouldn't let him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And how long have you been thus confined?&rdquo; said we.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Better than five months-but it's because there a'n't room up stairs.
+ They've been promising me some clothes for a long time, but they don't
+ come,&rdquo; he continued.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And how much longer have you to stop in this condition?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, they say 'at court sets in October; it's somethin' like two months
+ off; the grand jury'll visit the jail then, and maybe they'll find a bill'
+ against me, and I'll be tried. I dont't care if they only don't flog me in
+ that fish-market.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then you have not been tried yet? Well, may God give that man peace to
+ enjoy his bounty, who would consign a poor object like thee to such
+ cruelty!&rdquo; said we.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was raised in Charleston-can neither read nor write-I have no father,
+ and my mother is crazy in the poor-house, and I work about the city for a
+ living, when I'm out!&rdquo; said he. There was food for reflection in this poor
+ fellow's simple story, which we found to be correct, as corroborated by
+ the jailer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you get enough to eat?&rdquo; we asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh no, indeed! I could eat twice as much-that's the worst on't: 't
+ wouldn't be bad only for that. I git me loaf' in the mornin', and me soup
+ at twelve, but I don't git nothin' to eat at night, and a feller's mighty
+ hungry afore it's time to lay down,&rdquo; said he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We looked around the room, and not seeing any thing to sleep upon,
+ curiosity led us to ask him where he slept.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The jail allows us a blanket-that's mine in the corner: I spread it at
+ night when I wants to go to bed,&rdquo; he answered, quite contentedly. We left
+ the poor wretch, for our feelings could withstand it no longer. The state
+ of society that would thus reduce a human being, needed more pity than the
+ calloused bones reduced to such a bed. His name was Bergen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other was a young Irishman, who had been dragged to jail in his shirt,
+ pantaloons, and hat, on suspicion of having stolen seven dollars from a
+ comrade. He had been in jail very near four months, and in regard to filth
+ and vermin was a counterpart of the other. A death-like smell, so
+ offensive that we stopped upon the threshold, escaped from the room as
+ soon as the door opened, enough to destroy a common constitution, which
+ his emaciated limbs bore the strongest evidence of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The prisoners upon the second story were allowed the privilege of the yard
+ during certain hours in the day, and the debtors at all hours in the day;
+ yet, all were subjected to the same fare. In the yard were a number of
+ very close cells, which, as we have said before, were kept for negroes,
+ refractory criminals, and those condemned to capital punishment. These
+ cells seemed to be held as a terror over the criminals, and well they
+ might, for we never witnessed any thing more dismal for the tenement of
+ man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIII. HOW IT IS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ IT is our object to show the reader how many gross abuses of power exist
+ in Charleston, and to point him to the source. In doing this, the task
+ becomes a delicate one, for there are so many things we could wish were
+ not so, because we know there are many good men in the community whose
+ feelings are enlisted in the right, but their power is not coequal; and if
+ it were, it is checked by an opposite influence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The more intelligent of the lower classes look upon the subject of
+ politics in its proper light&mdash;they see the crashing effect the
+ doctrine of nullification has upon their interests; yet, though their
+ numbers are not few, their voice is small, and cannot sound through the
+ channels that make popular influence. Thus all castes of society are
+ governed by impracticable abstractions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The jail belongs to the county&mdash;the municipal authorities have no
+ voice in it; and the State, in its legislative benevolence, has provided
+ thirty cents a day for the maintenance of each prisoner. This small sum,
+ in the State of South Carolina, where provision is extremely high, may be
+ considered as a paltry pittance; but more especially so when the
+ magnificent pretensions of South Carolina are taken into consideration,
+ and a comparison is made between this meagre allowance and that of other
+ States. Even Georgia, her sister State, and one whose plain modesty is
+ really worthy of her enterprising citizens, takes a more enlightened view
+ of a criminal's circumstances-allows forty-four cents a day for his
+ maintenance, and treats him as if he was really a human being. But for
+ this disparity and the wanton neglect of humane feelings South Carolinians
+ excuse themselves upon the ground that they have no penitentiary; nor do
+ they believe in that system of punishment, contending that it creates an
+ improper competition with the honest mechanic, and gives countenance to
+ crime, because it attempts to improve criminals. The common jail is made
+ the place of confinement, while the whipping-post and starvation supply
+ the correctives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sheriff being created an absolute functionary, with unlimited powers
+ to control the jail in all its varied functions, without either
+ commissioners or jail-committee, what state of management may be expected?
+ The court gives no specific direction as to the apartment or mode of
+ confinement when sentencing a criminal; consequently, it becomes an
+ established fact that the legislative confidence deposed in the sheriff is
+ used as a medium of favors, to be dispensed as best suits the feelings or
+ interests of the incumbent. Such power in the hands of an arbitrary,
+ vindictive, or avaricious man, affords unlimited means of abuse, and
+ without fear of exposure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may be inferred from what we have said that the jailer was relax in his
+ duty. This is not the case, for we have good authority that a more
+ kind-hearted and benevolent man never filled the office. But his power was
+ so restricted by those in absolute control, that his office became a mere
+ turnkey's duty, for which he was paid the pittance of five hundred dollars
+ a year or thereabouts. Thus he discharged his duty according to the
+ instructions of the sheriff, who, it was well known, looked upon the jail
+ as a means of speculation; and in carrying out his purposes, he would give
+ very benevolent instructions in words, and at the same time withhold the
+ means of carrying them out, like the very good man who always preached but
+ never practised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, how is it? What is the regimen of this jail-prison and how is it
+ provided? We will say nothing of that arduous duty which the jailer
+ performs for his small sum; nor the report that the sheriff's office is
+ worth fourteen thousand dollars a year: these things are too well
+ established. But the law provides thirty cents a day for the prisoner's
+ maintenance, which shall be received by the sheriff, who is to procure one
+ pound of good bread, and one pound of good beef per day for each man. Now
+ this provision is capable of a very elastic construction. The poor
+ criminal is given a loaf of bad bread, costing about three cents, and a
+ pound of meat, the most unwholesome and sickly in its appearance, costing
+ five cents. Allowing a margin, however, and we may say the incumbent has a
+ very nice profit of from eighteen to twenty cents per day on each
+ prisoner. But, as no provision is made against the possibility of the
+ criminal eating his meat raw, he is very delicately forced to an
+ alternative which has another profitable issue for the sheriff; that of
+ taking a pint of diluted water, very improperly called soup. Thus is
+ carried out that ancient law of England which even she is now ashamed to
+ own. Our feelings are naturally roused against the perpetration of such
+ abuses upon suffering humanity. We struggle between a wish to speak well
+ of her whose power it is to practise them, and an imperative duty that
+ commands us to speak for those who cannot speak for themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These things could not exist if the public mind was properly enlightened.
+ It is unnecessary to spend many words in exposing such palpable abuses, or
+ to trace the cause of their existence and continuance. One cause of this
+ is the wilful blindness and silly gasconade of some of those who lead and
+ form public opinion. With South Carolinians, nothing is done in South
+ Carolina that is not greater than ever was done in the United States-no
+ battles were ever fought that South Carolina did not win-no statesman was
+ ever equal to Mr. Calhoun-no confederacy would be equal to the Southern,
+ with South Carolina at its head-no political doctrines contain so much
+ vital element as secession, and no society in the Union is equal to South
+ Carolina for caste and elegance-not excepting the worthy and learned
+ aristocracy of Boston.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A will to do as it pleases and act as it pleases, without national
+ restraint, is the great drawback under which South Carolina sends forth
+ her groaning tale of political distress. Let her look upon her dubious
+ glory in its proper light-let her observe the rights of others, and found
+ her acts in justice!&mdash;annihilate her grasping spirit, and she will
+ find a power adequate to her own preservation. She can then show to the
+ world that she gives encouragement to the masses, and is determined to
+ persevere in that moderate and forbearing policy which creates its own
+ protection, merits admiration abroad, instead of rebuke, and which needs
+ no gorgeous military display to marshal peace at the point of the bayonet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIV. MANUEL PEREIRA COMMITTED.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ IT was nearly eleven o'clock as they ascended the jail steps and rang the
+ bell for admittance. The jailer, a stout, rough-looking man, opened the
+ iron door, and as Manuel was about to step over the stone sill, Dunn gave
+ him a sudden push that sent him headlong upon the floor. &ldquo;Heavens! what
+ now?&rdquo; inquired the jailer with a look of astonishment, and at the next
+ moment Dunn raised his foot to kick Manuel in the face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You infernal beast!&rdquo; said the jailer, &ldquo;you are more like a savage than a
+ man-you are drunk now, you vagabond,&rdquo; and jumped in between them to save
+ him from the effect of the blow. As he did this, the gentleman who
+ accompanied them from the &ldquo;corner-shop,&rdquo; as a protection against Dunn's
+ cruelty, fetched Dunn a blow on the back of the neck that made him stagger
+ against a door, and created such confusion as to arouse the whole jail.
+ Turning to Manuel, he, with the assistance of the jailer, raised him from
+ the ground and led him into the jail-office. &ldquo;Mister jailer,&rdquo; said Dunn,
+ &ldquo;the prisoner is mine until such times as you receipt the commitment, and
+ I demand protection from you against this man. He has committed two
+ violent assaults upon me, when I'd be doing me duty.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have violated all duty, and are more like an incarnate fiend. You
+ first decoy men into rum-shops, and then you plunder and abuse them,
+ because you think they are black and can get no redress. You abused that
+ man unmercifully, because you knew his evidence was not valid against
+ you!&rdquo; said the gentleman, turning to the jailer, and giving him the
+ particulars of what he saw in the &ldquo;corner-shop,&rdquo; and what cruelties he had
+ seen practised by Dunn on former occasions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The jailer looked upon Manuel with commiseration, and handed him a chair
+ to sit down on. The poor fellow was excited and fatigued, for he had eaten
+ nothing that day, and been treated more like a brute than a human being
+ from the time, he left the ship until he arrived at the jail. He readily
+ accepted the kind offer, and commenced to tell the story of his treatment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You need' not tell me,&mdash;I know too much of that man already. It has
+ long been a mystery to me why he is retained in office.&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Dunn interrupted. &ldquo;Sure it's yer master I'd obey and not yerself, an'
+ I'd do what I'd plase with prisoners, and, it's his business and not
+ yeers. If ye had yer way, sure you'd be makin' white men of every nigger
+ that ye turned a key upon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Give me none of your insolence,&rdquo; said the jailer. &ldquo;You have no authority
+ beyond my door. Your brutal treatment to prisoners has caused me an
+ immense deal of trouble-more than my paltry pay would induce me to stay
+ for. Suppose you were indicted for these outrages? What would be the
+ result?&rdquo; asked the jailer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sure it's meself could answer for the sheriff, without yer bothering
+ yerself. I'd not work for yer, but for him; and he's yer master anyhow,
+ and knows all about it. Give me the receipt, and that's all I'd ax yer.
+ When a nigger don't mind me, I just makes him feel the delight of a
+ hickory stick.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, if you had the shame of a man in you, you'd not make a beast of
+ yourself with liquor, and treat these poor stewards as if they were dogs,&rdquo;
+ said the jailer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed, ye might learn a thing or two if ye was a politician like meself,
+ and belonged to the secession party. An' if his honor the sheriff-for he's
+ a dacent man-knew ye'd be preachin' in that shape, ye wouldn't keep the
+ jail f'nent the morning. Be letting me out, and make much of the nigger;
+ ye have him there.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The jailer unlocked the door and allowed him to pass out, with a pertinent
+ rebuke. This was but a trifling affair in Dunn's ear, for he knew his
+ master's feelings too well, and was backed by him in his most intolerable
+ proceedings. Returning to the office, he looked at the commitment, and
+ then again at Manuel. &ldquo;This is a 'contrary to law' case, I see, Mr.
+ Manuel; you are a likely fellow too, to come within that,&rdquo; said he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes. If I understand him right, he's a shipwrecked sailor, belonging to a
+ foreign vessel that was driven in here in distress,&rdquo; said the man. &ldquo;It's a
+ hard law that imprisons a colored seaman who comes here voluntarily; but
+ it seems beyond all manner of precedent to imprison a shipwrecked man like
+ this, especially when he seems so respectable. There are no circumstances
+ to warrant the enforcement of such a law.&rdquo; Thus saying, he left the jail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Be it said of the jailer, to his honor, so far as personal kindness went,
+ he did his utmost&mdash;brought him water to wash himself, and gave him
+ some clean clothes. After which, he was registered upon the criminal
+ calendar as follows:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;March 24, 1852.&mdash;Manuel Peirire.&mdash;[Committed by] Sheriff&mdash;Sheriff.
+ Crime&mdash;Contrary to law.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the jailer had done his duty, so far as his feelings were concerned;
+ but, such were the stern requirements of the law, and his functions so
+ restricted by Mr. Grimshaw, that he dare not make distinctions. He called
+ Daley, one of the criminal assistants, and ordered him to show the
+ prisoner his room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here, my boy, take yer blanket,&rdquo; said Daley; and throwing him a coarse,
+ filthy-looking blanket, told him to roll it up and follow him. &ldquo;It's on
+ the second floor we'll put ye, among the stewards; there's a nice lot on
+ 'em to keep yer company, and ye'll have a jolly time, my boy.&rdquo; Manuel
+ followed through the second iron door until he came to a large door
+ secured with heavy bolts and bars, which Daley began to withdraw and
+ unlock. &ldquo;Don't be takin' it amiss; it's a right good crib, savin' the'
+ bed, an' it's that's the worst of it. Bad luck to old Grimshaw, an'
+ himself thinks everybody's bones be's as tuf as his own,&rdquo; said Daley, and
+ threw open the heavy doors, sending forth those ominous prison sounds.
+ &ldquo;All here? Ah! yer a pretty set of lambs, as the British consul calls
+ yees. Have ye ever a drop to spare?&rdquo; At this, three or four
+ respectable-looking black men came to the door and greeted Manuel. &ldquo;Come,
+ talk her out, for th' auld man'll be on the scent.&rdquo; At this, one of the
+ confined stewards, a tall, good-looking mulatto man, ran his hand into a
+ large opening in the wall, and drew forth a little soda-bottle filled with
+ Monongahela whisky. Without giving reasonable time for politeness, Daley
+ seized the bottle, and putting it to his mouth, gauged about half its
+ contents into his homony dept, smacked his lips, wiped his mouth with his
+ cuff, and, passing the balance back, shut and rebolted the door, after
+ saying, &ldquo;Good luck till yees, an' I wish yees a merry time.&rdquo; The reader
+ may imagine what provision the State or the sheriff had made for the
+ comfort of these poor men, one of whom was imprisoned because it was
+ &ldquo;contrary to law&rdquo; to be driven into the port of Charleston in distress,
+ and the rest, peaceable, unoffending citizens belonging to distant States
+ and countries, and guilty of no crime, when we describe the room and
+ regimen to which they were subjected. The room was about twenty-six feet
+ long and ten feet wide. The brick walls were plastered and colored with
+ some kind of blue wash, which, however, was so nearly obliterated with
+ dirt and the damp of a southern climate, as to leave but little to show
+ what its original color was. The walls were covered with the condensed
+ moisture of the atmosphere, spiders hung their festooned network overhead,
+ and cockroaches and ants, those domesticated pests of South Carolina, were
+ running about the floor in swarms, and holding all legal rights to rations
+ in superlative contempt. Two small apertures in the wall, about fourteen
+ inches square, and double-barred with heavy flat iron, served to admit
+ light and air. The reader may thus judge of its gloomy appearance, and
+ what a miserable unhealthy cell it must have been in which to place men
+ just arrived from sea. There was not the first vestige of furniture in the
+ room, not; even a bench to sit upon, for the State, with its gracious
+ hospitality, forgot that men in jail ever sit down; but it was in keeping
+ with all other things that the State left to the control of its officials.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Am I to be punished in this miserable place? Why, I cannot see where I'm
+ going; and have I nothing to lay down upon but the floor, and that
+ creeping with live creatures?&rdquo; inquired Manuel of those who were already
+ inured to the hardship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nothing! nothing! Bring your mind to realize the worst, and forget the
+ cruelty while you are suffering it; they let us out a part of the day. We
+ are locked up to-day because one of the assistants stole my friend's
+ liquor, and he dared to accuse him of the theft, because he was a white
+ man,&rdquo; said a tall, fine-looking mulatto man by the name of James Redman,
+ who was steward on board a Thomastown (Maine) ship, and declared that he
+ had visited Charleston on a former occasion, and by paying five dollars to
+ one of the officers, remained on board of the ship unmolested.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And how long shall I have to suffer in this manner?&rdquo; inquired Manuel.
+ &ldquo;Can I not have my own bed and clothing?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, yes,&rdquo; said Redman; &ldquo;you can have them, but if you bring them here,
+ they'll not be worth anything when you leave; and the prisoners upon this
+ floor are so starved and destitute, that necessity forces them to steal
+ whatever comes in their way; and the assistants are as much implicated as
+ the prisoners. You'll fare hard; but just do as we do in a calm, wait for
+ the wind to blow, and pray for the best. If you say any thing, or grumble
+ about it, the sheriff will order you locked, up on the third story, and
+ that's worse than death itself. The first thing you do, make preparations
+ for something to eat. We pay for it here, but don't get it; and you'd
+ starve afore you'd eat what they give them poor white prisoners. They
+ suffer worse than we do, only they have cleaner rooms.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I pray for my deliverance from such a place as this.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His manners and appearance at once enlisted the respect of those present,
+ and they immediately set to work, with all the means at hand, to make him
+ comfortable. Joseph Jociquei, a young man who had been taken from a vessel
+ just arrived from Rio, and was more fortunate than the rest, in having a
+ mattrass, seeing Manuel's weak condition, immediately removed it from its
+ place, and spreading it upon the floor, invited him to lay down. The
+ invitation was as acceptable as it was kind on the part of Jociquei, and
+ the poor fellow laid his weary limbs upon it, and almost simultaneously
+ fell into a profound sleep. Manuel continued to sleep. His face and head
+ were scarred in several places; which were dressed and covered with pieces
+ of plaster that the jailer had supplied. His companions, for such we shall
+ call those who were confined with him, sat around him, discussing the
+ circumstances that brought him there, and the manner in which they could
+ best relieve his suffering. &ldquo;It's just as I was sarved,&rdquo; said Redman. &ldquo;And
+ I'll bet that red-headed constable, Dunn, brought him up: and abused him
+ in all them Dutch shops. I didn't know the law, and he made me give him
+ three dollars not to put the handcuffs upon me, and then I had to treat
+ him in every grog-shop we came to. Yes, and the last shop we were in, he
+ throw'd liquor in me face, cursed the Dutchman that kept the shop, kick'd
+ me, and tried every way in the world to raise a fuss. If I hadn't know'd
+ the law here too well, I'd whipt him sure. I have suffered the want of
+ that three dollars since I bin here. 'Twould sarved me for coffee. We have
+ neither coffee nor bread to-night, for we gave our allowance of bad bread
+ to the white prisoners, but we must do something to make the poor fellow
+ comfortable. I know the constable has kept him all day coming up, and
+ he'll be hungry as soon as he awakes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Won't he receive his allowance to-day like another prisoner?&rdquo; inquired
+ Copeland, a thick-set, well made, dark-skinned negro steward, who had
+ formerly conducted a barber shop in Fleet street, Boston, but was now
+ attached to the schooner Oscar Jones, Kellogg, master.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh! no, sir,&rdquo; said Redman, &ldquo;that's against the rules of the jail-every
+ thing is done by rule here, even to paying for what we don't get, and
+ starving the prisoners. A man that don't come in before eleven o'clock
+ gets no ration until the next morning. I know, because I had a fuss with
+ the jailer about it, the first day I was brought in; but he gin me a loaf
+ out of his own house. The old sheriff never allows any thing done outside
+ the rules, for he's tighter than a mantrap. 'T a'n't what ye suffers in
+ this cell, but it's what ye don't get to eat; and if that poor feller
+ a'n't got money, he'll wish himself alongside the caboose again 'fore he
+ gets out.&rdquo; The poor fellows were driven to the extreme of providing
+ sustenance to sustain life. They mustered their little means together, and
+ by giving a sum to the sheriff's black boy, (a man more intelligent,
+ gentlemanly, and generous-hearted than his master,) had a measure of
+ coffee, sugar, and bread brought in. Necessity was the mother of invention
+ with them, for they had procured a barrel for twenty-five cents, and made
+ it supply the place of a table. With a few chips that were brought to them
+ by a kind-hearted colored woman that did their washing, and bestowed many
+ little acts of kindness, they made a fire, endured the annoyance of a
+ dense smoke from the old fire-place, and prepared their little supper. As
+ soon as it was upon the table, they awoke Manuel, and invited him to join
+ in their humble fare. The poor fellow arose, and looking around the
+ gloomy, cavern-like place, heaved a deep sigh. &ldquo;It's hard to be brought to
+ this for nothing!&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;and my bones are so sore that I can scarcely
+ move. I must see the Captain and consul.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That won't do any good; you might as well keep quiet and drink your
+ coffee. A prisoner that says the least in this jail is best off,&rdquo; returned
+ Redman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Manuel took his bowl of coffee and a piece of bread, eating it with a good
+ appetite, and asking what time they got breakfast. &ldquo;It's the first time I
+ was abused in a foreign country. I'm Portuguese, but a citizen of Great
+ Britain, and got my protection.-When it won't save me, I'll never come to
+ South Carolina again, nor sail where a flag won't protect me. When I go
+ among Patagonians, I know what they do; but when I sail to United States
+ or be cast away on them, I don't know what they do, because I expect good
+ people.&rdquo; * * *
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind, my good fellow,&rdquo; said Redman; &ldquo;cheer up, take it as a good
+ sailor would a storm, and in the morning you'll get a small loaf of sour
+ bread and a bucket of water for breakfast, if you go to the pump for it.
+ Be careful to moderate your appetite when you breakfast according to the
+ State's rules; for you must save enough to last you during the day, and if
+ you can keep &ldquo;banyan day,&rdquo; as the Bluenose calls it, you're just the man
+ for this institution, and no mistake. Come, I see you're hungry; drink
+ another bowl of coffee, and eat plenty of bread; then you'll be all right
+ for another good sleep.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, but I don't expect to be in here long. But tell me, do we get
+ nothing more than a loaf? didn't the jail give us this supper?&rdquo; he
+ inquired with surprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Supper, indeed!&mdash;it's against the rules for prisoners to have
+ coffee; that's our private fixings; but you'll get a pound of bloody
+ neck-bone, they call beef, in the morning. I have twice thrown mine to the
+ dog, but he doesn't seem to thank me for it; so I told the cook he needn't
+ trouble his steelyards for me again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Redman's conversation was interrupted by a noise that seemed to be a ring
+ of the prison bell, and an anxious expression which Manuel gave utterance
+ to, indicated that he expected somebody would come to see him. He was not
+ disappointed, for a few minutes after, the bolts were heard to withdraw
+ and the heavy door swung back. There, true to his charge, was little
+ Tommy, in his nicest blue rig, tipped off a la man-o'-war touch, with his
+ palmetto-braid hat,&mdash;a long black ribbon displayed over the rim,&mdash;his
+ hair combed so slick, and his little round face and red cheeks so plump
+ and full of the sailor-boy pertness, with his blue, braided shirt-collar
+ laid over his jacket, and set off around the neck, with a black India
+ handkerchief, secured at the throat with the joint of a shark's backbone.
+ He looked the very picture and pattern of a Simon-Pure salt. He had wended
+ his way through strange streets and lanes, with a big haversack under his
+ arm, which Daley had relieved him of at the door, and brought into the
+ room under his arm. As soon as Manuel caught a glimpse of him, he rose and
+ clasped the little fellow in his arms with a fond embrace. No greeting
+ could be more affecting. Manuel exulted at seeing his little companion;
+ but Tommy looked grieved, and asked, &ldquo;But what has scarred your face so,
+ Manuel? You didn't look that way when you left the brig. We have had a
+ site o' folks down to see us to-day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, that's nothing!&mdash;just a little fall I got; don't tell the
+ Captain: it'll all be well to-morrow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here, Jack, take your knapsack; did yer bring ever a drop o' liquor for
+ the steward?&rdquo; said Daley, addressing himself to Tommy, and putting the
+ package upon the floor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, Manuel!&rdquo; said Tommy, &ldquo;the Captain sent you some nice bread and ham,
+ some oranges and raisins, and a bottle of nice claret,&mdash;for he was
+ told by the consul that they didn't give 'em nothing to eat at the jail.
+ And I had a tug with 'em, I tell you. I got lost once, and got a
+ good-natured black boy to pilot me for a Victoria threepence,&mdash;but he
+ did not like to carry the bundle to the jail, for fear of his master.
+ Captain 'll be up first thing in the morning, if he can get away from
+ business,&rdquo; said the little tar, opening the haversack and pulling out its
+ contents to tempt the hungry appetites of those around him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Daley very coolly took the bottle of claret by the neck, and holding it
+ between himself and the light, took a lunar squint at it, as if doubting
+ its contents; and then, putting it down, exclaimed, &ldquo;Ah! the divil a red
+ I'd give you for your claret. Sure, why didn't ye bring a token of good
+ old hardware?&rdquo; &ldquo;Hardware! what is hardware?&rdquo; inquired Manuel. &ldquo;Ah!
+ botheration to the bunch of yees&mdash;a drap of old whiskey, that 'd make
+ the delight cum f'nent. Have ye ne'er a drap among the whole o' yees?&rdquo;
+ Receiving an answer in the negative, he turned about with a Kilkenny, &ldquo;It
+ don't signify,&rdquo; and toddled for the door, which he left open, to await
+ Tommy's return. Redman knew Daley's propensity too well, and having ocular
+ proof that he had wet t'other eye until it required more than ordinary
+ effort to make either one stay open, he declined recognising his very
+ significant hint.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as Daley withdrew, Manuel invited his companions to partake of the
+ Captain's present, which they did with general satisfaction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XV. THE LAW'S INTRICACY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ WHILE the scenes we have described in the foregoing chapter were being
+ performed, several very interesting ones were going through the course of
+ performance at the consul's office and other places, which we must
+ describe. The British Government, in its instructions to Mr. Mathew,
+ impressed upon him the necessity of being very cautious lest he should in
+ any manner prejudice the interests of the local institutions within his
+ consular jurisdiction; to make no requests that were incompatible with the
+ local laws; but to pursue a judicious course in bringing the matter of Her
+ Majesty's subjects properly to the consideration of the legal authorities,
+ and to point to the true grievance; and as it involved a question of right
+ affecting the interests and liberties of her citizens, to ask the exercise
+ of that judicial power from which it had a right to expect justice. The
+ main object was to test the question whether this peculiar construction
+ given to that local law which prohibits free colored men from coming
+ within the limits of the State, was legal in its application to those who
+ come into its ports connected with the shipping interests, pursuing an
+ honest vocation, and intending to leave whenever their ship was ready. The
+ consul was censured by the press in several of the slaveholding States,
+ because he dared to bring the matter before the local legislature. We are
+ bound to say that Consul Mathew, knowing the predominant prejudices of the
+ Carolinians, acted wisely in so doing. First, he knew the tenacious value
+ they put upon courtesy; secondly, the point at issue between South
+ Carolina and the Federal Government, (and, as a learned friend in Georgia
+ once said, &ldquo;Whether South Carolina belonged to the United States, or the
+ United States to South Carolina;&rdquo;) and thirdly, the right of State
+ sovereignty, which South Carolina held to be of the first importance. To
+ disregard the first, would have been considered an insult to the feelings
+ of her people; and if the question had first been mooted with the Federal
+ Government, the ire of South Carolinians would have been fired; the slur
+ in placing her in a secondary position would have sounded the war-trumpet
+ of Abolition encroachments, while the latter would have been considered a
+ breach of confidence, and an unwarrantable disregard of her assertion of
+ State rights. The Executive transmitted the documents to the Assembly,
+ that body referred them to special committees, and the Messrs. Mazyck and
+ McCready, reported as everybody in South Carolina expected, virtually
+ giving the British consul a very significant invitation to keep his
+ petitions in his pocket for the future, and his &ldquo;black lambs&rdquo; out of the
+ State, or it might disturb their domesticated ideas. Thus was the right
+ clearly reserved to themselves, and the question settled, so far as the
+ State Legislature was concerned. The next course for Mr. Mathew was to
+ appeal to the Judiciary, and should redress be denied, make it the medium
+ of bringing the matter, before the Federal courts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We cannot forbear to say, that the strenuous opposition waged against this
+ appeal of common humanity arose from political influence, supported by a
+ set of ultra partisans, whose theoretical restrictions, assisted by the
+ voice of the press, catered to the war-spirit of the abstractionists.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The British consul, as the representative of his government, knowing the
+ personal suffering to which the subjects of his country were subjected by
+ the wretched state of the Charleston prison, and its management, sought to
+ remove no restriction that might be necessary for protecting their
+ dangerous institutions, but to relieve that suffering. He had pointed the
+ authorities to the wretched state of the prison, and the inhuman regimen
+ which existed within it; but, whether through that superlative
+ carelessness which has become so materialized in the spirit of society&mdash;that
+ callousness to misfortune so strongly manifested by the rich toward the
+ industrious poor and the slaves-or, a contempt for his opinions, because
+ he had followed out the instructions of his government, things went on in
+ the same neglected manner and no attention was paid to them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, we dare assert that a large, portion of the excitement which the
+ question has caused has arisen from personal suffering, consequent upon
+ that wretched state of jail provisions which exists in South Carolina, and
+ which, to say the least, is degrading to the spirit and character of a
+ proud people. If a plea could be made, for excuse, upon the shattered
+ finances of the State, we might tolerate something of the abuse. But this
+ is not the case; and when its privileges become reposed in men who make
+ suffering the means to serve their own interests, its existence becomes an
+ outrage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A stronger evidence of the cause of these remonstrances on the part of the
+ British Government, is shown by the manner in which it has been submitted
+ to in Georgia. The British consul of the port of Savannah, a gentleman
+ whose intelligence and humane feelings are no less remarkable than Mr.
+ Mathew's, has never had occasion to call the attention of the Executive of
+ Georgia to the abuse of power consequent upon the imprisonment of colored
+ seamen belonging to the ships of Great Britain in that port. The seaman
+ was imprisoned, consequently deprived of his liberty; but there was no
+ suffering attendant beyond the loss of liberty during the stay of the
+ vessel; for the imprisonment itself was a nominal thing; the imprisoned
+ was well cared for; he had good, comfortable apartments, cleanly and well
+ ordered, away from the criminals, and plenty of good, wholesome food to
+ eat. There was even a satisfaction in this, for the man got what he paid
+ for, and was treated as if he were really a human being. Thus, with the
+ exception of the restriction on the man's liberty, and that evil, which
+ those interested in commerce would reflect upon as a tax upon the marine
+ interests of the port to support a municipal police, because it imposes a
+ tax and burdensome annoyance upon owners for that which they have no
+ interest in and can derive no benefit from, the observance of the law had
+ more penalty in mental anxiety than bodily suffering. We have sometimes
+ been at a loss to account for the restriction, even as it existed in
+ Georgia, and especially when we consider the character of those
+ controlling and developing the enterprising commercial affairs of
+ Savannah.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But we must return to South Carolina. If we view this law as a police
+ regulation, it only gives us broader latitude. If a community has that
+ within itself which is dangerous to its well-being, it becomes pertinent
+ to inquire whether there is not an imperfect state of society existing,
+ and whether this policy is not injurious to the well-being of the State.
+ The evil, though it be a mortifying fact, we are bound to say, arises from
+ a strange notion of caste and color, which measures sympathy according to
+ complexion. There is no proof that can possibly be adduced, showing that
+ colored seamen have made any infections among the slaves, or sought to
+ increase the dangers of her peculiar institution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVI. PLEA OF JUST CONSIDERATION AND MISTAKEN CONSTANCY OF THE
+ LAWS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE consul's office opened at nine o'clock,&mdash;the Captain, with his
+ register-case and shipping papers under his arm, presented himself to Mr.
+ Mathew, handed him his papers, and reported his condition. That gentleman
+ immediately set about rendering every facility to relieve his immediate
+ wants and further his business. The consul was a man of plain, unassuming
+ manners, frank in his expressions, and strongly imbued with a sense of his
+ rights, and the faith of his Government,&mdash;willing to take an active
+ part in obtaining justice, and, a deadly opponent to wrong, regardless of
+ the active hostility that surrounded him. After relating the incidents of
+ his voyage, and the circumstances connected with Manuel's being dragged to
+ prison,&mdash;&ldquo;Can it be possible that the law is to be carried to such an
+ extreme?&rdquo; said he, giving vent to his feelings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your people seem to have a strange manner of exhibiting their
+ hospitality,&rdquo; said the Captain, in reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is true; but it will not do to appeal to the officials.&rdquo; Thus
+ saying, the consul prepared the certificate, and putting on his hat,
+ repaired to the jail. Here he questioned Manuel upon the circumstances of
+ his arrest, his birthplace, and several other things. &ldquo;I am not sure that
+ I can get you out, Manuel, but I will do my best; the circumstances of
+ your being driven in here in distress will warrant some consideration in
+ your case; yet the feeling is not favorable, and we cannot expect much.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From thence he proceeded to the office of Mr. Grimshaw, where he met that
+ functionary, seated in all the dignity of his office.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good morning, Mr. Consul. Another of your darkies in my place, this
+ morning,&rdquo; said Mr. Grimshaw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; it is upon that business I have called to see you. I think you could
+ not have considered the condition of this man, nor his rights, or you
+ would not have imprisoned him. Is there no way by which I can relieve
+ him?&rdquo; inquired the consul, expecting little at his hands, but venturing
+ the effort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir! I never do any thing inconsistent with my office. The law gives me
+ power in these cases, and I exercise it according to my judgment. It makes
+ no exceptions for shipwrecks, and I feel that you have no right to
+ question me in the premises. It's contrary to law to bring niggers here;
+ and if you can show that he is a white man, there's the law; but you must
+ await its process.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But do you not make exceptions?&rdquo; inquired the consul. &ldquo;I do not wish to
+ seek his relief by process of law; that would increase expense and delay.
+ I have made the request as a favor; if you cannot consider it in that
+ light, I can only say my expectations are disappointed. But how is it that
+ the man was abused by your officers before he was committed?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Those are things I've nothing to do with; they are between the officers
+ and your niggers. If they are stubborn, the officers must use force, and
+ we have a right to iron the whole of them. Your niggers give more trouble
+ than our own, and are a set of unruly fellows. We give 'em advantages
+ which they don't deserve, in allowing them the yard at certain hours of
+ the day. You Englishmen are never satisfied with any thing we do,&rdquo;
+ returned Mr. Grimshaw, with indifference, appearing to satisfy himself
+ that the law gave him the right to do what he pleased in the premises.
+ There seemed but one idea in his head, so far as niggers were concerned,
+ nor could any mode of reasoning arouse him: to a consideration of any
+ extenuating circumstances. A nigger was a nigger with him, whether white
+ or black-a creature for hog, homony, and servitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I expected little and got nothing. I might have anticipated it, knowing
+ the fees you make by imprisonment. I shall seek relief for the man through
+ a higher tribunal, and I shall seek redress for the repeated abuses
+ inflicted upon these men by your officers,&rdquo; said the consul, turning to
+ the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You can do that, sir,&rdquo; said Mr. Grimshaw; &ldquo;but you must remember that it
+ will require white evidence to substantiate the charge. We don't take the
+ testimony of your niggers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just as the consul left the office, he met Colonel S&mdash;entering. The
+ colonel always manifested a readiness to relieve the many cases of
+ oppression and persecution arising from bad laws and abused official duty.
+ He had called upon Mr. Grimshaw on the morning of the arrest, and received
+ from him an assurance that the case would be considered, the most
+ favorable construction given to it, and every thing done for the man that
+ was in his power. Notwithstanding this to show how far confidence could be
+ put in such assurances, we have only to inform the reader that he had
+ despatched the officers an hour previously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel knew his man, and felt no hesitation at speaking his mind.
+ Stepping up to him, &ldquo;Mr. Grimshaw,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;how do you reconcile your
+ statement and assurances to me this morning with your subsequent conduct?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That's my business. I act for the State, and not for you. Are you counsel
+ for these niggers, that you are so anxious to set them at liberty among
+ our slaves? You seem to have more interest in it than that interfering
+ consul. Just let these Yankee niggers and British niggers out to-night,
+ and we'd have another insurrection before morning; it's better to prevent
+ than cure,&rdquo; said Grimshaw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The only insurrection would have been in your heart, for the loss of
+ fees. If you did not intend what you said, why did you deceive me with
+ such statements? I know the feelings of our people, as well as I do yours
+ for caging people within that jail. Upon that, I intimated to the Captain
+ what I thought would be the probable result, and this morning I proceeded
+ to his vessel to reassure him, upon your statement. Imagine my
+ mortification when he informed me that his steward had been dragged off to
+ jail early in the morning, and that those two ruffians whom you disgrace
+ the community with, behaved in the most outrageous manner. It is in your
+ power to relieve this man, and I ask it as a favor, and on behalf of what
+ I know to be the feelings of the citizens of Charleston.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your request, colonel,&rdquo; said Mr. Grimshaw, with a little more
+ complacency, &ldquo;is too much in the shape of a demand. There's no discretion
+ left me by the State, and if you have a power superior to that, you better
+ pay the expenses of the nigger, and take the management into your own
+ hands. I never allow this trifling philanthropy about niggers to disturb
+ me. I could never follow out the laws of the State and practise it; and
+ you better not burden yourself with it, or your successors may suffer for
+ adequate means to support themselves. Now, sir, take my advice. It's
+ contrary to law for them niggers to come here; you know our laws cannot be
+ violated. South Carolina has a great interest at stake in maintaining the
+ reputation of her laws. Don't excite the nigger's anxiety, and he'll be
+ better off in jail than he would running about among the wenches. He won't
+ have luxuries, but we'll make him comfortable, and he must suit his habits
+ to our way of living. We must not set a bad example before our own
+ niggers; the whiter they are the worse they are. They struggle for their
+ existence now, and think they're above observing our nigger laws. We want
+ to get rid of them, and you know it,&rdquo; returned Grimshaw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes; I know it too well, for I have had too many cases to protect them
+ from being 'run off' and sold in the New Orleans market. But when you
+ speak of white niggers, I suppose you mean our brightest; I dispute your
+ assertion, and point you to my proof in the many men of wealth among them
+ now pursuing their occupations in our city. Can you set an example more
+ praiseworthy? And notwithstanding they are imposed upon by taxes, and many
+ of our whites take the advantage of law to withhold the payment of debts
+ contracted with them, they make no complaint. They are subject to the same
+ law that restricts the blackest slave. Where is the white man that would
+ not have yielded under such inequality? No! Mr. Grimshaw, I am as true a
+ Southerner-born and bred-as you are; but I have the interests of these men
+ at heart, because I know they are with us, and their interests and
+ feelings are identical with our own. They are Native Americans by birth
+ and blood, and we have no right to dispossess them by law of what we have
+ given them by blood. We destroy their feelings by despoiling them of their
+ rights, and by it we weaken our own cause. Give them the same rights and
+ privileges that we extend to that miserable class of foreigners who are
+ spreading pestilence and death over our social institutions, and we would
+ have nothing to fear from them, but rather find them our strongest
+ protectors. I want to see a law taking from that class of men the power to
+ lord it over and abuse them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A friend, who has resided several years in Charleston, strong in his
+ feelings of Southern rights, and whose keen observation could not fail to
+ detect the working of different phases of the slave institution, informed
+ us that he had conversed with a great many very intelligent and
+ enterprising men belonging to that large class of &ldquo;bright&rdquo; men in
+ Charleston, and that which appeared to pain them most was the manner they
+ were treated by foreigners of the lowest class; that rights which they had
+ inherited by birth and blood were taken away from them; that, being
+ subjected to the same law which governed the most abject slave, every
+ construction of it went to degrade them, while it gave supreme power to
+ the most degraded white to impose upon them, and exercise his vindictive
+ feelings toward them; that no consideration being given to circumstances,
+ the least deviation from the police regulations made to govern negroes,
+ was taken advantage of by the petty guardmen, who either extorted a fee to
+ release them, or dragged them to the police-office, where their oath was
+ nothing, even if supported by testimony of their own color; but the
+ guardman's word was taken as positive proof. Thus the laws of South
+ Carolina forced them to be what their feelings revolted at. And I want to
+ see another making it a penal offence for those men holding slaves for
+ breeding purposes. Another, which humanity calls for louder than any
+ other, is one to regulate their food, punish these grievous cases of
+ starvation, and make the offender suffer for withholding proper rations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well-pretty well!&rdquo; said Grimshaw, snapping his fingers very
+ significantly. &ldquo;You seem to enjoy the independence of your own opinion,
+ colonel. Just prove this nigger's a white, and I'll give you a release for
+ him, after paying the fees. You better move to Massachusetts, and preach
+ that doctrine to William Lloyd Garrison and Abby Kelly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Give me none of your impudence, or your low insults. You may protect
+ yourself from personal danger by your own consciousness that you are
+ beneath the laws of honor; but that will not save you from what you
+ deserve, if you repeat your language. Our moderation is our protection,
+ while such unwise restrictions as you would enforce, fan the flame of
+ danger to our own households,&rdquo; said the colonel, evidently yielding to his
+ impulses; while Mr. Grimshaw sat trembling, and began to make a slender
+ apology, saying that the language was forced upon him, because the colonel
+ had overstepped the bounds of propriety in his demands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm somewhat astonished at your demand, colonel, for you don't seem to
+ comprehend the law, and the imperative manner in which I'm bound to carry
+ it out. Shipowners should get white stewards, if they want to avoid all
+ this difficulty. I know the nature of the case, but we can't be
+ accountable for storms, shipwrecks, old vessels, and all these things.
+ I'll go and see the fellow to-morrow, and tell the jailer-he's a pattern
+ of kindness, and that's why I got him for jailer-to give him good rations
+ and keep his room clean,&rdquo; said Grimshaw, getting up and looking among some
+ old books that lay on a dusty shelf. At length he found the one, and
+ drawing it forth, commenced brushing the dust from it with a dust-brush,
+ and turning his tobacco-quid. After brushing the old book for a length of
+ time, he gave it a scientific wipe with his coat-sleeve, again sat down,
+ and commenced turning over its pages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's in here, somewhere,&rdquo; said he, wetting his finger and thumb at every
+ turn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What's in there, pray? You don't think I've practised at the Charleston
+ bar all my life without knowing a law which has called up so many
+ questions?&rdquo; inquired the colonel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, the act and the amendments. I believe this is the right one. I a'n't
+ practised so long, that I reckon I've lost the run of the appendix and
+ everything else,&rdquo; adding another stream of tobacco-spit to the puddle on
+ the floor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That's better thought than said. Perhaps you'd better get a schoolboy to
+ keep his finger on it,&rdquo; continued the colonel, laconically.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, well; but I must find it and refresh your memory. Ah! here it is,
+ and it's just as binding on me as it can be. There's no mistake about
+ it-it's genuine South Carolina, perfectly aboveboard.&rdquo; Thus saying, he
+ commenced reading to the colonel as if he was about to instruct a
+ schoolboy in his rudiments. &ldquo;Here it is-a very pretty specimen of
+ enlightened legislation-born in the lap of freedom, cradled in a land of
+ universal rights, and enforced by the strong arm of South Carolina.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;An Act for the better regulation and government of free negroes and
+ persons of color, and for other purposes,&rdquo; &amp;c. &amp;c. &amp;c., Mr.
+ Grimshaw read; but as the two first sections are really a disgrace to the
+ delegated powers of man, in their aim to oppress the man of color, we
+ prefer to pass to the third section, and follow Mr. Grimshaw as he reads:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That if any vessel shall come into any port or harbor of this State,
+ (South Carolina,) from any other State or foreign port, having on board
+ any free negroes or persons of color, as cooks, stewards, or mariners, or
+ in any other employment on board said vessel, such free negroes or persons
+ of color shall be liable to be seized and confined in jail until said
+ vessel shall clear out and depart from this State; and that when said
+ vessel is ready to sail, the captain of said vessel shall be bound to
+ carry away the said free negro or person of color, and pay the expenses of
+ detention; and in case of his refusal or neglect to do so, he shall be
+ liable to be indicted, and, on conviction thereof, shall be fined in a sum
+ not less than one thousand dollars, and imprisoned not less than two
+ months; and such free negroes or persons of color shall be deemed and
+ taken as absolute slaves, and sold in conformity to the provisions of the
+ act passed on the twentieth day of December, one thousand eight hundred
+ and twenty aforesaid.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Grimshaw's coolness in the matter became so intolerable, that the
+ colonel could stand it no longer; so, getting up while Mr. Grimshaw was
+ reading the law, he left the office, perfectly satisfied that further
+ endeavors at that source would be fruitless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After Mr. Grimshaw had concluded, he looked up, perfectly amazed to find
+ that he was enjoying the reading of the act to himself. &ldquo;Had I not given
+ it all the consideration of my power, and seen the correctness of the law,
+ I should not have given so much importance to my opinion. But there it is,
+ all in that section of the Act, and they can't find no convention in the
+ world to control the Legislature of South Carolina. There's my principles,
+ and all the Englishmen and Abolitionists in Christendom wouldn't change
+ me. Now, I've the power, and let 'em get the nigger out of my place, if
+ they can,&rdquo; said Grimshaw, shutting the book, kicking a good-sized,
+ peaceable-looking dog that lay under the table, and deliberately taking
+ his hat and walking into the street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here is an Act, bearing on its face the arrogant will of South Carolina,
+ setting aside all constitutional rights, and denying the validity of
+ stipulations made by the United States in her general commercial laws. She
+ asserts her right to disregard citizenship, to make criminals of colored
+ men, because they are colored, and to sell them for slaves to pay the
+ expenses which she had incurred to make them such. And what is still
+ worse, is, that the exercise of this misconceived and unjust law is so
+ unrelentingly enforced, and so abused by those who carry it out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During this time the consul had been unremitting in his endeavors to
+ procure the man's release. The mayor had no power in the premises; the
+ attorney-general was not positive in regard to the extent of his power in
+ such a case, though he admitted the case to be an aggravated one; the
+ judges could only recognise him as a nigger, consequently must govern
+ their proceedings by legislative acts. Upon the whole, he found that he
+ was wasting his time, for while they all talked sympathy, they acted
+ tyranny. Cold, measured words about niggers, &ldquo;contrary to law,&rdquo;
+ constitutional rights, inviolable laws, State sovereignty and secession,
+ the necessary police regulations to protect a peculiar institution, and
+ their right to enforce them, everywhere greeted his ears. There was about
+ as much in it to relieve Manuel, as there would have been had a little
+ bird perched upon the prison-wall and warbled its song of love to him
+ while strongly secured in his cell-more tantalizing because he could hear
+ the notes, but not see the songster.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Notwithstanding the commendable energy of the consul, he had the
+ satisfaction of knowing that several very improbable reports touching his
+ course, and construing it into an interference with the institution of
+ slavery, had been widely circulated, and were creating a feeling against
+ him among a certain class of &ldquo;fire-eating&rdquo; secessionists. He was too well
+ aware of the source from which they originated to awaken any fears, and
+ instead of daunting his energy they only increased it, and brought to his
+ aid the valuable services of the Hon. James L. Petigru, a gentleman of
+ whom it is said, (notwithstanding his eminence at the bar,) that had it
+ not been for his purity of character, his opinions in opposition to the
+ State would have long since consigned him to a traitor's exile. The truth
+ was-and much against Mr. Petigru's popularity in his own State-that he was
+ a man of sound logic, practical judgment, and legal discrimination. Thus
+ endowed with the requisite qualities of a good statesman, and pursuing a
+ true course to create a conservative influence in the State, he failed to
+ become popular beyond his legal sphere. Had he espoused that most popular
+ of all doctrines in South Carolina-nullification and secession-and carried
+ abstraction to distraction, James L. Petigru would have added another
+ &ldquo;Roman name&rdquo; to that which has already passed from South Carolina's field
+ of action.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The consul did his duty, but effected nothing; and such was the opposition
+ manifested by the officials who were interested in the spoils of law, and
+ politicians who could not see any thing important beyond secession, that
+ there was no prospect of it. And, as the last resort, he appealed to the
+ Judiciary through the &ldquo;habeas corpus,&rdquo; the result of which we shall show
+ in a subsequent chapter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVII. LITTLE GEORGE, THE CAPTAIN, AND MR. GRIMSHAW.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE consul had returned to his office rather discomfited at not being able
+ to relieve Manuel, yet satisfied that he had placed matters in their
+ proper light before the public. The Captain reported and left his manifest
+ at the custom-house, after entering his protest and making the necessary
+ arrangements for survey, &amp;c. &amp;c. And Colonel S&mdash;became so
+ well satisfied of the affectation of law protectors, and that his services
+ in behalf of humanity were like straws contending against a foaming
+ current, that, acknowledging his regrets to the Captain, he preferred to
+ make up in attention what he could not do for Manuel through the law.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Little George paid his respects to the Janson between ten and eleven
+ o'clock, duly dressed. &ldquo;Mr. Mate, where's your skipper?&rdquo; he inquired, with
+ an air of consequence that put an extra pucker on his little twisting
+ mouth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gone to jail, or to see Doctor Jones, I expect, not giving ye an ill
+ answer,&rdquo; replied the old mate, gruffly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perhaps you don't know who I am, sir. Your answer's not polite. You must
+ remember, sir, you're in South Carolina, the sunny city of the South,&rdquo;
+ said the little secessionist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I al'a's make my answer to suit myself. I study hard work and honesty,
+ but never was known to carry a grammar in my pocket. But, my taut friend,
+ I should know'd I was in South Carolina if you hadn't said a word about
+ it, for no other nation under the sky would a dragged a poor cast-away
+ sailor to prison because he had the misfortune to have a tawny hide. It's
+ a ten-to-one, my hearty, if you don't find the skipper in jail, and all
+ the rest of us, before we leave. I'm lookin' now to see some body-grabber
+ coming down with a pair of handcuffs,&rdquo; continued the mate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What! do you mean to insult me again, Mr. Mate? Explain yourself! I'm not
+ accustomed to this ironical talk!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, it's something like your laws. They dragged our steward off to jail
+ this morning, without judge or jury, and with about as much ceremony as a
+ Smithfield policeman would a pickpocket.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What! you don't say. Well, I was afraid of that. Our officers are mighty
+ quick, but I'd hoped differently. But, sir, give my compliments to the
+ Captain. Tell him I'll make the matter all right; my influence, sir, and
+ my father's&mdash;he is one of the first men in the city&mdash;tells
+ mightily here. I have promised my services to the Captain, and I'll see
+ him through. Just pledging my word to Grimshaw will be enough to satisfy
+ the judicial requisites of the law,&rdquo; said George, switching his little
+ cane on his trowsers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My good fellow,&rdquo; said the mate, &ldquo;if you can get our steward out a limbo,
+ you'll be doing us all a good turn, and we'll remember you as long as we
+ pull a brace.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You may reckon on me, Mister Mate; and if I a'n't down before six
+ o'clock, my father will certainly take the matter in hand; and he and
+ Mazyck belong to the secession party, and control things just as they
+ please at Columbia.&rdquo; So saying, George bid the old mate good morning, and
+ bent his course for the head of the wharf.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There,&rdquo; said the old mate, &ldquo;it's just what I thought all along; I knew my
+ presentiment would come true. I'll wager a crown they treat Manuel like a
+ dog in that old prison, and don't get him out until he is mildewed; or
+ perhaps they'll sell him for a slave a'cos he's got curly black hair and a
+ yellow skin. Now I'm a hardy sailor, but I've sailed around the world
+ about three times, and know something of nature. Now ye may note it as
+ clear as the north star, prisons in slave countries a'n't fit for dogs.
+ They may tell about their fine, fat, slick, saucy niggers, but a slave's a
+ slave&mdash;his master's property, a piece of merchandise, his chattel, or
+ his football-thankful for what his master may please to give him, and
+ inured to suffer the want of what he withholds. Yes, he must have his
+ thinking stopped by law, and his back lashed at his master's will, if he
+ don't toe the mark in work. Men's habits and associations form their
+ feelings and character, and it's just so with them fellers; they've become
+ so accustomed to looking upon a nigger as a mere tool of labor&mdash;lordin'
+ it over him, starving him, and lashing him-that they associate the
+ exercise of the same feelings and actions with every thing connected with
+ labor, without paying any respect to a poor white man's feelings,&rdquo;
+ continued the mate, addressing himself to his second, as they sat upon the
+ companion, waiting for the Captain to come on board and give further
+ orders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Never were words spoken with more truth. The negro is reduced to the
+ lowest and worst restrictions, even by those who are considered wealthy
+ planters and good masters. We say nothing of those whose abuse of their
+ negroes by starvation and punishment forms the theme of complaint among
+ slaveholders themselves. His food is not only the coarsest that can, be
+ procured, but inadequate to support the system for the amount of labor
+ required. Recourse to other means becomes necessary. This is supplied by
+ giving the slave his task, which, so far as our observation extends, is
+ quite sufficient for any common, laborer's day's-work. This done, his
+ master is served; and as an act of kindness, (which Sambo is taught to
+ appreciate as such,) he is allowed to work on his own little cultivated
+ patch to raise a few things, which mass'r (in many cases) very
+ condescendingly sells in the market, and returns those little comforts,
+ which are so much appreciated by slaves on a plantation-tea, molasses,
+ coffee, and tobacco-and now and then a little wet of whiskey. This is the
+ allowance of a good man doing a good week's work, and getting two pounds
+ of bacon and a peck of corn as his compensation. But, in grateful
+ consideration, his good master allows him to work nights and Sundays to
+ maintain himself. In this way was &ldquo;Bob's bale of cotton&rdquo; raised, which
+ that anxious child of popular favor, the editor of the &ldquo;Savannah Morning
+ News,&rdquo; so struggled to herald to the world as something magnificent on the
+ part of the Southern slave-masters. At best, it was but a speck. If the
+ many extra hours of toil that poor Bob had spent, and the hours of night
+ that he had watched and nursed his plants, were taken into account, there
+ would be a dark picture connected with &ldquo;Bob's bale of cotton,&rdquo; which the
+ editor forgot to disclose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every form of labor becomes so associated with servitude, that we may
+ excuse the Southerner for those feelings which condemn those devoted to
+ mechanical pursuits as beneath his caste and dignity. Arrogance and
+ idleness foster extravagance, while his pride induces him to keep up a
+ style of life which his means are inadequate to support. This induces him
+ to subsist his slaves on the coarsest fare, and becoming hampered,
+ embarrassed, and fretted in his fast-decaying circumstances, his slaves,
+ one by one, suffer the penalty of his extravagance, and finally he himself
+ is reduced to such a condition that he is unable to do justice to himself
+ or his children any longer; his slaves are dragged from him, sold to the
+ terrors of a distant sugar-plantation, and he turned out of doors a
+ miserable man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We see this result every day in South Carolina; we hear the comments in
+ the broadways and public places, while the attorney and bailiff's offices
+ and notices tell the sad tale of poverty's wasting struggle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ George, in passing from the wharf into the bay, met the Captain, who was
+ shaping his course for the brig. He immediately ran up to him, and shook
+ his hands with an appearance of friendship. &ldquo;Captain, I'm right sorry to
+ hear about your nigger. I was not prepared for such a decision on the part
+ of Mr. Grimshaw, but I'm determined to have him out,&rdquo; said he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well!&rdquo; said the Captain, &ldquo;I'm sorry to say, I find things very different
+ from what I anticipated. My steward is imprisoned, for nothing, except
+ that he is a Portuguese, and everybody insists that he's a nigger.
+ Everybody talks very fine, yet nobody can do any thing; and every thing is
+ left to the will of one man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, Captain, we've the best system in the world for doing business;
+ you'd appreciate it after you understood it! Just come with me, and let me
+ introduce you to my father. If he don't put you right, I'll stand
+ convicted,&rdquo; said little George.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accepting the invitation, they walked back to the &ldquo;old man's&rdquo;
+ counting-room. George had given the Captain such an extended account of
+ his father's business and estates, that the latter had made up his mind to
+ be introduced to an &ldquo;India Palace' counting-room. Judge of his surprise,
+ then, when George led the way into an old, dirty-looking counting-room,
+ very small and dingy, containing two dilapidated high desks, standing
+ against the wall. They were made of pitch pine, painted and grained, but
+ so scarred and whittled as to have the appearance of long use and abuse.
+ In one corner was an old-fashioned low desk, provided with an ink-stand,
+ sundry pieces of blotting-paper, the pigeon-holes filled with loose
+ invoices, letters, and bills of lading, very promiscuously huddled
+ together; while hanging suspended on a large nail, driven in the side, and
+ exposed to view, was an enormous dust-brush. A venerable-looking subject
+ of some foreign country stood writing at one desk, a little boy at the
+ other, and George's veritable &ldquo;old man&rdquo; at the low desk. Here and there
+ around the floor were baskets and papers containing samples of sea-island
+ and upland cotton. George introduced the Captain to his father with the
+ suavity of a courtier. He was a grave-looking man, well dressed, and spoke
+ in a tone that at once enlisted respect. Unlike George, he was a tall,
+ well-formed man, with bland, yet marked features, and very gray hair. He
+ received the Captain in a cold, yet dignified manner-inquired about his
+ voyage, and who he had consigned to, and what steps he had taken to
+ proceed with his business,&mdash;all of which the Captain answered
+ according to the circumstances.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What! then you have consigned already, have you?&rdquo; said little George,
+ with surprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh yes,&rdquo; returned the Captain, &ldquo;I have left my business in the hands of
+ the consul, and shall follow his directions. It's according to my sailing
+ orders. But there's so much difficulty, I shouldn't wonder if I had to
+ leave the port, yet!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not so, Captain; I'll take care of that!&rdquo; said George, giving his father
+ a statement of the Captain's trouble about Manuel's imprisonment, and
+ begging that he would bestow his influence in behalf of his friend the
+ Captain. Although George coupled his request with a seeming sincerity, it
+ was evident that he felt somewhat disappointed at the consignment. The old
+ gentleman looked very wise upon the subject, lifted his gold-framed
+ spectacles upon his forehead, gratified his olfactory nerves with a pinch
+ of snuff, and then said in a cold, measured tone, &ldquo;Well, if he's a nigger,
+ I see no alternative,&mdash;the circumstances may give a coloring of
+ severity to the law; but my opinion has always been, that the construction
+ of the law was right; and the act being founded upon necessity, I see no
+ reason why we should meddle with its prerogative. I think the interference
+ of the consul unwarrantable, and pressed upon mere technical grounds.
+ These stories about the bad state of our jail, and the sufferings of
+ criminals confined in it, arise, I must think, from the reports of bad
+ prisoners. I have never been in it. Our people are opposed to vice, and
+ seldom visit such a place; but the sheriff tells me it is comfortable
+ enough for anybody. If this be so, and I have no reason to doubt his word,
+ we can exercise our sympathy and kindness for his shipwrecked
+ circumstances, and make him as comfortable there as we could anywhere
+ else. There are many different opinions, I admit, touching the effect of
+ this law; but I'm among those who support stringent measures for better
+ protection. His color can form no excuse, Captain, so long as there is
+ symptoms of the negro about him. We might open a wide field for
+ metaphysical investigation, if we admitted exceptions upon grades of
+ complexion; for many of our own slaves are as white ar the brightest
+ woman. Consequently, when we shut the gates entirely, we save ourselves
+ boundless perplexity. Nor would it be safe to grant an issue upon the
+ score of intelligence, for experience has taught us that the most
+ intelligent 'bright fellows' are the worst scamps in creating discontent
+ among the slaves. I only speak of these things, Captain, in a general
+ sense. Your man may be very good, noble, generous, and intelligent; and,
+ more than all, not inclined to meddle with our peculiar institution,&mdash;but
+ it would be a false principle to make him an exception, setting an example
+ that would be entirely incompatible with our greatest interests. So far as
+ my word will affect the sheriff, and enlist his better feelings in making
+ him comfortable, I will use it,&rdquo; said the 'old man,' again adjusting his
+ specs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Little George seemed dumbfounded with mortification, and the Captain felt
+ as though he would give a guinea to be on board his brig. It was no use
+ for him to enter into the extenuating circumstance of his voyage, or the
+ character of the man, Manuel. The same cold opinions about the law, and
+ the faith and importance of South Carolina and her peculiar institutions,
+ met his ears wherever he went. The Captain arose, took his hat, and
+ bidding the old gentleman good morning, again left for his brig.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't be worried about it-I'll do what I can for you,&rdquo; said the old man,
+ as the Captain was leaving. George followed him into the street, and made
+ a great many apologies for his father's opinions and seeming indifference,
+ promising to do himself what his father did not seem inclined to
+ undertake. The Captain saw no more of him during his stay in Charleston,
+ and if his influence was exerted in Manuel's behalf, he did not feel its
+ benefits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Business had so occupied the Captain's attention during the day, that he
+ had no time to visit Manuel at the jail; and when he returned to the
+ vessel, a message awaited him from the British consul. One of the seamen
+ had been detailed to fill Manuel's place, who, with his dinner all
+ prepared, reminded the Captain that it was awaiting him. He sat down, took
+ dinner, and left to answer the consul's call. Arriving at the office, he
+ found the consul had left for his hotel, and would not return until four
+ o'clock. As he passed the post-office, a knot of men stood in front of it,
+ apparantly in anxious discussion. Feeling that their conversation might be
+ interesting to him, or have some connection with his case, he walked
+ slowly back, and as he approached them, observed that the conversation had
+ become more excited. The principals were Mr. Grimshaw, and a factor on the
+ bay, deeply interested in shipping.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A man acting in your capacity,&rdquo; said the factor, &ldquo;should never make use
+ of such expressions-never give encouragement to mob law. It's not only
+ disgraceful to any city, but ruinous to its interests. Officials never
+ should set or encourage the example. Want of order is already in the
+ ascendant, and if the populace is to be led on to riot by the officials,
+ what check have we? God save us from the direful effects!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, perhaps I went too far,&rdquo; said Mr. Grimshaw, &ldquo;for I think as much of
+ the name of our fair city as you do. But we ought to teach him that he
+ can't pursue this open, bold, and daring course, endangering our
+ institutions, because he's consul for Great Britain. I would, at all
+ events, treat him as we did the Yankee HOAR from Massachusetts, and let
+ the invitation be given outside of official character, to save the name;
+ then, if he did not move off, I'd go for serving him as they did the
+ Spanish consul, in New Orleans. These English niggers and Yankee niggers
+ are fast destroying the peace of Charleston.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You would, would you?&rdquo; said another. &ldquo;Then you would incite the fury of
+ an ungovernable mob to endanger the man's life for carrying out the
+ instructions of his government.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That don't begin to be all that he does, for he's meddling with every
+ thing, and continually making remarks about our society,&rdquo; said Grimshaw,
+ evidently intending to create ill feeling against the consul, and to make
+ the matter as bad as possible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, Mr. Grimshaw,&rdquo; said the factor, &ldquo;you know your jail is not fit to
+ put any kind of human beings into, much less respectable men. It's an old
+ Revolutionary concern, tumbling down with decay, swarming with insects and
+ vermin; the rooms are damp and unhealthy, and without means to ventilate
+ them; the mildew and horrible stench is enough to strike disease into the
+ strongest constitution; and you aggravate men's appetites with food that's
+ both insufficient and unwholesome, I know, because I visited a friend who
+ was put in there on 'mesne process.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is little confidence to be placed in the stories of prisoners; they
+ all think they must be treated like princes, instead of considering that
+ they are put there for cause, and that a jail was intended for
+ punishment,&rdquo; interrupted Grimshaw, anxious to change the subject of
+ conversation, and displaying an habitual coldness to misfortune which
+ never can see the gentleman in a prisoner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, but you must not measure men by that standard. Circumstances which
+ bring them there are as different as their natures. I've known many good,
+ honest, and respectable, citizens, who once enjoyed affluence in our
+ community, put in there, month after month, and year after year, suffering
+ the persecution of creditors and the effects of bad laws. Now these men
+ would not all complain if there was no cause, and they all loved you, as
+ you state. But tell me, Mr. Grimshaw, would it not be even safer for our
+ institutions to make a restriction confining them to the wharf, which
+ could be easily done, and with but small expense to the city? Niggers on
+ the wharves could have no communication with them, because each is
+ occupied in his business, and ours are too closely watched and driven
+ during working hours. As soon as those hours end, they are bound to leave,
+ and the danger ends. Again, those niggers who work on the wharves are
+ generally good niggers, while, on the other hand, bad niggers are put into
+ jail; and during the hours these stewards are allowed the privilege of the
+ yard, they mix with them without discrimination or restraint. Their
+ feelings, naturally excited by imprisonment, find relief in discoursing
+ upon their wrongs with those of their own color, and making the
+ contamination greater,&rdquo; said the factor, who seemed inclined to view the
+ matter in its proper light.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh! what sir? That would never do. You mistake a nigger's feelings
+ entirely. Privileges never create respect with them. Just make a law to
+ leave 'em upon the wharf, and five hundred policemen wouldn't keep 'em
+ from spoiling every nigger in town, just destroying the sovereignty of the
+ law, and yielding a supreme right that we have always contended for. It's
+ 'contrary to law,' and we must carry out the law,&rdquo; replied Grimshaw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pshaw! Talk such stuff to me! Just take away the sixteen hundred or two
+ thousand dollars that you make by the law; and you'd curse it for a
+ nuisance. It would become obsolete, and the poor devils of stewards would
+ do what they pleased; you'd never trouble your head about them. Now,
+ Grimshaw, be honest for once; tell us what you would do if circumstances
+ compelled the Captain to leave that nigger boy here?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Carry out the letter of the law; there's no alternative. But the Captain
+ swears he's a white man, and that would give him an opportunity to prove
+ it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How is he to prove it, Grimshaw? We take away the power, and then ask him
+ to do what we make impossible. Then, of course, you would carry out the
+ letter of the law and sell him for a slave. * * * Well, I should like to
+ see the issue upon a question of that kind carried out upon an English
+ nigger. It would be more of a curse upon our slave institution than every
+ thing else that could be raised,&rdquo; said the factor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gentlemen, you might as well preach abolition at once, and then the
+ public would know what your sentiments were, and how to guard against you.
+ I must bid you good-by.&rdquo; So saying, Mr. Grimshaw twisted his whip, took a
+ large quid of tobacco, and left the company to discuss the question among
+ themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVIII. LITTLE TOMMY AND THE POLICE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ WE must take the reader back to the old jail, and continue our scene from
+ where we left little Tommy spreading the Captain's present before the
+ imprisoned stewards, whose grateful thanks were showered upon the head of
+ the bestower. Kindness, be it ever so small, to a man in prison, is like
+ the golden rays of the rising sun lighting up the opening day. They all
+ partook of the refreshments provided for them with grateful spirits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was near ten o'clock when Daley came to announce that it was time to
+ close the prison, and all strangers must withdraw. Tommy had insisted upon
+ stopping with Manuel during the night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This man Daley was a proverbial drunkard, a tyrant in the exercise of his
+ &ldquo;little brief authority,&rdquo; and a notorious&mdash;. Singular as it may seem,
+ considering his position, he would quarrel with the men for a glass of
+ whiskey, had given the jailer more trouble than any other man, and been
+ several times confined in the cells for his incorrigible vices. If any
+ thing more was wanting to confirm our note, we could refer to Colonel
+ Condy, the very gentlemanly United States marshal in a very rude manner,
+ told him it was against the rules, and putting his hand to his back,
+ pushed him out of the cell and secured the bolts. The little fellow felt
+ his way through the passage and down the stairs in the dark until he
+ reached the corridor, where the jailer stood awaiting to let him pass the
+ outer iron-gate. &ldquo;You've made a long stay, my little fellow. You'll have a
+ heap o' trouble to find the wharf, at this time o' night. I'd o' let you
+ stopped all night, but it's strictly against the sheriff's orders,&rdquo; said
+ the jailer, as, he passed into the street, at the same time giving him a
+ list of imperfect directions about the course to proceed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The jail is in a distant and obscure part of the city, surrounded by
+ narrow streets and lanes, imperfectly laid out and undefined. In leaving
+ the walls of the prison, he mistook his direction, and the night being
+ very dark, with a light, drizzling rain, which commenced while he was in
+ the prison, the whole aspect of things seemed reversed. After travelling
+ about for some time, he found himself upon a narrow strip of land that
+ crossed a basin of water and led to Chisholm's mill. The different
+ appearance of things here convinced him of his error. Bewildered, and not
+ knowing which way to proceed, he approached a cross road, and sitting down
+ upon a log, wept bitterly. He soon heard a footstep, and as it approached,
+ his cares lightened. It proved to be a negro man from the mill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These mills are worked all night, and the poor negroes, wishing to follow
+ an example which massa sets on a grand scale, save that they have an
+ excuse in the fatigue of labor, will delegate some shrewd one of their
+ number to proceed to a Dutch &ldquo;corner-shop&rdquo; in the suburbs, run the
+ gauntlet of the police, and get a bottle of whiskey, When interrogated,
+ they are always &ldquo;going for a bottle of molasses.&rdquo; They keep a keen watch
+ for the police, and their cunning modes of eluding their vigilance forms
+ many amusing anecdotes. They are bound to have a pass from master, or some
+ white man; but if they can reach the shop in safety, the Dutchman will
+ always furnish them with one to return. It not unfrequently happens that
+ the guard-men are much more ignorant than the slaves. The latter knowing
+ this, will endeavor to find their station and approach by it, taking with
+ them either an old pass or a forged one, which the guard-man makes a
+ wonderful piece of importance about examining and countersigning, though
+ he can neither read nor write. Thus Sambo passes on to get his molasses,
+ laughing in his sleeve to think how he &ldquo;fool ignorant buckra.&rdquo; A change of
+ guard often forms a trap for Sambo, when he is lugged to the guard-house,
+ kept all night, his master informed in the morning, and requested to step
+ up and pay a fine, or Sambo's back catches thirty-nine, thus noting a
+ depression of value upon the property. Sometimes his master pays the
+ municipal fine, and administers a domestic castigation less lacerating
+ bound into the city on the usual errand of procuring a little of molasses.
+ When he first discovered Tommy, he started back a few paces, as if in
+ fear; but on being told by Tommy that he was lost, and wanted to find his
+ way to the wharves, he approached and recovering, confidence readily,
+ volunteered to see him to the corner of Broad street. So, taking him by
+ the hand, they proceeded together until they reached the termination of
+ the Causeway, and were about to enter Tradd street, when suddenly a
+ guard-man sprang from behind an old shed. The negro, recognising his white
+ belt and tap-stick, made the best of his time, and set off at full speed
+ down a narrow lane. The watchman proceeded close at his heels, springing
+ his rattle at every step, and pouring out a volley of vile imprecations.
+ Tommy stood for a few moments, but soon the cries of the negro and the
+ beating of clubs broke upon his ear; he became terrified, and ran at the
+ top of his speed in an opposite direction. Again he had lost his way, and
+ seemed in a worse dilemma than before; he was weary and frightened, and
+ hearing so many stories among the sailors about selling white children for
+ slaves, and knowing the imprisonment of Manuel, which he did not
+ comprehend, his feelings were excited to the highest degree. After running
+ for a few minutes, he stopped to see if he could recognize his position.
+ The first thing that caught his eye was the old jail, looming its sombre
+ walls in the gloomy contrast of night. He followed the walls until he
+ reached the main gate, and then, taking an opposite direction from his
+ former route, proceeded along the street until he came to a lantern,
+ shedding its feeble light upon the murky objects at the corner of a narrow
+ lane. Here he stood for several minutes, not knowing which way to proceed:
+ the street he was in continued but a few steps farther, and turn which
+ ever way he would, darkness and obstacles rose to impede his progress. At
+ length he turned down the lane, and proceeded until he came to another
+ junction of streets; taking one which he thought would lead him in the
+ right direction, he wandered through it and into a narrow, circuitous
+ street, full of little, wretched-looking houses. A light glimmered from
+ one of them, and he saw a female passing to and fro before the window. He
+ approached and rapped gently upon the door. Almost simultaneously the
+ light was extinguished. He stood for a few minutes, and again rapped
+ louder than before; all was silent for some minutes. A drenching shower
+ had commenced, adding to the already gloomy picture; and the rustling
+ leaves on a tree that stood near gave an ominous sound to the excited
+ feelings of the child. He listened at the door with anxiety and fear, as
+ he heard whispers within; and as he was about to repeat his rapping, a
+ window on the right hand was slowly raised. The female who had been pacing
+ the floor protruded her head with a caution that bespoke alarm. Her long,
+ black hair hanging about her shoulders, and her tawny, Indian countenance,
+ with her ghost-like figure dressed in a white habiliment, struck him with
+ a sort of terror that wellnigh made him run.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who is that, at this time of night?&rdquo; inquired the woman, in a low voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's only me. I'm lost, and can't find my way to our vessel,&rdquo; said Tommy,
+ in a half-crying tone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mother,&rdquo; said the woman, shutting the window, &ldquo;it's only a little
+ sailor-boy, a stranger, and he's wet through.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She immediately unbarred and opened the door, and invited him to come in.
+ Stepping beyond the threshold, she closed the door against the storm, and
+ placing a chair at the fire, told him to sit down and warm himself. They
+ were mulatto half-breeds, retaining all the Indian features which that
+ remnant of the tribe now in Charleston are distinguished by a family well
+ known in the city, yet under the strictest surveillance of the police.
+ Every thing around the little room denoted poverty and neatness. The
+ withered remnant of an aged Indian mother lay stretched upon a bed of
+ sickness, and the daughter, about nineteen years old, had been watching
+ over her, and administering those comforts, which her condition required.
+ &ldquo;Why, mother, it's a'most twelve o'clock. I don't believe he'll come
+ to-night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She awaited her friend, or rather he whose mistress she had condescended
+ to be, after passing from several lords. The history of this female
+ remnant of beautiful Indian girls now left in Charleston, is a mournful
+ one. The recollection of their noble sires, when contrasted with their
+ present unhappy associations, affords a sad subject for reflection and
+ &ldquo;this little boy can stop till morning in our room up-stairs,&rdquo; said she,
+ looking up at an old Connecticut clock that adorned the mantel-piece.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh! I could not stay all night. The mate would be uneasy about me, and
+ might send the crew to look for me. I'm just as thankful, but I couldn't
+ stop,&rdquo; said Tommy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you never can find the bay on such a night as this; and I've no pass,
+ or I would show you into Broad street, and then you could find the way. I
+ am afraid of the guardmen, and if they caught me and took me to the
+ station, my friend would abuse me awfully,&rdquo; said Angeline, for such was
+ her name; and she laid her hand upon his arm to feel his wet clothes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He now arose from the chair, and putting on his hat, she followed him to
+ the door and directed him how to proceed to find Broad street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He proceeded according to her directions, and soon found it. Now, he
+ thought, he was all right; but the wind had increased to a gale, and
+ having a full sweep through the street, it was as much as he could do to
+ resist it. He had scarcely reached half the distance of the street when it
+ came in such sudden gusts that he was forced to seek a refuge against its
+ fury in the recess of a door. He sat down upon a step, and buttoning his
+ little jacket around him, rested his head upon his knees, and while
+ waiting for the storm to abate, fell into a deep sleep. From this
+ situation he was suddenly aroused by a guardman, who seized him by the
+ collar, and giving him an unmerciful twitch, brought, him headlong upon
+ the sidewalk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What are you at here? Ah! another miserable vagrant, I suppose. We'll
+ take care of such rascals as you; come with me. We'll larn ye to be round
+ stealing at this time o' night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, sir! no, sir! I didn't do nothing&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Shut up! None of your lyin' to a policeman, you young rascal. I don't
+ want to hear, nor I won't stand your infernal lies.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh do, mister, let me tell you all about it, and I know you won't hurt
+ me. I'm only going to the vessel, if you'll show me the way,&rdquo; said the
+ little fellow imploringly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stop yer noise, ye lying young thief, you. Ye wouldn't be prowling about
+ at this time o' night if ye belonged to a vessel. 'Pon me soul, I believe
+ yer a nigger. Come to the light,&rdquo; said the guardman, dragging him up to a
+ lamp near by. &ldquo;Well, you a'n't a nigger, I reckon, but yer a strolling
+ vagrant, and that's worse,&rdquo; he continued, after examining his face very
+ minutely. So, dragging him to the guardhouse as he would a dog, and
+ thrusting him into a sort of barrack-room, the captain of the guard and
+ several officials soon gathered around him to inquire the difficulty. The
+ officers listened to the guardman's story, with perfect confidence in
+ every thing he said, but refused to allow the little fellow to reply in
+ his own behalf. &ldquo;I watched him for a long time, saw him fumbling about
+ people's doors, and then go to sleep in Mr. T&mdash;'s recess. These boys
+ are gettin' to be the very mischief-most dangerous fellows we have to deal
+ with,&rdquo; said the policeman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, no! I was only goin' to the brig, and got turned round. I've been
+ more than two hours trying to find my way in the storm. I'm sure I a'n't
+ done no harm. If ye'll only let me tell my story,&rdquo; said Tommy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Shut up! We want no stories till morning. The mayor will settle your hash
+ to-morrow; and if you belong to a ship, you can tell him all about it; but
+ you'll have the costs to pay anyhow. Just lay down upon that bench, and
+ you can sleep there till morning; that's better than loafing about the
+ streets,&rdquo; said the captain of the guard, a large, portly-looking man, as
+ he pointed Tommy to a long bench similar to those used in barrack-rooms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little fellow saw it was no use to attempt a hearing, and going
+ quietly to the bench, he pulled off his man-a-war hat, and laying it upon
+ a chair, stretched himself out upon it, putting his little hands under his
+ head to ease it from the hard boards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But he was not destined to sleep long in this position, for a loud,
+ groaning noise at the door, broke upon their ears though the pelting fury
+ of the storm, like one in agonizing distress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Heavens! what is that!&rdquo; said the captain of the guard, suddenly starting
+ from his seat, and running for the door, followed by the whole posse. The
+ groans grew louder and more death-like in their sound, accompanied by
+ strange voices, giving utterance to horrible imprecations, and a dragging
+ upon the floor. The large door opened, and what a sight presented itself!
+ Three huge monsters, with side-arms on, dragged in the poor negro who
+ proffered to show Tommy into Broad street. His clothes were nearly torn
+ from his back, besmeared with mud, from head to foot, and his face cut and
+ mangled in the most shocking manner. His head, neck, and shoulders, were
+ covered with a gore of blood, and still it kept oozing from his mouth and
+ the cuts on his head. They dragged him in as if he was a dying dog that
+ had been beaten with a club, and threw him into a corner, upon the floor,
+ with just about as much unconcern.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh! massa! massa! kill me, massa, den 'em stop sufferin'!&rdquo; said the poor
+ fellow, in a painful murmur, raising his shackled hands to his head, and
+ grasping the heavy chain that secured his neck, in the agony of pain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What has he done?&rdquo; inquired the officer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Resisted the guard, and ran when we told him to stop!&rdquo; responded a trio
+ of voices. &ldquo;Yes, and attempted to get into a house. Ah! you vagabond you;
+ that's the way we serve niggers like you!&mdash;Attempt to run again, will
+ you? I'll knock your infernal daylights out, you nigger you,&rdquo; said one of
+ the party.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It does seem tome that you might have taken him, and brought him up with
+ less severity,&rdquo; said the officer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What else could we do, sure? Didn't we catch him prowling about with a
+ white fellow, and he runn'd till we couldn't get him. Indeed it was
+ nothing good they were after, and it's the like o' them that bees doing
+ all the mischief beyant the city.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;An' 'imself, too, struck Muldown two pokes, 'efore he lave de hancuffs be
+ pat upon him, at all!&rdquo; said another of the guardmen; and then turning
+ around, caught a glimpse of poor little Tommy, who had been standing up
+ near a desk, during the scene, nearly &ldquo;frightened out of his wits.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By the pipers,&mdash;what! and is't here ye are? The same that was with
+ himself beyant! Come here, you spalpeen you. Wasn't ye the same what
+ runn'd whin we bees spaken to that nigger?&rdquo; said the same guardman, taking
+ hold of Tommy's arm, and drawing him nearer the light.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, he was coming along with me, to show me&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stop!&mdash;you know you are going to lie already. Better lock 'em both
+ up for the night, and let them be sent up in the morning,&rdquo; said another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then you won't let me speak for myself&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush, sir!&rdquo; interrupted the officer; &ldquo;you can tell your story in the
+ morning! but take care you are not a vagrant. If it's proved that you were
+ with that nigger at the improper hour, you'll get your back scarred. Come,
+ you have owned it, and I must lock you up.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without attempting to wash the blood off the negro, or dress his wounds,
+ they unlocked the handcuffs, and loosened the chain from his neck,
+ handling him with less feeling than they would a dumb brute. Relieved of
+ his chains, they ordered him to get up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The poor creature looked up imploringly, as if to beg them to spare his
+ life, for he was too weak to speak. He held up his hands, drenched with
+ blood, while beneath his head was a pool of gore that had streamed from
+ his mounds. &ldquo;None of your infernal humbuggery-you could run fast enough.
+ Just get up, and be spry about it, or I'll help you with the cowhide,&rdquo;
+ said the officer, calling to one of the guardmen to bring it to him. He
+ now made an effort, and had got upon his knees, when the guardman that
+ seemed foremost in his brutality fetched him a kick with his heavy boots
+ in the side, that again felled him to the ground with a deep groan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh-tut! that will not do. You mus'n't kill the nigger; his master will
+ come for him in the morning,&rdquo; said the officer, stooping down and taking
+ hold of his arm with his left hand, while holding a cowhide in his right.
+ &ldquo;Come, my boy, you must get up and go into the lock-up,&rdquo; he continued.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Massa! oh, good massa, do-don't! I's most dead now, wha'for ye no lef me
+ whare a be?&rdquo; said he in a whining manner; and making a second attempt,
+ fell back upon the floor, at which two of them seized him by the
+ shoulders, and dragging him into a long, dark, cell-like room, threw him
+ violently upon the floor. Then returning to the room, the officer took
+ Tommy by the arm, and marching him into the same room, shut the door to
+ smother his cries. The little fellow was so frightened, that he burst into
+ an excitement of tears. The room was dark, and as gloomy as a cavern. He
+ could neither lie down, sleep, nor console himself. He thought of Manuel,
+ only to envy his lot, and would gladly have shared his imprisonment, to be
+ relieved from such a horrible situation. Morning was to bring, perhaps,
+ worse terrors. He thought of the happy scenes of his rustic home in
+ Dunakade, and his poor parents, but nothing could relieve the anguish of
+ his feelings. And then, how could he get word to his Captain? If they were
+ so cruel to him now, he could not expect them to be less so in the
+ morning. In this manner, he sat down upon the floor with the poor negro,
+ and, if he could do nothing more, sympathized with his feelings. The poor
+ negro murmured and groaned in a manner that would have enlisted the
+ feelings of a Patagonian; and in this way he continued until about three
+ o'clock in the morning, when his moaning became so loud and pitiful, that
+ the officer of the guard came to the door with an attendant, and unbolting
+ it, entered with a lantern in his hand. He held the light toward his face,
+ and inquired what he was making such a noise about? &ldquo;Oh! good massa, good
+ massa, do send for docta; ma head got a pile o' cuts on him,&rdquo; said he,
+ putting his hand to his head. The officer passed the lantern to his
+ attendant, and after putting a pair of gloves on his hands, began to feel
+ his head, turn aside his torn clothes, and wipe the dirt from the places
+ where the blood seemed to be clotted. &ldquo;Good gracious! I didn't conjecture
+ that you were cut so bad. Here, my good fellow, (addressing himself to
+ Tommy,) hold the lantern. Michael, go get a pail of water, and some
+ cloths,&rdquo; said he, very suddenly becoming awakened to the real condition of
+ the man, after he had exhibited a coldness that bordered on brutality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Water and cloths were soon brought. The attendant, Michael, commenced to
+ strip his clothes off, but the poor fellow was so sore that he screeched,
+ in the greatest agony, every time he attempted to touch him. &ldquo;Be easy,&rdquo;
+ said the officer, &ldquo;he's hurt pretty badly. He must a' been mighty
+ refractory, or they'd never beaten him in this manner,&rdquo; he continued,
+ opening a roll of adhesive plaster, and cutting it into strips. After
+ washing, him with water and whiskey, they dressed his wounds with the
+ plaster, and bound his head with an old silk handkerchief which they found
+ in his pocket, after which they left the light burning and retired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After they retired, Tommy inquired of the negro how they came to keep him
+ so long, before they brought him to the guard-house? It proved, that as
+ soon as they came up with him, the first one knocked him down with a club;
+ and they all at once commenced beating him with their bludgeons, and
+ continued until they had satisfied their mad fury. And while he lay
+ groaning in the streets, they left one of their number in charge, while
+ the others proceeded to get handcuffs and chains, in which they bound him,
+ and dragged him, as it were, the distance of four squares to the
+ guard-house. What a sublime picture for the meditations of a people who
+ boast of their bravery and generosity!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0019" id="link2HCH0019">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIX. THE NEXT MORNING, AND THE MAYOR'S VERDICT.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ SHORTLY after daylight, Tommy fell into a dozing sleep, from which he was
+ awakened by the mustering of the prisoners who had been brought up during
+ the night, and were to appear before the mayor at nine o'clock. A few
+ minutes before eight o'clock, an officer opened the cell-door, and they
+ were ordered to march out into a long room. In this room they found all
+ the prisoners gathered. There were three blacks and five whites, who had
+ been arrested on different charges; and as the mayor's court was merely a
+ tribunal of commitment-not judgment-if the charges upon which the
+ prisoners were brought up were sustained-which they generally were,
+ because the policeman who made the arrest was the important witness, they
+ were committed to await the tardy process of the law.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Considerable uneasiness had been felt on board of the Janson for Tommy,
+ and the Captain suggested that he might have got astray among the dark
+ lanes of the city, and that the mate had better send some of the crew to
+ look for him. The mate, better acquainted with Tommy's feelings and
+ attachment for Manuel than he was with the rules of the prison and Mr.
+ Grimshaw's arbitrary orders, assured the Captain that such a course would
+ be entirely unnecessary, for he knew when he left that he would stop all
+ night with Manuel. This quieted the Captain's apprehensions, and he said
+ no more about it until he sat down to breakfast. &ldquo;I miss Tommy amazingly,&rdquo;
+ said the Captain. &ldquo;If he stopped all night, he should be here by this
+ time. I think some one had better be sent to the jail to inquire for him.&rdquo;
+ Just as he arose from the table, one of the crew announced at the
+ companion that a person on deck wished to see the Captain. On going up, he
+ found a policeman, who informed him that a little boy had been arrested as
+ a vagrant in the street, last night, and when brought before the mayor a
+ few minutes ago, stated that he belonged to his vessel, and the mayor had
+ despatched him to notify the master. &ldquo;Circumstances are suspicious; he was
+ seen in company with a negro of very bad habits; but if you can identify
+ the boy, you had better come quick, or he'll be sent to jail, and you'll
+ have some trouble to get him out,&rdquo; said the messenger, giving the Captain
+ a description of the boy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh yes!&rdquo; said the Captain, &ldquo;that's my Tommy. I verily believe they'll
+ have us all in jail before we get away from the port.&rdquo; Numerous
+ appointments engrossed his time, and he had promised to meet the consul at
+ an early hour that morning. Notwithstanding this, he gave a few orders to
+ the mate about getting the hatches ready and receiving the port-wardens,
+ and then immediately repaired to the all-important guard-house. He was
+ just in time to receive the mortifying intelligence that the mayor's court
+ had concluded its sitting, and to see little Tommy, with a pair of
+ handcuffs on his hand, in the act of being committed to jail by a Dutch
+ constable. He stopped the constable, and being told that his honor was yet
+ in the room, put a couple of dollars into his hand to await his
+ intercession. Another fortunate circumstance favored him; just as he
+ stopped the constable, he saw his friend, Colonel S&mdash;, approaching.
+ The colonel saw there was trouble, and with his usual, characteristic
+ kindness, hastened up and volunteered his services.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We must now return to the arraignment, as it proceeded after the messenger
+ had been despatched.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The negro confined with Tommy presented a wretched picture when brought
+ into the light room among the other prisoners. His head was so swollen
+ that no trace of feature was left in his face. Cuts and gashes were marked
+ with plaster all over his neck and face; his head tied up with an old red
+ handkerchief; his eyes, what could be seen of them, more like balls of
+ blood than organs of sight; while the whiskey and water with which his
+ head had been washed, had mixed with the blood upon his clothes, and only
+ served to make its appearance more disgusting. Altogether, a more pitiful
+ object never was presented to human sight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some minutes before the clock struck nine, an intelligent-looking
+ gentleman, very well dressed, and portly in his appearance, entered the
+ room. He was evidently kindly disposed, but one of those men whose
+ feelings prompt them to get through business with despatch, rather than
+ inquire into the circumstances of aggravated cases. He held a consultation
+ with the officer for some minutes with reference to the prisoners. After
+ which he mounted a little tribune, and addressing a few words to the white
+ prisoners, (a person who acted the part of clerk announced court by
+ rapping upon a desk with a little mallet,) inquired whether the officers
+ had notified the owners of the negroes. Being informed that they had, he
+ proceeded with the negroes first. One, by some good fortune, was taken
+ away by his master, who paid the usual fee to swell the city treasury;
+ another was sentenced to receive twenty paddles on the frame at the
+ workhouse; and the third, the man we have described, being brought
+ forward, weak with the loss of blood, leaned his hand upon the back of a
+ chair. &ldquo;Stand up straight!&rdquo; said the officer, in a commanding tone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, my boy, this is twice you have been before this court. Your master
+ has left you to the mercy of the law, and given strict orders to the
+ police in the event that you were caught a third time. Your crime is worse
+ now, for you were caught in company with that white boy-probably on some
+ errand of villany, prowling about the streets after drum-beat. I shall, in
+ consideration of the facts here stated by the police, whose evidence I am
+ bound to recognise, sentence you to nineteen paddles on the frame, and to
+ be committed to jail, in accordance with your master's orders, there to
+ await his further directions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Arraign the white prisoners according to the roll, Mr.&mdash;. Have you
+ sent a message to the Captain about that boy?&rdquo; inquired the mayor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, yer honor; but I will send at once,&rdquo; said the officer, stepping into
+ the passage and calling an attendant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little fellow was arraigned first. He stood up before the mayor while
+ the ruffianly policeman who arrested him preferred the charges and swore
+ to them, adding as much to give coloring as possible. &ldquo;Now, my man, let me
+ hear what you have got to say for yourself. I have sent for your captain,&rdquo;
+ said the mayor, looking as if he really felt pity for the little fellow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He commenced to tell his simple story, but soon became so convulsed with
+ tears that he could proceed no further. &ldquo;I only went to the jail to see
+ Manuel, the steward, and I got lost, and begged the black man to show me
+ the way&rdquo;&mdash;said he, sobbing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I have heard enough,&rdquo; said the mayor, interrupting him. &ldquo;You could
+ not have been at the jail at that time o' night-impossible. It was after
+ hours-contrary to rules-and only makes the matter worse for yourself. You
+ can stand aside, and if the Captain comes before court is through, we will
+ see further; if not, you must be committed as a vagrant. I'm afraid of you
+ young strollers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The officer of the guard, as if the poor boy's feelings were not already
+ sufficiently harassed, took him by the arm, and pushing him into a corner,
+ said, &ldquo;There, you young scamp, sit down. You'll get your deserts when you
+ get to the jail.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He sat down, but could not restrain his feelings. The presence of the
+ Captain was his only hope. He saw the prisoners arraigned one by one, and
+ join him as they were ordered for committal. He was handcuffed like the
+ rest, and delivered to the constable. The reader can imagine the smile of
+ gladness that welcomed the Captain's timely appearance. The latter's
+ exhibition of feeling, and the simple exclamation of the child's joy,
+ formed a striking picture of that fondness which a loving child manifests
+ when meeting its parents after a long absence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Take the irons off that child,&rdquo; said the colonel to the constable. &ldquo;A man
+ like you should not put such symbols of ignominy upon a youth like that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I would do any thing to oblige you, colonel; but I cannot without orders
+ from the mayor,&rdquo; returned the man, very civilly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'll see that you do, very quick,&rdquo; rejoined the colonel, impatiently; and
+ taking the little fellow by the arm in a compassionate manner, led him
+ back into the presence of the mayor, followed by the Captain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I want to know what you are committing this lad for,&rdquo; said the colonel,
+ setting his hat upon the table, while his face flushed with indignation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Vagrancy, and caught prowling about the streets with a negro at midnight.
+ That is the charge, colonel,&rdquo; replied the mayor, with particular
+ condescension and suavity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Was there any proof adduced to substantiate that fact?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;None but the policeman's; you know we are bound to take that as prima
+ facie.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then it was entirely ex parte. But you know the character of these
+ policemen, and the many aggravated circumstances that have arisen from
+ their false testimony. I wish to cast no disrespect, your honor; but
+ really they will swear to any thing for a fee, while their unscrupulous
+ bribery has become so glaring, that it is a disgrace to our police system.
+ Have you heard the boy's story?&rdquo; said the colonel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, he began to tell a crooked story, so full of admissions, and then
+ made such a blubbering about it, that I couldn't make head or tail of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, here is the Captain of his vessel, a friend of mine, whom I esteem
+ a gentleman-for all captains ought to be gentlemen, not excepting Georgia
+ captains and majors,&rdquo; said the colonel, jocosely, turning round and
+ introducing the Captain to his honor. &ldquo;Now, your honor, you will indulge
+ me by listening to the little fellow's story, which will be corroborated
+ in its material points by the statements of the Captain, which, I trust,
+ will be sufficient; if not, we shall recur to the jailer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It will be sufficient. I am only sorry there has been so much trouble
+ about it,&rdquo; said the mayor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boy now commenced to tell his story, which the mayor listened to with
+ all learned attention. No sooner had Tommy finished, and the Captain arose
+ to confirm his statements, than the mayor declared himself satisfied,
+ apologized for the trouble it had caused, and discharged the boy upon
+ paying the costs, the amount of which the colonel took from his pocket and
+ threw upon the table. Thus was Tommy's joy complete; not so the poor negro
+ whose ill luck he shared. This high-sounding mayor's court was like
+ Caesar's court, with the exceptions in Caesar's favor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0020" id="link2HCH0020">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XX. EMEUTE AMONG THE STEWARDS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ SEVERAL days had passed ere we again introduce the reader to the cell of
+ the imprisoned stewards. The captain of the Janson had been assured by Mr.
+ Grimshaw that every thing was comfortable at the jail, and Manuel would be
+ well cared for. Confiding in this, the activity of the consul to bring the
+ matter before the proper authorities-and the manner in which his own time
+ was engrossed with his business-left him no opportunity to visit Manuel at
+ the jail. Tommy and one of the sailors had carried him his hammock, and a
+ few things from the ship's stores; and with this exception, they had but
+ little to eat for several days. Copeland had but a few days more to
+ remain, and, together with those who were with him, had exhausted their
+ means, in providing from day to day, during their imprisonment. The poor
+ woman who did their washing, a generous-hearted mulatto, had brought them
+ many things, for which she asked no compensation. Her name was Jane Bee,
+ and when the rules of the jail made every man his own washerwoman, she
+ frequently washed for those who had nothing to pay her. But her means were
+ small, and she worked hard for a small pittance, and had nothing to bring
+ them for several days. They were forced to take the allowance of bread,
+ but could not muster resolution to eat the sickly meat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Those who had suffered from it before, took it as a natural consequence,
+ looking to the time of their release, as if it was to bring a happy change
+ in their lives. But Manuel felt that it was an unprecedented outrage upon
+ his feelings, and was determined to remonstrate against it. He knocked
+ loudly at the door, and some of the prisoners hearing it, reported to the
+ jailer, who sent Daley to answer it. As soon as the door was opened, he
+ rushed past, and succeeded in gaining the iron door that opened into the
+ vestibule, where he could converse with the Jailer, through the grating,
+ before Daley could stop him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The jailer seeing him at the grating, anticipated his complaint. &ldquo;Well,
+ Pereira,&mdash;what's the matter up-stairs?&rdquo; said he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For God's sake, jailer, what am I put in here for-to starve? We cannot
+ eat the meat you send us, and we have had little else than bread and water
+ for three days. Do give us something to eat, and charge it to consul, or
+ Captain, an' I'll pay it from my wages when I get out, if I ever do,&rdquo; said
+ he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear fellow!&rdquo; said the jailer, &ldquo;no one knows your case better than I
+ do; but I am poor, and the restrictions which I am under allow me no
+ privileges. You had all better take your meat in the morning-if you won't
+ take soup-and try to cook it, or get Jane to do it for you. I will give
+ you some coffee and bread from my own table, to-night, and you better say
+ as little about it as possible, for if Grimshaw hears it, he may lock you
+ up.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do, I shall be very thankful, for we are really suffering from hunger, in
+ our cell, and I pay you when I get money from Captain,&rdquo; said Manuel,
+ manifesting his thankfulness at the jailer's kindness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will send it up in a few minutes, but you needn't trouble yourself
+ about pay-I wouldn't accept it!&rdquo; said the jailer; and as good as his word,
+ he sent them up a nice bowl of coffee for each, and some bread, butter,
+ and cheese. They partook of the humble fare, with many thanks to the
+ donor. Having despatched it, they seated themselves upon the floor, around
+ the faint glimmer of a tin lamp, while Copeland read the twentieth and
+ twenty-first chapters of the Acts of the Apostles. Copeland was a pious
+ negro, and his behaviour during his imprisonment enlisted the respect of
+ every one in jail. Singular as the taste may seem, he had his corner in
+ the cell decorated with little framed prints. Among them we noticed one of
+ the crucifixion, and another of the Madonna. After reading the chapters,
+ they retired to their hard beds. About nine o'clock the next morning,
+ Daley came to the door with a piece of neck meat, so tainted and bloody
+ that its smell and looks more than satisfied the stomach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here it is, boys,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;yer four pound, but ye's better take soup,
+ cos ye'll niver cook that bone, anyhow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you think we're like dogs, to eat such filth as that? No! I'd rather
+ starve!&rdquo; said Manuel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed, an' ye'll larn to ate any thing win ye'd be here a month. But be
+ dad, if ye don't watch number one about here, ye's won't get much nohow,&rdquo;
+ replied Daley, dropping the bloody neck upon the floor, and walking out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Better take it,&rdquo; said Copeland. &ldquo;There's no choice, and hunger don't
+ stand for dainties, especially in this jail, where everybody is famished
+ for punishment. If we don't eat it, we can give it to some of the poor
+ prisoners up-stairs.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;While I have good ship-owners, and a good Captain, I never will eat such
+ stuff as that; oh! no,&rdquo; returned Manuel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The meat was laid in a corner for the benefit of the flies; and when
+ dinner time arrived, the same hard extreme arrived with it-bread and
+ water. And nobody seemed to have any anxieties on their behalf; for two of
+ them had written notes to their Captains, on the day previous, but they
+ remained in the office for want of a messenger to carry them. Fortunately,
+ Jane called upon them in the afternoon, and brought a nice dish of rice
+ and another of homony.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We will here insert a letter we received from a very worthy friend, who,
+ though he had done much for the Charleston people, and been repaid in
+ persecutions, was thrown into jail for a paltry debt by a ruthless
+ creditor. Cleared by a jury of twelve men, he was held in confinement
+ through the wretched imperfection of South Carolina law, to await nearly
+ twelve months for the sitting of the &ldquo;Appeal Court,&rdquo; more to appease the
+ vindictiveness of his enemies than to satisfy justice, for it was well
+ understood that he did not owe the debt. His letter speaks for itself.
+ Charleston Jail, March 31, '52.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MY DEAR FRIEND,&mdash;I could not account for your absence during the last
+ few days, until this morning, when Mr. F***** called upon me for a few
+ moments, and from him I learnt that you had been quite unwell. If you are
+ about to-morrow, do call upon me; for a more dreary place, or one where
+ less regard is paid to the calls of humanity, cannot be found among the
+ nations of the earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such is the ordinary condition of suffering within this establishment,
+ that men, and even women, are forced to all kinds of extremes to sustain
+ life; and, to speak what experience has taught me, crime is more increased
+ than reduced by this wretched system. There seems to be little distinction
+ among the prisoners, and no means to observe it, except in what is called
+ Mount Rascal on the third story. Pilfering is so common, that you cannot
+ leave your room without locking your door. The jailer is a good,
+ kind-hearted old man, very often giving from his own table to relieve the
+ wants of debtors, many of whom repay him with ingratitude. I have suffered
+ many privations from shipwreck and cold, but never until I came to South
+ Carolina was I compelled to endure imprisonment and subsist several days
+ upon bread and water.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Talk about chivalry and hospitality! How many men could join with me and
+ ask, &ldquo;Where is it?&rdquo; But why should I demur, when I see those abroad who
+ have been driven from this State to seek bread; when I hear the many
+ voices without tell of struggling to live, for want of system in
+ mechanical employment, and when I look upon several within these sombre
+ walls who are even worse than me. Here is a physician, with a wife and
+ large family, committed for a debt which he was unable to pay. His
+ father's name stands among the foremost of the State&mdash;a General of
+ distinction, who offered his life for her in time of war, and whose name
+ honors her triumphs, and has since graced the councils of state.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ General Hammond, whose name occupies such a conspicuous place in the
+ military history of South Carolina. The father's enthusiasm for his
+ country's cause led him to sacrifice his all, and by it he entailed
+ misfortune upon his descendants. When I consider the case of Shannon,
+ whose eleven years and seven months' imprisonment for debt, as it was
+ called, but which eventually proved to be a question turning upon
+ technicalities of law, gave him, body and soul, to the vindictiveness of a
+ persecutor, whose unrelenting malignity was kept up during that long space
+ of time. It was merely a breach of limitation between merchants, the
+ rights of which should be governed by commercial custom. Shannon had,
+ amassed about twenty thousand dollars by hard industry; his health was
+ waning, and he resolved to retire with it to his native county. The gem
+ proved too glaring for the lynx eye of a &ldquo;true Carolinian,&rdquo; who persuaded
+ him to invest his money in cotton. Moved by flattering inducements, he
+ authorized a factor to purchase for him upon certain restrictions, which,
+ unfortunately for himself, were not drawn up with regard to legal
+ enforcement-one of those singular instruments between a merchant and an
+ inexperienced man which a professional quibbler can take advantage of.
+ Cotton was at the tip-top, and very soon Shannon was presented with an
+ account of purchase, and draft so far beyond his limits, that he demurred,
+ and rejected the purchase entirely; but some plot should be laid to entrap
+ him. The factor undertook the force game, notified him that the cotton was
+ held subject to his order, and protested the draft for the appearance of
+ straightforwardness. Cotton shortly fell to the other extreme, the lot was
+ &ldquo;shoved up&rdquo; for sale on Shannon's account, Shannon was sued for the
+ balance, held to bail, and in default committed to prison. His confinement
+ and endurance of it would form a strange chapter in the history of
+ imprisonment for debt. Carrying his money with him, he closed the door of
+ his cell, and neither went out nor would allow any one but the priest to
+ enter for more than three years; and for eleven years and seven months he
+ paced the room upon a diagonal line from corner to corner, until he wore
+ the first flooring, of two-and-a-quarter-inch pine, entirely through.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I might go on and tell of many others, whose poverty was well known, and
+ yet suffered years of imprisonment for debt; but I find I have digressed.
+ I must relate an amusing affair which took place this morning between
+ Manuel Pereira, the steward of the English brig Janson, which put into
+ this port in distress, and the jailer. He is the man about whom so much
+ talk and little feeling has been enlisted&mdash;a fine, well-made,
+ generous-hearted Portuguese. He is olive-complexioned&mdash;as light as
+ many of the Carolinians&mdash;intelligent and obliging, and evidently
+ unaccustomed to such treatment as he receives here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Manuel appeared before the jailer's office this morning with two junks of
+ disgusting-looking meat, the neck-bones, tainted and bloody, in each hand.
+ His Portuguese ire was up. &ldquo;Mister Poulnot, what you call dis? In South
+ Carolina you feed man on him, ah? In my country, ah yes! we feed him to
+ dog. What you call him? May-be somethin' what me no know him. In South
+ Carolina, prison sailor when he shipwreck, starve him on nosin', den tell
+ him eat this, ah! I sails 'round ze world, but never savage man gives me
+ like zat to eat! No, I starve 'fore I eat him, be gar! Zar, you take him,&rdquo;
+ said he, throwing the pieces of meat upon the floor in disdain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Meat! Yes, it's what's sent here for us. You mustn't grumble at me; enter
+ your complaints to the sheriff, when he comes,&rdquo; said the jailer, with an
+ expression of mortification on his countenance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Meat, ah! You call dat meat in South Carolina? I call him bull-neck, not
+ fit for dog in my country. I see, when Capitan come, vat he do,&rdquo; said
+ Manuel, turning about and going to his room in a great excitement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You'd better be careful how you talk, or you may get locked up when the
+ sheriff comes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seems that the Captain had received a note from him, addressed by one
+ of the white prisoners on the same floor, and reached the jail just as
+ Manuel had ascended the stairs. He rang the bell and requested to see
+ Manuel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Manuel Pereira?&rdquo; inquired the jailer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the Captain, &ldquo;he is my steward.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He heard the Captain's voice, and immediately returned to the lobby. The
+ tears ran down his cheeks as soon as he saw his old protector. &ldquo;Well,
+ Manuel, I am glad to see you, but sorry that it is in imprisonment. Tell
+ me what is the matter. Don't they use you well here?&rdquo; inquired the
+ Captain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stepping within the office door, he caught up the pieces of meat, and
+ bringing them out in his hands, held them up. &ldquo;There, Capitan, that no fit
+ for man, is it?&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;Law send me prison, but law no give not'ing to
+ eat. What I do dat people treat me so? Ah, Capitan, bull neck, by gar,
+ yes-bull born in South Carolina, wid two neck. Ils sont reduits
+ l'extremit,&rdquo; said he, concluding with broken French.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That cannot be; it's against the law to kill bulls in South Carolina,&rdquo;
+ interrupted the jailer jocosely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Must be. I swear he bull-neck, 'cas he cum every day just like him. Bull
+ born wid one neck no cum so many. What I get for breakfast, Capitan, ah?&mdash;piece
+ bad bread. What I get for dinner, ah?&mdash;bull-neck. Yes, what I get for
+ supper, too?&mdash;piece bread and bucket o' water. May-be he bad, may be
+ he good, just so he come. You think I live on dat, Capitan?&rdquo; said he, in
+ reply to the Captain's questions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Captain felt incensed at such treatment, and excused himself for not
+ calling before; yet he could not suppress a smile that stole upon his
+ countenance in consequence of Manuel's quaint earnestness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is certainly strange fare for a human being; but the supper seems
+ rather a comical one. Did you drink the bucket of water, Manuel?&rdquo; inquired
+ the Captain, retaining a sober face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Capitan, you know me too well for dat. I not ask 'em nozin' what he no
+ get, but I want my coffee for suppe'. I no eat him like zat,&rdquo; throwing the
+ putrid meat upon the floor again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hi, hi! That won't do in this jail. You're dirtying up all my floor,&rdquo;
+ said the jailer, calling a negro boy and ordering him to carry the
+ bull-necks, as Manuel called them, into the kitchen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You call him dirt, ah, Miser Jailer? Capitan, just come my room; I shown
+ him,&rdquo; said Manuel, leading the way up-stairs, and the Captain followed. A
+ sight at the cell was enough, while the sickly stench forbid him to enter
+ beyond the threshold. He promised Manuel that he would provide for him in
+ future, and turning about suddenly, retreated into the lower lobby.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Jailer, what does all this mean? Do you allow men to starve in a land of
+ plenty, and to suffer in a cell like that?&rdquo; asked the Captain in a
+ peremptory tone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I feel for the men, but you must enter your complaints to the sheriff-the
+ ration of the jail is entirely in his hands.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But have you no voice in it, by which you can alleviate their situation?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not the least! My duty is to keep every thing-every thing to rights, as
+ far as people are committed. You will find the sheriff in his office, any
+ time between this and two o'clock,&rdquo; said the jailer. And the Captain left
+ as suddenly as he came.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You will think I have written you an essay, instead of a letter inviting
+ you to come and see me. Accept it for its intention, and excuse the
+ circumstances. Your obedient servant,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0021" id="link2HCH0021">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXI. THE CAPTAIN'S INTERVIEW WITH MR. GRIMSHAW.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE appearance of things at the jail was forlorn in the extreme. The
+ Captain knew the integrity of Manuel, and not only believed his statement,
+ but saw the positive proofs to confirm them. He repaired to the sheriff's
+ office, and inquiring for that functionary, was pointed to Mr. Grimshaw,
+ who sat in his large chair, with his feet upon the table, puffing the
+ fumes of a very fine-flavored Havana, as unconcerned as if he was lord in
+ sovereignty over every thing about the city. &ldquo;I am captain of the Janson,
+ and have called to inquire about my steward?&rdquo; said the Captain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! yes,&mdash;you have a nigger fellow in jail. Oh! by-the-by, that's
+ the one there was so much fuss about, isn't it?&rdquo; said Mr. Grimshaw,
+ looking up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is an imperative duty on me to seek the comfort of my officers and
+ crew,&rdquo; said the Captain. &ldquo;I received a note from my steward, this morning,&mdash;here
+ it is, (handing him the note,) you can read it. He requested me to call
+ upon him at the jail, where I lost no time in going, and found what he
+ stated there to be too true. How is it! From the great liberality of tone
+ which everywhere met my ears when I first arrived, I was led to believe
+ that he would be made comfortable; and that the mere confinement was the
+ only feature of the law that was a grievance. Now I find that to be the
+ only tolerable part of it. When a man has committed no crime, and is
+ imprisoned to satisfy a caprice of public feeling, it should be
+ accompanied with the most favoring attendants. To couple it with the most
+ disgraceful abuses, as are shown here, makes it exceedingly repugnant. If
+ we pay for confining these men, and for their living while they are
+ confined, in God's name let us get what we pay for!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reader will observe that Mr. Grimshaw was a man of coarse manners and
+ vulgar mind, with all their traces preserved on the outer man. He looked
+ up at the Captain with a presumptuous frown, and then said, &ldquo;Why, Mr.
+ Captain, how you talk! But that kind o' talk won't do here in South
+ Carolina. That nigger o' yourn gives us a mighty site of trouble, Captain.
+ He doesn't seem to understand that he must be contented in jail, and live
+ as the other prisoners do. He gets what the law requires, and if he gives
+ us any further trouble, we shall lock him up in the third story.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You cannot expect him to be contented, when you furnish the means of
+ discontent. But I did not come here to argue with you, nor to ask any
+ thing as a favour, but as a right. My steward has been left to suffer! Am
+ I to pay for what he does not get? Or am I to pay you for the pretence,
+ and still be compelled to supply him on account of the owners? You must
+ excuse my feelings, for I have had enough to provoke them!&rdquo; returned the
+ Captain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That business is entirely my own! He gets what the State allows, and I
+ provide. Your steward never wrote that note; it was dictated by some of
+ them miserable white prisoners. I can hear no complaints upon such cases
+ as them. If I were to listen to all these nonsensical complaints, it would
+ waste all my time. I wish the devil had all the nigger stewards and their
+ complaints; the jail's in a fuss with them all the time. I can hear
+ nothing further, sir-nothing further!&rdquo; said Grimshaw emphatically,
+ interrupting the Captain as he attempted to speak; at which the Captain
+ became so deeply incensed, that he relieved his feelings in that sort of
+ plain English which a Scotchman can best bestow in telling a man what he
+ thinks of his character.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You must remember, sir, you are in the office of the sheriff of the
+ county-parish, I mean,&mdash;and I am, sir, entitled to proper respect.
+ Begone!&mdash;avaunt! you have no right to come here and traduce my
+ character in that way. You musn't take me for a parish beadle,&rdquo; said
+ Grimshaw, contorting the unmeaning features of his visage, and letting fly
+ a stream of tobacco juice in his excitement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you have no laws to give me justice, you have my opinion of your
+ wrongs,&rdquo; returned the Captain, and taking his hat, left the office with
+ the intention of returning to the jail. On reflection, he concluded to
+ call upon Colonel S&mdash;, which he did, and finding him in his office,
+ stated the circumstances to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;These things are the fruits of imbecility; but I am sorry to say there is
+ no relief from them. We are a curious people, and do a great many curious
+ things according to law, and leave a great many things undone that the law
+ and lawmakers ought to do. But I will go with you to the jail, and
+ whatever my influence will effect is at your service,&rdquo; said the Colonel,
+ putting on his hat, and accompanying the Captain to the jail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Grimshaw had forestalled them, and after having given the jailer
+ particular instructions to lock Manuel up if he made any further
+ complaint, and to carry out his orders upon the peril of his situation,
+ met them a few steps from the outer gate, on his return. &ldquo;There, Captain!&rdquo;
+ said Grimshaw, making a sort of halt, &ldquo;I have given the jailer particular
+ orders in regard to your grumbling nigger!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Neither the Captain nor Colonel S&mdash;took any notice of his remarks,
+ and passed on into the jail. Colonel S&mdash;interceded for the man,
+ explaining the circumstances which had unfortunately brought him there,
+ and begged the jailer's kind consideration in his behalf. The jailer told
+ them what his orders had been, but promised to do as far as was in his
+ power, and to see any thing that was sent to him safely delivered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After leaving the jail, Colonel S&mdash;proposed a walk, and they
+ proceeded along a street running at right angles with the jail, until they
+ came to a corner where a large brick building was in process of erection.
+ The location was not in what might strictly be called &ldquo;the heart of the
+ city,&rdquo; nor was it in the suburbs. Carpenters and masons, both black and
+ white, were busily employed in their avocations, and from the distance all
+ seemed fair and moving with despatch. As they approached nearer, cries and
+ moans sounded upon the air, and rose high above the clatter of the
+ artisans' work. The Captain quickened his pace, but the colonel, as if
+ from a consciousness of the effect, halted, and would fain have retraced
+ his steps. &ldquo;Come!&rdquo; said the Captain, &ldquo;let us hasten-they are killing
+ somebody!&rdquo; They approached the building, and entered by an open door in
+ the basement. The passage, or entry-way, was filled with all sorts of
+ building materials; and on the left, another door opened into a long
+ basement apartment, with loose boards laid upon the floor-joists overhead.
+ Here in this dark apartment was the suffering object whose moans had
+ attracted their attention. A large billet of wood, about six feet long and
+ three feet square, which had the appearance of being used for a
+ chopping-block, laid near. A poor negro man, apparently advanced in years,
+ was stripped naked and bent over the block, in the shape of a horse-shoe,
+ with his hands and feet closely pinioned to stakes, driven in the ground
+ on each side. His feet were kept close together, and close up to the log,
+ while he was drawn over, tight by the hands, which were spread open. Thus,
+ with a rope around his neck, tied in a knot at the throat, with each end
+ carried to the pinion where his hands were secured, his head and neck were
+ drawn down to the tightest point. The very position was enough to have
+ killed an ordinary human being in less than six hours. His master, a
+ large, robust man, with a strong Irish brogue, started at their
+ appearance, as if alarmed at the presence of intruders, while holding his
+ hand in the attitude of administering another blow. &ldquo;There! you infernal
+ nigger; steal again, will you?&rdquo; said he, frothing at the mouth with rage&mdash;with
+ his coat off, his shirt-sleeves rolled up, and his face, hands, arms and
+ shirt-bosom so bespattered with blood, that a thrill of horror ran through
+ the Captain. On the ground lay several pieces of hoop, broken and covered
+ with blood, while he held in his hand another piece, (which he had torn
+ from a lime-cask,) reeking with blood, presenting the picture of a
+ murderer bestained with the blood of his victim. But the poor sufferer's
+ punishment had wasted his strength,&mdash;his moans had become so faint as
+ to be scarcely perceptible. His posteriors were so cut and mangled that we
+ could compare them to nothing but a piece of bullock's-liver, with its
+ tenacity torn by craven dogs. His body was in a profuse perspiration, the
+ sweat running from his neck and shoulders, while the blood streamed from
+ his bruises, down his legs, and upon some shavings on the ground. Just at
+ this moment a boy brought a pail of water, and set it down close by the
+ tyrant's feet. &ldquo;Go away, boy!&rdquo; said he, and the boy left as quick as
+ possible. The Captain stood dismayed at the bloody picture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Unmerciful man!&rdquo; said the colonel in a peremptory tone; &ldquo;what have you
+ been doing here? You fiend of hell, let the man up! You own slaves to
+ bring disgrace upon us in this manner! Epithets of contempt and disgust
+ are too good for you. It is such beasts as you who are creating a popular
+ hatred against us, and souring the feelings of our countrymen. Let the man
+ up instantly; the very position you have him in is enough to kill him,
+ and, if I'm not mistaken, you've killed him already.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed, he's me own property, and it's yerself won't lose a ha'penny if
+ he's kilt. An' I'll warrant ye he's cur't of stalin' better than the man
+ beyant at the wurk'o'se would be doin' if. Bad luck to the nager, an' it's
+ the second time he'd be doin' that same thing,&rdquo; said he, as unconcernedly
+ as if he had just been killing a calf.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'll 'your own' you, you miserable wretch! Your abuse and cruel treatment
+ of your slaves is becoming a public thing; and if you a'n't very careful,
+ something will be done about it before council. If they are your own, you
+ must not treat them worse than dogs; they have feeling, if you have no
+ compassion. Be quick! release him at once!&rdquo; demanded the colonel, feeling
+ the man's wrist and head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tyrant vent deliberately to work, unloosing the cords. This provoked
+ the colonel still more, and taking his knife from his pocket, he severed
+ the cords that bound his hands and feet, while as suddenly the Captain
+ sprang with his knife and severed those that bound his hands and neck.
+ &ldquo;Stop, Captain, stop! take no part,&rdquo; said the colonel, with a significant
+ look.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gintlemen, I wish yes wouldn't interfere with my own business,&rdquo; said the
+ master.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Take him up, you villanous wretch! I speak to you as you deserve, without
+ restraint or respect,&rdquo; again the colonel repeated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He called to the boy who was bringing the pail of water when they entered.
+ He came forward, and taking the poor fellow by the shoulders, this beast
+ in human form cried out, &ldquo;Get up now, ye miserable thief, ye.&rdquo; The poor
+ fellow made a struggle, but as the black man raised his head-which seemed
+ to hang as a dead weight-exhaustion had left him without strength, and he
+ fell back among the bloody shavings like a mutilated mass of lifeless
+ flesh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;None of your humbugging; yer worth a dozen dead niggers anyhow,&rdquo; said he,
+ taking up the pail of water and throwing nearly half of it over him; then
+ passing the bucket to the black man and ordering him to get more water and
+ wash him down; then to get some saltpetre and a sponge to sop his flesh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the colonel, &ldquo;I have seen a good deal of cruelty to slaves,
+ but this is the most beastly I have ever beheld. If you don't send for a
+ doctor at once, I shall report you. That man will die, to a moral
+ certainty. Now, you may depend upon what I say-if that man dies, you'll
+ feel the consequences, and I shall watch you closely.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sure I always takes care of me own niggers, an' it's himself that won't
+ be asked to do a stroke of work for a week, but have the same to git well
+ in,&rdquo; said the tyrant as the colonel and Captain were leaving.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;God be merciful to us, and spare us from the savages of mankind. That
+ scene, with its bloody accompaniment, will haunt me through life. Do your
+ laws allow such things?&rdquo; said the Captain, evidently excited.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To tell the truth, Captain,&rdquo; said the colonel, &ldquo;our laws do not reach
+ them. These men own a few negroes, which, being property, they exercise
+ absolute control over; a negro's testimony being invalid, gives them an
+ unlimited power to abuse and inflict punishment; while, if a white man
+ attempts to report such things, the cry of 'abolitionist' is raised
+ against him, and so many stand ready to second the cry, that he must have
+ a peculiar position if he does not prejudice his own interests and safety.
+ I am sorry it is so; but it is too true, and while it stigmatizes the
+ system, it works against ourselves. The evil is in the defects of the
+ system, but the remedy is a problem with diverse and intricate workings,
+ which, I own, are beyond my comprehension to solve. The reason why I spoke
+ to you as I did when you cut the pinions from the man's hands, was to give
+ you a word of precaution. That is a bad man. Negroes would rather be sold
+ to a sugar plantation in Louisiana any time than be sold to him. He soon
+ works them down; in two years, fine, healthy fellows become lame, infirm,
+ and sickly under him; he never gives them a holiday, and seldom a Sunday,
+ and half-starves them at that. If his feelings had been in a peculiar mood
+ at the instant you cut that cord, and he had not labored under the fear of
+ my presence, he would have raised a gang of his stamp, and with the
+ circumstance of your being a stranger, the only alternative for your
+ safety would have been in your leaving the city.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That vagabond has beaten the poor creature so that he will die; it can't
+ be otherwise,&rdquo; said the Captain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, no; I think not, if he is well taken care of for a week or so; but
+ it's a chance if that brute gives him a week to get well. When proud-flesh
+ sets in, it is very tedious; that is the reason, so far as the law is
+ concerned, that the lash was abolished and the paddle substituted&mdash;the
+ former mangled in the manner you saw just now, while the latter is more
+ acute and bruises less. I have seen a nigger taken from the paddle-frame
+ apparently motionless and lifeless, very little bruised, and not much
+ blood drawn; but he would come to and go to work in three or four days,&rdquo;
+ said the colonel as they passed along together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We would print the name of this brute in human form, that the world might
+ read it, were it not for an amiable wife and interesting family, whose
+ feelings we respect. We heard the cause of this cruel torture a short time
+ after, which was simply that he had stolen a few pounds of nails, and this
+ fomented the demon's rage. In the manner we have described, this ferocious
+ creature had kept his victim for more than two hours, beating him with the
+ knotty hoops taken from lime-casks. His rage would move at intervals, like
+ gusts of wind during a gale. Thus, while his feelings raged highest, he
+ would vent them upon the flesh of the poor pinioned wretch; then he would
+ stop, rest his arm, and pace the ground from wall to wall, and as soon as
+ his passion stormed, commence again and strike the blows with all his
+ power, at the same time keeping the black boy standing with a bucket of
+ water in his hand ready to pour upon the wretch whenever signs of fainting
+ appeared. Several times, when the copious shower came over him, it filled
+ his mouth, so that his cries resounded with a gurgling, death-like noise,
+ that made every sensation chill to hear it. During this space of time, he
+ inflicted more than three hundred blows. Our information is from the man
+ who did his master's bidding&mdash;poured the water&mdash;and dared not
+ say, &ldquo;Good massa, spare poor Jacob.&rdquo; We visited the place about a month
+ afterward, on a pretext of examining the basement of the building, and saw
+ the unmistakable evidences of civilized torture yet remaining in the
+ ground and upon the shavings that were scattered around.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Captain, you must not judge the institution of slavery by what you saw
+ there; that is only one of those isolated cases so injurious in
+ themselves, but for which the general character of the institution should
+ not be held answerable,&rdquo; said the colonel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A system so imperfect should be revised, lest innocent men be made to
+ suffer its wrongs,&rdquo; said the Captain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They continued their walk through several very pretty parts of the city,
+ where fine flowering gardens and well-trimmed hedges were nicely laid out;
+ these, however, were not the habitations of the &ldquo;old families.&rdquo; They
+ occupied parts of the city designated by massive-looking old mansions,
+ exhibiting an antiqueness and mixed architecture, with dilapidated
+ court-yards and weather-stained walls, showing how steadfast was the work
+ of decay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel pointed out the many military advantages of the city, which
+ would be used against Uncle Sam if he meddled with South Carolina. He
+ spoke of them ironically, for he was not possessed of the secession
+ monomania. He had been a personal friend of Mr. Calhoun, and knew his
+ abstractions. He knew Mr. McDuffie; Hamilton, (the transcendant, of South
+ Carolina fame;) Butler, of good component parts-eloquent, but moved by
+ fancied wrongs; Rhett, renouncer of that vulgar name of Smith, who hated
+ man because he spoke, yet would not fight because he feared his God; and
+ betwixt them, a host of worthies who made revenge a motto; and last, but
+ not least, great Quattlebum, whose strength and spirit knows no bound, and
+ brought the champion Commander, with his enthusiastic devotion, to lead
+ unfaltering forlorn hopes. But he knew there was deception in the
+ political dealings of this circle of great names.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Returning to the market, they took a social glass at Baker's, where the
+ colonel took leave of the Captain; and the latter, intending to repair to
+ his vessel, followed the course of the market almost to its lowest
+ extreme. In one of the most public places of the market, the Captain's
+ attention was attracted by a singular object of mechanism. It seemed so
+ undefined in its application, that he was reminded of the old saying among
+ sailors when they fall in with any indescribable thing at sea, that it was
+ a &ldquo;fidge-fadge, to pry the sun up with in cloudy weather.&rdquo; It was a large
+ pedestal about six feet high, with a sort of platform at the base for
+ persons to stand upon, supplied with two heavy rings about eight inches
+ apart. It was surmounted by an apex, containing an iron shackle long
+ enough for a sloop-of-war's best bower chain, and just, beneath it was a
+ nicely-turned moulding. About three feet from the ground, and twelve
+ inches from the pedestal, were two pieces of timber one above the other,
+ with a space of some ten inches between them, the upper one set about five
+ inches nearest the pedestal, also containing two rings, and both supported
+ by posts in the ground. Above the whole was a framework, with two
+ projecting timbers supplied with rings, and standing about fourteen inches
+ in a diagonal direction above the big ring in the apex of the shaft. It
+ was altogether a curious instrument, but it designated the civilization of
+ the age, upon the same principle that a certain voyager who, on landing in
+ a distant country, discovered traces of civilization in the decaying
+ remains of an old gallows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He viewed the curious instrument for some time, and then turning to an old
+ ragged negro, whose head and beard were whitened with the flour of age,
+ said, &ldquo;Well, old man, what do you call that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, massa, him great t'ing dat-what big old massa judge send buckra-man
+ to get whip, so color foke laugh when 'e ketch 'im on de back, ca' bim;
+ an' massa wid de cock-up hat on 'e head put on big vip jus' so,&rdquo; said the
+ old negro.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the whipping-post, where white men, for small thefts, were branded
+ with ignominy and shame.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you a slave, old man?&rdquo; inquired the Captain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old man turned his head aside and pulled his ragged garments, as if
+ shame had stung his feelings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do, good massa-old Simon know ye don'e belong here-give him piece of
+ 'bacca,&rdquo; replied the hoary-headed veteran evidently intending to evade the
+ question. The Captain divided his &ldquo;plug&rdquo; with him, and gave him a quarter
+ to get more, but not to buy whiskey. &ldquo;Tank-e, massa, tank-e; he gone wid
+ ole Simon long time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you haven't answered my question; I asked you if you were a slave.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! massa, ye don'e know him how he is, ah ha! ha! I done gone now. Massa
+ Pringle own 'im once, but 'im so old now, nobody say I own 'im, an' ole
+ Simon a'n't no massa what say I his fo' bacon. I don't woff nofin' nohow
+ now, 'cos I ole. When Simon young-great time 'go-den massa say Simon his;
+ woff touzan' dollars; den me do eve' ting fo' massa just so. I prime nigga
+ den, massa; now I woff nosin', no corn and bacon 'cept what 'im git from
+ Suke-e. She free; good massa make her free,&rdquo; said he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How old are you, old man?&rdquo; inquired the Captain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, Massa Stranger, ye got ole Simon da! If me know dat, den 'im know
+ somefin' long time ago, what buckra-man don' larn. I con'try-born nigger,
+ massa, but I know yonder Massa Pringle house fo' he built 'im.&rdquo; Just at
+ this moment several pieces of cannon and other ordnance were being drawn
+ past on long, low-wheeled drays. &ldquo;Ah, massa, ye don'e know what 'em be,&rdquo;
+ said the old negro, pointing to them. &ldquo;Dem wa' Massa South Ca'lina gwan to
+ whip de 'Nited States wid Massa Goberna' order 'em last year, an 'e jus'
+ come. Good masse gwan' to fight fo' we wid 'em.&rdquo; The poor old man seemed
+ to take a great interest in the pieces of ordnance as they passed along,
+ and to have inherited all the pompous ideas of his master. The negroes
+ about Charleston have a natural inclination for military tactics, and
+ hundreds of ragged urchins, as well as old daddies and mammies, may be
+ seen following the fife and drum on parade days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then I suppose you've a home anywhere, and a master nowhere, old man?&rdquo;
+ said the Captain, shaking him by the hand, as one who had worn out his
+ slavery to be disowned in the winter of life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0022" id="link2HCH0022">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXII. COPELAND'S RELEASE, AND MANUEL'S CLOSE CONFINEMENT.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE Captain of the Janson, finding that no dependence was to be placed
+ upon the statements of the officials, after returning to his vessel, gave
+ orders that Tommy should be sent to the jail every day with provisions for
+ Manuel. The task was a desirable one for Tommy, and every day about ten
+ o'clock he might be seen trudging to the jail with a haversack under his
+ arm. There were five stewards confined in the cell, and for some days
+ previous to this attention on the part of the Captain they had been
+ reduced to the last stage of necessity. The quantity may be considered as
+ meagre when divided among so many, but added to the little things brought
+ in by Jane, and presents from several of the crew of the Janson, they got
+ along. Still it was a dependence upon chance and charity, which any casual
+ circumstance might affect. For several days they made themselves as
+ contented and happy as the circumstances would admit; and always being
+ anxious to enjoy the privilege of their time in the yard, they would leave
+ their cell together, and mix with the prisoners of their own color under
+ the stoop.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a few days, they found that their cell had been entered, and nearly
+ all their provisions stolen. Not contented with this, the act was repeated
+ for several days, and all the means they provided to detect the thief
+ proved fruitless. The jailer made several searches through their
+ remonstrances, but without effecting any thing. They kept their provisions
+ in a little box, which they locked with a padlock; but as Daley had the
+ keys of the cell, they had no means of locking the door. At length Manuel
+ set a trap that proved effectual. One morning Tommy came puffing into the
+ jail with a satchel over his back. &ldquo;I guess Manuel won't feel downhearted
+ when he sees this&mdash;do you think he will?&rdquo; said the little fellow, as
+ he put the satchel upon the floor and looked up at the jailer. &ldquo;An' I've
+ got some cigars, too, the Captain sent, in my pocket,&rdquo; said he, nodding
+ his head; and putting his hand into a side-pocket, pulled out one and
+ handed it to the jailer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! you are a good little fellow-worth a dozen of our boys. Sit down and
+ rest yourself,&rdquo; said the jailer, and called a monstrous negro wench to
+ bring a chair and take the satchel up to the cell. Then turning to the
+ back-door, he called Manuel; and, as if conscious of Tommy's arrival, the
+ rest of the stewards followed. He sprang from the chair as soon as he saw
+ Manuel, and running toward him, commenced telling him what he had got in
+ the satchel and at the same time pulled out a handful of segars that the
+ Captain had sent for himself. Manuel led the way up-stairs, followed by
+ Tommy and the train of stewards. Tommy opened the satchel, while Manuel
+ laid the contents, one by one, on the table which necessity had found in
+ the head of a barrel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now eat, my friends, eat just as much as you want, and then I'll catch
+ the thief that breaks my lock and steals my meat. I catch him,&rdquo; said
+ Manuel. After they had all done, he locked the balance up in his box, and
+ sent everybody down-stairs into the yard, first covering himself with two
+ mattrasses, and giving orders to Copeland to lock the door after him.
+ Every thing was ready to move at the word. In this position he remained
+ for nearly half an hour. At length he heard a footstep approach the door,
+ and then the lock clink. The door opened slowly, and the veritable Mr.
+ Daley limped in, and taking a key from his pocket, unlocked the little
+ box, and filling his tin pan, locked it, and was walking off as
+ independent as a wood-sawyer, making a slight whistle to a watch that was
+ stationed at the end of the passage. &ldquo;It's you, is it?&rdquo; said Manuel,
+ suddenly springing up and giving him a blow on the side of the head that
+ sent him and the contents of the pan into a promiscuous pile on the floor.
+ Daley gathered himself up and made an attempt to reach the door, but
+ Manuel, fearing what might be the consequence if the other prisoners came
+ to his assistance, shut the door before him and fastened it on the inside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bad luck to yer infernal eyes, will ye strike a white man, ye nager ye,
+ in a country like this same?&rdquo; said Daley, as he was gathering himself up.
+ This incensed Manuel's feelings still more. To have insult added to
+ injury, and a worthless drunkard and thief abuse him, was more than he
+ could bear. He commenced according to a sailor's rule of science, and gave
+ Daley a systematic threshing, which, although against the rules of the
+ jail, was declared by several of the prisoners to be no more than he had
+ long deserved. As may have been expected, Daley cried lustily for help,
+ adding the very convenient item of murder, to make his case more alarming.
+ Several persons had crowded around the door, but none could gain
+ admittance. The jailer had no sooner reached the door, than (most
+ unfortunately for Manuel) he was called back to the outer door, to admit
+ Mr. Grimshaw, who had just rung the bell. The moment he entered, Daley's
+ noise was loudest, and reached his ears before he had gained the outside
+ gate. He rushed up-stairs, followed by the jailer, and demanded entrance
+ at the cell door, swearing at the top of his voice that he would break it
+ in with an axe if the command was not instantly obeyed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The door opened, and Manuel stood with his left hand extended at Daley.
+ &ldquo;Come in, gentlemen, I catch him, one rascal, what steal my provision
+ every day, and I punish him, what he remember when I leave.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Daley stood trembling against the wall, bearing the marks of serious
+ injury upon his face and eyes. &ldquo;At it again, Daley? Ah! I thought you had
+ left off them tricks!&rdquo; said the jailer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Daley began to tell a three-cornered story, and to give as many possible
+ excuses, with equally as many characteristic bulls in them. &ldquo;I don't want
+ to hear your story, Daley,&rdquo; said Mr. Grimshaw. &ldquo;But, Mr. Jailer, I command
+ you to lock that man up in the third story,&rdquo; pointing to Manuel. &ldquo;I don't
+ care what the circumstances are. He's given us more trouble than he's
+ worth. He tried to pass himself off for a white man, but he couldn't come
+ that, and now he's had the impudence to strike a white man; lock him up!
+ lock him up!! and keep him locked up until further orders from me. I'll
+ teach him a lesson that he never learnt before he came to South Carolina;
+ and then let Consul Mathew sweat over him, and raise another fuss if he
+ can.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If he's guilty of violating the rules of the jail, Daley is guilty of
+ misdemeanour, and the thieving has been aggravatingly continued. If we put
+ one, we must put both up,&rdquo; said the jailer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Just obey my orders, Mr. Jailer. I will reprimand Daley to-morrow. I
+ shall just go to the extent of the law with that feller,&rdquo; said Grimshaw
+ peremptorily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You may lock me up in a dungeon, do with me as you will, if the power is
+ yours; but my feelings are my own, and you cannot crush them. I look to my
+ consul, and the country that has protected me around the world, and can
+ protect me still,&rdquo; said Manuel, resigning himself to the jailer, whose
+ intentions he knew to be good.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Poor little Tommy stood begging and crying for his friend and companion,
+ for he heard Mr. Grimshaw give an imperative order to the jailer not to
+ allow visitors into his cell. &ldquo;Never mind, Tommy, we shall soon meet
+ again, and sail companions for the old owners. Don't cry; the jailer will
+ let you see me to-morrow,&rdquo; said Manuel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, I can't do that; you heard my orders; I must obey them. I should like
+ to do it, but it's out of my power,&rdquo; returned the jailer, awaiting with a
+ bunch of keys in his hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Manuel turned to the little fellow, and kissing him as he would an
+ affectionate child, bade him adieu, and ascended, the steps leading to the
+ third story (Mount Rascal) in advance of the jailer, to be confined in a
+ dark, unhealthy cell, there to await the caprice of one man. To describe
+ this miserable hole would be a task too harrowing to our feelings. We pass
+ it for those who will come after us. He little thought, when he shook the
+ hand of his little companion, that it was the last time he should meet him
+ for many months, and then only to take a last parting look, under the most
+ painful circumstances. But such is the course of life!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Copeland had received notice to hold himself in readiness, as his vessel
+ would be ready for sea the next morning. He was not long in getting his
+ few things in order, and when morning came he was on hand, prepared to
+ bound from the iron confines of the Charleston jail, like a stag from a
+ thicket. As he bade good-by to his fellow-prisoners in the morning, he
+ said, &ldquo;This is my last imprisonment in Charleston. I have been imprisoned
+ in Savannah, but there I had plenty to eat, comfortable apartments, and
+ every thing I asked for, except my liberty. Never, so long as I sail the
+ water, shall I ship for such a port as this again.&rdquo; He requested to see
+ Manuel, but being refused, upon the restraint of orders, he left the jail.
+ It was contrary to law; and thus in pursuing his vocation within the
+ limits of South-Carolina, his owners were made to pay the following sum,
+ for which neither they nor the man who suffered the imprisonment received
+ any compensation. &ldquo;Contrary to Law.&rdquo; Schooner &ldquo;Oscar Jones,&rdquo; Captain
+ Kelly, For William H. Copeland, Colored Seaman. To Sheriff of Charleston
+ District. 1852,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To Arrest, $2; Registry, $2, $4.00 To Recog. $1.31; Constable, $1, 2.31 To
+ Commitment and Discharge, 1.00 To 15 Days' Jail Maintenance of Wm. H.
+ Copeland, at 80 cts. per day, 4.50 Received payment, $11.81 J. D&mdash;,
+ Per Charles E. Kanapeaux, Clerk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ God save the sovereignty of South Carolina, and let her mercy and
+ hospitality be known on earth!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0023" id="link2HCH0023">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIII. IMPRISONMENT OF JOHN PAUL, AND JOHN BAPTISTE PAMERLIE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ IN order to complete the four characters, as we designed in the outset, we
+ must here introduce the persons whose names fill the caption. The time of
+ their imprisonment was some two months later than Manuel's release; but we
+ introduce them here for the purpose of furnishing a clear understanding of
+ the scenes connected with Manuel's release.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John Paul was a fine-looking French negro, very dark, with well-developed
+ features, and very intelligent,&mdash;what would be called in South
+ Carolina, &ldquo;a very prime feller.&rdquo; He was steward on board of the French
+ bark Senegal, Captain&mdash;. He spoke excellent French and Spanish, and
+ read Latin very well,&mdash;was a Catholic, and paid particular respect to
+ devotional exercises,&mdash;but unfortunately he could not speak or
+ understand a word of English. In all our observation of different
+ characters of colored men, we do not remember to have seen one whose
+ pleasant manner, intelligence, and civility, attracted more general
+ attention. But he could not comprehend the meaning of the law imprisoning
+ a peaceable man without crime, and why the authorities should fear him,
+ when he could not speak their language. He wanted to see the city-what
+ sort of people were in it-if they bore any analogy to their good old
+ forefathers in France; and whether they had inherited the same capricious
+ feelings as the descendants of the same generation on the other side of
+ the water. There could be no harm in that; and although he knew something
+ of French socialism, he was ignorant of Carolina's peculiar institutions,
+ her politics, and her fears of abolition, as a &ldquo;Georgia cracker&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A sort of semi-civilized native, wearing a peculiar homespun dress; with a
+ native dialect strongly resembling many of the Yorkshire phrases. They are
+ generally found located in the poorer parishes and districts, where their
+ primitive-looking cabins are easily designated from that of the more
+ enterprising agriculturist. But few of them can read or write,&mdash;and
+ preferring the coarsest mode of life, their habits are extremely
+ dissolute. Now and then one may be found owning a negro or two,&mdash;but
+ a negro would rather be sold to the torments of hell, or a Louisiana
+ sugar-planter, than to a Georgia cracker. You will see them approaching
+ the city on market-days, with their travelling-cart, which is a curiosity
+ in itself. It is a two-wheeled vehicle of the most primitive description,
+ with long, rough poles for shafts or thills. Sometimes it is covered with
+ a blanket, and sometimes with a white rag, under which are a few things
+ for market, and the good wife, with sometimes one or two wee-yans; for the
+ liege lord never fails to bring his wife to market, that she may see the
+ things of the city. The dejected-looking frame of some scrub-breed horse
+ or a half-starved mule is tied (for we can't call it harnessed) between
+ the thills, with a few pieces of rope and withes; and, provided with a
+ piece of wool-tanned sheep-skin, the lord of the family, with peculiar
+ dress, a drab slouched hat over his eyes, and a big whip in his hand,
+ mounts on the back of the poor animal, and placing his feet upon the
+ thills to keep them down, tortures it through a heavy, sandy road. The
+ horses are loaded so much beyond their strength, that they will stop to
+ blow, every ten or fifteen minutes, while the man will sit upon their
+ backs with perfect unconcern. Remonstrate with them in regard to the
+ sufficient draught added to the insupportable weight upon their backs, and
+ they will immediately commence demonstrating how he can draw easier when
+ there is an immense weight upon his back. The husband generally exchanges
+ his things for whiskey, rice, and tobacco, while the wife buys calico and
+ knick-knacks. Sometimes they get &ldquo;a right smart chance o' things&rdquo;
+ together, and have a &ldquo;party at home,&rdquo; which means a blow-out among
+ themselves. Sometimes they have a shucking, which is a great affair, even
+ among the little farmers in Upper Georgia, where, only, corn-shuckings are
+ kept up with all the spice of old custom, and invitations are extended to
+ those at a distance of ten or fifteen miles, who repay the compliment with
+ their presence, and join in the revelry. There are two classes of the
+ cracker in Georgia, according to our observation, differing somewhat in
+ their dialect, but not in their habits. One is the upper, and the other
+ the low country, or rather what some call the &ldquo;co-u-n-try-b-o-r-n&rdquo;
+ cracker. The up-country cracker gives more attention to farming, inhabits
+ what's known as the Cherokee country and its vicinity, and is designated
+ by the sobriquet of &ldquo;wire-grass man.&rdquo; would be of Greek. Like his
+ predecessors in confinement, he fell into the hands of the veritable Dunn,
+ without the assistance of his friend Duse, as he called him; but had it
+ not been for the timely appearance of a clerk in the French consul's
+ office, who explained the nature of the arrest, in his native tongue, Mr.
+ Dunn would have found some trouble in making the arrest. Already had the
+ officers and crew of the bark gathered around him, making grimaces, and
+ gibbering away like a flock of blackbirds surrounding a hawk, and just
+ ready to pounce. &ldquo;Don't I'se be tellin' yees what I wants wid 'im, and the
+ divil a bit ye'll understand me. Why don't yees spake so a body can
+ understand what yees be blatherin' about. Sure, here's the paper, an' yees
+ won't read the English of it. The divil o' such a fix I was ever in before
+ wid yer John o' crapue's an' yer chatter. Ye say we-we-we; sure it's but
+ one I wants. Ah! whist now, captain, and don't ye be makin' a bother over
+ it. Shure, did ye niver hear o' South Carolina in the wide world? An' ye
+ bees travellin' all over it, and herself's such a great State, wid so many
+ great gintlemen in it,&rdquo; said Dunn, talking his green-island Greek to the
+ Frenchman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We, we! mon Dieu, ah!&rdquo; said the Frenchman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, shure there ye are again. What would I be doin' wid de 'hole o' yees?
+ It's the nager I want. Don't ye know that South Carolina don't allow the
+ likes o' him to be comin ashore and playing the divil wid her slaves,&rdquo;
+ continued Dunn, stretching himself up on his lame leg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The clerk stepped up at this moment. &ldquo;It's 'imself'll be telling yes all
+ about it, for yer like a parcel of geese makin' a fuss about a goslin.&rdquo;
+ Mr. Dunn had got his Corkonian blood up; and although the matter was
+ explained, he saw the means at hand, and fixed his feelings for a stiff
+ compensation. The clerk, after explaining to the captain, turned to John
+ Paul and addressed him. As soon as he was done, John commenced to pack up
+ his dunnage and get money from the captain, as if he was bound on an
+ Arctic Expedition. Dunn's eyes glistened as he saw the money passing into
+ Paul's hand; but he was not to be troubled with the dunnage, and after
+ hurrying him a few times, marched him off. He went through the regular
+ system of grog-shop sponging; but his suavity and willingness to acquiesce
+ in all Mr. Dunn's demands, saved him some rough usage. There was this
+ difference between John Paul and Manuel, that the former, not
+ understanding the English language, mistook Dunn's deception for
+ friendship, and moved by that extreme French politeness and warmth of
+ feeling, which he thought doing the gentleman par excellence; while the
+ latter, with a quicker perception of right and wrong, and understanding
+ our language, saw the motive and disdained its nefarious object. For when
+ Paul arrived at the jail he was minus a five-dollar gold-piece, which his
+ very amiable official companion took particular care of, lest something
+ should befall it. Poor John Paul! He was as harmless as South Carolina's
+ secession and chivalry-two of the most harmless things in the world, not
+ excepting Congressional duelling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as he entered the jail and found that the jailer could speak
+ French, he broke out in a perfect tornado of enthusiasm. &ldquo;Je serai charme
+ de lier connaissance avec un si amiable compagnon,&rdquo; said he, and continued
+ in a strain so swift and unabated that it would have been impossible for
+ an Englishman to have traced the inflections.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The jailer called Daley, and telling him to take his blanket, the State's
+ allotment, ordered him shown to his cell. Daley took the blanket under his
+ arm and the keys in his hand, and Paul soon followed him upstairs to be
+ introduced to his cell. &ldquo;There, that's the place for yees. We takes the
+ shine off all ye dandy niggers whin we gets ye here. Do ye see the pair of
+ eyes in the head o' me?&rdquo; said Daley, pointing to his blackened eyes; &ldquo;an'
+ he that done that same is in the divil's own place above. Now, if ye have
+ ever a drap of whiskey, don't be keepin' it shy, an' it'll be tellin' ye a
+ good many favors.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! mon Dieu! Cela fait dresser les cheveux la tete,&rdquo; said Paul,
+ shrugging his shoulders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bad luck to the word of that I'd be understandin' at all, at all. Can't
+ ye spake so a body'd understand what ye'd mane?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;C'est ma grande consolation d'avoir. * * * Les Etats-Unis est une modele
+ de perfection republicaine,&rdquo; said he, taking the blanket from Daley and
+ throwing it upon the floor. He was but a poor companion for his
+ fellow-prisoners, being deprived of the means to exercise his social
+ qualities. He went through the same course of suffering that Manuel did;
+ but, whether from inclination or necessity, bore it with more Christian
+ fortitude, chanting vespers every morning, and reading the Latin service
+ every evening. The lesson which Manuel taught Daley proved of great
+ service to Paul, who gave Daley the jail-ration which it was impossible
+ for him to eat, and was saved from his pilfering propensities. Thus, after
+ John Paul had suffered thirty-five days' imprisonment, in mute
+ confinement, to satisfy the majesty of South Carolina, he was released
+ upon the following conditions, and taken to his vessel at early daylight,
+ lest he should see the city or leave something to contaminate the slaves.
+ &ldquo;Contrary to law.&rdquo; State vs. &ldquo;Contrary to law.&rdquo; French bark &ldquo;Senegal,&rdquo;
+ Capt.&mdash;For John Paul, Colored Seaman. To Sheriff Charleston Dist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ July 18, 1852. To Arrest, $2; Registry, $2, $4.00&rdquo; &ldquo;Recog. $1.31;
+ Constable, $1, 2.31&rdquo; &ldquo;Commitment and discharge, 1.00&rdquo; &ldquo;35 Days' Maintenace
+ of John Paul, at 30 cents per day, 10.50
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Recd. payment, $17.81 J. D&mdash;, S. C. D. Per Chs. E. Kanapeaux, Clerk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A very nice item of disbursements to present to the owners-a premium paid
+ for the advanced civilization of South Carolina!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have merely noticed the imprisonment of John Paul, our limits excluding
+ the details. We must now turn to a little, pert, saucy French boy, eleven
+ years old, who spoke nothing but Creole French, and that as rotten as we
+ ever heard lisped. The French bark Nouvelle Amelie, Gilliet, master, from
+ Rouen, arrived in Charleston on the twenty-ninth of July. The captain was
+ a fine specimen of a French gentleman. He stood upon the quarter-deck as
+ she was being &ldquo;breasted-in&rdquo; to the wharf, giving orders to his men, while
+ the little child stood at the galley looking at the people upon the wharf,
+ making grimaces and pointing one of the crew to several things that
+ attracted his attention. Presently the vessel hauled alongside of the
+ dock, and Dusenberry, with his companion Dunn, who had been watching all
+ the movements of the vessel from a hiding-place on the wharf, sprang out
+ and boarded her ere she had touched the piles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The &ldquo;nigger,&rdquo; seeing Dusenberry approach him, waited until he saw his hand
+ extended, and then, as if to save himself from impending danger, ran aft
+ and into the cabin, screaming at the top of his voice. The crew began to
+ run and move up into close quarters. The issue was an important one, and
+ rested between South Carolina and the little &ldquo;nigger.&rdquo; Dusenberry
+ attempted to descend into the cabin. &ldquo;Vat you vant wid my John, my
+ Baptiste? No, you no do dat, 'z my cabin; never allow stranger go down
+ 'im,&rdquo; said the captain, placing himself in the companionway, while the
+ little terrified nigger peeped above the combing, and rolled his large
+ eyes, the white glowing in contrast, from behind the captain's legs. In
+ this tempting position the little darkie, knowing he was protected by the
+ captain and crew, would taunt the representative of the State with his bad
+ French. Dunn stood some distance behind Dusenberry, upon the deck, and the
+ mission seemed to be such a mystery to both captain and crew, that their
+ presence aroused a feeling of curiosity as well as anxiety. Several of the
+ sailors gathered around him, and made antic grimaces, pointing their
+ fingers at him and swearing, so that Dunn began to be alarmed by the
+ incomprehensible earnestness of their gibberish, turned pale, and
+ retreated several steps, to the infinite amusement of those upon the
+ wharf.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Vat 'e do, ah, you vant 'im? Vat you do vid 'im ven zu gets him, ah?
+ Cette affaire delicate demande,&rdquo; said one of the number, who was honored
+ with the title of mate, and who, with a terrific black moustache and
+ beard, had the power of contorting his face into the most repugnant
+ grimaces. And, at the moment, he drew his sheath-knife and made a
+ pretended plunge at Dunn's breast, causing him to send forth a pitiful
+ yell, and retreat to the wharf with quicker movements than he ever thought
+ himself capable of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Il n'y a pas grand mal cela,&rdquo; said the Frenchman, laughing at Dunn as he
+ stood upon the capsill of the wharf.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bad luck to ye, a pretty mess a murderous Frinchmin that ye are. Do yees
+ be thinkin' ye'd play that trick in South Carolina? Ye'll get the like o'
+ that taken out o' ye whin yer before his honor in the mornin',&rdquo; said Dunn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dusenberry had stood parleying with the captain at the companion-door,
+ endeavoring to make the latter understand that it was not a case which
+ required the presence of the silver oar. There is a prevailing opinion
+ among sailors, that no suit in Admiralty can be commenced, or seaman
+ arrested while on board, without the presence of the silver oar. And thus
+ acting upon this impression, the captain and officers of the Nouvelle
+ Amelie contended for what they considered a right. The mate and crew drew
+ closer and closer toward Dusenberry, until he became infected with the
+ prevailing alarm. &ldquo;Captain, I demand your protection from these men, in
+ the name of the State of South Carolina,&rdquo; said he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who he? De State Souf Ca'lina, vat I know 'bout him, ah? Bring de silver
+ oar when come take my man. Il y a de la malhomme tete dans sou proces&rdquo;
+ said Captain Gilliet, turning to his mate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Avaunt! avaunt!&rdquo; said the big man with the large whiskers, and they all
+ made a rush at Dusenberry, and drove him over the rail and back to the
+ wharf, where he demanded the assistance of those anxious spectators, for
+ and in the name of the State. It was a right good vaudeville comique,
+ played in dialogue and pantomime. The point of the piece, which, with a
+ little arrangement, might have made an excellent production, consisted of
+ a misunderstanding between an Irishman and a Frenchman about South
+ Carolina, and a law so peculiar that no stranger could comprehend its
+ meaning at first and as neither could understand the language of the
+ other, the more they explained the more confounded the object became,
+ until, from piquant comique, the scene was worked into the appearance of a
+ tragedy. One represented his ship, and to him his ship was his nation; the
+ other represented South Carolina, and to him South Carolina was the United
+ States; and the question was, which had the best right to the little
+ darkie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The spectators on the wharf were not inclined to move, either not wishing
+ to meddle themselves with South Carolina's affairs-wanting larger game to
+ show their bravery-or some more respectable officer to act in command. The
+ little darkie, seeing Dusenberry driven to the wharf, ran to the gangway,
+ and protruding his head over the rail, worked his black phiz into a dozen
+ pert expressions, showing his ivory, rolling the white of his eyes, and
+ crooking his finger upon his nose in aggravating contempt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Shure, we'll turn the guard out and take ye an' yer ship, anyhow. Why
+ don't yees give the nager up dasently, an' don't be botherin'. An' isn't
+ it the law of South Carolina, be dad; an' be the mortis, ye'd be getting'
+ no small dale of a pinalty for the same yer doin',&rdquo; said Dunn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A gentleman, who had been a silent looker-on, thinking it no more than
+ proper to proffer his mediation, perceiving where the difficulty lay,
+ stepped on board and introducing himself to the captain, addressed him in
+ French, and explained the nature of the proceeding. The captain shook his
+ head for some time, and shrugged his shoulders. &ldquo;La police y est bien
+ administree,&rdquo; said he, with an air of politeness; and speaking to his
+ mate, that officer again spoke to the men, and Dusenberry was told by the
+ gentleman that he could come on board. Without further ceremony, he
+ mounted the rail and made a second attempt at the young urchin, who
+ screamed and ran into the cook's galley, amid the applause of the seamen,
+ who made all sorts of shouts inciting him to run, crying out, &ldquo;Run,
+ Baptiste! run, Baptiste!&rdquo; In this manner the little darkie kept the
+ officer at bay for more than fifteen minutes, passing out of one door as
+ the officer entered the other, to the infinite delight of the crew. At
+ length his patience became wearied, and as he was about to call Dunn to
+ his assistance, the captain came up, and calling the child to him-for such
+ he was-delivered him up, the little fellow roaring at the top of his voice
+ as the big officer carried him over the rail under his arm. This ended the
+ vaudeville comique on board of the French bark Nouvelle Amelie, Captain
+ Gilliet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dignity of the State was triumphant, and the diminutive nigger was
+ borne off under the arm of its representative. What a beautiful theme for
+ the painter's imagination! And how mutely sublime would have been the
+ picture if the pencil of a Hogarth could have touched it. The majesty of
+ South Carolina carrying a child into captivity!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After carrying John Baptiste about halfway up the wharf, they put him
+ down, and made him &ldquo;trot it&rdquo; until they reached the Dutch grog-shop we
+ have described in the scene with Manuel. Here they halted to take a
+ &ldquo;stiff'ner,&rdquo; while Baptiste was ordered to sit down upon a bench, Dunn
+ taking him by the collar and giving him a hearty shake, which made the lad
+ bellow right lustily. &ldquo;Shut up, ye whelp of a nigger, or ye'll get a doz
+ for yeer tricks beyant in the ship,&rdquo; said Dunn; and after remaining nearly
+ an hour, arguing politics and drinking toddies, Mr. Dunn got very amiably
+ fuddled, and was for having a good-natured quarrel with every customer
+ that came; into the shop. He laboured under a spirit-inspired opinion that
+ they must treat or fight; and accordingly would attempt to reduce his
+ opinions to practical demonstrations. At length the Dutchman made a
+ courteous remonstrance, but no sooner had he done it, than Dunn drew his
+ hickory stick across the Dutchman's head, and levelled him upon the floor.
+ The Dutchman was a double-fisted fellow, and springing up almost
+ instantly, returned the compliment. Dusenberry was more sober, and stepped
+ in to make a reconciliation; but before he had time to exert himself, the
+ Dutchman running behind the counter, Dunn aimed another blow at him, which
+ glanced from his arm and swept a tin drench, with a number of tumblers on
+ it, into a smash upon the floor. This was the signal for a general melee,
+ and it began in right earnest between the Dutch and the Irish,&mdash;for
+ the Dutchman called the assistance of several kinsmen who were in the
+ front store, and Dunn, with the assistance of Dusenberry, mustered
+ recruits from among a number of his cronies, who were standing at a corner
+ on the opposite side, of the street. Both came to the rescue, but the
+ O'Nales and Finnegans outnumbering the Dutch, made a Donnybrook onset,
+ disarming and routing their adversaries, and capsizing barrels, boxes,
+ kegs, decanters, and baskets of onions, into one general chaos,&mdash;taking
+ possession of the Dutchman's calabash, and proclaiming their victory with
+ triumphant shouts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They had handcuffed the boy Baptiste as soon as they entered the store,
+ and in the midst of the conflict he escaped without being observed, and
+ ran for his vessel, handcuffed, and crying at the top of his voice. He
+ reached the Nouvelle Amelie, to the consummate surprise of the officers
+ and crew, and the alarm of pedestrians as he passed along the street. &ldquo;Mon
+ Dieu!&rdquo; said the mate, and taking the little fellow to the windlass-bits,
+ succeeded in severing the handcuffs with a cold-chisel, and sent him down
+ into the forecastle to secrete himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Dunn's wild Irish had subsided, Dusenberry began to reason with him
+ upon the nature of the affair, and the matter was reconciled upon the
+ obligations that had previously existed, and a promise to report no
+ violations of the ordinances during a specified time. Looking around, Dunn
+ exclaimed, &ldquo;Bad manners till ye, Swizer, what a' ye done with the little
+ nager? Where did ye put him?&mdash;Be dad, Duse, he's gone beyant!&rdquo; An
+ ineffectual search was made among barrels and boxes, and up the old
+ chimney. &ldquo;Did ye see him?&rdquo; inquired Dunn, of a yellow man that had been
+ watching the affray at the door, while Dusenberry continued to poke with
+ his stick among the boxes and barrels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, massa, I sees him when he lef de doo, but I no watch him 'till 'e
+ done gone,&rdquo; said the man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dunn was despatched to the vessel in search, but every thing there was
+ serious wonderment, and carried out with such French naviete, that his
+ suspicions were disarmed, and he returned with perfect confidence that he
+ was not there. A search was now made in all the negro-houses in the
+ neighborhood; but kicks, cuts, and other abuses failed to elicit any
+ information of his whereabouts. At length Dunn began to feel the deadening
+ effects of the liquor, and was so muddled that he could not stand up;
+ then, taking possession of a bed in one of the houses, he stretched
+ himself upon it in superlative contempt of every thing official, and
+ almost simultaneously fell into a profound sleep. In this manner he
+ received the attention of the poor colored woman whose bed he occupied,
+ and whom he had abused in searching for the boy. In this predicament,
+ Dusenberry continued to search alone, and kept it up until sundown, when
+ he was constrained to report the case to the sheriff, who suspended Mr.
+ Dunn for a few days. The matter rested until the next morning, when the
+ case of the little saucy nigger vs. South Carolina was renewed with fresh
+ vigor. Then Mr. Grimshaw, accompanied by Dusenberry, proceeded to the
+ barque, and there saw the boy busily engaged in the galley. Mr. Grimshaw
+ went on board, followed by Duse, and approaching the cabin door, met the
+ captain ascending the stairs. &ldquo;Captain, I want that nigger boy of yourn,
+ and you may just as well give him up peaceably,&rdquo; said he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, monsieur,&mdash;but you no treat 'im like child wen you get 'im,&rdquo;
+ said the captain. Retiring to the cabin, and bringing back the broken
+ manacles in his hand, he held them up to Mr. Grimshaw, &ldquo;You put such dem
+ thing on child like 'im, in South Carolina, ah? What you tink 'im be,
+ young nigger, ox, horse, bull, ah! what? Now you take'e him! treat him
+ like man, den we no 'struct to laws wat South Carolina got,&rdquo; continued he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Grimshaw thanked the captain, but made no reply about the manacles;
+ taking them in his hand, and handing the boy over into the charge of
+ Dusenberry. In a few minutes he was ushered into the sheriff's office, and
+ the important points of his dimensions and features noted in accordance
+ with the law. We are not advised whether the pert characteristics of his
+ nature were emblazoned,&mdash;if they were, the record would describe a
+ singular specimen of a frightened French darkie, more amusing than
+ judicial. But John Baptiste Pamerlie passed the ordeal, muttering some
+ rotten Creole, which none of the officials could understand, and was
+ marched off to the jail, where the jailer acted as his interpreter. Being
+ so small, he was allowed more latitude to ware and haul than the others,
+ while his peculiar bon point and pert chatter afforded a fund of amusement
+ for the prisoners, who made him a particular butt, and kept up an
+ incessant teasing to hear him jabber. The second day of his imprisonment
+ he received a loaf of bread in the morning, and a pint of greasy water,
+ misnamed soup. That was the allowance when they did not take meat. He ran
+ down-stairs with the pan in hand, raising an amusing fuss, pointing at it,
+ and spitting out his Creole to the jailer. He was disputing the question
+ of its being soup, and his independent manner had attracted a number of
+ the prisoners. Just at the moment, the prison dog came fondling against
+ his legs, and to decide the question, quick as thought, he set the pan
+ before him; and as if acting upon an instinctive knowledge of the point at
+ issue, the dog put his nose to it, gave a significant scent, shook his
+ head and walked off, to the infinite delight of the prisoners, who sent
+ forth a shout of acclamation. Baptiste left his soup, and got a prisoner,
+ who could speak Creole, to send for his captain, who came on the next
+ morning and made arrangements to relieve his condition from the ship's
+ stores. The following day he whipped one of the jailer's boys in a fair
+ fight; and on the next he killed a duck, and on the fourth he cut a white
+ prisoner. Transgressing the rules of the jail in rejecting his
+ soup-violating the laws of South Carolina making it a heinous offence for
+ a negro to strike or insult a white person&mdash;committing murder on a
+ duck&mdash;endeavoring to get up a fandango among the yard niggers, and
+ trying the qualities of cold steel, in a prisoner's hand, thus exhibiting
+ all the versatility of a Frenchman's genius with a youthful sang-froid, he
+ was considered decidedly dangerous, and locked up for formal reform. Here
+ he remained until the seventeenth of August, when it was announced that
+ the good barque Nouvelle Amelie, Captain Gilliet, was ready for sea, and
+ he was forthwith led to the wharf between two officers, and ordered to be
+ transferred beyond the limits of the State, the Captain paying the
+ following nice little bill, of costs. &ldquo;Contrary to Law.&rdquo; &ldquo;French Barque
+ Nouvelle Amelie, Captain Gilliet, from Rouen, For John Baptiste Pamerlie,
+ Colored Seaman. 1852. To Sheriff of Charleston District. August 26th, To
+ Arrest, $2; Registry, $2, $4.00&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Recog. 1.31; Constable, $1, 2.31&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Commitment and Discharge, 1.00&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;20 days' Jail Maintenance of John Baptiste Pamerlie, at 30 cts. per day,
+ $6.00
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Received payment, 13.31 J. D., S. C. D. Per Charles E. Kanapeaux, Clerk.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus ended the scene. The little darkie might have said when he was in
+ jail, &ldquo;Je meurs de faime et l'on ne mapporte rien;&rdquo; and when he left, &ldquo;Il
+ est faufite avec les chevaliers d'industrie.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0024" id="link2HCH0024">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIV. THE JANSON CONDEMNED.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ WE must now return to Manuel. He was in close confinement, through Mr.
+ Grimshaw's orders. Tommy continued to bring him food from day to day, but
+ was not allowed to see him. The mate and several of the crew were also
+ refused admittance to him. This was carrying power to an unnecessary
+ limit, and inflicting a wanton punishment without proper cause, at the
+ same time exhibiting a flagrant disrespect for personal feelings. Tommy
+ did not report the affair to the Captain, lest it should be misconstrued,
+ and worse punishment be inflicted; but when the men were refused, they
+ naturally mistrusted something, and made inquiries of the jailer, who
+ readily gave them all the information in his power concerning the affair,
+ and his orders. This they reported to the Captain, who immediately
+ repaired to the consul's office, where he found Mr. Mathew reading a note
+ which he had just received from Manuel. It stated his grievances in a
+ clear and distinct manner, and begged the protection of that government
+ under whose flag he sailed, but said nothing about his provisions. The
+ consul, accompanied by the Captain, proceeded to the sheriff's office, but
+ could get no satisfaction. &ldquo;I never consider circumstances when prisoners
+ violate the rules of the jail,&mdash;he must await my orders! but I shall
+ keep him closely confined for two weeks, at least,&rdquo; said Mr. Grimshaw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This incensed the consul still more, for he saw the manner in which a
+ clique of officials were determined to show their arbitrary power. It was
+ impossible for him to remain indifferent to this matter, affecting, as it
+ did, the life and liberty of his fellow-countryman. He could invoke no
+ sympathy for the man, and the extent of punishment to which he had been
+ subjected was evidently excited by vindictive feelings. He applied for a
+ writ of habeas corpus,&mdash;but mark the result.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Captain proceeded to the jail, and demanded to see his steward; the
+ jailer hesitating at first, at length granted his permission. He found
+ Manuel locked up in a little, unwholesome cell, with scarcely a glimmer of
+ light to mark the distinction of day and night; and so pale and emaciated,
+ that had he met him in the street he should scarcely have recognised him.
+ &ldquo;Gracious God! What crime could have brought such an excess of punishment
+ upon you?&rdquo; inquired the Captain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Manuel told him the whole story; and, added to that, the things which had
+ been sent to him during the seven days he had been confined in that
+ manner, had seldom reached him. He had lost his good friend Jane, and the
+ many kind acts which she was wont to bestow upon him, and had been
+ compelled to live upon bread and water nearly the whole time, suffering
+ the most intense hunger. Upon inquiry, it was ascertained that the few
+ things sent to make him comfortable had been intrusted to Daley to
+ deliver, who appropriated nearly the whole of them to his own use, as a
+ sort of retaliatory measure for the castigation he received from Manuel.
+ He had not failed to carry him his pan of soup at twelve o'clock every
+ day, but made the &ldquo;choice bits&rdquo; serve his own digestion. The jailer felt
+ the pain of the neglect, and promised to arrange a safer process of
+ forwarding his things by attending to it himself, which he did with all
+ the attention in his power, when Manuel's condition became more tolerable.
+ The Captain told Manuel how his affairs stood-that he should probably have
+ to leave him in charge of the consul, but to keep up good spirits; that he
+ would leave him plenty of means, and as soon as his release was effected,
+ to make the best of his way to Scotland and join the old owners. And thus
+ he left him, with a heavy heart, for Manuel did read in his countenance
+ what he did not speak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Janson had been discharged, a survey held upon the cargo, protest
+ extended, and the whole sold for the benefit of whom it might concern.
+ Necessary surveys were likewise held upon the hull, and finding it so old
+ and strained as to be unworthy of repair, it was condemned and sold for
+ the benefit of the underwriters. Thus the register &ldquo;de novo&rdquo; was given up
+ to the consul, the men discharged, and paid off according to the act of
+ William IV., which provides that each man shall receive a stipend to carry
+ him to the port in Great Britain from which he shipped, or the consul to
+ provide passage for him, according to his inclination, to proceed to a
+ point where the voyage would be completed. The consul adopted the best
+ means in his power to make them all comfortable and satisfied with their
+ discharge. Their several register-tickets were given up to them, and one
+ by one left for his place of destination; Tommy and the second mate only
+ preferring to remain and seek some new voyage. The old chief mate seemed
+ to congratulate himself in the condemnation of the unlucky Janson. He
+ shipped on board an English ship, laden with cotton and naval stores, and
+ just ready for sea. When he came on board to take a farewell of the
+ Captain, he stood upon deck, and looking up at the dismantled spars, said,
+ &ldquo;Skipper, a shadow may save a body after all. I've always had a
+ presentment that this unlucky old thing would serve us a trick. I says to
+ meself that night in the Gulf, 'Well, old craft, yer goin' to turn yer old
+ ribs into a coffin, at last,' but I'll praise the bridge that carries me
+ safe over, because I've an affection for the old thing after all, and
+ can't part without saying God bless her, for it's an honest death to die
+ in debt to the underwriters. I hope her old bones will rest in peace on
+ terra-firma. Good-by, Captain,&mdash;remember me to Manuel; and let us
+ forget our troubles in Charleston by keeping away from it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0025" id="link2HCH0025">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXV. GEORGE THE SECESSIONIST, AND HIS FATHER'S SHIPS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ AS we have said, the second mate and little Tommy remained to seek new
+ voyages. Such was the fact with the second mate; but Tommy had contracted
+ a violent cold on the night he was locked up in the guard-house, and had
+ been a subject for the medicine-chest for some time; and this, with his
+ ardent attachment for Manuel, and hopes to join him again as a sailing
+ companion, was the chief inducement for his remaining. The Captain gave
+ them accommodations in the cabin so long as he had possession of the ship,
+ which afforded the means of saving their money, of which Tommy had much
+ need; for notwithstanding he received a nice present from the consul, and
+ another from the Captain, which, added to the few dollars that were coming
+ to him for wages, made him feel purse-proud, though it was far from being
+ adequate to sustain him any length of time, or to protect him against any
+ sudden adversity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Captain had not seen little George, the secessionist, since his
+ assurance that he would make every thing right with Mr. Grimshaw, and have
+ Manuel out in less than twenty-four hours. It was now the fourteenth of
+ April, and the signs of his getting out were not so good as they were on
+ the first day he was committed, for the vessel being condemned, if the law
+ was carried to the strictest literal construction, Manuel would be tied up
+ among the human things that are articles of merchandise in South Carolina.
+ He was passing from the wharf to the consul's office about ten o'clock in
+ the morning, when he was suddenly surprised in the street by little
+ George, who shook his hand as if he had been an old friend just returned
+ after a long absence. He made all the apologies in the world for being
+ called away suddenly, and consequently, unable to render that attention to
+ his business which his feelings had prompted. Like all secessionists,
+ George was very fiery and transitory in his feelings. He expressed
+ unmeasurable surprise when the Captain told him the condition of his man
+ in the old jail. &ldquo;You don't say that men are restricted like that in
+ Charleston? Well, now, I never was in that jail, but it's unsuited to the
+ hospitality of our society,&rdquo; said he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your prison groans with abuses, and yet your people never hear them,&rdquo;
+ replied the Captain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ George seemed anxious to change the subject, and commenced giving the
+ Captain a description of his journey to the plantation, his hunting and
+ fishing, his enjoyments, and the fat, saucy, slick niggers, the fine corn
+ and bacon they had, and what they said about massa, ending with an endless
+ encomium of the &ldquo;old man's&rdquo; old whiskey, and how he ripened it to give it
+ smoothness and flavor. His description of the plantation and the niggers
+ was truly wonderful, tantalizing the Captain's imagination with the
+ beauties of a growing principality in itself. &ldquo;We have just got a new
+ vessel added to our ships, and she sails for the Pedee this afternoon. We
+ got the right stripe of a captain, but we have made him adopt conditions
+ to be true to the secession party. As soon as I get another man, we'll
+ despatch her in grand style, and no mistake.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Captain thought of his second mate, and suggested him at once. &ldquo;Just
+ the chap. My old man would like him, I know,&rdquo; said George, and they
+ returned directly to the Janson, where they found the second mate lashing
+ his dunnage. The proposition was made and readily accepted. Again the
+ Captain parted with little George, leaving him to take the mate to his
+ father's office, while he pursued his business at the consul's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ George led the mate into the office. &ldquo;Here, father, here's a man to go in
+ our vessel,&rdquo; said he. The old man looked upon him with a serene
+ importance, as if he was fettered with his own greatness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My shipping interests are becoming very extensive, my man; I own the
+ whole of four schooners, and a share in the greatest steamship afloat-I
+ mean screw-ship, the South Carolina&mdash;you've heard of her, I suppose?&rdquo;
+ said the old man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jack stood up with his hat in his hand, thinking over what he meant by big
+ interests, and &ldquo;reckoning he hadn't seen the establishment of them
+ ship-owners about Prince's Dock, what owned more ships apiece than there
+ were days in the month.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, my man,&rdquo; continued the old man, &ldquo;I'm mighty strict about my
+ discipline, for I want every man to do his duty for the interests of the
+ owners. But how many dollars do you want a month, my man?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nothing less than four pounds starling; that's twenty dollars your
+ currency, if I reckon right,&rdquo; said Jack, giving his hat a twirl upon the
+ floor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wh-e-w! you belong to the independent sailors. You'll come down from that
+ afore you get a ship in this port. Why, I can get a good, prime nigger
+ feller sailor for eight dollars a month and his feed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jack concluded not to sail in any of the old man's big ships, and said,
+ &ldquo;Yes, I joined them a long time ago, and I ha'n't regretted it, neither;
+ wouldn't pull a bow-line a penny less. I don't like drogging, no-how. Good
+ morning, sir,&rdquo; said he, putting on his hat and backing out of the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish you'd a' taken a chance with my father, old fellow; he'd a' made
+ you captain afore a year,&rdquo; said George, as he was leaving the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The like o' that don't signify. I've been skipper in the West Ingie trade
+ years ago. There isn't much difference between a nigger and a schooner's
+ captain,&rdquo; said Jack, as he walked off to the Janson, preparatory to taking
+ lodgings ashore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That afternoon about five o'clock, a loud noise was heard on board a
+ little schooner, of about sixty tons' register, that lay in a bend of the
+ wharf a few lengths ahead of the Janson. Captain Thompson and his second
+ mate were seated on a locker in the cabin, conversing upon the prospects
+ ahead, when the noise became so loud that they ran upon deck to witness
+ the scene.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ George stood upon the capsill of the wharf, with mortification pictured in
+ his countenance. &ldquo;Well, captain, you needn't make so much noise about it;
+ your conduct is decidedly ungentlemanly. If you don't wish to sail in
+ father's employ, leave like a gentleman,&rdquo; said George, pulling up the
+ corners of his shirt-collar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the great craft that George had distended upon, and the veritable
+ captain of the right stripe, who promised to toe the mark according to
+ secession principles, but made no stipulations for the nigger feed that
+ was the cause of the excitement. The captain, a Baltimore coaster, and
+ accustomed to good feed in his vessels at home, had been induced by a
+ large representations to take charge of the craft and run her in the Pedee
+ trade, bringing rice to Charleston. On being told the craft was all ready
+ for sea, he repaired on board, and, to his chagrin, found two black men
+ for a crew, and a most ungainly old wench, seven shades blacker than
+ Egyptian darkness, for a cook. This was imposition enough to arouse his
+ feelings, for but one of the men knew any thing about a vessel; but on
+ examining the stores, the reader may judge of his feelings, if he have any
+ idea of supplying a vessel in a Northern port, when we tell him that all
+ and singular the stores consisted of a shoulder of rusty Western bacon, a
+ half-bushel of rice, and a jug of molasses; and this was to proceed the
+ distance of a hundred miles, But to add to the ridiculous farce of that
+ South Carolina notion, when he remonstrated with them, he was very
+ indifferently told that it was what they always provided for their
+ work-people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Take your' little jebacca-boat and go to thunder with her,&rdquo; said the
+ captain, commencing to pick up his duds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, captain, I lent you my gun, and we always expect our captains to
+ make fresh provision of game as you run up the river,&rdquo; said George.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fresh provisions, the devil!&rdquo; said the captain. &ldquo;I've enough to do to
+ mind my duty, without hunting my living as I pursue my voyage, like a
+ hungry dog. We don't do business on your nigger-allowance system in
+ Maryland.&rdquo; And here we leave him, getting one of the negroes to carry his
+ things back to his boarding-house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few days after the occurrence we have narrated above little Tommy,
+ somewhat recovered from his cold, shipped on board a little centre-board
+ schooner, called the Three Sisters, bound to the Edisto River for a cargo
+ of rice. The captain, a little, stubby man, rather good looking, and well
+ dressed, was making his maiden voyage as captain of a South Carolina
+ craft. He was &ldquo;South Carolina born,&rdquo; but, like many others of his kind,
+ had been forced to seek his advancement in a distant State, through the
+ influence of those formidable opinions which exiles the genius of the poor
+ in South Carolina. For ten years he had sailed out of the port of Boston,
+ had held the position of mate on two Indian voyages under the well-known
+ Captain Nott, and had sailed with Captain Albert Brown, and received his
+ recommendation, yet this was not enough to qualify him for the nautical
+ ideas of a pompous South Carolinian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tommy got his baggage on board, and before leaving, made another attempt
+ at the jail to see his friend Manuel. He presented himself to the jailer,
+ and told him how much he wanted to see his old friend before he left. The
+ jailer's orders were imperative. He was told if he came next week he would
+ see him; that he would then be released, and allowed to occupy the cell on
+ the second floor with the other stewards. Recognising one of the stewards
+ that had joined with them when they enjoyed their social feelings around
+ the festive barrel, he walked into the piazza to meet him and bid him
+ good-by. While he stood shaking hands with him, the poor negro.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The name of this poor fellow was George Fairchild. After being sent to the
+ workhouse to receive twenty blows with the paddle when he was scarcely
+ able to stand, he was taken down from the frame and supported to the jail,
+ where he remained several weeks, fed at a cost of eighteen cents a day.
+ His crime was &ldquo;going for whiskey at night,&rdquo; and the third offence; but
+ there were a variety of pleadings in his favor. His master worked his
+ negroes to the very last tension of their strength, and exposed their
+ appetites to all sorts of temptation, especially those who worked in the
+ night-gang. His master flogged him once, while he was in the jail,
+ himself, giving him about forty stripes with a raw hide on the bare back:
+ not satisfying his feelings with this, he concluded to send him to New
+ Orleans. He had an affectionate wife and child, who were forbidden to see
+ him. His master ordered that he should be sent to the workhouse and
+ receive thirty-nine paddles before leaving, and on the morning he was to
+ be shipped, his distressed wife, hearing the sad news, came to the jail;
+ but notwithstanding the entreaties of several debtors, the jailer could
+ not allow her to come in, but granted, as a favor, that she should speak
+ with him through the grated door. The cries and lamentations of that poor
+ woman, as she stood upon the outside, holding her bond-offspring in her
+ arms, taking a last sorrowing farewell of him who was so dearly cherished
+ and beloved, would have melted a heart of stone. She could not embrace
+ him, but waited until he was led out to torture, when she threw her arms
+ around him, and was dragged away by a ruffian's hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Poor George Fairchild! We heard him moaning under the acute pain of the
+ paddle, and saw him thrust into a cart like a dog, to be shipped as a bale
+ of merchandise for a distant port, who had suffered with him in the
+ guard-house came up and saluted him with a friendly recognition. Some two
+ weeks had passed since the occurrence, and yet his head presented the
+ effects of bruising, and was bandaged with a cloth. &ldquo;Good young massa, do
+ give me a' fo' pence, for Is'e mose starve,&rdquo; he said in a suppliant tone.
+ Tommy put his hand into his pocket, and drawing out a quarter, passed it
+ to the poor fellow, and received his thanks. Leaving a message for Manuel
+ that he would be sure to call and see him when he returned, he passed from
+ the house of misery and proceeded to his vessel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The captain of the schooner had been engaged by parties in Charleston, who
+ simply acted as agents for the owners. He had been moved to return to
+ Charleston by those feelings which are so inherent in our nature,
+ inspiring a feeling for the place of its nativity, and recalling the early
+ associations of childhood. Each longing fancy pointed back again, and back
+ he came, to further fortune on his native soil. His crew, with the
+ exception of Tommy, consisted of three good, active negroes, one of whom
+ acted as pilot on the Edisto River. Accustomed to the provisioning of
+ Boston ships, he had paid no attention to his supplies; for, in fact, he
+ only took charge of the little craft as an accommodation to the agents,
+ and with the promise of a large vessel as soon as he returned; and sailing
+ with a fine stiff breeze, he was far outside the light when the doctor
+ announced dinner. &ldquo;What have you got that's good, old chap?&rdquo; said he to
+ the cook.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fust stripe, Massa Cap'en. A right good chance o' homony and bacon fry,&rdquo;
+ returned the negro.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Homony and what? Nothing else but that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, massa! gracious, dat what Massa Whaley give all he cap'en, an' he
+ tink 'em fust-rate,&rdquo; said the negro.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As they were the only whites on board, the captain took little Tommy into
+ the cabin with him to sit at the same table; but there was too much truth
+ in the negro's statement, and instead of sitting down to one of those nice
+ dinners which are spread in Boston ships, both great and small, there, on
+ a little piece of pine board, swung with a preventer, was a plate of black
+ homony covered with a few pieces of fried pork, so rank and oily as to be
+ really repulsive to a common stomach. Beside it was an earthen mug,
+ containing about a pint of molasses, which was bedaubed on the outside to
+ show its quality. The captain looked at it for a minute, and then taking
+ up the iron spoon which stood in it, and letting one or two spoonfuls drop
+ back, said, &ldquo;Old daddie, where are all your stores? Fetch them out here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gih, massa! here 'em is; 'e's jus' as Massa Stoney give 'em,&rdquo; said the
+ negro, drawing forth a piece of rusty and tainted bacon, weighing about
+ fifteen pounds, and, in spots, perfectly alive with motion; about a
+ half-bushel of corn-grits; and a small keg of molasses, with a piece of
+ leather attached to the bung.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is that all?&rdquo; inquired the captain peremptorily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, massa, he all w'at 'em got now, but git more at Massa Whaley
+ plantation win 'em git da.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Throw it overboard, such stinking stuff; it'll breed pestilence on
+ board,&rdquo; said the captain to the negro, (who stood holding the spoiled
+ bacon in his hand, with the destructive macalia dropping on the floor,) at
+ the same time applying his foot to the table, and making wreck of hog,
+ homony, molasses, and plates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gih-e-wh-ew! Massa, I trow 'im o'board, Massa Whaley scratch 'em back,
+ sartin. He tink 'em fust-rate. Plantation nigger on'y gits bacon twice
+ week, Massa Cap'en,&rdquo; said he, picking up the wreck and carrying it upon
+ deck, where it was devoured with great gusto by the negroes, who fully
+ appreciated the happy God-send.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The captain had provided a little private store of crackers, cheese,
+ segars, and a bottle of brandy, and turning to his trunk, he opened it and
+ drew them out one by one, passing the crackers and cheese to Tommy, and
+ imbibing a little of the deacon himself, thus satisfying the cravings of
+ nature. Night came on; they were crossing the bar and approaching the
+ outlet of the Edisto, which was broad in sight; but there was neither
+ coffee nor tea on board, and no prospect of supper-nothing but a resort to
+ the crackers and cheese remained, the stock of which had already
+ diminished so fast, that what was left was treasured among the things too
+ choice to be eaten without limitation. They reached the entrance, and
+ after ascending a few miles, came to anchor under a jut of wood that
+ formed a bend in the river. The baying of dogs during the night intimated
+ the vicinity of a settlement near, and in the morning the captain sent one
+ of the negroes on shore for a bottle of milk. &ldquo;Massa, dat man what live
+ yonder ha'n't much no-how, alwa's makes 'em pay seven-pence,&rdquo; said the
+ negro. Sure enough it was true; notwithstanding he was a planter of some
+ property, he made the smallest things turn to profit, and would charge
+ vessels going up the river twelve and a half cents per bottle for milk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The captain had spent a restless night, and found himself blotched with
+ innumerable chinch-bites; and on examining the berths and lockers, he
+ found them swarming in piles. Calling one of the black men, he commenced
+ overhauling them, and drew out a perfect storehouse of rubbish, which must
+ have been deposited there, without molestation, from the day the vessel
+ was launched up to the present time, as varied in its kinds as the stock
+ of a Jew-shop, and rotten with age. About nine o'clock they got under
+ weigh again, and proceeding about twenty miles with a fair wind and tide,
+ they came to another point in the river, on which a concourse of men had
+ assembled, armed to the teeth with guns, rifles, and knives. As he passed
+ up, they were holding parley with a man and boy in a canoe a few rods from
+ the shore. At every few minutes they would point their rifles at him, and
+ with threatening gestures, swear vengeance against him if he attempted to
+ land. The captain, being excited by the precarious situation of the man
+ and his boy, and anxious to ascertain the particulars, let go his anchor
+ and &ldquo;came to&rdquo; a few lengths above.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scarcely had his anchor brought up than he was hailed from the shore by a
+ rough-looking man, who appeared to be chief in the manouvre, and who
+ proved to be no less a personage than a Mr. S&mdash;k, a wealthy planter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't take that man on board of your vessel, at the peril of your life,
+ captain. He's an abolitionist,&rdquo; said he, accompanying his imperative
+ command with a very Southern rotation of oaths.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man paddled his canoe on the outside of the vessel, and begged the
+ captain &ldquo;for God's sake to take him on board and protect him; that an
+ excitement had been gotten up against him very unjustly, and he would
+ explain the circumstances if he would allow him to come on board.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come on board,&rdquo; said the captain. &ldquo;Let you be abolitionist or what you
+ will, humanity will not let me see you driven out to sea in that manner;
+ you would be swamped before you crossed the bar.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He came on board, trembling and wet, the little boy handing up a couple of
+ carpet-bags, and following him. No sooner had he done so, than three or
+ four balls whizzed past the captain's head, causing him to retreat to the
+ cabin. A few minutes intervened, and he returned to the deck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lower your boat and come on shore immediately,&rdquo; they cried out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The captain, not at all daunted, lowered his boat and went on shore. &ldquo;Now,
+ gentlemen, what do you want with me?&rdquo; said he, when S&mdash;k stepped
+ forward, and the following dialogue ensued:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who owns that vessel, and what right have you to harbor a d&mdash;d
+ abolitionist?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't know who owns the vessel; I know that I sail her, and the laws of
+ God and man demand that I shall not pass a man in distress, especially
+ upon the water. He protests that he is not, and never was an abolitionist;
+ offers to prove it if you will hear him, and only asks that you allow him
+ to take away his property,&rdquo; rejoined the captain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What! then you are an abolitionist yourself?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, sir. I'm a Southern-born man, raised in Charleston, where my father
+ was raised before me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So much, so good; but just turn that d&mdash;d scoundrel ashore as quick
+ as seventy, or we'll tie your vessel up and report you to the Executive
+ Committee, and stop your getting on more freight on the Edisto.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That I shall not do. You should have patience to investigate these
+ things, and not allow your feelings to become so excited. If I turn him
+ and his son adrift, I'm answerable for their lives if any accident should
+ occur to them,&rdquo; rejoined the captain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you a secessionist, captain, or what are your political principles?
+ You seem determined to protect abolitionists. That scoundrel has been
+ associating with a nigger, and eating at his house ever since he has been
+ here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, yes, and we'll be d&mdash;d if he isn't an abolitionist,&rdquo; joined in
+ a dozen voices, &ldquo;for he dined at Bill Webster's last Sunday on a
+ wild-turkey. Nobody but an infernal abolitionist would dine with a
+ nigger.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As for politics, I never had much to do with them, and care as little
+ about secession as I do about theology; but I like to see men act
+ reasonably. If you want any thing more of me, you will find me at Colonel
+ Whaley's plantation to-morrow.&rdquo; Thus saying, he stepped into his boat and
+ returned on board of his vessel. Just as he was getting under-weigh again,
+ whiz! whiz! whiz! came three shots, one in quick succession after the
+ other, the last taking effect and piercing the crown of his hat, at which
+ they retired out of sight. Fearing a return, he worked his vessel about
+ two miles farther up and came to anchor on the other side of the channel,
+ where he waited the return of the tide, and had an opportunity to put his
+ affrighted passengers on board a schooner that was passing down, bound to
+ Charleston.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The secret of such an outrage is told in a few words. The man was a
+ timber-getter from the vicinity of New Bedford, Massachusetts, who, with
+ his son, a lad about sixteen years of age, had spent several winters in
+ the vicinity of the Edisto, getting live-oak, what he considered a
+ laudable enterprise. He purchased the timber on the stump of the
+ inhabitants, at a price which left him very little profit, and had also
+ been charged an exorbitant price for every thing he got, whether labor or
+ provisions; and so far had that feeling of South Carolina's
+ self-sufficiency been carried out against him in all its cold
+ repulsiveness, that he found much more honesty and true hospitality under
+ the roof of a poor colored man. This so enraged some of the planters, that
+ they proclaimed against him, and that mad-dog cry of abolitionist was
+ raised against him. His horse and buggy, books and papers were packed up
+ and sent to Charleston-not, however, without some of the most important of
+ the latter being lost. His business was destroyed, and he and his child
+ taken by force, put into a little canoe with one or two carpet-bags, and
+ sent adrift. In this manner they had followed him two miles down the
+ river, he begging to be allowed the privilege of settling his business and
+ leave respectably-they threatening to shoot him if he attempted to near
+ the shore, or was caught in the vicinity. This was his position when the
+ captain found him. He proceeded to Charleston, and laid his case before
+ James L. Petigru, Esq., United States District Attorney, and, upon his
+ advice, returned to the scene of &ldquo;war on the banks of the Edisto,&rdquo; to
+ arrange his business; but no sooner had he made his appearance than he was
+ thrown into prison, and there remained when we last heard of him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is one of the many cases which afford matter for exciting comment for
+ the editors of the Charleston Mercury and the Courier, and which reflect
+ no honor on a people who thus set law and order at defiance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0026" id="link2HCH0026">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXVI. A SINGULAR RECEPTION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ IT was about ten o'clock on the night of the fifteenth of April when the
+ schooner &ldquo;Three Sisters&rdquo; lay anchored close alongside of a dark jungle of
+ clustering brakes that hung their luxuriant foliage upon the bosom of the
+ stream. The captain sat upon a little box near the quarter, apparently
+ contemplating the scene, for there was a fairy-like beauty in its dark
+ windings, mellowed by the shadowing foliage that skirted its borders in
+ mournful grandeur, while stars twinkled on the sombre surface.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tide had just turned, and little Tommy, who had rolled himself up in a
+ blanket and laid down close to the captain, suddenly arose. &ldquo;Captain, did
+ you hear that?&rdquo; said he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hark! there it is again,&rdquo; said the captain. &ldquo;Go and call the men,&mdash;we
+ must get under weigh.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a rustling noise among the brakes; and when little Tommy went
+ forward to call the men, two balls came whistling over the quarter, and
+ then a loud rustling noise indicated that persons were retreating. The
+ captain retired to the cabin and took Tommy with him, giving orders to the
+ negro pilot to stand to the deck, get her anchor up, and let her drift up
+ stream with the tide, determined that if they shot any person, it should
+ be the negroes, for whose value they would be held answerable. Thus she
+ drifted up the stream, and the next morning was at the creek at Colonel
+ Whaley's plantation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A number of ragged negroes came down to the bank in high glee at the
+ arrival, and making sundry inquiries about corn and bacon. One old
+ patriarchal subject cried out to the pilot, &ldquo;Ah, Cesar, I 'now'd ye wah
+ cumin'. Massa, an' young Massa Aleck, bin promis' bacon mor' den week,
+ gess he cum' now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Got sum corn, but ven ye gets bacon out o' dis craf' ye kotch wesel, dat
+ a'n't got no hair on 'im,&rdquo; said Cesar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The scene around was any thing but promising-disappointing to the
+ captain's exalted ideas of Colonel Whaley's magnificent plantation. The
+ old farm-house was a barrack-like building, dilapidated, and showing no
+ signs of having lately furnished a job for the painter, and standing in an
+ arena surrounded by an enclosure of rough slats. Close examination
+ disclosed fragments of gardening in the arena, but they showed the
+ unmistakable evidences of carelessness. At a short distance from this was
+ a cluster of dirty-looking negro-huts, raised a few feet from the ground
+ on palmetto piles, and strung along from them to the brink of the river
+ were numerous half-starved cattle and hogs, the latter rooting up the sod.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was now nearly slack water, on a high flood, and the schooner lay just
+ above the bend of the creek. Presently a large, portly-looking man,
+ dressed like as Yorkshire farmer, came, to the bank, and in a stentorious
+ voice ordered the captain to haul into the creek at once! The manner in
+ which the order was given rather taxed the captain's feelings, yet he
+ immediately set his men to work heaving up the anchor and carrying out &ldquo;a
+ line&rdquo; to warp her in. But that slow motion with which negroes execute all
+ orders, caused some delay, and no sooner had he, begun to heave on the
+ line than the tide set strong ebb and carried him upon the lower point,
+ where a strong eddy, made by the receding water from the creek, and the
+ strong undertow in the river, baffled all his exertions. There she stuck,
+ and all the warps and tow-lines of a seventy-four, hove by the combined
+ strength of the plantation, would not have started her. When the tide
+ left, she careened over toward the river, for there was no means at hand
+ to shore her up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the drivers went up and reported &ldquo;Massa captain got 'im ship
+ ashore,&rdquo; and down came Colonel Whaley, with all the pomp of seven lord
+ mayors in his countenance. &ldquo;What sort of a feller are you to command a
+ ship? I'd whip the worst nigger on the plantation, if he couldn't do
+ better than that. Rig a raft out and let me come o' board that vessel!&rdquo;
+ said he, accompanying his demands with a volley of vile imprecations that
+ would have disgraced St. Giles'.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you know who you're talking to? You mus'n't take me for a nigger, sir!
+ I know my duty, if you don't good manners,&rdquo; rejoined the captain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you know who owns that ship? you impudent feller, you! Take the sails
+ off her, immediately-at once! or I'll shoot you, by heavens!&rdquo; he bawled
+ out again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why didn't you say mud-scow? Call such a thing as this a ship? I don't
+ care who owns her, I only know it's a disgrace to sail her; but I've got
+ the papers, and you may help yourself. When you pay me for my time, and
+ give me something for myself and these men to eat, you may take your old
+ jebac&mdash;car-boat,&mdash;but you don't put a foot aboard her till you
+ do!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This made the colonel rage worse. &ldquo;I'll teach you a lesson how you disobey
+ my orders. Go get my rifle, Zeke,&rdquo; said the colonel, turning to an old
+ negro who stood close by. And then calling to the men on board, he ordered
+ them to take charge of the vessel and take the sails off her at once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't you move a hand to unbend a sail, Cesar! I don't know that man
+ ashore there. This vessel is mine until further orders from the persons
+ who shipped me,&rdquo; rejoined the captain with an imperative demand to his
+ men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, la! massa, he own em dis ere vessel, an' he shoot em sartin if we
+ done do him; ye done know dat massa, as I does,&rdquo; said Cesar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't touch a hand to those sails, I command one and all of you. There's
+ two can play at shooting, and I'll shoot you if you disobey my orders.&rdquo;
+ Then turning to those on shore, he warned them that he would shoot the
+ first nigger that attempted to make a raft to come on board. The reader
+ will observe that the poor negroes were in a worse dilemma than the
+ captain; goaded on the one side by a ruthless master, who claims ownership
+ and demands the execution of his orders, while on the other extreme the
+ hired master proclaims his right, and warns them against the peril of
+ varying one iota from his commands. Here the clashing feelings of
+ arbitrary men come together, which have placed many a good negro in that
+ complex position, that he would be punished by one master for doing that
+ which he would have been punished by the other if he had left undone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may be said to the colonel's credit, he did not return, rifle in hand,
+ nor did the captain see him afterward; but a young gentleman, a son, who
+ represented the father, came to the bank about an hour after the
+ occurrence, and making a lame apology for his father's temper, requested
+ the captain to come on shore. The latter had concluded to await the return
+ of the tide, run the vessel back to Charleston, report his reception, and
+ deliver the vessel up to the agents; but on further consideration, there
+ was nothing to eat on board, and what could he do? He went on shore, and
+ held a parley with the young man, whom he found much more inclined to
+ respect his color. &ldquo;Your father took me for a nigger, and as such he
+ presumed upon the dignity of his plantation. Now I know my duty, and have
+ sailed in the finest ships and with the best masters in the country. All I
+ want is proper respect, something to eat, what there is coming to me, and
+ my passage paid back to Charleston by land. No! I will not even request so
+ much as that; give me something to eat, and my passage to Charleston, and
+ you may do what you please with the vessel, but I shall deliver the papers
+ to nobody but the persons who shipped me. And I shall want you to see this
+ little boy attended to, for he's quite sick now,&rdquo; said the captain,
+ pointing to Tommy, and calling him to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh yes,&rdquo; replied the young man, &ldquo;we'll take care of the little fellow,
+ and see him sent safely back,&rdquo; and took leave, promising to have another
+ interview in the afternoon. About twelve o'clock a negro boy came to the
+ vessel with a tin pan covered with a towel, and presenting it to Cesar,
+ for &ldquo;massa cap'en and buckra boy.&rdquo; Cesar brought it aft and set it upon
+ the companion. It contained some rice, a piece of bacon, corn-cake, and
+ three sweet-potatoes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Coarse fare, but I can get along with it. Come Tommy, I guess you're
+ hungry, as well as myself,&rdquo; said the captain, and they sat down, and soon
+ demolished the feast of Southern hospitality. About five o'clock in the
+ evening, the young man not making his appearance, the Captain sent Tommy
+ ashore to inquire for him at the house, telling him (in order to test
+ their feelings) that he could stop and get his supper. Tommy clambered
+ ashore, and up the bank wending his way to the house. The young man made
+ his appearance, offering an apology for his delay and inattention, saying
+ the presence of some very particular friends from Beaufort was the cause.
+ &ldquo;My father, you are aware, owns this vessel, captain!&mdash;You got a good
+ dinner, to-day, by-the-by,&rdquo; said he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, we got along with it, but could have eaten more,&rdquo; rejoined the
+ captain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! bless me, that was the nigger's fault. These niggers are such
+ uncertain creatures, you must watch 'em over the least thing. Well now,
+ captain, my father has sent you five dollars to pay your passage to
+ Charleston!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, that's a small amount, but I'll try and get along with it, rather
+ than stop here, at any rate,&rdquo; said the captain, taking the bill and
+ twisting it into his pocket, and giving particular charges in regard to
+ taking care of the boy. That night, a little after sundown, he took
+ passage in a downward-bound coaster, bid a long good-by to the Edisto and
+ Colonel Whaley's plantation, and arrived in Charleston the next night. On
+ the following morning he presented himself to the agents, who generously
+ paid him, all his demands, and expressed their regrets at the
+ circumstance. Acting upon the smart of feeling, the captain enclosed the
+ five-dollar bill and returned it to the sovereign Colonel Whaley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Savannah Republican, of the 11th September, says-&ldquo;We have been kindly
+ furnished with the particulars of a duel which came off at Major Stark's
+ plantation, opposite this city, yesterday morning, between Colonel E. M.
+ Whaley, and E. E. Jenkins, of South Carolina.&rdquo; Another paper stated that
+ &ldquo;after a single exchange of shot, * * * * the affair terminated, but
+ without a reconciliation.&rdquo; The same Colonel Whaley! Either 'of these
+ journals might have give particulars more grievous, and equally as
+ expressive of Southern life. They might have described a beautiful wife, a
+ Northern lady, fleeing with her two children, to escape the abuses of a
+ faithless husband-taking shelter in the Charleston Hotel, and befriended
+ by Mr. Jenkins and another young man, whose name we shall not mention-and
+ that famous establishment surrounded by the police on a Sabbath night, to
+ guard its entrances-and she dragged forth, and carried back to the home of
+ unhappiness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0027" id="link2HCH0027">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXVII. THE HABEAS CORPUS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE Captain of the Janson had settled his business, and was anxious to
+ return home. He had done all in his power for Manuel, and notwithstanding
+ the able exertions of the consul were combined with his, he had effected
+ nothing to relieve him. The law was imperative, and if followed out, there
+ was no alternative for him, except upon the ground of his proving himself
+ entitled to a white man's privileges. To do this would require an endless
+ routine of law, which would increase his anxiety and suffering twofold.
+ Mr. Grimshaw had been heard to say, that if an habeas corpus were sued
+ out, he should stand upon the technicality of an act of the legislature,
+ refuse to answer the summons or give the man up. No, he would himself
+ stand the test upon the point of right to the habeas corpus, and if he was
+ committed for refusing to deliver up the prisoner, he would take advantage
+ of another act of the legislature, and after remaining a length of time in
+ jail, demand his release according to the statutes. So far was Mr.
+ Grimshaw impressed with his own important position in the matter, and of
+ the course which he should pursue, that he several times told the
+ prisoners that he should be a prisoner among them in a few days, to
+ partake of the same fare.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Judge Withers, however, saved him the necessity of such important trouble.
+ To those acquainted with Judge Withers it would be needless to dwell upon
+ the traits of his character. To those who are not, we can say that his
+ were feelings founded upon interest-moving in the foremost elements of
+ secession-arbitrary, self-willed, and easily swayed by prejudice-a man
+ known to the public and the bar for his frigidity, bound in his own
+ opinions, and yielding second to the wishes and principles of none-fearful
+ of his popularity as a judge, yet devoid of those sterling principles
+ which deep jurists bring to their aid when considering important
+ questions, where life or liberty is at stake-a mind that would rather
+ reinstate monarchy than spread the blessings of a free government. What
+ ground have we here to hope for a favorable issue?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus when the consul applied for the writ of habeas corpus, the right was
+ denied him, notwithstanding the subject was heir-inherent to all the
+ rights of citizenship and protection, which the laws of his own nation
+ could clothe him with. To show how this matter was treated by the
+ press-though we are happy to say the feelings of the mercantile community
+ are not reflected in it-we copy the leader from the &ldquo;Southern Standard,&rdquo; a
+ journal published in Charleston, the editor of which professes to
+ represent the conservative views of a diminutive minority. Here it is:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;CHARLESTON, APRIL 23, 1852. &ldquo;Colored Seamen and State Rights.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Our readers have not forgotten the correspondence which some time since
+ took place between His Excellency Governor Means and Her British Majesty's
+ Consul, Mr. Mathew. We published in the Standard, of the 5th December
+ last, the very temperate, dignified, and well-argued report of Mr. Mazyck,
+ chairman of the special committee of the Senate, to whom had been referred
+ the message of the Governor, transmitting the correspondence. In our issue
+ of the 16th December, we gave to our readers the able report of Mr.
+ McCready, on behalf of the committee of the other house, on the same
+ subject.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We have now to call the attention of the public to the fact, that the
+ practical issue has been made, by which the validity of the laws in regard
+ to colored seamen arriving in our port is to be submitted to the judicial
+ tribunals of the country. For ourselves we have no fears for the credit of
+ the State in such a controversy. The right of the State to control, by her
+ own legislation, the whole subject-matter, can, as we think, by a full
+ discussion, be established upon a basis which, in the South at least, will
+ never hereafter be questioned. If there be defects in the details of the
+ regulations enacted, the consideration of them is now precluded, when the
+ issue presented is the right of the State to act at all times in the
+ premises.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The writ of habeas corpus was applied for before Judge Withers, during
+ the term of the court which has just closed, by the British consul,
+ through his counsel, Mr. Petigru, in behalf of one Manuel Pereira, a
+ colored sailor, who claims to be a Portuguese subject, articled to service
+ on board an English brig driven into this port by stress of weather; the
+ said Manuel Pereira being then in jail under the provisions of the act of
+ the legislature of this State, passed in 1835, emendatory of the previous
+ acts on the subject. Judge Withers, in compliance with the requirements of
+ the act of 1844, refused the writ of habeas corpus, and notice of appeal
+ has been given. Thus is the issue upon us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We have but one regret in the matter, and that is that the case made is
+ one where the party asking his liberty has been driven into our harbor
+ involuntarily. Great Britain, it is true, is the last power which should
+ complain on this account, with her own example in the case of the
+ Enterprise before her eyes; but we do not, we confess, like this feature
+ of the law. We have no doubt, however, that this fact being brought to the
+ notice of the executive, he will interfere promptly to release the
+ individual in the present case, provided the party petitions for the
+ purpose, and engages at once to leave the State. But we shall see nothing
+ of this. Mr. Manuel Pereira, like another John Wilkes, is to have settled
+ in his person great questions of constitutional liberty. The posterity
+ which in after times shall read of his voluntary martyrdom and heroic
+ self-sacrifice in the cause of suffering humanity, must be somewhat better
+ informed than Mr. Pereira himself; for we observe that his clerkly skill
+ did not reach the point of enabling him to subscribe his name to the
+ petition for habeas corpus, which is to figure so conspicuously in future
+ history, it being more primitively witnessed by his 'mark.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An appeal was taken from this refusal, and carried before the appeal
+ court, sitting at Columbia, the capital of the State. How was this
+ treated? Without enlisting common respect, it sustained the opinion of
+ Judge Withers, who was one of its constituted members. Under such a state
+ of things, where all the avenues to right and justice were clogged by a
+ popular will that set itself above law or justice, where is the
+ unprejudiced mind that will charge improper motives in asking justice of
+ the highest judicial tribunal in the country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the year 1445, a petition was presented, or entered on the rolls of the
+ British Parliament, from the commons of two neighboring counties, praying
+ the abatement of a nuisance which promised fearful interruptions to the
+ peace and quiet of their hamlets, in consequence of the number of
+ attorneys having increased from eight to twenty-four, setting forth that
+ attorneys were dangerous to the peace and happiness of a community, and
+ praying that there should be no more than six attorneys for each county.
+ The king granted the petition, adding a clause which left it subject to
+ the approval of the judges. Time works mighty contrasts. If those
+ peaceable old commoners could have seen a picture of the nineteenth
+ century, with its judiciary dotted upon the surface, they would certainly
+ have put the world down as a very unhappy place. The people of Charleston
+ might now inquire why they have so much law and so little justice?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0028" id="link2HCH0028">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXVIII. THE CAPTAIN'S DEPARTURE AND MANUEL'S RELEASE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ AFTER remaining nearly three weeks in close confinement in a cell on the
+ third story, Manuel was allowed to come down and resume his position among
+ the stewards, in the &ldquo;steward's cell.&rdquo; There was a sad change of faces.
+ But one of those he left was there; and he, poor fellow, was so changed as
+ to be but a wreck of what he was when Manuel was confined in the cell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After little Tommy left, the Captain deposited a sum of money with the
+ jailer to supply Manuel's wants. The jailer performed his duty faithfully,
+ but the fund was soon exhausted, and Manuel was forced to appeal to his
+ consul. With the care for its citizens that marks the course of that
+ government, and the characteristic kindness of its representative in
+ Charleston, the appeal was promptly responded to. The consul attended him
+ in person, and even provided from his own purse things necessary to make
+ him comfortable. We could not but admire the nobleness of many acts
+ bestowed upon this humble citizen through the consul, showing the
+ attachment and faith of a government to its humblest subject. The question
+ now was, would the Executive release him? Mr. Grimshaw had interposed
+ strong objections, and made unwarrantable statements in regard to his
+ having been abandoned by his captain, the heavy expenses incurred to
+ maintain the man, and questioning the validity of the British consul's
+ right to protect him. Under the effect of these representations, the
+ prospect began to darken, and Manuel became more discontented, and
+ anxiously awaited the result.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this position, a petition was despatched to the Executive, asking that
+ the man might be released, on the faith of the British Government that all
+ expenses be paid, and he immediately sent beyond the limits of the State.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But we must return and take leave of Captain Thompson, before we receive
+ the answer to the petition. The day fixed for his departure had arrived.
+ He had all his papers collected, and arose early to take his accustomed
+ walk through the market. It was a little after seven o'clock, and as he
+ approached the singular piece of wood-work that we have described in a
+ previous chapter as the Charleston Whipping-post, he saw a crowd collected
+ around it, and negroes running to the scene, crying out, &ldquo;Buckra gwine to
+ get whip! buckra get 'e back scratch!&rdquo; &amp;c. &amp;c. He quickened his
+ pace, and, arriving at the scene, elbowed his way through an immense crowd
+ until he came to where he had a fair view. Here, exposed to view, were six
+ respectably dressed white men, to be whipped according to the laws of
+ South Carolina, which flog in the market for petty theft. Five of them
+ were chained together, and the other scientifically secured to the
+ machine, with his bare back exposed, and Mr. Grimshaw (dressed with his
+ hat and sword of office to make the dignity of the punishment appropriate)
+ laying on the stripes with a big whip, and raising on tip-toe at each blow
+ to add force, making the flesh follow the lash. Standing around were about
+ a dozen huge constables with long-pointed tipstaffs in their hands, while
+ two others assisted in chaining and unchaining the prisoners. The
+ spectacle was a barbarous one, opening a wide field for reflection. It was
+ said that this barbarous mode of punishment was kept up as an example for
+ the negroes. It certainly is a very singular mode of inspiring respect for
+ the laws.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had heard much of T. Norman Gadsden, whose fame sounded for being the
+ greatest negro-seller in the country, yet he had not seen him, though he
+ had witnessed several negro-sales at other places. On looking over the
+ papers after breakfast, his eye caught a flaming advertisement with &ldquo;T.
+ Norman Gadsden's sale of negroes&rdquo; at the head. There were plantation
+ negroes, coachmen, house-servants, mechanics, children of all ages, with
+ descriptions as various as the kinds. Below the rest, and set out with a
+ glowing delineation, was a description of a remarkably fine young
+ sempstress, very bright and very intelligent, sold for no fault. The
+ notice should have added an exception, that the owner was going to get
+ married.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He repaired to the place at the time designated, and found them selling an
+ old plantation-negro, dressed in ragged, gray clothes, who, after a few
+ bids, was knocked down for three hundred and fifty dollars. &ldquo;We will give
+ tip-top titles to everything we sell here to-day; and, gentlemen, we shall
+ now offer you the prettiest wench in town. She is too well-known for me to
+ say more,&rdquo; said the notorious auctioneer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A number of the first citizens were present, and among them the Captain
+ recognised Colonel S&mdash;, who approached and began to descant upon the
+ sale of the woman. &ldquo;It's a d&mdash;d shame to sell that girl, and that
+ fellow ought to be hung up,&rdquo; said he, meaning the owner; and upon this he
+ commenced giving a history of the poor girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where is she? Bring her along! Lord! gentlemen, her very curls are enough
+ to start a bid of fifteen hundred,&rdquo; said the auctioneer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go it, Gadsden, you're a trump,&rdquo; rejoined a number of voices.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The poor girl moved to the stand, pale and trembling, as if she was
+ stepping upon the scaffold, and saw her executioners around her. She was
+ very fair and beautiful-there was something even in her graceful motions
+ that enlisted admiration. Here she stood almost motionless for a few
+ moments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gentlemen, I ought to charge all of you sevenpence a sight for looking at
+ her,&rdquo; said the auctioneer. She smiled at the remark, but it was the smile
+ of pain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why don't you sell the girl, and not be dogging her feelings in this
+ manner?&rdquo; said Colonel S&mdash;.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bids continued in rapid succession from eleven hundred up to thirteen
+ hundred and forty. A well-known trader from New Orleans stood behind one
+ of the city brokers, motioning him at every bid, and she was knocked down
+ to him. We learned her history and know the sequel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Captain watched her with mingled feelings, and would fain have said,
+ &ldquo;Good God! and why art thou a slave?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The history of that unfortunate beauty may be comprehended in a few words,
+ leaving the reader to draw the details from his imagination. Her mother
+ was a fine mulatto slave, with about a quarter Indian blood. She was the
+ mistress of a celebrated gentleman in Charleston, who ranked among the
+ first families, to whom she bore three beautiful children, the second of
+ which is the one before us. Her father, although he could not acknowledge
+ her, prized her highly, and unquestionably never intended that she should
+ be considered a slave. Alice, for such was her name, felt the shame of her
+ position. She knew her father, and was proud to descant upon his honor and
+ rank, yet must either associate with negroes or nobody, for it would be
+ the death of caste for a white woman, however mean, to associate with her.
+ At the age of sixteen she became attached to a young gentleman of high
+ standing but moderate means, and lived with him as his mistress. Her
+ father, whose death is well known, died suddenly away from home. On
+ administering on his estate, it proved that instead of being wealthy, as
+ was supposed, he was insolvent, and the creditors insisting upon the
+ children being sold. Alice was purchased by compromise with the
+ administrator, and retained by her lord under a mortgage, the interest and
+ premium on which he had regularly paid for more than four years. Now that
+ he was about to get married, the excuse of the mortgage was the best
+ pretext in the world to get rid of her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Captain turned from the scene with feelings that left deep impressions
+ upon his mind, and that afternoon took his departure for his Scottish
+ home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Time passed heavily at the jail, and day after day Manuel awaited his fate
+ with anxiety. At every tap of the prison-bell he would spring to the door
+ and listen, asserting that he heard the consul's voice in every passing
+ sound. Day after day the consul would call upon him and quiet his fears,
+ reassuring him that he was safe and should not be sold as a slave. At
+ length, on the seventeenth day of May, after nearly two months'
+ imprisonment, the glad news was received that Manuel Pereira was not to be
+ sold, according to the statutes, but to be released upon payment of all
+ costs, &amp;c. &amp;c., and immediately sent beyond the limits of the
+ State. We leave it to the reader's fancy, to picture the scene of joy on
+ the reception of the news in the &ldquo;stewards' cell.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The consul lost no time in arranging his affairs for him, and at five
+ o'clock on the afternoon of the 17th of May, 1852, Manuel Pereira, a poor,
+ shipwrecked mariner, who, by the dispensation of an all-wise Providence,
+ was cast upon the shores of South Carolina, and imprisoned because
+ hospitality to him was &ldquo;contrary to law,&rdquo; was led forth, pale and
+ emaciated, by two constables, thrust into a closely covered vehicle, and
+ driven at full speed to the steamboat then awaiting to depart for New
+ York. This is but a faint glimpse, of the suffering to which colored
+ stewards are subjected in the Charleston jail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were no less than sixty-three cases of colored seamen imprisoned on
+ this charge of &ldquo;contrary to law,&rdquo; during the calendar year ending on the
+ twelfth of September, 1852. And now that abuses had become so glaring, a
+ few gentlemen made a representation of the wretched prison regimen to his
+ Excellency, Governor Means, who, as if just awoke from a dream that had
+ lasted a generation, addressed a letter to the Attorney-General, dated on
+ the seventh of September, 1852, requesting a statement in regard to the
+ jail-how many prisoners there were confined on the twelfth day of
+ September, under sentence and awaiting trial, the nature of offences, who
+ committed by, and how long they had awaited trial; what the cost of the
+ jail was, how much was paid by prisoners, and how much by the State, &amp;c.
+ &amp;c. In that statement, the number of colored seamen was, for reasons
+ best known to Mr. Grimshaw, kept out of the statement; so also was the
+ difference between thirty cents and eight cents a day, paid for the ration
+ for each man. The real statement showed a bounty to the sheriff of
+ fourteen hundred and sixty-three dollars on' the provisions alone-a sad
+ premium upon misery. Now add to this a medium amount for each of these
+ sixty-three sailors, and we have between eight and nine hundred dollars
+ more, which, with sundry jail-fees and other cribbage-money, makes the
+ Charleston jail a nice little appendage to the sheriff's office, and will
+ fully account for the tenacity with which those functionaries cling to the
+ &ldquo;old system.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We conclude the bills by giving Manuel's as it stands upon the books:&mdash;&ldquo;Contrary
+ to law.&rdquo; British brig &ldquo;Janson,&rdquo; Capt. Thompson. For Manuel Pereira,
+ Colored Seaman. 1852. To Sheriff of Charleston District.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ May 15th. To Arrest, $2; Register, $2, $4.00&rdquo; &ldquo;Recog., $1.31; Constable,
+ $1, 2.31&rdquo; &ldquo;Commitment and Discharge, 1.00&rdquo; &ldquo;52 Days' Maintenance of Manuel
+ Pereira, at 30 cents per day, 15.60
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ $22.81 Rec' payment, J. D&mdash;, S. C. D. Per Chs. Kanapeaux, Clerk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This amount is exclusive of all the long scale of law charges and
+ attorney's fees that were incurred, and is entirely the perquisite of the
+ sheriff.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, notwithstanding that high-sounding clamor about the laws of South
+ Carolina, which every South Carolinian, in the redundance of his feelings,
+ strives to impress you with the sovereignty of its justice, its sacred
+ rights, and its pre-eminent reputation, we never were in a country or
+ community where the privileges of a certain class were so much abused.
+ Every thing is made to conserve popular favor, giving to those in
+ influence power to do what they please with a destitute class, whether
+ they be white or black. Official departments are turned into depots for
+ miserable espionage, where the most unjust schemes are practised upon
+ those whose voices cannot be heard in their own defence. A magistrate is
+ clothed with, or assumes a power that is almost absolute, committing them
+ without a hearing, and leaving them to waste in jail; then releasing them
+ before the court sits, and charging the fees to the State; or releasing
+ the poor prisoner on receiving &ldquo;black mail&rdquo; for the kindness; giving one
+ man a peace-warrant to oppress another whom he knows cannot get bail; and
+ where a man has served out the penalty of the crime for which he was
+ committed, give a peace-warrant to his adversary that he may continue to
+ vent his spleen upon him. In this manner, we have known a man who had
+ served seven months' imprisonment for assault and battery, by an
+ understanding between the magistrate and the plaintiff, continued in jail
+ for several years upon a peace-warrant, issued by the magistrate from time
+ to time, until at length he shot himself in jail. The man was a peaceable
+ man, and of a social temperament. He had been offered the alternative of
+ leaving the State, but he scorned to accept it. To show that we are
+ correct in what we say respecting some of the Charleston officials, we
+ insert an article which appeared in the Charleston Courier of Sept. 1,
+ 1852:&mdash;[For the Courier.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Many of the quiet and moral portion of our community can form no adequate
+ conception of the extent to which those who sell liquor, and otherwise
+ trade with our slaves, are now plying their illegal and demoralizing
+ traffic. At no period within our recollection has it prevailed to such an
+ alarming extent; at no period has its influence upon our slave population
+ been more palpable or more dangerous; at no period has the municipal
+ administration been so wilfully blind to these corrupt practices, or so
+ lenient and forgiving when such practices are exposed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * * * *
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We have heard it intimated that when General Schnierle is a candidate for
+ the mayoralty, they are regularly assessed for means to defray the
+ expenses of the canvass. Instances are not wanting where amounts of money
+ are paid monthly to General Schnierle's police as a reward for shutting
+ their eyes and closing their lips when unlawful proceedings are in
+ progress. We have at this moment in our possession a certificate from a
+ citizen, sworn to before Mr. Giles, the magistrate, declaring that he, the
+ deponent, heard one of the city police-officers (Sharlock) make a demand
+ for money upon one of these shop-keepers, and promised that if he would
+ pay him five dollars at stated intervals, 'none of the police-officers
+ would trouble him.' This affidavit can be seen, if inquired for, at this
+ office. Thus bribery is added to guilt, and those who should enforce the
+ laws are made auxiliaries in their violation. Said one of these
+ slave-destroyers to us, 'General Schnierle suits us very well. I have no
+ trouble with General Schnierle'&mdash;remarks at once repugnant and
+ suggestive. * * * We are told by one, that Mr. Hutchinson, when in power,
+ fined him heavily (and, as he thought, unjustly) for selling liquor to a
+ slave; hence he would not vote for him. An additional reason for this
+ animosity toward Mr. Hutchinson arises from the fact that the names of
+ offenders were always published during that gentleman's administration,
+ while under that of General Schnierle they are screened from public view.
+ On any Sunday evening, light may be seen in the shops of these dealers. If
+ the passer-by will for a few moments stay his course, he will witness the
+ ingress and egress of negroes; if he approach the door, he will hear noise
+ as of card-playing and revelry within. And this is carried on
+ unblushingly; is not confined to a shop here and a shop there, but may be
+ observed throughout the city. The writer of this article, some Sundays
+ since, witnessed from his upper window a scene of revelry and gambling in
+ one of these drinking-shops, which will scarcely be credited. A party of
+ negroes were seen around a card-table, with money beside them, engaged in
+ betting; glasses of liquor were on the table, from which they ever and
+ anon regaled themselves with all the nonchalance and affected mannerism of
+ the most fashionable blades of the beau monde.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This may not be a 'desecration of the Sabbath' by the municipal
+ authorities themselves, but they are assuredly responsible for its
+ profanation. Appointed to guard the public morals, they are assuredly
+ censurable if licentiousness is suffered to run its wild career unnoticed
+ and unchecked. We do not ask to be believed. We would prefer to have
+ skeptical rather than credulous readers. We should prefer that all would
+ arise from the perusal of this article in doubt, and determine to examine
+ for themselves. We believe in the strength and sufficiency of ocular
+ proof, and court investigation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * * *
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are abundantly repaid if we succeed in arousing public attention to
+ the alarming and dangerous condition of our city. * * * Let inquiry be
+ entered into. We boldly challenge it. It will lead to other and more
+ astonishing developments than those we have revealed. (Signed)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A RESPONSIBLE CITIZEN.&rdquo; <a name="link2HCH0029" id="link2HCH0029">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIX. MANUEL'S ARRIVAL IN NEW YORK.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ WHEN we left Manuel, he was being hurried on board the steamship, as if he
+ was a bale of infected goods. Through the kindness of the clerk in the
+ consul's office, he was provided with a little box of stores to supply his
+ wants on the passage, as it was known that he would have to &ldquo;go forward.&rdquo;
+ He soon found himself gliding over Charleston bar, and took a last look of
+ what to him had been the city of injustice. On the afternoon of the second
+ day, he was sitting upon the forward deck eating an orange that had been
+ given to him by the steward of the ship, probably as a token of sympathy
+ for his sickly appearance, when a number of passengers, acting upon the
+ information of the clerk of the ship, gathered around him. One gentleman
+ from Philadelphia, who seemed to take more interest in the man than any
+ other of the passengers, expressed his indignation in no measured terms,
+ that such a man should be imprisoned as a slave. &ldquo;Take care,&rdquo; said a
+ bystander, &ldquo;there's a good many Southerners on board.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't care if every slaveholder in the South was on board, holding a
+ knife at my throat; I'm on the broad ocean, where God spreads the breezes
+ of freedom that man cannot enslave,&rdquo; said he, sitting down beside Manuel,
+ and getting him to recount the details of his shipwreck and imprisonment.
+ The number increased around him, and all listened with attention until he
+ had concluded. One of the spectators asked him if he would have something
+ good to eat? but he declined, pulling out the little box that the consul
+ had sent him, and, opening it before them, showed it to be well-stored
+ with little delicacies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Philadelphian motioned that they take up a subscription for him, and
+ almost simultaneously took his hat off and began to pass it around; but
+ Manuel, mistaking the motive, told them that he never yet sought
+ charity-that the consul had paid him his wages, and he had money enough to
+ get home. But if he did not accept their contributions, he had their
+ sympathies and their good wishes, which were more prized by him, because
+ they were contrasted with the cold hospitality he had suffered in
+ Charleston.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the morning of the twentieth he arrived in New York. Here things wore a
+ different aspect. There were no constables fettering him with irons,
+ aggravating his feelings, and dragging him to a miseerable cell overrun
+ with vermin. He had no scientific ordeal of the statutes to pass through,
+ requiring the measure of his form and features; and he was a man again,
+ with life and liberty, and the dark dread of the oppressor's power far
+ from him. He went to his comfortable boarding-house, and laid his weary
+ limbs down to rest, thanking God that he could now sleep in peace, and
+ awake to liberty. His system was so reduced that he was unable to do duty,
+ although he was anxious to proceed on his way to join the old owners, but
+ wanted to work his way in the capacity of steward. Thus he remained in New
+ York more than four weeks, gaining vigor and strength, and with a
+ lingering hope that he should meet his little companion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the twenty-first of June, being well recruited, he sailed for
+ Liverpool, and after a remarkably calm passage of thirty-four days,
+ arrived in the Mersey, and in forty-eight hours more the ship was safely
+ within the Princess' Dock, and all hands ready to go on shore. In the same
+ dock was a ship taking in cargo and passengers for Charleston, South
+ Carolina. Manuel went on board, and found, in conversation with the
+ steward, that she had sailed from that port on the 23d of May. A short
+ conversation disclosed that they had been old shipmates from the Thames,
+ on board of the Indiaman, Lord William Bentick, and were on board of that
+ ship when an unfortunate circumstance occurred to her on entering a
+ British North American port, many years ago. Here they sat recounting the
+ many adventures through which they had passed since that period, the ships
+ they had sailed in, the sufferings they had gone through, and the narrow
+ escapes they had had for their lives, until past midnight. Manuel wound up
+ by giving a detailed account of his sufferings in Charleston.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What!&rdquo; said the steward of the Charleston ship, &ldquo;then you must have known
+ our cabin-boy, he belonged to the same vessel!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What was his name?&rdquo; inquired Manuel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tommy Ward! and as nice a little fellow as ever served the cabin; poor
+ little fellow, we could hardly get him across.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gracious! that's my Tommy,&rdquo; said Manuel. &ldquo;Where is he? He loves me as he
+ does his life, and would run to me as a child would to its father. Little
+ as he is, he has been a friend through my severest trials, and a companion
+ in my pleasures.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, poor child! I'm afraid you wouldn't know him now. He has suffered
+ much since you saw him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is he not aboard? Where can I find him?&rdquo; inquired Manuel, hastily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, he is not aboard; he is at the hospital in Dennison street. Go there
+ to-morrow, and you will find him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0030" id="link2HCH0030">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXX. THE SCENE OF ANGUISH.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ WE are sorry, that having traced the details of our narrative as they
+ occurred, without adding for dramatic effect, we are constrained to
+ conclude with a picture at once painful and harrowing to the feelings. We
+ do this that we may be sustained by records, in what we have stated,
+ rather than give one of those more popular conclusions which restore
+ happiness and relieve the reader's feelings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Manuel retired to his berth, full of meditation. His little companion was
+ before him, pictured in his child-like innocence and playfulness. He saw
+ him in the youthful zeal and freshness of the night when he brought the
+ well-laden haversack into his dreary cell, and which kind act was repaid
+ by a night of suffering in the guard-house. There was too much of life and
+ buoyancy in the picture his imagination called up, to reconcile the belief
+ that any thing serious had befallen him; and yet the man spoke in a manner
+ that aroused the intensity of his feelings. It was a whisper full of
+ fearful forebodings, and filled his mind with anxious expectation. He
+ could not sleep-the anxiety of his feelings had awakened a nervvous
+ restlessness that awaited the return of morning with impatience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Morning came. He proceeded to the hospital and rang the bell. An aged
+ gentleman came to the door, and to his questions about Tommy being there,
+ answered in the affirmative, and called an attendant to show him the ward
+ in which the little sufferer lay. He followed the attendant, and after
+ ascending several flights of stairs and following a dark, narrow passage
+ nearly to its end, was shown into a small, single-room on the right. The
+ result was suggestive in the very atmosphere, which had a singular effect
+ upon the senses. The room, newly-whitewashed, was darkened by a green
+ curtain tacked over the frame of the window. Standing near the window were
+ two wooden-stools and a little table, upon which burned the faint light of
+ a small taper, arranged in a cup of oil, and shedding its feeble flickers
+ on the evidences of a sick-chamber. There, on a little, narrow cot, lay
+ the death-like form of his once joyous companion, with the old nurse
+ sitting beside him, watching his last pulsation. Her arm encircled his
+ head, while his raven locks curled over his forehead, and shadowed the
+ beauty of innocence even in death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is he there? is he there?&rdquo; inquired Manuel in a low tone. At the same
+ time a low, gurgling noise sounded in his ears. The nurse started to her
+ feet as if to inquire for what he came. &ldquo;He is my companion-my companion,&rdquo;
+ said Manuel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was enough. The woman recognised the object of the little sufferer's
+ anxiety. &ldquo;Ah! it is Manuel. How often he has called that name for the last
+ week!&rdquo; said she.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He ran to the bedside and grasped his little fleshless hand as it lay upon
+ the white sheet, bathing his cold brow with kisses of grief. Life was
+ gone-the spirit had winged its way to the God who gave it. Thus closed the
+ life of poor Tommy Ward. He died as one resting in a calm sleep, far from
+ the boisterous sound of the ocean's tempest, with God's love to shield his
+ spirit in another and brighter world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_CONC" id="link2H_CONC">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CONCLUSION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ IN a preceding chapter, we left the poor boy on the plantation of Colonel
+ Whaley, affected by a pulmonary disease, the seeds of which were planted
+ on the night he was confined in the guard-house, and the signs of gradual
+ decay evinced their symptoms. After Captain Williams&mdash;for such was
+ the name of the captain of the Three Sisters&mdash;left the plantation, no
+ person appeared to care for him, and on the second day he was attacked
+ with a fever, and sent to one of the negro cabins, where an old mulatto
+ woman took care of him and nursed him as well as her scanty means would
+ admit. The fever continued for seven days, when he became convalescent and
+ able to walk out; but feeling that he was an incumbrance to those around
+ him, he packed his clothes into a little bundle and started for Charleston
+ on foot. He reached that city after four days' travelling over a heavy,
+ sandy road, subsisting upon the charity of poor negroes, whom he found
+ much more ready to supply his wants than the opulent planters. One night
+ he, was compelled to make a pillow of his little bundle, and lay down in a
+ corn-shed, where the planter, aroused by the noise of his dogs, which were
+ confined in a kennel, came with a lantern and two negroes and discovered
+ him. At first he ordered him off, and threatened to set the dogs upon him
+ if he did not instantly comply with the order; but his miserable
+ appearance affected the planter, and before he had gone twenty rods one of
+ the negroes overtook him, and said his master had sent him to bring him
+ back. He returned, and the negro made him a coarse bed in his cabin, and
+ gave him some homony and milk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His hopes to see Manuel had buoyed him up through every fatigue, but when
+ he arrived, and was informed at the jail that Manuel had left three days
+ before, his disappointment was extreme. A few days after he shipped as
+ cabin-boy on board a ship ready for sea and bound to Liverpool. Scarcely
+ half-way across, he was compelled to resign himself to the sick-list. The
+ disease had struck deep into his system, and was rapidly wasting him away.
+ The sailors, one by one in turns, watched over him with tenderness and
+ care. As soon as the ship arrived, he was sent to the hospital, and there
+ he breathed his last as Manuel entered the sick-chamber. We leave Manuel
+ and a few of his shipmates following his remains to the last resting-place
+ of man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_APPE" id="link2H_APPE">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ APPENDIX.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ SINCE the foregoing was written, Governor Means, in his message to the
+ Legislature of South Carolina, refers to the laws under which &ldquo;colored
+ seamen&rdquo; are imprisoned. We make the subjoined extract, showing that he
+ insists upon its being continued in force, on the ground of
+ &ldquo;self-preservation&rdquo;&mdash;a right which ship-owners will please regard for
+ the protection of their own interests:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I feel it my duty to call your attention to certain proceedings which
+ have grown out of the enforcement of that law of our State which requires
+ the Sheriff of Charleston to seize and imprison colored seamen who are
+ brought to that port. You will remember that the British Consul addressed
+ a communication to the legislature in December, 1850, on the subject of a
+ modification of this law. A committee was appointed by the House and
+ Senate to report upon it at the next session of the legislature. These
+ committees reported adverse to any modification. On the 24th March, 1852,
+ Manuel Pereira was imprisoned in accordance with the law alluded to. The
+ vessel in which he sailed was driven into the port of Charleston in
+ distress. This was looked upon as a favorable case upon which to make an
+ issue, as so strong an element of sympathy was connected with it.
+ Accordingly, a motion was made before Judge Withers for a writ of 'habeas
+ corpus,' which was refused by him. These proceedings were instituted by
+ the British Consul, it is said, under instructions from his government, to
+ test the constitutionality of the Act. I think it here proper to state,
+ that Pereira was at perfect liberty to depart at any moment that he could
+ get a vessel to transport him beyond the limits of the State. In truth, in
+ consideration of the fact that his coming into the State was involuntary,
+ the Sheriff of Charleston, with his characteristic kindness, procured for
+ him a place in a ship about to sail for Liverpool. Early in April, Pereira
+ was actually released, and on his way to the ship, having himself signed
+ the shipping articles, when, by interposition of the British Consul, he
+ was again consigned to the custody of the sheriff. A few days after this,
+ the British Consul insisted no longer on his detention, but voluntarily
+ paid his passage to New York. This was looked upon as an abandonment of
+ that case. The statement of Mr. Yates, together with the letter of the
+ British Consul, are herewith transmitted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;While these proceedings were pending, the Sheriff of Charleston had my
+ instructions not to give up the prisoners even if a writ of habeas corpus
+ had been granted. I considered that the 'Act of 1844,' entitled, 'An Act
+ more effectually to prevent negroes and other persons of color from
+ entering into this State, and for other purposes,' made it my duty to do
+ so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On the 19th May, Reuben Roberts, a colored seaman, a native of Nassau,
+ arrived in the steamer Clyde, from Baracoa. The Sheriff of Charleston, in
+ conformity with the law of the State, which has been in force since 1823,
+ arrested and lodged him in the district jail, where he was detained until
+ the 26th of May, when, the Clyde being ready to sail, Roberts was put on
+ board, and sailed the same day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On the 9th of June, a writ in trespass, for assault and false
+ imprisonment, from the Federal Court, was served upon Sheriff Yates,
+ laying the damage at $4000.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Act of 1844, I take it, was intended to prevent all interference on
+ the part of any power on the face of the earth, with the execution of this
+ police regulation, which is so essential to the peace and safety of our
+ community. Had the legislature which passed it ever dreamed that the
+ sheriff was to be subjected to the annoyance of being dragged before the
+ Federal Court for doing his duty under a law of the State, I am sure it
+ would have provided for his protection. As no such provision has been made
+ for so unexpected a contingency, I recommend that you so amend this Act of
+ 1844, that it may meet any case that may arise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is certainly wrong to tolerate this interference with the laws enacted
+ for the protection of our institution. In the general distribution of
+ power between the Federal and State Governments, the right to make their
+ own police regulations was clearly reserved to the States. In fact, it is
+ nothing more nor less than the right of self-preservation-a right which is
+ above all constitutions, and above all laws, and one which never was, nor
+ never will be, abandoned by a people who are worthy to be free. It is a
+ right which has never yet been attempted to be denied to any people,
+ except to us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The complaint against this law is very strange, and the attempt to bring
+ us in conflict with the General Government on account of it, is still more
+ remarkable; when, so far from its being at variance with the laws of the
+ United States, it is only requiring the State authorities to enforce an
+ Act of Congress, approved February 28th, 1803, entitled, An Act to prevent
+ the importation of certain persons into certain States, where, by the laws
+ thereof, their importation is prohibited. By referring to this Act, you
+ will see that the plaintiff in the action alluded to was prohibited by it
+ from entering into this State. I deem it unnecessary, however, to enter
+ fully into the argument. If any doubt should be entertained by you, as to
+ its constitutionality, I beg leave to refer to the able opinion of the
+ Hon. J. McPherson Berrien, delivered at the time he was Attorney-General
+ of the United States, which I herewith send you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On the subject of the modification of this law, I am free to say, that
+ when Her B. M.'s Government, through its consul, made a respectful request
+ to our legislature to that effect, I was anxious that it should be made.
+ It was with pleasure that I transmitted his first communication to the
+ last legislature. I would have made a recommendation of its modification a
+ special point in my first message, but that I thought it indelicate to do
+ so, as the matter was already before the legislature, and committees had
+ been appointed to report upon it. Another reason for the neglect of this
+ recommendation, was the then excited state of party politics, which might
+ have precluded the possibility of a calm consideration of the subject. But
+ for the proceedings instituted in the premises, I would even now recommend
+ a modification of the law, so as to require captains to confine their
+ colored seamen to their vessels, and to prevent their landing under heavy
+ penalties. For while I think the State has a perfect right to pass
+ whatever laws on this subject it may deem necessary for its safety, yet
+ the spirit of the age requires that while they should be so formed as to
+ be adequate to our protection, they should be at the same time as little
+ offensive as possible to other nations with whom we have friendly
+ relations. But since an attempt has been made to defy our laws, and bring
+ us in conflict with the Federal Government, on a subject upon which we are
+ so justly sensitive, our own self-respect demands that we should not abate
+ one jot or tittle of that law, which was enacted to protect us from the
+ influence of ignorant incendiaries.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are under many obligations to Governor Means for his remarks upon this
+ subject. We esteem his character too highly to entertain an idea that he
+ would knowingly make an incorrect statement; but, with a knowledge of the
+ facts, we can assure him that he was misled by those whom he depended upon
+ for information. And also, though his name deserves to stand pre-eminent
+ among the good men of Carolina, for recurring to that frightful state of
+ things which exists in the Charleston prison, that he did not receive a
+ correct statement in regard to it. In this want, his remarks lose much of
+ their value. Subjects and grievances exist there which he should know most
+ of, and yet he knows least, because he intrusts them to the caretakers,
+ who make abuses their medium of profit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under the influence of that exceedingly suspicious, and yet exceedingly
+ credulous characteristic of a people, few know the power that is working
+ beneath the sunshine of South Carolina, and those who do, stand upon that
+ slaveworn ostentation which considers it beneath notice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have no interest nor feeling beyond that of humanity, and a right to
+ expose the mendacity of those who have power to exercise it over the
+ prisoners in Charleston. That mendacity has existed too long for the honor
+ of that community, and for the feelings of those who have suffered under
+ it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may be true that this case was considered a favorable one to try the
+ issue upon, but no elements of sympathy were sought by the consul. That
+ functionary to whom the Governor has attributed &ldquo;characteristic kindness,&rdquo;
+ said, in our presence, and we have the testimony of others to confirm what
+ we say, that if Judge Withers had granted the habeas corpus, he would not
+ have given up the prisoner, but rather gone to jail and suffered the same
+ regimen with the prisoners. Had he tried the accommodations, he would have
+ found the &ldquo;profits&rdquo; more than necessary to appease common hunger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Governor says, &ldquo;Pereira was at liberty to depart at any moment that he
+ could get a vessel to transport him beyond the limits of the State.&rdquo; How
+ are we to reconcile this with the following sentence, which appears in the
+ next paragraph:&mdash;&ldquo;While these proceedings were pending,&rdquo; (meaning the
+ action instituted by the consul to release the prisoner,) &ldquo;the sheriff of
+ Charleston had my instructions not to give up the prisoner, even if a writ
+ of habeas corpus had been granted?&rdquo; According to this, the sheriff assumed
+ a power independent of and above the Governor's prerogative. We have
+ attempted to picture the force of this in our work, and to show that there
+ are official abuses cloaked by an honorable dishonesty, which dignifies
+ the business of the local factor and vendor of human property, and which
+ should be stayed by the power of the Executive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The singular fact presents itself, that while Judge Withers was
+ deliberating upon the question of granting the &ldquo;habeas corpus,&rdquo; the
+ proceedings pending, and the Governor's instructions to the contrary
+ before him, the sheriff takes it upon himself to smuggle the prisoner out
+ of port. Now what was the object of this Secret and concerted movement?
+ Was it &ldquo;kindness&rdquo; on the part of that functionary, who has grasped every
+ pretence to enforce this law? We think not. The reader will not require
+ any extended comments from us to explain the motive; yet we witnessed it,
+ and cannot leave it without a few remarks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is well known that it has been the aim of that functionary, whose
+ &ldquo;characteristic kindness&rdquo; has not failed to escape the Governor's notice,
+ to thwart the consul in all his proceedings. In this instance, he engaged
+ the services of a &ldquo;shipping master&rdquo; as a pretext, and with him was about
+ to send the man away when his presence was essential to test his right to
+ the habeas corpus, and at this very time, more than two months wages, due
+ him from the owners, lay in the hands of the consul, ready to be paid on
+ his release.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The nefarious design speaks for itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The consul was informed of the proceeding, and very properly refused to
+ submit to such a violation of authority, intended to annul his
+ proceedings. He preferred to await the &ldquo;test,&rdquo; demanding the prisoner's
+ release through the proper authorities. That release, instead of being &ldquo;a
+ few days after this,&rdquo; as the message sets forth, was-not effected until
+ the fifteenth of May.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let the Governor institute an inquiry into the treatment of these men by
+ the officials, and the prison regimen, and he will find the truth of what
+ we have said. Public opinion will not credit his award of &ldquo;characteristic
+ kindness&rdquo; to those who set up a paltry pretext as an apology for their
+ wrong-doing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If men are to be imprisoned upon this singular construction of law, (which
+ is no less than arming the fears of South Carolina,) is it any more than
+ just to ask that she should pay for it, instead of imposing it upon
+ innocent persons? Or, to say the least, to make such comfortable provision
+ for them as is made in the port of Savannah, and give them what they pay
+ for, instead of charging thirty cents a day for their board, and making
+ twenty-two of that profit?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had the Governor referred to the &ldquo;characteristic kindness&rdquo; of the jailer,
+ his remarks would have been bestowed upon a worthy man, who has been a
+ father to those unfortunates who chanced within the turn of his key.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In another part of his message, commenting upon the existence of
+ disgraceful criminal laws, the management and wretched state of prisons,
+ he says, &ldquo;The attorney-general, at my request, has drawn up a report on
+ the subject of prisons and prison discipline.&rdquo; Now, if such were the
+ facts, the reports would be very imperfect to be drawn up by one who never
+ visits the prisons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are well aware that he called for this report, and further, that the
+ attorney-general, in a letter to the sheriff, (of which we have a copy,)
+ propounded numerous questions in regard to the jail, calling for a
+ statement in full, particularly the amount of fees paid to certain
+ functionaries; those charged to the State, and the average number of
+ prisoners per month, from Sept. 1851, to Sept. 1852, &amp;c. &amp;c. That
+ letter was transmitted to the jailer-a man whose character and integrity
+ is well known, and above reproach in Charleston-with a request that he
+ would make out his report. He drew up his report in accordance with the
+ calendar and the facts, but that report was not submitted. Why was it not
+ submitted? Simply because it showed the profit of starving men in South
+ Carolina prisons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have the evidence in our possession, and can show the Executive that he
+ has been misled. We only ask him to call for the original statement, made
+ out in the jailer's handwriting, and compare it with the calendar; and
+ when he has done that, let us ask, Why the average of prisoners per month
+ does not correspond? and why the enormous amount of fees accruing from
+ upward of fifty &ldquo;colored seamen,&rdquo; imprisoned during the year, and entered
+ upon the calendar &ldquo;contrary to law,&rdquo; was not included?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is a very unhealthy state of things, to say the least; but as the
+ sheriff considers it his own, perhaps we have no right to meddle with it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this clamor about the bad influence of &ldquo;colored seamen&rdquo; is kept up by
+ a set of mendicant officials who harvest upon the fees, and falls to
+ naught, when, at certain hours of the day during their imprisonment, they
+ are allowed to associate with &ldquo;bad niggers,&rdquo; committed for criminal
+ offences and sale. If their presence is &ldquo;dangerous,&rdquo; it certainly would be
+ more dangerous in its connection with criminals of the feared class.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Take away the fees&mdash;the mercantile community will not murmur, and the
+ official gentry will neither abuse nor trouble themselves about enforcing
+ the law to imprison freemen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+
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+</pre>
+ </body>
+</html>
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--- /dev/null
+++ b/4680.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,8786 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Manuel Pereira, by F. C. Adams
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Manuel Pereira
+
+Author: F. C. Adams
+
+Release Date: November, 2003 [EBook #4680]
+Posting Date: January 11, 2010
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MANUEL PEREIRA ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charles Aldarondo
+
+
+
+
+
+MANUEL PEREIRA
+
+or, The Sovereign Rule of South Carolina.
+
+With Views Of Southern Laws, Life, And Hospitality.
+
+By F. C. Adams.
+
+
+Written In Charleston, South Carolina. Washington, D. C.:
+
+1853.
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ CHAPTER I. THE Unlucky Ship
+ CHAPTER II. The Steward's Bravery
+ CHAPTER III. The Second Storm
+ CHAPTER IV. The Charleston Police
+ CHAPTER V. Mr. Grimshaw, the Man of the County
+ CHAPTER VI. The Janson in the Offing
+ CHAPTER VII. Arrival of the Janson
+ CHAPTER VIII. A New Dish of Secession
+ CHAPTER IX. A few Points of the Law
+ CHAPTER X. The Prospect Darkening
+ CHAPTER XI. The Sheriff's Office
+ CHAPTER XII. The Old Jail
+ CHAPTER XIII. How it is
+ CHAPTER XIV. Manuel Pereira Committed
+ CHAPTER XV. The Law's Intricacy
+ CHAPTER XVI. Plea of Just Consideration and Mistaken Constancy of the Laws
+ CHAPTER XVII. Little George, the Captain, and Mr. Grimshaw
+ CHAPTER XVIII. Little Tommy and the Police
+ CHAPTER XIX. The Next Morning, and the Mayor's Verdict
+ CHAPTER XX. Emeute among the Stewards
+ CHAPTER XXI. The Captain's Interview with Mr. Grimshaw
+ CHAPTER XXII. Copeland's Release and Manuel's close Confinement
+ CHAPTER XXIII. Imprisonment of John Paul, and John Baptiste Pamerlie
+ CHAPTER XXIV. The Janson Condemned
+ CHAPTER XXV. George the Secessionist, and his Father's Ships
+ CHAPTER XXVI. A Singular Reception
+ CHAPTER XXVII. The Habeas Corpus
+ CHAPTER XXVIII. The Captain's Departure and Manuel's Release
+ CHAPTER XXIX. Manuel's Arrival in New York
+ CHAPTER XXX. The Scene of Anguish
+ CONCLUSION
+ APPENDIX
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION.
+
+
+OUR generous friends in Georgia and South Carolina will not add among
+their assumptions that we know nothing of the South and Southern life. A
+residence of several years in those States, a connection with the press,
+and associations in public life, gave us opportunities which we did
+not lose, and have not lost sight of; and if we dipped deeper into the
+vicissitudes of life and law than they gave us credit for at the time,
+we trust they will pardon us, on the ground of interest in the welfare
+of the South.
+
+Perhaps we should say, to support the true interests of the South, we
+should and must abandon many of those errors we so strenuously supported
+in years past; and thus we have taken up the subject of our book, based
+upon the practical workings of an infamous law, which we witnessed upon
+the individual whose name forms a part of the title.
+
+Imprisoning a shipwrecked sailor, and making it a penal offence for
+a freeman to come within the limits of a republican State, whether
+voluntarily or involuntarily, seems to be considered commonplace,
+instead of barbarous in South Carolina. This may be accounted for by the
+fact that the power of a minority, created in wrong, requiring barbarous
+expedients to preserve itself intact, becomes an habitual sentiment,
+which usage makes right.
+
+This subject has been treated with indifference, even by the press,
+which has satisfied itself in discussing the abstract right as a
+question of law, rather than by disclosing the sufferings of those who
+endure the wrong and injustice. When we are called upon to support, and
+are made to suffer the penalty of laws founded in domestic fear, and
+made subservient to various grades of injustice, it becomes our duty
+to localize the wrong, and to point out the odium which attaches to the
+State that enacts such laws of oppression.
+
+A "peculiar-institution" absorbs and takes precedence of every thing;
+its protection has become a sacred element of legislative and private
+action; and fair discussion is looked upon as ominous, and proclaimed
+as incendiary. But we speak for those who owe no allegiance to
+that delicate institution; citizens to all intents and, purposes
+(notwithstanding their dark skins) of the countries to which they
+severally belong; peaceable persons, pursuing their avocations, to
+provide a respectable maintenance for their families, and worthy of the
+same protective rights claimed by the more fortunate citizens of such
+countries. In doing this we shall give a practical illustration of the
+imprisonment of four individuals in South Carolina, and ask those who
+speculate in the abstract science of State sovereignty, to reflect upon
+the issue of that lamentable injustice which inflicts punishment upon
+persons guiltless of crime. We prefer to be plain, and we know our
+Southern friends will not accuse us of misconstruction, for we have
+their interests at heart, as well as the cause of humanity, which we
+shall strive to promote, in spite of the struggles of modern barbarism,
+seeking to perpetuate itself. Fear, the inventor of such pretexts as are
+set up, and mantled in Southern modesty, must remodel its code for South
+Carolinians, before it can assert a power unknown to law, or trample
+upon the obligations of treaty, or enforce nullification of individual
+rights.
+
+CHARLESTON, S. C., July 17,1852.
+
+
+
+
+MANUEL PEREIRA.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I. THE UNLUCKY SHIP.
+
+
+
+THE British brig Janson, Thompson, master, laden with sugar, pimento,
+&c. &c. left Kingston, Jamaica, in the early part of March, in the
+present year, bound for Glasgow. The skipper, who was a genuine son
+of the "Land o' Cakes," concluded to take the inside passage, and run
+through the gulf. This might have been questioned by seamen better
+acquainted with the windward passage; but as every Scotchman likes to
+have his own way, the advice of the first officer--an experienced salt
+in the West India waters--went to leeward. On rounding Cape Antoine, it
+was evident that a strong blow was approaching. The clouds hung their
+dark curtains in threatening blackness; and, as the sharp flashes of
+lightning inflamed the gloomy scene, the little bark seemed like a speck
+upon the bosom of the sea. It was the first mate's watch on deck. The
+wind, then blowing from the W.S.W., began to increase and veer into the
+westward; from whence it suddenly chopped into the northward. The mate
+paced the quarter wrapt in his fearnought jacket, and at every turn
+giving a glance aloft, then looking at the compass, and again to the man
+at the wheel, as if he had an instinct of what was coming.
+
+He was a fearless navigator, yet, like many others who had yielded to
+the force of habit, was deeply imbued with that prevalent superstition
+so common to sailors, which regards a particular ship as unlucky.
+Imagine an old-fashioned boatswain, with north-country features strongly
+marked, a weather-beaten face, and a painted south-wester on his head,
+and you have the "Mister Mate" of the old brig Janson.
+
+"Keep her full, my hearty. We must take in our light sails and go on
+the other tack soon. If we don't catch it before daylight, I'll miss my
+calculation. She's an unlucky old craft as ever I sailed in, and if the
+skipper a'n't mighty careful, he'll never get her across. I've sworn
+against sailing in her several times, but if I get across in her this
+time, I'll bid her good-by; and if the owners don't give me a new craft,
+they may get somebody else. We're just as sure to have bad luck as if we
+had cats and parsons aboard."
+
+Thus saying, he descended the companion-way, and reported the appearance
+of the weather to the skipper, who arose quickly, and, consulting his
+barometer, found it had fallen to near the lowest scale. After inquiring
+the quarter of the wind, and how she headed, what sail she was carrying,
+and the probable distance from the cape, he gave orders to call all
+hands to take in the topgallant-sails, double reef the fore, and single
+reef the maintop-sails, and stow the flying-jib--dressed himself, and
+came on deck. Just as he put his head above the slide of the companion,
+and stopped for a minute with his hands resting upon the sides, a vivid
+flash of lightning hung its festoons of fire around the rigging, giving
+it the appearance of a chain of livid flame.
+
+"We'll catch the but-end of a gulf sneezer soon. Tell the boys to bear
+a hand with them sails. We must get her snug, and stand by to lay
+her under a double-reefed maintop-sail and jib, with her head to the
+northward and eastward. We may make a clear drift--chance if it lasts
+long," said Skipper Thompson, as he stood surveying the horizon and his
+craft. Scarcely had he given the orders before the storm burst upon them
+with all its fury. Its suddenness can only be appreciated by those who
+have sailed in the West India passages, where the sudden shocks of the
+short-chopping sea acts with a tremendous strain upon the hull of a
+heavy-laden vessel. The captain ran to the windward gangway, hurrying
+his men in the discharge of their duty, and giving another order to
+clew up the coursers and foretop-sail. Just as the men had executed the
+first, and were about to pull on the clew-lines of the latter, a sudden
+gust took effect upon the bag of the sail and carried it clean from the
+bolt-ropes. The halyards were lowered and the yards properly braced
+up, while the Janson was brought to under the canvas we have before
+described. In a few minutes more the wind had increased to a gale, and,
+as the sailors say, several times the old craft "wouldn't look at it."
+Several times we had to put her helm up, and as many times she shipped
+those forcing cross seas which drive every thing before them, and sweep
+the decks. At length a piece of canvas was lashed to the fore-rigging
+which gave her a balance, and she rode easy until about five o'clock in
+the morning, when by a sudden broach the canvas was carried away, and a
+tremendous sharp sea boarded her forward; starting several stanchions,
+carrying away part of her starboard bulwark and rail, and simultaneously
+the foretop-gallant-mast, which snapped just above the withe. As a
+natural consequence, every thing was in the utmost confusion--the old
+hull worked in every timber. The wreck swayed to and fro, retarding the
+working of the vessel and endangering the lives of those who attempted
+to clear it from obstruction. Thus she remained for more than half an
+hour, nearly on her beam-ends, and at the mercy of each succeeding sea
+that threatened to engulf her.
+
+As daylight broke, the wind lulled, and, as usual in those waters,
+the sea soon ran down. Enabled to take the advantage of daylight,
+they commenced to clear away the wreck. In the mean time it was found
+necessary to remove the fore-hatch in order to get out some spare sails
+that had been stowed away near the forward bulkhead, instead of a more
+appropriate place. The mate, after trying the pumps in the early part of
+the gale, reported that she had started a leak; which, however, was so
+trifling as to require but one man to keep her free, until she broached,
+and carried away her topgallant-mast. The man on duty then reported
+the water increasing, and another was ordered to assist him. On an
+examination in the morning, it was found that she was strained in the
+fore-channels, and had started a but.
+
+"She's an unlucky concern, skipper," said the mate as he brought the axe
+to take the battons off the forehatch. "A fellow might as well try to
+work a crab at low tide as to keep her to it in a blow like that. She
+minds her helm like a porpoise in the breakers. Old Davy must have put
+his mark upon her some time, but I never know'd a lucky vessel to be got
+as she was. She makes a haul on the underwriters every time she drifts
+across; for I never knew her to sail clear since I shipped in the old
+tub. If she was mine, I'd find a place for her at somebody's expense."
+
+The sea became smooth, the water was found to have receded, the wind,
+light, had hauled to W.S.W., and Cape Antoine was judged by dead
+reckoning to bear S.S.W. about thirty miles distant. The larboard
+fore-shrouds were found to have been scorched by the lightning, which
+had completely melted the tar from the after-shroud. All hands were now
+busily employed repairing the wreck, which by two o'clock P.M. they had
+got so far completed as to stand on their course in the gulf, at the
+rate of six knots an hour.
+
+The skipper now consulted in his mind as to the expediency of making for
+Havana or proceeding on his cruise. The leak had materially diminished,
+and, like all old vessels, though she gave a good portion of work at
+the pumps, a continuation of good weather might afford an opportunity
+to shove her across. Under these feelings, he was inclined to give the
+preference to his hopes rather than yield to his fears. He considered
+the interest of all concerned--consulted his mate, but found him
+governed by his superstition, and looking upon the issue of his life
+about as certain whether he jumped overboard or "stuck by the old tub."
+He considered again the enormous port-charges imposed in Havana, the
+nature of his cargo in regard to tariff, should his vessel be condemned,
+and the ruinous expenses of discharging, &c. &c. together with the cost
+of repairs, providing they were ordered. All these things he considered
+with the mature deliberation of a good master, who has the general
+interests of all concerned at heart. So, if he put away for a port, in
+consideration of all concerned, his lien for general average would have
+strong ground in maritime law; yet there were circumstances connected
+with the sea-worthy condition of the craft--known to himself, if not to
+the port-wardens, and which are matters of condition between the master
+and his owners--which might, upon certain technicalities of law, give
+rise to strong objectionable points. With all these glancing before
+him, he, with commendable prudence, resolved to continue his voyage, and
+trust to kind Providence for the best.
+
+"Captain," said the mate, as he stood viewing the prospect, with a
+marlinespike in one hand and a piece of seizing in the other--"I verily
+think, if that blow had stuck to us two hours longer, the old tub would
+a' rolled her futtocks out. Ye don't know her as well as I do. She's
+unlucky, anyhow; and always has been since she sot upon the water. I've
+seen her top-sides open like a basket when we've been trying to work her
+into port in heavy weather: and a craft that won't look nearer than
+nine points close-hauled, with a stiff breeze, ought to be sent into the
+Clyde for a coal-droger. An old vessel's a perfect pickpocket to owners;
+and if this old thing hasn't opened their purses as bad as her own
+seams, I'll miss my reckonin'. I've had a strong foreknowledge that we
+wouldn't get across in her. I saw the rats leaving in Jamaica--taking
+up their line of march, like marines on the fore. It's a sure sign. And
+then I'd a dream, which is as sure as a mainstay--never deceives me. I
+can depend on its presentiment. I have dreamed it several times, and we
+always had an awful passage. Twice we come within a bobstay of all
+goin' to Old Davy's store-house. I once escaped it, after I'd had my
+mysterious dream; but then I made the cook throw the cat overboard just
+after we left port, and 'twas all that saved us."
+
+Thus saying, he went forward to serve a topgallant-stay that was
+stretched across the forecastle-hatch from the cat-heads, and had just
+been spliced by the men, followed by an old-fashioned sea-urchin, a
+miniature of the tar, with a mallet in his hand. The captain, although
+a firm, intelligent man, and little given to such notions of fate as
+are generally entertained by sailors, who never shake off the spiritual
+imaginings of the forecastle, displayed some discomfiture of mind at
+the strong character of the mate's misgivings. He knew him to be a good
+sailor, firm in his duty, and unmoved by peril. This he had proved on
+several occasions when sailing in other vessels, when the last ray
+of hope seemed to be gone. He approached the mate again, and with a
+pretence of making inquiries about the storage of the cargo, sounded
+him further in regard to his knowledge of the Bahamas, and with special
+reference to the port of Nassau.
+
+"Six-tenths of her timbers are as rotten as punk," said the mate; "this
+North American timber never lasts long; the pump-wells are defective,
+and when we carry sail upon her, they don't affect the water in the
+lee-bilge, and she rolls it through her air-streaks like a whale. She'll
+damage the best cargo that ever floated, in that way. Take my word for
+it, skipper, she'll never go across the Banks; she'll roll to splinters
+as soon as she gets into them long seas; and if we get dismasted again,
+it's gone Davy."
+
+"I know the old scow before to-day, and wouldn't shipped in her, if I
+hadn't been lime-juiced by that villanous landlord that advanced me the
+trifle. But I seen she was as deep as a luggerman's sand-barge, and I
+popped the old cat overboard, just as we rounded the point coming out
+o' Kingston harbour," said a fine, active-looking sailor, who bore
+every trait of a royal tar, and boasted of serving five years in the
+East-India service, to his shipmate, while he continued to serve the
+stay. His words were spoken in a whisper, and not intended for the
+captain's ears. The captain overheard him, however; and, as a vessel is
+a world to those on board, the general sentiment carries its weight
+in controlling its affairs. Thus the strong feeling which prevailed on
+board could not fail to have its effect upon the captain's mind.
+
+"Well, we'll try her at any rate," said the captain, walking aft and
+ordering the cabin-boy to bring up his glass; with which he took a sharp
+look to the southward.
+
+"I'd shape her course for a southern Yankee port. I haven't been much in
+them, but I think we'll stand a better chance there than in these ports
+where they make a speculation of wrecking, and would take a fellow's
+pea-jacket for salvage." "We're always better under the protection of a
+consul than in a British port," said the mate, coming aft to inform the
+skipper that they had carried away the chains of the bobstay, and that
+the bowsprit strained her in the knight-heads.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II. THE STEWARD'S BRAVERY.
+
+
+
+DURING the worst of the gale, a mulatto man, with prominent features,
+indicating more of the mestino than negro character, was moving in busy
+occupation about the deck, and lending a willing hand with the rest
+of the crew to execute the captain's orders. He was rather tall,
+well formed, of a light olive complexion, with dark, piercing eyes, a
+straight, pointed nose, and well-formed mouth. His hair, also, had none
+of that crimp so indicative of negro extraction, but lay in dark curls
+all over his head. As he answered to the captain's orders, he spoke in
+broken accents, indicating but little knowledge of the English language.
+From the manner in which the crew treated him, it was evident that he
+was an established favourite with them as well as the officers, for
+each appeared to treat him more as an equal than a menial. He laboured
+cheerfully at sailor's duty until the first sea broke over her,
+when, seeing that the caboose was in danger of being carried from the
+lashings, and swept to leeward in the mass of wreck, he ran for that
+all-important apartment, and began securing it with extra lashings. He
+worked away with an earnestness that deserved all praise; not with
+the most satisfactory effect for an angry sea immediately succeeding
+completely stripped the furnace of its woodwork, and in its force
+carried the gallant fellow among its fragments into the lee-scuppers,
+where he saved himself from going overboard only by clinging to a
+stanchion.
+
+The second mate, a burly old salt, ran to his assistance, but, before
+he reached him, our hero had recovered himself, and was making another
+attempt to reach his coppers. It seemed to him as much a pending
+necessity to save the cooking apparatus as it did the captain to save
+the ship.
+
+"He no catch me dis time," said he to the mate, smiling as he lifted his
+drenched head from among the fragments of the wreck. "I fix a de coffee
+in him yet, please God."
+
+After securing the remains of his cooking utensils, he might be seen
+busily employed over a little stove, arranged at the foot of the stairs
+that led to the cabin. The smoke from the funnel several times annoyed
+the captain, who laboured under the excitement consequent upon
+the confusion of the wreck and peril of his vessel, bringing forth
+remonstrances of no very pleasant character. It proved that the good
+steward was considering how he could best serve Jack's necessities;
+and while they were laboring to save the ship, lie was studiously
+endeavoring to anticipate the craving of their stomachs. For when
+daylight appeared and the storm subsided, the steward had a bountiful
+dish of hot coffee to relieve Jack's fatigued system. It was received
+with warm welcome, and many blessings were heaped upon the head of the
+steward; A good "doctor" is as essential for the interests of owners and
+crew as a good captain. So it proved in this instance, for while he had
+a careful regard for the stores, he never failed to secure the praises
+of the crew.
+
+"When I gib de stove fire, den me gib de Cap-i-tan, wid de crew, some
+good breakfas," said he with a gleam of satisfaction.
+
+This individual, reader, was Manuel Pereira, or, as he was called by
+his shipmates, Pe-rah-re. Manuel was born in Brazil, an extract of the
+Indians and Spanish, claiming birthright of the Portuguese nation. It
+mattered but very little to Manuel where he was born, for he had been
+so long tossed about in his hardy vocation that he had almost become
+alienated from the affections of birthplace. He had sailed so long under
+the protection of the main-jack of old England that he had formed a
+stronger allegiance to that country than to any other. He had sailed
+under it with pride, had pointed to its emblem, as if he felt secure,
+when it was unfurled, that the register-ticket which that government had
+given him was a covenant between it and himself; that it was a ticket to
+incite him to good behavior in a foreign country; and that the flag was
+sure to protect his rights, and insure, from the government to which
+he sailed respect and hospitality. He had sailed around the world
+under it--visited savage and semi-civilized nations--had received
+the hospitality of cannibals, had joined in the merry dance with the
+Otaheitian, had eaten fruits with the Hottentots, shared the coarse
+morsel of the Greenlander, been twice chased by the Patagonians--but
+what shall we say?--he was imprisoned, for the olive tints of his color,
+in a land where not only civilization rules in its brightest conquests,
+but chivalry and honor sound its fame within the lanes, streets, and
+court-yards. Echo asks, Where--where? We will tell the reader. That flag
+which had waved over him so long and in so many of his wayfarings--that
+flag which had so long boasted its rule upon the wave, and had protected
+him among the savage and the civilized, found a spot upon this wonderful
+globe where it ceased to do so, unless he could change his skin.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III. THE SECOND STORM.
+
+
+
+ON the fourth night succeeding the perilous position of the Janson off
+Cape Antoine, the brig was making about seven knots, current of the gulf
+included. The sun had set beneath heavy radiant clouds, which rolled up
+like masses of inflamed matter, reflecting in a thousand mellow shades,
+and again spreading their gorgeous shadows upon the rippled surface of
+the ocean, making the picture serene and grand.
+
+As darkness quickly followed, these beautiful transparencies of a
+West-India horizon gradually changed into murky-looking monitors,
+spreading gloom in the sombre perspective. The moon was in its second
+quarter, and was rising on the earth. The mist gathered thicker and
+thicker as she ascended, until at length she became totally obscured.
+The Captain sat upon the companion-way, anxiously watching the sudden
+change that was going on overhead; and, without speaking to any one,
+rose, took a glance at the compass, and then went forward to the
+lookout, charging him to keep a sharp watch, as they were not only in a
+dangerous channel, but in the track of vessels bound into and out of the
+gulf. After this, he returned amidship, where the little miniature
+salt we have described before lay, with his face downward, upon the
+main-hatch, and ordering him to bring the lead-line, he went to leeward
+and took a cast; and after paying out about twenty-five fathoms without
+sounding, hauled aboard again. The wind was southward and light. As soon
+as he had examined the lead he walked aft and ordered the sheets eased
+and the vessel headed two points farther off. This done, he went below,
+and shaking his barometer several times, found it had begun to fall very
+fast. Taking down his coast-chart, he consulted it very studiously for
+nearly half an hour, laying off an angle with a pair of dividers and
+scale, with mathematical minuteness; after which he pricked his course
+along the surface to a given point. This was intended as his course.
+
+"Where do you make her, Captain?" said the mate, as he lay in his berth.
+
+"We must be off the Capes--we must keep a sharp look out for them
+reefs. They are so deceptive that we'll be on to them before we know it.
+There's no telling by sounding. We may get forty fathoms one minute and
+strike the next. I've heard old West-India coasters say the white water
+was the best warning," replied the Captain.
+
+"I'm mighty afraid of that Carysfort reef, since I struck upon it in
+1845. I was in a British schooner then, bound from Kingston, Jamaica, to
+New York. We kept a bright lookout, all the way through the passage, and
+yet struck, one morning just about day-light; and, five minutes before,
+we had sounded without getting bottom. When it cleared away, that we
+could see, there was two others like ourselves. One was the ship John
+Parker, of Boston, and the other was a 'long-shoreman. We had a valuable
+cargo on board, but the craft wasn't hurt a bit; and if the skipper--who
+was a little colonial man, not much acquainted with the judicial value
+of a wrecker's services--had a' taken my advice, he wouldn't got into
+the snarl he did at Key West, where they carried him, and charged
+him thirty-six hundred dollars for the job. Yes, and a nice little
+commission to the British consul for counting the doubloons, which,
+by-the-by, Skipper, belonged to that great house of Howland &
+Aspinwalls. They were right clever fellows, and it went into the
+general average account for the relief of the underwriters' big chest,"
+continued the mate.
+
+"We must have all hands ready at the call," said the Captain. "It looks
+dirty overhead, and I think we're going to catch it from the north-east
+to-night. If we do, our position is not as good as before. I don't feel
+afraid of her, if we only get clear of this infernal coast," said the
+Skipper, as he rolled up his chart, and repaired on deck again.
+
+During this time, Manuel, who, had given the crew some very acceptable
+hot cakes for supper, was sitting upon the windlass, earnestly engaged,
+with his broken English, recounting an adventure he had on the coast of
+Patagonia, a few years previous, while serving on board a whaleman, to
+a shipmate who sat at his left. It was one of those incidents which
+frequently occur to the men attached to vessels which visit that coast
+for the purpose of providing a supply of wood and water, and which would
+require too much space to relate here.
+
+"Did you run, Manuel?" said the listening shipmate.
+
+"What else did me do? If I no run, I'd not be here dis night, because
+I be make slave, or I be killed wid club. Patagonian don't care for
+flag--nor not'in' else--I trust--e my leg, an' he get to de boat jus'
+when cap-i-tan come to rescue."
+
+"Was you on board an Englishman then, Manuel?" inquired the shipmate.
+
+"Yes, I'm always sail in English ship, because I can get protection from
+flag and consul, where I go--any part of globe," said he.
+
+"I never liked this sailing among barbarous nations; they've no respect
+for any flag, and would just as lief imprison an Englishman or an
+American as they would a dog. They're a set of wild barbarians, and if
+they kill a fellow, there's no responsibility for it. It's like a parcel
+of wolves chasing a lamb, and there's no finding them after they've
+killed it. But they give a fellow his rights in Old England and the
+States. A man's a man there, rich or poor, and his feelings are just as
+much his own as anybody's. It's a glorious thing, this civilization,
+and if the world keeps on, there'll be no danger of a fellow's being
+imprisoned and killed among these savages. They're a cowardly set, for
+nobody but cowards are afraid of their own actions. Men neither imprison
+nor kill strangers, that don't fear the injustice of their own acts. You
+may smoke that in your pipe, Manuel, for I've heard great men say so.
+But you'd been done making dough-nuts then, Manuel, if they'd got hold
+o' you."
+
+"Never catch Manuel among Patagonians, again; they not know what the
+flag be, nor they can't read de registrum ticket, if they know'd where
+England was," said Manuel; and just as he was concluding the story of
+his adventure, the little sailor-boy put his arm around Manuel's
+waist, and, laying his head on his breast, fondled about him with an
+affectionate attachment. The little fellow had been a shipmate with
+Manuel on several voyages, and, through the kindness he had received
+at his hands, naturally formed an ardent attachment to him. Taking
+advantage of the good treatment, he knew how to direct his attention
+to the steward whenever he wanted a snack from the cabin-locker of that
+which was not allowed in the forecastle. After holding him for a minute,
+encircling his arm around the little fellow's shoulder, he arose,
+and saying, "I know what you want, Tommy," proceeded to the cabin and
+brought him several little eatables that had been left at the captain's
+table.
+
+The wind now began to veer and increase, her sails kept filling aback;
+and as often as the man at the helm kept her off, the wind would baffle
+him, until finding it would be necessary to go on the other tack, or
+make some change of course, he called the Captain. The moment the latter
+put his foot upon deck, he found his previous predictions were about to
+be verified. The rustling noise of the gulf, mingling its solemn sounds
+with the petrel-like music of that foreboding wind that "whistles
+through the shrouds," awakened the more superstitious sensations of a
+sailor's heart. The clouds had gathered their sombre folds into potent
+conclaves, while the sparkling brine in her wake, seemed like a fiery
+stream, rolling its troubled foam upon the dark waters.
+
+"Brace the yards up sharp-hard a-starboard!--and trim aft the sheets,"
+ordered the Captain, who had previously given the order, "All hands on
+deck!"
+
+The order was scarcely executed, before the noise of the approaching
+gale was heard in the distance. All hands were ordered to shorten sail
+as quickly as possible; but before they could get aloft, it came upon
+them with such fury from E.N.E. as to carry away the foretop-mast and
+topgallant-mast, together with its sails, and the main-topgallant-mast
+with the sail. The foretop-mast, in going by the board, carried away the
+flying-jib-boom and flying-jibs. Thus the ill-fated Janson was doomed to
+another struggle for her floating existence. The sea began to rise and
+break in fearful power; the leak had already increased so, that two
+men were continually kept working the pumps. The crew, with commendable
+alacrity, cut away the wreck, which had been swaying to and fro, not
+only endangering the lives of those on board, but obstructing every
+attempt to get the vessel into any kind of working order. The main-sail
+had rent from the leash to the peak of the gaff, and was shaking into
+shreds. The starboard sheet of the maintop-sail was gone, and it had
+torn at the head from the bolt-rope, flying at every gust like the
+shreds of a muslin rag in a hail-storm. Without the government of her
+helm, she lay in the trough of the sea more like a log than a manageable
+mass. Sea after sea broke over her, carrying every thing before them
+at each pass. The officers and crew had now as much as they could do to
+retain their holds, without making any effort to save the wreck, while
+the men at the pumps could only work at each subsiding of the sea,
+and that under the disadvantage of being lashed to the frame. A more
+perilous position than that in which the old brig Janson now lay, it was
+impossible to imagine.
+
+"'Tis the worst hurricane I've ever experienced upon the West India
+coast, Captain, but it's too furious to last long; and if she don't
+go to pieces before morning, I'll give her credit for what I've always
+swore against her. She can't keep afloat though, if it hangs on another
+hour in this way," said the mate, who, with the Captain and Manuel, had
+just made an ineffectual attempt to rig a storm stay-sail, to try
+and lay her to under it. For the mate swore by his knowledge of her
+qualities, that to put her before it, would be certain foundering. The
+gale continued with unabated fury for about two hours, and stopped about
+as suddenly as it commenced. The work of destruction was complete, for
+from her water-line to the stump of the remaining spars, the Janson
+floated a complete wreck.
+
+The captain gave orders to clear away the wreck, and get what little
+sail they could patch up, upon her, for the purpose of working her
+into the nearest port. The mate was not inclined to further the order,
+evidently laboring under the strong presentiment that she was to be
+their coffin. He advised that it was fruitless to stick by her any
+longer, or hazard an attempt to reach a port with her, in such a leaky
+and disabled condition. "If we don't abandon her, Skipper," said he,
+"she'll abandon us. We'd better make signal for the first vessel, and
+bid the old coffin good-by."
+
+The captain was more determined in his resolution, and instead of being
+influenced by the mate's fears, continued his order, and the men went
+to work with a cheerful willingness. None seemed more anxious to lend a
+ready hand than Manuel, for in addition to is duties as steward, he had
+worked at sail-making, and both worked at and directed the repairing of
+the sails. Those acquainted with maritime affairs can readily appreciate
+the amount of labor necessary to provide a mess with the means at hand
+that we have before described. And yet he did it to the satisfaction of
+all, and manifested a restless anxiety lest he should not make everybody
+comfortable, and particularly his little pet boy, Tommy.
+
+"We'll get a good observation at meridian, and then we shall shape our
+course for Charleston, South Carolina. We'll be more likely to reach
+it than any other southern port," said the captain to his mate. "That
+steward, Manuel, is worth his weight in gold. If we have to abandon the
+old craft, I'll take him home; the owners respect him just as much as
+a white man; his politeness and affability could not but command such
+esteem, with a man that a'n't a fool. I never believed in making equals
+of negroes, but if Manuel was to be classed with niggers for all the
+nigger blood that's in him, seven-tenths of the inhabitants of the earth
+would go with him. I never saw such an attachment between brothers, as
+exists between him and Tommy. I verily believe that one couldn't go to
+sleep without the other. I should think they were brothers, if the
+lad wasn't English, and Manuel a Portuguese. But Manuel is as much an
+Englishman at heart as the lad, and has sailed so long under the flag
+that he seems to have a reverence for the old jack when he sees the
+bunting go up. He likes to tell that story about the Patagonians chasing
+him. I have overheard him several times, as much amused in his own
+recital as if he was listening to the quaint jokes of an old tar. But he
+swears the Patagonians will never catch him on their shores again, for
+he says he doesn't believe in making 'drum-head of man-skin,'" said the
+Captain, evidently with the intention of affecting the mate's feelings,
+and drawing his mind from its dark forebodings.
+
+"Well, Skipper, I pray for a happy deliverance," said the mate, "but if
+we make Charleston with her, it'll be a luck that man nor mermaid ever
+thought of. I hearn a good deal o' tell about Charleston, and the Keys.
+That isn't one of the places our stewards are so 'fraid of, and where
+owners don't like to send their ships when they can find freight in
+other ports?"
+
+"I expect it is, sir; but I apprehend no such trouble with any of my
+crew," answered the Captain promptly. "I sail under the faith of my
+nation's honor and prowess, the same as the Americans do under theirs.
+We're both respected wherever we go, and if one little State in the
+Union violates the responsibility of a great nation like that, I'm
+mistaken. Certainly, no nation in Christendom could be found, that
+wouldn't open their hearts to a shipwrecked sailor. I have too much
+faith in what I have heard of the hospitality of Southerners, to believe
+any thing of that kind."
+
+"Talk's all very well, Skipper," said the mate; "but my word for it, I
+know'd several ships lying in the Mersey, about three years ago, bound
+to Southern ports for cotton. White stewards worth any thing couldn't be
+had for love nor money, and the colored ones wouldn't ship for ports in
+Slaves States. The Thebis got a colored man, but the owners had to pay
+him an enormous advance, and this, too, with the knowledge of his being
+locked up the whole time he was in port; thus having to incur the
+very useless expense of supplying his place, or find boarding-house
+accommodations for the officers and crew. If it be true, what I've hearn
+'em say in the Mersey, the man doesn't only suffer in his feelings by
+some sort of confinement they have, but the owners suffer in pocket.
+But it may be, Skipper, and I'm inclined to think with you, our case is
+certainly deplorable enough to command pity instead of imprisonment. The
+government must be found cutting a dirty figure on the national picture,
+that would ill-treat sailors who had suffered as much as our boys have.
+I would hate to see Manuel shut up or ill-used. He's as brave a fellow
+as ever buckled at a handspike or rode a jib-boom. Last night, while
+in the worst of the gale, he volunteered to take Higgins's place, and,
+mounting the jib-boom, was several times buried in the sea; yet he held
+on like a bravo, and succeeded in cutting away the wreck. I thought he
+was gone once or twice, and I own I never saw more peril at sea; but if
+he hadn't effected it, the foot of the bowsprit would have strained her
+open in the eyes, and we'd all been sharks'-bait before this. The fellow
+was nearly exhausted when he came on board; says I, its gone day with
+you, old fellow; but he come to in a little while, and went cheerily to
+work again," continued Mr. Mate, who though pleased with the Captain's
+determination to make the nearest port, seemed to dread that all would
+not be right in Charleston--that the bar was a very intricate one--water
+very shoal in the ship-channel, and though marked with three distinctive
+buoys, numbered according to their range, impossible to crops without
+a skilful pilot. The mate plead a preference for Savannah, asserting,
+according to his own knowlege, that a ship of any draft could cross
+that bar at any time of tide, and that it was a better port for the
+transaction of business.
+
+The Janson was headed for Charleston, the queen city of the sunny South,
+and, as may be expected from her disabled condition, made very slow
+progress on her course. During the gale, her stores had become damaged,
+and on the third day before making Charleston light, Manuel Pereira
+came aft, and with a sad countenance reported that the last cask of
+good water was nearly out; that the others had all been stove during
+the gale, and what remained, so brackish that it was unfit for use.
+From this time until their arrival at Charleston, they suffered those
+tortures of thirst, which only those who have endured them can estimate.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV. THE CHARLESTON POLICE.
+
+
+
+MR. DURKEE had said in Congress, that a negro was condemned to be hung
+in Charleston for resisting his master's attempts upon the chastity of
+his wife; and that such was the sympathy expressed for the negro, that
+the sheriffs offer of one thousand dollars could induce no one present
+to execute the final mandate. Now, had Mr. Durkee been better acquainted
+with that social understanding between the slave, the pretty wife, and
+his master, and the acquiescing pleasure of the slave, who in nineteen
+cases out of twenty congratulates himself on the distinguished honor, he
+would have saved himself the error of such a charge against the tenor
+of social life in Charleston. Or, had he been better acquainted with the
+character of her police, he certainly would have saved the talent of
+Mr. Aiken its sophomore display in that cumbrous defence. In the first
+place, Mr. Durkee would have known that such attempts are so common
+among the social events of the day, and so well understood by the slave,
+that instead of being resented, they are appreciated to a great extent.
+We speak from long experience and knowledge of the connection between
+a certain class of slaves and their masters. In the second place,
+Mr. Durkee would have known that any man connected with the city
+police--save its honorable mayor, to whose character we would pay all
+deference--would not for conscience' sake scruple to hang a man for five
+dollars. We make no exception for color or crime. A qualification might
+be called for, more adapted to our knowledge of it as it has existed for
+the last four or five years; but we are informed by those whose lives
+and fortunes have been spent for the moral elevation of the city police,
+that it was even worse at the time referred to.
+
+The reader may think we are making grave charges. Let us say, without
+fear of refutation, they are too well known in the community that
+tolerates them. As a mere shadow of what lays beneath the surface,
+we would refer to the only independent speech we ever listened to in
+Charleston,--except when self-laudation was the theme,--made by G. R--,
+Esq., in one of her public halls a few weeks ago. Mr. R--is a gentleman
+of moral courage and integrity, and, without fear or trembling, openly
+denounced the corruption and demoralization of the police department.
+Even the enemies of his party, knowing the facts, appreciated his
+candor as a man, while they denounced the publicity, (for his speech
+was paraded by the press,) lest the fair name of the queen city should
+suffer abroad. A beautiful farce followed this grave exposition. The
+board of aldermen, composed of fourteen men of very general standing,
+remained mum under the accusation for a long time. Its object was to
+show up the character of a class of officials, whose character and
+nefarious arts have long disgraced the city. But in order to make a
+display of his purity, Mr. C--, a gentleman entitled to high moral
+consideration, chose to make it a personal matter; yet, not content
+with a private explanation given by Mr. R--, he made a call through the
+press. Mr. R--responded in a proper and courteous manner, acknowledging
+the due respect to which Mr. C--'s private character was entitled;
+thus increasing the ambition of the board generally, who, with the
+expectation of Mr. R--making a like acknowledgment to them as a body,
+(not excepting their honorable head,) made a demand in joint-officio.
+This being duly signalized through the columns of the Courier and
+Mercury, Mr. R--met it with a response worthy of a gentleman. He
+referred them to the strongest evidence of his assertions, in the
+countenance which they gave to a class of officials too well known to
+the community for the honor of its name and the moral foundation of its
+corporate dignity. Thus ended a great municipal farce, to prolong which
+the principal performers knew would disclose the intriguing scenes of
+their secondary performers. The plot of this melo-comic concern was in
+the sequel, and turned upon the very grave fact of Mr. C--having some
+time previous withdrawn from the honorable board, to preserve some very
+delicate considerations for conscience' sake.
+
+How much spiritual consolation Mr. C--realized through the
+acknowledgment of Mr. R--, or the honorable board in joint-officio from
+the firm admonition, we leave for the secondary consideration of proper
+wives and daughters.
+
+But the reader will ask, what has this to do with poor Manuel
+Pereira,--or the imprisonment of free citizens of a friendly nation? We
+will show him that the complex system of official spoliation, and the
+misrepresentations of the police in regard to the influence of such
+persons upon the slave population, is a principal feature in its
+enforcement. To do this, we deem it essentially necessary to show the
+character of such men and the manner in which this law is carried out.
+We shall make no charges that we cannot sustain by the evidence of the
+whole city proper, and with the knowledge that truth is stronger than
+fiction.
+
+What will the reader say when we tell him that, among the leading minds
+of the city--we say leading minds, for we class those who are considered
+foremost in the mercantile sphere among them--are three brothers,
+unmarried, but with mistresses bought for the purpose, whose dark skins
+avert the tongue of scandal;--that, twice, men were sold, because of the
+beauty of their wives, to distant traders, that the brothers might cast
+off their old mistresses, and appropriate new ones to an unholy purpose;
+that these men enjoy their richly furnished mansions, are known for
+their sumptuous entertainments, set an example of mercantile honor and
+integrity, are flattered among the populace, receive the attentions of
+very fine and very virtuous ladies, wield a potential voice in the
+city government, and lead in the greatest development of internal
+improvements;--that these men even whisper high-sounding words of
+morality, and the established custom considers their example no harm
+when color is modified.
+
+What will the reader think, when we tell him that there is no
+city-marshal in Charleston, but innumerable marshalled men, supported
+by an onerous tax upon the people, to quiet the fears of a few. And
+what will they think, when we tell them that the man whose name is
+so frequently sounded through the columns of the press as the head of
+police, and applauded for his activity among thieves, is the well-known
+prince-officio of a voluptuous dwelling, where dazzling licentiousness
+fills his pockets with the spoils of allurement. This man has several
+counterparts, whose acts are no secrets to the public ear, and who turn
+their office into a mart of intrigue, and have enriched themselves upon
+the bounty of espionage and hush-money, and now assert the dignity of
+their purse. It may be asked, why are these men kept in office?--or
+have these offices become so disgraced that honest men will not deign to
+accept them? No! such is not the case. It is that moral integrity is not
+considered in its proper light, and is not valued as it should be;
+that these men have a secret influence which is well known, and are
+countenanced and retained for the weight of their control among a
+certain class; and, strange to say, that the party ex-officio make these
+demoralizing things the basis of their complaints against the "powers
+that be;" yet such is their feeble dependence, that no sooner are they
+in office than we have the repetition of the same things.
+
+Now, how far his honor is answerable for these things we must leave the
+reader to judge. The leading characteristics of his nature conflict with
+each other; his moral character is what is considered sound here; and
+truly he is entitled to much respect for his exemplary conduct, whether
+it be only exerted as an example, or the heartfelt love of Christian
+purity. Some people are pious from impulse, and become affected
+when purpose serves to make it profitable. We, however, are not so
+uncharitable as to charge such piety to our worthy head of the city
+government, but rather to a highly developed organ of the love
+of office, which has outgrown the better inclinations of his
+well-established Christianity.
+
+We must invite the reader's attention to another and still more glaring
+evidence of the demoralization of social life in Charleston. A notorious
+woman, who has kept the worst kind of a brothel for years, where harlots
+of all shades and importations break the quietude of night with their
+polluted songs, becomes so bold in her infamy that she appeals to the
+gracious considerations of the city council, (board of aldermen.) How
+is this? Why, we will tell the reader:--She remained unmolested in her
+trade of demoralization, amassed a fortune which gave her boldness,
+while her open display was considered very fine fun for the joking
+propensities of officials and gallants. With her wealth she reared a
+splendid mansion to infamy and shame, where she, and such as she,
+whose steps the wise man tells us "lead down to hell," could sway their
+victory over the industrious poor. So public was it, that she openly
+boasted its purpose and its adaptation to the ensnaring vices of
+passion. Yes, this create in female form had spread ruin and death
+through the community, and brought the head of many a brilliant young
+man to the last stage of cast-off misery. And yet, so openly tolerated
+and countenanced by leading men are these things, that on the 31st
+of July, 1852, this mother of crime appeals to the honorable board of
+aldermen, as appeared in the "Proceedings of Council" in the Charleston
+Courier of that date, in the following manner:
+
+"Laid over until a monied quorum is present.
+
+"Letter from Mrs. G. Pieseitto, informing Council that having recessed
+her new brick building in Berresford street at least two feet, so as to
+dedicate it to the use of the citizens of Charleston, if they will pave
+with flag-stones the front of her lot, respectfully requests, that if
+accepted, the work may be done as soon as possible. Referred to the
+Aldermen, Ward No. 4." The street is narrow and little used, except for
+purposes known to the lanterns, when honest people should sleep.
+The information might have been couched with more modesty, when the
+notoriety of the woman and the dedication of her tabernacle of vice
+was so public. How far the sensitive aldermen of the fourth ward have
+proceeded in the delicate mission, or how much champagne their modest
+consideration has cost, the public have not yet been informed. Rumor
+says every thing is favorable. We are only drawing from a few principal
+points, and shall leave the reader to draw his own inference of the
+moral complexion of our social being. We make but one more view, and
+resume our story.
+
+An office connected with the judiciary, so long held as one of high
+responsibility and honorable position, is now held merely as a medium
+of miserable speculation and espionage. It is an elective office, the
+representative holding for four years. The present incumbent was elected
+more through charity than recompense for any amiable qualities, moral
+worth, or efficient services to party ends. A more weak man could not
+have been drawn from the lowest scale of party hirelings, though he had
+abdicated the office once before to save his name and the respectability
+of the judiciary. It may be said, he was elected in pity to speculate
+on misery; and thus it proved in the case of MANUEL PEREIRA. This
+functionary was elected by a large majority. Could his moral worth have
+been taken into consideration? We should think not! For several times
+have we been pointed to two interesting girls,--or, if their color was
+not shaded, would be called young ladies--promenading the shady side of
+King street, with their faces deeply vailed, and informed who was their
+father. The mother of these innocent victims had been a mother to their
+father, had nursed him and maintained him through his adversity, and
+had lived the partner of his life and affections for many years, and
+had reared to him an interesting but fatal family. But, no sooner had
+fortune begun to shed its smiling rays, than he abandoned the one that
+had watched over him for the choice of one who could boast no more than
+a white skin.
+
+If men who fill high places live by teaching others to gratify their
+appetites and pleasures alone, instead of setting a commendable example
+for a higher state of existence, by whom can we expect that justice and
+moral worth shall be respected?
+
+Connected with the city constabulary are two men whose duty it is to
+keep a sharp lookout for all vessels arriving, and see that all negroes
+or colored seamen are committed to prison. One is a South Carolinian, by
+the name of Dusenberry, and the other an Irishman, by the name of Dunn.
+These two men, although their office is despicable in the eyes of
+many, assume more authority over a certain class of persons, who are
+unacquainted with the laws, than the mayor himself. The former is a
+man of dark, heavy features, with an assassin-like countenance, more
+inclined to look at you distrustfully than to meet you with an open
+gaze. He is rather tall and athletic, but never has been known to do any
+thing that would give him credit for bravery. Several times he has been
+on the brink of losing his office for giving too much latitude to his
+craving for perquisites; yet, by some unaccountable means, he manages
+to hold on. The other is a robust son of the Emerald Isle, with a broad,
+florid face, low forehead, short crispy hair very red, and knotted
+over his forehead. His dress is usually very slovenly and dirty, his
+shirt-collar bespotted with tobacco-juice, and tied with an old striped
+bandana handkerchief. This, taken with a very wide mouth, flat nose,
+vicious eye, and a countenance as hard as ever came from Tipperary, and
+a lame leg, which causes him to limp as he walks, gives our man Dunn the
+incarnate appearance of a fit body-grabber. A few words will suffice
+for his character. He is known to the official department, of which
+the magistrates are a constituent part, as a notorious ----l; and his
+better-half, who, by-the-way, is what is called a free-trader, meaning,
+to save the rascality of a husband, sells liquor by small portions, to
+suit the Murphys and the O'Neals. But, as it pleases our Mr. Dunn, he
+very often becomes a more than profitable customer, and may be found
+snoring out the penalty in some sequestered place, too frequently for
+his own character. Between the hours of ten and twelve in the morning,
+Dunn, if not too much incapacitated, may be seen limping his way down
+Broad street, to watch vessels arriving and departing, carrying a
+limp-cane in one hand, and a large covered whip in the other. We were
+struck with the appearance of the latter, because it was similar to
+those carried in the hands of a rough, menial class of men in Macon,
+Georgia, who called themselves marshals, under a misapplication of the
+term. Their office was to keep the negro population "straight," and do
+the whipping when called upon, at fifty cents a head. They also did the
+whipping at the jails, and frequently made from five to six dollars a
+day at this alone; for it is not considered fashionable for a gentleman
+to whip his own negro. We noticed the universal carrying of this whip,
+when we first visited Macon, some four years ago, and were curious to
+know its purport, which was elucidated by a friend; but we have since
+seen the practical demonstrations painfully carried out. Those who
+visited Boston for the recovery of Crafts and Ellen--whose mode of
+escape is a romance in itself--were specimens of these "marshals."
+How they passed themselves off for gentlemen, we are at a loss to
+comprehend.
+
+During the day, the Messrs. Dusenberry and Dunn may be seen at times
+watching about the wharves, and again in low grog-shops--then pimping
+about the "Dutch beer-shops and corner-shops"--picking up, here and
+there, a hopeful-looking nigger, whom they drag off to limbo, or extort
+a bribe to let him go. Again, they act as monitors over the Dutch
+corner-shops, the keepers of which pay them large sums to save
+themselves the heavy license fine and the information docket. When they
+are no longer able to pay over hush-money, they find themselves walked
+up to the captain's office, to be dealt with according to the severe
+penalty made and provided for violating the law which prohibits the sale
+of liquor to negroes without an order. The failure to observe this law
+is visited with fine and imprisonment,--both beyond their proportionate
+deserts, when the law which governs the sale of liquor to white men is
+considered. Things are very strictly regulated by complexions in South
+Carolina. The master sets the most dissipated and immoral examples
+in his own person, and allows his children not only to exercise their
+youthful caprices, but to gratify such feelings as are pernicious to
+their moral welfare, upon his slaves. Now, the question is, that knowing
+the negro's power of imitation, ought not some allowance to be made
+for copying the errors of his master? Yet such is not the case; for the
+slightest deviation from the strictest rule of discipline brings condign
+punishment upon the head of the offender.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V. MR. GRIMSHAW, THE MAN OF THE COUNTY.
+
+
+
+ON the 22d of March last, about ten o'clock in the morning, a thin,
+spare-looking man, dressed in a black cashmeret suit, swallow-tail
+coat, loose-cut pants, a straight-breasted vest, with a very extravagant
+shirt-collar rolling over upon his coat, with a black ribbon tied at the
+throat, stood at the east corner of Broad and Meeting street, holding a
+very excited conversation with officers Dusenberry and Dunn. His
+visage was long, very dark--much more so than many of the colored
+population--with pointed nose and chin, standing in grim advance to
+each other; his face narrow, with high cheek-bones, small, peering eyes,
+contracted forehead, reclining with a sunken arch between the perceptive
+and intellectual organs--or, perhaps, we might have said, where
+those organs should have been. His countenance was full of vacant
+restlessness; and as he stared at you through his glasses, with his
+silvery gray hair hanging about his ears and neck in shaggy points,
+rolling a large quid of tobacco in his mouth, and dangling a little whip
+in his right hand, you saw the index to his office. As he raised his
+voice--which he did by twisting his mouth on one side, and working his
+chin to adjust his enormous quid--the drawling tone in which he spoke
+gave a picture not easily forgotten.
+
+"You must pay more attention to the arrivals," said he in a commanding
+tone. "The loss of one of these fellers is a serious drawback to my
+pocket; and that British consul's using the infernalest means to destroy
+our business, that ever was. He's worse than the vilest abolitionist,
+because he thinks he's protected by that flag of their'n. If he don't
+take care, we'll tar-and-feather him; and if his government says much
+about it, she'll larn what and who South Carolina is. We can turn out
+a dozen Palmetto regiments that'd lick any thing John Bull could send
+here, and a troop o' them d--d Yankee abolitionists besides. South
+Carolina's got to show her hand yet against these fellers, afore they'll
+respect the honor and standing of her institutions. They can't send
+their navy to hurt us. And it shows that I always predicts right; for
+while these commercial fellers about the wharves are telling about
+digging out the channel, I've al'ays said they didn't think how much
+injury they were doing; for it was our very best protection in war-time.
+South Carolina can lick John Bull, single-fisted, any time; but if that
+pack of inconsiderate traders on the wharves get their own way, away
+goes our protection, and John Bull would bring his big ships in and
+blow us up. And these fellows that own ships are getting so bold, that a
+great many are beginning to side with Mathew, the consul. Yes, they even
+swear that 'tis the officials that stick to the law for the sake of the
+fees. Now, if I only knew that the consul was the means of that Nassau
+nigger getting away, I'd raise a mob, and teach him a lesson that South
+Carolinians ought to have teached him before. It took about seventeen
+dollars out of my pocket, and if I was to sue him for it, I could get
+no recompense. The next time you allow one to escape, I must place some
+other officer over the port," said our man whom, we shall continue to
+call Mr. Grimshaw.
+
+"Sure I heard the same consul, when spakin to a gintleman, say that
+the law was only an abuse of power, to put money into the pockets of
+yourself and a few like ye. And whin meself and Flin put the irons on a
+big nigger that the captain was endeavoring to skulk by keeping him in
+the forecastle of the ship, he interfered between me and me duty, and
+began talking his balderdash about the law. Sure, with his own way, he'd
+have every nigger in the city an abolitionist in three weeks. And sure,
+Mr. Sheriff, and ye'd think they were babies, if ye'd see himself talk
+to them at the jail, and send them up things, as if they were better
+than the other criminals, and couldn't live on the jail fare," said
+officer Dunn, who continued to pledge himself to the sheriff that the
+wharves should not be neglected, nor a hopeful English darky escape his
+vigilant eye.
+
+"For my own part, I think they're better off in jail than they would be
+on the wharf," continued Grimshaw. "They're a worthless set, and ha'n't
+half the character that a majority of our slaves have; and instead of
+attending the captain on board, they'd be into Elliot street, spending
+their money, getting drunk, and associating with our worst niggers. And
+they all know so much about law, that they're always teaching our bad
+niggers the beauties of their government, which makes them more unhappy
+than they are. Our niggers are like a shoal of fish--when one becomes
+diseased, he spreads it among all the rest; and before you know where
+you are, they're done gone."
+
+"They're not very profitable customers for us, Sheriff," said
+Dusenberry. "We have a deal of watching, and a mighty smart lot of
+trouble after we get them fellows; and if we get a perquisite, it never
+amounts to much, for I seldom knew one that had money enough to treat
+as we took him up. These Britishers a'n't like us; they don't pay off in
+port and if the fellows get any thing in jail from the consul, it's by
+drib-drabs, that a'n't no good, for it all goes for liquor. And them
+criminals make a dead haul upon a black steward, as soon as he is locked
+up. But if these sympathizing fools follow up their bugbears about the
+treatment at the jail, they'll get things so that our business won't
+be worth a dollar. For my own part, I'm not so much beholdin', for I've
+made myself comfortable within the last few years, but I want my son
+to succeed me in the office. But if this consul of their'n keeps up his
+objections, appeals, and his protests in this way, and finds such men as
+his honor the district-attorney to second him with his nonsense and his
+notions, folks of our business might as well move north of Mason and
+Dixon's."
+
+"I can wake him up to a point," said Grimshaw, "that that abolition
+consul ha'n't learnt before; and if he'd stuck his old petition
+in Charles Sumner's breeches pocket instead of sending it to our
+legislature, he might have saved his old-womanish ideas from the
+showing' up that Myzeck gave 'em. It takes Myzeck to show these
+blue-skin Yankees how to toe the mark when they come to South Carolina.
+If South Carolina should secede, I'd say give us Myzeck and Commander to
+lead our war, and we'd be as sure to whip 'em as we won the Mexican war
+for the Federal Government. There is three things about an Englishman,
+Dusenberry, which you may mark for facts. He is self-conceited, and
+don't want to be advised;--he thinks there is no law like the law of
+England, and that the old union-jack is a pass-book of nations;--and
+he thinks everybody's bound to obey his notions of humanity and the
+dictates of his positive opinions. But what's worse than all, they've
+never seen the sovereignty of South Carolina carried out, and according
+to Consul Mathew's silly notions, they think we could be licked by a
+gun-boat.
+
+"It's no use arguing this thing, you must keep a keen eye upon the
+English niggers; and when a man pretends to dispute the right, tell him
+its 'contrary to law,' and to look at the statute-books; tell him it
+costs more to keep them than they're all worth; and if they say the law
+was never intended for foreign citizens, tell 'em its 'contrary to law.'
+South Carolina's not bound to obey the voice of the General Government,
+and what does she care for the federal courts? We'll pursue a course
+according to the law; and any thing that is contrary to it we will take
+care of for the better protection of our institutions. Now, don't let
+one pass, upon the peril of your office," continued Mr. Grimshaw.
+
+"It's not a button I'd care for the office," said Dunn. "Sure it's
+yerself be's makin' all the fees, and ourselves getting the paltry
+dollar; and yerself gives us as much trouble to get that as we'd be
+earning two dollars at magistrate Jiles' beyant. Sure! himself's
+liberal and doesn't be afraid to give us a division of the fees when the
+business is good. And sure ye make yer ten times the fees on an English
+nigger, and never gives us beyant the dollar," continued he, moving off
+in high dudgeon, and swearing a stream of oaths that made the very blood
+chill. There was a covert meaning about Mr. Grimshaw's language that was
+not at all satisfactory to Mr. Dunn's Irish; especially when he knew Mr.
+Grimshaw's insincerity so well, and that, instead of being liberal, he
+pocketed a large amount of the fees, to the very conscientious benefit
+of his own dear self. The reader must remember that in Charleston, South
+Carolina, there is a large majority of men who care little for law,
+less for justice, and nothing for Christianity. Without compunction
+of conscience, and with an inherited passion to set forward the
+all-absorbing greatness of South Carolina, these men act as a check upon
+the better-disposed citizens. The more lamentable part is, that forming
+a large portion of that species of beings known as bar-room politicians,
+they actually control the elections in the city; and thus we may account
+for the character of the incumbents of office, and for the tenacity with
+which those oppressive laws are adhered to.
+
+This almost incompatible conversation between a high sheriff and two
+menial constables, may to many seem inconsistent with the dignity
+that should be observed between such functionaries. Nevertheless, all
+restraint is not only annihilated by consent, but so prominently is
+this carried out, and so well understood by that respectable class of
+citizens whose interests and feelings are for maintaining a good
+name for the city and promoting its moral integrity, that in all
+our conversation with them, we never heard one speak well of those
+functionaries or the manner in which the police regulations of the city
+were carried out.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI. THE JANSON IN THE OFFING.
+
+
+
+AFTER several days' suffering for want of wafer and fatigue of labor,
+several of the crew were reported upon the sick-list. Manuel, who had
+borne his part nobly and cheerfully, was among the number; and his loss
+was more severely felt, having done a double duty, and succeeded, as far
+as the means were at hand, in making everybody on board comfortable. He
+had attended upon those who gave up first, like a good nurse, ready
+at the call, whether night or day, and with a readiness that seemed
+pleasure to him. From the captain to the little boy Tommy, his loss
+was felt with regret; and the latter would often go into the forecastle
+where he lay, lean over him with a child-like simplicity, and smooth his
+forehead with his little hand. "Manuel! I wish poor Manuel was well!" he
+would say, and again he would lay his little hand on his head and smooth
+his hair. He would whisper encouragement in his ear; and having learned
+a smattering of Portuguese, would tell him how soon they would be in
+port, and what pleasant times they would have together.
+
+On the 21st they descried land, which proved to be Stono, about
+twenty-five miles south of Charleston. Tommy announced the news to
+Manuel, which seemed to cheer him up. His sickness was evidently caused
+by fatigue, and his recovery depended more upon rest and nourishment
+than medical treatment. That night at ten o'clock the wind came strong
+north-west, and drove the Janson some distance to sea again; and it was
+not until the morning of the 23d that she made Charleston light, and
+succeeded in working up to the bar. Signal was made for a pilot, and
+soon, a very fine cutter-looking boat, "Palmetto, No. 4," was seen
+shooting out over the bar in the main channel. Manuel, somewhat
+recovered, had a few minutes before been assisted on deck, and through
+the captain's orders was laid upon a mattrass, stretched on the
+starboard side of the companion-way. By his side sat little Tommy,
+serving him with some nourishment.
+
+The boat was soon alongside, and the pilot, a middle-sized man, well
+dressed, with a frank, open countenance, rather florid and sun-stained,
+and a profusion of gold chain and seal dangling from his fob, came
+on board. After saluting the captain, he surveyed the weather-beaten
+condition of the craft, made several inquiries in regard to her working,
+and then said in a sang-froid manner, "Well! I reckon you've seen some
+knocking, anyhow." Then turning again and giving some orders in regard,
+to getting more way upon her, he viewed the laborious working at the
+pumps, and walking about midships on the larboard side, took a sharp
+survey of her waist. "Don't she leak around her topsides, Captain?" said
+he.
+
+Receiving an answer in the affirmative, he gave a glance aloft, and
+then at the sky to windward; asked how long he had worked her in that
+condition, and where he took the gale. "It's a wonder she hadn't swamped
+ye before now. I'd a' beached her at the first point, if she'd bin mine;
+I'd never stand at slapping an old craft like this on. She reminds me
+of one o' these down-east sugar-box crafts what trade to Cuba," he
+continued. Then walking across the main-hatch to the starboard side, he
+approached the men who were pumping, and after inquiring about freeing
+her, suddenly caught a glimpse of Manuel, as he lay upon the mattrass
+with his face uncovered.
+
+"Heavens! What! have you got the yellow fever on board at this season
+of the year?" he inquired of the mate, who had just come aft to inquire
+about getting some water from the pilot-boat.
+
+"No, we've had every thing else but the yellow fever; one might as well
+bin on a raft as such an infernal unlucky old tub as she is. It's the
+steward, sir--he's got a touch of a fever; but he'll soon be over it.
+He only wants rest, poor fellow! He's bin a bully at work ever since the
+first gale. He'll mend before he gets to town," was the reply.
+
+"Ah! then you've had a double dose of it. It gives a fellow bringer off
+them capes once in a while.--The steward's a nigger, isn't he?" inquired
+the pilot.
+
+"Nigger!--not he," said the mate. "He's a Portuguese mixed breed; a kind
+o' sun-scorched subject, like a good many of you Southerners. A nigger's
+mother never had him, you may bet your 'davie on that. There's as much
+white blood in his jacket as anybody's got, only them Portuguese are
+dark-lookin' fellers. He's no fool--his name's Manuel, a right clever
+feller, and the owners think as much of him as they do of the Skipper."
+
+"Gammon," said the pilot to himself. "What would he think if we were
+to show him some specimens of our white niggers in Charleston?" And
+turning, he walked past Manuel with a suspicious look, and took a
+position near the man at the wheel, where he remained for some time
+fingering the seals of his watch-chain. The Captain had gone into the
+cabin a few minutes before, and coming on deck again, walked toward the
+place where the pilot stood, and took a seat upon an old camp-stool.
+
+"Cap," said the pilot, "ye'll have trouble with that nigger of your'n
+when ye git to town. If you want to save yerself and the owners a d--d
+site o' bother and expense, y' better keep him close when y' haul in;
+and ship him off to New York the first chance. I've seen into the mill,
+Cap, and y' better take a friend's advice."
+
+"Nigger!" said the Captain indignantly, "what do they call niggers in
+Charleston? My steward's no more a nigger than you are!"
+
+"What, sir?" returned the pilot in a perfect rage. "Do you know the
+insulting nature of your language? Sir, if the law did not subject me,
+I would leave your vessel instantly, and hold you personally responsible
+as soon as you landed, sir."
+
+The Captain, unconscious of the tenacity with which the chivalrous blood
+of South Carolina held language that mooted a comparison of colors,
+considered his answer; but could see nothing offensive in it.
+
+"You asked me a question, and I gave you a proper answer. If you
+consider such a man as my steward--poor fellow--a nigger, in your
+country, I'm glad that you are blessed with so many good men."
+
+"We polishes our language, Captain, when we speak of niggers in South
+Carolina," said the pilot. "A South Carolinian, sir, is a gentleman all
+over the world. It don't want nothin' further than the name of his State
+to insure him respect. And when foreign folks and Northerners from them
+abolition States bring free niggers into South Carolina, and then go to
+comparing them to white folks, they better be mighty careful how they
+stir about. South Carolina ought to've seceded last year, when she
+talked about it, and sent every Yankee home to make shoe-pegs. We
+wouldn't bin insulted then, as we are now. I'll tell you what it is,
+Cap," said he, rather cooling off, "if our folks was only as spunky as
+they were in eighteen hundred and thirty-two times, them fellers what
+come here to feed upon South Carolina, put the devil in the heads of the
+niggers, and then go home again, would see stars and feel bullet-holes."
+
+The Captain listened to the pilot's original South Carolina talk, or, as
+the pilot himself had called it, polished language, without exhibiting
+any signs of fear and trembling at its sublime dignity; yet, finding
+that the pilot had misconstrued the tenor of his answer, said, "You must
+have mistaken the intention of my reply, sir; and the different manner
+in which you appropriate its import may be attributed to a custom
+among yourselves, which makes language offensive that has no offensive
+meaning. We never carry pistols or any such playthings in my country.
+We have a moral security for our lives, and never look upon death as so
+great an enemy that we must carry deadly weapons to defend it. In fact,
+pilot," he said in a joking manner, "they're rather cumbersome little
+bits for a feller's pocket: I'd rather carry my supper and breakfast in
+my pocket. Now tell us, who do you call niggers in South Carolina?"
+
+"Why, Captain, we call all what a'n't white folks. Our folks can
+tell 'em right smart. They can't shirk out if it's only marked by
+the seventeenth generation. You can always tell 'em by the way they
+look--they can't look you in the face, if they are ever so white. The
+law snaps 'em up once in a while, and then, if they're ever so white,
+it makes 'em prove it. I've known several cases where the doubt was in
+favor of the nigger, but he couldn't prove it, and had to stand aside
+among the darkies. Dogs take my skin, Cap, if theren't a Jew feller in
+town as white as anybody, and his father's a doctor. It got whispered
+round that he was a nigger, and the boarders where he stayed raised a
+fuss about it. The nigger's father had two of them sued for slander,
+but they proved the nigger by a quirk of law that'd make a volume bigger
+than Blackstone; and instead of the old Jew getting satisfaction, the
+judges, as a matter of policy, granted him time to procure further proof
+to show that his son wasn't a nigger. It was a very well-considered
+insinuation of the judges, but the young-un stands about A-1 with a
+prime nigger-feller."
+
+"I should like to have 'em try me, to see whether I was a nigger or a
+white man. It must be a funny law, 'nigger or no nigger.' If a feller's
+skin won't save him, what the devil will?" said the Captain.
+
+"Why, show your mother and her generation were white, to be sure! It's
+easy enough done, and our judges are all very larned in such things--can
+tell in the twinkling of an eye," said the pilot.
+
+"I should think the distinguishing points would be to show that their
+mother had nothing to do with a nigger. Do your judges make this a
+particular branch of jurisprudence? If they do, I'd like to know what
+they took for their text-books. If the intermixture is as complex as
+what you say, I should think some of the judges would be afraid of
+passing verdict upon their own kin."
+
+"Not a whit!" said the pilot; "they know enough for that."
+
+"Then you admit there's a chance. It must be an amusing affair, 'pon
+my soul! when a nice little female has to draw aside her vail before a
+court of very dignified judges, for the purpose of having her pedigree
+examined," said the Captain.
+
+"Oh! the devil, Cap; your getting all astray--a woman nigger never has
+the advantage of the law. They always go with the niggers, ah! ha! ha!!"
+
+"But suppose they're related to some of your big-bugs. What then? Are
+your authorities so wise and generous that they make allowance for these
+things," asked the Captain, innocently.
+
+"Oh! poh! there you're again: you must live in Charleston a year or two,
+but you'll have to be careful at first that you don't fall in love with
+some of our bright gals, and think they're white, before you know it. It
+doesn't matter seven coppers who they're got by, there's no distinction
+among niggers in Charleston. I'll put you through some of the bright
+houses when we get up, and show you some scions of our aristocracy, that
+are the very worst cases. It's a fact, Cap, these little shoots of the
+aristocracy invariably make bad niggers. If a fellow wants a real prime,
+likely nigger wench, he must get the pure African blood. As they say
+themselves, 'Wherever Buckra-man bin, make bad nigger.'"
+
+"Well, Pilot, I think we've had enough about mixed niggers for the
+present. Tell me! do you really think they'll give me trouble with my
+steward? He certainly is not a black man, and a better fellow never
+lived," inquired the Captain earnestly.
+
+"Nothing else, Cap," said the pilot. "It's a hard law, I tell you, and
+if our merchants and business men had a say in it, 'twouldn't last long;
+ye can't pass him off for a white man nohow, for the thing's 'contrary
+to law,' and pays so well that them contemptible land-sharks of officers
+make all the fuss about it, and never let one pass. Just take the
+infernal fees off, and nobody'd trouble themselves about the stewards.
+It all goes into old Grimshaw's pocket, and he'd skin a bolt-rope for
+the grease, and sell the steward if he could get a chance. He has sold a
+much nearer relation. I'm down upon the law, you'll see, Cap, for I know
+it plays the dickens with our business, and is a curse to the commerce
+of the port. Folks what a'n't acquainted with shipping troubles, and
+a shipowner's interests, think such things are very small affairs. But
+it's the name that affects us, and when an owner stands at every item in
+the disbursements, and a heavy bill for keeping his steward, and another
+for filling his place, or boarding-house accommodations, and then be
+deprived of his services, he makes a wry face, and either begins to
+think about another port, or making the rate of freight in proportion to
+the annoyance. It has an effect that we feel, but don't say much about.
+I'm a secessionist, but I don't believe in running mad after politics,
+and letting our commercial interests suffer."
+
+"But what if I prove my steward a'n't a colored man?" said the Captain;
+"they surely won't give me any trouble then. It would pain my feelings
+very much to see Manuel locked up in a cell for no crime; and then to
+be deprived of his services, is more than I can stand. If I'd known it
+before, I'd suffered the torments of thirst, and put for a port farther
+north."
+
+"It'll cost more than it's worth," said the pilot. "Take my plain
+advice, Cap; never try that; our lawyers are lusty fellows upon fees;
+and the feller'd rot in that old nuisance of a jail afore you'd get him
+out. The process is so slow and entangled, nobody'd know how to bring
+the case, and ev'ry lawyer'd have an opinion of his own. But the worst
+of all is that it's so unpopular, you can't get a lawyer worth seven
+cents to undertake it. It would be as dangerous as an attempt to
+extricate a martyr from the burning flames. Public opinion in Charleston
+is controlled by politicians; and an attempt to move in a thing so
+unpopular would be like a man attempting to speak, with pistols and
+swords pointed to his head."
+
+"Then it's folly to ask justice in your city, is it?" asked the Captain.
+"But your people are generous, a'n't they? and treat strangers with a
+courtesy that marks the character of every high-minded society?"
+
+"Yes!--but society in South Carolina has nothing to do with the law; our
+laws are gloriously ancient. I wish, Cap, I could only open your ideas
+to the way our folks manage their own affairs. I'm opposed to this law
+that imprisons stewards, because it affects commerce, but then our other
+laws are tip-top. It was the law that our legislature made to stop free
+niggers from coming from the abolition States to destroy the affections
+of our slaves. Some say, the construction given to it and applied to
+stewards of foreign vessels a'n't legal, and wasn't intended; but now
+it's controlled by popular will,--the stewards a'n't legislators, and
+the judges know it wouldn't be popular, and there's nobody dare meddle
+with it, for fear he may be called an abolitionist. You better take my
+advice, Cap: ship the nigger, and save yourself and Consul Mathew the
+trouble of another fuss," continued the pilot.
+
+"That I'll never do! I've made up my mind to try it, and won't be driven
+out of a port because the people stand in fear of a harmless man. If
+they have any souls in them, they'll regard with favor a poor sailor
+driven into their port in distress. I've sailed nearly all over
+the world, and I never got among a people yet that wouldn't treat a
+shipwrecked sailor with humanity. Gracious God! I've known savages to be
+kind to poor shipwrecked sailors, and to share their food with them. I
+can't, pilot, imagine a civilization so degraded, nor a public so lost
+to common humanity, as to ill treat a man in distress. We've said enough
+about it for the present. I'll appeal to Mr. Grimshaw's feelings, when
+I get to the city; and I know, if he's a man, he'll let Manuel stay on
+board, if I pledge my honor that he won't leave the craft."
+
+"Humph!--If you knew him as well as I do, you'd save your own feelings.
+His sympathies don't run that way," said the pilot.
+
+The Janson had now crossed the bar, and was fast approaching Fort
+Sumpter. Manuel had overheard enough of the conversation to awaken fears
+for his own safety. Arising from the mattrass, in a manner indicating
+his feeble condition, he called Tommy, and walking forward, leaned over
+the rail near the fore-rigging, and inquired what the Captain and
+the pilot were talking about. Observing his fears, the little fellow
+endeavoured to quiet him by telling him they were talking about bad
+sailors.
+
+"I think it is me they are talking about. If they sell me for slave
+in Charleston, I'll kill myself before a week," said he in his broken
+English.
+
+"What's that you say, Manuel?" inquired the first mate as he came along,
+clearing up the decks with the men.
+
+"Pilot tell Captain they sell me for slave in South Carolina. I'd jump
+overboard 'fore I suffer him," said he.
+
+"Oh, poh! don't be a fool; you a'n't among Patagonians, Manuel; you
+won't have to give 'em leg for your life. They don't sell foreigners and
+outlandish men like you for slaves in Carolina--it's only black folks
+what can't clothe the'r words in plain English. Yer copper-colored hide
+wouldn't be worth a sixpence to a nigger-trader--not even to old Norman
+Gadsden, that I've heard 'em tell so much about in the Liverpool docks.
+He's a regular Jonathan Wild in nigger-dealing; his name's like a fiery
+dragon among the niggers all over the South; and I hearn our skipper say
+once when I sailed in a liner, that niggers in Charleston were so 'fraid
+of him they'd run, like young scorpions away from an old he-devil, when
+they saw him coming. He sells white niggers, as they call 'em, and
+black niggers--any thing that comes in his way, in the shape of saleable
+folks. But he won't acknowledge the corn when he goes away from home,
+and swears there's two Norman Gadsdens in Charleston; that he a'n't the
+one! When a man's ashamed of his name abroad, his trade must be very bad
+at home, or I'm no sailor," said the mate.
+
+"Ah, my boys!" said the pilot in a quizzical manner, as he came to
+where several of the men were getting the larboard anchor ready to let
+go,--"if old Norman Gadsden gets hold of you, you're a gone sucker. A
+man what's got a bad nigger has only got to say Old Gadsden to him, and
+it's equal to fifty paddles. The mode of punishment most modern,
+and adopted in all the workhouses and places of punishment in South
+Carolina, is with the paddle, a wooden instrument in, the shape of a
+baker's peel; with a blade from three to five inches wide, and from
+eight to ten long. This is laid on the posteriors--generally by
+constables or officers connected with the police. Holes are frequently
+bored in the blade, which gives the application a sort of percussive
+effect; The pain is much more acute than with the cowhide; and several
+instances are known where a master ordered an amount of strokes beyond
+the endurance of the slave, and it proved fatal at the workhouse. They
+tell a pretty good story about the old fellow. I don't know if it's
+true, but the old fellow's rich now, and he does just what he pleases.
+It was that somebody found one of those little occasional droppings of
+the aristocracy, very well known among the secrets of the chivalry, and
+called foundlings, nicely fixed up in a basket.--It's among the secrets
+though, and mustn't be told abroad.--The finders labelled it, 'Please
+sell to the highest bidder,' and left it at his door. There was a fund
+of ominous meaning in the label; but Norman very coolly took the little
+helpless pledge under his charge, and, with the good nursing of old
+Bina, made him tell to the tune of two hundred and thirty, cash, 'fore
+he was two year old. He went by the name of Thomas Norman, the Christian
+division of his foster-father's, according to custom. The old fellow
+laughs at the joke, as he calls it, and tells 'em, when they stick it to
+him, they don't understand the practice of making money. You must keep a
+bright look out for him, Manuel--you'll know him by the niggers running
+when they see him coming."
+
+The pilot now returned to the quarter, and commenced dilating upon the
+beauty of Charleston harbor and its tributaries, the Astley and Cooper
+Rivers--then upon the prospects of fortifications to beat the United
+States in the event of South Carolina's seceding and raising an
+independent sovereignty, composed of her best blood. The Captain
+listened to his unsolicited and uninteresting exposition of South
+Carolina's prowess in silence, now and then looking up at the pilot and
+nodding assent. He saw that the pilot was intent upon astonishing him
+with his wonderful advancement in the theory of government, and the
+important position of South Carolina. Again he looked dumbfounded, as
+much as to acknowledge the pilot's profundity, and exclaimed, "Well!
+South Carolina must be a devil of a State: every thing seems captivated
+with its greatness: I'd like to live in Carolina if I didn't get
+licked."
+
+"By scissors! that you would, Captain; you ha'n't an idee what a mighty
+site our people can do if they're a mind to! All South Carolina wants
+is her constitutional rights, which her great men fought for in
+the Revolution. We want the freedom to protect our own rights and
+institutions--not to be insulted and robbed by the General Government
+and the abolitionists."
+
+"Do you practice as a people upon the same principles that you ask of
+the General Government!" inquired the Captain.
+
+"Certainly, Captain, as far as it was intended for the judicious good of
+all white citizens!"
+
+"Then you claim a right for the whites, but withhold the right when it
+touches on the dark side. You'll have to lick the Federal Government, as
+you call it, for they won't cut the constitution up to suit your notions
+of black and white." * * *
+
+"That's just the thing, Cap, and we can do it just as easy as we
+now protect our own laws, and exterminate the niggers what attempt
+insurrections. South Carolina sets an example, sir, of honor and bravery
+that can't be beat. Why, just look a-yonder, Cap: the Federal Government
+owns this 'er Fort Sumpter, and they insulted us by building it right
+in our teeth, so that they could command the harbor, block out our
+commerce, and collect the duties down here. But, Cap, this don't scare
+South Carolina nohow. We can show 'em two figures in war tactics that'd
+blow 'em to thunder. Ye see yonder!" said he, with an earnest look of
+satisfaction, pointing to the south, "That's Morris Island. We'd take
+Fort Moultrie for a breakfast spell, and then we'd put it to 'em hot
+and strong from both sides, until they'd surrender Fort Sumpter. They
+couldn't stand it from both sides. Yes, sir, they shut Fort Moultrie
+against us, and wouldn't let us have it to celebrate independence in.
+There's a smouldering flame in South Carolina that'll burst forth one
+of these days in a way that must teach the Federal Government some
+astonishing and exciting lessons. There's old Castle Pinckney, sir; we
+could keep it for a reserve, and with Generals Quattlebum and Commander,
+from Georgetown and Santee Swamp, we could raise an army of Palmetto
+regiments that would whip the Federal Government troop and gun-boat."
+
+We have given this singular conversation of the pilot with a strange
+Captain, which at the time was taken as an isolated case of gasconade
+peculiar to the man; but which the Captain afterward found to harmonize
+in sentiment, feeling, and expression with the general character of the
+people--the only exceptions being the colored people.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII. ARRIVAL OF THE JANSON.
+
+
+
+ABOUT five o'clock on the evening of the 23d, the Janson passed Castle
+Pinckney, ran up to the wharf with the flood-tide, let go her anchor,
+and commenced warping into the dock. Her condition attracted sundry
+persons to the end of the wharf, who viewed her with a sort of
+commiseration that might have been taken for sincere feeling. The
+boarding officer had received her papers, and reported her character and
+condition, which had aroused a feeling of speculative curiosity, that
+was already beginning to spread among ship-carpenters and outfitters.
+
+Conspicuous among those gathered on the wharf was a diminutive little
+dandy, with an olive-colored frock-coat, black pants, embroidered vest,
+and an enormous shirt-collar that endangered his ears. This was secured
+around the neck with a fancy neckcloth, very tastefully set off with a
+diamond pin, He was very slender, with a narrow, feminine face,
+round popeyes--requiring the application of a pocket-glass every few
+minutes--and very fair complexion, with little positive expression of
+character in his features. His nose was pointed; his chin, projected
+and covered with innumerable little pimples, gave an irregular
+and mastiff-shaped mouth a peculiar expression. He wore a very
+highly-polished and high-heeled pair of boots, and a broad-brimmed,
+silk-smooth hat. He seemed very anxious to display the beauty of two
+diamond rings that glittered upon his delicate little fingers, made
+more conspicuous by the wristbands of his shirt. Standing in a very
+conspicuous place upon the capsill of the wharf, he would rub his hands,
+then running from one part of the wharf to another, ordering sundry
+niggers about making fast the lines, kicking one, and slapping another,
+as he stooped, with his little hand. All paid respect to him. The
+Captain viewed him with a smile of curiosity, as much as to say, "What
+important specimen of a miss in breeches is that?" But when the little
+fellow spoke, the secret was told. He gathered the inflections of his
+voice, as if he were rolling them over the little end of a thunderbolt
+in his mouth. As the vessel touched the wharf, he sprang to the corner
+and cried out at the top of his voice, "Yer' welcome to Charleston,
+Captain Thompson! Where did you get that knocking?--where are ye bound
+for?--how many days are you out?--how long has she leaked in that way?"
+and a strain of such questions, which it would be impossible to trace,
+such was the rapidity with which he put them. The Captain answered him
+in accordance with the circumstances; and supposing him clothed with
+authority, inquired where he should find some hands to work his pumps,
+in order to relieve his men. "By-Je-w-hu! Captain, you must a' had a
+piping time, old feller. Oh! yes, you want help to work your pumps. Get
+niggers, Captain, there's lots on 'em about here. They're as thick as
+grasshoppers in a cotton-patch."
+
+"Yes, but I want 'em now, my men are worn out; I must get some Irishmen,
+if I can't get others at once," said the Captain, viewing his man again
+from head to foot.
+
+"Oh! don't employ Paddies, Captain; 'ta'n't popular; they don't belong
+to the secession party; Charleston's overrun with them and the Dutch!
+Why, she won't hurt to lay till to-morrow morning, and there'll be lots
+o' niggers down; they can't be out after bell-ring without a pass, and
+its difficult to find their masters after dark. Haul her up 'till she
+grounds, and she won't leak when the tide leaves her. We can go to
+the theatre and have a right good supper after, at Baker's or the St.
+Charles's. It's the way our folks live. We live to enjoy ourselves in
+South Carolina. Let the old wreck go to-night." The little fellow seemed
+so extremely polite, and so anxious to "do the genteel attention,"
+that the Captain entirely forgot the tenor of his conversation with the
+pilot, while his feelings changed with the prospect of such respectful
+attention; and yet he seemed at a loss how to analyze the peculiar
+character of his little, pedantic friend.
+
+"You must not think me intrusive, Captain," said he, pulling out his
+segar-pouch and presenting it with at Chesterfieldian politeness. "It's
+a pleasure we Carolinians take in being hospitable and attentive to
+strangers. My name, sir, is--! My niggers call me Master George. Yes,
+sir! our family!--you have heard of my father probably--he belongs to
+one of the best stocks in Carolina--owns a large interest in this wharf,
+and is an extensive cotton-broker, factors, we call them here--and
+he owns a large plantation of niggers on Pee-Dee; you must visit our
+plantation. Captain, certain! before you leave the city. But you mustn't
+pay much attention to the gossip you'll hear about the city. I pledge
+you my honor, sir, it don't amount to any thing, nor has it any
+prominent place in our society."
+
+"Really, sir," replied the Captain, "I shall do myself the honor to
+accept of your hospitable kindness, and hope it may be my good fortune
+to reciprocate at some future day. I'm only too sorry that our wrecked
+condition affords me no opportunity to invite you to my table to-night;
+but the circumstances which you see everywhere presenting themselves are
+my best apology."
+
+"Oh, dear me! don't mention it, I pray, Captain. Just imagine yourself
+perfectly at home. We will show you what Southern hospitality is.
+We don't go upon the Yankee system of Mr. So-and-so and
+What-do-ye-call-'um. Our feelings are in keeping with our State pride,
+which, with our extreme sensibility of honor, forbids the countenance
+of meanness. South Carolinians, sir, are at the very top of the social
+ladder--awake to every high-minded consideration of justice and right.
+We are not moved by those morbid excitements and notions that so often
+lead people away at the North. Make no unnecessary preparation, Captain,
+and I will do myself the honor to call upon you in an hour." Thus
+saying, he shook his hand and left.
+
+The pilot had delivered his charge safe, and was about to, bid
+the Captain good-by for the night. But in order to do the thing in
+accordance with an English custom, that appears to have lost none of its
+zest in South Carolina, he was invited into the Captain's cabin to take
+a little prime old Jamaica. Manuel, who had somewhat recovered, brought
+out the case from a private locker, and setting it before them, they
+filled up, touched glasses, and drank the usual standing toast to South
+Carolina. "Pilot," said the Captain, "who is my polite friend--he seems
+a right clever little fellow?"
+
+"Well, Captain, he's little, but he's first-rate blood, and a genuine
+sprig of the chivalry. He's a devil of a secessionist, sir. If ye were
+to hear that fellow make a stump speech on States' rights, you'd think
+him a Samson on Government. His father is the head of a good mercantile
+house here; 'twouldn't be a bad idea to consign to him. But I must bid
+you good-night, Captain; I'll call and see you to-morrow," said the
+pilot, leaving for his home.
+
+The Janson was hauled well up the dock, and grounded on the ebb-tide.
+Manuel prepared supper for the officers and crew, while the Captain
+awaited the return of his new acquaintance. "Captain," said Manuel,
+"I should like to go ashore to-night and take a walk, for my bones are
+sore, and I'm full of pains. I think it will do me good. You don't think
+anybody will trouble me, if I walk peaceably along?"
+
+"Nobody would trouble you if they knew you, Manuel; but I am afraid they
+will mistake you in the night. You had better keep ship until morning;
+take a good rest, and to-morrow will be a fine day--you can then take
+some exercise."
+
+Manuel looked at the Captain as if he read something doubtful in his
+countenance, and turned away with a pitiful look of dissatisfaction.
+It seems that through his imperfect knowledge of English, he had
+misconceived the position of the celebrated Thomas Norman Gadsden, whom
+he imagined to be something like an infernal machine, made and provided
+by the good citizens of Charleston to catch bad niggers. "Nora-ma Gazine
+no catch-e me, Cap-i-tan, if me go ashore, 'case me no make trouble in
+no part de world where me sail, Oh! no, Cap-i-tan, Manuel know how to
+mine dis bisness," said he returning again to the Captain.
+
+"Yes, yes, Manuel, but we can't let the crew go ashore 'till we get
+through the custom-house; you must content yourself to-night, and in
+the morning 'twill be all right. I'm afraid you'll get sick again-the
+night-air is very bad in this climate; old Gadsden won't trouble you. He
+don't walk about at night."
+
+Manuel walked forward, not very well satisfied with the manner in which
+the Captain put him off. The latter felt the necessity of caution,
+fearing he might infringe upon some of the municipal regulations that
+the pilot had given him an account of, which accounted for his refusal
+Manuel sat upon the main-hatch fondling Tommy, and telling him what good
+things they would have in the morning for breakfast, and how happy they
+ought to be that they were not lost during the gales, little thinking
+that he was to be the victim of a merciless law, which would confine
+him within the iron grates of a prison before the breakfast hour in the
+morning. "I like Charleston, Tommy," said Manuel; "it looks like one of
+our old English towns, and the houses have such pretty gardens, and the
+people they say are all so rich and live so fine. Tommy, we'll have a
+long walk and look all around it, so that we can tell the folks when we
+get home. The ship, owes me eleven pounds, and I mean to take some good
+things home for presents, to show what they have in South Carolina."
+
+"You better buy a young nigger, and take him home as a curiosity to show
+among the Highlands. You can buy a young Sambo for any price, just
+the same as you would a leg of mutton at the butcher's; put him in
+a band-box, lug him across, and you'll make a fortune in the North
+country. But I'd rather buy a young wife, for the young niggers are
+more roguish than a lot o' snakes, and al'a's eat their heads off afore
+they're big enough to toddle. They sell gals here for niggers whiter
+than you are, Manuel; they sell 'em at auction, and then they sell corn
+to feed 'em on. Carolina's a great region of supersensual sensibility;
+they give you a wife of any color or beauty, and don't charge you much
+for her, providing you're the right stripe. What a funny thing it would
+be to show the Glasgow folks a bright specimen of a bought wife from the
+renowned State of South Carolina, with genuine aristocratic blood in her
+veins; yes, a pure descendant of the Huguenots!" said the mate, who
+was leaning over the rail where Manuel and Tommy were seated, smoking a
+segar and viewing the beautiful scenery around the harbor.
+
+"Ah!" said Manuel, "when I get a wife and live on shore, I don't want to
+buy one-it might be a dangerous bargain. Might buy the body, but not the
+soul-that's God's."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII. A NEW DISH OF SECESSION.
+
+
+
+ABOUT a quarter past eight o'clock in the evening, Master George, as he
+called himself, the little pedantic man, came skipping down the wharf.
+As soon as he approached the brig, he cried out at the top of his voice,
+"Captain! Captain!!"
+
+The Captain stepped to the gangway, and the little fellow, who had stood
+crossing and working his fingers, reached out his hand to assist him
+ashore. This done, he took the Captain's arm, and commencing a discourse
+upon the wonderful things and people of South Carolina they wended their
+way to the Charleston Theatre. The company then performing was a small
+affair, and the building itself perfectly filthy, and filled with an
+obnoxious stench. The play was a little farce, which the Captain had
+seen to much perfection in his own country, and which required some
+effort of mind to sit out its present mutilation. Yet, so highly pleased
+was Master George, that he kept up a succession of applauses at every
+grimace made by the comedian. Glad when the first piece was over, the
+Captain made a motion to adjourn to the first good bar-room and have a
+punch. It was agreed, upon the condition that the little man should "do
+the honor," and that they should return and see the next piece out. The
+Captain, of course, yielded to the rejoinder, though it was inflicting
+a severe penalty upon his feelings. There was another piece to come yet,
+which the little fellow's appetite was as ready to devour as the first.
+The Captain, seeing this, could not refrain expressing his surprise.
+This was taken as a charge against his taste, and George immediately
+commenced a discussion upon the subject of the piece, the intention of
+the author, and the merits of the principal performers, whose proper
+adaptation he admired. The Captain knew his subject, and instead of
+contending in detail, advised him to take a peep into the theatres of
+New York and London. Not to be undone, for he was like all little men,
+who insist upon the profoundness of their own opinions, he asserted that
+it could be only the different views which individuals entertained of
+delineating character, and that the Charlestonians were proverbially
+correct in their judgment of music and dramatic performances.
+
+"I pity the judgment that would award merit to such a performance as
+that," said the Captain.
+
+"How strange, that you Englishmen and Scotchmen always find fault with
+every thing we Americans do. Your writers manifest it in their books
+upon us and the people seem of necessity to copy from them, and echo
+their grumblings," rejoined Master George.
+
+"You judge from the common saying, instead of a knowledge front
+observation, I fear," said the Captain.
+
+"Lord, sir! you must not judge me by that rule. Carolinians, sir,
+always appreciate intelligent strangers, for they always exert a
+healthy influence, and never meddle with our institutions; so you see it
+wouldn't do to follow the pestilent notions of petty scribblers, lest we
+should form wrong opinions."
+
+"But tell me," said the Captain, "do you consider yourselves Americans
+in South Carolina?--the pilot must have led me astray."
+
+"Americans! yes, indeed, the true blood at that, and no man of tip-top
+judgment ever questioned it. But you must mark the difference; we
+ha'n't Yankees, nor we don't believe in their infernal humbuggery
+about abolition. If it wasn't for South Carolina and Georgia, the
+New-Englanders would starve for want of our cotton and rice. It's the
+great staple what keeps the country together; and as much as they talk
+about it, just take that away, and what would the United States be? We
+South Carolinians give no symptoms or expressions of what we mean to do
+that we cannot maintain. We have been grossly insulted by the Federal
+Government, but it dar'n't come at us and just give us a chance at fair
+fight. We'd show 'em the thunder of the Palmetto, that they'd never
+trouble our sovereignty again. Captain, I pledge you my honor that if
+there wasn't so many infernal Yankees in Georgia, and she'd follow
+our lead in secession, we'd just lick the whole North. Georgia's a big
+State, but she a'n't pluck, and has no chivalry at all among her people.
+She allows such privileges to them Yankees-gives them power to control
+her manufacturing interests-and this is just what will uproot the
+foundation of their slave institution. Georgians a'n't a bit like
+us; first, they are too plebeian in their manners-have no bond of
+guardianship for their laws, and exert no restraints for the proper
+protection of good society. But, Captain, their stock has a different
+origin, and the peculiarity which now marks our character may be traced
+to the offspring of early settlement. We derived our character and
+sentiments from the Huguenots; they, from an uncharacterized class of
+coarse adventurers, whose honesty was tinctured with penal suspicion.
+This, sir, accounts for the differences so marked in our character."
+
+The little fellow pressed this kind of conversation in the lobby of
+the theatre, and at the same time took the very particular pleasure of
+introducing the Captain to several of the young bloods, as he called
+them, while they walked to and from the boxes. At length the Captain
+found himself in a perfect hornet's nest, surrounded by vicious young
+secessionists, so perfectly nullified in the growth that they were all
+ready to shoulder muskets, pitchforks, and daggers, and to fire pistols
+at poor old Uncle Sam, if he should poke his nose in South Carolina. The
+picture presented was that of an unruly set of children dictating their
+opinions to a hoary-headed old daddy-accusing him of pragmatism, and
+threatening, if he was twice as old, they'd whip him unless he did
+as they directed. The knowledge of South Carolina's power and South
+Carolina's difficulties with the Federal Government he found so
+universally set forth as to form the atmosphere of conversation in the
+parlor, the public-house, the school and the bar-room, the lecture-room
+and the theatre.
+
+The little man extended his invitation to a party of the bloods. The
+Captain was taken by the arms in a kind of bond fellowship, and escorted
+into Baker's eating-saloon, a place adjacent to the theatre, and, to
+a man unaccustomed to the things that are in Charleston, a very rowdy
+place. This is considered by Charlestonians one of the finest places
+in the Southern country; where good suppers and secession (the
+all-engrossing subjects with Charlestonians) form the only important
+element of conversation. It may be set down as a fact, that among
+seven-tenths of the people of Charleston, the standard of a gentleman
+is measured according to his knowledge of secession and his ability
+to settle the question of hot suppers. We say nothing of that vigorous
+patriotism so often manifested in a long string of fulsome toasts that
+disgrace the columns of the Mercury and Courier.
+
+At Baker's the place was literally crowded with all kinds and
+characters, graded from the honorable judge down to the pot-boy; a
+pot-pouri of courtesy and companionship only exhibited in England on the
+near approach of elections. The reader may think this strange, but we
+can assure him that distinctions are strangely maintained; an exclusive
+arrogance being observed in private life, while a too frequent and
+general resort to bar-rooms has established plebeianism in public.
+Voices were sounding at all parts of the counter, and for as many
+different voices as many different mixtures were named. The Captain
+received a great many introductions, and almost as many invitations to
+drink; but the little man, Master George, claimed the exclusive honor,
+and keeping an eye wide awake, took the advantage of his own dimensions,
+and began working his way through a barricade of bodies and elbows,
+until he had reached the counter. His party followed close, at his
+heels. Altogether, they called for cocktails, smashes, toddies,
+cobblers, juleps, and legitimates. These disposed of, the company
+repaired to what is called a "box up-stairs." Scarcely seated, Master
+George rang the bell with such violence that he disjointed the cord and
+tassel, and gave such an alarm that three or four darkies came poking
+their alarmed countenances through the curtains at once.
+
+"There's nothing like making the fellows mind; they've got so infernal
+independent here, and old Tom thinks so much of his young wife, that his
+niggers have begun to imitate him. One's enough at a time!" said Master
+George, with all the importance of his character. A "bright boy," with
+his hair nicely parted on the middle of his head, and frizzed for the
+occasion, made a polite bow, while the others retired.
+
+"What have you choice for supper, to-night? We want something ripe for
+the palate-none of your leavings, now, you infernal nigger, and don't
+tell us none of your lies."
+
+"Birds, sir, grouse, woodcock, partridge, canvas-backs, and quails;
+meats, venison, and oysters, master-did up in any shape what the
+gentlemen wish. Wines, &c., if they want," replied the servant, without
+any of the negro dialect, at the same time making a low bow to Master
+George.
+
+"Name it! name your dishes, gentlemen! Don't be backward. I suppose
+his birds are as usual, without age to flavor them. It's perfectly
+heathenish to eat birds as they are served here: we never get a bird
+here that is sufficiently changed to suit a gentleman o' taste; their
+beef's tough, and such steak as they make is only fit for shoemakers and
+blacksmiths. I never come into the place but I think of my journey in
+France, where they know the style and taste of a gentleman, and things
+are served to suit your choice." Thus our little friend continued
+his connoisseur remarks, to give the Captain a particular idea of
+his proficiency in the requisite qualities, age, and time of keeping
+necessary to make the adjuncts of a supper fit for a gentleman. "D--me!
+we don't know when edibles are choice, and the Yankees are perfect
+brutes in these things, and have no more taste than a cow. Our folks
+ought to all go to France for a year or two, to learn the style of
+cooking. It's perfect murder to eat a bird the very day after it's
+killed; yes, sir! no man that considers his stomach will do it," said
+George.
+
+The servant waited impatiently-the Captain rubbed his eyes, and began
+to pour out a glass of water; and dryly said he'd no choice, which was
+responded to by the rest. It was left to Master George, and he ordered
+a bountiful supply of grouse, partridges, oyster, and champagne of
+his favourite brand-none other. There was also a billiard-room,
+reading-room, a room for more important gambling, and a bar-room,
+up-stairs. All these were well filled with very well-dressed and very
+noisy people; the latter being a very convenient place, the party sent
+to it for tipplers to fill up time.
+
+"This is but a small portion of what constitutes life in Charleston,
+Captain. We live for living's sake, and don't stand upon those blueskin
+theories of temperance and religion that Yankees do, and blame the
+Father of generations for not making the world better. I never saw
+one of them that wasn't worse than we Southerners before he'd been in
+Charleston a year, and was perfect death on niggers. Yes, sir, it's
+only the extreme goodness of the Southern people's hearts that makes the
+niggers like them so. I never saw a Northerner yet that wouldn't work
+his niggers to death in two years. D--me, sir, my servants all love
+me as if I was a prince. Have you ever been in France, sir?" said he,
+suddenly breaking off. The Captain replied in the affirmative.
+
+"Ah! then you can speak French! the most polished language known to
+refined society. I wouldn't part with my French for the world. All
+the first families in Charleston are familiar with it. It's the modern
+gentleman's curt-blanche to society here. There's no language like
+it for beauty and flexibility; but one must go to France and learn to
+acquire its grace and ease," said he, in rapid succession, rolling
+out his words in imitation of a London sprig of the Inner Temple, and
+working his little mastiff mouth.
+
+"No, sir," said the Captain quaintly. "I never stopped long enough in
+France to get hold of the lingo."
+
+"God bless me, what a misfortune! and can't speak it yet, ah? Why,
+Captain, if you wanted to court a petite madmoselle, you'd be in a sad
+fix-she wouldn't understand what you were talking about and would take
+your love-pledges for gammon."
+
+"You're mistaken there, my good fellow. Love grows on trees in France,
+and a French woman can see it before you begin to tell her about it!"
+retorted the Captain, which brought a "Good! good! hit him again!" from
+the whole party. At this, Master George commenced reading the Captain a
+disquisition upon the best mode of acquiring the French language. Supper
+was brought-in old Tom Baker's best flourish-and the party begun to
+discuss its merits with great gusto. What the little, chivalrous fellows
+lacked in physical dimension, they made up in patriotic sentiment in
+behalf of the grand sovereignty of South Carolina, which they continued
+to pour out until a late hour, every man backing his sayings by the
+authority of the great and wonderful Calhoun.
+
+The Captain sat eating away, and seeming more disposed to enjoy the
+physical consolation of his supper than to elevate his ideas upon South
+Carolina's politics.
+
+"Now, Captain," said Master George, in a very serious tone, after he had
+been striking his hand upon the marble table for more than an hour to
+confirm the points of his reasoning,--"what is your opinion of the great
+question at issue between the Federal Government and South Carolina?
+And what do you think of the Old Dominion? how will she stand upon the
+test-question?"
+
+The poor Captain looked confounded-took another oyster, and began to get
+his mouth in a fix, while little George worked his fingers through
+his nice curly hair, and the young bloods awaited the rejoinder with
+anxiety.
+
+"Really, sir, you have the advantage of me in your question. It is
+so much beyond my profession that I am entirely ignorant of the
+subject-therefore could not give an opinion. In truth, sir, I do
+not know the purport of the question. It has given me pleasure and
+information to listen to your conversation and the ability you displayed
+in argument, but, as a stranger, I could take no part," replied the
+Captain very sincerely.
+
+Not content with this, Master George wished to be more direct. "It's
+the right of secession, Captain-the power to maintain the right by the
+constitution."
+
+"Probably; but may I expose my ignorance by inquiring what is meant
+by secession? and to what it is applied so frequently?" inquired the
+Captain.
+
+"Oh! murder Captain; have you never heard of nullification times!
+Well, sir, you must be posted on the affairs of our government." So
+he commenced an analysis of nearly an hour long, and in it gave some
+astonishing accounts of the wonderful statesmanship of Calhoun, Butler,
+and Rhett, tapering down with a perfect fire-and-thunder account of
+the military exploits of General Quattlebum and Captain Blanding. The
+Captain began to stretch and gape, for he labored under the fatigue of a
+perilous voyage, and repose was the only sovereign remedy. He felt that
+the limits of propriety were entirely overstepped, and that he would
+have reason to remember the first night spent with little George the
+secessionist.
+
+"But, Captain! my dear fellow. I see you don't understand our position
+yet. We've been insulted; yes, most rascally insulted by the Federal
+Government, and they keep it up every year. We can't get our rights. Oh!
+no, sir, there's no such thing in the knowledge of the Federal officers
+as justice for South Carolina; and you must understand, Captain, that
+she is the greatest State in the Union, and there a'n't nothing like her
+people for bravery. The political power's got North and West, the old
+constitution is being dissected to suit the abolitionists, and they're
+drawing the cordon around us faster and faster; and they're now out like
+a warrior boldly to the conquest, sounding their voices in the halls of
+Congress, appealing to human and divine power to protect their nonsense,
+and bidding defiance to our constitutional rights, Our slaves are our
+property, protected by the law of God-by that inspired and superhuman
+wisdom that founded our great and glorious constitution. Yes, sir!
+it was an institution entailed upon us by our forefathers, and a wise
+providence has provided proper laws by which we shall protect and see
+these poor miserable devils of helpless slaves, that can't take care of
+themselves, straight through."
+
+"But how does this affect you and the Federal Government?" inquired the
+Captain.
+
+"Why, sir, most directly!" replied Master George, screwing his mouth and
+giving his head a very learned attitude. "Directly, sir!--the Federal
+Government is acquiescing in every abolition scheme that is put forward
+by that intriguing Northern compact for the establishment of new
+governments in the territories. She is granting unconstitutional
+privileges to designing politicians, whose chief aim is to uproot our
+domestic institution and destroy the allegiance of the slave to his
+master, by which the slaves would be cast upon the world unprotected,
+and we disarmed of power to protect them. Ah! sir, I tell you, of all
+fruits of the imagination that would be the most damnable, and the slave
+would be the sufferer. It would be worse for him, poor fellow; it would
+be an abuse of human power without precedent. So far as political power
+is concerned, we are nearly disarmed. The influx of population finds
+its way into the opened avenues of the North and West. And with opinions
+predisposed against our institutions, and the contaminating influence
+standing ready with open arms to embrace the great current, what can we
+expect? It's the increasing power made by foreign influx that's giving
+tone to our government. If our Southern Convention stand firm we are
+saved; but I'm fearful there's too many doubtful shadows in it that
+won't stand to the gun. That's what's always played the devil with us,"
+said George, striking his hand upon the table. "There's no limitation to
+their interpositions, and their resolves, and their adjournments; which
+don't come up to my principles of making the issue, and standing to the
+question with our coffins on our backs. These condescensions of thought
+and feeling arise from the misconceived notions of a few, who are always
+ready to join, but never willing to march to action, and must not be
+taken as a specimen of South Carolina bravery. The Federal Government
+has become vicious and even puerile toward South Carolina; and since
+the Herculean power of the great Calhoun is gone, it treats us like a
+semi-barbarous and secluded people, mistaking our character. But we'll
+learn the Federal Government a lesson yet."
+
+"Do not your legislators make laws for your government, or how is it
+that you express such a restive dissatisfaction? Do not the same laws
+which govern you, govern the whole of the slave States?"
+
+Little George had previously monopolized all the conversation, but at
+this juncture five or six voices broke out, each fired with a reply to
+the Captain's question; and yet the answer was of the same old stamp:
+What South Carolina had done-how she had fought and gained the Mexican
+war-how she was interested in slaves, and how she yet feared to strike
+the blow because a set of mere adventurers had got the power to vote in
+her elections, and cowards through them had got into the legislature.
+
+"Why, gentlemen, listen to me in this particular. If"--
+
+"Your oysters are getting cold, George," interrupted a blood at his
+left, rather facetiously.
+
+"I claim the respect due a gentleman, sir! A South Carolinian will
+transgress no rules of etiquette," said George, grasping his tumbler
+in a passionate manner and smashing it upon the marble slab, causing a
+sudden emeute in the camp. "Order! order! order!" was sounded from every
+tongue. "You mustn't be afeard, Captain," said one of the party. "This
+is perfectly South Carolinian-just the oscillating of the champagne; it
+won't last long."
+
+The noise was more loud than ordinary, and brought a score of people
+around to hear the trouble. George had got in high dudgeon, and it took
+several persons to hold him, while the remainder, not excepting the
+Captain, were engaged in a pacification. The scene was very extravagant
+in folly; and through the kind interposition of friends, the matter was
+settled to the honorable satisfaction of both parties-the question was
+called for-the Captain called for a legitimate, rubbed his eyes, and
+little George proceeded. "If my friend Thomas Y. Simmons, Jr., had been
+elected to the legislature he'd altered the position of things in
+South Carolina. All these corruptions would have been exposed, and
+the disparity of party would have dwindled into obscurity. Every
+true Carolinian voted for him to the hilt, but how was he defeated?
+Gentlemen, can you answer? it will be a favor highly gratifying to me to
+hear your opinions!" A voice answered, "Because he wasn't big enough!"
+"No, sir," said George, "it was because there was intrigue in the party,
+and the Yankee influence went to put him down. The world'll hear from
+him yet. He's my particular friend, and will stand in the halls of
+Congress as great a statesman as ever lisped a political sentiment."
+
+George's account of his particular friend, Thomas Y. S--, Jr., was so
+extravagant, and not having heard of him before, the Captain's curiosity
+was aroused to know who he was and where he resided. We will not tax the
+reader with George's wonderful memoir of his friend, but merely inform
+him that "little Tommy Simmons," as he is usually styled in Charleston,
+is an exact pattern of Master George, with the exception of his mouth,
+which is straight and regular; and if we may be allowed to condescend
+to the extremes, we should say that the cordwainer had done more for
+his heels. Otherwise, no daguerreotype could give a counterpart more
+correct. Tommy is a very small member of the Charleston bar, who, though
+he can seldom be seen when the court is crowded, makes a great deal of
+noise without displaying power of elucidation or legal abilities, yet
+always acquitting himself cleverly. Tommy was little George in two
+particulars-he had studied law, and was a great secessionist; and if
+George had never practised, it was only from inclination, which he
+asserted arose from a humane feeling which he never could overcome-that
+he never wished to oppress anybody. But the greatest contrast that
+the reader can picture to himself between mental and physical objects
+existed between Tommy's aspirations and the physical man. His mind was
+big enough, and so was his self-confidence, to have led the Assyrian
+and Chaldean army against the Hebrews. To this end, and to further
+the formula of his statesmanship, no sooner was he twenty-one, and
+the corner just turned, than he sounded his war-trumpet-secession or
+death!--mounted the rostrum and "stump'd it," to sound the goodness and
+greatness of South Carolina, and total annihilation to all unbelievers
+in nullification. It was like Jonah and the whale, except the
+swallowing, which spunky Tommy promised should be his office, if the
+Federal Government didn't toe the mark. Yes, Tommy was a candidate
+for the legislature, and for the Southern Congress, (which latter was
+exclusively chivalrous;) and the reader must not be surprised when we
+tell him that he lacked but a few votes of being elected to the former.
+Such was the voice of the Charleston district.
+
+Supper had been discussed down to the fragments, and all expressed their
+satisfaction of the quantity and declined any more; but George called on
+another bottle of champagne, and insisted that the party should take
+a parting glass. The servant had begun to extinguish the lights-a
+sure sign that the success of the bar was ended for the night. George
+reprimanded the negro-the sparkling beverage was brought, glasses filled
+up, touched, and drunk with the standing toast of South Carolina.
+A motion to adjourn was made and seconded, and the party, feeling
+satisfied with their evening's recreation, moved off accordingly.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII. A FEW POINTS OF THE LAW.
+
+
+
+IN Charleston, such an adjournment at a bar-room or an eating-house,
+when parties are enjoying what is termed a "pleasant occasion," does not
+mean an adjournment to the domestic fireside; nor are the distinctions
+between married and single men regarded, though domestic attachments
+may be considered as governing the thoughts and feelings. The practical
+definition of such an adjournment means to some place where beauty
+secludes itself to waste in shame.
+
+The party descended into the lower bar-room, which, though rather
+thinned, presented a picture of characters stimulated to the tottering
+point. A motion had been made and strongly seconded to visit the
+voluptuous house of a certain lady, which it is considered a stranger
+has not seen Charleston until he has visited. The Captain remonstrated
+against this, assuring the party that he must go to the ship and needed
+rest. Again and again they insisted, setting forth the charms and beauty
+of the denizens, but he as often declined in the most positive manner.
+Unable to move him in his resolution, one by one began to give him a
+hearty shake of the hand and bid him good-night, leaving little Master
+George to the exclusive honor of seeing him home.
+
+Standing in the centre of the room, surrounded by five or six persons
+well-dressed but very weak in the knees, was a portly-looking gentleman;
+with very florid countenance, keen dark eyes, and aquiline nose which
+he frequently fingered. There was an air of respectability about him,
+though his countenance was not marked with any particularly prominent
+feature to distinguish him from the ordinary class of respectable men.
+He spoke well, yet without taste or discrimination in his language, was
+rather bald and gray, with small head and low perceptive powers; and
+judging from the particular tone of his voice and the cant terms he
+used, we should think he had figured among the Kentucky horse-traders,
+or made stump speeches in Arkansas. His dress was inclined to the gaudy.
+He wore a flashy brown-colored frock-coat with the collar laid very far
+back, a foppish white vest exposing his shirt-bosom nearly down to
+the waistbands of his pants, which were of gray stripes. But the more
+fanciful portions of his dress were a large and costly fob-chain, which
+hung very low and supported an immense seal containing a glistening
+stone, which he seemed very fond of dangling with his left hand.
+Attached to this was a very prominently displayed black ribbon,
+answering the purpose of a guard-chain, and laid with great contrasting
+care over the bosom of his shirt. This, with a neckerchief of more
+flashy colors than Joseph's coat, and a late style Parisian hat, with
+the rim very exquisitely turned upon the sides, make up our man.
+
+He was discussing politics, with a great many sensible sayings, though
+nothing like close reasoning; and strange as it may seem, he was
+strongly opposed to the rabid views of several staggering secessionists,
+who surrounded him, and advocated the views set forth in convention by
+Mr. Butler. We remarked this more particularly, for it was about the
+only instance we witnessed of a public man being independent enough to
+denounce the fanaticism of secession. A more amusing scene than that
+presented by the attitudes-the questions in regard to South Carolina
+licking the Federal Government-the strange pomp-ribald gasconade, and
+high-sounding chivalry of the worthies, cannot be imagined. They were
+in a perfect ecstasy with themselves and South Carolina, and swore, let
+whatever come, they were ready to meet it.
+
+Little Master George seemed very anxious that the Captain should become
+acquainted with him, and commenced giving him a monstrous account of his
+distinguished abilities. "And that's not all!" said George; "he's not
+only one of the greatest characters in Charleston, or perhaps the State,
+but he's a right good fellow."
+
+We will interrupt, by informing the reader that he was one of the good
+fellows-a numerous family in Charleston-who never use fine instruments
+when they select their company; and pay a large amount of worthy tribute
+to the liquor-dealers. There is no discriminating latitude attached
+to the good-fellow family, for its members may be found with alike
+gratifying inclinations, from the highest aristocracy to the negro
+population.
+
+"That, sir, is Col. S--e; belongs to one of the first families, sir. He
+can beat old Pettigru all hollow; his eloquence is so thrilling that
+he always reminds me of Pericles. He can beat little Thomas Y.
+Simmons, Jr., all to pieces-make the best stump speech-address a public
+assemblage, and rivet all their minds-can make a jury cry quicker than
+any other man-can clear the worst criminal that ever committed crime-and
+he's good-hearted too-can draw the most astonishing comparisons to
+confound the minds of stupid jurors, and make them believe the d--dest
+nonsense that ever man invented. Yes, sir-when he makes a speech,
+everybody goes to hear him, for he says what he pleases, and old Judge
+Withers, whose will is as arbitrary as Julius Caesar's, and has got the
+obstinacy of Tom Boyce's mule, dar'n't attempt to control the tenor of
+his plea. And he can tell the best invented story of any man in town.
+He cleared the villanous Doctor Hines once upon the color of his
+pantaloons."
+
+George waited impatiently for the end of the political controversy,
+determined to introduce his friend to the colonel. He soon had an
+opportunity, for the colonel, finding himself beset by a set of
+unreasonable secessionists, made a sweeping declaration. "Gentlemen,"
+said he, "let me tell you a modest fact: seven-eighths of the secession
+fire-eaters don't know what the proper meaning of government is: I
+make the charge against my own people-but it is true." "Traitor!
+traitor!--traitor to South Carolina," was sounded at the top of a dozen
+voices.
+
+"Then, if I am such in your opinions, I'm gratified to know that my
+feelings are my own. Good-night!"
+
+Thus saying, he withdrew from the party, and making his way for the
+door, was saluted by George, who introduced him to his friend, the
+Captain. The colonel was a very sociable, communicative man; and taking
+the Captain's arm, as they walked along, entered into an interesting
+conversation about his voyage and first visit to the city, at the same
+time displaying his good sense in not trying to force the great things
+of South Carolina into his mind.
+
+We, a few weeks afterward, had the good fortune to hear the legal
+abilities of this gentleman displayed in a plea at the bar. There were
+many good points in it, which, if not legally pointed, were said well;
+yet we should class him as belonging to the loud school.
+
+The Captain, thinking it a good opportunity to make some inquiries about
+his steward, as they proceeded, commenced in the following manner:
+
+"Your laws are very stringent in South Carolina, I believe, sir!"
+
+"Well, no sir," said the colonel, "if we except those which govern the
+niggers; they of necessity must be so; we have had so many emeutes with
+them, that no law can be made too strict in its bearings. We have so
+many bad niggers poured in upon us, that the whole class is becoming
+corrupted."
+
+"Your laws, of course, make a distinction between good and bad niggers,
+and free negroes?" interposed the Captain.
+
+"We make no distinction between the colors--some are as white as you
+are; but the grades are so complex that it would be impossible to make a
+sliding-scale law for any fixed complexions. The law which governs
+them is distinctive and comprehensive-made in order to shield the white
+population from their ignorance of law and evidence. We never could
+govern them in their respective spheres, unless the laws were made
+stringent in their effect. As for the free niggers, they're the greatest
+nuisance we have; it is our policy to get rid of them, and to that end
+we tax them severely. The riddance of this class of niggers would be an
+essential benefit to our slaves, as upon account of their influence our
+negro-laws are made more stringent. And the worst of it is that they
+increase faster. But we make it a principal point to get all the free
+men we can married to slaves, and the free women run off. You, that are
+accustomed to the free institutions of your country, may think some of
+these things singular at first; but you would soon become accustomed
+to them, and would really admire them when you saw how beautifully they
+worked."
+
+"Is there no discretionary power left?" inquired the Captain. "It
+must be oppressive, if carried out; Good men-whether they be white or
+black-are entitled to the advantages due them; but where laws such as
+you describe are carried out, a good man's evidence being black, the
+intention could not be made white. Now, according to my idea of the
+law of nature, a man's merits are in his moral integrity and behaviour;
+therefore I should establish the rule that a good black man was better
+than a bad white man, and was as much entitled to the respect and
+government of law."
+
+"Hi!--oh! Captain; it won't do to talk so in South Carolina. Just let a
+nigger imagine himself as good as a white man, and all the seven codes
+in Christendom wouldn't keep 'em under. Ah! you've got to learn a thing
+or two about niggers yet," interrupted Master George, before the Colonel
+had time to speak.
+
+"I only speak from my observation of human nature; but I may become
+better acquainted with your laws, if I remain among you," said the
+Captain.
+
+"As I have said before sir," replied the Colonel, "our nigger-laws are
+such as to require a strict enforcement. If we allowed the prerogative
+of a discretionary power, it would open the way to an endless system of
+favoritism, just at the mercy and feelings of those exercising it. As it
+is now, the white or black nigger, male or female, gets the same law and
+the same penalty. We make no distinction even at the paddle-gallows. The
+paddle-gallows is a frame with two uprights, and a wrench screw at
+the top. The negro's hands are secured in iron wristlets-similar to
+handcuffs; a rope is then attached to an eye in these, and passing over
+the wrench, which being turned, the negro is raised in an agonizing
+position until the tips of his toes scarcely touch the floor. Thus
+suspended, with the skin stretched to its utmost tension, it not
+unfrequently parts at the first blow of the paddle. Sometimes the feet
+are secured, when the effect of this modern science of demonstrating the
+tension of the human body for punishment becomes more painful under the
+paddle. South Carolinians deny this mode of punishment generally, and
+never allow strangers to witness it. It is not, as some writers have
+stated, practised in Georgia, where, we are happy to say, that so far as
+punishment is conducted in a legal manner, at the jails and prisons,
+it is administered in a humane manner; and instead of turning modern
+barbarity into a science, as is, done in South Carolina, a strict
+regard for the criminal is observed. I will relate some singular facts
+connected with the strictness with which we South Carolinians carry
+out our laws. And now that we are on the spot connected with it, its
+associations are more forcibly impressed on my mind. It brings with it
+many painful remembrances, and, were we differently situated, I should
+wish the cause to be removed. But it cannot be, and we must carry out
+the law without making allowances, for in these little leniencies all
+those evils which threaten the destruction of our peculiar institution
+creep in. In fact, Captain, they are points of law upon which all our
+domestic quietude stands; and as such, we are bound to strengthen our
+means of enforcing them to the strictest letter. Our laws are founded
+upon the ancient wisdom of our forefathers, and South Carolina has never
+traduced herself or injured her legal purity. We have reduced our system
+almost to a practical science, so complete in its bearings and points
+of government as to be worthy the highest and noblest purposes of our
+country. And at the same time, such is the spirit and magnanimity of our
+people, that in framing laws to guard against the dangerous influences
+of that wing of our country that spreads its ambitious fallacies--its
+tempting attractions-shallow criticisms upon minute and isolated
+cases-redundant theories without measure or observation, and making
+a standard for the government of slaves upon foolish and capricious
+prejudices, we have been careful to preserve a conservative moderation
+toward the slave. But, to my remarks."
+
+The party had now arrived opposite to what was formerly known as Jones's
+Hotel, where the Colonel made a halt to relate the singular case that
+had pained his feelings, though he held very tenaciously to the law as
+it was, because he believed strongly in the wisdom of the South Carolina
+judiciary.
+
+"Our first and great object is to prevent the interchange of sentiment
+between our domestic niggers, whether bond or free, and niggers who
+reside abroad or have left our State; To do this, it became imperative
+to establish a law prohibiting free negroes from coming into the State,
+and those in the State from going out, under penalty of imprisonment and
+fine, if they returned. The penalty amounted to sale upon a peon form;
+and subjected the offender to the slave system in a manner that he
+seldom retrieved himself. You will observe, Captain, the penalty is not
+desired by our people, the object being to prevent them from returning,
+and as such it must be taken in the spirit of its origin. Another very
+wise provision was made by our legislators, and which has prevented a
+great deal of suffering on the part of the slave. A few years ago, our
+wise legislature made a law to revert the power of emancipation from the
+board of magistrates where it had been very much abused, to the House
+itself. And such is the law at the present day, that no master can give
+his slaves their freedom, except by special act of the legislature, and
+that with such a multiplicity of provisions and conditions that few even
+attempt it. But I'm about to refer to cases in which some modification
+might be said to have been necessary, because in them are embodied the
+worst germs for abolition speculation.
+
+"That, Captain, is Jones's Hotel," said the Colonel, pointing to an
+odd-looking house of antique and mixed architecture, with a large convex
+window above the hall-entrance, in the second story. This house is
+situated in Broad street, next to the aristocratic St. Michael's Church,
+one of the most public places in the city. "In years past, that house
+was kept by Jones, a free nigger. Jones was almost white, a fine
+portly-looking man, active, enterprising, intelligent, honest to the
+letter, and whose integrity and responsibility was never doubted. He
+lived in every way like a white man, and, I think, with few exceptions,
+never kept company with even bright folks. His house was unquestionably
+the best in the city, and had a widespread reputation. Few persons of
+note ever visited Charleston without putting up at Jones's, where they
+found, not only the comforts of a private house, but a table spread with
+every luxury that the county afforded. The Governor always put up at
+Jones's; and when you were travelling abroad, strangers would speak
+of the sumptuous fare at Jones's in Charleston, and the elegance and
+correctness of his house. But if his house and fare were the boast of
+Carolinians, and the remark of strangers, his civility and courteous
+attention could not be outdone. Jones continued in the popularity of his
+house for many years, reared a beautiful, intelligent, and interesting
+family; at the same time accumulated about forty thousand dollars. The
+most interesting part of his family was three beautiful daughters, the
+eldest of whom was married to a person now in New York. She was fairer
+than seven-eighths of those ladies who term themselves aristocracy in
+Charleston, and promenade King street in the afternoon.
+
+"She removed to New York with her husband, who now resides in that city,
+engaged in lucrative and respectable business. A short time after, her
+second sister-not dreaming that the law would be so stringent as to
+class her with the lowest nigger, or even lay its painful bearings
+at her door; for the family were very high-minded, and would have
+considered themselves grossly insulted to have the opprobrious name of
+nigger applied to them-paid her a visit. The public became acquainted
+with the fact, and to his surprise, Jones was informed by authority
+that upon no condition could she be allowed to return-that the law was
+imperative, and no consideration could be given to the circumstances,
+for such would be virtually destroying its validity, and furnishing a
+precedent that would be followed by innumerable cases. In spite of all
+the remonstrances which Jones could set forth, and the influence of
+several friends of high standing, he was compelled to relinquish all
+hope of his daughter's being allowed to return to the family. The
+reasoning set forth had every plausibility; but such is our respect for
+the law, that we were compelled to forego our hospitality, and maintain
+it, even though the case was painful to our feelings. Thus, you see, we
+maintain the point and spirit of the law above every thing else.
+
+"But the end is not here! A few years after this, Jones received
+a letter, that his daughter was very sick and not expected to
+live-accompanied with a desire to have the last soothing comfort of
+seeing her parents. Jones being an affectionate man, and dotingly fond
+of his children, without regarding the former admonition, immediately
+prepared himself, and left in disguise for New York. Mature
+consideration would have convinced him of the error of one so well known
+as himself trying to elude recognition.
+
+"His son-in-law, Lee, a noble fellow, kept the house, and when Jones was
+inquired for, it was reported that he was confined to his room. It would
+have been well if Jones had kept himself secluded in New York; but he
+was recognised by a Charlestonian, and, as such reports have uncommon
+wings, the news of it soon reached the authorities; when a mandate was
+issued accordingly, and Jones subjected to the fate of his daughter.
+There are many painful circumstances connected with the affair, which,
+if well told, would make quite a romance," said the Colonel, all of
+which the Captain listened to with profound attention. "His family all
+moved to New York, and his affairs were put into the hands of attorneys
+here, for settlement, by his son-in-law, who continued the business for
+some years."
+
+"Of course he got his property restored to him?" interrupted the
+Captain.
+
+"Most certainly, Captain! The spirit of justice is coequal with that of
+honorable law, in South Carolina," said George, anxious to relieve the
+Colonel of the answer.
+
+"It is somewhat difficult to settle a man's business by legal process
+when the principal is not present. The law's delay and lawyers' spoils
+make time hallowed and costly," said the Captain.
+
+"You're right there, Captain," said the Colonel; "and I doubt-to speak
+honestly-whether Jones ever got much of his property. There's a good
+many stories told, and a great deal of mystery about it that's got to be
+explained to my mind. But you're a stranger, Captain, and it would
+not be interesting to the feelings of a Scotchman. I may give you the
+details more minutely at some future day."
+
+"Why, Colonel!" said George, "you should be considerate in your
+statements. Remember the immense difficulty that has attended Jones's
+affairs-they're not all settled yet."
+
+"True, George; and I'm afraid they never will be;--but there are
+some very singular appearances connected with it. I mean no personal
+disrespect toward those cousins of yours who have figured in the case.
+'Tis bad to call names, but there is a mystery about a certain member of
+our profession getting rich, when poor Jones declares he's got nothing,
+and Lee has had to give up the house,--I don't say what for." * * *
+
+"Yes, strange things must be kept strangely secret in some parts of the
+world, and only whispered when there's no wind," said the Captain.
+
+"But that's the only case, Captain," said George; "and the Colonel
+was indiscreet in recounting it; for from that you may conceive wrong
+impressions of the best institutions and laws in the world. Jones was an
+old fool, led away by his nigger-like affections for them gals of his.
+He never knew when he was well off, and always wanted to be with white
+folk when he was here. 'Twould been a great deal better if he'd let
+them youngest gals gone with Pingree and Allston. They'd have made the
+tip-top mistresses--been kept like ladies, and not been bothered,
+and brought all this trouble upon their heads through these infernal
+abolitionists. I really believe the old fool thought some white man
+would marry them at one time."
+
+"What harm would there've been in that, providing they're as white as
+anybody, and got plenty of money, and were handsome? There must be a
+singular sensibility, that I don't understand, exerting itself in your
+society," said the Captain laconically.
+
+"Harm! You'd find out the harm. Just live in South Carolina a year or
+two. 'Tisn't the fair complexion-we don't dispute that-but it's the
+blood."
+
+"Oh! then the legal objection," said the Captain, "is what is so
+revolting to society, eh! It may be sown broadcast in licentiousness,
+then, and custom sustains an immoral element that is devouring the
+essential bond of society."
+
+"Excuse me, Captain," interrupted the Colonel. "George, you are always
+taking me upon suppositions. I only related it to the Captain in order
+to show the power and integrity of our law, and how South Carolinians
+frequently sacrifice their own interests to maintain it intact. Nothing
+could be more fatal to its vitality than to make provisions which would
+entail legal preferences. The law in regard to free niggers leaving
+the State should be looked upon in the light of protection rather than
+alienation, for it is made to protect property and society. Yet where
+a case is attended with such circumstances as that of Jones's, some
+disposition to accommodate might have been evinced without endangering
+the State's sovereignty. And I must also differ with you, George, so far
+as the girls maintained their self-respect. It was commendable in them
+to get husbands whom they could live with in the bonds of matrimony.
+My word for it, George, though I am a Southerner, and may give rein to
+improprieties at times, nothing can be more pernicious to our society
+than this destructive system of our first people in keeping mistresses.
+It's a source of misery at best, depending upon expediency instead of
+obligation, and results in bringing forth children and heirs with an
+entailed burden upon their lives, to be disowned, cast off from paternal
+rights, and left to the tender mercies of the law. We see the curse, yet
+countenance it-and while it devours domestic affections and has cankered
+the core of social obligations, we look upon it as a flowery garden as
+we pass by the wayside.. There may be but a shadow between the rightful
+heir and the doubtful son-the former may enjoy the bounty of his
+inheritance, but the latter is doomed to know not his sire nor his
+kinsman, but to suffer the doubts and fears and the dark gloom which
+broods over a bondman's life."
+
+"By-je-w-hu! Colonel, what in scissors are you preaching about. You must
+a' got a pull too much at Bakers's. You're giving vent to real abolition
+sentiments. Exercise your knowledge of the provision that is made for
+such children. The Captain will certainly draw incorrect notions about
+us," said George, with anxiety pictured on his countenance. He knew the
+Colonel's free, open, and frank manner of expressing himself, and feared
+lest the famous name of the chivalry should suffer from his unconscious
+disclosures.
+
+"Provisions! George, you know my feelings concerning that vice which is
+so universally practised in our community. If you know of any provision,
+it's more than I do. Perhaps you are older and have had more experience.
+'Tis the want of such a provision that is just destroying our
+institution of slavery!"
+
+At this juncture the Captain interrupted them, and begging that the
+Colonel would finish the story about Jones, said he had a few questions
+to ask them after it was through.
+
+"Well," said the Colonel, "Jones died, I believe; but his family are as
+industrious as ever, and have made money enough to live comfortable; but
+the scamps have turned out perfect helpmates of the abolitionists, and
+make their intelligence figure at the bottom of many an escape. But
+Lee's case is as hard as Jones's. His son went to New York to see his
+grandfather, and was debarred by the same statute of limitations. Lee,
+however, was a very capable fellow, and after trying for two years, and
+finding it would be impossible to return to his father, very shrewdly
+set about some kind of business, and is now largely engaged in the
+preserve and pickle business. Lee's celebrated pickle and preserve
+establishment, New York. The father is now in this city, making a living
+for his family at something or other. He has made several efforts to
+sell out his little property, but there's some trouble about the
+title; and if he leaves it to go and see his son, he knows what the
+consequences will be; and to leave it for settlement would be to abandon
+it, to the same fate that swallowed up Jones's. Thus the son cannot come
+to visit his father, nor the father go to visit the son. This, in my
+opinion, is carrying a prohibition to an extreme point; and although
+I believe the law should be maintained, I cannot believe that any good
+arises from it upon such people as the Jones's and Lee's, from the very
+fact that they never associated with niggers. Hence, where there is
+no grounds for fear there can be no cause for action," continued the
+Colonel.
+
+"Just what I wanted to know," said the Captain. "As I informed you, I am
+driven into your port in distress. Charleston, as you are aware, is in
+an advantageous latitude for vessels to refit that have met with those
+disasters which, are frequent in the gulf and among the Bahamas. Thus I
+expected to find good facilities here, without any unkind feeling on the
+part of the people"--
+
+"Oh! bless me, Captain, you will find us the most hospitable people in
+the world," said the Colonel.
+
+"But your pilot told me I would have trouble with my steward, and that
+the law would make no distinction between his being cast upon your
+shores in distress and subject to your sympathy, and his coming in
+voluntarily."
+
+"What!" said little George. "Is he a nigger, Captain? Old Grimshaw's
+just as sure to nab him as you're a white man. He'll buy and sell a
+saint for the fees, and gives such an extended construction to the terms
+of the act that you need expect no special favor at his hands. The law's
+no fiction with him. I'm sorry, Captain: you may judge his conduct as
+an index of that of our people, and I know him so well that I fear the
+consequences."
+
+"No!" said the Captain. "My steward is a Portuguese, a sort of mestino,
+and one of the best men that ever stepped foot aboard a vessel. He
+is willing, intelligent, always ready to do his duty, and is a great
+favorite with his shipmates, and saves his wages like a good man-but he
+is olive complexion, like a Spaniard. He has sailed under the British
+flag for a great many years, has been 'most all over the world, and is
+as much attached to the service as if he was a Londoner, and has got a
+register ticket. Nothing would pain my feelings more than to see him
+in a prison, for I think he has as proud a notion of honesty as any man
+I've seen, and I know he wouldn't commit a crime that would subject him
+to imprisonment for the world. The boys have been pestering the poor
+fellow, and telling him about some old fellow they heard the pilot speak
+about, called Norman Gadsden; they tell him if he catches him they'll
+sell him for a slave."
+
+"The question is one about which you need give yourself no concern. Our
+people are not so inhuman but that they will shelter a castaway sailor,
+and extend those comforts which are due from all humane people. The act
+under which seamen are imprisoned is the law provided to prohibit free
+niggers from entering our port, and, in my opinion, was brought into
+life for the sake of the fees. It's no more nor less than a tax and
+restriction upon commerce, and I doubt whether it was ever the intention
+of the framers that it should be construed in this manner. However, so
+far as your steward is con-cerned, the question of how far his color
+will make him amenable to the law will never be raised; the mere
+circumstance of his being a seaman in distress, thrown upon our
+sympathies, will be all you need among our hospitable people. I'm not
+aware of a precedent, but I will guaranty his safety from a knowledge
+of the feelings of our people. Our merchants are, with few exceptions,
+opposed to the law in this sense, but such is the power and control of
+a class of inexperienced legislators, prompted by a most trifling clique
+of office-holders, that their voice has no weight. I am opposed to this
+system of dragging people into courts of law upon every pretext. It is
+practised too much in our city for the good of its name."
+
+Upon this the Colonel and little George accompanied the Captain to his
+ship, and, expressing their heartfelt regrets at her appearance, bid
+him good-night-George promising to call upon him in the morning, and the
+Colonel charging him to give himself no trouble about his steward, that
+he would see Mr. Grimshaw that night, and make all things straight.
+
+Thus ended the Captain's first night in Charleston, and represented a
+picture from which he might have drawn conclusions somewhat different
+from the actual result. Alas! that all the good fellowship and pleasant
+associations of a people should be disgraced by an absurdity arising
+from their fears.
+
+The Colonel might have given many other instances equally as painful as
+that connected with the transportation of Jones and his family, and the
+fetters that were placed upon poor Lee. He might have instanced that
+of Malcome Brown, a wealthy, industrious, honest, high-minded, and
+straightforward man, now living at Aiken, in South Carolina. Brown
+conducts a profitable mechanical business, is unquestionably the best
+horticulturist in the State, and produces the best fruit brought to the
+Charleston market. What has he done to be degraded in the eyes of the
+law? Why is he looked upon as a dangerous citizen and his influence
+feared? Why is he refused a hearing through those laws which bad white
+men take the advantage of? He is compelled to submit to those which
+were made to govern the worst slaves! And why is he subjected to that
+injustice which gives him no voice in his own behalf when the most
+depraved whites are his accusers? Can it be the little crimp that is in
+his hair? for he has a fairer skin than those who make laws to oppress
+him. If he inhaled the free atmosphere from abroad, can it be that
+there is contagion in it, and Malcome Brown is the dreaded medium of its
+communication? And if the statement rung in our ears be true, "that
+the free colored of the North suffer while the slave is cared for and
+comfortable," why belie ourselves? Malcome's influence is, and always
+has been, with the whites, and manifestly good in the preservation of
+order and obedience on the part of the slaves. He pursues his avocation
+with spirit and enterprise, while he is subjected to menial and
+oppressive laws. His father visited New York, and was forbidden to
+return. He appealed again and again, set forth his claims and his
+integrity to the State and her laws, but all was of no avail. He was
+hopelessly banished, as it were, from ever seeing his son again, unless
+that son would sacrifice his property and submit to perpetual banishment
+from the State. If we reflect upon the many paternal associations that
+would gladden the hearts of father and child to meet in happy affection,
+we may realize the effect of that law which makes the separation painful
+and which denies even the death-bed scene its last cheering consolation.
+
+We have conversed with poor Brown on many occasions, found him a very
+intelligent man, full of humour, and fond of relating incidents in the
+history of his family-even proud of his good credit in Charleston. He
+frequently speaks of his father and the gratifying hope of meeting him
+at some future day, when he can give vent to his feelings in bursts of
+affection. He wants his father to return and live with him, because he
+says he knows they would be more happy together. "I suppose the law was
+made in justice, and it's right for me to submit to it," he would say
+when conversing upon its stringency; and it also seems a sort of comfort
+to him that he is not the only sufferer.
+
+If South Carolina would awake to her own interest, she would find more
+to fear from the stringency of her own laws than from the influence of a
+few men coming from abroad.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X. THE PROSPECT DARKENING.
+
+
+
+AFTER the Colonel and little George left the Captain, as we have stated
+in the foregoing chapter, he descended into the cabin, and found Manuel
+sitting upon one of the lockers, apparently in great anxiety. He,
+however, waited for the mate to speak before he addressed the
+Captain. The mate awoke and informed the Captain that a slender,
+dark-complexioned man had been aboard a few minutes after he left,
+making particular inquiries about the steward; that he spoke like an
+official man, was dressed in black clothes, and wore spectacles.
+
+"I asked him if we'd have any trouble with Manuel, and tried to make him
+understand that he wasn't a black, and that our situation might excuse
+us from any annoyance through their peculiar laws. But the old chap
+seemed mighty stupid about every thing, and talked just as if he didn't
+know any thing about nothing. 'A nigger's a nigger in South Carolina,'
+said he dryly, and inquired for a quid of tobacco, which I handed him,
+and he took one big enough for six. Said I, 'Mister, do you call a man
+a nigger what's a Portugee and a'n't black?' 'It depends on how he was
+born,' says he. 'Well, but ye can't make a white man a nigger nohow,
+whether it's in South Carolina or Scotland,' says I. 'Well, we don't
+stand upon such things here; we can show you niggers as white as you be,
+Mr. Mate,' says he. 'But, Mister, what's to do about our steward, that
+ye make yer inquiries about him; he ha'n't did nothing,' said I. 'Well,
+Mr. Mate; it's contrary to law to bring nigger stewards into our port.
+They're a bad set of fellows generally, and we claim the right to lock
+'em up to insure their good behavior and keep their bad influence away
+from our slaves. 'Tis not my office. I observed your arrival and wrecked
+condition, and merely came to take a look,' said he. 'Well now, Mister,
+our steward thinks as much of himself as anybody and wouldn't mix with
+your niggers on any account. But Mister! won't it make a difference
+because we're cast upon your shore in distress,' says I. 'Not a whit!
+it's contrary to law, and the law's got nothing to do with wind and
+weather. We love the sovereignty of our law too well to make any
+discrimination. We're a hospitable people, and always give folks plenty
+to eat, but we never allow any favors in the law. I'll call and see you
+in the morning,' said he, and away he went."
+
+This individual was Mr. Grimshaw, the principal mover of the powers that
+be, notwithstanding he asserted that it was not his office, and that he
+just walked round to take a look.
+
+During his visit on board, Manuel was absent on board a Boston bark,
+where he met a white steward, who gave him a sad picture of the
+Charleston jail and the cruel treatment that was inflicted upon
+prisoners there by starvation. He told him that he was once put in for
+a trifling offence, and nearly starved to death before he got out.
+"You will be sure to go there, Manuel," said he, "for they make no
+distinction; and if a man's a foreigner, and can't speak for himself,
+he'll stand no chance at all. I'd give 'em the slip afore I'd suffer
+such another punishment," he continued.
+
+This so worked upon the poor fellow's mind, that it became a matter of
+little moment whether he jumped overboard or remained on the ship. He
+waited until the mate had concluded, and commenced appealing to the
+Captain in a most pitiful manner. The disgrace of being imprisoned
+seemed worse than the punishment; and he did not seem to comprehend
+the intention that he should be imprisoned for no crime in the United
+States, when he had sailed around the world and visited a majority of
+its ports, both barbarous and civilized, without molestation. He wanted
+the Captain to pay him off and let him leave by some vessel in the
+morning. The Captain endeavored to soothe his fears by assuring him
+that there was no danger of his being imprisoned; that the people of
+Charleston had too much good feeling in them to be cruel to a distressed
+sailor; that the power of the consul was a sufficient guarantee of
+protection. "You are not among Patagonians, Manuel," said he. "There's
+no use of working your mind into a fever, you'll be as well taken
+care of here and be thought as much of as you would in London." This
+assurance had the effect to soothe his mind, upon which he left the
+cabin more at ease, and went into the forecastle to turn in with his
+little companion Tommy. Men had been detailed for the pumps as soon as
+the flood-tide made, and the Captain retired to his berth.
+
+It seemed there was a mutual understanding between the pilots and
+officers in regard to the arrival of colored stewards; and the pilot,
+after leaving the vessel, went directly to Mr. Grimshaw's office and
+reported a nut for him to crack: this brought him to the wharf to "look
+around."
+
+Early in the morning the crew were at their duty. The mate commenced
+giving orders to clear away the deck, and Manuel to make preparations
+for breakfast. He had scarcely commenced before two men, Messrs. Dunn
+and Dusenberry walked up and down the wharf for several minutes, then
+they would stand together and gaze as if to watch the approach of some
+vessel in the offing. At length, Dusenberry, seeing Manuel come to the
+gangway with a bucket in his hand, walked to her side, and, stepping on
+board, seized him by the collar, and drawing a paper from his pocket,
+said, "You're my prisoner! you must go to jail-come, be quick, sir; you
+must not stop to get your things; you must send for them after you're
+committed."
+
+The mate and several of the crew being near, at once gathered around
+him. At the same time Dunn, who was standing at the end of the wharf
+awaiting the result, thinking Dusenberry was opposed, came to his
+assistance. The officers and crew knew the respect due to the laws too
+well to oppose any obstacles to the constables in executing their duty.
+The mate, in a very polite manner, asked as a favor that they would
+leave the man a few minutes until the Captain came on deck. They yielded
+to his solicitation after a great deal of grumbling. The arrest made a
+deep feeling among the seamen, but none felt it more than little Tommy;
+he heard the noise upon deck, and came running with tears in his eyes,
+and cried, "Oh! Manuel, why Manuel, what are they going to take you
+away for? Won't I see you again, Manuel?" The little fellow's simplicity
+touched the feelings of all present. But the lame officer, Dunn, stood
+with a pair of handcuffs in his hand, as unmoved as a stoic, while
+Dusenberry expressed his impatience, and began to push the boy away, and
+motion to march him off.
+
+"Hold a bit!" said the mate. "The Captain will be on deck in a few
+minutes; he wants a word or two with you."
+
+"We can't stop unless we're compensated for our time. 'Tis no use to
+delay-'twon't do any good; he's a nigger to all intents and purposes. I
+know by the curl in his hair-they can't escape me, I've had too much to
+do with them!" said Dunn. "Yes, to be sure, I can tell a nigger by his
+ear, if his skin's as white as chalk!" said Dusenberry. "It's all gammon
+this bringing bright outlandish men here, and trying to pass them off
+for white folks. 'Twon't stick-you must come up and be registered, and
+you'll have a good time at the jail, my boy; there's plenty of bright
+gals in there, and you can have a wife, if you know how to do the
+courting."
+
+The Captain now came upon deck; and began to intercede, begging that
+they would not take Manuel away until he had seen the British Consul. "I
+know I can make every thing straight. There is no occasion to imprison
+my steward-he's neither a nigger nor a bad man; and I'll pledge you my
+honor that he shall not leave the ship, or even go upon the wharf, if
+you will only allow me to see the Consul before you take any further
+action," he continued.
+
+"That is beyond our power, sir; you must see the sheriff-you'll find him
+in his office bright and early. But you might as well put your appeal in
+your pocket, or send it to Queen Victoria, for all Consul Mathew can do
+for you. He's been kicking up a fuss for two years; but he might as well
+whistle agin a brickbat as to talk his nonsense about English niggers to
+South Carolina. He'll get tarred and feathered yet, if he a'n't mighty
+shy about his movements. Sorry, Captain, we can't accommodate you, but
+we're only actin' for the sheriff, and his orders are imperative to
+bring him right up. We must lock the fellow up. We don't make the law,
+nor we ha'n't the power to control it." Thus saying, Dunn took a little
+key from his pocket and begun to turn it in the handcuffs.
+
+"What!" said the Captain-"don't attempt to put them things on my man,
+upon your peril. Is that the way you treat a poor shipwrecked sailor
+in South Carolina, the State of boasted hospitality? No, sir! I will
+sacrifice my life before my man shall submit to such a thing," said the
+Captain, with his Scotch energy aroused.
+
+"Captain!" said Dunn, "we'd not be takin' the advantage of ye because
+ye're a stranger, but 'tis the law; and if we accommodates ye, sure
+it'll be at our own risk. But anyhow, Captain, ye'd be keepin' meself
+an' this gentleman a long time waiting, 'twouldn't be amiss to be giving
+us the usual perquisite. You won't miss it, and we've a great deal to do
+for small fees, that niver compinsate for the accommodation we be's to
+give everybody-an' the loss of time's the loss of money."
+
+"Give you a perquisite!--no, indeed; I never pay for such favors. Wait a
+few moments; I will accompany you myself, if you will not take my honor
+for his good conduct on the way to prison," continued the Captain.
+
+"Captain, sure ye needn't trouble yerself anyhow; we'll take yer honor
+that he don't run away, and if he does ye'll stand the odds at the
+sheriff's. Sure a case would niver pass Mr. Grimshaw s observation; but
+to plase ye, and considerin' the wreck, meself and Dusenberry 'll put
+him up without," said Dunn.
+
+During the conversation, Manuel plead hard to be heard before the
+Consul, having a mistaken idea that the Consul could protect him from
+all danger; and that if he could get a hearing before him, he was sure
+to be released. The Captain shook his hand and told him to be contented
+until the Consul's office opened, when he would come to the jail and see
+him. Manuel then turned to the crew, and shaking the hands of each, took
+his little bundle in one hand, and holding little Tommy by the other,
+(who accompanied him to the head of the wharf,) was soon out of sight.
+
+But will the reader believe what was the practice of these petty
+officers? We can assure them that such instances as the one we shall
+relate are not only practised in Charleston to an unlimited extent, but
+the fact is well known to both magistrates and the public; the former
+treat it as moonshine, and the latter rail against it, but never take
+proper action.
+
+Scarcely had little Tommy left them at the head of the wharf, before
+they intimated that it would be well to consider a morning dram. To this
+end, they walked into a "Dutch corner shop," and passing into the back
+room, gave sundry insinuations that could not be misunderstood. "Well!
+come, who pays the shot?" said Dunn, stepping up to the counter, and
+crooking his finger upon his nose at a dumpling-faced Dutchman, who
+stood behind the counter, waiting for his man to name it. The Dutchman
+was very short and very thick, leaving the impression that he had been
+very much depressed in his own country when young. He rubbed his
+hands and flirted his fingers in motion of anxiety, "Every ting vat de
+shentleman vant him--dare notin like to my zin and brondty vat him got
+mit ze zity," said Dutchy.
+
+"Gentlemen, I should be glad to have you drink with me, if it be proper
+to ask," said Manuel.
+
+"Oh! yes--certainly, yes!--just what we come for, something to cut
+away the cobwebs--'twouldn't do to go out in the morning fog without a
+lining," said Dunn.
+
+"Name it! name it! shentlemen," exclaimed the Dutchman, as he rapped his
+fingers upon the counter, and seemed impatient to draw forth his filthy
+stuff. They named their drinks, each with a different name. Manuel
+not being a Charleston graduate in the profession of mixing drinks and
+attaching slang names to them, Mr. Dusenberry undertook to instruct
+him in a choice. The Dutchman was an adept at mixing, and the "morning
+pulls" were soon set out to the extreme satisfaction of Dunn and
+Dusenberry. "All right! tip her down, my old fellow; none o' yer
+screwed faces over such liquor as that. We drink on the legitimate, in
+Charleston, and can put it down until we see stars," said Dusenberry,
+addressing himself to Manuel, who was making a wry face, while straining
+to swallow the cut-throat stuff.
+
+Dusenberry now left Manuel in charge of Dunn, saying he was going out
+to attend to some business. Manuel drew from his pocket a quarter of a
+Colombian doubloon, and throwing it upon the counter, told the Dutchman
+to give him change. The Dutchman picked it up, turned it over several
+times, and squinting at it, inquired, in a very unpretending manner,
+what its value was. He knew already, yet this was only done to try
+Manuel. At the same moment he winked to Dunn, who, stepping up, gave
+it a significant toss upon the counter. "The divil a bit more than two
+dollars; all right, Swizer," said he.
+
+"'Tis four dollar, West Inge-I want my change," said Manuel, shrugging
+his shoulders. "I no want no more than my own; and no man to cheat-e
+me."
+
+"Don't be bothering with your four dollars-sure ye a'n't in the West
+Inges now; and money's plenty in Charleston, and I can't bring up so
+much-half so much. Don't be bothering with yer West Inge nonsense. If
+ye try to raise a fuss here, I'll make the Captain suffer. Ye must learn
+that it won't do for a nigger to dispute a white man in Charleston; we'd
+twitch ye up by the same law; we'd put it to our own niggers, and ye'd
+git trised up, and about fifty paddles on yer bare butt." The Dutchman
+put down a dollar and seventy cents, but Manuel refused to take it up;
+when this fellow, Dunn, pretending to be the friend of Manuel, held out
+his hand, and telling the bar-keeper to put another dollar, which he
+did, he passed it hurriedly into Manuel's hand, and making a pass, told
+him to put it into his pocket.
+
+It was now about good business time for the Dutchman, and his customers
+were coming in with their bottles and pots in great numbers. The place
+was a little filthy hole, very black and dirty, about twelve feet long,
+and seven feet wide, with a high board counter almost in the centre. The
+only stock-in-trade that decorated it, was a few barrels of lager beer;
+several kegs, with names to set forth the different qualities of liquors
+painted upon them; a bushel basket about half full of onions, and a few
+salt fish in a keg that stood by the door. Around the room were
+several benches similar to those in guard-houses. Upon two of them were
+stretched two ragged and filthy-looking negroes, who looked as if they
+had been spending the night in debauchery. Dunn, as if to show his
+authority, limped toward them, and commenced fledging their backs
+with his hickory stick in a most unmerciful manner, until one poor old
+fellow, with a lame hand, cried out for mercy at the top of his voice.
+
+"It's a bad business keeping these niggers here all night, Swizer-you
+know I've done the clean thing with you several times," said Dunn,
+pointing his finger at the Dutchman; who winked, and coming from behind
+the counter, slipped something into his hand, and stepping to the door,
+assumed some threatning language against the negroes, should they ever
+came back to his store. A large portion of those who came for liquor
+were negroes, who looked as if they were parting with their last cent
+for stimulant, for they were ragged and dirty, and needed bread more
+than liquor. Their condition seemed pitiful in the extreme, and yet the
+Dutch "corner-shop keeper" actually got rich from their custom, and so
+craving was he upon their patronage, that he treated them with much more
+courtesy than his white customers.
+
+These "Dutch corner-shops" are notorious places in Charleston, and
+are discountenanced by respectable citizens, because they become the
+rendezvous of "niggers," who get into bad habits and neglect their
+masters' or mistresses' business. Yet the keepers exert such an
+influence at elections, that the officials not only fear them, but in
+order to secure their favors, leave their rascality unmolested. Well
+might a writer in the Charleston Courier of August 31, 1852, say--
+
+"We were astonished, with many others, at the sweeping charges made in
+the resolutions passed at the HUTCHINSON meeting at Hatch's Hall,
+and were ready to enlist at once to lend our voice to turn out an
+'administration' that for two years permitted 'moral sentiment to
+be abandoned,' 'truthfulness disregarded,' 'reverence for religion
+obliterated,' 'protection to religious freedom refused,' 'licentiousness
+allowed,' 'and a due administration for vice, neglected.'" These charges
+stand unrefuted, and with but one or two exceptions, we have never
+known one of those unlawful corner shops prosecuted by the present
+administration. And those single instances only where they were driven
+to notice the most flagrant abuses.
+
+It is strictly "contrary to law in Charleston," to sell liquor to a
+negro without an order from a white man; the penalty being fine
+and imprisonment. Yet, so flagrant has become the abuse, that it
+is notorious that hush-money is paid by a certain class of Dutch
+liquor-sellers to the officers. In nearly all the streets of Charleston,
+where there is a shanty or nook large enough to hold a counter and some
+tumblers, these wretches may be found dealing out their poisonous drugs
+to a poor, half-starved class of negroes, who resort to all kinds of
+dishonest means to get money to spend at their counters. These places
+are nearly all kept by foreigners, whose merciless avarice scruples at
+nothing, however mean. They soon become possessed of considerable means,
+and through their courtesy and subserviency to the negro-for they are
+the only class of whites that will beg his pardon, if they have offended
+him-carry on a sort of active rivalry with each other for his custom. It
+is from these miserable hells that seven-tenths of the crimes arise for
+which the poor negro is dragged to the work-house and made to suffer
+under the paddle.
+
+And yet these very men, whose connivance at vice and crime is
+disregarded by the law, rise and take position in society-not only
+entering into more respectable business-but joining in that phalanx
+who are seeking the life-blood of the old Southerner, and like a silent
+moth, working upon his decay. There is a deep significance in the answer
+so frequently given in Charleston to the interrogatory, "Who lives in
+that splendid dwelling-it seems to have been the mansion of a prince,
+but is somewhat decayed?"
+
+"Oh! bless me, yes! It was once the mansion of the So-and-sos, one of
+the first families, but they're very poor now. Mr. What-you-may-call-em
+owns it now-they say he didn't get it honestly. He kept a little
+grog-shop on the Bay, or sold bacon and whisky on the Bay, and made
+awful charges against poor So-and-so, and after a long trial in Chancery
+he got his house. He's a big fellow; now, I tell you, and is going to
+fit the house up for himself!"
+
+Dunn told Manuel to be seated, that there was no occasion for hurrying;
+it would be all right if he got to the sheriffs office at nine o'clock;
+and then commenced descanting upon the fine time he would have at the
+jail. "There's a right good lot of comrades there, me boy; ye'll have
+fiddling and dancing, plenty of gals, and a jolly time; and ye a'n't a
+criminal, ye know, so it won't be any thing at all, only keep up a stiff
+under-lip. Come, let us take another drink; I feel mighty husky this
+morning!" said he.
+
+Just at this time Dusenberry re-entered, puffing and blowing as if he
+had been engaged in a foot-race. "Another bird for old Grimshaw, at
+Commercial Wharf! I know'd she had one aboard, 'cause I seed him from
+the wharf," said he, in perfect ecstasy, pulling out a pencil and making
+a note in a little book.
+
+"Don't be a child," said Dunn. "Come, we have just proposed another
+drink; you join of course; ye niver says no,--eh, Duse?" They stepped to
+the counter, and Dunn, again, pointing his finger upon his nose at the
+Dutchman, who stood with his hands spread upon the counter, called for
+gin and bitters, Stoughton light. Turning to Manuel, who was sitting
+upon a bench with his head reclined upon his hand, apparently in deep
+meditation, he took him by the collar in a rude manner, and dragging him
+to the counter, said, "Come, by the pipers, rouse up your spirits, and
+don't be sulking, my old Portugee; take another O-be-joyful, and it'll
+put ye all right, and ye'll dance a hornpipe like a jim-crack."
+
+"Excuse me, sir; I think I have taken enough; do, please, either take me
+back to my vessel, or where you are going to. This is no place for me!"
+said Manuel.
+
+"Sure, what signifies; don't be talking your botheration here; a nigger
+musn't sauce a white man. Come, there's no use backing out; you must
+take a glass of Swizer's lager beer," said Dunn.
+
+Manuel looked around him, and then closing up very reluctantly, the
+Dutchman filled his glass with frothy beer, and the three touched
+glasses and drank. They then retired to a bench and commenced discussing
+the propriety of some point of their official privileges, while Manuel
+was left standing at the counter.
+
+"Who pay de drink vat shu get?" inquired the Dutchman, anxious to serve
+two little niggers who had just come in with bottles in their hands.
+
+"It was our friend's treat; come, my good fellow, do the clean thing
+according to Southern science. We'll put a good word in for you to the
+jailer; you won't lose nothing by it," said Dusenberry.
+
+"My friends, I work hard for my money, and have none to spend foolishly.
+The small amount is of little consequence, but I would much sooner make
+you a present of it, than to be drugged by pretence. I've no desire to
+indulge the propensities of others. Whatever you are going to do with
+me, do it; and let me know my fate. I am sick and fatigued, and have
+need for the doctor. Take me to a prison or where you please. I have
+done no crime; I want sleep, not punishment. Next time I shipwrecked,
+I get plank and go overboard 'fore I cum to Charleston." So saying, he
+pulled out fifty cents and threw it upon the counter, and the Dutchman
+swept it into the drawer, as if it was all right, and "just the change."
+
+"Shut up, you black rascal, you; you musn't talk that way in South
+Carolina; we'll have you stretched on the frame and paddled for
+insolence to a white man. D--n me, if you're in such a hurry for it,
+just come along," said Dusenberry; and reaching his hand over to Dunn,
+took the handcuffs from him and attempted to put them on Manuel's
+wrists. The poor fellow struggled and begged for more than ten minutes,
+and was wellnigh overpowering them, when Dusenberry drew a long
+dirk-knife from his bosom, and holding it in a threatening attitude
+at his breast, uttered one of those fierce yells such as are common to
+slave-hunters, whose business it is to hunt and run down runaway niggers
+with bloodhounds. "Submit, you black villain, or I'll have your heart's
+blood; bring a rope, and we'll trise him up here. Jump, be quick,
+Swizer!" said he, addressing himself to the Dutchman. The Dutchman ran
+into the front apartment; brought out a cord similar to a clothes-line;
+and commenced to undo it.
+
+"Do you give up now?" said Dusenberry, still holding the knife pointed
+at him. Manuel was in the habit of carrying a poniard when on shore in
+foreign countries, and put his hand to his breast-pocket to feel for
+it. He remembered that he had left it in his chest, and that resistance
+would be useless against a posse giving expression to such hostility to
+him. The shackles were put upon his hands with ruffianly force.
+
+"Oh! am I a man, or am I a brute? What have I done to receive such
+treatment? May God look down upon me and forgive me my transgressions;
+for in his hands are my rights, and he will give me justice," said
+Manuel, looking his cruel torturers in the face.
+
+"A man! No, by heavens, you're a nigger; an' it's that we'd he teaching
+you! Come, none of yer sermons here, trot off! We'll give you a
+handkerchief to cover your hands, if you're so d--d delicate about
+walking through the streets," said Dunn, throwing him an old red
+handkerchief, and marching him along through Broad street. Dusenberry
+now left him entirely in the charge of Dunn; while, as he said, he went
+to Adger's Wharf to keep his eye on another vessel that was approaching
+the dock. The tricks of this man Dunn were well known to those,
+connected with the police and sheriff's office; but, instead of being
+displaced for his many offences, he was looked upon by them as the best
+officer upon the rolls; and in fishing for mischievous niggers he was
+held as a perfect paragon. In this instance he was not contented with
+the outrages he had inflicted upon Manuel at the Dutch grog-shop, which
+he had forced him into, but he would stop in the public street to hold
+conversation with every cove he met, and keep the poor man standing for
+public gaze, like chained innocence awaiting the nod of a villain. The
+picture would have been complete, if a monster in human form were placed
+in the foreground applying the lash, according to the statute laws of
+South Carolina.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI. THE SHERIFF'S OFFICE.
+
+
+
+IT is nine o'clock, on the morning of the 24th March, 1852. Manuel was
+marched into the sheriff's office, situated in the court-house, on the
+corner of Broad and Meeting streets. A large table stood in the centre
+of the room, covered with sundry old papers and an inkstand. At one side
+was an old sofa, bearing strong evidence of its being worn out at the
+expense of the State. A few pine-wood and painted book-stands, several
+tip-staffs, old broken-backed chairs, and last, but not least, a
+wood-sawyer's buck-saw, stood here and there in beautiful disorder
+around the room; while, as if to display the immense importance of the
+office, a "cocked" hat with the judicial sword hung conspicuously above
+the old sofa. A door opened upon the left hand, leading into the clerk's
+office, where the books and archives of the office were kept. Mr.
+Kanapeaux, the incumbent, exhibited a great deal of good feeling, which
+it would have lost the sheriff none of his reputation to pattern after,
+and kept his office in very respectable order.
+
+"Come in 'ere, Manwell, or whatever yer name is," said Dunn, as he led
+the way into the presence of Mr. Grimshaw, the lean, haggard-looking man
+we have before described. His dark, craven features, as he sat peering
+through his glasses at the morning news, gave him the appearance of a
+man of whom little was, to be expected by those who had the misfortune
+to fall into his hands.
+
+"Ah! Dunn, you are the best officer in the city; 'pon my soul, these
+fellows can't escape you! Where did you pick up that nigger?" said he,
+with a look of satisfaction.
+
+"A fat fee case, Mr. Grimshaw, 'contrary to law;' he's a Portugee
+nigger. Never had so much trouble with a nigger in my life; I didn't
+know but the fellow was going to preach a sermon. The Captain-he belongs
+to a wrecked Englishman-wanted to come the gammon game with him, and
+pass him for a white man; but sure he couldn't come that game over
+meself and Duse, anyhow," said Dunn.
+
+Without saying a word, Manuel stood up before his accusers, upon this
+strange charge of "contrary to law."
+
+As he looked upon his accusers, he said, "What have I done to suffer a
+murderer's fate? Am I to be sold as a slave, because of the visitation
+of God? I have done no murder! No!--nor have I stolen in your land! and
+why did these men decoy me into"--
+
+"Silence! silence! You are in the sheriff's office," said Dunn, pointing
+his finger at his nose. "You can't come your John Bull nigger in South
+Carolina."
+
+This brought the sheriff's clerk to the door that led into the passage.
+"Dunn, I have warned you about these things several times; the public
+are getting wind of them; they'll bring this office into disrepute yet.
+You ought to know what effect the association of officials with these
+'corner-shop keepers' is already having in the community," said he.
+
+"How the divil do ye know what yer talking about; sure it's his honor's
+bisniss, and not yours at all, at all," said Dunn, addressing himself to
+Mr. Kanapeaux, and then looking at Mr. Grimshaw.
+
+"Mr. Kanapeaux, you must not interfere with the officers and their
+duty; attend to your business, and get, your book ready to register this
+nigger-boy," said Grimshaw.
+
+"Well, now, my good fellow," continued Grimshaw, "I dislike this
+business very much; it don't pay me enough for all the bother I have
+with it. 'Tis just a little filtering of fees, which makes the duty of
+my office exceedingly annoying. But we must respect the law. We do these
+things to protect our institutions and make them as light as possible. I
+might give you a great deal of trouble; I have the power, but I make it
+a point to consider men in your case, and we'll make you so comfortable
+that you won't think of being imprisoned. You must understand that it is
+'contrary to law' to come among our niggers in this way; it gives them
+fanciful ideas. There's such an infernal imperfect state of things as
+these abolitionists are getting every thing into, behooves us to watch
+the communications which are going on between, designing people and our
+slaves. We are a hospitable people--the world knows that--and have a
+religious respect for our laws, which we enforce without respect to
+persons. We'd like to let you go about the city, but then it's 'contrary
+to law.' Make up your mind, my good fellow, that you are among humane
+people, who will seek to benefit you among men of your class. Make
+yourself happy--and look upon me as a friend, and you will never be
+deceived. I control the jail, and my prisoners are as much attached to
+me as they would be to a father."
+
+"It must be humanity that puts these symbols of ignominy upon my hands,"
+said Manuel; "that confines me in a dungeon lest I should breathe a word
+of liberty to ears that know it only as a fable."
+
+Nobody had asked him to sit down, and, feeling the effect of his
+sickness and fatigue, he turned around as if to look for something
+to rest against. "You must not sit down,--take off your hat!" said
+Grimshaw.
+
+The poor fellow made an effort, but could not effect it with the fetters
+on his hands; at which, Dunn stepped up, and snatching it from his head,
+flung it upon the floor. "You should learn manners, my good fellow,"
+said Grimshaw, "when you come into a sheriff's office. It's a place of
+importance, and people always pay respect to it when they come into it;
+a few months in Charleston would make you as polite as our niggers."
+
+"Had you not better take the irons off the poor fellow's hands?--he
+looks as if he was tired out," said Mr. Kanapeaux, the clerk, who again
+came to the door and looked upon Manuel with an air of pity. The words
+of sympathy touched his feelings deeply; it was a simple word in his
+favour, so different from what he had met since he left the vessel, that
+he felt a kind friend had spoken in his behalf, and he gave way to his
+feeling in a gush of tears.
+
+"Good suggestion, Mr. Kanapeaux!" said Grimshaw. "Better take 'em off,
+Mr. Dunn; I don't think he'll give you any more difficulty. He seems
+like a 'likely fellow,' and knows, if he cuts up any nigger rascality
+in Charleston, he'll be snapped up. Now, my good fellow, put on your
+best-natured countenance, and stand as straight as a ramrod. Mr.
+Kanapeaux, get your book ready to register him," continued Grimshaw.
+
+Manuel now stood up under a slide, and his height and general features
+were noted in the following manner, in order to appease that sovereign
+dignity of South Carolina law, which has so many strange devices to show
+its importance:--"Contrary to Law." Violation of the Act of 1821, as
+amended, &c. &c. Manuel Pereira vs. State of South Carolina, Steward on
+board British Brig Janson, Captain Thompson. Entered 24th March, 1852.
+
+Height, 5 feet 8 1/2 inches.
+
+Complexion, light olive, (bright.)
+
+Features, sharp and aquiline.
+
+[Hair and eyes, dark and straight; the former inclined to curl.]
+
+General remarks:--Age, twenty-nine; Portuguese by birth; speaks rather
+broken, but politely; is intelligent, well formed, and good looking.
+Fees to Sheriff:
+
+To arrest, $2--Registry, $2 - $4 00 To Recog. $1.31--Constable. $1 - $2.31 To
+Commitment and discharge, $1.00
+
+$7.31
+
+Jail fees to be added when discharged.
+
+After these remarks were duly entered, and Mr. Grimshaw read another
+lecture to him on the importance of South Carolina law, and the kindness
+he would receive at his hands if he made himself con-tented, he was told
+that he could go and be committed. The poor fellow had stood up until he
+was nearly exhausted; yet, it was not enough to gratify the feelings
+of that miserable miscreant, Dunn. Scarcely had he left the sheriff's
+office, or passed two squares from the court-house, before he entered
+another Dutch grog-shop, a little more respectable in appearance-but
+not in character. They entered by a side door, which led into a back
+apartment provided with a table and two wooden settees. As Dunn entered,
+he was recognised by two negro-fellows, who were playing dominoes at the
+table. They arose and ran through the front store, into the street, as
+if some evil spirit had descended among them. The Dutchman sprang
+for the dominoes, and quickly thrust them into a tin measure which he
+secreted under the counter.
+
+"Ah! Drydez!" said Dunn; "you vagabond, you; up to the old tricks again?
+Ye Dutchmen are worse than the divil! It's meself'll make ye put a five
+for that. Come, fork it over straight, and don't be muttering yer Dutch
+lingo!"
+
+"Vat zue drink mit me dis morning? Misser Dunz' te best fellow vat comez
+in my shop," said Drydez.
+
+"Ah! stop yer botheration, and don't be comin' yer Dutch logger over
+an Irishman! put down the five dollars, and we'll take the drinks
+presently; meself and me friend here'll drink yer health," said Dunn,
+pointing to Manuel, who shook his head as much as to decline. The
+Dutchman now opened his drawer, and rolling a bill up in his fingers,
+passed it as if unobserved into the hands of Dunn.
+
+"Now, Drydez," said Dunn, "if ye want to do the clean thing, put a
+couple of brandy smashes-none of your d--d Dutch cut-throat brandy-the
+best old stuff. Come, me old chuck, (turning to Manuel and pulling him
+by the Whiskers,) cheer up, another good stiff'ner will put you on your
+taps again. South Carolina's a great State, and a man what can't
+be happy in Charleston, ought to be put through by daylight by the
+abolitionists."
+
+The Dutchman soon prepared the smashes, and supplying them with straws,
+put them upon the table, and seated chairs close at hand. "Excuse me!"
+said Manuel, "I've drunk enough already, and should like to lie down.
+I am unwell, and feel the effect of what I have already taken. I am
+too feeble. Pray tell me how far the prison is from here, and I will go
+myself."
+
+"Go, is it?--the divil a go ye'll go from this until ye drink the smash.
+None of yer Portugee independence here. We larn niggers the politeness
+of gintlemen in Charleston, me buck!" and seizing him by the collar,
+dragged him to the table, then grasping the tumbler with the other hand,
+he held it before his face. "Do you see that? and, bedad, ye'll drink
+it, and not be foolin', or I'd put the contents in your phiz," said he.
+
+Manuel took the glass, while the Dutchman stood chuckling over the very
+nice piece of fun, and the spice of Mr. Dunn's wit, as he called it.
+"Vat zu make him vat'e no vants too? You doz make me laugh so ven zu
+comes 'ere, I likes to kilt myself," said Drydez.
+
+A bright mulatto-fellow was now seen in the front store, making
+quizzical signs to the Dutchman; who understanding its signification,
+lost no time in slipping into his pocket a tumbler nearly half full of
+brandy and water; and stepping behind the division door, passed it slily
+to the mulatto, who equally as slily passed it down his throat; and
+putting a piece of money into the Dutchman's hand, stepped up to the
+counter, as if to wait for his change. "All right!" said the Dutchman,
+looking around at his shelves, and then again under the counter.
+
+"No so!" said the mulatto; "I want fourpence; you done' dat befor'
+several times; I wants my money."
+
+"Get out of my store, or I'll kick you out," said the Dutchman, and
+catching up a big club, ran from behind the counter and commenced
+belaboring the negro over the head in a most unmerciful manner. At this,
+the mulatto retreated into the lane, and with a volley of the vilest
+epithets, dared the Dutchman to come out, and he would whip him.
+
+Dunn ran to the scene, and ordered the negro to be off, and not use such
+language to a white man, that it was "contrary to law," and he would
+take him to the workhouse.
+
+"Why, massa, I knows what 'em respect white men what be gemmen like
+yersef, but dat Dutchman stand da'h a'n't no gentlem', he done gone
+tieffe my money seven time; an' I whip him sure-jus' lef' him come out
+here. I doesn't care for true, and God saw me, I be whip at the wukhouse
+next minute. He tief, an' lie, an 'e cheat me." The Dutchman stood at
+the door with the big stick in his hand-the negro in the middle of the
+lane with his fists in a pugilistic attitude, daring and threatening,
+while the limping Dunn stood by the side of the Dutchman, acting as
+a mediator. Manuel, taking advantage of the opportunity, emptied his
+tumbler down a large opening in the floor.
+
+It is a notorious fact in Charleston, that although the negro, whether
+he be a black or white one, is held in abject obedience to the white man
+proper, no matter what his grade may be, yet such is the covetous and
+condescending character of these groggery keepers, that they become
+courteous to the negro and submit to an equality of sociability. The
+negro, taking advantage of this familiarity, will use the most insulting
+and abusive language to this class of Dutchmen, who, either through
+cowardice, or fear of losing their trade, never resent it. We may say,
+in the language of Dunn, when he was asked if negroes had such liberties
+with white men in Charleston, "A nigger knows a Dutch shopkeeper better
+than he knows himself-a nigger dare not speak that way to anybody else."
+
+The Dutchman gets a double profit from the negro, and with it diffuses
+a double vice among them, for which they have to suffer the severest
+penalty. It is strictly "contrary to law" to purchase any thing from
+a negro without a ticket to sell it, from his master. But how is this
+regarded? Why, the shopkeeper foregoes the ticket, encourages the
+warehouse negro to steal, and purchases his stealings indiscriminately,
+at about one-half their value. We might enumerate fifty different modes
+practised by "good" legal voting citizens--totally regardless of the
+law--and exerting an influence upon the negro tenfold more direful
+than that which could possibly arise from the conversation of a few
+respectable men belonging to a friendly nation.
+
+Dunn, after driving the mulatto man from the door and upbraiding the
+Dutchman for his cowardice, returned to the table, and patting Manuel
+upon the back, drank the balance of his smash, saying, "Come, me good
+fellow, we must do the thing up brown, now; we've got the Dutchman
+nailed on his own hook. We must have another horn; it's just the stuff
+in our climate; the 'Old Jug's' close by, and they'll be makin' a parson
+of you when you get there. We've had a right jolly time; and ye can't
+wet your whistle when ye're fernint the gates."
+
+"I don't ask such favors, and will drink no more," said Manuel.
+
+"Fill her up, Drydez! fill her up! two more smashes-best brandy and
+no mistake. You must drink another, my old chuck-we'll bring the pious
+notions out o' ye in Charleston," said Dunn, turning around to Manuel.
+
+The Dutchman filled the glasses, and Dunn, laying his big hickory stick
+upon the counter, took one in each hand, and going directly to Manuel,
+"There, take it, and drink her off-no humbugging; yer mother niver gave
+such milk as that," said he.
+
+"Excuse me, sir; I positively will not!" said Manuel, and no sooner had
+he lisped the words, than Dunn threw the whole contents in his face.
+Enraged at such outrageous conduct, the poor fellow could stand it no
+longer, and fetched him a blow that levelled him upon the floor.
+
+The Dutchman ran to the assistance of Dunn, and succeeded in relieving
+him from his unenviable situation. Not satisfied, however, they
+succeeded, after a hard struggle, in getting him upon the floor, when
+the Dutchman-after calling the assistance of a miserable negro, held
+him down while Dunn beat him with his stick. His cries of "Murder" and
+"Help" resounded throughout the neighbourhood, and notwithstanding they
+attempted to gag him, brought several persons to the spot. Among them
+was a well-known master builder, in Charleston-a very muscular and a
+very humane man. The rascality of Dunn was no new thing to him, for he
+had had practical demonstrations of it upon his own negroes,--who had
+been enticed into the "corner shops" for the double purpose of the
+Dutchmen getting their money, and the officers getting hush-money from
+the owner.
+
+The moment he saw Dunn, he exclaimed, "Ah! you vagabond!" and springing
+with the nimbleness of a cat, struck the Dutchman a blow that sent him
+measuring his length, into a corner among a lot of empty boxes; then
+seizing Dunn by the collar, he shook him like a puppy, and brought him
+a slap with his open hand that double-dyed his red face, and brought a
+stream of claret from his nose; while the miserable nigger, who had been
+struggling to hold Manuel down, let go his hold, and ran as if his life
+was in danger. The scene was disgusting in the extreme. Manuel arose,
+with his face cut in several places, his clothes bedaubed with filth
+from the floor, and his neck and shirt-bosom covered with blood; while
+the aghast features of Dunn, with his red, matted hair, and his glaring,
+vicious eyes, bespattered with the combined blood of his victim and his
+own nasal organ, gave him the most fiendish look imaginable.
+
+The gentleman, after reprimanding the Dutchman for keeping up these
+miserable practices, which were disgracing the community, and bringing
+suffering, starvation, and death upon the slaves, turned to Dunn, and
+addressed him. "You are a pretty officer of the law! A villain upon the
+highway-a disgrace to your color, and a stain upon those who retain
+you in office. A man who has violated the peace and every principle of
+honest duty, a man who every day merits the worst criminal punishment,
+kept in the favor of the municipal department, to pollute its very name.
+If there is a spark of honesty left in the police department, I will use
+my influence to stop your conduct. The gallows will be your doom yet.
+You must not think because you are leagued in the same traffic."
+
+Dunn kept one of the worst and most notorious drinking-shops in
+Charleston, but, to reconcile his office with that strict requirement
+which never allowed any thing "contrary to law" in Charleston, he made
+his wife a "free trader." This special set of South Carolina may in
+effect be classed among its many singular laws. It has an exceedingly
+accommodating effect among bankrupt husbands, and acts as a masked
+battery for innumerable sins in a business or official line. It so
+happens, once in a while, that one of the "fair free dealers" gets
+into limbo through the force of some ruthless creditor; and the "Prison
+Bounds Act," being very delicate in its bearings, frequently taxes the
+gallantry of the chivalrous gentlemen of the Charleston bar that you are
+to go unpunished. And you, Drydez," said he, turning to the Dutchman, "I
+shall enter you upon the information docket, as soon as I go down into
+the city."
+
+"Zeu may tu vat zeu plas mit me-te mayor bees my friend, an' he knowz
+vot me ams. Yuz sees zel no bronty, no zin! Vot yu to mit de fine, ah?"
+* * *
+
+"I'd like to see you do that same agin Mr.--. It wouldn't be savin'
+yerself a pace-warrant, and another for assault and battery! Sure
+magistrate Gyles is a first-rate friend of me own, and he'd not suffer
+me imposed on. The d--d nigger was obstinate and wouldn't go to jail,"
+said Dunn in a cowardly, whimpering manner.
+
+"Oh yez, me heard mit 'im swore, vat he no go to zale!" rejoined the
+Dutchman anxiously.
+
+"Tell me none of your lies," said he; "you are both the biggest rascals
+in town, and carry on your concerted villany as boldly as if you had
+the control of the city in your hands." Manuel was trembling under the
+emotions of grief and revenge. His Portuguese blood would have revenged
+itself at the poniard's point, but fortunately he had left it in his
+chest. He saw that he had a friend at his hand, and with the earnestness
+of a child, resigned himself to his charge.
+
+In a few minutes quiet was produced, and the gentleman expressing a
+desire to know how the trouble originated, inquired of Manuel how it
+was brought about. But no sooner had he commenced his story, than he was
+interrupted by Dunn asserting his right, according to the laws of South
+Carolina, to make his declaration, which could not be refuted by the
+negro's statement, or even testimony at law; and in another moment
+jumped up, and taking Manuel by the collar, commanded him to come along
+to jail; and turning to the gentleman, dared him to interfere with his
+duty.
+
+"I know how you take people to jail, very well. I'll now see that you
+perform that duty properly, and not torture prisoners from place to
+place before you get there. You inflict a worse punishment in taking
+poor, helpless people to jail, than they suffer after they get there!"
+said he; and immediately joined Manuel and walked to the jail with him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII. THE OLD JAIL.
+
+
+
+THERE are three institutions in Charleston-either of which would be
+a stain upon the name of civilization-standing as emblems of the
+time-established notions of a people, and their cherished love for
+the ancestral relics of a gone-by age. Nothing could point with more
+unerring aim than these sombre monuments do, to the distance behind the
+age that marks the thoughts and actions of the Charlestonians. They are
+the poor-house, hospital, and jail; but as the latter only pertains
+to our present subject, we prefer to speak of it alone, and leave
+the others for another occasion. The workhouse may be said to form an
+exception-that being a new building, recently erected upon a European
+plan. It is very spacious, with an extravagant exterior, surmounted
+by lofty semi-Gothic watch-towers, similar to the old castles upon the
+Rhine. So great was the opposition to building this magnificent temple
+of a workhouse, and so inconsistent, beyond the progress of the age,
+was it viewed by the "manifest ancestry," that it caused the mayor his
+defeat at the following hustings. "Young Charleston" was rebuked for its
+daring progress, and the building is marked by the singular cognomen
+of "Hutchinson's Folly." What is somewhat singular, this magnificent
+building is exclusively for negroes. One fact will show how progressive
+has been the science of law to govern the negro, while those to which
+the white man is subjected are such as good old England conferred upon
+them some centuries ago. For felonious and burglarious offences, a white
+man is confined in the common jail; then dragged to the market-place,
+stripped, and whipped, that the negroes may laugh "and go see buckra
+catch it;" while a negro is sent to the workhouse, confined in his cell
+for a length of time, and then whipped according to modern science,--but
+nobody sees it except by special permission. Thus the negro has the
+advantage of science and privacy.
+
+The jail is a sombre-looking building, with every mark of antiquity
+standing boldly outlined upon its exterior. It is surrounded by a
+high brick wall, and its windows are grated with double rows of bars,
+sufficiently strong for a modern penitentiary. Altogether, its dark,
+gloomy appearance strikes those who approach it, with the thought and
+association of some ancient cruelty. You enter through an iron-barred
+door, and on both sides of a narrow portal leading to the right are four
+small cells and a filthy-looking kitchen, resembling an old-fashioned
+smoke-house. These cells are the debtors'; and as we were passing out,
+after visiting a friend, a lame "molatto-fellow" with scarcely rags to
+cover his nakedness, and filthy beyond description, stood at what was
+called the kitchen door. "That poor dejected object," said our friend,
+"is the cook. He is in for misdemeanor-one of the peculiar shades of
+it, for which a nigger is honored with the jail." "It seems, then, that
+cooking is a punishment in Charleston, and the negro is undergoing the
+penalty," said we. "Yes!" said our friend; "but the poor fellow has a
+sovereign consolation, which few niggers in Charleston can boast of-and
+none of the prisoners here have-he can get enough to eat."
+
+The poor fellow held out his hand as we passed him, and said, "Massa,
+gin poor Abe a piece o' 'bacca'?" We freely gave him all in our
+possession.
+
+On the left side, after passing the main iron door, are the jailer's
+apartments. Passing through another iron door, you ascend a narrow,
+crooked stairs and reach the second story; here are some eight or nine
+miserable cells-some large and some small-badly ventilated, and entirely
+destitute of any kind of furniture: and if they are badly ventilated
+for summer, they are equally badly provided with means to warm them in
+winter. In one of these rooms were nine or ten persons, when we visited
+it; and such was the morbid stench escaping from it, that we were
+compelled to put our handkerchiefs to our faces. This floor is
+appropriated for such crimes as assault and battery; assault and
+battery, with intent to kill; refractory seamen; deserters; violating
+the statutes; suspicion of arson and murder; witnesses; all sorts of
+crimes, varying from the debtor to the positive murderer, burglar,
+and felon. We should have enumerated, among the rest, all stewards,
+(colored,) whether foreign or domestic, who are committed on that
+singular charge, "contrary to law." And it should have been added, even
+though cast away upon our "hospitable shores." Among all these different
+shades of criminals, there must be some very bad men. And we could
+recount three who were pointed out to us, as very dangerous men, yet
+were allowed the favor of this floor and its associations. One was
+an Irish sailor, who was sentenced to three years and nine months'
+imprisonment by the United States court, for revolt and a desperate
+attempt to murder the captain of a ship; the next was a German, a
+soldier in the United States army, sentenced to one year and eight
+months' imprisonment for killing his comrade; and the third was an
+English sailor, who killed a woman-but as she happened to be of doubtful
+character, the presiding judge of the sessions sentenced him to a light
+imprisonment, which the Governor very condescendingly pardoned after a
+few weeks.
+
+The two former acted as attendants, or deputy jailers; with the
+exception of turning the key, which privilege the jailer reserved for
+himself exclusively. The principle may seem a strange one, that places
+men confined upon such grave charges in a superior position over
+prisoners; and may be questionable with regard to the discipline itself.
+
+From this floor, another iron door opened, and a winding passage led
+into the third and upper story, where a third iron door opened into a
+vestibule, on the right and left of which were grated doors secured with
+heavy bolts and bars. These opened into narrow portals with dark, gloomy
+cells on each side. In the floor of each of these cells was a large iron
+ring-bolt, doubtless intended to chain refractory prisoners to; but we
+were informed that such prisoners were kept in close stone cells, in
+the yard, which were commonly occupied by negroes and those condemned
+to capital punishment. The ominous name of this third story was "Mount
+Rascal," intended, no doubt, as significant of the class of prisoners
+it contained. It is said that genius is never idle: the floor of these
+cells bore some evidence of the fact in a variety of very fine specimens
+of carving and flourish work, done with a knife. Among them was a
+well-executed crucifix; with the Redeemer, on Calvary-an emblem of hope,
+showing how the man marked the weary moments of his durance. We spoke
+with many of the prisoners, and heard their different stories, some of
+which were really painful. Their crimes were variously stated, from that
+of murder, arson, and picking pockets, down to the felon who had stolen
+a pair of shoes to cover his feet; one had stolen a pair of pantaloons,
+and a little boy had stolen a few door-keys. Three boys were undergoing
+their sentence for murder. A man of genteel appearance, who had been
+sentenced to three years imprisonment, and to receive two hundred and
+twenty lashes in the market, at different periods, complained bitterly
+of the injustice of his case. Some had been flogged in the market, and
+were awaiting their time to be flogged again and discharged; and others
+were confined on suspicion, and had been kept in this close durance
+for more than six months, awaiting trial. We noticed that this worst of
+injustice, "the law's delay," was felt worse by those confined on the
+suspicion of some paltry theft, who, even were they found guilty by a
+jury, would not have been subjected to more than one week imprisonment.
+Yet such was the adherence to that ancient system of English criminal
+jurisprudence, that it was almost impossible for the most innocent
+person to get a hearing, except at the regular sessions, "which sit
+seldom, and with large intervals between." There is indeed a city
+court in Charleston, somewhat more modern in its jurisprudence than the
+sessions. It has its city sheriff, and its city officers, and holds its
+terms more frequently. Thus is Charleston doubly provided with sheriffs
+and officials. Both aspire to a distinct jurisdiction in civil and
+criminal cases. Prisoners seem mere shuttlecocks between the sheriffs,
+with a decided advantage in favor of the county sheriff, who is autocrat
+in rei over the jail; and any criminal who has the good fortune to get
+a hearing before the city judge, may consider himself under special
+obligation to the county sheriff for the favor.
+
+We noticed these cells were much cleaner than those below, yet there
+was a fetid smell escaping from them. This we found arose from the tubs
+being allowed to stand in the rooms, where the criminals were closely
+confined, for twenty-four hours, which, with the action of the damp,
+heated atmosphere of that climate, was of itself enough to breed
+contagion. We spoke of the want of ventilation and the noxious fumes
+that seemed almost pestilential, but they seemed to have become
+habituated to it, and told us that the rooms on the south side were
+lighter and more comfortable. Many of them spoke cheerfully, and
+endeavored to restrain their feelings, but the furrows upon their
+haggard countenances needed no tongue to utter its tale.
+
+Hunger was the great grievance of which they complained; and if
+their stories were true--and we afterward had strong proofs that they
+were--there was a wanton disregard of common humanity, and an abuse of
+power the most reprehensible. The allowance per day was a loaf of bad
+bread, weighing about nine ounces, and a pint of thin, repulsive soup,
+so nauseous that only the most necessitated appetite could be forced
+to receive it, merely to sustain animal life. This was served in a
+dirty-looking tin pan, without even a spoon to serve it. One man told us
+that he had subsisted on bread and water for nearly five weeks-that
+he had lain down to sleep in the afternoon and dreamed that he was
+devouring some wholesome nourishment to stay the cravings of his
+appetite, and awoke to grieve that it was but a dream. In this manner
+his appetite was doubly aggravated, yet he could get nothing to appease
+its wants until the next morning. To add to this cruelty, we found two
+men in close confinement, the most emaciated and abject specimens of
+humanity we have ever beheld. We asked ourselves, "Lord God! was it
+to be that humanity should descend so low?" The first was a forlorn,
+dejected-looking creature, with a downcast countenance, containing
+little of the human to mark his features. His face was covered with
+hair, and so completely matted with dirt and made fiendish by the tufts
+of coarse hair that hung over his forehead, that a thrill of horror
+invaded our feelings. He had no shoes on his feet; and a pair of ragged
+pantaloons, and the shreds of a striped shirt without sleeves, secured
+around the waist with a string, made his only clothing. In truth, he had
+scarce enough on to cover his nakedness, and that so filthy and swarming
+with vermin, that he kept his shoulders and hands busily employed; while
+his skin was so incrusted with dirt as to leave no trace of its original
+complexion. In this manner he was kept closely confined, and was more
+like a wild beast who saw none but his keepers when they came to throw
+him his feed. Whether he was kept in this manner for his dark deeds or
+to cover the shame of those who speculated upon his misery, we leave to
+the judgment of the reader.
+
+We asked this poor mortal what he had done to merit such a punishment?
+He held his head down, and motioned his fevered lips. "Speak out!" said
+we, "perhaps we can get you out." "I had no shoes, and I took a pair
+of boots from the gentleman I worked with," said he in a low, murmuring
+tone,
+
+"Gracious, man!" said we, "a pair of boots! and is that all you are here
+for?"
+
+"Yes, sir! he lives on the wharf, is very wealthy, and is a good man:
+'t wasn't his fault, because he tried to get me out if I'd pay for the
+boots, but they wouldn't let him."
+
+"And how long have you been thus confined?" said we.
+
+"Better than five months-but it's because there a'n't room up stairs.
+They've been promising me some clothes for a long time, but they don't
+come," he continued.
+
+"And how much longer have you to stop in this condition?"
+
+"Well, they say 'at court sets in October; it's somethin' like two
+months off; the grand jury'll visit the jail then, and maybe they'll
+find a bill' against me, and I'll be tried. I dont't care if they only
+don't flog me in that fish-market."
+
+"Then you have not been tried yet? Well, may God give that man peace
+to enjoy his bounty, who would consign a poor object like thee to such
+cruelty!" said we.
+
+"I was raised in Charleston-can neither read nor write-I have no father,
+and my mother is crazy in the poor-house, and I work about the city for
+a living, when I'm out!" said he. There was food for reflection in
+this poor fellow's simple story, which we found to be correct, as
+corroborated by the jailer.
+
+"Do you get enough to eat?" we asked.
+
+"Oh no, indeed! I could eat twice as much-that's the worst on't: 't
+wouldn't be bad only for that. I git me loaf' in the mornin', and me
+soup at twelve, but I don't git nothin' to eat at night, and a feller's
+mighty hungry afore it's time to lay down," said he.
+
+We looked around the room, and not seeing any thing to sleep upon,
+curiosity led us to ask him where he slept.
+
+"The jail allows us a blanket-that's mine in the corner: I spread it
+at night when I wants to go to bed," he answered, quite contentedly. We
+left the poor wretch, for our feelings could withstand it no longer. The
+state of society that would thus reduce a human being, needed more pity
+than the calloused bones reduced to such a bed. His name was Bergen.
+
+The other was a young Irishman, who had been dragged to jail in his
+shirt, pantaloons, and hat, on suspicion of having stolen seven dollars
+from a comrade. He had been in jail very near four months, and in regard
+to filth and vermin was a counterpart of the other. A death-like smell,
+so offensive that we stopped upon the threshold, escaped from the room
+as soon as the door opened, enough to destroy a common constitution,
+which his emaciated limbs bore the strongest evidence of.
+
+The prisoners upon the second story were allowed the privilege of the
+yard during certain hours in the day, and the debtors at all hours in
+the day; yet, all were subjected to the same fare. In the yard were a
+number of very close cells, which, as we have said before, were kept
+for negroes, refractory criminals, and those condemned to capital
+punishment. These cells seemed to be held as a terror over the
+criminals, and well they might, for we never witnessed any thing more
+dismal for the tenement of man.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII. HOW IT IS.
+
+
+
+IT is our object to show the reader how many gross abuses of power exist
+in Charleston, and to point him to the source. In doing this, the task
+becomes a delicate one, for there are so many things we could wish were
+not so, because we know there are many good men in the community whose
+feelings are enlisted in the right, but their power is not coequal; and
+if it were, it is checked by an opposite influence.
+
+The more intelligent of the lower classes look upon the subject of
+politics in its proper light--they see the crashing effect the doctrine
+of nullification has upon their interests; yet, though their numbers
+are not few, their voice is small, and cannot sound through the channels
+that make popular influence. Thus all castes of society are governed by
+impracticable abstractions.
+
+The jail belongs to the county--the municipal authorities have no voice
+in it; and the State, in its legislative benevolence, has provided
+thirty cents a day for the maintenance of each prisoner. This small sum,
+in the State of South Carolina, where provision is extremely high, may
+be considered as a paltry pittance; but more especially so when the
+magnificent pretensions of South Carolina are taken into consideration,
+and a comparison is made between this meagre allowance and that of other
+States. Even Georgia, her sister State, and one whose plain modesty is
+really worthy of her enterprising citizens, takes a more enlightened
+view of a criminal's circumstances-allows forty-four cents a day for his
+maintenance, and treats him as if he was really a human being. But
+for this disparity and the wanton neglect of humane feelings South
+Carolinians excuse themselves upon the ground that they have no
+penitentiary; nor do they believe in that system of punishment,
+contending that it creates an improper competition with the honest
+mechanic, and gives countenance to crime, because it attempts to improve
+criminals. The common jail is made the place of confinement, while the
+whipping-post and starvation supply the correctives.
+
+The sheriff being created an absolute functionary, with unlimited
+powers to control the jail in all its varied functions, without either
+commissioners or jail-committee, what state of management may be
+expected? The court gives no specific direction as to the apartment or
+mode of confinement when sentencing a criminal; consequently, it becomes
+an established fact that the legislative confidence deposed in the
+sheriff is used as a medium of favors, to be dispensed as best suits the
+feelings or interests of the incumbent. Such power in the hands of an
+arbitrary, vindictive, or avaricious man, affords unlimited means of
+abuse, and without fear of exposure.
+
+It may be inferred from what we have said that the jailer was relax in
+his duty. This is not the case, for we have good authority that a more
+kind-hearted and benevolent man never filled the office. But his power
+was so restricted by those in absolute control, that his office became a
+mere turnkey's duty, for which he was paid the pittance of five hundred
+dollars a year or thereabouts. Thus he discharged his duty according to
+the instructions of the sheriff, who, it was well known, looked upon
+the jail as a means of speculation; and in carrying out his purposes, he
+would give very benevolent instructions in words, and at the same time
+withhold the means of carrying them out, like the very good man who
+always preached but never practised.
+
+Now, how is it? What is the regimen of this jail-prison and how is it
+provided? We will say nothing of that arduous duty which the jailer
+performs for his small sum; nor the report that the sheriff's office
+is worth fourteen thousand dollars a year: these things are too well
+established. But the law provides thirty cents a day for the prisoner's
+maintenance, which shall be received by the sheriff, who is to procure
+one pound of good bread, and one pound of good beef per day for each
+man. Now this provision is capable of a very elastic construction. The
+poor criminal is given a loaf of bad bread, costing about three cents,
+and a pound of meat, the most unwholesome and sickly in its appearance,
+costing five cents. Allowing a margin, however, and we may say the
+incumbent has a very nice profit of from eighteen to twenty cents
+per day on each prisoner. But, as no provision is made against the
+possibility of the criminal eating his meat raw, he is very delicately
+forced to an alternative which has another profitable issue for the
+sheriff; that of taking a pint of diluted water, very improperly called
+soup. Thus is carried out that ancient law of England which even she
+is now ashamed to own. Our feelings are naturally roused against the
+perpetration of such abuses upon suffering humanity. We struggle between
+a wish to speak well of her whose power it is to practise them, and an
+imperative duty that commands us to speak for those who cannot speak for
+themselves.
+
+These things could not exist if the public mind was properly
+enlightened. It is unnecessary to spend many words in exposing
+such palpable abuses, or to trace the cause of their existence and
+continuance. One cause of this is the wilful blindness and silly
+gasconade of some of those who lead and form public opinion. With South
+Carolinians, nothing is done in South Carolina that is not greater than
+ever was done in the United States-no battles were ever fought that
+South Carolina did not win-no statesman was ever equal to Mr. Calhoun-no
+confederacy would be equal to the Southern, with South Carolina at its
+head-no political doctrines contain so much vital element as secession,
+and no society in the Union is equal to South Carolina for caste and
+elegance-not excepting the worthy and learned aristocracy of Boston.
+
+A will to do as it pleases and act as it pleases, without national
+restraint, is the great drawback under which South Carolina sends forth
+her groaning tale of political distress. Let her look upon her dubious
+glory in its proper light-let her observe the rights of others, and
+found her acts in justice!--annihilate her grasping spirit, and she will
+find a power adequate to her own preservation. She can then show to the
+world that she gives encouragement to the masses, and is determined to
+persevere in that moderate and forbearing policy which creates its own
+protection, merits admiration abroad, instead of rebuke, and which
+needs no gorgeous military display to marshal peace at the point of the
+bayonet.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV. MANUEL PEREIRA COMMITTED.
+
+
+
+IT was nearly eleven o'clock as they ascended the jail steps and rang
+the bell for admittance. The jailer, a stout, rough-looking man, opened
+the iron door, and as Manuel was about to step over the stone sill, Dunn
+gave him a sudden push that sent him headlong upon the floor. "Heavens!
+what now?" inquired the jailer with a look of astonishment, and at the
+next moment Dunn raised his foot to kick Manuel in the face.
+
+"You infernal beast!" said the jailer, "you are more like a savage than
+a man-you are drunk now, you vagabond," and jumped in between them to
+save him from the effect of the blow. As he did this, the gentleman who
+accompanied them from the "corner-shop," as a protection against Dunn's
+cruelty, fetched Dunn a blow on the back of the neck that made him
+stagger against a door, and created such confusion as to arouse the
+whole jail. Turning to Manuel, he, with the assistance of the jailer,
+raised him from the ground and led him into the jail-office. "Mister
+jailer," said Dunn, "the prisoner is mine until such times as you
+receipt the commitment, and I demand protection from you against this
+man. He has committed two violent assaults upon me, when I'd be doing me
+duty."
+
+"You have violated all duty, and are more like an incarnate fiend. You
+first decoy men into rum-shops, and then you plunder and abuse them,
+because you think they are black and can get no redress. You abused that
+man unmercifully, because you knew his evidence was not valid against
+you!" said the gentleman, turning to the jailer, and giving him the
+particulars of what he saw in the "corner-shop," and what cruelties he
+had seen practised by Dunn on former occasions.
+
+The jailer looked upon Manuel with commiseration, and handed him a chair
+to sit down on. The poor fellow was excited and fatigued, for he had
+eaten nothing that day, and been treated more like a brute than a human
+being from the time, he left the ship until he arrived at the jail. He
+readily accepted the kind offer, and commenced to tell the story of his
+treatment.
+
+"You need' not tell me,--I know too much of that man already. It has
+long been a mystery to me why he is retained in office."--
+
+Here Dunn interrupted. "Sure it's yer master I'd obey and not yerself,
+an' I'd do what I'd plase with prisoners, and, it's his business and not
+yeers. If ye had yer way, sure you'd be makin' white men of every nigger
+that ye turned a key upon."
+
+"Give me none of your insolence," said the jailer. "You have no
+authority beyond my door. Your brutal treatment to prisoners has caused
+me an immense deal of trouble-more than my paltry pay would induce me
+to stay for. Suppose you were indicted for these outrages? What would be
+the result?" asked the jailer.
+
+"Sure it's meself could answer for the sheriff, without yer bothering
+yerself. I'd not work for yer, but for him; and he's yer master anyhow,
+and knows all about it. Give me the receipt, and that's all I'd ax yer.
+When a nigger don't mind me, I just makes him feel the delight of a
+hickory stick."
+
+"Yes, if you had the shame of a man in you, you'd not make a beast of
+yourself with liquor, and treat these poor stewards as if they were
+dogs," said the jailer.
+
+"Indeed, ye might learn a thing or two if ye was a politician like
+meself, and belonged to the secession party. An' if his honor the
+sheriff-for he's a dacent man-knew ye'd be preachin' in that shape, ye
+wouldn't keep the jail f'nent the morning. Be letting me out, and make
+much of the nigger; ye have him there."
+
+The jailer unlocked the door and allowed him to pass out, with a
+pertinent rebuke. This was but a trifling affair in Dunn's ear, for he
+knew his master's feelings too well, and was backed by him in his most
+intolerable proceedings. Returning to the office, he looked at the
+commitment, and then again at Manuel. "This is a 'contrary to law' case,
+I see, Mr. Manuel; you are a likely fellow too, to come within that,"
+said he.
+
+"Yes. If I understand him right, he's a shipwrecked sailor, belonging
+to a foreign vessel that was driven in here in distress," said the
+man. "It's a hard law that imprisons a colored seaman who comes here
+voluntarily; but it seems beyond all manner of precedent to imprison
+a shipwrecked man like this, especially when he seems so respectable.
+There are no circumstances to warrant the enforcement of such a law."
+Thus saying, he left the jail.
+
+Be it said of the jailer, to his honor, so far as personal kindness
+went, he did his utmost--brought him water to wash himself, and gave
+him some clean clothes. After which, he was registered upon the criminal
+calendar as follows:--
+
+"March 24, 1852.--Manuel Peirire.--[Committed by] Sheriff--Sheriff.
+Crime--Contrary to law."
+
+Now the jailer had done his duty, so far as his feelings were concerned;
+but, such were the stern requirements of the law, and his functions
+so restricted by Mr. Grimshaw, that he dare not make distinctions. He
+called Daley, one of the criminal assistants, and ordered him to show
+the prisoner his room.
+
+"Here, my boy, take yer blanket," said Daley; and throwing him a coarse,
+filthy-looking blanket, told him to roll it up and follow him. "It's on
+the second floor we'll put ye, among the stewards; there's a nice lot
+on 'em to keep yer company, and ye'll have a jolly time, my boy." Manuel
+followed through the second iron door until he came to a large door
+secured with heavy bolts and bars, which Daley began to withdraw and
+unlock. "Don't be takin' it amiss; it's a right good crib, savin' the'
+bed, an' it's that's the worst of it. Bad luck to old Grimshaw, an'
+himself thinks everybody's bones be's as tuf as his own," said Daley,
+and threw open the heavy doors, sending forth those ominous prison
+sounds. "All here? Ah! yer a pretty set of lambs, as the British consul
+calls yees. Have ye ever a drop to spare?" At this, three or four
+respectable-looking black men came to the door and greeted Manuel.
+"Come, talk her out, for th' auld man'll be on the scent." At this, one
+of the confined stewards, a tall, good-looking mulatto man, ran his hand
+into a large opening in the wall, and drew forth a little soda-bottle
+filled with Monongahela whisky. Without giving reasonable time for
+politeness, Daley seized the bottle, and putting it to his mouth, gauged
+about half its contents into his homony dept, smacked his lips,
+wiped his mouth with his cuff, and, passing the balance back, shut and
+rebolted the door, after saying, "Good luck till yees, an' I wish yees
+a merry time." The reader may imagine what provision the State or the
+sheriff had made for the comfort of these poor men, one of whom was
+imprisoned because it was "contrary to law" to be driven into the port
+of Charleston in distress, and the rest, peaceable, unoffending citizens
+belonging to distant States and countries, and guilty of no crime, when
+we describe the room and regimen to which they were subjected. The room
+was about twenty-six feet long and ten feet wide. The brick walls were
+plastered and colored with some kind of blue wash, which, however, was
+so nearly obliterated with dirt and the damp of a southern climate, as
+to leave but little to show what its original color was. The walls were
+covered with the condensed moisture of the atmosphere, spiders hung
+their festooned network overhead, and cockroaches and ants, those
+domesticated pests of South Carolina, were running about the floor in
+swarms, and holding all legal rights to rations in superlative contempt.
+Two small apertures in the wall, about fourteen inches square, and
+double-barred with heavy flat iron, served to admit light and air. The
+reader may thus judge of its gloomy appearance, and what a miserable
+unhealthy cell it must have been in which to place men just arrived from
+sea. There was not the first vestige of furniture in the room, not;
+even a bench to sit upon, for the State, with its gracious hospitality,
+forgot that men in jail ever sit down; but it was in keeping with all
+other things that the State left to the control of its officials.
+
+"Am I to be punished in this miserable place? Why, I cannot see where
+I'm going; and have I nothing to lay down upon but the floor, and that
+creeping with live creatures?" inquired Manuel of those who were already
+inured to the hardship.
+
+"Nothing! nothing! Bring your mind to realize the worst, and forget the
+cruelty while you are suffering it; they let us out a part of the day.
+We are locked up to-day because one of the assistants stole my friend's
+liquor, and he dared to accuse him of the theft, because he was a white
+man," said a tall, fine-looking mulatto man by the name of James Redman,
+who was steward on board a Thomastown (Maine) ship, and declared that he
+had visited Charleston on a former occasion, and by paying five dollars
+to one of the officers, remained on board of the ship unmolested.
+
+"And how long shall I have to suffer in this manner?" inquired Manuel.
+"Can I not have my own bed and clothing?"
+
+"Oh, yes," said Redman; "you can have them, but if you bring them here,
+they'll not be worth anything when you leave; and the prisoners upon
+this floor are so starved and destitute, that necessity forces them
+to steal whatever comes in their way; and the assistants are as much
+implicated as the prisoners. You'll fare hard; but just do as we do in
+a calm, wait for the wind to blow, and pray for the best. If you say any
+thing, or grumble about it, the sheriff will order you locked, up on the
+third story, and that's worse than death itself. The first thing you do,
+make preparations for something to eat. We pay for it here, but don't
+get it; and you'd starve afore you'd eat what they give them poor white
+prisoners. They suffer worse than we do, only they have cleaner rooms."
+
+"I pray for my deliverance from such a place as this."
+
+His manners and appearance at once enlisted the respect of those
+present, and they immediately set to work, with all the means at hand,
+to make him comfortable. Joseph Jociquei, a young man who had been taken
+from a vessel just arrived from Rio, and was more fortunate than the
+rest, in having a mattrass, seeing Manuel's weak condition, immediately
+removed it from its place, and spreading it upon the floor, invited him
+to lay down. The invitation was as acceptable as it was kind on the
+part of Jociquei, and the poor fellow laid his weary limbs upon it, and
+almost simultaneously fell into a profound sleep. Manuel continued to
+sleep. His face and head were scarred in several places; which were
+dressed and covered with pieces of plaster that the jailer had supplied.
+His companions, for such we shall call those who were confined with him,
+sat around him, discussing the circumstances that brought him there, and
+the manner in which they could best relieve his suffering. "It's just
+as I was sarved," said Redman. "And I'll bet that red-headed constable,
+Dunn, brought him up: and abused him in all them Dutch shops. I didn't
+know the law, and he made me give him three dollars not to put the
+handcuffs upon me, and then I had to treat him in every grog-shop we
+came to. Yes, and the last shop we were in, he throw'd liquor in me
+face, cursed the Dutchman that kept the shop, kick'd me, and tried every
+way in the world to raise a fuss. If I hadn't know'd the law here too
+well, I'd whipt him sure. I have suffered the want of that three dollars
+since I bin here. 'Twould sarved me for coffee. We have neither coffee
+nor bread to-night, for we gave our allowance of bad bread to the white
+prisoners, but we must do something to make the poor fellow comfortable.
+I know the constable has kept him all day coming up, and he'll be hungry
+as soon as he awakes."
+
+"Won't he receive his allowance to-day like another prisoner?" inquired
+Copeland, a thick-set, well made, dark-skinned negro steward, who had
+formerly conducted a barber shop in Fleet street, Boston, but was now
+attached to the schooner Oscar Jones, Kellogg, master.
+
+"Oh! no, sir," said Redman, "that's against the rules of the jail-every
+thing is done by rule here, even to paying for what we don't get, and
+starving the prisoners. A man that don't come in before eleven o'clock
+gets no ration until the next morning. I know, because I had a fuss with
+the jailer about it, the first day I was brought in; but he gin me a
+loaf out of his own house. The old sheriff never allows any thing done
+outside the rules, for he's tighter than a mantrap. 'T a'n't what ye
+suffers in this cell, but it's what ye don't get to eat; and if that
+poor feller a'n't got money, he'll wish himself alongside the caboose
+again 'fore he gets out." The poor fellows were driven to the extreme of
+providing sustenance to sustain life. They mustered their little means
+together, and by giving a sum to the sheriff's black boy, (a man more
+intelligent, gentlemanly, and generous-hearted than his master,) had a
+measure of coffee, sugar, and bread brought in. Necessity was the mother
+of invention with them, for they had procured a barrel for twenty-five
+cents, and made it supply the place of a table. With a few chips that
+were brought to them by a kind-hearted colored woman that did their
+washing, and bestowed many little acts of kindness, they made a fire,
+endured the annoyance of a dense smoke from the old fire-place, and
+prepared their little supper. As soon as it was upon the table, they
+awoke Manuel, and invited him to join in their humble fare. The poor
+fellow arose, and looking around the gloomy, cavern-like place, heaved a
+deep sigh. "It's hard to be brought to this for nothing!" said he; "and
+my bones are so sore that I can scarcely move. I must see the Captain
+and consul."
+
+"That won't do any good; you might as well keep quiet and drink your
+coffee. A prisoner that says the least in this jail is best off,"
+returned Redman.
+
+Manuel took his bowl of coffee and a piece of bread, eating it with a
+good appetite, and asking what time they got breakfast. "It's the first
+time I was abused in a foreign country. I'm Portuguese, but a citizen of
+Great Britain, and got my protection.-When it won't save me, I'll never
+come to South Carolina again, nor sail where a flag won't protect me.
+When I go among Patagonians, I know what they do; but when I sail
+to United States or be cast away on them, I don't know what they do,
+because I expect good people." * * *
+
+"Never mind, my good fellow," said Redman; "cheer up, take it as a good
+sailor would a storm, and in the morning you'll get a small loaf of sour
+bread and a bucket of water for breakfast, if you go to the pump for it.
+Be careful to moderate your appetite when you breakfast according to the
+State's rules; for you must save enough to last you during the day, and
+if you can keep "banyan day," as the Bluenose calls it, you're just the
+man for this institution, and no mistake. Come, I see you're hungry;
+drink another bowl of coffee, and eat plenty of bread; then you'll be
+all right for another good sleep."
+
+"Yes, but I don't expect to be in here long. But tell me, do we get
+nothing more than a loaf? didn't the jail give us this supper?" he
+inquired with surprise.
+
+"Supper, indeed!--it's against the rules for prisoners to have coffee;
+that's our private fixings; but you'll get a pound of bloody neck-bone,
+they call beef, in the morning. I have twice thrown mine to the dog,
+but he doesn't seem to thank me for it; so I told the cook he needn't
+trouble his steelyards for me again."
+
+Redman's conversation was interrupted by a noise that seemed to be a
+ring of the prison bell, and an anxious expression which Manuel gave
+utterance to, indicated that he expected somebody would come to see him.
+He was not disappointed, for a few minutes after, the bolts were heard
+to withdraw and the heavy door swung back. There, true to his charge,
+was little Tommy, in his nicest blue rig, tipped off a la man-o'-war
+touch, with his palmetto-braid hat,--a long black ribbon displayed over
+the rim,--his hair combed so slick, and his little round face and red
+cheeks so plump and full of the sailor-boy pertness, with his blue,
+braided shirt-collar laid over his jacket, and set off around the neck,
+with a black India handkerchief, secured at the throat with the joint
+of a shark's backbone. He looked the very picture and pattern of a
+Simon-Pure salt. He had wended his way through strange streets and
+lanes, with a big haversack under his arm, which Daley had relieved
+him of at the door, and brought into the room under his arm. As soon as
+Manuel caught a glimpse of him, he rose and clasped the little fellow
+in his arms with a fond embrace. No greeting could be more affecting.
+Manuel exulted at seeing his little companion; but Tommy looked grieved,
+and asked, "But what has scarred your face so, Manuel? You didn't look
+that way when you left the brig. We have had a site o' folks down to see
+us to-day."
+
+"Oh, that's nothing!--just a little fall I got; don't tell the Captain:
+it'll all be well to-morrow."
+
+"Here, Jack, take your knapsack; did yer bring ever a drop o' liquor for
+the steward?" said Daley, addressing himself to Tommy, and putting the
+package upon the floor.
+
+"Yes, Manuel!" said Tommy, "the Captain sent you some nice bread and
+ham, some oranges and raisins, and a bottle of nice claret,--for he was
+told by the consul that they didn't give 'em nothing to eat at the
+jail. And I had a tug with 'em, I tell you. I got lost once, and got a
+good-natured black boy to pilot me for a Victoria threepence,--but he
+did not like to carry the bundle to the jail, for fear of his master.
+Captain 'll be up first thing in the morning, if he can get away from
+business," said the little tar, opening the haversack and pulling out
+its contents to tempt the hungry appetites of those around him.
+
+Daley very coolly took the bottle of claret by the neck, and holding it
+between himself and the light, took a lunar squint at it, as if doubting
+its contents; and then, putting it down, exclaimed, "Ah! the divil a red
+I'd give you for your claret. Sure, why didn't ye bring a token of
+good old hardware?" "Hardware! what is hardware?" inquired Manuel. "Ah!
+botheration to the bunch of yees--a drap of old whiskey, that 'd make
+the delight cum f'nent. Have ye ne'er a drap among the whole o' yees?"
+Receiving an answer in the negative, he turned about with a Kilkenny,
+"It don't signify," and toddled for the door, which he left open, to
+await Tommy's return. Redman knew Daley's propensity too well, and
+having ocular proof that he had wet t'other eye until it required
+more than ordinary effort to make either one stay open, he declined
+recognising his very significant hint.
+
+As soon as Daley withdrew, Manuel invited his companions to partake of
+the Captain's present, which they did with general satisfaction.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV. THE LAW'S INTRICACY.
+
+
+
+WHILE the scenes we have described in the foregoing chapter were being
+performed, several very interesting ones were going through the course
+of performance at the consul's office and other places, which we must
+describe. The British Government, in its instructions to Mr. Mathew,
+impressed upon him the necessity of being very cautious lest he should
+in any manner prejudice the interests of the local institutions within
+his consular jurisdiction; to make no requests that were incompatible
+with the local laws; but to pursue a judicious course in bringing the
+matter of Her Majesty's subjects properly to the consideration of
+the legal authorities, and to point to the true grievance; and as it
+involved a question of right affecting the interests and liberties of
+her citizens, to ask the exercise of that judicial power from which it
+had a right to expect justice. The main object was to test the question
+whether this peculiar construction given to that local law which
+prohibits free colored men from coming within the limits of the State,
+was legal in its application to those who come into its ports connected
+with the shipping interests, pursuing an honest vocation, and intending
+to leave whenever their ship was ready. The consul was censured by the
+press in several of the slaveholding States, because he dared to bring
+the matter before the local legislature. We are bound to say that Consul
+Mathew, knowing the predominant prejudices of the Carolinians, acted
+wisely in so doing. First, he knew the tenacious value they put upon
+courtesy; secondly, the point at issue between South Carolina and the
+Federal Government, (and, as a learned friend in Georgia once said,
+"Whether South Carolina belonged to the United States, or the United
+States to South Carolina;") and thirdly, the right of State sovereignty,
+which South Carolina held to be of the first importance. To disregard
+the first, would have been considered an insult to the feelings of
+her people; and if the question had first been mooted with the Federal
+Government, the ire of South Carolinians would have been fired; the
+slur in placing her in a secondary position would have sounded the
+war-trumpet of Abolition encroachments, while the latter would have been
+considered a breach of confidence, and an unwarrantable disregard of her
+assertion of State rights. The Executive transmitted the documents to
+the Assembly, that body referred them to special committees, and the
+Messrs. Mazyck and McCready, reported as everybody in South Carolina
+expected, virtually giving the British consul a very significant
+invitation to keep his petitions in his pocket for the future, and his
+"black lambs" out of the State, or it might disturb their domesticated
+ideas. Thus was the right clearly reserved to themselves, and the
+question settled, so far as the State Legislature was concerned. The
+next course for Mr. Mathew was to appeal to the Judiciary, and should
+redress be denied, make it the medium of bringing the matter, before the
+Federal courts.
+
+We cannot forbear to say, that the strenuous opposition waged against
+this appeal of common humanity arose from political influence, supported
+by a set of ultra partisans, whose theoretical restrictions, assisted
+by the voice of the press, catered to the war-spirit of the
+abstractionists.
+
+The British consul, as the representative of his government, knowing the
+personal suffering to which the subjects of his country were subjected
+by the wretched state of the Charleston prison, and its management,
+sought to remove no restriction that might be necessary for protecting
+their dangerous institutions, but to relieve that suffering. He had
+pointed the authorities to the wretched state of the prison, and the
+inhuman regimen which existed within it; but, whether through that
+superlative carelessness which has become so materialized in the spirit
+of society--that callousness to misfortune so strongly manifested by the
+rich toward the industrious poor and the slaves-or, a contempt for
+his opinions, because he had followed out the instructions of his
+government, things went on in the same neglected manner and no attention
+was paid to them.
+
+Now, we dare assert that a large, portion of the excitement which the
+question has caused has arisen from personal suffering, consequent upon
+that wretched state of jail provisions which exists in South Carolina,
+and which, to say the least, is degrading to the spirit and character of
+a proud people. If a plea could be made, for excuse, upon the shattered
+finances of the State, we might tolerate something of the abuse. But
+this is not the case; and when its privileges become reposed in men who
+make suffering the means to serve their own interests, its existence
+becomes an outrage.
+
+A stronger evidence of the cause of these remonstrances on the part
+of the British Government, is shown by the manner in which it has been
+submitted to in Georgia. The British consul of the port of Savannah, a
+gentleman whose intelligence and humane feelings are no less remarkable
+than Mr. Mathew's, has never had occasion to call the attention of
+the Executive of Georgia to the abuse of power consequent upon the
+imprisonment of colored seamen belonging to the ships of Great Britain
+in that port. The seaman was imprisoned, consequently deprived of his
+liberty; but there was no suffering attendant beyond the loss of liberty
+during the stay of the vessel; for the imprisonment itself was a nominal
+thing; the imprisoned was well cared for; he had good, comfortable
+apartments, cleanly and well ordered, away from the criminals, and
+plenty of good, wholesome food to eat. There was even a satisfaction in
+this, for the man got what he paid for, and was treated as if he were
+really a human being. Thus, with the exception of the restriction on the
+man's liberty, and that evil, which those interested in commerce would
+reflect upon as a tax upon the marine interests of the port to support a
+municipal police, because it imposes a tax and burdensome annoyance upon
+owners for that which they have no interest in and can derive no benefit
+from, the observance of the law had more penalty in mental anxiety than
+bodily suffering. We have sometimes been at a loss to account for the
+restriction, even as it existed in Georgia, and especially when
+we consider the character of those controlling and developing the
+enterprising commercial affairs of Savannah.
+
+But we must return to South Carolina. If we view this law as a police
+regulation, it only gives us broader latitude. If a community has that
+within itself which is dangerous to its well-being, it becomes pertinent
+to inquire whether there is not an imperfect state of society existing,
+and whether this policy is not injurious to the well-being of the State.
+The evil, though it be a mortifying fact, we are bound to say, arises
+from a strange notion of caste and color, which measures sympathy
+according to complexion. There is no proof that can possibly be adduced,
+showing that colored seamen have made any infections among the slaves,
+or sought to increase the dangers of her peculiar institution.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI. PLEA OF JUST CONSIDERATION AND MISTAKEN CONSTANCY OF THE
+LAWS.
+
+
+
+THE consul's office opened at nine o'clock,--the Captain, with his
+register-case and shipping papers under his arm, presented himself to
+Mr. Mathew, handed him his papers, and reported his condition. That
+gentleman immediately set about rendering every facility to relieve his
+immediate wants and further his business. The consul was a man of plain,
+unassuming manners, frank in his expressions, and strongly imbued with
+a sense of his rights, and the faith of his Government,--willing to take
+an active part in obtaining justice, and, a deadly opponent to wrong,
+regardless of the active hostility that surrounded him. After relating
+the incidents of his voyage, and the circumstances connected with
+Manuel's being dragged to prison,--"Can it be possible that the law is
+to be carried to such an extreme?" said he, giving vent to his feelings.
+
+"Your people seem to have a strange manner of exhibiting their
+hospitality," said the Captain, in reply.
+
+"That is true; but it will not do to appeal to the officials." Thus
+saying, the consul prepared the certificate, and putting on his hat,
+repaired to the jail. Here he questioned Manuel upon the circumstances
+of his arrest, his birthplace, and several other things. "I am not sure
+that I can get you out, Manuel, but I will do my best; the circumstances
+of your being driven in here in distress will warrant some consideration
+in your case; yet the feeling is not favorable, and we cannot expect
+much."
+
+From thence he proceeded to the office of Mr. Grimshaw, where he met
+that functionary, seated in all the dignity of his office.
+
+"Good morning, Mr. Consul. Another of your darkies in my place, this
+morning," said Mr. Grimshaw.
+
+"Yes; it is upon that business I have called to see you. I think you
+could not have considered the condition of this man, nor his rights,
+or you would not have imprisoned him. Is there no way by which I can
+relieve him?" inquired the consul, expecting little at his hands, but
+venturing the effort.
+
+"Sir! I never do any thing inconsistent with my office. The law gives
+me power in these cases, and I exercise it according to my judgment. It
+makes no exceptions for shipwrecks, and I feel that you have no right to
+question me in the premises. It's contrary to law to bring niggers here;
+and if you can show that he is a white man, there's the law; but you
+must await its process."
+
+"But do you not make exceptions?" inquired the consul. "I do not wish
+to seek his relief by process of law; that would increase expense and
+delay. I have made the request as a favor; if you cannot consider it in
+that light, I can only say my expectations are disappointed. But how is
+it that the man was abused by your officers before he was committed?"
+
+"Those are things I've nothing to do with; they are between the officers
+and your niggers. If they are stubborn, the officers must use force,
+and we have a right to iron the whole of them. Your niggers give more
+trouble than our own, and are a set of unruly fellows. We give 'em
+advantages which they don't deserve, in allowing them the yard at
+certain hours of the day. You Englishmen are never satisfied with any
+thing we do," returned Mr. Grimshaw, with indifference, appearing to
+satisfy himself that the law gave him the right to do what he pleased in
+the premises. There seemed but one idea in his head, so far as niggers
+were concerned, nor could any mode of reasoning arouse him: to a
+consideration of any extenuating circumstances. A nigger was a nigger
+with him, whether white or black-a creature for hog, homony, and
+servitude.
+
+"I expected little and got nothing. I might have anticipated it, knowing
+the fees you make by imprisonment. I shall seek relief for the man
+through a higher tribunal, and I shall seek redress for the repeated
+abuses inflicted upon these men by your officers," said the consul,
+turning to the door.
+
+"You can do that, sir," said Mr. Grimshaw; "but you must remember that
+it will require white evidence to substantiate the charge. We don't take
+the testimony of your niggers."
+
+Just as the consul left the office, he met Colonel S--entering. The
+colonel always manifested a readiness to relieve the many cases of
+oppression and persecution arising from bad laws and abused official
+duty. He had called upon Mr. Grimshaw on the morning of the arrest, and
+received from him an assurance that the case would be considered, the
+most favorable construction given to it, and every thing done for
+the man that was in his power. Notwithstanding this to show how far
+confidence could be put in such assurances, we have only to inform the
+reader that he had despatched the officers an hour previously.
+
+The colonel knew his man, and felt no hesitation at speaking his mind.
+Stepping up to him, "Mr. Grimshaw," said he, "how do you reconcile
+your statement and assurances to me this morning with your subsequent
+conduct?"
+
+"That's my business. I act for the State, and not for you. Are you
+counsel for these niggers, that you are so anxious to set them at
+liberty among our slaves? You seem to have more interest in it than that
+interfering consul. Just let these Yankee niggers and British niggers
+out to-night, and we'd have another insurrection before morning; it's
+better to prevent than cure," said Grimshaw.
+
+"The only insurrection would have been in your heart, for the loss of
+fees. If you did not intend what you said, why did you deceive me with
+such statements? I know the feelings of our people, as well as I do
+yours for caging people within that jail. Upon that, I intimated to the
+Captain what I thought would be the probable result, and this morning I
+proceeded to his vessel to reassure him, upon your statement. Imagine my
+mortification when he informed me that his steward had been dragged
+off to jail early in the morning, and that those two ruffians whom you
+disgrace the community with, behaved in the most outrageous manner. It
+is in your power to relieve this man, and I ask it as a favor, and on
+behalf of what I know to be the feelings of the citizens of Charleston."
+
+"Your request, colonel," said Mr. Grimshaw, with a little more
+complacency, "is too much in the shape of a demand. There's no
+discretion left me by the State, and if you have a power superior to
+that, you better pay the expenses of the nigger, and take the management
+into your own hands. I never allow this trifling philanthropy about
+niggers to disturb me. I could never follow out the laws of the State
+and practise it; and you better not burden yourself with it, or your
+successors may suffer for adequate means to support themselves. Now,
+sir, take my advice. It's contrary to law for them niggers to come
+here; you know our laws cannot be violated. South Carolina has a great
+interest at stake in maintaining the reputation of her laws. Don't
+excite the nigger's anxiety, and he'll be better off in jail than he
+would running about among the wenches. He won't have luxuries, but we'll
+make him comfortable, and he must suit his habits to our way of living.
+We must not set a bad example before our own niggers; the whiter they
+are the worse they are. They struggle for their existence now, and think
+they're above observing our nigger laws. We want to get rid of them, and
+you know it," returned Grimshaw.
+
+"Yes; I know it too well, for I have had too many cases to protect them
+from being 'run off' and sold in the New Orleans market. But when you
+speak of white niggers, I suppose you mean our brightest; I dispute your
+assertion, and point you to my proof in the many men of wealth among
+them now pursuing their occupations in our city. Can you set an example
+more praiseworthy? And notwithstanding they are imposed upon by taxes,
+and many of our whites take the advantage of law to withhold the payment
+of debts contracted with them, they make no complaint. They are subject
+to the same law that restricts the blackest slave. Where is the white
+man that would not have yielded under such inequality? No! Mr. Grimshaw,
+I am as true a Southerner-born and bred-as you are; but I have the
+interests of these men at heart, because I know they are with us, and
+their interests and feelings are identical with our own. They are Native
+Americans by birth and blood, and we have no right to dispossess them
+by law of what we have given them by blood. We destroy their feelings by
+despoiling them of their rights, and by it we weaken our own cause. Give
+them the same rights and privileges that we extend to that miserable
+class of foreigners who are spreading pestilence and death over our
+social institutions, and we would have nothing to fear from them, but
+rather find them our strongest protectors. I want to see a law taking
+from that class of men the power to lord it over and abuse them."
+
+A friend, who has resided several years in Charleston, strong in his
+feelings of Southern rights, and whose keen observation could not fail
+to detect the working of different phases of the slave institution,
+informed us that he had conversed with a great many very intelligent
+and enterprising men belonging to that large class of "bright" men in
+Charleston, and that which appeared to pain them most was the manner
+they were treated by foreigners of the lowest class; that rights which
+they had inherited by birth and blood were taken away from them; that,
+being subjected to the same law which governed the most abject slave,
+every construction of it went to degrade them, while it gave supreme
+power to the most degraded white to impose upon them, and exercise his
+vindictive feelings toward them; that no consideration being given to
+circumstances, the least deviation from the police regulations made to
+govern negroes, was taken advantage of by the petty guardmen, who either
+extorted a fee to release them, or dragged them to the police-office,
+where their oath was nothing, even if supported by testimony of their
+own color; but the guardman's word was taken as positive proof. Thus the
+laws of South Carolina forced them to be what their feelings revolted
+at. And I want to see another making it a penal offence for those men
+holding slaves for breeding purposes. Another, which humanity calls
+for louder than any other, is one to regulate their food, punish
+these grievous cases of starvation, and make the offender suffer for
+withholding proper rations.
+
+"Well-pretty well!" said Grimshaw, snapping his fingers very
+significantly. "You seem to enjoy the independence of your own opinion,
+colonel. Just prove this nigger's a white, and I'll give you a release
+for him, after paying the fees. You better move to Massachusetts, and
+preach that doctrine to William Lloyd Garrison and Abby Kelly."
+
+"Give me none of your impudence, or your low insults. You may protect
+yourself from personal danger by your own consciousness that you are
+beneath the laws of honor; but that will not save you from what you
+deserve, if you repeat your language. Our moderation is our protection,
+while such unwise restrictions as you would enforce, fan the flame of
+danger to our own households," said the colonel, evidently yielding
+to his impulses; while Mr. Grimshaw sat trembling, and began to make a
+slender apology, saying that the language was forced upon him, because
+the colonel had overstepped the bounds of propriety in his demands.
+
+"I'm somewhat astonished at your demand, colonel, for you don't seem
+to comprehend the law, and the imperative manner in which I'm bound
+to carry it out. Shipowners should get white stewards, if they want to
+avoid all this difficulty. I know the nature of the case, but we can't
+be accountable for storms, shipwrecks, old vessels, and all these
+things. I'll go and see the fellow to-morrow, and tell the jailer-he's
+a pattern of kindness, and that's why I got him for jailer-to give him
+good rations and keep his room clean," said Grimshaw, getting up and
+looking among some old books that lay on a dusty shelf. At length he
+found the one, and drawing it forth, commenced brushing the dust from it
+with a dust-brush, and turning his tobacco-quid. After brushing the
+old book for a length of time, he gave it a scientific wipe with his
+coat-sleeve, again sat down, and commenced turning over its pages.
+
+"It's in here, somewhere," said he, wetting his finger and thumb at
+every turn.
+
+"What's in there, pray? You don't think I've practised at the Charleston
+bar all my life without knowing a law which has called up so many
+questions?" inquired the colonel.
+
+"Why, the act and the amendments. I believe this is the right one. I
+a'n't practised so long, that I reckon I've lost the run of the appendix
+and everything else," adding another stream of tobacco-spit to the
+puddle on the floor.
+
+"That's better thought than said. Perhaps you'd better get a schoolboy
+to keep his finger on it," continued the colonel, laconically.
+
+"Well, well; but I must find it and refresh your memory. Ah! here it is,
+and it's just as binding on me as it can be. There's no mistake about
+it-it's genuine South Carolina, perfectly aboveboard." Thus saying,
+he commenced reading to the colonel as if he was about to instruct
+a schoolboy in his rudiments. "Here it is-a very pretty specimen of
+enlightened legislation-born in the lap of freedom, cradled in a land of
+universal rights, and enforced by the strong arm of South Carolina."
+
+"An Act for the better regulation and government of free negroes and
+persons of color, and for other purposes," &c. &c. &c., Mr. Grimshaw
+read; but as the two first sections are really a disgrace to the
+delegated powers of man, in their aim to oppress the man of color,
+we prefer to pass to the third section, and follow Mr. Grimshaw as he
+reads:--
+
+"That if any vessel shall come into any port or harbor of this State,
+(South Carolina,) from any other State or foreign port, having on board
+any free negroes or persons of color, as cooks, stewards, or mariners,
+or in any other employment on board said vessel, such free negroes or
+persons of color shall be liable to be seized and confined in jail until
+said vessel shall clear out and depart from this State; and that when
+said vessel is ready to sail, the captain of said vessel shall be
+bound to carry away the said free negro or person of color, and pay the
+expenses of detention; and in case of his refusal or neglect to do so,
+he shall be liable to be indicted, and, on conviction thereof, shall be
+fined in a sum not less than one thousand dollars, and imprisoned not
+less than two months; and such free negroes or persons of color shall
+be deemed and taken as absolute slaves, and sold in conformity to the
+provisions of the act passed on the twentieth day of December, one
+thousand eight hundred and twenty aforesaid.'"
+
+Mr. Grimshaw's coolness in the matter became so intolerable, that the
+colonel could stand it no longer; so, getting up while Mr. Grimshaw was
+reading the law, he left the office, perfectly satisfied that further
+endeavors at that source would be fruitless.
+
+After Mr. Grimshaw had concluded, he looked up, perfectly amazed to find
+that he was enjoying the reading of the act to himself. "Had I not given
+it all the consideration of my power, and seen the correctness of the
+law, I should not have given so much importance to my opinion. But there
+it is, all in that section of the Act, and they can't find no convention
+in the world to control the Legislature of South Carolina. There's my
+principles, and all the Englishmen and Abolitionists in Christendom
+wouldn't change me. Now, I've the power, and let 'em get the nigger out
+of my place, if they can," said Grimshaw, shutting the book, kicking
+a good-sized, peaceable-looking dog that lay under the table, and
+deliberately taking his hat and walking into the street.
+
+Here is an Act, bearing on its face the arrogant will of South Carolina,
+setting aside all constitutional rights, and denying the validity of
+stipulations made by the United States in her general commercial laws.
+She asserts her right to disregard citizenship, to make criminals of
+colored men, because they are colored, and to sell them for slaves to
+pay the expenses which she had incurred to make them such. And what is
+still worse, is, that the exercise of this misconceived and unjust law
+is so unrelentingly enforced, and so abused by those who carry it out.
+
+During this time the consul had been unremitting in his endeavors to
+procure the man's release. The mayor had no power in the premises; the
+attorney-general was not positive in regard to the extent of his power
+in such a case, though he admitted the case to be an aggravated one; the
+judges could only recognise him as a nigger, consequently must govern
+their proceedings by legislative acts. Upon the whole, he found that
+he was wasting his time, for while they all talked sympathy, they
+acted tyranny. Cold, measured words about niggers, "contrary to law,"
+constitutional rights, inviolable laws, State sovereignty and secession,
+the necessary police regulations to protect a peculiar institution,
+and their right to enforce them, everywhere greeted his ears. There was
+about as much in it to relieve Manuel, as there would have been had a
+little bird perched upon the prison-wall and warbled its song of love to
+him while strongly secured in his cell-more tantalizing because he could
+hear the notes, but not see the songster.
+
+Notwithstanding the commendable energy of the consul, he had the
+satisfaction of knowing that several very improbable reports touching
+his course, and construing it into an interference with the institution
+of slavery, had been widely circulated, and were creating a feeling
+against him among a certain class of "fire-eating" secessionists. He was
+too well aware of the source from which they originated to awaken any
+fears, and instead of daunting his energy they only increased it, and
+brought to his aid the valuable services of the Hon. James L. Petigru, a
+gentleman of whom it is said, (notwithstanding his eminence at the
+bar,) that had it not been for his purity of character, his opinions
+in opposition to the State would have long since consigned him to a
+traitor's exile. The truth was-and much against Mr. Petigru's popularity
+in his own State-that he was a man of sound logic, practical judgment,
+and legal discrimination. Thus endowed with the requisite qualities of
+a good statesman, and pursuing a true course to create a conservative
+influence in the State, he failed to become popular beyond his legal
+sphere. Had he espoused that most popular of all doctrines in South
+Carolina-nullification and secession-and carried abstraction to
+distraction, James L. Petigru would have added another "Roman name" to
+that which has already passed from South Carolina's field of action.
+
+The consul did his duty, but effected nothing; and such was the
+opposition manifested by the officials who were interested in the spoils
+of law, and politicians who could not see any thing important beyond
+secession, that there was no prospect of it. And, as the last resort,
+he appealed to the Judiciary through the "habeas corpus," the result of
+which we shall show in a subsequent chapter.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII. LITTLE GEORGE, THE CAPTAIN, AND MR. GRIMSHAW.
+
+
+
+THE consul had returned to his office rather discomfited at not being
+able to relieve Manuel, yet satisfied that he had placed matters in
+their proper light before the public. The Captain reported and left his
+manifest at the custom-house, after entering his protest and making the
+necessary arrangements for survey, &c. &c. And Colonel S--became so well
+satisfied of the affectation of law protectors, and that his services
+in behalf of humanity were like straws contending against a foaming
+current, that, acknowledging his regrets to the Captain, he preferred to
+make up in attention what he could not do for Manuel through the law.
+
+Little George paid his respects to the Janson between ten and eleven
+o'clock, duly dressed. "Mr. Mate, where's your skipper?" he inquired,
+with an air of consequence that put an extra pucker on his little
+twisting mouth.
+
+"Gone to jail, or to see Doctor Jones, I expect, not giving ye an ill
+answer," replied the old mate, gruffly.
+
+"Perhaps you don't know who I am, sir. Your answer's not polite. You
+must remember, sir, you're in South Carolina, the sunny city of the
+South," said the little secessionist.
+
+"I al'a's make my answer to suit myself. I study hard work and honesty,
+but never was known to carry a grammar in my pocket. But, my taut
+friend, I should know'd I was in South Carolina if you hadn't said a
+word about it, for no other nation under the sky would a dragged a poor
+cast-away sailor to prison because he had the misfortune to have a tawny
+hide. It's a ten-to-one, my hearty, if you don't find the skipper in
+jail, and all the rest of us, before we leave. I'm lookin' now to see
+some body-grabber coming down with a pair of handcuffs," continued the
+mate.
+
+"What! do you mean to insult me again, Mr. Mate? Explain yourself! I'm
+not accustomed to this ironical talk!"
+
+"Well, it's something like your laws. They dragged our steward off
+to jail this morning, without judge or jury, and with about as much
+ceremony as a Smithfield policeman would a pickpocket."
+
+"What! you don't say. Well, I was afraid of that. Our officers are
+mighty quick, but I'd hoped differently. But, sir, give my compliments
+to the Captain. Tell him I'll make the matter all right; my influence,
+sir, and my father's--he is one of the first men in the city--tells
+mightily here. I have promised my services to the Captain, and I'll see
+him through. Just pledging my word to Grimshaw will be enough to satisfy
+the judicial requisites of the law," said George, switching his little
+cane on his trowsers.
+
+"My good fellow," said the mate, "if you can get our steward out a
+limbo, you'll be doing us all a good turn, and we'll remember you as
+long as we pull a brace."
+
+"You may reckon on me, Mister Mate; and if I a'n't down before six
+o'clock, my father will certainly take the matter in hand; and he and
+Mazyck belong to the secession party, and control things just as they
+please at Columbia." So saying, George bid the old mate good morning,
+and bent his course for the head of the wharf.
+
+"There," said the old mate, "it's just what I thought all along; I knew
+my presentiment would come true. I'll wager a crown they treat Manuel
+like a dog in that old prison, and don't get him out until he is
+mildewed; or perhaps they'll sell him for a slave a'cos he's got curly
+black hair and a yellow skin. Now I'm a hardy sailor, but I've sailed
+around the world about three times, and know something of nature. Now ye
+may note it as clear as the north star, prisons in slave countries a'n't
+fit for dogs. They may tell about their fine, fat, slick, saucy niggers,
+but a slave's a slave--his master's property, a piece of merchandise,
+his chattel, or his football-thankful for what his master may please to
+give him, and inured to suffer the want of what he withholds. Yes,
+he must have his thinking stopped by law, and his back lashed at his
+master's will, if he don't toe the mark in work. Men's habits and
+associations form their feelings and character, and it's just so with
+them fellers; they've become so accustomed to looking upon a nigger as
+a mere tool of labor--lordin' it over him, starving him, and lashing
+him-that they associate the exercise of the same feelings and actions
+with every thing connected with labor, without paying any respect to a
+poor white man's feelings," continued the mate, addressing himself to
+his second, as they sat upon the companion, waiting for the Captain to
+come on board and give further orders.
+
+Never were words spoken with more truth. The negro is reduced to the
+lowest and worst restrictions, even by those who are considered wealthy
+planters and good masters. We say nothing of those whose abuse of their
+negroes by starvation and punishment forms the theme of complaint among
+slaveholders themselves. His food is not only the coarsest that can, be
+procured, but inadequate to support the system for the amount of labor
+required. Recourse to other means becomes necessary. This is supplied by
+giving the slave his task, which, so far as our observation extends, is
+quite sufficient for any common, laborer's day's-work. This done, his
+master is served; and as an act of kindness, (which Sambo is taught to
+appreciate as such,) he is allowed to work on his own little cultivated
+patch to raise a few things, which mass'r (in many cases) very
+condescendingly sells in the market, and returns those little comforts,
+which are so much appreciated by slaves on a plantation-tea, molasses,
+coffee, and tobacco-and now and then a little wet of whiskey. This is
+the allowance of a good man doing a good week's work, and getting two
+pounds of bacon and a peck of corn as his compensation. But, in grateful
+consideration, his good master allows him to work nights and Sundays to
+maintain himself. In this way was "Bob's bale of cotton" raised, which
+that anxious child of popular favor, the editor of the "Savannah Morning
+News," so struggled to herald to the world as something magnificent on
+the part of the Southern slave-masters. At best, it was but a speck. If
+the many extra hours of toil that poor Bob had spent, and the hours
+of night that he had watched and nursed his plants, were taken into
+account, there would be a dark picture connected with "Bob's bale of
+cotton," which the editor forgot to disclose.
+
+Every form of labor becomes so associated with servitude, that we may
+excuse the Southerner for those feelings which condemn those devoted
+to mechanical pursuits as beneath his caste and dignity. Arrogance and
+idleness foster extravagance, while his pride induces him to keep up a
+style of life which his means are inadequate to support. This induces
+him to subsist his slaves on the coarsest fare, and becoming hampered,
+embarrassed, and fretted in his fast-decaying circumstances, his slaves,
+one by one, suffer the penalty of his extravagance, and finally he
+himself is reduced to such a condition that he is unable to do justice
+to himself or his children any longer; his slaves are dragged from him,
+sold to the terrors of a distant sugar-plantation, and he turned out of
+doors a miserable man.
+
+We see this result every day in South Carolina; we hear the comments
+in the broadways and public places, while the attorney and bailiff's
+offices and notices tell the sad tale of poverty's wasting struggle.
+
+George, in passing from the wharf into the bay, met the Captain, who was
+shaping his course for the brig. He immediately ran up to him, and shook
+his hands with an appearance of friendship. "Captain, I'm right sorry
+to hear about your nigger. I was not prepared for such a decision on the
+part of Mr. Grimshaw, but I'm determined to have him out," said he.
+
+"Well!" said the Captain, "I'm sorry to say, I find things very
+different from what I anticipated. My steward is imprisoned, for
+nothing, except that he is a Portuguese, and everybody insists that he's
+a nigger. Everybody talks very fine, yet nobody can do any thing; and
+every thing is left to the will of one man."
+
+"Why, Captain, we've the best system in the world for doing business;
+you'd appreciate it after you understood it! Just come with me, and let
+me introduce you to my father. If he don't put you right, I'll stand
+convicted," said little George.
+
+Accepting the invitation, they walked back to the "old man's"
+counting-room. George had given the Captain such an extended account of
+his father's business and estates, that the latter had made up his
+mind to be introduced to an "India Palace' counting-room. Judge of
+his surprise, then, when George led the way into an old, dirty-looking
+counting-room, very small and dingy, containing two dilapidated high
+desks, standing against the wall. They were made of pitch pine, painted
+and grained, but so scarred and whittled as to have the appearance
+of long use and abuse. In one corner was an old-fashioned low desk,
+provided with an ink-stand, sundry pieces of blotting-paper, the
+pigeon-holes filled with loose invoices, letters, and bills of lading,
+very promiscuously huddled together; while hanging suspended on a
+large nail, driven in the side, and exposed to view, was an enormous
+dust-brush. A venerable-looking subject of some foreign country stood
+writing at one desk, a little boy at the other, and George's veritable
+"old man" at the low desk. Here and there around the floor were baskets
+and papers containing samples of sea-island and upland cotton. George
+introduced the Captain to his father with the suavity of a courtier. He
+was a grave-looking man, well dressed, and spoke in a tone that at once
+enlisted respect. Unlike George, he was a tall, well-formed man, with
+bland, yet marked features, and very gray hair. He received the Captain
+in a cold, yet dignified manner-inquired about his voyage, and who
+he had consigned to, and what steps he had taken to proceed with
+his business,--all of which the Captain answered according to the
+circumstances.
+
+"What! then you have consigned already, have you?" said little George,
+with surprise.
+
+"Oh yes," returned the Captain, "I have left my business in the hands
+of the consul, and shall follow his directions. It's according to my
+sailing orders. But there's so much difficulty, I shouldn't wonder if I
+had to leave the port, yet!"
+
+"Not so, Captain; I'll take care of that!" said George, giving his
+father a statement of the Captain's trouble about Manuel's imprisonment,
+and begging that he would bestow his influence in behalf of his
+friend the Captain. Although George coupled his request with a seeming
+sincerity, it was evident that he felt somewhat disappointed at the
+consignment. The old gentleman looked very wise upon the subject, lifted
+his gold-framed spectacles upon his forehead, gratified his olfactory
+nerves with a pinch of snuff, and then said in a cold, measured tone,
+"Well, if he's a nigger, I see no alternative,--the circumstances may
+give a coloring of severity to the law; but my opinion has always been,
+that the construction of the law was right; and the act being
+founded upon necessity, I see no reason why we should meddle with its
+prerogative. I think the interference of the consul unwarrantable, and
+pressed upon mere technical grounds. These stories about the bad state
+of our jail, and the sufferings of criminals confined in it, arise, I
+must think, from the reports of bad prisoners. I have never been in it.
+Our people are opposed to vice, and seldom visit such a place; but the
+sheriff tells me it is comfortable enough for anybody. If this be so,
+and I have no reason to doubt his word, we can exercise our sympathy and
+kindness for his shipwrecked circumstances, and make him as comfortable
+there as we could anywhere else. There are many different opinions, I
+admit, touching the effect of this law; but I'm among those who support
+stringent measures for better protection. His color can form no excuse,
+Captain, so long as there is symptoms of the negro about him. We
+might open a wide field for metaphysical investigation, if we admitted
+exceptions upon grades of complexion; for many of our own slaves are
+as white ar the brightest woman. Consequently, when we shut the gates
+entirely, we save ourselves boundless perplexity. Nor would it be safe
+to grant an issue upon the score of intelligence, for experience has
+taught us that the most intelligent 'bright fellows' are the worst
+scamps in creating discontent among the slaves. I only speak of these
+things, Captain, in a general sense. Your man may be very good, noble,
+generous, and intelligent; and, more than all, not inclined to meddle
+with our peculiar institution,--but it would be a false principle
+to make him an exception, setting an example that would be entirely
+incompatible with our greatest interests. So far as my word will affect
+the sheriff, and enlist his better feelings in making him comfortable, I
+will use it," said the 'old man,' again adjusting his specs.
+
+Little George seemed dumbfounded with mortification, and the Captain
+felt as though he would give a guinea to be on board his brig. It was no
+use for him to enter into the extenuating circumstance of his voyage, or
+the character of the man, Manuel. The same cold opinions about the
+law, and the faith and importance of South Carolina and her peculiar
+institutions, met his ears wherever he went. The Captain arose, took
+his hat, and bidding the old gentleman good morning, again left for his
+brig.
+
+"Don't be worried about it-I'll do what I can for you," said the old
+man, as the Captain was leaving. George followed him into the street,
+and made a great many apologies for his father's opinions and seeming
+indifference, promising to do himself what his father did not seem
+inclined to undertake. The Captain saw no more of him during his stay in
+Charleston, and if his influence was exerted in Manuel's behalf, he did
+not feel its benefits.
+
+Business had so occupied the Captain's attention during the day, that
+he had no time to visit Manuel at the jail; and when he returned to the
+vessel, a message awaited him from the British consul. One of the seamen
+had been detailed to fill Manuel's place, who, with his dinner all
+prepared, reminded the Captain that it was awaiting him. He sat down,
+took dinner, and left to answer the consul's call. Arriving at the
+office, he found the consul had left for his hotel, and would not return
+until four o'clock. As he passed the post-office, a knot of men stood
+in front of it, apparantly in anxious discussion. Feeling that their
+conversation might be interesting to him, or have some connection with
+his case, he walked slowly back, and as he approached them, observed
+that the conversation had become more excited. The principals were Mr.
+Grimshaw, and a factor on the bay, deeply interested in shipping.
+
+"A man acting in your capacity," said the factor, "should never make use
+of such expressions-never give encouragement to mob law. It's not only
+disgraceful to any city, but ruinous to its interests. Officials never
+should set or encourage the example. Want of order is already in the
+ascendant, and if the populace is to be led on to riot by the officials,
+what check have we? God save us from the direful effects!"
+
+"Well, perhaps I went too far," said Mr. Grimshaw, "for I think as much
+of the name of our fair city as you do. But we ought to teach him that
+he can't pursue this open, bold, and daring course, endangering our
+institutions, because he's consul for Great Britain. I would, at all
+events, treat him as we did the Yankee HOAR from Massachusetts, and let
+the invitation be given outside of official character, to save the name;
+then, if he did not move off, I'd go for serving him as they did the
+Spanish consul, in New Orleans. These English niggers and Yankee niggers
+are fast destroying the peace of Charleston."
+
+"You would, would you?" said another. "Then you would incite the fury
+of an ungovernable mob to endanger the man's life for carrying out the
+instructions of his government."
+
+"That don't begin to be all that he does, for he's meddling with every
+thing, and continually making remarks about our society," said Grimshaw,
+evidently intending to create ill feeling against the consul, and to
+make the matter as bad as possible.
+
+"Now, Mr. Grimshaw," said the factor, "you know your jail is not fit to
+put any kind of human beings into, much less respectable men. It's
+an old Revolutionary concern, tumbling down with decay, swarming with
+insects and vermin; the rooms are damp and unhealthy, and without means
+to ventilate them; the mildew and horrible stench is enough to strike
+disease into the strongest constitution; and you aggravate men's
+appetites with food that's both insufficient and unwholesome, I know,
+because I visited a friend who was put in there on 'mesne process.'"
+
+"There is little confidence to be placed in the stories of prisoners;
+they all think they must be treated like princes, instead of considering
+that they are put there for cause, and that a jail was intended for
+punishment," interrupted Grimshaw, anxious to change the subject of
+conversation, and displaying an habitual coldness to misfortune which
+never can see the gentleman in a prisoner.
+
+"Yes, but you must not measure men by that standard. Circumstances which
+bring them there are as different as their natures. I've known many
+good, honest, and respectable, citizens, who once enjoyed affluence in
+our community, put in there, month after month, and year after year,
+suffering the persecution of creditors and the effects of bad laws. Now
+these men would not all complain if there was no cause, and they all
+loved you, as you state. But tell me, Mr. Grimshaw, would it not be even
+safer for our institutions to make a restriction confining them to the
+wharf, which could be easily done, and with but small expense to the
+city? Niggers on the wharves could have no communication with them,
+because each is occupied in his business, and ours are too closely
+watched and driven during working hours. As soon as those hours end,
+they are bound to leave, and the danger ends. Again, those niggers who
+work on the wharves are generally good niggers, while, on the other
+hand, bad niggers are put into jail; and during the hours these stewards
+are allowed the privilege of the yard, they mix with them without
+discrimination or restraint. Their feelings, naturally excited by
+imprisonment, find relief in discoursing upon their wrongs with those of
+their own color, and making the contamination greater," said the factor,
+who seemed inclined to view the matter in its proper light.
+
+"Oh! what sir? That would never do. You mistake a nigger's feelings
+entirely. Privileges never create respect with them. Just make a law to
+leave 'em upon the wharf, and five hundred policemen wouldn't keep 'em
+from spoiling every nigger in town, just destroying the sovereignty of
+the law, and yielding a supreme right that we have always contended
+for. It's 'contrary to law,' and we must carry out the law," replied
+Grimshaw.
+
+"Pshaw! Talk such stuff to me! Just take away the sixteen hundred or
+two thousand dollars that you make by the law; and you'd curse it for
+a nuisance. It would become obsolete, and the poor devils of stewards
+would do what they pleased; you'd never trouble your head about
+them. Now, Grimshaw, be honest for once; tell us what you would do if
+circumstances compelled the Captain to leave that nigger boy here?"
+
+"Carry out the letter of the law; there's no alternative. But the
+Captain swears he's a white man, and that would give him an opportunity
+to prove it."
+
+"How is he to prove it, Grimshaw? We take away the power, and then ask
+him to do what we make impossible. Then, of course, you would carry out
+the letter of the law and sell him for a slave. * * * Well, I should
+like to see the issue upon a question of that kind carried out upon an
+English nigger. It would be more of a curse upon our slave institution
+than every thing else that could be raised," said the factor.
+
+"Gentlemen, you might as well preach abolition at once, and then the
+public would know what your sentiments were, and how to guard against
+you. I must bid you good-by." So saying, Mr. Grimshaw twisted his
+whip, took a large quid of tobacco, and left the company to discuss the
+question among themselves.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII. LITTLE TOMMY AND THE POLICE.
+
+
+
+WE must take the reader back to the old jail, and continue our scene
+from where we left little Tommy spreading the Captain's present before
+the imprisoned stewards, whose grateful thanks were showered upon the
+head of the bestower. Kindness, be it ever so small, to a man in prison,
+is like the golden rays of the rising sun lighting up the opening day.
+They all partook of the refreshments provided for them with grateful
+spirits.
+
+It was near ten o'clock when Daley came to announce that it was time to
+close the prison, and all strangers must withdraw. Tommy had insisted
+upon stopping with Manuel during the night.
+
+This man Daley was a proverbial drunkard, a tyrant in the exercise of
+his "little brief authority," and a notorious--. Singular as it may
+seem, considering his position, he would quarrel with the men for a
+glass of whiskey, had given the jailer more trouble than any other man,
+and been several times confined in the cells for his incorrigible vices.
+If any thing more was wanting to confirm our note, we could refer to
+Colonel Condy, the very gentlemanly United States marshal in a very rude
+manner, told him it was against the rules, and putting his hand to
+his back, pushed him out of the cell and secured the bolts. The little
+fellow felt his way through the passage and down the stairs in the dark
+until he reached the corridor, where the jailer stood awaiting to
+let him pass the outer iron-gate. "You've made a long stay, my little
+fellow. You'll have a heap o' trouble to find the wharf, at this time o'
+night. I'd o' let you stopped all night, but it's strictly against the
+sheriff's orders," said the jailer, as, he passed into the street, at
+the same time giving him a list of imperfect directions about the course
+to proceed.
+
+The jail is in a distant and obscure part of the city, surrounded by
+narrow streets and lanes, imperfectly laid out and undefined. In leaving
+the walls of the prison, he mistook his direction, and the night being
+very dark, with a light, drizzling rain, which commenced while he was in
+the prison, the whole aspect of things seemed reversed. After travelling
+about for some time, he found himself upon a narrow strip of land that
+crossed a basin of water and led to Chisholm's mill. The different
+appearance of things here convinced him of his error. Bewildered,
+and not knowing which way to proceed, he approached a cross road, and
+sitting down upon a log, wept bitterly. He soon heard a footstep, and as
+it approached, his cares lightened. It proved to be a negro man from the
+mill.
+
+These mills are worked all night, and the poor negroes, wishing to
+follow an example which massa sets on a grand scale, save that they
+have an excuse in the fatigue of labor, will delegate some shrewd one of
+their number to proceed to a Dutch "corner-shop" in the suburbs, run the
+gauntlet of the police, and get a bottle of whiskey, When interrogated,
+they are always "going for a bottle of molasses." They keep a keen watch
+for the police, and their cunning modes of eluding their vigilance forms
+many amusing anecdotes. They are bound to have a pass from master, or
+some white man; but if they can reach the shop in safety, the Dutchman
+will always furnish them with one to return. It not unfrequently happens
+that the guard-men are much more ignorant than the slaves. The latter
+knowing this, will endeavor to find their station and approach by it,
+taking with them either an old pass or a forged one, which the
+guard-man makes a wonderful piece of importance about examining and
+countersigning, though he can neither read nor write. Thus Sambo passes
+on to get his molasses, laughing in his sleeve to think how he "fool
+ignorant buckra." A change of guard often forms a trap for Sambo, when
+he is lugged to the guard-house, kept all night, his master informed in
+the morning, and requested to step up and pay a fine, or Sambo's
+back catches thirty-nine, thus noting a depression of value upon the
+property. Sometimes his master pays the municipal fine, and administers
+a domestic castigation less lacerating bound into the city on the usual
+errand of procuring a little of molasses. When he first discovered
+Tommy, he started back a few paces, as if in fear; but on being told by
+Tommy that he was lost, and wanted to find his way to the wharves, he
+approached and recovering, confidence readily, volunteered to see him to
+the corner of Broad street. So, taking him by the hand, they proceeded
+together until they reached the termination of the Causeway, and were
+about to enter Tradd street, when suddenly a guard-man sprang from
+behind an old shed. The negro, recognising his white belt and tap-stick,
+made the best of his time, and set off at full speed down a narrow lane.
+The watchman proceeded close at his heels, springing his rattle at every
+step, and pouring out a volley of vile imprecations. Tommy stood for a
+few moments, but soon the cries of the negro and the beating of clubs
+broke upon his ear; he became terrified, and ran at the top of his speed
+in an opposite direction. Again he had lost his way, and seemed in a
+worse dilemma than before; he was weary and frightened, and hearing so
+many stories among the sailors about selling white children for slaves,
+and knowing the imprisonment of Manuel, which he did not comprehend,
+his feelings were excited to the highest degree. After running for a few
+minutes, he stopped to see if he could recognize his position. The first
+thing that caught his eye was the old jail, looming its sombre walls in
+the gloomy contrast of night. He followed the walls until he reached the
+main gate, and then, taking an opposite direction from his former route,
+proceeded along the street until he came to a lantern, shedding its
+feeble light upon the murky objects at the corner of a narrow lane.
+Here he stood for several minutes, not knowing which way to proceed: the
+street he was in continued but a few steps farther, and turn which ever
+way he would, darkness and obstacles rose to impede his progress. At
+length he turned down the lane, and proceeded until he came to another
+junction of streets; taking one which he thought would lead him in the
+right direction, he wandered through it and into a narrow, circuitous
+street, full of little, wretched-looking houses. A light glimmered from
+one of them, and he saw a female passing to and fro before the window.
+He approached and rapped gently upon the door. Almost simultaneously
+the light was extinguished. He stood for a few minutes, and again rapped
+louder than before; all was silent for some minutes. A drenching shower
+had commenced, adding to the already gloomy picture; and the rustling
+leaves on a tree that stood near gave an ominous sound to the excited
+feelings of the child. He listened at the door with anxiety and fear, as
+he heard whispers within; and as he was about to repeat his rapping,
+a window on the right hand was slowly raised. The female who had been
+pacing the floor protruded her head with a caution that bespoke alarm.
+Her long, black hair hanging about her shoulders, and her tawny, Indian
+countenance, with her ghost-like figure dressed in a white habiliment,
+struck him with a sort of terror that wellnigh made him run.
+
+"Who is that, at this time of night?" inquired the woman, in a low
+voice.
+
+"It's only me. I'm lost, and can't find my way to our vessel," said
+Tommy, in a half-crying tone.
+
+"Mother," said the woman, shutting the window, "it's only a little
+sailor-boy, a stranger, and he's wet through."
+
+She immediately unbarred and opened the door, and invited him to come
+in. Stepping beyond the threshold, she closed the door against the
+storm, and placing a chair at the fire, told him to sit down and
+warm himself. They were mulatto half-breeds, retaining all the
+Indian features which that remnant of the tribe now in Charleston
+are distinguished by a family well known in the city, yet under the
+strictest surveillance of the police. Every thing around the little room
+denoted poverty and neatness. The withered remnant of an aged Indian
+mother lay stretched upon a bed of sickness, and the daughter, about
+nineteen years old, had been watching over her, and administering those
+comforts, which her condition required. "Why, mother, it's a'most twelve
+o'clock. I don't believe he'll come to-night."
+
+She awaited her friend, or rather he whose mistress she had condescended
+to be, after passing from several lords. The history of this female
+remnant of beautiful Indian girls now left in Charleston, is a mournful
+one. The recollection of their noble sires, when contrasted with their
+present unhappy associations, affords a sad subject for reflection and
+"this little boy can stop till morning in our room up-stairs," said she,
+looking up at an old Connecticut clock that adorned the mantel-piece.
+
+"Oh! I could not stay all night. The mate would be uneasy about me, and
+might send the crew to look for me. I'm just as thankful, but I couldn't
+stop," said Tommy.
+
+"But you never can find the bay on such a night as this; and I've no
+pass, or I would show you into Broad street, and then you could find the
+way. I am afraid of the guardmen, and if they caught me and took me to
+the station, my friend would abuse me awfully," said Angeline, for
+such was her name; and she laid her hand upon his arm to feel his wet
+clothes.
+
+He now arose from the chair, and putting on his hat, she followed him to
+the door and directed him how to proceed to find Broad street.
+
+He proceeded according to her directions, and soon found it. Now, he
+thought, he was all right; but the wind had increased to a gale, and
+having a full sweep through the street, it was as much as he could do to
+resist it. He had scarcely reached half the distance of the street when
+it came in such sudden gusts that he was forced to seek a refuge against
+its fury in the recess of a door. He sat down upon a step, and buttoning
+his little jacket around him, rested his head upon his knees, and
+while waiting for the storm to abate, fell into a deep sleep. From this
+situation he was suddenly aroused by a guardman, who seized him by the
+collar, and giving him an unmerciful twitch, brought, him headlong upon
+the sidewalk.
+
+"What are you at here? Ah! another miserable vagrant, I suppose. We'll
+take care of such rascals as you; come with me. We'll larn ye to be
+round stealing at this time o' night."
+
+"No, sir! no, sir! I didn't do nothing"--
+
+"Shut up! None of your lyin' to a policeman, you young rascal. I don't
+want to hear, nor I won't stand your infernal lies."
+
+"Oh do, mister, let me tell you all about it, and I know you won't hurt
+me. I'm only going to the vessel, if you'll show me the way," said the
+little fellow imploringly.
+
+"Stop yer noise, ye lying young thief, you. Ye wouldn't be prowling
+about at this time o' night if ye belonged to a vessel. 'Pon me soul,
+I believe yer a nigger. Come to the light," said the guardman, dragging
+him up to a lamp near by. "Well, you a'n't a nigger, I reckon, but yer a
+strolling vagrant, and that's worse," he continued, after examining his
+face very minutely. So, dragging him to the guardhouse as he would a
+dog, and thrusting him into a sort of barrack-room, the captain of the
+guard and several officials soon gathered around him to inquire the
+difficulty. The officers listened to the guardman's story, with perfect
+confidence in every thing he said, but refused to allow the little
+fellow to reply in his own behalf. "I watched him for a long time, saw
+him fumbling about people's doors, and then go to sleep in Mr. T--'s
+recess. These boys are gettin' to be the very mischief-most dangerous
+fellows we have to deal with," said the policeman.
+
+"Oh, no! I was only goin' to the brig, and got turned round. I've been
+more than two hours trying to find my way in the storm. I'm sure I a'n't
+done no harm. If ye'll only let me tell my story," said Tommy.
+
+"Shut up! We want no stories till morning. The mayor will settle your
+hash to-morrow; and if you belong to a ship, you can tell him all about
+it; but you'll have the costs to pay anyhow. Just lay down upon that
+bench, and you can sleep there till morning; that's better than
+loafing about the streets," said the captain of the guard, a large,
+portly-looking man, as he pointed Tommy to a long bench similar to those
+used in barrack-rooms.
+
+The little fellow saw it was no use to attempt a hearing, and going
+quietly to the bench, he pulled off his man-a-war hat, and laying it
+upon a chair, stretched himself out upon it, putting his little hands
+under his head to ease it from the hard boards.
+
+But he was not destined to sleep long in this position, for a loud,
+groaning noise at the door, broke upon their ears though the pelting
+fury of the storm, like one in agonizing distress.
+
+"Heavens! what is that!" said the captain of the guard, suddenly
+starting from his seat, and running for the door, followed by the
+whole posse. The groans grew louder and more death-like in their
+sound, accompanied by strange voices, giving utterance to horrible
+imprecations, and a dragging upon the floor. The large door opened, and
+what a sight presented itself! Three huge monsters, with side-arms on,
+dragged in the poor negro who proffered to show Tommy into Broad street.
+His clothes were nearly torn from his back, besmeared with mud, from
+head to foot, and his face cut and mangled in the most shocking manner.
+His head, neck, and shoulders, were covered with a gore of blood, and
+still it kept oozing from his mouth and the cuts on his head. They
+dragged him in as if he was a dying dog that had been beaten with a
+club, and threw him into a corner, upon the floor, with just about as
+much unconcern.
+
+"Oh! massa! massa! kill me, massa, den 'em stop sufferin'!" said the
+poor fellow, in a painful murmur, raising his shackled hands to his
+head, and grasping the heavy chain that secured his neck, in the agony
+of pain.
+
+"What has he done?" inquired the officer.
+
+"Resisted the guard, and ran when we told him to stop!" responded a trio
+of voices. "Yes, and attempted to get into a house. Ah! you vagabond
+you; that's the way we serve niggers like you!--Attempt to run again,
+will you? I'll knock your infernal daylights out, you nigger you," said
+one of the party.
+
+"It does seem tome that you might have taken him, and brought him up
+with less severity," said the officer.
+
+"What else could we do, sure? Didn't we catch him prowling about with
+a white fellow, and he runn'd till we couldn't get him. Indeed it was
+nothing good they were after, and it's the like o' them that bees doing
+all the mischief beyant the city."
+
+"An' 'imself, too, struck Muldown two pokes, 'efore he lave de hancuffs
+be pat upon him, at all!" said another of the guardmen; and then turning
+around, caught a glimpse of poor little Tommy, who had been standing up
+near a desk, during the scene, nearly "frightened out of his wits."
+
+"By the pipers,--what! and is't here ye are? The same that was with
+himself beyant! Come here, you spalpeen you. Wasn't ye the same what
+runn'd whin we bees spaken to that nigger?" said the same guardman,
+taking hold of Tommy's arm, and drawing him nearer the light.
+
+"Yes, he was coming along with me, to show me"--
+
+"Stop!--you know you are going to lie already. Better lock 'em both up
+for the night, and let them be sent up in the morning," said another.
+
+"Then you won't let me speak for myself--"
+
+"Hush, sir!" interrupted the officer; "you can tell your story in the
+morning! but take care you are not a vagrant. If it's proved that
+you were with that nigger at the improper hour, you'll get your back
+scarred. Come, you have owned it, and I must lock you up."
+
+Without attempting to wash the blood off the negro, or dress his wounds,
+they unlocked the handcuffs, and loosened the chain from his neck,
+handling him with less feeling than they would a dumb brute. Relieved of
+his chains, they ordered him to get up.
+
+The poor creature looked up imploringly, as if to beg them to spare his
+life, for he was too weak to speak. He held up his hands, drenched with
+blood, while beneath his head was a pool of gore that had streamed from
+his mounds. "None of your infernal humbuggery-you could run fast enough.
+Just get up, and be spry about it, or I'll help you with the cowhide,"
+said the officer, calling to one of the guardmen to bring it to him. He
+now made an effort, and had got upon his knees, when the guardman that
+seemed foremost in his brutality fetched him a kick with his heavy boots
+in the side, that again felled him to the ground with a deep groan.
+
+"Oh-tut! that will not do. You mus'n't kill the nigger; his master will
+come for him in the morning," said the officer, stooping down and taking
+hold of his arm with his left hand, while holding a cowhide in his
+right. "Come, my boy, you must get up and go into the lock-up," he
+continued.
+
+"Massa! oh, good massa, do-don't! I's most dead now, wha'for ye no
+lef me whare a be?" said he in a whining manner; and making a second
+attempt, fell back upon the floor, at which two of them seized him by
+the shoulders, and dragging him into a long, dark, cell-like room, threw
+him violently upon the floor. Then returning to the room, the officer
+took Tommy by the arm, and marching him into the same room, shut the
+door to smother his cries. The little fellow was so frightened, that he
+burst into an excitement of tears. The room was dark, and as gloomy as
+a cavern. He could neither lie down, sleep, nor console himself. He
+thought of Manuel, only to envy his lot, and would gladly have shared
+his imprisonment, to be relieved from such a horrible situation. Morning
+was to bring, perhaps, worse terrors. He thought of the happy scenes
+of his rustic home in Dunakade, and his poor parents, but nothing could
+relieve the anguish of his feelings. And then, how could he get word to
+his Captain? If they were so cruel to him now, he could not expect them
+to be less so in the morning. In this manner, he sat down upon the floor
+with the poor negro, and, if he could do nothing more, sympathized with
+his feelings. The poor negro murmured and groaned in a manner that would
+have enlisted the feelings of a Patagonian; and in this way he continued
+until about three o'clock in the morning, when his moaning became so
+loud and pitiful, that the officer of the guard came to the door with an
+attendant, and unbolting it, entered with a lantern in his hand. He held
+the light toward his face, and inquired what he was making such a noise
+about? "Oh! good massa, good massa, do send for docta; ma head got a
+pile o' cuts on him," said he, putting his hand to his head. The officer
+passed the lantern to his attendant, and after putting a pair of gloves
+on his hands, began to feel his head, turn aside his torn clothes, and
+wipe the dirt from the places where the blood seemed to be clotted.
+"Good gracious! I didn't conjecture that you were cut so bad. Here, my
+good fellow, (addressing himself to Tommy,) hold the lantern. Michael,
+go get a pail of water, and some cloths," said he, very suddenly
+becoming awakened to the real condition of the man, after he had
+exhibited a coldness that bordered on brutality.
+
+Water and cloths were soon brought. The attendant, Michael, commenced
+to strip his clothes off, but the poor fellow was so sore that he
+screeched, in the greatest agony, every time he attempted to touch him.
+"Be easy," said the officer, "he's hurt pretty badly. He must a' been
+mighty refractory, or they'd never beaten him in this manner," he
+continued, opening a roll of adhesive plaster, and cutting it into
+strips. After washing, him with water and whiskey, they dressed
+his wounds with the plaster, and bound his head with an old silk
+handkerchief which they found in his pocket, after which they left the
+light burning and retired.
+
+After they retired, Tommy inquired of the negro how they came to keep
+him so long, before they brought him to the guard-house? It proved, that
+as soon as they came up with him, the first one knocked him down with a
+club; and they all at once commenced beating him with their bludgeons,
+and continued until they had satisfied their mad fury. And while he lay
+groaning in the streets, they left one of their number in charge, while
+the others proceeded to get handcuffs and chains, in which they bound
+him, and dragged him, as it were, the distance of four squares to the
+guard-house. What a sublime picture for the meditations of a people who
+boast of their bravery and generosity!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX. THE NEXT MORNING, AND THE MAYOR'S VERDICT.
+
+
+
+SHORTLY after daylight, Tommy fell into a dozing sleep, from which he
+was awakened by the mustering of the prisoners who had been brought up
+during the night, and were to appear before the mayor at nine o'clock.
+A few minutes before eight o'clock, an officer opened the cell-door, and
+they were ordered to march out into a long room. In this room they found
+all the prisoners gathered. There were three blacks and five whites,
+who had been arrested on different charges; and as the mayor's court was
+merely a tribunal of commitment-not judgment-if the charges upon which
+the prisoners were brought up were sustained-which they generally were,
+because the policeman who made the arrest was the important witness,
+they were committed to await the tardy process of the law.
+
+Considerable uneasiness had been felt on board of the Janson for Tommy,
+and the Captain suggested that he might have got astray among the dark
+lanes of the city, and that the mate had better send some of the crew
+to look for him. The mate, better acquainted with Tommy's feelings and
+attachment for Manuel than he was with the rules of the prison and Mr.
+Grimshaw's arbitrary orders, assured the Captain that such a course
+would be entirely unnecessary, for he knew when he left that he would
+stop all night with Manuel. This quieted the Captain's apprehensions,
+and he said no more about it until he sat down to breakfast. "I miss
+Tommy amazingly," said the Captain. "If he stopped all night, he should
+be here by this time. I think some one had better be sent to the jail
+to inquire for him." Just as he arose from the table, one of the crew
+announced at the companion that a person on deck wished to see the
+Captain. On going up, he found a policeman, who informed him that a
+little boy had been arrested as a vagrant in the street, last night, and
+when brought before the mayor a few minutes ago, stated that he belonged
+to his vessel, and the mayor had despatched him to notify the master.
+"Circumstances are suspicious; he was seen in company with a negro of
+very bad habits; but if you can identify the boy, you had better come
+quick, or he'll be sent to jail, and you'll have some trouble to get him
+out," said the messenger, giving the Captain a description of the boy.
+
+"Oh yes!" said the Captain, "that's my Tommy. I verily believe they'll
+have us all in jail before we get away from the port." Numerous
+appointments engrossed his time, and he had promised to meet the consul
+at an early hour that morning. Notwithstanding this, he gave a few
+orders to the mate about getting the hatches ready and receiving
+the port-wardens, and then immediately repaired to the all-important
+guard-house. He was just in time to receive the mortifying intelligence
+that the mayor's court had concluded its sitting, and to see little
+Tommy, with a pair of handcuffs on his hand, in the act of being
+committed to jail by a Dutch constable. He stopped the constable, and
+being told that his honor was yet in the room, put a couple of dollars
+into his hand to await his intercession. Another fortunate circumstance
+favored him; just as he stopped the constable, he saw his friend,
+Colonel S--, approaching. The colonel saw there was trouble, and with
+his usual, characteristic kindness, hastened up and volunteered his
+services.
+
+We must now return to the arraignment, as it proceeded after the
+messenger had been despatched.
+
+The negro confined with Tommy presented a wretched picture when brought
+into the light room among the other prisoners. His head was so swollen
+that no trace of feature was left in his face. Cuts and gashes were
+marked with plaster all over his neck and face; his head tied up with
+an old red handkerchief; his eyes, what could be seen of them, more like
+balls of blood than organs of sight; while the whiskey and water with
+which his head had been washed, had mixed with the blood upon his
+clothes, and only served to make its appearance more disgusting.
+Altogether, a more pitiful object never was presented to human sight.
+
+Some minutes before the clock struck nine, an intelligent-looking
+gentleman, very well dressed, and portly in his appearance, entered
+the room. He was evidently kindly disposed, but one of those men whose
+feelings prompt them to get through business with despatch, rather
+than inquire into the circumstances of aggravated cases. He held a
+consultation with the officer for some minutes with reference to the
+prisoners. After which he mounted a little tribune, and addressing a
+few words to the white prisoners, (a person who acted the part of clerk
+announced court by rapping upon a desk with a little mallet,) inquired
+whether the officers had notified the owners of the negroes. Being
+informed that they had, he proceeded with the negroes first. One, by
+some good fortune, was taken away by his master, who paid the usual
+fee to swell the city treasury; another was sentenced to receive twenty
+paddles on the frame at the workhouse; and the third, the man we have
+described, being brought forward, weak with the loss of blood, leaned
+his hand upon the back of a chair. "Stand up straight!" said the
+officer, in a commanding tone.
+
+"Now, my boy, this is twice you have been before this court. Your master
+has left you to the mercy of the law, and given strict orders to the
+police in the event that you were caught a third time. Your crime is
+worse now, for you were caught in company with that white boy-probably
+on some errand of villany, prowling about the streets after drum-beat.
+I shall, in consideration of the facts here stated by the police, whose
+evidence I am bound to recognise, sentence you to nineteen paddles on
+the frame, and to be committed to jail, in accordance with your master's
+orders, there to await his further directions.
+
+"Arraign the white prisoners according to the roll, Mr.--. Have you sent
+a message to the Captain about that boy?" inquired the mayor.
+
+"No, yer honor; but I will send at once," said the officer, stepping
+into the passage and calling an attendant.
+
+The little fellow was arraigned first. He stood up before the mayor
+while the ruffianly policeman who arrested him preferred the charges
+and swore to them, adding as much to give coloring as possible. "Now, my
+man, let me hear what you have got to say for yourself. I have sent for
+your captain," said the mayor, looking as if he really felt pity for the
+little fellow.
+
+He commenced to tell his simple story, but soon became so convulsed with
+tears that he could proceed no further. "I only went to the jail to see
+Manuel, the steward, and I got lost, and begged the black man to show me
+the way"--said he, sobbing.
+
+"Well, I have heard enough," said the mayor, interrupting him. "You
+could not have been at the jail at that time o' night-impossible. It
+was after hours-contrary to rules-and only makes the matter worse for
+yourself. You can stand aside, and if the Captain comes before court
+is through, we will see further; if not, you must be committed as a
+vagrant. I'm afraid of you young strollers."
+
+The officer of the guard, as if the poor boy's feelings were not already
+sufficiently harassed, took him by the arm, and pushing him into a
+corner, said, "There, you young scamp, sit down. You'll get your deserts
+when you get to the jail."
+
+He sat down, but could not restrain his feelings. The presence of the
+Captain was his only hope. He saw the prisoners arraigned one by one,
+and join him as they were ordered for committal. He was handcuffed like
+the rest, and delivered to the constable. The reader can imagine the
+smile of gladness that welcomed the Captain's timely appearance. The
+latter's exhibition of feeling, and the simple exclamation of the
+child's joy, formed a striking picture of that fondness which a loving
+child manifests when meeting its parents after a long absence.
+
+"Take the irons off that child," said the colonel to the constable. "A
+man like you should not put such symbols of ignominy upon a youth like
+that."
+
+"I would do any thing to oblige you, colonel; but I cannot without
+orders from the mayor," returned the man, very civilly.
+
+"I'll see that you do, very quick," rejoined the colonel, impatiently;
+and taking the little fellow by the arm in a compassionate manner, led
+him back into the presence of the mayor, followed by the Captain.
+
+"I want to know what you are committing this lad for," said the colonel,
+setting his hat upon the table, while his face flushed with indignation.
+
+"Vagrancy, and caught prowling about the streets with a negro at
+midnight. That is the charge, colonel," replied the mayor, with
+particular condescension and suavity.
+
+"Was there any proof adduced to substantiate that fact?"
+
+"None but the policeman's; you know we are bound to take that as prima
+facie."
+
+"Then it was entirely ex parte. But you know the character of these
+policemen, and the many aggravated circumstances that have arisen from
+their false testimony. I wish to cast no disrespect, your honor; but
+really they will swear to any thing for a fee, while their unscrupulous
+bribery has become so glaring, that it is a disgrace to our police
+system. Have you heard the boy's story?" said the colonel.
+
+"Well, he began to tell a crooked story, so full of admissions, and then
+made such a blubbering about it, that I couldn't make head or tail of
+it."
+
+"Well, here is the Captain of his vessel, a friend of mine, whom I
+esteem a gentleman-for all captains ought to be gentlemen, not excepting
+Georgia captains and majors," said the colonel, jocosely, turning round
+and introducing the Captain to his honor. "Now, your honor, you will
+indulge me by listening to the little fellow's story, which will be
+corroborated in its material points by the statements of the Captain,
+which, I trust, will be sufficient; if not, we shall recur to the
+jailer."
+
+"It will be sufficient. I am only sorry there has been so much trouble
+about it," said the mayor.
+
+The boy now commenced to tell his story, which the mayor listened
+to with all learned attention. No sooner had Tommy finished, and the
+Captain arose to confirm his statements, than the mayor declared himself
+satisfied, apologized for the trouble it had caused, and discharged the
+boy upon paying the costs, the amount of which the colonel took from his
+pocket and threw upon the table. Thus was Tommy's joy complete; not
+so the poor negro whose ill luck he shared. This high-sounding mayor's
+court was like Caesar's court, with the exceptions in Caesar's favor.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX. EMEUTE AMONG THE STEWARDS.
+
+
+
+SEVERAL days had passed ere we again introduce the reader to the cell of
+the imprisoned stewards. The captain of the Janson had been assured by
+Mr. Grimshaw that every thing was comfortable at the jail, and Manuel
+would be well cared for. Confiding in this, the activity of the consul
+to bring the matter before the proper authorities-and the manner
+in which his own time was engrossed with his business-left him no
+opportunity to visit Manuel at the jail. Tommy and one of the sailors
+had carried him his hammock, and a few things from the ship's stores;
+and with this exception, they had but little to eat for several days.
+Copeland had but a few days more to remain, and, together with those who
+were with him, had exhausted their means, in providing from day to
+day, during their imprisonment. The poor woman who did their washing,
+a generous-hearted mulatto, had brought them many things, for which she
+asked no compensation. Her name was Jane Bee, and when the rules of the
+jail made every man his own washerwoman, she frequently washed for those
+who had nothing to pay her. But her means were small, and she worked
+hard for a small pittance, and had nothing to bring them for several
+days. They were forced to take the allowance of bread, but could not
+muster resolution to eat the sickly meat.
+
+Those who had suffered from it before, took it as a natural consequence,
+looking to the time of their release, as if it was to bring a happy
+change in their lives. But Manuel felt that it was an unprecedented
+outrage upon his feelings, and was determined to remonstrate against
+it. He knocked loudly at the door, and some of the prisoners hearing it,
+reported to the jailer, who sent Daley to answer it. As soon as the door
+was opened, he rushed past, and succeeded in gaining the iron door that
+opened into the vestibule, where he could converse with the Jailer,
+through the grating, before Daley could stop him.
+
+The jailer seeing him at the grating, anticipated his complaint. "Well,
+Pereira,--what's the matter up-stairs?" said he.
+
+"For God's sake, jailer, what am I put in here for-to starve? We cannot
+eat the meat you send us, and we have had little else than bread and
+water for three days. Do give us something to eat, and charge it to
+consul, or Captain, an' I'll pay it from my wages when I get out, if I
+ever do," said he.
+
+"My dear fellow!" said the jailer, "no one knows your case better than
+I do; but I am poor, and the restrictions which I am under allow me
+no privileges. You had all better take your meat in the morning-if you
+won't take soup-and try to cook it, or get Jane to do it for you. I
+will give you some coffee and bread from my own table, to-night, and you
+better say as little about it as possible, for if Grimshaw hears it, he
+may lock you up."
+
+"Do, I shall be very thankful, for we are really suffering from hunger,
+in our cell, and I pay you when I get money from Captain," said Manuel,
+manifesting his thankfulness at the jailer's kindness.
+
+"I will send it up in a few minutes, but you needn't trouble yourself
+about pay-I wouldn't accept it!" said the jailer; and as good as his
+word, he sent them up a nice bowl of coffee for each, and some bread,
+butter, and cheese. They partook of the humble fare, with many thanks to
+the donor. Having despatched it, they seated themselves upon the
+floor, around the faint glimmer of a tin lamp, while Copeland read
+the twentieth and twenty-first chapters of the Acts of the Apostles.
+Copeland was a pious negro, and his behaviour during his imprisonment
+enlisted the respect of every one in jail. Singular as the taste may
+seem, he had his corner in the cell decorated with little framed
+prints. Among them we noticed one of the crucifixion, and another of the
+Madonna. After reading the chapters, they retired to their hard beds.
+About nine o'clock the next morning, Daley came to the door with a piece
+of neck meat, so tainted and bloody that its smell and looks more than
+satisfied the stomach.
+
+"Here it is, boys," said he; "yer four pound, but ye's better take soup,
+cos ye'll niver cook that bone, anyhow."
+
+"Do you think we're like dogs, to eat such filth as that? No! I'd rather
+starve!" said Manuel.
+
+"Indeed, an' ye'll larn to ate any thing win ye'd be here a month. But
+be dad, if ye don't watch number one about here, ye's won't get much
+nohow," replied Daley, dropping the bloody neck upon the floor, and
+walking out.
+
+"Better take it," said Copeland. "There's no choice, and hunger don't
+stand for dainties, especially in this jail, where everybody is famished
+for punishment. If we don't eat it, we can give it to some of the poor
+prisoners up-stairs."
+
+"While I have good ship-owners, and a good Captain, I never will eat
+such stuff as that; oh! no," returned Manuel.
+
+The meat was laid in a corner for the benefit of the flies; and when
+dinner time arrived, the same hard extreme arrived with it-bread and
+water. And nobody seemed to have any anxieties on their behalf; for two
+of them had written notes to their Captains, on the day previous, but
+they remained in the office for want of a messenger to carry them.
+Fortunately, Jane called upon them in the afternoon, and brought a nice
+dish of rice and another of homony.
+
+We will here insert a letter we received from a very worthy friend, who,
+though he had done much for the Charleston people, and been repaid
+in persecutions, was thrown into jail for a paltry debt by a ruthless
+creditor. Cleared by a jury of twelve men, he was held in confinement
+through the wretched imperfection of South Carolina law, to await nearly
+twelve months for the sitting of the "Appeal Court," more to appease the
+vindictiveness of his enemies than to satisfy justice, for it was well
+understood that he did not owe the debt. His letter speaks for itself.
+Charleston Jail, March 31, '52.
+
+MY DEAR FRIEND,--I could not account for your absence during the last
+few days, until this morning, when Mr. F***** called upon me for a few
+moments, and from him I learnt that you had been quite unwell. If you
+are about to-morrow, do call upon me; for a more dreary place, or one
+where less regard is paid to the calls of humanity, cannot be found
+among the nations of the earth.
+
+Such is the ordinary condition of suffering within this establishment,
+that men, and even women, are forced to all kinds of extremes to
+sustain life; and, to speak what experience has taught me, crime is more
+increased than reduced by this wretched system. There seems to be little
+distinction among the prisoners, and no means to observe it, except in
+what is called Mount Rascal on the third story. Pilfering is so common,
+that you cannot leave your room without locking your door. The jailer
+is a good, kind-hearted old man, very often giving from his own table to
+relieve the wants of debtors, many of whom repay him with ingratitude. I
+have suffered many privations from shipwreck and cold, but never until
+I came to South Carolina was I compelled to endure imprisonment and
+subsist several days upon bread and water.
+
+Talk about chivalry and hospitality! How many men could join with me and
+ask, "Where is it?" But why should I demur, when I see those abroad who
+have been driven from this State to seek bread; when I hear the many
+voices without tell of struggling to live, for want of system in
+mechanical employment, and when I look upon several within these sombre
+walls who are even worse than me. Here is a physician, with a wife
+and large family, committed for a debt which he was unable to pay.
+His father's name stands among the foremost of the State--a General of
+distinction, who offered his life for her in time of war, and whose name
+honors her triumphs, and has since graced the councils of state.
+
+General Hammond, whose name occupies such a conspicuous place in the
+military history of South Carolina. The father's enthusiasm for his
+country's cause led him to sacrifice his all, and by it he entailed
+misfortune upon his descendants. When I consider the case of Shannon,
+whose eleven years and seven months' imprisonment for debt, as it
+was called, but which eventually proved to be a question turning upon
+technicalities of law, gave him, body and soul, to the vindictiveness of
+a persecutor, whose unrelenting malignity was kept up during that long
+space of time. It was merely a breach of limitation between merchants,
+the rights of which should be governed by commercial custom. Shannon
+had, amassed about twenty thousand dollars by hard industry; his health
+was waning, and he resolved to retire with it to his native county.
+The gem proved too glaring for the lynx eye of a "true Carolinian,"
+who persuaded him to invest his money in cotton. Moved by flattering
+inducements, he authorized a factor to purchase for him upon certain
+restrictions, which, unfortunately for himself, were not drawn up with
+regard to legal enforcement-one of those singular instruments between a
+merchant and an inexperienced man which a professional quibbler can
+take advantage of. Cotton was at the tip-top, and very soon Shannon
+was presented with an account of purchase, and draft so far beyond his
+limits, that he demurred, and rejected the purchase entirely; but some
+plot should be laid to entrap him. The factor undertook the force
+game, notified him that the cotton was held subject to his order, and
+protested the draft for the appearance of straightforwardness. Cotton
+shortly fell to the other extreme, the lot was "shoved up" for sale on
+Shannon's account, Shannon was sued for the balance, held to bail, and
+in default committed to prison. His confinement and endurance of it
+would form a strange chapter in the history of imprisonment for debt.
+Carrying his money with him, he closed the door of his cell, and neither
+went out nor would allow any one but the priest to enter for more than
+three years; and for eleven years and seven months he paced the room
+upon a diagonal line from corner to corner, until he wore the first
+flooring, of two-and-a-quarter-inch pine, entirely through.
+
+I might go on and tell of many others, whose poverty was well known,
+and yet suffered years of imprisonment for debt; but I find I have
+digressed. I must relate an amusing affair which took place this morning
+between Manuel Pereira, the steward of the English brig Janson, which
+put into this port in distress, and the jailer. He is the man about whom
+so much talk and little feeling has been enlisted--a fine, well-made,
+generous-hearted Portuguese. He is olive-complexioned--as light as many
+of the Carolinians--intelligent and obliging, and evidently unaccustomed
+to such treatment as he receives here.
+
+Manuel appeared before the jailer's office this morning with two junks
+of disgusting-looking meat, the neck-bones, tainted and bloody, in each
+hand. His Portuguese ire was up. "Mister Poulnot, what you call dis? In
+South Carolina you feed man on him, ah? In my country, ah yes! we feed
+him to dog. What you call him? May-be somethin' what me no know him. In
+South Carolina, prison sailor when he shipwreck, starve him on nosin',
+den tell him eat this, ah! I sails 'round ze world, but never savage man
+gives me like zat to eat! No, I starve 'fore I eat him, be gar! Zar,
+you take him," said he, throwing the pieces of meat upon the floor in
+disdain.
+
+"Meat! Yes, it's what's sent here for us. You mustn't grumble at me;
+enter your complaints to the sheriff, when he comes," said the jailer,
+with an expression of mortification on his countenance.
+
+"Meat, ah! You call dat meat in South Carolina? I call him bull-neck,
+not fit for dog in my country. I see, when Capitan come, vat he do,"
+said Manuel, turning about and going to his room in a great excitement.
+
+"You'd better be careful how you talk, or you may get locked up when the
+sheriff comes."
+
+It seems that the Captain had received a note from him, addressed by one
+of the white prisoners on the same floor, and reached the jail just as
+Manuel had ascended the stairs. He rang the bell and requested to see
+Manuel.
+
+"Manuel Pereira?" inquired the jailer.
+
+"Yes," said the Captain, "he is my steward."
+
+He heard the Captain's voice, and immediately returned to the lobby. The
+tears ran down his cheeks as soon as he saw his old protector. "Well,
+Manuel, I am glad to see you, but sorry that it is in imprisonment.
+Tell me what is the matter. Don't they use you well here?" inquired the
+Captain.
+
+Stepping within the office door, he caught up the pieces of meat, and
+bringing them out in his hands, held them up. "There, Capitan, that
+no fit for man, is it?" said he. "Law send me prison, but law no give
+not'ing to eat. What I do dat people treat me so? Ah, Capitan, bull
+neck, by gar, yes-bull born in South Carolina, wid two neck. Ils sont
+reduits l'extremit," said he, concluding with broken French.
+
+"That cannot be; it's against the law to kill bulls in South Carolina,"
+interrupted the jailer jocosely.
+
+"Must be. I swear he bull-neck, 'cas he cum every day just like him.
+Bull born wid one neck no cum so many. What I get for breakfast,
+Capitan, ah?--piece bad bread. What I get for dinner, ah?--bull-neck.
+Yes, what I get for supper, too?--piece bread and bucket o' water.
+May-be he bad, may be he good, just so he come. You think I live on dat,
+Capitan?" said he, in reply to the Captain's questions.
+
+The Captain felt incensed at such treatment, and excused himself for not
+calling before; yet he could not suppress a smile that stole upon his
+countenance in consequence of Manuel's quaint earnestness.
+
+"That is certainly strange fare for a human being; but the supper
+seems rather a comical one. Did you drink the bucket of water, Manuel?"
+inquired the Captain, retaining a sober face.
+
+"Capitan, you know me too well for dat. I not ask 'em nozin' what he no
+get, but I want my coffee for suppe'. I no eat him like zat," throwing
+the putrid meat upon the floor again.
+
+"Hi, hi! That won't do in this jail. You're dirtying up all my floor,"
+said the jailer, calling a negro boy and ordering him to carry the
+bull-necks, as Manuel called them, into the kitchen.
+
+"You call him dirt, ah, Miser Jailer? Capitan, just come my room; I
+shown him," said Manuel, leading the way up-stairs, and the Captain
+followed. A sight at the cell was enough, while the sickly stench forbid
+him to enter beyond the threshold. He promised Manuel that he would
+provide for him in future, and turning about suddenly, retreated into
+the lower lobby.
+
+"Jailer, what does all this mean? Do you allow men to starve in a land
+of plenty, and to suffer in a cell like that?" asked the Captain in a
+peremptory tone.
+
+"I feel for the men, but you must enter your complaints to the
+sheriff-the ration of the jail is entirely in his hands."
+
+"But have you no voice in it, by which you can alleviate their
+situation?"
+
+"Not the least! My duty is to keep every thing-every thing to rights,
+as far as people are committed. You will find the sheriff in his office,
+any time between this and two o'clock," said the jailer. And the Captain
+left as suddenly as he came.
+
+You will think I have written you an essay, instead of a letter inviting
+you to come and see me. Accept it for its intention, and excuse the
+circumstances. Your obedient servant,
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI. THE CAPTAIN'S INTERVIEW WITH MR. GRIMSHAW.
+
+
+
+THE appearance of things at the jail was forlorn in the extreme.
+The Captain knew the integrity of Manuel, and not only believed his
+statement, but saw the positive proofs to confirm them. He repaired to
+the sheriff's office, and inquiring for that functionary, was pointed to
+Mr. Grimshaw, who sat in his large chair, with his feet upon the table,
+puffing the fumes of a very fine-flavored Havana, as unconcerned as
+if he was lord in sovereignty over every thing about the city. "I am
+captain of the Janson, and have called to inquire about my steward?"
+said the Captain.
+
+"Ah! yes,--you have a nigger fellow in jail. Oh! by-the-by, that's the
+one there was so much fuss about, isn't it?" said Mr. Grimshaw, looking
+up.
+
+"It is an imperative duty on me to seek the comfort of my officers
+and crew," said the Captain. "I received a note from my steward, this
+morning,--here it is, (handing him the note,) you can read it. He
+requested me to call upon him at the jail, where I lost no time in
+going, and found what he stated there to be too true. How is it! From
+the great liberality of tone which everywhere met my ears when I first
+arrived, I was led to believe that he would be made comfortable; and
+that the mere confinement was the only feature of the law that was a
+grievance. Now I find that to be the only tolerable part of it. When a
+man has committed no crime, and is imprisoned to satisfy a caprice
+of public feeling, it should be accompanied with the most favoring
+attendants. To couple it with the most disgraceful abuses, as are shown
+here, makes it exceedingly repugnant. If we pay for confining these men,
+and for their living while they are confined, in God's name let us get
+what we pay for!"
+
+The reader will observe that Mr. Grimshaw was a man of coarse manners
+and vulgar mind, with all their traces preserved on the outer man. He
+looked up at the Captain with a presumptuous frown, and then said, "Why,
+Mr. Captain, how you talk! But that kind o' talk won't do here in
+South Carolina. That nigger o' yourn gives us a mighty site of trouble,
+Captain. He doesn't seem to understand that he must be contented in
+jail, and live as the other prisoners do. He gets what the law requires,
+and if he gives us any further trouble, we shall lock him up in the
+third story."
+
+"You cannot expect him to be contented, when you furnish the means of
+discontent. But I did not come here to argue with you, nor to ask any
+thing as a favour, but as a right. My steward has been left to suffer!
+Am I to pay for what he does not get? Or am I to pay you for the
+pretence, and still be compelled to supply him on account of the owners?
+You must excuse my feelings, for I have had enough to provoke them!"
+returned the Captain.
+
+"That business is entirely my own! He gets what the State allows, and I
+provide. Your steward never wrote that note; it was dictated by some of
+them miserable white prisoners. I can hear no complaints upon such cases
+as them. If I were to listen to all these nonsensical complaints, it
+would waste all my time. I wish the devil had all the nigger stewards
+and their complaints; the jail's in a fuss with them all the time. I can
+hear nothing further, sir-nothing further!" said Grimshaw emphatically,
+interrupting the Captain as he attempted to speak; at which the Captain
+became so deeply incensed, that he relieved his feelings in that sort of
+plain English which a Scotchman can best bestow in telling a man what he
+thinks of his character.
+
+"You must remember, sir, you are in the office of the sheriff of the
+county-parish, I mean,--and I am, sir, entitled to proper respect.
+Begone!--avaunt! you have no right to come here and traduce my character
+in that way. You musn't take me for a parish beadle," said Grimshaw,
+contorting the unmeaning features of his visage, and letting fly a
+stream of tobacco juice in his excitement.
+
+"If you have no laws to give me justice, you have my opinion of your
+wrongs," returned the Captain, and taking his hat, left the office with
+the intention of returning to the jail. On reflection, he concluded
+to call upon Colonel S--, which he did, and finding him in his office,
+stated the circumstances to him.
+
+"These things are the fruits of imbecility; but I am sorry to say there
+is no relief from them. We are a curious people, and do a great many
+curious things according to law, and leave a great many things undone
+that the law and lawmakers ought to do. But I will go with you to the
+jail, and whatever my influence will effect is at your service," said
+the Colonel, putting on his hat, and accompanying the Captain to the
+jail.
+
+Mr. Grimshaw had forestalled them, and after having given the jailer
+particular instructions to lock Manuel up if he made any further
+complaint, and to carry out his orders upon the peril of his situation,
+met them a few steps from the outer gate, on his return. "There,
+Captain!" said Grimshaw, making a sort of halt, "I have given the jailer
+particular orders in regard to your grumbling nigger!"
+
+Neither the Captain nor Colonel S--took any notice of his remarks, and
+passed on into the jail. Colonel S--interceded for the man, explaining
+the circumstances which had unfortunately brought him there, and begged
+the jailer's kind consideration in his behalf. The jailer told them what
+his orders had been, but promised to do as far as was in his power, and
+to see any thing that was sent to him safely delivered.
+
+After leaving the jail, Colonel S--proposed a walk, and they proceeded
+along a street running at right angles with the jail, until they came
+to a corner where a large brick building was in process of erection.
+The location was not in what might strictly be called "the heart of the
+city," nor was it in the suburbs. Carpenters and masons, both black and
+white, were busily employed in their avocations, and from the distance
+all seemed fair and moving with despatch. As they approached nearer,
+cries and moans sounded upon the air, and rose high above the clatter of
+the artisans' work. The Captain quickened his pace, but the colonel,
+as if from a consciousness of the effect, halted, and would fain have
+retraced his steps. "Come!" said the Captain, "let us hasten-they are
+killing somebody!" They approached the building, and entered by an open
+door in the basement. The passage, or entry-way, was filled with all
+sorts of building materials; and on the left, another door opened into
+a long basement apartment, with loose boards laid upon the floor-joists
+overhead. Here in this dark apartment was the suffering object whose
+moans had attracted their attention. A large billet of wood, about six
+feet long and three feet square, which had the appearance of being used
+for a chopping-block, laid near. A poor negro man, apparently advanced
+in years, was stripped naked and bent over the block, in the shape of a
+horse-shoe, with his hands and feet closely pinioned to stakes, driven
+in the ground on each side. His feet were kept close together, and close
+up to the log, while he was drawn over, tight by the hands, which were
+spread open. Thus, with a rope around his neck, tied in a knot at
+the throat, with each end carried to the pinion where his hands were
+secured, his head and neck were drawn down to the tightest point. The
+very position was enough to have killed an ordinary human being in less
+than six hours. His master, a large, robust man, with a strong Irish
+brogue, started at their appearance, as if alarmed at the presence
+of intruders, while holding his hand in the attitude of administering
+another blow. "There! you infernal nigger; steal again, will you?"
+said he, frothing at the mouth with rage--with his coat off, his
+shirt-sleeves rolled up, and his face, hands, arms and shirt-bosom so
+bespattered with blood, that a thrill of horror ran through the Captain.
+On the ground lay several pieces of hoop, broken and covered with blood,
+while he held in his hand another piece, (which he had torn from a
+lime-cask,) reeking with blood, presenting the picture of a murderer
+bestained with the blood of his victim. But the poor sufferer's
+punishment had wasted his strength,--his moans had become so faint as to
+be scarcely perceptible. His posteriors were so cut and mangled that we
+could compare them to nothing but a piece of bullock's-liver, with its
+tenacity torn by craven dogs. His body was in a profuse perspiration,
+the sweat running from his neck and shoulders, while the blood streamed
+from his bruises, down his legs, and upon some shavings on the ground.
+Just at this moment a boy brought a pail of water, and set it down close
+by the tyrant's feet. "Go away, boy!" said he, and the boy left as
+quick as possible. The Captain stood dismayed at the bloody picture.
+
+"Unmerciful man!" said the colonel in a peremptory tone; "what have you
+been doing here? You fiend of hell, let the man up! You own slaves to
+bring disgrace upon us in this manner! Epithets of contempt and disgust
+are too good for you. It is such beasts as you who are creating a
+popular hatred against us, and souring the feelings of our countrymen.
+Let the man up instantly; the very position you have him in is enough to
+kill him, and, if I'm not mistaken, you've killed him already."
+
+"Indeed, he's me own property, and it's yerself won't lose a ha'penny if
+he's kilt. An' I'll warrant ye he's cur't of stalin' better than the man
+beyant at the wurk'o'se would be doin' if. Bad luck to the nager,
+an' it's the second time he'd be doin' that same thing," said he, as
+unconcernedly as if he had just been killing a calf.
+
+"I'll 'your own' you, you miserable wretch! Your abuse and cruel
+treatment of your slaves is becoming a public thing; and if you a'n't
+very careful, something will be done about it before council. If
+they are your own, you must not treat them worse than dogs; they have
+feeling, if you have no compassion. Be quick! release him at once!"
+demanded the colonel, feeling the man's wrist and head.
+
+The tyrant vent deliberately to work, unloosing the cords. This provoked
+the colonel still more, and taking his knife from his pocket, he severed
+the cords that bound his hands and feet, while as suddenly the Captain
+sprang with his knife and severed those that bound his hands and
+neck. "Stop, Captain, stop! take no part," said the colonel, with a
+significant look.
+
+"Gintlemen, I wish yes wouldn't interfere with my own business," said
+the master.
+
+"Take him up, you villanous wretch! I speak to you as you deserve,
+without restraint or respect," again the colonel repeated.
+
+He called to the boy who was bringing the pail of water when they
+entered. He came forward, and taking the poor fellow by the shoulders,
+this beast in human form cried out, "Get up now, ye miserable thief,
+ye." The poor fellow made a struggle, but as the black man raised his
+head-which seemed to hang as a dead weight-exhaustion had left him
+without strength, and he fell back among the bloody shavings like a
+mutilated mass of lifeless flesh.
+
+"None of your humbugging; yer worth a dozen dead niggers anyhow," said
+he, taking up the pail of water and throwing nearly half of it over him;
+then passing the bucket to the black man and ordering him to get more
+water and wash him down; then to get some saltpetre and a sponge to sop
+his flesh.
+
+"Well," said the colonel, "I have seen a good deal of cruelty to slaves,
+but this is the most beastly I have ever beheld. If you don't send for
+a doctor at once, I shall report you. That man will die, to a moral
+certainty. Now, you may depend upon what I say-if that man dies, you'll
+feel the consequences, and I shall watch you closely."
+
+"Sure I always takes care of me own niggers, an' it's himself that won't
+be asked to do a stroke of work for a week, but have the same to git
+well in," said the tyrant as the colonel and Captain were leaving.
+
+"God be merciful to us, and spare us from the savages of mankind. That
+scene, with its bloody accompaniment, will haunt me through life. Do
+your laws allow such things?" said the Captain, evidently excited.
+
+"To tell the truth, Captain," said the colonel, "our laws do not reach
+them. These men own a few negroes, which, being property, they exercise
+absolute control over; a negro's testimony being invalid, gives them an
+unlimited power to abuse and inflict punishment; while, if a white man
+attempts to report such things, the cry of 'abolitionist' is raised
+against him, and so many stand ready to second the cry, that he must
+have a peculiar position if he does not prejudice his own interests
+and safety. I am sorry it is so; but it is too true, and while it
+stigmatizes the system, it works against ourselves. The evil is in the
+defects of the system, but the remedy is a problem with diverse and
+intricate workings, which, I own, are beyond my comprehension to solve.
+The reason why I spoke to you as I did when you cut the pinions from the
+man's hands, was to give you a word of precaution. That is a bad man.
+Negroes would rather be sold to a sugar plantation in Louisiana any
+time than be sold to him. He soon works them down; in two years, fine,
+healthy fellows become lame, infirm, and sickly under him; he never
+gives them a holiday, and seldom a Sunday, and half-starves them at
+that. If his feelings had been in a peculiar mood at the instant you
+cut that cord, and he had not labored under the fear of my presence, he
+would have raised a gang of his stamp, and with the circumstance of your
+being a stranger, the only alternative for your safety would have been
+in your leaving the city."
+
+"That vagabond has beaten the poor creature so that he will die; it
+can't be otherwise," said the Captain.
+
+"Well, no; I think not, if he is well taken care of for a week or so;
+but it's a chance if that brute gives him a week to get well. When
+proud-flesh sets in, it is very tedious; that is the reason, so far
+as the law is concerned, that the lash was abolished and the paddle
+substituted--the former mangled in the manner you saw just now, while
+the latter is more acute and bruises less. I have seen a nigger taken
+from the paddle-frame apparently motionless and lifeless, very little
+bruised, and not much blood drawn; but he would come to and go to work
+in three or four days," said the colonel as they passed along together.
+
+We would print the name of this brute in human form, that the world
+might read it, were it not for an amiable wife and interesting family,
+whose feelings we respect. We heard the cause of this cruel torture a
+short time after, which was simply that he had stolen a few pounds
+of nails, and this fomented the demon's rage. In the manner we have
+described, this ferocious creature had kept his victim for more than two
+hours, beating him with the knotty hoops taken from lime-casks. His rage
+would move at intervals, like gusts of wind during a gale. Thus, while
+his feelings raged highest, he would vent them upon the flesh of the
+poor pinioned wretch; then he would stop, rest his arm, and pace the
+ground from wall to wall, and as soon as his passion stormed, commence
+again and strike the blows with all his power, at the same time keeping
+the black boy standing with a bucket of water in his hand ready to pour
+upon the wretch whenever signs of fainting appeared. Several times, when
+the copious shower came over him, it filled his mouth, so that his cries
+resounded with a gurgling, death-like noise, that made every sensation
+chill to hear it. During this space of time, he inflicted more than
+three hundred blows. Our information is from the man who did his
+master's bidding--poured the water--and dared not say, "Good massa,
+spare poor Jacob." We visited the place about a month afterward, on
+a pretext of examining the basement of the building, and saw the
+unmistakable evidences of civilized torture yet remaining in the ground
+and upon the shavings that were scattered around.
+
+"Captain, you must not judge the institution of slavery by what you
+saw there; that is only one of those isolated cases so injurious in
+themselves, but for which the general character of the institution
+should not be held answerable," said the colonel.
+
+"A system so imperfect should be revised, lest innocent men be made to
+suffer its wrongs," said the Captain.
+
+They continued their walk through several very pretty parts of the city,
+where fine flowering gardens and well-trimmed hedges were nicely laid
+out; these, however, were not the habitations of the "old families."
+They occupied parts of the city designated by massive-looking old
+mansions, exhibiting an antiqueness and mixed architecture, with
+dilapidated court-yards and weather-stained walls, showing how steadfast
+was the work of decay.
+
+The colonel pointed out the many military advantages of the city, which
+would be used against Uncle Sam if he meddled with South Carolina. He
+spoke of them ironically, for he was not possessed of the secession
+monomania. He had been a personal friend of Mr. Calhoun, and knew his
+abstractions. He knew Mr. McDuffie; Hamilton, (the transcendant, of
+South Carolina fame;) Butler, of good component parts-eloquent, but
+moved by fancied wrongs; Rhett, renouncer of that vulgar name of Smith,
+who hated man because he spoke, yet would not fight because he feared
+his God; and betwixt them, a host of worthies who made revenge a motto;
+and last, but not least, great Quattlebum, whose strength and
+spirit knows no bound, and brought the champion Commander, with his
+enthusiastic devotion, to lead unfaltering forlorn hopes. But he knew
+there was deception in the political dealings of this circle of great
+names.
+
+Returning to the market, they took a social glass at Baker's, where the
+colonel took leave of the Captain; and the latter, intending to repair
+to his vessel, followed the course of the market almost to its lowest
+extreme. In one of the most public places of the market, the Captain's
+attention was attracted by a singular object of mechanism. It seemed
+so undefined in its application, that he was reminded of the old saying
+among sailors when they fall in with any indescribable thing at sea,
+that it was a "fidge-fadge, to pry the sun up with in cloudy weather."
+It was a large pedestal about six feet high, with a sort of platform at
+the base for persons to stand upon, supplied with two heavy rings about
+eight inches apart. It was surmounted by an apex, containing an iron
+shackle long enough for a sloop-of-war's best bower chain, and just,
+beneath it was a nicely-turned moulding. About three feet from the
+ground, and twelve inches from the pedestal, were two pieces of timber
+one above the other, with a space of some ten inches between them, the
+upper one set about five inches nearest the pedestal, also containing
+two rings, and both supported by posts in the ground. Above the whole
+was a framework, with two projecting timbers supplied with rings, and
+standing about fourteen inches in a diagonal direction above the big
+ring in the apex of the shaft. It was altogether a curious instrument,
+but it designated the civilization of the age, upon the same principle
+that a certain voyager who, on landing in a distant country, discovered
+traces of civilization in the decaying remains of an old gallows.
+
+He viewed the curious instrument for some time, and then turning to an
+old ragged negro, whose head and beard were whitened with the flour of
+age, said, "Well, old man, what do you call that?"
+
+"Why, massa, him great t'ing dat-what big old massa judge send
+buckra-man to get whip, so color foke laugh when 'e ketch 'im on de
+back, ca' bim; an' massa wid de cock-up hat on 'e head put on big vip
+jus' so," said the old negro.
+
+It was the whipping-post, where white men, for small thefts, were
+branded with ignominy and shame.
+
+"Are you a slave, old man?" inquired the Captain.
+
+The old man turned his head aside and pulled his ragged garments, as if
+shame had stung his feelings.
+
+"Do, good massa-old Simon know ye don'e belong here-give him piece of
+'bacca," replied the hoary-headed veteran evidently intending to evade
+the question. The Captain divided his "plug" with him, and gave him a
+quarter to get more, but not to buy whiskey. "Tank-e, massa, tank-e; he
+gone wid ole Simon long time."
+
+"But you haven't answered my question; I asked you if you were a slave."
+
+"Ah! massa, ye don'e know him how he is, ah ha! ha! I done gone now.
+Massa Pringle own 'im once, but 'im so old now, nobody say I own 'im,
+an' ole Simon a'n't no massa what say I his fo' bacon. I don't woff
+nofin' nohow now, 'cos I ole. When Simon young-great time 'go-den massa
+say Simon his; woff touzan' dollars; den me do eve' ting fo' massa just
+so. I prime nigga den, massa; now I woff nosin', no corn and bacon 'cept
+what 'im git from Suke-e. She free; good massa make her free," said he.
+
+"How old are you, old man?" inquired the Captain.
+
+"Ah, Massa Stranger, ye got ole Simon da! If me know dat, den 'im
+know somefin' long time ago, what buckra-man don' larn. I con'try-born
+nigger, massa, but I know yonder Massa Pringle house fo' he built 'im."
+Just at this moment several pieces of cannon and other ordnance were
+being drawn past on long, low-wheeled drays. "Ah, massa, ye don'e know
+what 'em be," said the old negro, pointing to them. "Dem wa' Massa South
+Ca'lina gwan to whip de 'Nited States wid Massa Goberna' order 'em last
+year, an 'e jus' come. Good masse gwan' to fight fo' we wid 'em." The
+poor old man seemed to take a great interest in the pieces of ordnance
+as they passed along, and to have inherited all the pompous ideas of
+his master. The negroes about Charleston have a natural inclination for
+military tactics, and hundreds of ragged urchins, as well as old daddies
+and mammies, may be seen following the fife and drum on parade days.
+
+"Then I suppose you've a home anywhere, and a master nowhere, old man?"
+said the Captain, shaking him by the hand, as one who had worn out his
+slavery to be disowned in the winter of life.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII. COPELAND'S RELEASE, AND MANUEL'S CLOSE CONFINEMENT.
+
+
+
+THE Captain of the Janson, finding that no dependence was to be placed
+upon the statements of the officials, after returning to his vessel,
+gave orders that Tommy should be sent to the jail every day with
+provisions for Manuel. The task was a desirable one for Tommy, and
+every day about ten o'clock he might be seen trudging to the jail with a
+haversack under his arm. There were five stewards confined in the cell,
+and for some days previous to this attention on the part of the Captain
+they had been reduced to the last stage of necessity. The quantity may
+be considered as meagre when divided among so many, but added to the
+little things brought in by Jane, and presents from several of the crew
+of the Janson, they got along. Still it was a dependence upon chance and
+charity, which any casual circumstance might affect. For several days
+they made themselves as contented and happy as the circumstances would
+admit; and always being anxious to enjoy the privilege of their time
+in the yard, they would leave their cell together, and mix with the
+prisoners of their own color under the stoop.
+
+After a few days, they found that their cell had been entered, and
+nearly all their provisions stolen. Not contented with this, the act was
+repeated for several days, and all the means they provided to detect the
+thief proved fruitless. The jailer made several searches through
+their remonstrances, but without effecting any thing. They kept their
+provisions in a little box, which they locked with a padlock; but as
+Daley had the keys of the cell, they had no means of locking the door.
+At length Manuel set a trap that proved effectual. One morning Tommy
+came puffing into the jail with a satchel over his back. "I guess Manuel
+won't feel downhearted when he sees this--do you think he will?" said
+the little fellow, as he put the satchel upon the floor and looked up
+at the jailer. "An' I've got some cigars, too, the Captain sent, in
+my pocket," said he, nodding his head; and putting his hand into a
+side-pocket, pulled out one and handed it to the jailer.
+
+"Ah! you are a good little fellow-worth a dozen of our boys. Sit down
+and rest yourself," said the jailer, and called a monstrous negro wench
+to bring a chair and take the satchel up to the cell. Then turning
+to the back-door, he called Manuel; and, as if conscious of Tommy's
+arrival, the rest of the stewards followed. He sprang from the chair
+as soon as he saw Manuel, and running toward him, commenced telling him
+what he had got in the satchel and at the same time pulled out a handful
+of segars that the Captain had sent for himself. Manuel led the way
+up-stairs, followed by Tommy and the train of stewards. Tommy opened the
+satchel, while Manuel laid the contents, one by one, on the table which
+necessity had found in the head of a barrel.
+
+"Now eat, my friends, eat just as much as you want, and then I'll catch
+the thief that breaks my lock and steals my meat. I catch him," said
+Manuel. After they had all done, he locked the balance up in his box,
+and sent everybody down-stairs into the yard, first covering himself
+with two mattrasses, and giving orders to Copeland to lock the door
+after him. Every thing was ready to move at the word. In this position
+he remained for nearly half an hour. At length he heard a footstep
+approach the door, and then the lock clink. The door opened slowly, and
+the veritable Mr. Daley limped in, and taking a key from his pocket,
+unlocked the little box, and filling his tin pan, locked it, and was
+walking off as independent as a wood-sawyer, making a slight whistle to
+a watch that was stationed at the end of the passage. "It's you, is it?"
+said Manuel, suddenly springing up and giving him a blow on the side of
+the head that sent him and the contents of the pan into a promiscuous
+pile on the floor. Daley gathered himself up and made an attempt to
+reach the door, but Manuel, fearing what might be the consequence if
+the other prisoners came to his assistance, shut the door before him and
+fastened it on the inside.
+
+"Bad luck to yer infernal eyes, will ye strike a white man, ye nager ye,
+in a country like this same?" said Daley, as he was gathering himself
+up. This incensed Manuel's feelings still more. To have insult added to
+injury, and a worthless drunkard and thief abuse him, was more than he
+could bear. He commenced according to a sailor's rule of science, and
+gave Daley a systematic threshing, which, although against the rules of
+the jail, was declared by several of the prisoners to be no more than
+he had long deserved. As may have been expected, Daley cried lustily for
+help, adding the very convenient item of murder, to make his case more
+alarming. Several persons had crowded around the door, but none could
+gain admittance. The jailer had no sooner reached the door, than (most
+unfortunately for Manuel) he was called back to the outer door, to admit
+Mr. Grimshaw, who had just rung the bell. The moment he entered, Daley's
+noise was loudest, and reached his ears before he had gained the outside
+gate. He rushed up-stairs, followed by the jailer, and demanded entrance
+at the cell door, swearing at the top of his voice that he would break
+it in with an axe if the command was not instantly obeyed.
+
+The door opened, and Manuel stood with his left hand extended at Daley.
+"Come in, gentlemen, I catch him, one rascal, what steal my provision
+every day, and I punish him, what he remember when I leave."
+
+Daley stood trembling against the wall, bearing the marks of serious
+injury upon his face and eyes. "At it again, Daley? Ah! I thought you
+had left off them tricks!" said the jailer.
+
+Daley began to tell a three-cornered story, and to give as many possible
+excuses, with equally as many characteristic bulls in them. "I don't
+want to hear your story, Daley," said Mr. Grimshaw. "But, Mr. Jailer, I
+command you to lock that man up in the third story," pointing to Manuel.
+"I don't care what the circumstances are. He's given us more trouble
+than he's worth. He tried to pass himself off for a white man, but he
+couldn't come that, and now he's had the impudence to strike a white
+man; lock him up! lock him up!! and keep him locked up until further
+orders from me. I'll teach him a lesson that he never learnt before he
+came to South Carolina; and then let Consul Mathew sweat over him, and
+raise another fuss if he can."
+
+"If he's guilty of violating the rules of the jail, Daley is guilty of
+misdemeanour, and the thieving has been aggravatingly continued. If we
+put one, we must put both up," said the jailer.
+
+"Just obey my orders, Mr. Jailer. I will reprimand Daley to-morrow. I
+shall just go to the extent of the law with that feller," said Grimshaw
+peremptorily.
+
+"You may lock me up in a dungeon, do with me as you will, if the power
+is yours; but my feelings are my own, and you cannot crush them. I look
+to my consul, and the country that has protected me around the world,
+and can protect me still," said Manuel, resigning himself to the jailer,
+whose intentions he knew to be good.
+
+Poor little Tommy stood begging and crying for his friend and companion,
+for he heard Mr. Grimshaw give an imperative order to the jailer not
+to allow visitors into his cell. "Never mind, Tommy, we shall soon meet
+again, and sail companions for the old owners. Don't cry; the jailer
+will let you see me to-morrow," said Manuel.
+
+"No, I can't do that; you heard my orders; I must obey them. I should
+like to do it, but it's out of my power," returned the jailer, awaiting
+with a bunch of keys in his hand.
+
+Manuel turned to the little fellow, and kissing him as he would an
+affectionate child, bade him adieu, and ascended, the steps leading to
+the third story (Mount Rascal) in advance of the jailer, to be confined
+in a dark, unhealthy cell, there to await the caprice of one man.
+To describe this miserable hole would be a task too harrowing to
+our feelings. We pass it for those who will come after us. He little
+thought, when he shook the hand of his little companion, that it was the
+last time he should meet him for many months, and then only to take a
+last parting look, under the most painful circumstances. But such is the
+course of life!
+
+Copeland had received notice to hold himself in readiness, as his vessel
+would be ready for sea the next morning. He was not long in getting his
+few things in order, and when morning came he was on hand, prepared to
+bound from the iron confines of the Charleston jail, like a stag from a
+thicket. As he bade good-by to his fellow-prisoners in the morning,
+he said, "This is my last imprisonment in Charleston. I have been
+imprisoned in Savannah, but there I had plenty to eat, comfortable
+apartments, and every thing I asked for, except my liberty. Never, so
+long as I sail the water, shall I ship for such a port as this again."
+He requested to see Manuel, but being refused, upon the restraint of
+orders, he left the jail. It was contrary to law; and thus in pursuing
+his vocation within the limits of South-Carolina, his owners were
+made to pay the following sum, for which neither they nor the man who
+suffered the imprisonment received any compensation. "Contrary to Law."
+Schooner "Oscar Jones," Captain Kelly, For William H. Copeland, Colored
+Seaman. To Sheriff of Charleston District. 1852,
+
+To Arrest, $2; Registry, $2, $4.00 To Recog. $1.31; Constable, $1, 2.31
+To Commitment and Discharge, 1.00 To 15 Days' Jail Maintenance of Wm. H.
+Copeland, at 80 cts. per day, 4.50 Received payment, $11.81 J. D--, Per
+Charles E. Kanapeaux, Clerk.
+
+God save the sovereignty of South Carolina, and let her mercy and
+hospitality be known on earth!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII. IMPRISONMENT OF JOHN PAUL, AND JOHN BAPTISTE PAMERLIE.
+
+
+
+IN order to complete the four characters, as we designed in the outset,
+we must here introduce the persons whose names fill the caption. The
+time of their imprisonment was some two months later than Manuel's
+release; but we introduce them here for the purpose of furnishing a
+clear understanding of the scenes connected with Manuel's release.
+
+John Paul was a fine-looking French negro, very dark, with
+well-developed features, and very intelligent,--what would be called in
+South Carolina, "a very prime feller." He was steward on board of the
+French bark Senegal, Captain--. He spoke excellent French and Spanish,
+and read Latin very well,--was a Catholic, and paid particular respect
+to devotional exercises,--but unfortunately he could not speak or
+understand a word of English. In all our observation of different
+characters of colored men, we do not remember to have seen one whose
+pleasant manner, intelligence, and civility, attracted more general
+attention. But he could not comprehend the meaning of the law
+imprisoning a peaceable man without crime, and why the authorities
+should fear him, when he could not speak their language. He wanted to
+see the city-what sort of people were in it-if they bore any analogy to
+their good old forefathers in France; and whether they had inherited the
+same capricious feelings as the descendants of the same generation
+on the other side of the water. There could be no harm in that; and
+although he knew something of French socialism, he was ignorant of
+Carolina's peculiar institutions, her politics, and her fears of
+abolition, as a "Georgia cracker"
+
+A sort of semi-civilized native, wearing a peculiar homespun dress; with
+a native dialect strongly resembling many of the Yorkshire phrases. They
+are generally found located in the poorer parishes and districts, where
+their primitive-looking cabins are easily designated from that of the
+more enterprising agriculturist. But few of them can read or write,--and
+preferring the coarsest mode of life, their habits are extremely
+dissolute. Now and then one may be found owning a negro or two,--but
+a negro would rather be sold to the torments of hell, or a Louisiana
+sugar-planter, than to a Georgia cracker. You will see them approaching
+the city on market-days, with their travelling-cart, which is a
+curiosity in itself. It is a two-wheeled vehicle of the most primitive
+description, with long, rough poles for shafts or thills. Sometimes it
+is covered with a blanket, and sometimes with a white rag, under which
+are a few things for market, and the good wife, with sometimes one
+or two wee-yans; for the liege lord never fails to bring his wife to
+market, that she may see the things of the city. The dejected-looking
+frame of some scrub-breed horse or a half-starved mule is tied (for we
+can't call it harnessed) between the thills, with a few pieces of rope
+and withes; and, provided with a piece of wool-tanned sheep-skin, the
+lord of the family, with peculiar dress, a drab slouched hat over his
+eyes, and a big whip in his hand, mounts on the back of the poor animal,
+and placing his feet upon the thills to keep them down, tortures it
+through a heavy, sandy road. The horses are loaded so much beyond their
+strength, that they will stop to blow, every ten or fifteen minutes,
+while the man will sit upon their backs with perfect unconcern.
+Remonstrate with them in regard to the sufficient draught added to
+the insupportable weight upon their backs, and they will immediately
+commence demonstrating how he can draw easier when there is an immense
+weight upon his back. The husband generally exchanges his things for
+whiskey, rice, and tobacco, while the wife buys calico and knick-knacks.
+Sometimes they get "a right smart chance o' things" together, and have a
+"party at home," which means a blow-out among themselves. Sometimes they
+have a shucking, which is a great affair, even among the little farmers
+in Upper Georgia, where, only, corn-shuckings are kept up with all the
+spice of old custom, and invitations are extended to those at a distance
+of ten or fifteen miles, who repay the compliment with their presence,
+and join in the revelry. There are two classes of the cracker in
+Georgia, according to our observation, differing somewhat in their
+dialect, but not in their habits. One is the upper, and the other the
+low country, or rather what some call the "co-u-n-try-b-o-r-n" cracker.
+The up-country cracker gives more attention to farming, inhabits what's
+known as the Cherokee country and its vicinity, and is designated by the
+sobriquet of "wire-grass man." would be of Greek. Like his predecessors
+in confinement, he fell into the hands of the veritable Dunn, without
+the assistance of his friend Duse, as he called him; but had it not been
+for the timely appearance of a clerk in the French consul's office, who
+explained the nature of the arrest, in his native tongue, Mr. Dunn would
+have found some trouble in making the arrest. Already had the officers
+and crew of the bark gathered around him, making grimaces, and gibbering
+away like a flock of blackbirds surrounding a hawk, and just ready to
+pounce. "Don't I'se be tellin' yees what I wants wid 'im, and the divil
+a bit ye'll understand me. Why don't yees spake so a body can understand
+what yees be blatherin' about. Sure, here's the paper, an' yees won't
+read the English of it. The divil o' such a fix I was ever in before wid
+yer John o' crapue's an' yer chatter. Ye say we-we-we; sure it's but one
+I wants. Ah! whist now, captain, and don't ye be makin' a bother over
+it. Shure, did ye niver hear o' South Carolina in the wide world? An'
+ye bees travellin' all over it, and herself's such a great State, wid so
+many great gintlemen in it," said Dunn, talking his green-island Greek
+to the Frenchman.
+
+"We, we! mon Dieu, ah!" said the Frenchman.
+
+"Ah, shure there ye are again. What would I be doin' wid de 'hole o'
+yees? It's the nager I want. Don't ye know that South Carolina don't
+allow the likes o' him to be comin ashore and playing the divil wid her
+slaves," continued Dunn, stretching himself up on his lame leg.
+
+The clerk stepped up at this moment. "It's 'imself'll be telling yes all
+about it, for yer like a parcel of geese makin' a fuss about a goslin."
+Mr. Dunn had got his Corkonian blood up; and although the matter was
+explained, he saw the means at hand, and fixed his feelings for a stiff
+compensation. The clerk, after explaining to the captain, turned to John
+Paul and addressed him. As soon as he was done, John commenced to pack
+up his dunnage and get money from the captain, as if he was bound on
+an Arctic Expedition. Dunn's eyes glistened as he saw the money passing
+into Paul's hand; but he was not to be troubled with the dunnage, and
+after hurrying him a few times, marched him off. He went through the
+regular system of grog-shop sponging; but his suavity and willingness to
+acquiesce in all Mr. Dunn's demands, saved him some rough usage. There
+was this difference between John Paul and Manuel, that the former,
+not understanding the English language, mistook Dunn's deception for
+friendship, and moved by that extreme French politeness and warmth of
+feeling, which he thought doing the gentleman par excellence; while the
+latter, with a quicker perception of right and wrong, and understanding
+our language, saw the motive and disdained its nefarious object. For
+when Paul arrived at the jail he was minus a five-dollar gold-piece,
+which his very amiable official companion took particular care of, lest
+something should befall it. Poor John Paul! He was as harmless as South
+Carolina's secession and chivalry-two of the most harmless things in the
+world, not excepting Congressional duelling.
+
+As soon as he entered the jail and found that the jailer could speak
+French, he broke out in a perfect tornado of enthusiasm. "Je serai
+charm, de lier connaissance avec un si amiable compagnon," said he,
+and continued in a strain so swift and unabated that it would have been
+impossible for an Englishman to have traced the inflections.
+
+The jailer called Daley, and telling him to take his blanket, the
+State's allotment, ordered him shown to his cell. Daley took the blanket
+under his arm and the keys in his hand, and Paul soon followed him
+upstairs to be introduced to his cell. "There, that's the place for
+yees. We takes the shine off all ye dandy niggers whin we gets ye here.
+Do ye see the pair of eyes in the head o' me?" said Daley, pointing to
+his blackened eyes; "an' he that done that same is in the divil's own
+place above. Now, if ye have ever a drap of whiskey, don't be keepin' it
+shy, an' it'll be tellin' ye a good many favors."
+
+"Ah! mon Dieu! Cela fait dresser les cheveux la tete," said Paul,
+shrugging his shoulders.
+
+"Bad luck to the word of that I'd be understandin' at all, at all. Can't
+ye spake so a body'd understand what ye'd mane?"
+
+"C'est ma grande consolation d'avoir. * * * Les Etats-Unis est une
+mod,le de perfection republicaine," said he, taking the blanket from
+Daley and throwing it upon the floor. He was but a poor companion for
+his fellow-prisoners, being deprived of the means to exercise his social
+qualities. He went through the same course of suffering that Manuel did;
+but, whether from inclination or necessity, bore it with more Christian
+fortitude, chanting vespers every morning, and reading the Latin service
+every evening. The lesson which Manuel taught Daley proved of great
+service to Paul, who gave Daley the jail-ration which it was impossible
+for him to eat, and was saved from his pilfering propensities. Thus,
+after John Paul had suffered thirty-five days' imprisonment, in mute
+confinement, to satisfy the majesty of South Carolina, he was released
+upon the following conditions, and taken to his vessel at early
+daylight, lest he should see the city or leave something to contaminate
+the slaves. "Contrary to law." State vs. "Contrary to law." French bark
+"Senegal," Capt.--For John Paul, Colored Seaman. To Sheriff Charleston
+Dist.
+
+July 18, 1852. To Arrest, $2; Registry, $2, $4.00" "Recog. $1.31;
+Constable, $1, 2.31" "Commitment and discharge, 1.00" "35 Days'
+Maintenace of John Paul, at 30 cents per day, 10.50
+
+Recd. payment, $17.81 J. D--, S. C. D. Per Chs. E. Kanapeaux, Clerk.
+
+A very nice item of disbursements to present to the owners-a premium
+paid for the advanced civilization of South Carolina!
+
+We have merely noticed the imprisonment of John Paul, our limits
+excluding the details. We must now turn to a little, pert, saucy French
+boy, eleven years old, who spoke nothing but Creole French, and that
+as rotten as we ever heard lisped. The French bark Nouvelle Amelie,
+Gilliet, master, from Rouen, arrived in Charleston on the twenty-ninth
+of July. The captain was a fine specimen of a French gentleman. He
+stood upon the quarter-deck as she was being "breasted-in" to the wharf,
+giving orders to his men, while the little child stood at the galley
+looking at the people upon the wharf, making grimaces and pointing one
+of the crew to several things that attracted his attention. Presently
+the vessel hauled alongside of the dock, and Dusenberry, with his
+companion Dunn, who had been watching all the movements of the vessel
+from a hiding-place on the wharf, sprang out and boarded her ere she had
+touched the piles.
+
+The "nigger," seeing Dusenberry approach him, waited until he saw his
+hand extended, and then, as if to save himself from impending danger,
+ran aft and into the cabin, screaming at the top of his voice. The crew
+began to run and move up into close quarters. The issue was an important
+one, and rested between South Carolina and the little "nigger."
+Dusenberry attempted to descend into the cabin. "Vat you vant wid my
+John, my Baptiste? No, you no do dat, 'z my cabin; never allow stranger
+go down 'im," said the captain, placing himself in the companionway,
+while the little terrified nigger peeped above the combing, and rolled
+his large eyes, the white glowing in contrast, from behind the captain's
+legs. In this tempting position the little darkie, knowing he was
+protected by the captain and crew, would taunt the representative of the
+State with his bad French. Dunn stood some distance behind Dusenberry,
+upon the deck, and the mission seemed to be such a mystery to both
+captain and crew, that their presence aroused a feeling of curiosity as
+well as anxiety. Several of the sailors gathered around him, and made
+antic grimaces, pointing their fingers at him and swearing, so that
+Dunn began to be alarmed by the incomprehensible earnestness of their
+gibberish, turned pale, and retreated several steps, to the infinite
+amusement of those upon the wharf.
+
+"Vat 'e do, ah, you vant 'im? Vat you do vid 'im ven zu gets him, ah?
+Cette affaire delicate demande," said one of the number, who was honored
+with the title of mate, and who, with a terrific black moustache and
+beard, had the power of contorting his face into the most repugnant
+grimaces. And, at the moment, he drew his sheath-knife and made a
+pretended plunge at Dunn's breast, causing him to send forth a pitiful
+yell, and retreat to the wharf with quicker movements than he ever
+thought himself capable of.
+
+"Il n'y a pas grand mal cela," said the Frenchman, laughing at Dunn as
+he stood upon the capsill of the wharf.
+
+"Bad luck to ye, a pretty mess a murderous Frinchmin that ye are. Do
+yees be thinkin' ye'd play that trick in South Carolina? Ye'll get the
+like o' that taken out o' ye whin yer before his honor in the mornin',"
+said Dunn.
+
+Dusenberry had stood parleying with the captain at the companion-door,
+endeavoring to make the latter understand that it was not a case which
+required the presence of the silver oar. There is a prevailing opinion
+among sailors, that no suit in Admiralty can be commenced, or seaman
+arrested while on board, without the presence of the silver oar. And
+thus acting upon this impression, the captain and officers of the
+Nouvelle Amelie contended for what they considered a right. The mate and
+crew drew closer and closer toward Dusenberry, until he became infected
+with the prevailing alarm. "Captain, I demand your protection from these
+men, in the name of the State of South Carolina," said he.
+
+"Who he? De State Souf Ca'lina, vat I know 'bout him, ah? Bring de
+silver oar when come take my man. Il y a de la malhomme tet, dans sou
+proces," said Captain Gilliet, turning to his mate.
+
+"Avaunt! avaunt!" said the big man with the large whiskers, and they all
+made a rush at Dusenberry, and drove him over the rail and back to the
+wharf, where he demanded the assistance of those anxious spectators, for
+and in the name of the State. It was a right good vaudeville comique,
+played in dialogue and pantomime. The point of the piece, which, with a
+little arrangement, might have made an excellent production, consisted
+of a misunderstanding between an Irishman and a Frenchman about South
+Carolina, and a law so peculiar that no stranger could comprehend its
+meaning at first and as neither could understand the language of the
+other, the more they explained the more confounded the object became,
+until, from piquant comique, the scene was worked into the appearance of
+a tragedy. One represented his ship, and to him his ship was his nation;
+the other represented South Carolina, and to him South Carolina was the
+United States; and the question was, which had the best right to the
+little darkie.
+
+The spectators on the wharf were not inclined to move, either not
+wishing to meddle themselves with South Carolina's affairs-wanting
+larger game to show their bravery-or some more respectable officer
+to act in command. The little darkie, seeing Dusenberry driven to the
+wharf, ran to the gangway, and protruding his head over the rail, worked
+his black phiz into a dozen pert expressions, showing his ivory,
+rolling the white of his eyes, and crooking his finger upon his nose in
+aggravating contempt.
+
+"Shure, we'll turn the guard out and take ye an' yer ship, anyhow. Why
+don't yees give the nager up dasently, an' don't be botherin'. An'
+isn't it the law of South Carolina, be dad; an' be the mortis, ye'd be
+getting' no small dale of a pinalty for the same yer doin'," said Dunn.
+
+A gentleman, who had been a silent looker-on, thinking it no more than
+proper to proffer his mediation, perceiving where the difficulty lay,
+stepped on board and introducing himself to the captain, addressed him
+in French, and explained the nature of the proceeding. The captain shook
+his head for some time, and shrugged his shoulders. "La police y est
+bien administree," said he, with an air of politeness; and speaking to
+his mate, that officer again spoke to the men, and Dusenberry was told
+by the gentleman that he could come on board. Without further ceremony,
+he mounted the rail and made a second attempt at the young urchin,
+who screamed and ran into the cook's galley, amid the applause of the
+seamen, who made all sorts of shouts inciting him to run, crying out,
+"Run, Baptiste! run, Baptiste!" In this manner the little darkie kept
+the officer at bay for more than fifteen minutes, passing out of one
+door as the officer entered the other, to the infinite delight of the
+crew. At length his patience became wearied, and as he was about to call
+Dunn to his assistance, the captain came up, and calling the child to
+him-for such he was-delivered him up, the little fellow roaring at the
+top of his voice as the big officer carried him over the rail under
+his arm. This ended the vaudeville comique on board of the French bark
+Nouvelle Amelie, Captain Gilliet.
+
+The dignity of the State was triumphant, and the diminutive nigger was
+borne off under the arm of its representative. What a beautiful theme
+for the painter's imagination! And how mutely sublime would have been
+the picture if the pencil of a Hogarth could have touched it. The
+majesty of South Carolina carrying a child into captivity!
+
+After carrying John Baptiste about halfway up the wharf, they put him
+down, and made him "trot it" until they reached the Dutch grog-shop
+we have described in the scene with Manuel. Here they halted to take a
+"stiff'ner," while Baptiste was ordered to sit down upon a bench, Dunn
+taking him by the collar and giving him a hearty shake, which made the
+lad bellow right lustily. "Shut up, ye whelp of a nigger, or ye'll get a
+doz for yeer tricks beyant in the ship," said Dunn; and after remaining
+nearly an hour, arguing politics and drinking toddies, Mr. Dunn got very
+amiably fuddled, and was for having a good-natured quarrel with every
+customer that came; into the shop. He laboured under a spirit-inspired
+opinion that they must treat or fight; and accordingly would attempt to
+reduce his opinions to practical demonstrations. At length the Dutchman
+made a courteous remonstrance, but no sooner had he done it, than Dunn
+drew his hickory stick across the Dutchman's head, and levelled him upon
+the floor. The Dutchman was a double-fisted fellow, and springing up
+almost instantly, returned the compliment. Dusenberry was more sober,
+and stepped in to make a reconciliation; but before he had time to exert
+himself, the Dutchman running behind the counter, Dunn aimed another
+blow at him, which glanced from his arm and swept a tin drench, with
+a number of tumblers on it, into a smash upon the floor. This was the
+signal for a general melee, and it began in right earnest between the
+Dutch and the Irish,--for the Dutchman called the assistance of several
+kinsmen who were in the front store, and Dunn, with the assistance of
+Dusenberry, mustered recruits from among a number of his cronies, who
+were standing at a corner on the opposite side, of the street. Both came
+to the rescue, but the O'Nales and Finnegans outnumbering the Dutch,
+made a Donnybrook onset, disarming and routing their adversaries, and
+capsizing barrels, boxes, kegs, decanters, and baskets of onions, into
+one general chaos,--taking possession of the Dutchman's calabash, and
+proclaiming their victory with triumphant shouts.
+
+They had handcuffed the boy Baptiste as soon as they entered the store,
+and in the midst of the conflict he escaped without being observed, and
+ran for his vessel, handcuffed, and crying at the top of his voice. He
+reached the Nouvelle Amelie, to the consummate surprise of the officers
+and crew, and the alarm of pedestrians as he passed along the street.
+"Mon Dieu!" said the mate, and taking the little fellow to the
+windlass-bits, succeeded in severing the handcuffs with a cold-chisel,
+and sent him down into the forecastle to secrete himself.
+
+When Dunn's wild Irish had subsided, Dusenberry began to reason with him
+upon the nature of the affair, and the matter was reconciled upon the
+obligations that had previously existed, and a promise to report no
+violations of the ordinances during a specified time. Looking around,
+Dunn exclaimed, "Bad manners till ye, Swizer, what a' ye done with the
+little nager? Where did ye put him?--Be dad, Duse, he's gone beyant!"
+An ineffectual search was made among barrels and boxes, and up the old
+chimney. "Did ye see him?" inquired Dunn, of a yellow man that had been
+watching the affray at the door, while Dusenberry continued to poke with
+his stick among the boxes and barrels.
+
+"Why, massa, I sees him when he lef de doo, but I no watch him 'till 'e
+done gone," said the man.
+
+Dunn was despatched to the vessel in search, but every thing there was
+serious wonderment, and carried out with such French naviete, that his
+suspicions were disarmed, and he returned with perfect confidence that
+he was not there. A search was now made in all the negro-houses in the
+neighborhood; but kicks, cuts, and other abuses failed to elicit
+any information of his whereabouts. At length Dunn began to feel the
+deadening effects of the liquor, and was so muddled that he could not
+stand up; then, taking possession of a bed in one of the houses,
+he stretched himself upon it in superlative contempt of every thing
+official, and almost simultaneously fell into a profound sleep. In this
+manner he received the attention of the poor colored woman whose bed
+he occupied, and whom he had abused in searching for the boy. In this
+predicament, Dusenberry continued to search alone, and kept it up until
+sundown, when he was constrained to report the case to the sheriff,
+who suspended Mr. Dunn for a few days. The matter rested until the next
+morning, when the case of the little saucy nigger vs. South Carolina was
+renewed with fresh vigor. Then Mr. Grimshaw, accompanied by Dusenberry,
+proceeded to the barque, and there saw the boy busily engaged in the
+galley. Mr. Grimshaw went on board, followed by Duse, and approaching
+the cabin door, met the captain ascending the stairs. "Captain, I
+want that nigger boy of yourn, and you may just as well give him up
+peaceably," said he.
+
+"Yes, monsieur,--but you no treat 'im like child wen you get 'im,"
+said the captain. Retiring to the cabin, and bringing back the broken
+manacles in his hand, he held them up to Mr. Grimshaw, "You put such dem
+thing on child like 'im, in South Carolina, ah? What you tink 'im be,
+young nigger, ox, horse, bull, ah! what? Now you take'e him! treat him
+like man, den we no 'struct to laws wat South Carolina got," continued
+he.
+
+Mr. Grimshaw thanked the captain, but made no reply about the manacles;
+taking them in his hand, and handing the boy over into the charge of
+Dusenberry. In a few minutes he was ushered into the sheriff's office,
+and the important points of his dimensions and features noted
+in accordance with the law. We are not advised whether the pert
+characteristics of his nature were emblazoned,--if they were, the record
+would describe a singular specimen of a frightened French darkie, more
+amusing than judicial. But John Baptiste Pamerlie passed the ordeal,
+muttering some rotten Creole, which none of the officials could
+understand, and was marched off to the jail, where the jailer acted as
+his interpreter. Being so small, he was allowed more latitude to ware
+and haul than the others, while his peculiar bon point and pert
+chatter afforded a fund of amusement for the prisoners, who made him a
+particular butt, and kept up an incessant teasing to hear him jabber.
+The second day of his imprisonment he received a loaf of bread in
+the morning, and a pint of greasy water, misnamed soup. That was the
+allowance when they did not take meat. He ran down-stairs with the pan
+in hand, raising an amusing fuss, pointing at it, and spitting out his
+Creole to the jailer. He was disputing the question of its being soup,
+and his independent manner had attracted a number of the prisoners. Just
+at the moment, the prison dog came fondling against his legs, and to
+decide the question, quick as thought, he set the pan before him; and as
+if acting upon an instinctive knowledge of the point at issue, the dog
+put his nose to it, gave a significant scent, shook his head and walked
+off, to the infinite delight of the prisoners, who sent forth a shout of
+acclamation. Baptiste left his soup, and got a prisoner, who could speak
+Creole, to send for his captain, who came on the next morning and
+made arrangements to relieve his condition from the ship's stores. The
+following day he whipped one of the jailer's boys in a fair fight; and
+on the next he killed a duck, and on the fourth he cut a white prisoner.
+Transgressing the rules of the jail in rejecting his soup-violating the
+laws of South Carolina making it a heinous offence for a negro to strike
+or insult a white person--committing murder on a duck--endeavoring to
+get up a fandango among the yard niggers, and trying the qualities of
+cold steel, in a prisoner's hand, thus exhibiting all the versatility
+of a Frenchman's genius with a youthful sang-froid, he was considered
+decidedly dangerous, and locked up for formal reform. Here he remained
+until the seventeenth of August, when it was announced that the good
+barque Nouvelle Amelie, Captain Gilliet, was ready for sea, and he
+was forthwith led to the wharf between two officers, and ordered to
+be transferred beyond the limits of the State, the Captain paying the
+following nice little bill, of costs. "Contrary to Law." "French
+Barque Nouvelle Amelie, Captain Gilliet, from Rouen, For John Baptiste
+Pamerlie, Colored Seaman. 1852. To Sheriff of Charleston District.
+August 26th, To Arrest, $2; Registry, $2, $4.00"
+
+"Recog. 1.31; Constable, $1, 2.31"
+
+"Commitment and Discharge, 1.00"
+
+"20 days' Jail Maintenance of John Baptiste Pamerlie, at 30 cts. per
+day, $6.00
+
+"Received payment, 13.31 J. D., S. C. D. Per Charles E. Kanapeaux,
+Clerk."
+
+Thus ended the scene. The little darkie might have said when he was in
+jail, "Je meurs de faim, et l'on ne mapport, rien;" and when he left,
+"Il est faufite avec les chevaliers d'industrie."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV. THE JANSON CONDEMNED.
+
+
+
+WE must now return to Manuel. He was in close confinement, through Mr.
+Grimshaw's orders. Tommy continued to bring him food from day to day,
+but was not allowed to see him. The mate and several of the crew
+were also refused admittance to him. This was carrying power to an
+unnecessary limit, and inflicting a wanton punishment without proper
+cause, at the same time exhibiting a flagrant disrespect for personal
+feelings. Tommy did not report the affair to the Captain, lest it should
+be misconstrued, and worse punishment be inflicted; but when the men
+were refused, they naturally mistrusted something, and made inquiries
+of the jailer, who readily gave them all the information in his power
+concerning the affair, and his orders. This they reported to the
+Captain, who immediately repaired to the consul's office, where he found
+Mr. Mathew reading a note which he had just received from Manuel. It
+stated his grievances in a clear and distinct manner, and begged the
+protection of that government under whose flag he sailed, but said
+nothing about his provisions. The consul, accompanied by the Captain,
+proceeded to the sheriff's office, but could get no satisfaction. "I
+never consider circumstances when prisoners violate the rules of the
+jail,--he must await my orders! but I shall keep him closely confined
+for two weeks, at least," said Mr. Grimshaw.
+
+This incensed the consul still more, for he saw the manner in which a
+clique of officials were determined to show their arbitrary power. It
+was impossible for him to remain indifferent to this matter, affecting,
+as it did, the life and liberty of his fellow-countryman. He could
+invoke no sympathy for the man, and the extent of punishment to which
+he had been subjected was evidently excited by vindictive feelings. He
+applied for a writ of habeas corpus,--but mark the result.
+
+The Captain proceeded to the jail, and demanded to see his steward; the
+jailer hesitating at first, at length granted his permission. He found
+Manuel locked up in a little, unwholesome cell, with scarcely a glimmer
+of light to mark the distinction of day and night; and so pale and
+emaciated, that had he met him in the street he should scarcely have
+recognised him. "Gracious God! What crime could have brought such an
+excess of punishment upon you?" inquired the Captain.
+
+Manuel told him the whole story; and, added to that, the things which
+had been sent to him during the seven days he had been confined in that
+manner, had seldom reached him. He had lost his good friend Jane, and
+the many kind acts which she was wont to bestow upon him, and had been
+compelled to live upon bread and water nearly the whole time, suffering
+the most intense hunger. Upon inquiry, it was ascertained that the
+few things sent to make him comfortable had been intrusted to Daley to
+deliver, who appropriated nearly the whole of them to his own use, as a
+sort of retaliatory measure for the castigation he received from Manuel.
+He had not failed to carry him his pan of soup at twelve o'clock every
+day, but made the "choice bits" serve his own digestion. The jailer
+felt the pain of the neglect, and promised to arrange a safer process of
+forwarding his things by attending to it himself, which he did with
+all the attention in his power, when Manuel's condition became more
+tolerable. The Captain told Manuel how his affairs stood-that he should
+probably have to leave him in charge of the consul, but to keep up good
+spirits; that he would leave him plenty of means, and as soon as his
+release was effected, to make the best of his way to Scotland and join
+the old owners. And thus he left him, with a heavy heart, for Manuel did
+read in his countenance what he did not speak.
+
+The Janson had been discharged, a survey held upon the cargo, protest
+extended, and the whole sold for the benefit of whom it might concern.
+Necessary surveys were likewise held upon the hull, and finding it so
+old and strained as to be unworthy of repair, it was condemned and sold
+for the benefit of the underwriters. Thus the register "de novo" was
+given up to the consul, the men discharged, and paid off according to
+the act of William IV., which provides that each man shall receive a
+stipend to carry him to the port in Great Britain from which he shipped,
+or the consul to provide passage for him, according to his inclination,
+to proceed to a point where the voyage would be completed. The consul
+adopted the best means in his power to make them all comfortable and
+satisfied with their discharge. Their several register-tickets were
+given up to them, and one by one left for his place of destination;
+Tommy and the second mate only preferring to remain and seek some
+new voyage. The old chief mate seemed to congratulate himself in the
+condemnation of the unlucky Janson. He shipped on board an English ship,
+laden with cotton and naval stores, and just ready for sea. When he
+came on board to take a farewell of the Captain, he stood upon deck, and
+looking up at the dismantled spars, said, "Skipper, a shadow may save
+a body after all. I've always had a presentment that this unlucky old
+thing would serve us a trick. I says to meself that night in the Gulf,
+'Well, old craft, yer goin' to turn yer old ribs into a coffin, at
+last,' but I'll praise the bridge that carries me safe over, because
+I've an affection for the old thing after all, and can't part without
+saying God bless her, for it's an honest death to die in debt to the
+underwriters. I hope her old bones will rest in peace on terra-firma.
+Good-by, Captain,--remember me to Manuel; and let us forget our troubles
+in Charleston by keeping away from it."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV. GEORGE THE SECESSIONIST, AND HIS FATHER'S SHIPS.
+
+
+
+AS we have said, the second mate and little Tommy remained to seek
+new voyages. Such was the fact with the second mate; but Tommy
+had contracted a violent cold on the night he was locked up in the
+guard-house, and had been a subject for the medicine-chest for some
+time; and this, with his ardent attachment for Manuel, and hopes to
+join him again as a sailing companion, was the chief inducement for his
+remaining. The Captain gave them accommodations in the cabin so long as
+he had possession of the ship, which afforded the means of saving their
+money, of which Tommy had much need; for notwithstanding he received a
+nice present from the consul, and another from the Captain, which, added
+to the few dollars that were coming to him for wages, made him feel
+purse-proud, though it was far from being adequate to sustain him any
+length of time, or to protect him against any sudden adversity.
+
+The Captain had not seen little George, the secessionist, since his
+assurance that he would make every thing right with Mr. Grimshaw,
+and have Manuel out in less than twenty-four hours. It was now the
+fourteenth of April, and the signs of his getting out were not so good
+as they were on the first day he was committed, for the vessel being
+condemned, if the law was carried to the strictest literal construction,
+Manuel would be tied up among the human things that are articles of
+merchandise in South Carolina. He was passing from the wharf to the
+consul's office about ten o'clock in the morning, when he was suddenly
+surprised in the street by little George, who shook his hand as if he
+had been an old friend just returned after a long absence. He made
+all the apologies in the world for being called away suddenly, and
+consequently, unable to render that attention to his business which his
+feelings had prompted. Like all secessionists, George was very fiery and
+transitory in his feelings. He expressed unmeasurable surprise when the
+Captain told him the condition of his man in the old jail. "You don't
+say that men are restricted like that in Charleston? Well, now, I never
+was in that jail, but it's unsuited to the hospitality of our society,"
+said he.
+
+"Your prison groans with abuses, and yet your people never hear them,"
+replied the Captain.
+
+George seemed anxious to change the subject, and commenced giving the
+Captain a description of his journey to the plantation, his hunting and
+fishing, his enjoyments, and the fat, saucy, slick niggers, the fine
+corn and bacon they had, and what they said about massa, ending with an
+endless encomium of the "old man's" old whiskey, and how he ripened it
+to give it smoothness and flavor. His description of the plantation and
+the niggers was truly wonderful, tantalizing the Captain's imagination
+with the beauties of a growing principality in itself. "We have just
+got a new vessel added to our ships, and she sails for the Pedee this
+afternoon. We got the right stripe of a captain, but we have made him
+adopt conditions to be true to the secession party. As soon as I get
+another man, we'll despatch her in grand style, and no mistake."
+
+The Captain thought of his second mate, and suggested him at once. "Just
+the chap. My old man would like him, I know," said George, and they
+returned directly to the Janson, where they found the second mate
+lashing his dunnage. The proposition was made and readily accepted.
+Again the Captain parted with little George, leaving him to take the
+mate to his father's office, while he pursued his business at the
+consul's.
+
+George led the mate into the office. "Here, father, here's a man to
+go in our vessel," said he. The old man looked upon him with a serene
+importance, as if he was fettered with his own greatness.
+
+"My shipping interests are becoming very extensive, my man; I own the
+whole of four schooners, and a share in the greatest steamship afloat-I
+mean screw-ship, the South Carolina--you've heard of her, I suppose?"
+said the old man.
+
+Jack stood up with his hat in his hand, thinking over what he meant by
+big interests, and "reckoning he hadn't seen the establishment of them
+ship-owners about Prince's Dock, what owned more ships apiece than there
+were days in the month."
+
+"Now, my man," continued the old man, "I'm mighty strict about my
+discipline, for I want every man to do his duty for the interests of the
+owners. But how many dollars do you want a month, my man?"
+
+"Nothing less than four pounds starling; that's twenty dollars your
+currency, if I reckon right," said Jack, giving his hat a twirl upon the
+floor.
+
+"Wh-e-w! you belong to the independent sailors. You'll come down from
+that afore you get a ship in this port. Why, I can get a good, prime
+nigger feller sailor for eight dollars a month and his feed."
+
+Jack concluded not to sail in any of the old man's big ships, and said,
+"Yes, I joined them a long time ago, and I ha'n't regretted it, neither;
+wouldn't pull a bow-line a penny less. I don't like drogging, no-how.
+Good morning, sir," said he, putting on his hat and backing out of the
+door.
+
+"I wish you'd a' taken a chance with my father, old fellow; he'd a' made
+you captain afore a year," said George, as he was leaving the door.
+
+"The like o' that don't signify. I've been skipper in the West Ingie
+trade years ago. There isn't much difference between a nigger and
+a schooner's captain," said Jack, as he walked off to the Janson,
+preparatory to taking lodgings ashore.
+
+That afternoon about five o'clock, a loud noise was heard on board a
+little schooner, of about sixty tons' register, that lay in a bend of
+the wharf a few lengths ahead of the Janson. Captain Thompson and his
+second mate were seated on a locker in the cabin, conversing upon the
+prospects ahead, when the noise became so loud that they ran upon deck
+to witness the scene.
+
+George stood upon the capsill of the wharf, with mortification pictured
+in his countenance. "Well, captain, you needn't make so much noise about
+it; your conduct is decidedly ungentlemanly. If you don't wish to sail
+in father's employ, leave like a gentleman," said George, pulling up the
+corners of his shirt-collar.
+
+It was the great craft that George had distended upon, and the veritable
+captain of the right stripe, who promised to toe the mark according to
+secession principles, but made no stipulations for the nigger feed that
+was the cause of the excitement. The captain, a Baltimore coaster, and
+accustomed to good feed in his vessels at home, had been induced by a
+large representations to take charge of the craft and run her in the
+Pedee trade, bringing rice to Charleston. On being told the craft was
+all ready for sea, he repaired on board, and, to his chagrin, found
+two black men for a crew, and a most ungainly old wench, seven shades
+blacker than Egyptian darkness, for a cook. This was imposition enough
+to arouse his feelings, for but one of the men knew any thing about
+a vessel; but on examining the stores, the reader may judge of his
+feelings, if he have any idea of supplying a vessel in a Northern
+port, when we tell him that all and singular the stores consisted of
+a shoulder of rusty Western bacon, a half-bushel of rice, and a jug of
+molasses; and this was to proceed the distance of a hundred miles, But
+to add to the ridiculous farce of that South Carolina notion, when he
+remonstrated with them, he was very indifferently told that it was what
+they always provided for their work-people.
+
+"Take your' little jebacca-boat and go to thunder with her," said the
+captain, commencing to pick up his duds.
+
+"Why, captain, I lent you my gun, and we always expect our captains to
+make fresh provision of game as you run up the river," said George.
+
+"Fresh provisions, the devil!" said the captain. "I've enough to do to
+mind my duty, without hunting my living as I pursue my voyage, like
+a hungry dog. We don't do business on your nigger-allowance system in
+Maryland." And here we leave him, getting one of the negroes to carry
+his things back to his boarding-house.
+
+A few days after the occurrence we have narrated above little Tommy,
+somewhat recovered from his cold, shipped on board a little centre-board
+schooner, called the Three Sisters, bound to the Edisto River for a
+cargo of rice. The captain, a little, stubby man, rather good looking,
+and well dressed, was making his maiden voyage as captain of a South
+Carolina craft. He was "South Carolina born," but, like many others of
+his kind, had been forced to seek his advancement in a distant State,
+through the influence of those formidable opinions which exiles the
+genius of the poor in South Carolina. For ten years he had sailed out of
+the port of Boston, had held the position of mate on two Indian voyages
+under the well-known Captain Nott, and had sailed with Captain Albert
+Brown, and received his recommendation, yet this was not enough to
+qualify him for the nautical ideas of a pompous South Carolinian.
+
+Tommy got his baggage on board, and before leaving, made another attempt
+at the jail to see his friend Manuel. He presented himself to the
+jailer, and told him how much he wanted to see his old friend before he
+left. The jailer's orders were imperative. He was told if he came next
+week he would see him; that he would then be released, and allowed to
+occupy the cell on the second floor with the other stewards. Recognising
+one of the stewards that had joined with them when they enjoyed their
+social feelings around the festive barrel, he walked into the piazza to
+meet him and bid him good-by. While he stood shaking hands with him, the
+poor negro.
+
+The name of this poor fellow was George Fairchild. After being sent
+to the workhouse to receive twenty blows with the paddle when he was
+scarcely able to stand, he was taken down from the frame and supported
+to the jail, where he remained several weeks, fed at a cost of eighteen
+cents a day. His crime was "going for whiskey at night," and the third
+offence; but there were a variety of pleadings in his favor. His master
+worked his negroes to the very last tension of their strength, and
+exposed their appetites to all sorts of temptation, especially those who
+worked in the night-gang. His master flogged him once, while he was in
+the jail, himself, giving him about forty stripes with a raw hide on the
+bare back: not satisfying his feelings with this, he concluded to send
+him to New Orleans. He had an affectionate wife and child, who were
+forbidden to see him. His master ordered that he should be sent to the
+workhouse and receive thirty-nine paddles before leaving, and on the
+morning he was to be shipped, his distressed wife, hearing the sad news,
+came to the jail; but notwithstanding the entreaties of several debtors,
+the jailer could not allow her to come in, but granted, as a favor,
+that she should speak with him through the grated door. The cries and
+lamentations of that poor woman, as she stood upon the outside, holding
+her bond-offspring in her arms, taking a last sorrowing farewell of him
+who was so dearly cherished and beloved, would have melted a heart of
+stone. She could not embrace him, but waited until he was led out to
+torture, when she threw her arms around him, and was dragged away by a
+ruffian's hand.
+
+Poor George Fairchild! We heard him moaning under the acute pain of the
+paddle, and saw him thrust into a cart like a dog, to be shipped as a
+bale of merchandise for a distant port, who had suffered with him in the
+guard-house came up and saluted him with a friendly recognition. Some
+two weeks had passed since the occurrence, and yet his head presented
+the effects of bruising, and was bandaged with a cloth. "Good young
+massa, do give me a' fo' pence, for Is'e mose starve," he said in a
+suppliant tone. Tommy put his hand into his pocket, and drawing out a
+quarter, passed it to the poor fellow, and received his thanks. Leaving
+a message for Manuel that he would be sure to call and see him when
+he returned, he passed from the house of misery and proceeded to his
+vessel.
+
+The captain of the schooner had been engaged by parties in Charleston,
+who simply acted as agents for the owners. He had been moved to return
+to Charleston by those feelings which are so inherent in our nature,
+inspiring a feeling for the place of its nativity, and recalling the
+early associations of childhood. Each longing fancy pointed back again,
+and back he came, to further fortune on his native soil. His crew, with
+the exception of Tommy, consisted of three good, active negroes, one of
+whom acted as pilot on the Edisto River. Accustomed to the provisioning
+of Boston ships, he had paid no attention to his supplies; for, in
+fact, he only took charge of the little craft as an accommodation to the
+agents, and with the promise of a large vessel as soon as he returned;
+and sailing with a fine stiff breeze, he was far outside the light when
+the doctor announced dinner. "What have you got that's good, old chap?"
+said he to the cook.
+
+"Fust stripe, Massa Cap'en. A right good chance o' homony and bacon
+fry," returned the negro.
+
+"Homony and what? Nothing else but that?"
+
+"Why, massa! gracious, dat what Massa Whaley give all he cap'en, an' he
+tink 'em fust-rate," said the negro.
+
+As they were the only whites on board, the captain took little Tommy
+into the cabin with him to sit at the same table; but there was too much
+truth in the negro's statement, and instead of sitting down to one of
+those nice dinners which are spread in Boston ships, both great and
+small, there, on a little piece of pine board, swung with a preventer,
+was a plate of black homony covered with a few pieces of fried pork, so
+rank and oily as to be really repulsive to a common stomach. Beside
+it was an earthen mug, containing about a pint of molasses, which was
+bedaubed on the outside to show its quality. The captain looked at it
+for a minute, and then taking up the iron spoon which stood in it, and
+letting one or two spoonfuls drop back, said, "Old daddie, where are all
+your stores? Fetch them out here."
+
+"Gih, massa! here 'em is; 'e's jus' as Massa Stoney give 'em," said the
+negro, drawing forth a piece of rusty and tainted bacon, weighing about
+fifteen pounds, and, in spots, perfectly alive with motion; about a
+half-bushel of corn-grits; and a small keg of molasses, with a piece of
+leather attached to the bung.
+
+"Is that all?" inquired the captain peremptorily.
+
+"Yes, massa, he all w'at 'em got now, but git more at Massa Whaley
+plantation win 'em git da."
+
+"Throw it overboard, such stinking stuff; it'll breed pestilence on
+board," said the captain to the negro, (who stood holding the spoiled
+bacon in his hand, with the destructive macalia dropping on the floor,)
+at the same time applying his foot to the table, and making wreck of
+hog, homony, molasses, and plates.
+
+"Gih-e-wh-ew! Massa, I trow 'im o'board, Massa Whaley scratch 'em back,
+sartin. He tink 'em fust-rate. Plantation nigger on'y gits bacon twice
+week, Massa Cap'en," said he, picking up the wreck and carrying it upon
+deck, where it was devoured with great gusto by the negroes, who fully
+appreciated the happy God-send.
+
+The captain had provided a little private store of crackers, cheese,
+segars, and a bottle of brandy, and turning to his trunk, he opened it
+and drew them out one by one, passing the crackers and cheese to
+Tommy, and imbibing a little of the deacon himself, thus satisfying
+the cravings of nature. Night came on; they were crossing the bar and
+approaching the outlet of the Edisto, which was broad in sight;
+but there was neither coffee nor tea on board, and no prospect of
+supper-nothing but a resort to the crackers and cheese remained, the
+stock of which had already diminished so fast, that what was left was
+treasured among the things too choice to be eaten without limitation.
+They reached the entrance, and after ascending a few miles, came to
+anchor under a jut of wood that formed a bend in the river. The baying
+of dogs during the night intimated the vicinity of a settlement near,
+and in the morning the captain sent one of the negroes on shore for a
+bottle of milk. "Massa, dat man what live yonder ha'n't much no-how,
+alwa's makes 'em pay seven-pence," said the negro. Sure enough it was
+true; notwithstanding he was a planter of some property, he made the
+smallest things turn to profit, and would charge vessels going up the
+river twelve and a half cents per bottle for milk.
+
+The captain had spent a restless night, and found himself blotched with
+innumerable chinch-bites; and on examining the berths and lockers, he
+found them swarming in piles. Calling one of the black men, he commenced
+overhauling them, and drew out a perfect storehouse of rubbish, which
+must have been deposited there, without molestation, from the day the
+vessel was launched up to the present time, as varied in its kinds as
+the stock of a Jew-shop, and rotten with age. About nine o'clock they
+got under weigh again, and proceeding about twenty miles with a fair
+wind and tide, they came to another point in the river, on which a
+concourse of men had assembled, armed to the teeth with guns, rifles,
+and knives. As he passed up, they were holding parley with a man and boy
+in a canoe a few rods from the shore. At every few minutes they
+would point their rifles at him, and with threatening gestures, swear
+vengeance against him if he attempted to land. The captain, being
+excited by the precarious situation of the man and his boy, and anxious
+to ascertain the particulars, let go his anchor and "came to" a few
+lengths above.
+
+Scarcely had his anchor brought up than he was hailed from the shore by
+a rough-looking man, who appeared to be chief in the manouvre, and who
+proved to be no less a personage than a Mr. S--k, a wealthy planter.
+
+"Don't take that man on board of your vessel, at the peril of your life,
+captain. He's an abolitionist," said he, accompanying his imperative
+command with a very Southern rotation of oaths.
+
+The man paddled his canoe on the outside of the vessel, and begged the
+captain "for God's sake to take him on board and protect him; that an
+excitement had been gotten up against him very unjustly, and he would
+explain the circumstances if he would allow him to come on board."
+
+"Come on board," said the captain. "Let you be abolitionist or what you
+will, humanity will not let me see you driven out to sea in that manner;
+you would be swamped before you crossed the bar."
+
+He came on board, trembling and wet, the little boy handing up a couple
+of carpet-bags, and following him. No sooner had he done so, than three
+or four balls whizzed past the captain's head, causing him to retreat to
+the cabin. A few minutes intervened, and he returned to the deck.
+
+"Lower your boat and come on shore immediately," they cried out.
+
+The captain, not at all daunted, lowered his boat and went on shore.
+"Now, gentlemen, what do you want with me?" said he, when S--k stepped
+forward, and the following dialogue ensued:--
+
+"Who owns that vessel, and what right have you to harbor a d--d
+abolitionist?"
+
+"I don't know who owns the vessel; I know that I sail her, and the
+laws of God and man demand that I shall not pass a man in distress,
+especially upon the water. He protests that he is not, and never was
+an abolitionist; offers to prove it if you will hear him, and only asks
+that you allow him to take away his property," rejoined the captain.
+
+"What! then you are an abolitionist yourself?"
+
+"No, sir. I'm a Southern-born man, raised in Charleston, where my father
+was raised before me."
+
+"So much, so good; but just turn that d--d scoundrel ashore as quick
+as seventy, or we'll tie your vessel up and report you to the Executive
+Committee, and stop your getting on more freight on the Edisto."
+
+"That I shall not do. You should have patience to investigate these
+things, and not allow your feelings to become so excited. If I turn
+him and his son adrift, I'm answerable for their lives if any accident
+should occur to them," rejoined the captain.
+
+"Are you a secessionist, captain, or what are your political principles?
+You seem determined to protect abolitionists. That scoundrel has been
+associating with a nigger, and eating at his house ever since he has
+been here."
+
+"Yes, yes, and we'll be d--d if he isn't an abolitionist," joined in
+a dozen voices, "for he dined at Bill Webster's last Sunday on a
+wild-turkey. Nobody but an infernal abolitionist would dine with a
+nigger."
+
+"As for politics, I never had much to do with them, and care as little
+about secession as I do about theology; but I like to see men act
+reasonably. If you want any thing more of me, you will find me at
+Colonel Whaley's plantation to-morrow." Thus saying, he stepped into
+his boat and returned on board of his vessel. Just as he was getting
+under-weigh again, whiz! whiz! whiz! came three shots, one in quick
+succession after the other, the last taking effect and piercing the
+crown of his hat, at which they retired out of sight. Fearing a return,
+he worked his vessel about two miles farther up and came to anchor on
+the other side of the channel, where he waited the return of the tide,
+and had an opportunity to put his affrighted passengers on board a
+schooner that was passing down, bound to Charleston.
+
+The secret of such an outrage is told in a few words. The man was a
+timber-getter from the vicinity of New Bedford, Massachusetts, who, with
+his son, a lad about sixteen years of age, had spent several winters
+in the vicinity of the Edisto, getting live-oak, what he considered
+a laudable enterprise. He purchased the timber on the stump of the
+inhabitants, at a price which left him very little profit, and had also
+been charged an exorbitant price for every thing he got, whether
+labor or provisions; and so far had that feeling of South Carolina's
+self-sufficiency been carried out against him in all its cold
+repulsiveness, that he found much more honesty and true hospitality
+under the roof of a poor colored man. This so enraged some of the
+planters, that they proclaimed against him, and that mad-dog cry of
+abolitionist was raised against him. His horse and buggy, books and
+papers were packed up and sent to Charleston-not, however, without
+some of the most important of the latter being lost. His business was
+destroyed, and he and his child taken by force, put into a little canoe
+with one or two carpet-bags, and sent adrift. In this manner they had
+followed him two miles down the river, he begging to be allowed
+the privilege of settling his business and leave respectably-they
+threatening to shoot him if he attempted to near the shore, or was
+caught in the vicinity. This was his position when the captain found
+him. He proceeded to Charleston, and laid his case before James L.
+Petigru, Esq., United States District Attorney, and, upon his advice,
+returned to the scene of "war on the banks of the Edisto," to arrange
+his business; but no sooner had he made his appearance than he was
+thrown into prison, and there remained when we last heard of him.
+
+This is one of the many cases which afford matter for exciting comment
+for the editors of the Charleston Mercury and the Courier, and which
+reflect no honor on a people who thus set law and order at defiance.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI. A SINGULAR RECEPTION.
+
+
+
+IT was about ten o'clock on the night of the fifteenth of April when the
+schooner "Three Sisters" lay anchored close alongside of a dark jungle
+of clustering brakes that hung their luxuriant foliage upon the bosom
+of the stream. The captain sat upon a little box near the quarter,
+apparently contemplating the scene, for there was a fairy-like beauty
+in its dark windings, mellowed by the shadowing foliage that skirted
+its borders in mournful grandeur, while stars twinkled on the sombre
+surface.
+
+The tide had just turned, and little Tommy, who had rolled himself up in
+a blanket and laid down close to the captain, suddenly arose. "Captain,
+did you hear that?" said he.
+
+"Hark! there it is again," said the captain. "Go and call the men,--we
+must get under weigh."
+
+It was a rustling noise among the brakes; and when little Tommy went
+forward to call the men, two balls came whistling over the quarter, and
+then a loud rustling noise indicated that persons were retreating. The
+captain retired to the cabin and took Tommy with him, giving orders to
+the negro pilot to stand to the deck, get her anchor up, and let her
+drift up stream with the tide, determined that if they shot any person,
+it should be the negroes, for whose value they would be held answerable.
+Thus she drifted up the stream, and the next morning was at the creek at
+Colonel Whaley's plantation.
+
+A number of ragged negroes came down to the bank in high glee at the
+arrival, and making sundry inquiries about corn and bacon. One old
+patriarchal subject cried out to the pilot, "Ah, Cesar, I 'now'd ye wah
+cumin'. Massa, an' young Massa Aleck, bin promis' bacon mor' den week,
+gess he cum' now."
+
+"Got sum corn, but ven ye gets bacon out o' dis craf' ye kotch wesel,
+dat a'n't got no hair on 'im," said Cesar.
+
+The scene around was any thing but promising-disappointing to the
+captain's exalted ideas of Colonel Whaley's magnificent plantation. The
+old farm-house was a barrack-like building, dilapidated, and showing no
+signs of having lately furnished a job for the painter, and standing in
+an arena surrounded by an enclosure of rough slats. Close examination
+disclosed fragments of gardening in the arena, but they showed the
+unmistakable evidences of carelessness. At a short distance from this
+was a cluster of dirty-looking negro-huts, raised a few feet from the
+ground on palmetto piles, and strung along from them to the brink of the
+river were numerous half-starved cattle and hogs, the latter rooting up
+the sod.
+
+It was now nearly slack water, on a high flood, and the schooner lay
+just above the bend of the creek. Presently a large, portly-looking
+man, dressed like as Yorkshire farmer, came, to the bank, and in a
+stentorious voice ordered the captain to haul into the creek at once!
+The manner in which the order was given rather taxed the captain's
+feelings, yet he immediately set his men to work heaving up the anchor
+and carrying out "a line" to warp her in. But that slow motion with
+which negroes execute all orders, caused some delay, and no sooner had
+he, begun to heave on the line than the tide set strong ebb and carried
+him upon the lower point, where a strong eddy, made by the receding
+water from the creek, and the strong undertow in the river, baffled all
+his exertions. There she stuck, and all the warps and tow-lines of a
+seventy-four, hove by the combined strength of the plantation, would
+not have started her. When the tide left, she careened over toward the
+river, for there was no means at hand to shore her up.
+
+One of the drivers went up and reported "Massa captain got 'im ship
+ashore," and down came Colonel Whaley, with all the pomp of seven lord
+mayors in his countenance. "What sort of a feller are you to command
+a ship? I'd whip the worst nigger on the plantation, if he couldn't do
+better than that. Rig a raft out and let me come o' board that vessel!"
+said he, accompanying his demands with a volley of vile imprecations
+that would have disgraced St. Giles'.
+
+"Do you know who you're talking to? You mus'n't take me for a nigger,
+sir! I know my duty, if you don't good manners," rejoined the captain.
+
+"Do you know who owns that ship? you impudent feller, you! Take the
+sails off her, immediately-at once! or I'll shoot you, by heavens!" he
+bawled out again.
+
+"Why didn't you say mud-scow? Call such a thing as this a ship? I don't
+care who owns her, I only know it's a disgrace to sail her; but I've got
+the papers, and you may help yourself. When you pay me for my time, and
+give me something for myself and these men to eat, you may take your old
+jebac--car-boat,--but you don't put a foot aboard her till you do!"
+
+This made the colonel rage worse. "I'll teach you a lesson how you
+disobey my orders. Go get my rifle, Zeke," said the colonel, turning to
+an old negro who stood close by. And then calling to the men on board,
+he ordered them to take charge of the vessel and take the sails off her
+at once.
+
+"Don't you move a hand to unbend a sail, Cesar! I don't know that man
+ashore there. This vessel is mine until further orders from the persons
+who shipped me," rejoined the captain with an imperative demand to his
+men.
+
+"Why, la! massa, he own em dis ere vessel, an' he shoot em sartin if we
+done do him; ye done know dat massa, as I does," said Cesar.
+
+"Don't touch a hand to those sails, I command one and all of you.
+There's two can play at shooting, and I'll shoot you if you disobey my
+orders." Then turning to those on shore, he warned them that he would
+shoot the first nigger that attempted to make a raft to come on board.
+The reader will observe that the poor negroes were in a worse dilemma
+than the captain; goaded on the one side by a ruthless master, who
+claims ownership and demands the execution of his orders, while on
+the other extreme the hired master proclaims his right, and warns
+them against the peril of varying one iota from his commands. Here the
+clashing feelings of arbitrary men come together, which have placed many
+a good negro in that complex position, that he would be punished by one
+master for doing that which he would have been punished by the other if
+he had left undone.
+
+It may be said to the colonel's credit, he did not return, rifle in
+hand, nor did the captain see him afterward; but a young gentleman, a
+son, who represented the father, came to the bank about an hour after
+the occurrence, and making a lame apology for his father's temper,
+requested the captain to come on shore. The latter had concluded to
+await the return of the tide, run the vessel back to Charleston, report
+his reception, and deliver the vessel up to the agents; but on further
+consideration, there was nothing to eat on board, and what could he do?
+He went on shore, and held a parley with the young man, whom he found
+much more inclined to respect his color. "Your father took me for a
+nigger, and as such he presumed upon the dignity of his plantation. Now
+I know my duty, and have sailed in the finest ships and with the best
+masters in the country. All I want is proper respect, something to eat,
+what there is coming to me, and my passage paid back to Charleston by
+land. No! I will not even request so much as that; give me something to
+eat, and my passage to Charleston, and you may do what you please with
+the vessel, but I shall deliver the papers to nobody but the persons who
+shipped me. And I shall want you to see this little boy attended to, for
+he's quite sick now," said the captain, pointing to Tommy, and calling
+him to him.
+
+"Oh yes," replied the young man, "we'll take care of the little fellow,
+and see him sent safely back," and took leave, promising to have another
+interview in the afternoon. About twelve o'clock a negro boy came to the
+vessel with a tin pan covered with a towel, and presenting it to Cesar,
+for "massa cap'en and buckra boy." Cesar brought it aft and set it upon
+the companion. It contained some rice, a piece of bacon, corn-cake, and
+three sweet-potatoes.
+
+"Coarse fare, but I can get along with it. Come Tommy, I guess you're
+hungry, as well as myself," said the captain, and they sat down, and
+soon demolished the feast of Southern hospitality. About five o'clock in
+the evening, the young man not making his appearance, the Captain sent
+Tommy ashore to inquire for him at the house, telling him (in order
+to test their feelings) that he could stop and get his supper. Tommy
+clambered ashore, and up the bank wending his way to the house. The
+young man made his appearance, offering an apology for his delay and
+inattention, saying the presence of some very particular friends from
+Beaufort was the cause. "My father, you are aware, owns this vessel,
+captain!--You got a good dinner, to-day, by-the-by," said he.
+
+"Yes, we got along with it, but could have eaten more," rejoined the
+captain.
+
+"Ah! bless me, that was the nigger's fault. These niggers are such
+uncertain creatures, you must watch 'em over the least thing. Well now,
+captain, my father has sent you five dollars to pay your passage to
+Charleston!"
+
+"Well, that's a small amount, but I'll try and get along with it, rather
+than stop here, at any rate," said the captain, taking the bill and
+twisting it into his pocket, and giving particular charges in regard
+to taking care of the boy. That night, a little after sundown, he took
+passage in a downward-bound coaster, bid a long good-by to the Edisto
+and Colonel Whaley's plantation, and arrived in Charleston the next
+night. On the following morning he presented himself to the agents, who
+generously paid him, all his demands, and expressed their regrets at the
+circumstance. Acting upon the smart of feeling, the captain enclosed the
+five-dollar bill and returned it to the sovereign Colonel Whaley.
+
+The Savannah Republican, of the 11th September, says-"We have been
+kindly furnished with the particulars of a duel which came off at Major
+Stark's plantation, opposite this city, yesterday morning, between
+Colonel E. M. Whaley, and E. E. Jenkins, of South Carolina." Another
+paper stated that "after a single exchange of shot, * * * * the affair
+terminated, but without a reconciliation." The same Colonel Whaley!
+Either 'of these journals might have give particulars more grievous,
+and equally as expressive of Southern life. They might have described
+a beautiful wife, a Northern lady, fleeing with her two children,
+to escape the abuses of a faithless husband-taking shelter in the
+Charleston Hotel, and befriended by Mr. Jenkins and another young man,
+whose name we shall not mention-and that famous establishment surrounded
+by the police on a Sabbath night, to guard its entrances-and she dragged
+forth, and carried back to the home of unhappiness.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII. THE HABEAS CORPUS.
+
+
+
+THE Captain of the Janson had settled his business, and was anxious
+to return home. He had done all in his power for Manuel, and
+notwithstanding the able exertions of the consul were combined with his,
+he had effected nothing to relieve him. The law was imperative, and if
+followed out, there was no alternative for him, except upon the ground
+of his proving himself entitled to a white man's privileges. To do
+this would require an endless routine of law, which would increase his
+anxiety and suffering twofold. Mr. Grimshaw had been heard to say, that
+if an habeas corpus were sued out, he should stand upon the technicality
+of an act of the legislature, refuse to answer the summons or give the
+man up. No, he would himself stand the test upon the point of right to
+the habeas corpus, and if he was committed for refusing to deliver up
+the prisoner, he would take advantage of another act of the legislature,
+and after remaining a length of time in jail, demand his release
+according to the statutes. So far was Mr. Grimshaw impressed with his
+own important position in the matter, and of the course which he should
+pursue, that he several times told the prisoners that he should be a
+prisoner among them in a few days, to partake of the same fare.
+
+Judge Withers, however, saved him the necessity of such important
+trouble. To those acquainted with Judge Withers it would be needless to
+dwell upon the traits of his character. To those who are not, we can
+say that his were feelings founded upon interest-moving in the foremost
+elements of secession-arbitrary, self-willed, and easily swayed by
+prejudice-a man known to the public and the bar for his frigidity, bound
+in his own opinions, and yielding second to the wishes and principles of
+none-fearful of his popularity as a judge, yet devoid of those sterling
+principles which deep jurists bring to their aid when considering
+important questions, where life or liberty is at stake-a mind that
+would rather reinstate monarchy than spread the blessings of a free
+government. What ground have we here to hope for a favorable issue?
+
+Thus when the consul applied for the writ of habeas corpus, the right
+was denied him, notwithstanding the subject was heir-inherent to all the
+rights of citizenship and protection, which the laws of his own nation
+could clothe him with. To show how this matter was treated by the
+press-though we are happy to say the feelings of the mercantile
+community are not reflected in it-we copy the leader from the "Southern
+Standard," a journal published in Charleston, the editor of which
+professes to represent the conservative views of a diminutive minority.
+Here it is:--
+
+"CHARLESTON, APRIL 23, 1852. "Colored Seamen and State Rights.
+
+"Our readers have not forgotten the correspondence which some time
+since took place between His Excellency Governor Means and Her British
+Majesty's Consul, Mr. Mathew. We published in the Standard, of the 5th
+December last, the very temperate, dignified, and well-argued report of
+Mr. Mazyck, chairman of the special committee of the Senate, to whom
+had been referred the message of the Governor, transmitting the
+correspondence. In our issue of the 16th December, we gave to our
+readers the able report of Mr. McCready, on behalf of the committee of
+the other house, on the same subject.
+
+"We have now to call the attention of the public to the fact, that the
+practical issue has been made, by which the validity of the laws in
+regard to colored seamen arriving in our port is to be submitted to the
+judicial tribunals of the country. For ourselves we have no fears for
+the credit of the State in such a controversy. The right of the State
+to control, by her own legislation, the whole subject-matter, can, as we
+think, by a full discussion, be established upon a basis which, in the
+South at least, will never hereafter be questioned. If there be defects
+in the details of the regulations enacted, the consideration of them is
+now precluded, when the issue presented is the right of the State to act
+at all times in the premises.
+
+"The writ of habeas corpus was applied for before Judge Withers, during
+the term of the court which has just closed, by the British consul,
+through his counsel, Mr. Petigru, in behalf of one Manuel Pereira,
+a colored sailor, who claims to be a Portuguese subject, articled to
+service on board an English brig driven into this port by stress of
+weather; the said Manuel Pereira being then in jail under the provisions
+of the act of the legislature of this State, passed in 1835, emendatory
+of the previous acts on the subject. Judge Withers, in compliance with
+the requirements of the act of 1844, refused the writ of habeas corpus,
+and notice of appeal has been given. Thus is the issue upon us.
+
+"We have but one regret in the matter, and that is that the case made is
+one where the party asking his liberty has been driven into our harbor
+involuntarily. Great Britain, it is true, is the last power which
+should complain on this account, with her own example in the case of the
+Enterprise before her eyes; but we do not, we confess, like this feature
+of the law. We have no doubt, however, that this fact being brought to
+the notice of the executive, he will interfere promptly to release the
+individual in the present case, provided the party petitions for the
+purpose, and engages at once to leave the State. But we shall see
+nothing of this. Mr. Manuel Pereira, like another John Wilkes, is to
+have settled in his person great questions of constitutional liberty.
+The posterity which in after times shall read of his voluntary martyrdom
+and heroic self-sacrifice in the cause of suffering humanity, must be
+somewhat better informed than Mr. Pereira himself; for we observe that
+his clerkly skill did not reach the point of enabling him to subscribe
+his name to the petition for habeas corpus, which is to figure so
+conspicuously in future history, it being more primitively witnessed by
+his 'mark.'"
+
+An appeal was taken from this refusal, and carried before the appeal
+court, sitting at Columbia, the capital of the State. How was this
+treated? Without enlisting common respect, it sustained the opinion
+of Judge Withers, who was one of its constituted members. Under such a
+state of things, where all the avenues to right and justice were clogged
+by a popular will that set itself above law or justice, where is the
+unprejudiced mind that will charge improper motives in asking justice of
+the highest judicial tribunal in the country.
+
+In the year 1445, a petition was presented, or entered on the rolls of
+the British Parliament, from the commons of two neighboring counties,
+praying the abatement of a nuisance which promised fearful interruptions
+to the peace and quiet of their hamlets, in consequence of the number of
+attorneys having increased from eight to twenty-four, setting forth that
+attorneys were dangerous to the peace and happiness of a community, and
+praying that there should be no more than six attorneys for each county.
+The king granted the petition, adding a clause which left it subject
+to the approval of the judges. Time works mighty contrasts. If those
+peaceable old commoners could have seen a picture of the nineteenth
+century, with its judiciary dotted upon the surface, they would
+certainly have put the world down as a very unhappy place. The people
+of Charleston might now inquire why they have so much law and so little
+justice?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII. THE CAPTAIN'S DEPARTURE AND MANUEL'S RELEASE.
+
+
+
+AFTER remaining nearly three weeks in close confinement in a cell on
+the third story, Manuel was allowed to come down and resume his position
+among the stewards, in the "steward's cell." There was a sad change of
+faces. But one of those he left was there; and he, poor fellow, was so
+changed as to be but a wreck of what he was when Manuel was confined in
+the cell.
+
+After little Tommy left, the Captain deposited a sum of money with
+the jailer to supply Manuel's wants. The jailer performed his duty
+faithfully, but the fund was soon exhausted, and Manuel was forced to
+appeal to his consul. With the care for its citizens that marks the
+course of that government, and the characteristic kindness of its
+representative in Charleston, the appeal was promptly responded to.
+The consul attended him in person, and even provided from his own purse
+things necessary to make him comfortable. We could not but admire the
+nobleness of many acts bestowed upon this humble citizen through the
+consul, showing the attachment and faith of a government to its humblest
+subject. The question now was, would the Executive release him? Mr.
+Grimshaw had interposed strong objections, and made unwarrantable
+statements in regard to his having been abandoned by his captain,
+the heavy expenses incurred to maintain the man, and questioning the
+validity of the British consul's right to protect him. Under the effect
+of these representations, the prospect began to darken, and Manuel
+became more discontented, and anxiously awaited the result.
+
+In this position, a petition was despatched to the Executive, asking
+that the man might be released, on the faith of the British Government
+that all expenses be paid, and he immediately sent beyond the limits of
+the State.
+
+But we must return and take leave of Captain Thompson, before we receive
+the answer to the petition. The day fixed for his departure had arrived.
+He had all his papers collected, and arose early to take his accustomed
+walk through the market. It was a little after seven o'clock, and as he
+approached the singular piece of wood-work that we have described in
+a previous chapter as the Charleston Whipping-post, he saw a crowd
+collected around it, and negroes running to the scene, crying out,
+"Buckra gwine to get whip! buckra get 'e back scratch!" &c. &c. He
+quickened his pace, and, arriving at the scene, elbowed his way through
+an immense crowd until he came to where he had a fair view. Here,
+exposed to view, were six respectably dressed white men, to be whipped
+according to the laws of South Carolina, which flog in the market
+for petty theft. Five of them were chained together, and the other
+scientifically secured to the machine, with his bare back exposed,
+and Mr. Grimshaw (dressed with his hat and sword of office to make the
+dignity of the punishment appropriate) laying on the stripes with a big
+whip, and raising on tip-toe at each blow to add force, making the flesh
+follow the lash. Standing around were about a dozen huge constables
+with long-pointed tipstaffs in their hands, while two others assisted
+in chaining and unchaining the prisoners. The spectacle was a barbarous
+one, opening a wide field for reflection. It was said that this
+barbarous mode of punishment was kept up as an example for the negroes.
+It certainly is a very singular mode of inspiring respect for the laws.
+
+He had heard much of T. Norman Gadsden, whose fame sounded for being the
+greatest negro-seller in the country, yet he had not seen him, though he
+had witnessed several negro-sales at other places. On looking over the
+papers after breakfast, his eye caught a flaming advertisement with "T.
+Norman Gadsden's sale of negroes" at the head. There were plantation
+negroes, coachmen, house-servants, mechanics, children of all ages, with
+descriptions as various as the kinds. Below the rest, and set out with
+a glowing delineation, was a description of a remarkably fine young
+sempstress, very bright and very intelligent, sold for no fault. The
+notice should have added an exception, that the owner was going to get
+married.
+
+He repaired to the place at the time designated, and found them selling
+an old plantation-negro, dressed in ragged, gray clothes, who, after a
+few bids, was knocked down for three hundred and fifty dollars. "We will
+give tip-top titles to everything we sell here to-day; and, gentlemen,
+we shall now offer you the prettiest wench in town. She is too
+well-known for me to say more," said the notorious auctioneer.
+
+A number of the first citizens were present, and among them the Captain
+recognised Colonel S--, who approached and began to descant upon the
+sale of the woman. "It's a d--d shame to sell that girl, and that fellow
+ought to be hung up," said he, meaning the owner; and upon this he
+commenced giving a history of the poor girl.
+
+"Where is she? Bring her along! Lord! gentlemen, her very curls are
+enough to start a bid of fifteen hundred," said the auctioneer.
+
+"Go it, Gadsden, you're a trump," rejoined a number of voices.
+
+The poor girl moved to the stand, pale and trembling, as if she was
+stepping upon the scaffold, and saw her executioners around her. She was
+very fair and beautiful-there was something even in her graceful motions
+that enlisted admiration. Here she stood almost motionless for a few
+moments.
+
+"Gentlemen, I ought to charge all of you sevenpence a sight for looking
+at her," said the auctioneer. She smiled at the remark, but it was the
+smile of pain.
+
+"Why don't you sell the girl, and not be dogging her feelings in this
+manner?" said Colonel S--.
+
+Bids continued in rapid succession from eleven hundred up to thirteen
+hundred and forty. A well-known trader from New Orleans stood behind
+one of the city brokers, motioning him at every bid, and she was knocked
+down to him. We learned her history and know the sequel.
+
+The Captain watched her with mingled feelings, and would fain have said,
+"Good God! and why art thou a slave?"
+
+The history of that unfortunate beauty may be comprehended in a few
+words, leaving the reader to draw the details from his imagination. Her
+mother was a fine mulatto slave, with about a quarter Indian blood. She
+was the mistress of a celebrated gentleman in Charleston, who ranked
+among the first families, to whom she bore three beautiful children, the
+second of which is the one before us. Her father, although he could not
+acknowledge her, prized her highly, and unquestionably never intended
+that she should be considered a slave. Alice, for such was her name,
+felt the shame of her position. She knew her father, and was proud to
+descant upon his honor and rank, yet must either associate with negroes
+or nobody, for it would be the death of caste for a white woman, however
+mean, to associate with her. At the age of sixteen she became attached
+to a young gentleman of high standing but moderate means, and lived
+with him as his mistress. Her father, whose death is well known, died
+suddenly away from home. On administering on his estate, it proved that
+instead of being wealthy, as was supposed, he was insolvent, and the
+creditors insisting upon the children being sold. Alice was purchased
+by compromise with the administrator, and retained by her lord under a
+mortgage, the interest and premium on which he had regularly paid for
+more than four years. Now that he was about to get married, the excuse
+of the mortgage was the best pretext in the world to get rid of her.
+
+The Captain turned from the scene with feelings that left deep
+impressions upon his mind, and that afternoon took his departure for his
+Scottish home.
+
+Time passed heavily at the jail, and day after day Manuel awaited his
+fate with anxiety. At every tap of the prison-bell he would spring to
+the door and listen, asserting that he heard the consul's voice in every
+passing sound. Day after day the consul would call upon him and quiet
+his fears, reassuring him that he was safe and should not be sold as
+a slave. At length, on the seventeenth day of May, after nearly two
+months' imprisonment, the glad news was received that Manuel Pereira
+was not to be sold, according to the statutes, but to be released upon
+payment of all costs, &c. &c., and immediately sent beyond the limits
+of the State. We leave it to the reader's fancy, to picture the scene of
+joy on the reception of the news in the "stewards' cell."
+
+The consul lost no time in arranging his affairs for him, and at five
+o'clock on the afternoon of the 17th of May, 1852, Manuel Pereira,
+a poor, shipwrecked mariner, who, by the dispensation of an all-wise
+Providence, was cast upon the shores of South Carolina, and imprisoned
+because hospitality to him was "contrary to law," was led forth, pale
+and emaciated, by two constables, thrust into a closely covered vehicle,
+and driven at full speed to the steamboat then awaiting to depart for
+New York. This is but a faint glimpse, of the suffering to which colored
+stewards are subjected in the Charleston jail.
+
+There were no less than sixty-three cases of colored seamen imprisoned
+on this charge of "contrary to law," during the calendar year ending
+on the twelfth of September, 1852. And now that abuses had become so
+glaring, a few gentlemen made a representation of the wretched prison
+regimen to his Excellency, Governor Means, who, as if just awoke from
+a dream that had lasted a generation, addressed a letter to the
+Attorney-General, dated on the seventh of September, 1852, requesting a
+statement in regard to the jail-how many prisoners there were confined
+on the twelfth day of September, under sentence and awaiting trial,
+the nature of offences, who committed by, and how long they had awaited
+trial; what the cost of the jail was, how much was paid by prisoners,
+and how much by the State, &c. &c. In that statement, the number of
+colored seamen was, for reasons best known to Mr. Grimshaw, kept out of
+the statement; so also was the difference between thirty cents and eight
+cents a day, paid for the ration for each man. The real statement showed
+a bounty to the sheriff of fourteen hundred and sixty-three dollars on'
+the provisions alone-a sad premium upon misery. Now add to this a medium
+amount for each of these sixty-three sailors, and we have between eight
+and nine hundred dollars more, which, with sundry jail-fees and other
+cribbage-money, makes the Charleston jail a nice little appendage to
+the sheriff's office, and will fully account for the tenacity with which
+those functionaries cling to the "old system."
+
+We conclude the bills by giving Manuel's as it stands upon the
+books:--"Contrary to law." British brig "Janson," Capt. Thompson. For
+Manuel Pereira, Colored Seaman. 1852. To Sheriff of Charleston District.
+
+May 15th. To Arrest, $2; Register, $2, $4.00" "Recog., $1.31; Constable,
+$1, 2.31" "Commitment and Discharge, 1.00" "52 Days' Maintenance of
+Manuel Pereira, at 30 cents per day, 15.60
+
+$22.81 Rec' payment, J. D--, S. C. D. Per Chs. Kanapeaux, Clerk.
+
+This amount is exclusive of all the long scale of law charges and
+attorney's fees that were incurred, and is entirely the perquisite of
+the sheriff.
+
+Now, notwithstanding that high-sounding clamor about the laws of
+South Carolina, which every South Carolinian, in the redundance of his
+feelings, strives to impress you with the sovereignty of its justice,
+its sacred rights, and its pre-eminent reputation, we never were in a
+country or community where the privileges of a certain class were so
+much abused. Every thing is made to conserve popular favor, giving to
+those in influence power to do what they please with a destitute class,
+whether they be white or black. Official departments are turned into
+depots for miserable espionage, where the most unjust schemes are
+practised upon those whose voices cannot be heard in their own defence.
+A magistrate is clothed with, or assumes a power that is almost
+absolute, committing them without a hearing, and leaving them to waste
+in jail; then releasing them before the court sits, and charging the
+fees to the State; or releasing the poor prisoner on receiving "black
+mail" for the kindness; giving one man a peace-warrant to oppress
+another whom he knows cannot get bail; and where a man has served
+out the penalty of the crime for which he was committed, give a
+peace-warrant to his adversary that he may continue to vent his spleen
+upon him. In this manner, we have known a man who had served seven
+months' imprisonment for assault and battery, by an understanding
+between the magistrate and the plaintiff, continued in jail for several
+years upon a peace-warrant, issued by the magistrate from time to time,
+until at length he shot himself in jail. The man was a peaceable man,
+and of a social temperament. He had been offered the alternative of
+leaving the State, but he scorned to accept it. To show that we are
+correct in what we say respecting some of the Charleston officials, we
+insert an article which appeared in the Charleston Courier of Sept. 1,
+1852:--[For the Courier.]
+
+"Many of the quiet and moral portion of our community can form no
+adequate conception of the extent to which those who sell liquor,
+and otherwise trade with our slaves, are now plying their illegal
+and demoralizing traffic. At no period within our recollection has it
+prevailed to such an alarming extent; at no period has its influence
+upon our slave population been more palpable or more dangerous; at no
+period has the municipal administration been so wilfully blind to these
+corrupt practices, or so lenient and forgiving when such practices are
+exposed."
+
+* * * *
+
+"We have heard it intimated that when General Schnierle is a candidate
+for the mayoralty, they are regularly assessed for means to defray the
+expenses of the canvass. Instances are not wanting where amounts of
+money are paid monthly to General Schnierle's police as a reward for
+shutting their eyes and closing their lips when unlawful proceedings are
+in progress. We have at this moment in our possession a certificate from
+a citizen, sworn to before Mr. Giles, the magistrate, declaring that he,
+the deponent, heard one of the city police-officers (Sharlock) make a
+demand for money upon one of these shop-keepers, and promised that if
+he would pay him five dollars at stated intervals, 'none of the
+police-officers would trouble him.' This affidavit can be seen, if
+inquired for, at this office. Thus bribery is added to guilt, and those
+who should enforce the laws are made auxiliaries in their violation.
+Said one of these slave-destroyers to us, 'General Schnierle suits us
+very well. I have no trouble with General Schnierle'--remarks at once
+repugnant and suggestive. * * * We are told by one, that Mr. Hutchinson,
+when in power, fined him heavily (and, as he thought, unjustly)
+for selling liquor to a slave; hence he would not vote for him. An
+additional reason for this animosity toward Mr. Hutchinson arises from
+the fact that the names of offenders were always published during that
+gentleman's administration, while under that of General Schnierle they
+are screened from public view. On any Sunday evening, light may be seen
+in the shops of these dealers. If the passer-by will for a few moments
+stay his course, he will witness the ingress and egress of negroes; if
+he approach the door, he will hear noise as of card-playing and revelry
+within. And this is carried on unblushingly; is not confined to a shop
+here and a shop there, but may be observed throughout the city. The
+writer of this article, some Sundays since, witnessed from his upper
+window a scene of revelry and gambling in one of these drinking-shops,
+which will scarcely be credited. A party of negroes were seen around
+a card-table, with money beside them, engaged in betting; glasses
+of liquor were on the table, from which they ever and anon regaled
+themselves with all the nonchalance and affected mannerism of the most
+fashionable blades of the beau monde.
+
+"This may not be a 'desecration of the Sabbath' by the municipal
+authorities themselves, but they are assuredly responsible for its
+profanation. Appointed to guard the public morals, they are assuredly
+censurable if licentiousness is suffered to run its wild career
+unnoticed and unchecked. We do not ask to be believed. We would prefer
+to have skeptical rather than credulous readers. We should prefer that
+all would arise from the perusal of this article in doubt, and determine
+to examine for themselves. We believe in the strength and sufficiency of
+ocular proof, and court investigation.
+
+* * *
+
+"We are abundantly repaid if we succeed in arousing public attention to
+the alarming and dangerous condition of our city. * * * Let inquiry be
+entered into. We boldly challenge it. It will lead to other and more
+astonishing developments than those we have revealed. (Signed)
+
+"A RESPONSIBLE CITIZEN."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX. MANUEL'S ARRIVAL IN NEW YORK.
+
+
+
+WHEN we left Manuel, he was being hurried on board the steamship, as if
+he was a bale of infected goods. Through the kindness of the clerk in
+the consul's office, he was provided with a little box of stores to
+supply his wants on the passage, as it was known that he would have to
+"go forward." He soon found himself gliding over Charleston bar, and
+took a last look of what to him had been the city of injustice. On the
+afternoon of the second day, he was sitting upon the forward deck
+eating an orange that had been given to him by the steward of the ship,
+probably as a token of sympathy for his sickly appearance, when a number
+of passengers, acting upon the information of the clerk of the ship,
+gathered around him. One gentleman from Philadelphia, who seemed to take
+more interest in the man than any other of the passengers, expressed his
+indignation in no measured terms, that such a man should be imprisoned
+as a slave. "Take care," said a bystander, "there's a good many
+Southerners on board."
+
+"I don't care if every slaveholder in the South was on board, holding
+a knife at my throat; I'm on the broad ocean, where God spreads the
+breezes of freedom that man cannot enslave," said he, sitting down
+beside Manuel, and getting him to recount the details of his shipwreck
+and imprisonment. The number increased around him, and all listened with
+attention until he had concluded. One of the spectators asked him if
+he would have something good to eat? but he declined, pulling out the
+little box that the consul had sent him, and, opening it before them,
+showed it to be well-stored with little delicacies.
+
+The Philadelphian motioned that they take up a subscription for him, and
+almost simultaneously took his hat off and began to pass it around;
+but Manuel, mistaking the motive, told them that he never yet sought
+charity-that the consul had paid him his wages, and he had money enough
+to get home. But if he did not accept their contributions, he had their
+sympathies and their good wishes, which were more prized by him, because
+they were contrasted with the cold hospitality he had suffered in
+Charleston.
+
+On the morning of the twentieth he arrived in New York. Here things wore
+a different aspect. There were no constables fettering him with irons,
+aggravating his feelings, and dragging him to a miseerable cell overrun
+with vermin. He had no scientific ordeal of the statutes to pass
+through, requiring the measure of his form and features; and he was a
+man again, with life and liberty, and the dark dread of the oppressor's
+power far from him. He went to his comfortable boarding-house, and laid
+his weary limbs down to rest, thanking God that he could now sleep
+in peace, and awake to liberty. His system was so reduced that he was
+unable to do duty, although he was anxious to proceed on his way to join
+the old owners, but wanted to work his way in the capacity of steward.
+Thus he remained in New York more than four weeks, gaining vigor and
+strength, and with a lingering hope that he should meet his little
+companion.
+
+On the twenty-first of June, being well recruited, he sailed for
+Liverpool, and after a remarkably calm passage of thirty-four days,
+arrived in the Mersey, and in forty-eight hours more the ship was safely
+within the Princess' Dock, and all hands ready to go on shore. In the
+same dock was a ship taking in cargo and passengers for Charleston,
+South Carolina. Manuel went on board, and found, in conversation with
+the steward, that she had sailed from that port on the 23d of May. A
+short conversation disclosed that they had been old shipmates from the
+Thames, on board of the Indiaman, Lord William Bentick, and were on
+board of that ship when an unfortunate circumstance occurred to her on
+entering a British North American port, many years ago. Here they sat
+recounting the many adventures through which they had passed since
+that period, the ships they had sailed in, the sufferings they had gone
+through, and the narrow escapes they had had for their lives, until past
+midnight. Manuel wound up by giving a detailed account of his sufferings
+in Charleston.
+
+"What!" said the steward of the Charleston ship, "then you must have
+known our cabin-boy, he belonged to the same vessel!"
+
+"What was his name?" inquired Manuel.
+
+"Tommy Ward! and as nice a little fellow as ever served the cabin; poor
+little fellow, we could hardly get him across."
+
+"Gracious! that's my Tommy," said Manuel. "Where is he? He loves me as
+he does his life, and would run to me as a child would to its father.
+Little as he is, he has been a friend through my severest trials, and a
+companion in my pleasures."
+
+"Ah, poor child! I'm afraid you wouldn't know him now. He has suffered
+much since you saw him."
+
+"Is he not aboard? Where can I find him?" inquired Manuel, hastily.
+
+"No, he is not aboard; he is at the hospital in Dennison street. Go
+there to-morrow, and you will find him."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX. THE SCENE OF ANGUISH.
+
+
+
+WE are sorry, that having traced the details of our narrative as they
+occurred, without adding for dramatic effect, we are constrained to
+conclude with a picture at once painful and harrowing to the feelings.
+We do this that we may be sustained by records, in what we have stated,
+rather than give one of those more popular conclusions which restore
+happiness and relieve the reader's feelings.
+
+Manuel retired to his berth, full of meditation. His little companion
+was before him, pictured in his child-like innocence and playfulness. He
+saw him in the youthful zeal and freshness of the night when he brought
+the well-laden haversack into his dreary cell, and which kind act was
+repaid by a night of suffering in the guard-house. There was too much of
+life and buoyancy in the picture his imagination called up, to reconcile
+the belief that any thing serious had befallen him; and yet the man
+spoke in a manner that aroused the intensity of his feelings. It was a
+whisper full of fearful forebodings, and filled his mind with anxious
+expectation. He could not sleep-the anxiety of his feelings had
+awakened a nervvous restlessness that awaited the return of morning with
+impatience.
+
+Morning came. He proceeded to the hospital and rang the bell. An aged
+gentleman came to the door, and to his questions about Tommy being
+there, answered in the affirmative, and called an attendant to show him
+the ward in which the little sufferer lay. He followed the attendant,
+and after ascending several flights of stairs and following a dark,
+narrow passage nearly to its end, was shown into a small, single-room on
+the right. The result was suggestive in the very atmosphere, which had
+a singular effect upon the senses. The room, newly-whitewashed, was
+darkened by a green curtain tacked over the frame of the window.
+Standing near the window were two wooden-stools and a little table, upon
+which burned the faint light of a small taper, arranged in a cup of oil,
+and shedding its feeble flickers on the evidences of a sick-chamber.
+There, on a little, narrow cot, lay the death-like form of his once
+joyous companion, with the old nurse sitting beside him, watching his
+last pulsation. Her arm encircled his head, while his raven locks curled
+over his forehead, and shadowed the beauty of innocence even in death.
+
+"Is he there? is he there?" inquired Manuel in a low tone. At the same
+time a low, gurgling noise sounded in his ears. The nurse started to
+her feet as if to inquire for what he came. "He is my companion-my
+companion," said Manuel.
+
+It was enough. The woman recognised the object of the little sufferer's
+anxiety. "Ah! it is Manuel. How often he has called that name for the
+last week!" said she.
+
+He ran to the bedside and grasped his little fleshless hand as it lay
+upon the white sheet, bathing his cold brow with kisses of grief. Life
+was gone-the spirit had winged its way to the God who gave it. Thus
+closed the life of poor Tommy Ward. He died as one resting in a calm
+sleep, far from the boisterous sound of the ocean's tempest, with God's
+love to shield his spirit in another and brighter world.
+
+
+
+
+CONCLUSION.
+
+
+
+IN a preceding chapter, we left the poor boy on the plantation of
+Colonel Whaley, affected by a pulmonary disease, the seeds of which were
+planted on the night he was confined in the guard-house, and the signs
+of gradual decay evinced their symptoms. After Captain Williams--for
+such was the name of the captain of the Three Sisters--left the
+plantation, no person appeared to care for him, and on the second day he
+was attacked with a fever, and sent to one of the negro cabins, where an
+old mulatto woman took care of him and nursed him as well as her scanty
+means would admit. The fever continued for seven days, when he
+became convalescent and able to walk out; but feeling that he was an
+incumbrance to those around him, he packed his clothes into a little
+bundle and started for Charleston on foot. He reached that city after
+four days' travelling over a heavy, sandy road, subsisting upon the
+charity of poor negroes, whom he found much more ready to supply his
+wants than the opulent planters. One night he, was compelled to make
+a pillow of his little bundle, and lay down in a corn-shed, where the
+planter, aroused by the noise of his dogs, which were confined in a
+kennel, came with a lantern and two negroes and discovered him. At first
+he ordered him off, and threatened to set the dogs upon him if he
+did not instantly comply with the order; but his miserable appearance
+affected the planter, and before he had gone twenty rods one of the
+negroes overtook him, and said his master had sent him to bring him
+back. He returned, and the negro made him a coarse bed in his cabin, and
+gave him some homony and milk.
+
+His hopes to see Manuel had buoyed him up through every fatigue, but
+when he arrived, and was informed at the jail that Manuel had left three
+days before, his disappointment was extreme. A few days after he shipped
+as cabin-boy on board a ship ready for sea and bound to Liverpool.
+Scarcely half-way across, he was compelled to resign himself to the
+sick-list. The disease had struck deep into his system, and was rapidly
+wasting him away. The sailors, one by one in turns, watched over him
+with tenderness and care. As soon as the ship arrived, he was sent
+to the hospital, and there he breathed his last as Manuel entered the
+sick-chamber. We leave Manuel and a few of his shipmates following his
+remains to the last resting-place of man.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX.
+
+SINCE the foregoing was written, Governor Means, in his message to the
+Legislature of South Carolina, refers to the laws under which "colored
+seamen" are imprisoned. We make the subjoined extract, showing that
+he insists upon its being continued in force, on the ground of
+"self-preservation"--a right which ship-owners will please regard for
+the protection of their own interests:--
+
+"I feel it my duty to call your attention to certain proceedings
+which have grown out of the enforcement of that law of our State which
+requires the Sheriff of Charleston to seize and imprison colored seamen
+who are brought to that port. You will remember that the British Consul
+addressed a communication to the legislature in December, 1850, on the
+subject of a modification of this law. A committee was appointed by
+the House and Senate to report upon it at the next session of the
+legislature. These committees reported adverse to any modification. On
+the 24th March, 1852, Manuel Pereira was imprisoned in accordance with
+the law alluded to. The vessel in which he sailed was driven into the
+port of Charleston in distress. This was looked upon as a favorable case
+upon which to make an issue, as so strong an element of sympathy was
+connected with it. Accordingly, a motion was made before Judge
+Withers for a writ of 'habeas corpus,' which was refused by him. These
+proceedings were instituted by the British Consul, it is said, under
+instructions from his government, to test the constitutionality of
+the Act. I think it here proper to state, that Pereira was at perfect
+liberty to depart at any moment that he could get a vessel to transport
+him beyond the limits of the State. In truth, in consideration of the
+fact that his coming into the State was involuntary, the Sheriff of
+Charleston, with his characteristic kindness, procured for him a place
+in a ship about to sail for Liverpool. Early in April, Pereira was
+actually released, and on his way to the ship, having himself signed the
+shipping articles, when, by interposition of the British Consul, he was
+again consigned to the custody of the sheriff. A few days after this,
+the British Consul insisted no longer on his detention, but voluntarily
+paid his passage to New York. This was looked upon as an abandonment of
+that case. The statement of Mr. Yates, together with the letter of the
+British Consul, are herewith transmitted.
+
+"While these proceedings were pending, the Sheriff of Charleston had
+my instructions not to give up the prisoners even if a writ of habeas
+corpus had been granted. I considered that the 'Act of 1844,' entitled,
+'An Act more effectually to prevent negroes and other persons of color
+from entering into this State, and for other purposes,' made it my duty
+to do so.
+
+"On the 19th May, Reuben Roberts, a colored seaman, a native of Nassau,
+arrived in the steamer Clyde, from Baracoa. The Sheriff of Charleston,
+in conformity with the law of the State, which has been in force
+since 1823, arrested and lodged him in the district jail, where he was
+detained until the 26th of May, when, the Clyde being ready to sail,
+Roberts was put on board, and sailed the same day.
+
+"On the 9th of June, a writ in trespass, for assault and false
+imprisonment, from the Federal Court, was served upon Sheriff Yates,
+laying the damage at $4000.
+
+"The Act of 1844, I take it, was intended to prevent all interference
+on the part of any power on the face of the earth, with the execution of
+this police regulation, which is so essential to the peace and safety of
+our community. Had the legislature which passed it ever dreamed that the
+sheriff was to be subjected to the annoyance of being dragged before the
+Federal Court for doing his duty under a law of the State, I am sure it
+would have provided for his protection. As no such provision has been
+made for so unexpected a contingency, I recommend that you so amend this
+Act of 1844, that it may meet any case that may arise.
+
+"It is certainly wrong to tolerate this interference with the
+laws enacted for the protection of our institution. In the general
+distribution of power between the Federal and State Governments, the
+right to make their own police regulations was clearly reserved to
+the States. In fact, it is nothing more nor less than the right of
+self-preservation-a right which is above all constitutions, and above
+all laws, and one which never was, nor never will be, abandoned by a
+people who are worthy to be free. It is a right which has never yet been
+attempted to be denied to any people, except to us.
+
+"The complaint against this law is very strange, and the attempt to
+bring us in conflict with the General Government on account of it, is
+still more remarkable; when, so far from its being at variance with the
+laws of the United States, it is only requiring the State authorities to
+enforce an Act of Congress, approved February 28th, 1803, entitled, An
+Act to prevent the importation of certain persons into certain States,
+where, by the laws thereof, their importation is prohibited. By
+referring to this Act, you will see that the plaintiff in the action
+alluded to was prohibited by it from entering into this State. I deem
+it unnecessary, however, to enter fully into the argument. If any doubt
+should be entertained by you, as to its constitutionality, I beg leave
+to refer to the able opinion of the Hon. J. McPherson Berrien, delivered
+at the time he was Attorney-General of the United States, which I
+herewith send you.
+
+"On the subject of the modification of this law, I am free to say,
+that when Her B. M.'s Government, through its consul, made a respectful
+request to our legislature to that effect, I was anxious that it should
+be made. It was with pleasure that I transmitted his first communication
+to the last legislature. I would have made a recommendation of its
+modification a special point in my first message, but that I thought it
+indelicate to do so, as the matter was already before the legislature,
+and committees had been appointed to report upon it. Another reason for
+the neglect of this recommendation, was the then excited state of
+party politics, which might have precluded the possibility of a calm
+consideration of the subject. But for the proceedings instituted in the
+premises, I would even now recommend a modification of the law, so as to
+require captains to confine their colored seamen to their vessels, and
+to prevent their landing under heavy penalties. For while I think the
+State has a perfect right to pass whatever laws on this subject it may
+deem necessary for its safety, yet the spirit of the age requires that
+while they should be so formed as to be adequate to our protection,
+they should be at the same time as little offensive as possible to other
+nations with whom we have friendly relations. But since an attempt has
+been made to defy our laws, and bring us in conflict with the Federal
+Government, on a subject upon which we are so justly sensitive, our own
+self-respect demands that we should not abate one jot or tittle of that
+law, which was enacted to protect us from the influence of ignorant
+incendiaries."
+
+We are under many obligations to Governor Means for his remarks upon
+this subject. We esteem his character too highly to entertain an
+idea that he would knowingly make an incorrect statement; but, with a
+knowledge of the facts, we can assure him that he was misled by those
+whom he depended upon for information. And also, though his name
+deserves to stand pre-eminent among the good men of Carolina, for
+recurring to that frightful state of things which exists in the
+Charleston prison, that he did not receive a correct statement in regard
+to it. In this want, his remarks lose much of their value. Subjects and
+grievances exist there which he should know most of, and yet he knows
+least, because he intrusts them to the caretakers, who make abuses their
+medium of profit.
+
+Under the influence of that exceedingly suspicious, and yet exceedingly
+credulous characteristic of a people, few know the power that is working
+beneath the sunshine of South Carolina, and those who do, stand upon
+that slaveworn ostentation which considers it beneath notice.
+
+We have no interest nor feeling beyond that of humanity, and a right
+to expose the mendacity of those who have power to exercise it over the
+prisoners in Charleston. That mendacity has existed too long for the
+honor of that community, and for the feelings of those who have suffered
+under it.
+
+It may be true that this case was considered a favorable one to try the
+issue upon, but no elements of sympathy were sought by the consul.
+That functionary to whom the Governor has attributed "characteristic
+kindness," said, in our presence, and we have the testimony of others
+to confirm what we say, that if Judge Withers had granted the habeas
+corpus, he would not have given up the prisoner, but rather gone to
+jail and suffered the same regimen with the prisoners. Had he tried the
+accommodations, he would have found the "profits" more than necessary to
+appease common hunger.
+
+The Governor says, "Pereira was at liberty to depart at any moment that
+he could get a vessel to transport him beyond the limits of the State."
+How are we to reconcile this with the following sentence, which appears
+in the next paragraph:--"While these proceedings were pending," (meaning
+the action instituted by the consul to release the prisoner,) "the
+sheriff of Charleston had my instructions not to give up the prisoner,
+even if a writ of habeas corpus had been granted?" According to this,
+the sheriff assumed a power independent of and above the Governor's
+prerogative. We have attempted to picture the force of this in our
+work, and to show that there are official abuses cloaked by an honorable
+dishonesty, which dignifies the business of the local factor and vendor
+of human property, and which should be stayed by the power of the
+Executive.
+
+The singular fact presents itself, that while Judge Withers was
+deliberating upon the question of granting the "habeas corpus," the
+proceedings pending, and the Governor's instructions to the contrary
+before him, the sheriff takes it upon himself to smuggle the prisoner
+out of port. Now what was the object of this Secret and concerted
+movement? Was it "kindness" on the part of that functionary, who has
+grasped every pretence to enforce this law? We think not. The reader
+will not require any extended comments from us to explain the motive;
+yet we witnessed it, and cannot leave it without a few remarks.
+
+It is well known that it has been the aim of that functionary, whose
+"characteristic kindness" has not failed to escape the Governor's
+notice, to thwart the consul in all his proceedings. In this instance,
+he engaged the services of a "shipping master" as a pretext, and with
+him was about to send the man away when his presence was essential to
+test his right to the habeas corpus, and at this very time, more than
+two months wages, due him from the owners, lay in the hands of the
+consul, ready to be paid on his release.
+
+The nefarious design speaks for itself.
+
+The consul was informed of the proceeding, and very properly refused
+to submit to such a violation of authority, intended to annul his
+proceedings. He preferred to await the "test," demanding the prisoner's
+release through the proper authorities. That release, instead of being
+"a few days after this," as the message sets forth, was-not effected
+until the fifteenth of May.
+
+Let the Governor institute an inquiry into the treatment of these men
+by the officials, and the prison regimen, and he will find the truth
+of what we have said. Public opinion will not credit his award of
+"characteristic kindness" to those who set up a paltry pretext as an
+apology for their wrong-doing.
+
+If men are to be imprisoned upon this singular construction of law,
+(which is no less than arming the fears of South Carolina,) is it any
+more than just to ask that she should pay for it, instead of imposing
+it upon innocent persons? Or, to say the least, to make such comfortable
+provision for them as is made in the port of Savannah, and give them
+what they pay for, instead of charging thirty cents a day for their
+board, and making twenty-two of that profit?
+
+Had the Governor referred to the "characteristic kindness" of the
+jailer, his remarks would have been bestowed upon a worthy man, who has
+been a father to those unfortunates who chanced within the turn of his
+key.
+
+In another part of his message, commenting upon the existence of
+disgraceful criminal laws, the management and wretched state of prisons,
+he says, "The attorney-general, at my request, has drawn up a report
+on the subject of prisons and prison discipline." Now, if such were the
+facts, the reports would be very imperfect to be drawn up by one who
+never visits the prisons.
+
+We are well aware that he called for this report, and further, that the
+attorney-general, in a letter to the sheriff, (of which we have a copy,)
+propounded numerous questions in regard to the jail, calling for a
+statement in full, particularly the amount of fees paid to certain
+functionaries; those charged to the State, and the average number of
+prisoners per month, from Sept. 1851, to Sept. 1852, &c. &c. That letter
+was transmitted to the jailer-a man whose character and integrity is
+well known, and above reproach in Charleston-with a request that he
+would make out his report. He drew up his report in accordance with the
+calendar and the facts, but that report was not submitted. Why was it
+not submitted? Simply because it showed the profit of starving men in
+South Carolina prisons.
+
+We have the evidence in our possession, and can show the Executive that
+he has been misled. We only ask him to call for the original statement,
+made out in the jailer's handwriting, and compare it with the calendar;
+and when he has done that, let us ask, Why the average of prisoners per
+month does not correspond? and why the enormous amount of fees accruing
+from upward of fifty "colored seamen," imprisoned during the year, and
+entered upon the calendar "contrary to law," was not included?
+
+It is a very unhealthy state of things, to say the least; but as the
+sheriff considers it his own, perhaps we have no right to meddle with
+it.
+
+All this clamor about the bad influence of "colored seamen" is kept up
+by a set of mendicant officials who harvest upon the fees, and falls
+to naught, when, at certain hours of the day during their imprisonment,
+they are allowed to associate with "bad niggers," committed for criminal
+offences and sale. If their presence is "dangerous," it certainly would
+be more dangerous in its connection with criminals of the feared class.
+
+Take away the fees--the mercantile community will not murmur, and
+the official gentry will neither abuse nor trouble themselves about
+enforcing the law to imprison freemen.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Manuel Pereira, by F. C. Adams
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Manuel Pereira
+by F. C. Adams
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
+copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing
+this or any other Project Gutenberg file.
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+
+Title: Manuel Pereira
+
+Author: F. C. Adams
+
+Release Date: November, 2003 [EBook #4680]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on February 26, 2002]
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Manuel Pereira
+by F. C. Adams
+******This file should be named mnlpr10.txt or mnlpr10.zip******
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+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we usually do not
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+The "legal small print" and other information about this book
+may now be found at the end of this file. Please read this
+important information, as it gives you specific rights and
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+
+***
+This etext was created by Charles Aldarondo (Aldarondo@yahoo.com)
+
+MANUEL PEREIRA;
+
+OR, The Sovereign Rule of South Carolina.
+
+WITH VIEWS OF SOUTHERN LAWS, LIFE, AND HOSPITALITY.
+
+BY F. C. ADAMS.
+
+WRITTEN IN CHARLESTON, SOUTH CAROLINA. WASHINGTON, D. C.:
+
+1853.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I. THE Unlucky Ship
+CHAPTER II. The Steward's Bravery
+CHAPTER III. The Second Storm
+CHAPTER IV. The Charleston Police
+CHAPTER V. Mr. Grimshaw, the Man of the County
+CHAPTER VI. The Janson in the Offing
+CHAPTER VII. Arrival of the Janson
+CHAPTER VIII. A New Dish of Secession
+CHAPTER IX. A few Points of the Law
+CHAPTER X. The Prospect Darkening
+CHAPTER XI. The Sheriff's Office
+CHAPTER XII. The Old Jail
+CHAPTER XIII. How it is
+CHAPTER XIV. Manuel Pereira Committed
+CHAPTER XV. The Law's Intricacy
+CHAPTER XVI. Plea of Just Consideration and Mistaken Constancy of the Laws
+CHAPTER XVII. Little George, the Captain, and Mr. Grimshaw
+CHAPTER XVIII. Little Tommy and the Police
+CHAPTER XIX. The Next Morning, and the Mayor's Verdict
+CHAPTER XX. Emeute among the Stewards
+CHAPTER XXI. The Captain's Interview with Mr. Grimshaw
+CHAPTER XXII. Copeland's Release and Manuel's close Confinement
+CHAPTER XXIII. Imprisonment of John Paul, and John Baptiste Pamerlie
+CHAPTER XXIV. The Janson Condemned
+CHAPTER XXV. George the Secessionist, and his Father's Ships
+CHAPTER XXVI. A Singular Reception
+CHAPTER XXVII. The Habeas Corpus
+CHAPTER XXVIII. The Captain's Departure and Manuel's Release
+CHAPTER XXIX. Manuel's Arrival in New York
+CHAPTER XXX. The Scene of Anguish
+CONCLUSION
+APPENDIX
+
+
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION.
+
+
+
+
+
+OUR generous friends in Georgia and South Carolina will not add among
+their assumptions that we know nothing of the South and Southern life. A
+residence of several years in those States, a connection with the press,
+and associations in public life, gave us opportunities which we did not
+lose, and have not lost sight of; and if we dipped deeper into the
+vicissitudes of life and law than they gave us credit for at the time,
+we trust they will pardon us, on the ground of interest in the welfare
+of the South.
+
+Perhaps we should say, to support the true interests of the South, we
+should and must abandon many of those errors we so strenuously supported
+in years past; and thus we have taken up the subject of our book, based
+upon the practical workings of an infamous law, which we witnessed upon
+the individual whose name forms a part of the title.
+
+Imprisoning a shipwrecked sailor, and making it a penal offence for a
+freeman to come within the limits of a republican State, whether
+voluntarily or involuntarily, seems to be considered commonplace,
+instead of barbarous in South Carolina. This may be accounted for by the
+fact that the power of a minority, created in wrong, requiring barbarous
+expedients to preserve itself intact, becomes an habitual sentiment,
+which usage makes right.
+
+This subject has been treated with indifference, even by the press,
+which has satisfied itself in discussing the abstract right as a
+question of law, rather than by disclosing the sufferings of those who
+endure the wrong and injustice. When we are called upon to support, and
+are made to suffer the penalty of laws founded in domestic fear, and
+made subservient to various grades of injustice, it becomes our duty to
+localize the wrong, and to point out the odium which attaches to the
+State that enacts such laws of oppression.
+
+A "peculiar-institution" absorbs and takes precedence of every thing;
+its protection has become a sacred element of legislative and private
+action; and fair discussion is looked upon as ominous, and proclaimed as
+incendiary. But we speak for those who owe no allegiance to that
+delicate institution; citizens to all intents and, purposes
+(notwithstanding their dark skins) of the countries to which they
+severally belong; peaceable persons, pursuing their avocations, to
+provide a respectable maintenance for their families, and worthy of the
+same protective rights claimed by the more fortunate citizens of such
+countries. In doing this we shall give a practical illustration of the
+imprisonment of four individuals in South Carolina, and ask those who
+speculate in the abstract science of State sovereignty, to reflect upon
+the issue of that lamentable injustice which inflicts punishment upon
+persons guiltless of crime. We prefer to be plain, and we know our
+Southern friends will not accuse us of misconstruction, for we have
+their interests at heart, as well as the cause of humanity, which we
+shall strive to promote, in spite of the struggles of modern barbarism,
+seeking to perpetuate itself. Fear, the inventor of such pretexts as are
+set up, and mantled in Southern modesty, must remodel its code for South
+Carolinians, before it can assert a power unknown to law, or trample
+upon the obligations of treaty, or enforce nullification of individual
+rights.
+
+CHARLESTON, S. C., July 17,1852.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+MANUEL PEREIRA.
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE UNLUCKY SHIP.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE British brig Janson, Thompson, master, laden with sugar,
+pimento, &c. &c. left Kingston, Jamaica, in the early part of March,
+in the present year, bound for Glasgow. The skipper, who was a
+genuine son of the "Land o' Cakes," concluded to take the inside
+passage, and run through the gulf. This might have been questioned
+by seamen better acquainted with the windward passage; but as every
+Scotchman likes to have his own way, the advice of the first
+officer--an experienced salt in the West India waters--went to
+leeward. On rounding Cape Antoine, it was evident that a strong blow
+was approaching. The clouds hung their dark curtains in threatening
+blackness; and, as the sharp flashes of lightning inflamed the
+gloomy scene, the little bark seemed like a speck upon the bosom of
+the sea. It was the first mate's watch on deck. The wind, then
+blowing from the W.S.W., began to increase and veer into the
+westward; from whence it suddenly chopped into the northward. The
+mate paced the quarter wrapt in his fearnought jacket, and at every
+turn giving a glance aloft, then looking at the compass, and again
+to the man at the wheel, as if he had an instinct of what was
+coming.
+
+He was a fearless navigator, yet, like many others who had yielded
+to the force of habit, was deeply imbued with that prevalent
+superstition so common to sailors, which regards a particular ship
+as unlucky. Imagine an old-fashioned boatswain, with north-country
+features strongly marked, a weather-beaten face, and a painted
+south-wester on his head, and you have the "Mister Mate" of the old
+brig Janson.
+
+"Keep her full, my hearty. We must take in our light sails and go on
+the other tack soon. If we don't catch it before daylight, I'll miss
+my calculation. She's an unlucky old craft as ever I sailed in, and
+if the skipper a'n't mighty careful, he'll never get her across.
+I've sworn against sailing in her several times, but if I get across
+in her this time, I'll bid her good-by; and if the owners don't give
+me a new craft, they may get somebody else. We're just as sure to
+have bad luck as if we had cats and parsons aboard."
+
+Thus saying, he descended the companion-way, and reported the
+appearance of the weather to the skipper, who arose quickly, and,
+consulting his barometer, found it had fallen to near the lowest
+scale. After inquiring the quarter of the wind, and how she headed,
+what sail she was carrying, and the probable distance from the cape,
+he gave orders to call all hands to take in the topgallant-sails,
+double reef the fore, and single reef the maintop-sails, and stow
+the flying-jib--dressed himself, and came on deck. Just as he put
+his head above the slide of the companion, and stopped for a minute
+with his hands resting upon the sides, a vivid flash of lightning
+hung its festoons of fire around the rigging, giving it the
+appearance of a chain of livid flame.
+
+"We'll catch the but-end of a gulf sneezer soon. Tell the boys to
+bear a hand with them sails. We must get her snug, and stand by to
+lay her under a double-reefed maintop-sail and jib, with her head to
+the northward and eastward. We may make a clear drift--chance if it
+lasts long," said Skipper Thompson, as he stood surveying the
+horizon and his craft. Scarcely had he given the orders before the
+storm burst upon them with all its fury. Its suddenness can only be
+appreciated by those who have sailed in the West India passages,
+where the sudden shocks of the short-chopping sea acts with a
+tremendous strain upon the hull of a heavy-laden vessel. The captain
+ran to the windward gangway, hurrying his men in the discharge of
+their duty, and giving another order to clew up the coursers and
+foretop-sail. Just as the men had executed the first, and were about
+to pull on the clew-lines of the latter, a sudden gust took effect
+upon the bag of the sail and carried it clean from the bolt-ropes.
+The halyards were lowered and the yards properly braced up, while
+the Janson was brought to under the canvas we have before described.
+In a few minutes more the wind had increased to a gale, and, as the
+sailors say, several times the old craft "wouldn't look at it."
+Several times we had to put her helm up, and as many times she
+shipped those forcing cross seas which drive every thing before
+them, and sweep the decks. At length a piece of canvas was lashed to
+the fore-rigging which gave her a balance, and she rode easy until
+about five o'clock in the morning, when by a sudden broach the
+canvas was carried away, and a tremendous sharp sea boarded her
+forward; starting several stanchions, carrying away part of her
+starboard bulwark and rail, and simultaneously the
+foretop-gallant-mast, which snapped just above the withe. As a
+natural consequence, every thing was in the utmost confusion--the old
+hull worked in every timber. The wreck swayed to and fro, retarding
+the working of the vessel and endangering the lives of those who
+attempted to clear it from obstruction. Thus she remained for more
+than half an hour, nearly on her beam-ends, and at the mercy of each
+succeeding sea that threatened to engulf her.
+
+As daylight broke, the wind lulled, and, as usual in those waters,
+the sea soon ran down. Enabled to take the advantage of daylight,
+they commenced to clear away the wreck. In the mean time it was
+found necessary to remove the fore-hatch in order to get out some
+spare sails that had been stowed away near the forward bulkhead,
+instead of a more appropriate place. The mate, after trying the
+pumps in the early part of the gale, reported that she had started a
+leak; which, however, was so trifling as to require but one man to
+keep her free, until she broached, and carried away her
+topgallant-mast. The man on duty then reported the water increasing,
+and another was ordered to assist him. On an examination in the
+morning, it was found that she was strained in the fore-channels,
+and had started a but.
+
+"She's an unlucky concern, skipper," said the mate as he brought the
+axe to take the battons off the forehatch. "A fellow might as well
+try to work a crab at low tide as to keep her to it in a blow like
+that. She minds her helm like a porpoise in the breakers. Old Davy
+must have put his mark upon her some time, but I never know'd a
+lucky vessel to be got as she was. She makes a haul on the
+underwriters every time she drifts across; for I never knew her to
+sail clear since I shipped in the old tub. If she was mine, I'd find
+a place for her at somebody's expense."
+
+The sea became smooth, the water was found to have receded, the
+wind, light, had hauled to W.S.W., and Cape Antoine was judged by
+dead reckoning to bear S.S.W. about thirty miles distant. The
+larboard fore-shrouds were found to have been scorched by the
+lightning, which had completely melted the tar from the
+after-shroud. All hands were now busily employed repairing the
+wreck, which by two o'clock P.M. they had got so far completed as to
+stand on their course in the gulf, at the rate of six knots an hour.
+
+The skipper now consulted in his mind as to the expediency of making
+for Havana or proceeding on his cruise. The leak had materially
+diminished, and, like all old vessels, though she gave a good
+portion of work at the pumps, a continuation of good weather might
+afford an opportunity to shove her across. Under these feelings, he
+was inclined to give the preference to his hopes rather than yield
+to his fears. He considered the interest of all concerned--consulted
+his mate, but found him governed by his superstition, and looking
+upon the issue of his life about as certain whether he jumped
+overboard or "stuck by the old tub." He considered again the
+enormous port-charges imposed in Havana, the nature of his cargo in
+regard to tariff, should his vessel be condemned, and the ruinous
+expenses of discharging, &c. &c. together with the cost of repairs,
+providing they were ordered. All these things he considered with the
+mature deliberation of a good master, who has the general interests
+of all concerned at heart. So, if he put away for a port, in
+consideration of all concerned, his lien for general average would
+have strong ground in maritime law; yet there were circumstances
+connected with the sea-worthy condition of the craft--known to
+himself, if not to the port-wardens, and which are matters of
+condition between the master and his owners--which might, upon
+certain technicalities of law, give rise to strong objectionable
+points. With all these glancing before him, he, with commendable
+prudence, resolved to continue his voyage, and trust to kind
+Providence for the best.
+
+"Captain," said the mate, as he stood viewing the prospect, with a
+marlinespike in one hand and a piece of seizing in the other--"I
+verily think, if that blow had stuck to us two hours longer, the old
+tub would a' rolled her futtocks out. Ye don't know her as well as I
+do. She's unlucky, anyhow; and always has been since she sot upon
+the water. I've seen her top-sides open like a basket when we've
+been trying to work her into port in heavy weather: and a craft that
+won't look nearer than nine points close-hauled, with a stiff
+breeze, ought to be sent into the Clyde for a coal-droger. An old
+vessel's a perfect pickpocket to owners; and if this old thing
+hasn't opened their purses as bad as her own seams, I'll miss my
+reckonin'. I've had a strong foreknowledge that we wouldn't get
+across in her. I saw the rats leaving in Jamaica--taking up their
+line of march, like marines on the fore. It's a sure sign. And then
+I'd a dream, which is as sure as a mainstay--never deceives me. I can
+depend on its presentiment. I have dreamed it several times, and we
+always had an awful passage. Twice we come within a bobstay of all
+goin' to Old Davy's store-house. I once escaped it, after I'd had my
+mysterious dream; but then I made the cook throw the cat overboard
+just after we left port, and 'twas all that saved us."
+
+Thus saying, he went forward to serve a topgallant-stay that was
+stretched across the forecastle-hatch from the cat-heads, and had
+just been spliced by the men, followed by an old-fashioned
+sea-urchin, a miniature of the tar, with a mallet in his hand. The
+captain, although a firm, intelligent man, and little given to such
+notions of fate as are generally entertained by sailors, who never
+shake off the spiritual imaginings of the forecastle, displayed some
+discomfiture of mind at the strong character of the mate's
+misgivings. He knew him to be a good sailor, firm in his duty, and
+unmoved by peril. This he had proved on several occasions when
+sailing in other vessels, when the last ray of hope seemed to be
+gone. He approached the mate again, and with a pretence of making
+inquiries about the storage of the cargo, sounded him further in
+regard to his knowledge of the Bahamas, and with special reference
+to the port of Nassau.
+
+"Six-tenths of her timbers are as rotten as punk," said the mate;
+"this North American timber never lasts long; the pump-wells are
+defective, and when we carry sail upon her, they don't affect the
+water in the lee-bilge, and she rolls it through her air-streaks
+like a whale. She'll damage the best cargo that ever floated, in
+that way. Take my word for it, skipper, she'll never go across the
+Banks; she'll roll to splinters as soon as she gets into them long
+seas; and if we get dismasted again, it's gone Davy."
+
+"I know the old scow before to-day, and wouldn't shipped in her, if
+I hadn't been lime-juiced by that villanous landlord that advanced
+me the trifle. But I seen she was as deep as a luggerman's
+sand-barge, and I popped the old cat overboard, just as we rounded
+the point coming out o' Kingston harbour," said a fine,
+active-looking sailor, who bore every trait of a royal tar, and
+boasted of serving five years in the East-India service, to his
+shipmate, while he continued to serve the stay. His words were
+spoken in a whisper, and not intended for the captain's ears. The
+captain overheard him, however; and, as a vessel is a world to those
+on board, the general sentiment carries its weight in controlling
+its affairs. Thus the strong feeling which prevailed on board could
+not fail to have its effect upon the captain's mind.
+
+"Well, we'll try her at any rate," said the captain, walking aft and
+ordering the cabin-boy to bring up his glass; with which he took a
+sharp look to the southward.
+
+"I'd shape her course for a southern Yankee port. I haven't been
+much in them, but I think we'll stand a better chance there than in
+these ports where they make a speculation of wrecking, and would
+take a fellow's pea-jacket for salvage." "We're always better under
+the protection of a consul than in a British port," said the mate,
+coming aft to inform the skipper that they had carried away the
+chains of the bobstay, and that the bowsprit strained her in the
+knight-heads.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+THE STEWARD'S BRAVERY.
+
+
+
+
+
+DURING the worst of the gale, a mulatto man, with prominent
+features, indicating more of the mestino than negro character, was
+moving in busy occupation about the deck, and lending a willing hand
+with the rest of the crew to execute the captain's orders. He was
+rather tall, well formed, of a light olive complexion, with dark,
+piercing eyes, a straight, pointed nose, and well-formed mouth. His
+hair, also, had none of that crimp so indicative of negro
+extraction, but lay in dark curls all over his head. As he answered
+to the captain's orders, he spoke in broken accents, indicating but
+little knowledge of the English language. From the manner in which
+the crew treated him, it was evident that he was an established
+favourite with them as well as the officers, for each appeared to
+treat him more as an equal than a menial. He laboured cheerfully at
+sailor's duty until the first sea broke over her, when, seeing that
+the caboose was in danger of being carried from the lashings, and
+swept to leeward in the mass of wreck, he ran for that all-important
+apartment, and began securing it with extra lashings. He worked away
+with an earnestness that deserved all praise; not with the most
+satisfactory effect for an angry sea immediately succeeding
+completely stripped the furnace of its woodwork, and in its force
+carried the gallant fellow among its fragments into the
+lee-scuppers, where he saved himself from going overboard only by
+clinging to a stanchion.
+
+The second mate, a burly old salt, ran to his assistance, but,
+before he reached him, our hero had recovered himself, and was
+making another attempt to reach his coppers. It seemed to him as
+much a pending necessity to save the cooking apparatus as it did the
+captain to save the ship.
+
+"He no catch me dis time," said he to the mate, smiling as he lifted
+his drenched head from among the fragments of the wreck. "I fix a de
+coffee in him yet, please God."
+
+After securing the remains of his cooking utensils, he might be seen
+busily employed over a little stove, arranged at the foot of the
+stairs that led to the cabin. The smoke from the funnel several
+times annoyed the captain, who laboured under the excitement
+consequent upon the confusion of the wreck and peril of his vessel,
+bringing forth remonstrances of no very pleasant character. It
+proved that the good steward was considering how he could best serve
+Jack's necessities; and while they were laboring to save the ship,
+lie was studiously endeavoring to anticipate the craving of their
+stomachs. For when daylight appeared and the storm subsided, the
+steward had a bountiful dish of hot coffee to relieve Jack's
+fatigued system. It was received with warm welcome, and many
+blessings were heaped upon the head of the steward; A good "doctor"
+is as essential for the interests of owners and crew as a good
+captain. So it proved in this instance, for while he had a careful
+regard for the stores, he never failed to secure the praises of the
+crew.
+
+"When I gib de stove fire, den me gib de Cap-i-tan, wid de crew,
+some good breakfas," said he with a gleam of satisfaction.
+
+This individual, reader, was Manuel Pereira, or, as he was called by
+his shipmates, Pe-rah-re. Manuel was born in Brazil, an extract of
+the Indians and Spanish, claiming birthright of the Portuguese
+nation. It mattered but very little to Manuel where he was born, for
+he had been so long tossed about in his hardy vocation that he had
+almost become alienated from the affections of birthplace. He had
+sailed so long under the protection of the main-jack of old England
+that he had formed a stronger allegiance to that country than to any
+other. He had sailed under it with pride, had pointed to its emblem,
+as if he felt secure, when it was unfurled, that the register-ticket
+which that government had given him was a covenant between it and
+himself; that it was a ticket to incite him to good behavior in a
+foreign country; and that the flag was sure to protect his rights,
+and insure, from the government to which he sailed respect and
+hospitality. He had sailed around the world under it--visited savage
+and semi-civilized nations--had received the hospitality of
+cannibals, had joined in the merry dance with the Otaheitian, had
+eaten fruits with the Hottentots, shared the coarse morsel of the
+Greenlander, been twice chased by the Patagonians--but what shall we
+say?--he was imprisoned, for the olive tints of his color, in a land
+where not only civilization rules in its brightest conquests, but
+chivalry and honor sound its fame within the lanes, streets, and
+court-yards. Echo asks, Where--where? We will tell the reader. That
+flag which had waved over him so long and in so many of his
+wayfarings--that flag which had so long boasted its rule upon the
+wave, and had protected him among the savage and the civilized,
+found a spot upon this wonderful globe where it ceased to do so,
+unless he could change his skin.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE SECOND STORM.
+
+
+
+
+
+ON the fourth night succeeding the perilous position of the Janson
+off Cape Antoine, the brig was making about seven knots, current of
+the gulf included. The sun had set beneath heavy radiant clouds,
+which rolled up like masses of inflamed matter, reflecting in a
+thousand mellow shades, and again spreading their gorgeous shadows
+upon the rippled surface of the ocean, making the picture serene and
+grand.
+
+As darkness quickly followed, these beautiful transparencies of a
+West-India horizon gradually changed into murky-looking monitors,
+spreading gloom in the sombre perspective. The moon was in its
+second quarter, and was rising on the earth. The mist gathered
+thicker and thicker as she ascended, until at length she became
+totally obscured. The Captain sat upon the companion-way, anxiously
+watching the sudden change that was going on overhead; and, without
+speaking to any one, rose, took a glance at the compass, and then
+went forward to the lookout, charging him to keep a sharp watch, as
+they were not only in a dangerous channel, but in the track of
+vessels bound into and out of the gulf. After this, he returned
+amidship, where the little miniature salt we have described before
+lay, with his face downward, upon the main-hatch, and ordering him
+to bring the lead-line, he went to leeward and took a cast; and
+after paying out about twenty-five fathoms without sounding, hauled
+aboard again. The wind was southward and light. As soon as he had
+examined the lead he walked aft and ordered the sheets eased and the
+vessel headed two points farther off. This done, he went below, and
+shaking his barometer several times, found it had begun to fall very
+fast. Taking down his coast-chart, he consulted it very studiously
+for nearly half an hour, laying off an angle with a pair of dividers
+and scale, with mathematical minuteness; after which he pricked his
+course along the surface to a given point. This was intended as his
+course.
+
+"Where do you make her, Captain?" said the mate, as he lay in his
+berth.
+
+"We must be off the Capes--we must keep a sharp look out for them
+reefs. They are so deceptive that we'll be on to them before we know
+it. There's no telling by sounding. We may get forty fathoms one
+minute and strike the next. I've heard old West-India coasters say
+the white water was the best warning," replied the Captain.
+
+"I'm mighty afraid of that Carysfort reef, since I struck upon it in
+1845. I was in a British schooner then, bound from Kingston,
+Jamaica, to New York. We kept a bright lookout, all the way through
+the passage, and yet struck, one morning just about day-light; and,
+five minutes before, we had sounded without getting bottom. When it
+cleared away, that we could see, there was two others like
+ourselves. One was the ship John Parker, of Boston, and the other
+was a 'long-shoreman. We had a valuable cargo on board, but the
+craft wasn't hurt a bit; and if the skipper--who was a little
+colonial man, not much acquainted with the judicial value of a
+wrecker's services--had a' taken my advice, he wouldn't got into the
+snarl he did at Key West, where they carried him, and charged him
+thirty-six hundred dollars for the job. Yes, and a nice little
+commission to the British consul for counting the doubloons, which,
+by-the-by, Skipper, belonged to that great house of Howland &
+Aspinwalls. They were right clever fellows, and it went into the
+general average account for the relief of the underwriters' big
+chest," continued the mate.
+
+"We must have all hands ready at the call," said the Captain. "It
+looks dirty overhead, and I think we're going to catch it from the
+north-east to-night. If we do, our position is not as good as
+before. I don't feel afraid of her, if we only get clear of this
+infernal coast," said the Skipper, as he rolled up his chart, and
+repaired on deck again.
+
+During this time, Manuel, who, had given the crew some very
+acceptable hot cakes for supper, was sitting upon the windlass,
+earnestly engaged, with his broken English, recounting an adventure
+he had on the coast of Patagonia, a few years previous, while
+serving on board a whaleman, to a shipmate who sat at his left. It
+was one of those incidents which frequently occur to the men
+attached to vessels which visit that coast for the purpose of
+providing a supply of wood and water, and which would require too
+much space to relate here.
+
+"Did you run, Manuel?" said the listening shipmate.
+
+"What else did me do? If I no run, I'd not be here dis night,
+because I be make slave, or I be killed wid club. Patagonian don't
+care for flag--nor not'in' else--I trust--e my leg, an' he get to de
+boat jus' when cap-i-tan come to rescue."
+
+"Was you on board an Englishman then, Manuel?" inquired the
+shipmate.
+
+"Yes, I'm always sail in English ship, because I can get protection
+from flag and consul, where I go--any part of globe," said he.
+
+"I never liked this sailing among barbarous nations; they've no
+respect for any flag, and would just as lief imprison an Englishman
+or an American as they would a dog. They're a set of wild
+barbarians, and if they kill a fellow, there's no responsibility for
+it. It's like a parcel of wolves chasing a lamb, and there's no
+finding them after they've killed it. But they give a fellow his
+rights in Old England and the States. A man's a man there, rich or
+poor, and his feelings are just as much his own as anybody's. It's a
+glorious thing, this civilization, and if the world keeps on,
+there'll be no danger of a fellow's being imprisoned and killed
+among these savages. They're a cowardly set, for nobody but cowards
+are afraid of their own actions. Men neither imprison nor kill
+strangers, that don't fear the injustice of their own acts. You may
+smoke that in your pipe, Manuel, for I've heard great men say so.
+But you'd been done making dough-nuts then, Manuel, if they'd got
+hold o' you."
+
+"Never catch Manuel among Patagonians, again; they not know what the
+flag be, nor they can't read de registrum ticket, if they know'd
+where England was," said Manuel; and just as he was concluding the
+story of his adventure, the little sailor-boy put his arm around
+Manuel's waist, and, laying his head on his breast, fondled about
+him with an affectionate attachment. The little fellow had been a
+shipmate with Manuel on several voyages, and, through the kindness
+he had received at his hands, naturally formed an ardent attachment
+to him. Taking advantage of the good treatment, he knew how to
+direct his attention to the steward whenever he wanted a snack from
+the cabin-locker of that which was not allowed in the forecastle.
+After holding him for a minute, encircling his arm around the little
+fellow's shoulder, he arose, and saying, "I know what you want,
+Tommy," proceeded to the cabin and brought him several little
+eatables that had been left at the captain's table.
+
+The wind now began to veer and increase, her sails kept filling
+aback; and as often as the man at the helm kept her off, the wind
+would baffle him, until finding it would be necessary to go on the
+other tack, or make some change of course, he called the Captain.
+The moment the latter put his foot upon deck, he found his previous
+predictions were about to be verified. The rustling noise of the
+gulf, mingling its solemn sounds with the petrel-like music of that
+foreboding wind that "whistles through the shrouds," awakened the
+more superstitious sensations of a sailor's heart. The clouds had
+gathered their sombre folds into potent conclaves, while the
+sparkling brine in her wake, seemed like a fiery stream, rolling its
+troubled foam upon the dark waters.
+
+"Brace the yards up sharp-hard a-starboard!--and trim aft the
+sheets," ordered the Captain, who had previously given the order,
+"All hands on deck!"
+
+The order was scarcely executed, before the noise of the approaching
+gale was heard in the distance. All hands were ordered to shorten
+sail as quickly as possible; but before they could get aloft, it
+came upon them with such fury from E.N.E. as to carry away the
+foretop-mast and topgallant-mast, together with its sails, and the
+main-topgallant-mast with the sail. The foretop-mast, in going by
+the board, carried away the flying-jib-boom and flying-jibs. Thus
+the ill-fated Janson was doomed to another struggle for her floating
+existence. The sea began to rise and break in fearful power; the
+leak had already increased so, that two men were continually kept
+working the pumps. The crew, with commendable alacrity, cut away the
+wreck, which had been swaying to and fro, not only endangering the
+lives of those on board, but obstructing every attempt to get the
+vessel into any kind of working order. The main-sail had rent from
+the leash to the peak of the gaff, and was shaking into shreds. The
+starboard sheet of the maintop-sail was gone, and it had torn at the
+head from the bolt-rope, flying at every gust like the shreds of a
+muslin rag in a hail-storm. Without the government of her helm, she
+lay in the trough of the sea more like a log than a manageable mass.
+Sea after sea broke over her, carrying every thing before them at
+each pass. The officers and crew had now as much as they could do to
+retain their holds, without making any effort to save the wreck,
+while the men at the pumps could only work at each subsiding of the
+sea, and that under the disadvantage of being lashed to the frame. A
+more perilous position than that in which the old brig Janson now
+lay, it was impossible to imagine.
+
+"'Tis the worst hurricane I've ever experienced upon the West India
+coast, Captain, but it's too furious to last long; and if she don't
+go to pieces before morning, I'll give her credit for what I've
+always swore against her. She can't keep afloat though, if it hangs
+on another hour in this way," said the mate, who, with the Captain
+and Manuel, had just made an ineffectual attempt to rig a storm
+stay-sail, to try and lay her to under it. For the mate swore by his
+knowledge of her qualities, that to put her before it, would be
+certain foundering. The gale continued with unabated fury for about
+two hours, and stopped about as suddenly as it commenced. The work
+of destruction was complete, for from her water-line to the stump of
+the remaining spars, the Janson floated a complete wreck.
+
+The captain gave orders to clear away the wreck, and get what little
+sail they could patch up, upon her, for the purpose of working her
+into the nearest port. The mate was not inclined to further the
+order, evidently laboring under the strong presentiment that she was
+to be their coffin. He advised that it was fruitless to stick by her
+any longer, or hazard an attempt to reach a port with her, in such a
+leaky and disabled condition. "If we don't abandon her, Skipper,"
+said he, "she'll abandon us. We'd better make signal for the first
+vessel, and bid the old coffin good-by."
+
+The captain was more determined in his resolution, and instead of
+being influenced by the mate's fears, continued his order, and the
+men went to work with a cheerful willingness. None seemed more
+anxious to lend a ready hand than Manuel, for in addition to is
+duties as steward, he had worked at sail-making, and both worked at
+and directed the repairing of the sails. Those acquainted with
+maritime affairs can readily appreciate the amount of labor
+necessary to provide a mess with the means at hand that we have
+before described. And yet he did it to the satisfaction of all, and
+manifested a restless anxiety lest he should not make everybody
+comfortable, and particularly his little pet boy, Tommy.
+
+"We'll get a good observation at meridian, and then we shall shape
+our course for Charleston, South Carolina. We'll be more likely to
+reach it than any other southern port," said the captain to his
+mate. "That steward, Manuel, is worth his weight in gold. If we have
+to abandon the old craft, I'll take him home; the owners respect him
+just as much as a white man; his politeness and affability could not
+but command such esteem, with a man that a'n't a fool. I never
+believed in making equals of negroes, but if Manuel was to be
+classed with niggers for all the nigger blood that's in him,
+seven-tenths of the inhabitants of the earth would go with him. I
+never saw such an attachment between brothers, as exists between him
+and Tommy. I verily believe that one couldn't go to sleep without
+the other. I should think they were brothers, if the lad wasn't
+English, and Manuel a Portuguese. But Manuel is as much an
+Englishman at heart as the lad, and has sailed so long under the
+flag that he seems to have a reverence for the old jack when he sees
+the bunting go up. He likes to tell that story about the Patagonians
+chasing him. I have overheard him several times, as much amused in
+his own recital as if he was listening to the quaint jokes of an old
+tar. But he swears the Patagonians will never catch him on their
+shores again, for he says he doesn't believe in making 'drum-head of
+man-skin,'" said the Captain, evidently with the intention of
+affecting the mate's feelings, and drawing his mind from its dark
+forebodings.
+
+"Well, Skipper, I pray for a happy deliverance," said the mate, "but
+if we make Charleston with her, it'll be a luck that man nor mermaid
+ever thought of. I hearn a good deal o' tell about Charleston, and
+the Keys. That isn't one of the places our stewards are so 'fraid
+of, and where owners don't like to send their ships when they can
+find freight in other ports?"
+
+"I expect it is, sir; but I apprehend no such trouble with any of my
+crew," answered the Captain promptly. "I sail under the faith of my
+nation's honor and prowess, the same as the Americans do under
+theirs. We're both respected wherever we go, and if one little State
+in the Union violates the responsibility of a great nation like
+that, I'm mistaken. Certainly, no nation in Christendom could be
+found, that wouldn't open their hearts to a shipwrecked sailor. I
+have too much faith in what I have heard of the hospitality of
+Southerners, to believe any thing of that kind."
+
+"Talk's all very well, Skipper," said the mate; "but my word for it,
+I know'd several ships lying in the Mersey, about three years ago,
+bound to Southern ports for cotton. White stewards worth any thing
+couldn't be had for love nor money, and the colored ones wouldn't
+ship for ports in Slaves States. The Thebis got a colored man, but
+the owners had to pay him an enormous advance, and this, too, with
+the knowledge of his being locked up the whole time he was in port;
+thus having to incur the very useless expense of supplying his
+place, or find boarding-house accommodations for the officers and
+crew. If it be true, what I've hearn 'em say in the Mersey, the man
+doesn't only suffer in his feelings by some sort of confinement they
+have, but the owners suffer in pocket. But it may be, Skipper, and
+I'm inclined to think with you, our case is certainly deplorable
+enough to command pity instead of imprisonment. The government must
+be found cutting a dirty figure on the national picture, that would
+ill-treat sailors who had suffered as much as our boys have. I would
+hate to see Manuel shut up or ill-used. He's as brave a fellow as
+ever buckled at a handspike or rode a jib-boom. Last night, while in
+the worst of the gale, he volunteered to take Higgins's place, and,
+mounting the jib-boom, was several times buried in the sea; yet he
+held on like a bravo, and succeeded in cutting away the wreck. I
+thought he was gone once or twice, and I own I never saw more peril
+at sea; but if he hadn't effected it, the foot of the bowsprit would
+have strained her open in the eyes, and we'd all been sharks'-bait
+before this. The fellow was nearly exhausted when he came on board;
+says I, its gone day with you, old fellow; but he come to in a
+little while, and went cheerily to work again," continued Mr. Mate,
+who though pleased with the Captain's determination to make the
+nearest port, seemed to dread that all would not be right in
+Charleston--that the bar was a very intricate one--water very shoal in
+the ship-channel, and though marked with three distinctive buoys,
+numbered according to their range, impossible to crops without a
+skilful pilot. The mate plead a preference for Savannah, asserting,
+according to his own knowlege, that a ship of any draft could cross
+that bar at any time of tide, and that it was a better port for the
+transaction of business.
+
+The Janson was headed for Charleston, the queen city of the sunny
+South, and, as may be expected from her disabled condition, made
+very slow progress on her course. During the gale, her stores had
+become damaged, and on the third day before making Charleston light,
+Manuel Pereira came aft, and with a sad countenance reported that
+the last cask of good water was nearly out; that the others had all
+been stove during the gale, and what remained, so brackish that it
+was unfit for use. From this time until their arrival at Charleston,
+they suffered those tortures of thirst, which only those who have
+endured them can estimate.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+THE CHARLESTON POLICE.
+
+
+
+
+
+MR. DURKEE had said in Congress, that a negro was condemned to be
+hung in Charleston for resisting his master's attempts upon the
+chastity of his wife; and that such was the sympathy expressed for
+the negro, that the sheriffs offer of one thousand dollars could
+induce no one present to execute the final mandate. Now, had Mr.
+Durkee been better acquainted with that social understanding between
+the slave, the pretty wife, and his master, and the acquiescing
+pleasure of the slave, who in nineteen cases out of twenty
+congratulates himself on the distinguished honor, he would have
+saved himself the error of such a charge against the tenor of social
+life in Charleston. Or, had he been better acquainted with the
+character of her police, he certainly would have saved the talent of
+Mr. Aiken its sophomore display in that cumbrous defence. In the
+first place, Mr. Durkee would have known that such attempts are so
+common among the social events of the day, and so well understood by
+the slave, that instead of being resented, they are appreciated to a
+great extent. We speak from long experience and knowledge of the
+connection between a certain class of slaves and their masters. In
+the second place, Mr. Durkee would have known that any man connected
+with the city police--save its honorable mayor, to whose character we
+would pay all deference--would not for conscience' sake scruple to
+hang a man for five dollars. We make no exception for color or
+crime. A qualification might be called for, more adapted to our
+knowledge of it as it has existed for the last four or five years;
+but we are informed by those whose lives and fortunes have been
+spent for the moral elevation of the city police, that it was even
+worse at the time referred to.
+
+The reader may think we are making grave charges. Let us say,
+without fear of refutation, they are too well known in the community
+that tolerates them. As a mere shadow of what lays beneath the
+surface, we would refer to the only independent speech we ever
+listened to in Charleston,--except when self-laudation was the
+theme,--made by G. R--, Esq., in one of her public halls a few weeks
+ago. Mr. R--is a gentleman of moral courage and integrity, and,
+without fear or trembling, openly denounced the corruption and
+demoralization of the police department. Even the enemies of his
+party, knowing the facts, appreciated his candor as a man, while
+they denounced the publicity, (for his speech was paraded by the
+press,) lest the fair name of the queen city should suffer abroad. A
+beautiful farce followed this grave exposition. The board of
+aldermen, composed of fourteen men of very general standing,
+remained mum under the accusation for a long time. Its object was to
+show up the character of a class of officials, whose character and
+nefarious arts have long disgraced the city. But in order to make a
+display of his purity, Mr. C--, a gentleman entitled to high moral
+consideration, chose to make it a personal matter; yet, not content
+with a private explanation given by Mr. R--, he made a call through
+the press. Mr. R--responded in a proper and courteous manner,
+acknowledging the due respect to which Mr. C--'s private character
+was entitled; thus increasing the ambition of the board generally,
+who, with the expectation of Mr. R--making a like acknowledgment to
+them as a body, (not excepting their honorable head,) made a demand
+in joint-officio. This being duly signalized through the columns of
+the Courier and Mercury, Mr. R--met it with a response worthy of a
+gentleman. He referred them to the strongest evidence of his
+assertions, in the countenance which they gave to a class of
+officials too well known to the community for the honor of its name
+and the moral foundation of its corporate dignity. Thus ended a
+great municipal farce, to prolong which the principal performers
+knew would disclose the intriguing scenes of their secondary
+performers. The plot of this melo-comic concern was in the sequel,
+and turned upon the very grave fact of Mr. C--having some time
+previous withdrawn from the honorable board, to preserve some very
+delicate considerations for conscience' sake.
+
+How much spiritual consolation Mr. C--realized through the
+acknowledgment of Mr. R--, or the honorable board in joint-officio
+from the firm admonition, we leave for the secondary consideration
+of proper wives and daughters.
+
+But the reader will ask, what has this to do with poor Manuel
+Pereira,--or the imprisonment of free citizens of a friendly nation?
+We will show him that the complex system of official spoliation, and
+the misrepresentations of the police in regard to the influence of
+such persons upon the slave population, is a principal feature in
+its enforcement. To do this, we deem it essentially necessary to
+show the character of such men and the manner in which this law is
+carried out. We shall make no charges that we cannot sustain by the
+evidence of the whole city proper, and with the knowledge that truth
+is stronger than fiction.
+
+What will the reader say when we tell him that, among the leading
+minds of the city--we say leading minds, for we class those who are
+considered foremost in the mercantile sphere among them--are three
+brothers, unmarried, but with mistresses bought for the purpose,
+whose dark skins avert the tongue of scandal;--that, twice, men were
+sold, because of the beauty of their wives, to distant traders, that
+the brothers might cast off their old mistresses, and appropriate
+new ones to an unholy purpose; that these men enjoy their richly
+furnished mansions, are known for their sumptuous entertainments,
+set an example of mercantile honor and integrity, are flattered
+among the populace, receive the attentions of very fine and very
+virtuous ladies, wield a potential voice in the city government, and
+lead in the greatest development of internal improvements;--that
+these men even whisper high-sounding words of morality, and the
+established custom considers their example no harm when color is
+modified.
+
+What will the reader think, when we tell him that there is no
+city-marshal in Charleston, but innumerable marshalled men,
+supported by an onerous tax upon the people, to quiet the fears of a
+few. And what will they think, when we tell them that the man whose
+name is so frequently sounded through the columns of the press as
+the head of police, and applauded for his activity among thieves, is
+the well-known prince-officio of a voluptuous dwelling, where
+dazzling licentiousness fills his pockets with the spoils of
+allurement. This man has several counterparts, whose acts are no
+secrets to the public ear, and who turn their office into a mart of
+intrigue, and have enriched themselves upon the bounty of espionage
+and hush-money, and now assert the dignity of their purse. It may be
+asked, why are these men kept in office?--or have these offices
+become so disgraced that honest men will not deign to accept them?
+No! such is not the case. It is that moral integrity is not
+considered in its proper light, and is not valued as it should be;
+that these men have a secret influence which is well known, and are
+countenanced and retained for the weight of their control among a
+certain class; and, strange to say, that the party ex-officio make
+these demoralizing things the basis of their complaints against the
+"powers that be;" yet such is their feeble dependence, that no
+sooner are they in office than we have the repetition of the same
+things.
+
+Now, how far his honor is answerable for these things we must leave
+the reader to judge. The leading characteristics of his nature
+conflict with each other; his moral character is what is considered
+sound here; and truly he is entitled to much respect for his
+exemplary conduct, whether it be only exerted as an example, or the
+heartfelt love of Christian purity. Some people are pious from
+impulse, and become affected when purpose serves to make it
+profitable. We, however, are not so uncharitable as to charge such
+piety to our worthy head of the city government, but rather to a
+highly developed organ of the love of office, which has outgrown the
+better inclinations of his well-established Christianity.
+
+We must invite the reader's attention to another and still more
+glaring evidence of the demoralization of social life in Charleston.
+A notorious woman, who has kept the worst kind of a brothel for
+years, where harlots of all shades and importations break the
+quietude of night with their polluted songs, becomes so bold in her
+infamy that she appeals to the gracious considerations of the city
+council, (board of aldermen.) How is this? Why, we will tell the
+reader:--She remained unmolested in her trade of demoralization,
+amassed a fortune which gave her boldness, while her open display
+was considered very fine fun for the joking propensities of
+officials and gallants. With her wealth she reared a splendid
+mansion to infamy and shame, where she, and such as she, whose steps
+the wise man tells us "lead down to hell," could sway their victory
+over the industrious poor. So public was it, that she openly boasted
+its purpose and its adaptation to the ensnaring vices of passion.
+Yes, this create in female form had spread ruin and death through
+the community, and brought the head of many a brilliant young man to
+the last stage of cast-off misery. And yet, so openly tolerated and
+countenanced by leading men are these things, that on the 31st of
+July, 1852, this mother of crime appeals to the honorable board of
+aldermen, as appeared in the "Proceedings of Council" in the
+Charleston Courier of that date, in the following manner:
+
+"Laid over until a monied quorum is present.
+
+"Letter from Mrs. G. Pieseitto, informing Council that having
+recessed her new brick building in Berresford street at least two
+feet, so as to dedicate it to the use of the citizens of Charleston,
+if they will pave with flag-stones the front of her lot,
+respectfully requests, that if accepted, the work may be done as
+soon as possible. Referred to the Aldermen, Ward No. 4." The street
+is narrow and little used, except for purposes known to the
+lanterns, when honest people should sleep. The information might
+have been couched with more modesty, when the notoriety of the woman
+and the dedication of her tabernacle of vice was so public. How far
+the sensitive aldermen of the fourth ward have proceeded in the
+delicate mission, or how much champagne their modest consideration
+has cost, the public have not yet been informed. Rumor says every
+thing is favorable. We are only drawing from a few principal points,
+and shall leave the reader to draw his own inference of the moral
+complexion of our social being. We make but one more view, and
+resume our story.
+
+An office connected with the judiciary, so long held as one of high
+responsibility and honorable position, is now held merely as a
+medium of miserable speculation and espionage. It is an elective
+office, the representative holding for four years. The present
+incumbent was elected more through charity than recompense for any
+amiable qualities, moral worth, or efficient services to party ends.
+A more weak man could not have been drawn from the lowest scale of
+party hirelings, though he had abdicated the office once before to
+save his name and the respectability of the judiciary. It may be
+said, he was elected in pity to speculate on misery; and thus it
+proved in the case of MANUEL PEREIRA. This functionary was elected
+by a large majority. Could his moral worth have been taken into
+consideration? We should think not! For several times have we been
+pointed to two interesting girls,--or, if their color was not
+shaded, would be called young ladies--promenading the shady side of
+King street, with their faces deeply vailed, and informed who was
+their father. The mother of these innocent victims had been a mother
+to their father, had nursed him and maintained him through his
+adversity, and had lived the partner of his life and affections for
+many years, and had reared to him an interesting but fatal family.
+But, no sooner had fortune begun to shed its smiling rays, than he
+abandoned the one that had watched over him for the choice of one
+who could boast no more than a white skin.
+
+If men who fill high places live by teaching others to gratify their
+appetites and pleasures alone, instead of setting a commendable
+example for a higher state of existence, by whom can we expect that
+justice and moral worth shall be respected?
+
+Connected with the city constabulary are two men whose duty it is to
+keep a sharp lookout for all vessels arriving, and see that all
+negroes or colored seamen are committed to prison. One is a South
+Carolinian, by the name of Dusenberry, and the other an Irishman, by
+the name of Dunn. These two men, although their office is despicable
+in the eyes of many, assume more authority over a certain class of
+persons, who are unacquainted with the laws, than the mayor himself.
+The former is a man of dark, heavy features, with an assassin-like
+countenance, more inclined to look at you distrustfully than to meet
+you with an open gaze. He is rather tall and athletic, but never has
+been known to do any thing that would give him credit for bravery.
+Several times he has been on the brink of losing his office for
+giving too much latitude to his craving for perquisites; yet, by
+some unaccountable means, he manages to hold on. The other is a
+robust son of the Emerald Isle, with a broad, florid face, low
+forehead, short crispy hair very red, and knotted over his forehead.
+His dress is usually very slovenly and dirty, his shirt-collar
+bespotted with tobacco-juice, and tied with an old striped bandana
+handkerchief. This, taken with a very wide mouth, flat nose, vicious
+eye, and a countenance as hard as ever came from Tipperary, and a
+lame leg, which causes him to limp as he walks, gives our man Dunn
+the incarnate appearance of a fit body-grabber. A few words will
+suffice for his character. He is known to the official department,
+of which the magistrates are a constituent part, as a notorious--l;
+and his better-half, who, by-the-way, is what is called a
+free-trader, meaning, to save the rascality of a husband, sells
+liquor by small portions, to suit the Murphys and the O'Neals. But,
+as it pleases our Mr. Dunn, he very often becomes a more than
+profitable customer, and may be found snoring out the penalty in
+some sequestered place, too frequently for his own character.
+Between the hours of ten and twelve in the morning, Dunn, if not too
+much incapacitated, may be seen limping his way down Broad street,
+to watch vessels arriving and departing, carrying a limp-cane in one
+hand, and a large covered whip in the other. We were struck with the
+appearance of the latter, because it was similar to those carried in
+the hands of a rough, menial class of men in Macon, Georgia, who
+called themselves marshals, under a misapplication of the term.
+Their office was to keep the negro population "straight," and do the
+whipping when called upon, at fifty cents a head. They also did the
+whipping at the jails, and frequently made from five to six dollars
+a day at this alone; for it is not considered fashionable for a
+gentleman to whip his own negro. We noticed the universal carrying
+of this whip, when we first visited Macon, some four years ago, and
+were curious to know its purport, which was elucidated by a friend;
+but we have since seen the practical demonstrations painfully
+carried out. Those who visited Boston for the recovery of Crafts and
+Ellen--whose mode of escape is a romance in itself--were specimens of
+these "marshals." How they passed themselves off for gentlemen, we
+are at a loss to comprehend.
+
+During the day, the Messrs. Dusenberry and Dunn may be seen at times
+watching about the wharves, and again in low grog-shops--then pimping
+about the "Dutch beer-shops and corner-shops"--picking up, here and
+there, a hopeful-looking nigger, whom they drag off to limbo, or
+extort a bribe to let him go. Again, they act as monitors over the
+Dutch corner-shops, the keepers of which pay them large sums to save
+themselves the heavy license fine and the information docket. When
+they are no longer able to pay over hush-money, they find themselves
+walked up to the captain's office, to be dealt with according to the
+severe penalty made and provided for violating the law which
+prohibits the sale of liquor to negroes without an order. The
+failure to observe this law is visited with fine and
+imprisonment,--both beyond their proportionate deserts, when the law
+which governs the sale of liquor to white men is considered. Things
+are very strictly regulated by complexions in South Carolina. The
+master sets the most dissipated and immoral examples in his own
+person, and allows his children not only to exercise their youthful
+caprices, but to gratify such feelings as are pernicious to their
+moral welfare, upon his slaves. Now, the question is, that knowing
+the negro's power of imitation, ought not some allowance to be made
+for copying the errors of his master? Yet such is not the case; for
+the slightest deviation from the strictest rule of discipline brings
+condign punishment upon the head of the offender.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+MR. GRIMSHAW, THE MAN OF THE COUNTY.
+
+
+
+
+
+ON the 22d of March last, about ten o'clock in the morning, a thin,
+spare-looking man, dressed in a black cashmeret suit, swallow-tail
+coat, loose-cut pants, a straight-breasted vest, with a very
+extravagant shirt-collar rolling over upon his coat, with a black
+ribbon tied at the throat, stood at the east corner of Broad and
+Meeting street, holding a very excited conversation with officers
+Dusenberry and Dunn. His visage was long, very dark--much more so
+than many of the colored population--with pointed nose and chin,
+standing in grim advance to each other; his face narrow, with high
+cheek-bones, small, peering eyes, contracted forehead, reclining
+with a sunken arch between the perceptive and intellectual
+organs--or, perhaps, we might have said, where those organs should
+have been. His countenance was full of vacant restlessness; and as
+he stared at you through his glasses, with his silvery gray hair
+hanging about his ears and neck in shaggy points, rolling a large
+quid of tobacco in his mouth, and dangling a little whip in his
+right hand, you saw the index to his office. As he raised his voice--
+which he did by twisting his mouth on one side, and working his chin
+to adjust his enormous quid--the drawling tone in which he spoke gave
+a picture not easily forgotten.
+
+"You must pay more attention to the arrivals," said he in a
+commanding tone. "The loss of one of these fellers is a serious
+drawback to my pocket; and that British consul's using the
+infernalest means to destroy our business, that ever was. He's worse
+than the vilest abolitionist, because he thinks he's protected by
+that flag of their'n. If he don't take care, we'll tar-and-feather
+him; and if his government says much about it, she'll larn what and
+who South Carolina is. We can turn out a dozen Palmetto regiments
+that'd lick any thing John Bull could send here, and a troop o' them
+d--d Yankee abolitionists besides. South Carolina's got to show her
+hand yet against these fellers, afore they'll respect the honor and
+standing of her institutions. They can't send their navy to hurt us.
+And it shows that I always predicts right; for while these
+commercial fellers about the wharves are telling about digging out
+the channel, I've al'ays said they didn't think how much injury they
+were doing; for it was our very best protection in war-time. South
+Carolina can lick John Bull, single-fisted, any time; but if that
+pack of inconsiderate traders on the wharves get their own way, away
+goes our protection, and John Bull would bring his big ships in and
+blow us up. And these fellows that own ships are getting so bold,
+that a great many are beginning to side with Mathew, the consul.
+Yes, they even swear that 'tis the officials that stick to the law
+for the sake of the fees. Now, if I only knew that the consul was
+the means of that Nassau nigger getting away, I'd raise a mob, and
+teach him a lesson that South Carolinians ought to have teached him
+before. It took about seventeen dollars out of my pocket, and if I
+was to sue him for it, I could get no recompense. The next time you
+allow one to escape, I must place some other officer over the port,"
+said our man whom, we shall continue to call Mr. Grimshaw.
+
+"Sure I heard the same consul, when spakin to a gintleman, say that
+the law was only an abuse of power, to put money into the pockets of
+yourself and a few like ye. And whin meself and Flin put the irons
+on a big nigger that the captain was endeavoring to skulk by keeping
+him in the forecastle of the ship, he interfered between me and me
+duty, and began talking his balderdash about the law. Sure, with his
+own way, he'd have every nigger in the city an abolitionist in three
+weeks. And sure, Mr. Sheriff, and ye'd think they were babies, if
+ye'd see himself talk to them at the jail, and send them up things,
+as if they were better than the other criminals, and couldn't live
+on the jail fare," said officer Dunn, who continued to pledge
+himself to the sheriff that the wharves should not be neglected, nor
+a hopeful English darky escape his vigilant eye.
+
+"For my own part, I think they're better off in jail than they would
+be on the wharf," continued Grimshaw. "They're a worthless set, and
+ha'n't half the character that a majority of our slaves have; and
+instead of attending the captain on board, they'd be into Elliot
+street, spending their money, getting drunk, and associating with
+our worst niggers. And they all know so much about law, that they're
+always teaching our bad niggers the beauties of their government,
+which makes them more unhappy than they are. Our niggers are like a
+shoal of fish--when one becomes diseased, he spreads it among all the
+rest; and before you know where you are, they're done gone."
+
+"They're not very profitable customers for us, Sheriff," said
+Dusenberry. "We have a deal of watching, and a mighty smart lot of
+trouble after we get them fellows; and if we get a perquisite, it
+never amounts to much, for I seldom knew one that had money enough
+to treat as we took him up. These Britishers a'n't like us; they
+don't pay off in port and if the fellows get any thing in jail from
+the consul, it's by drib-drabs, that a'n't no good, for it all goes
+for liquor. And them criminals make a dead haul upon a black
+steward, as soon as he is locked up. But if these sympathizing fools
+follow up their bugbears about the treatment at the jail, they'll
+get things so that our business won't be worth a dollar. For my own
+part, I'm not so much beholdin', for I've made myself comfortable
+within the last few years, but I want my son to succeed me in the
+office. But if this consul of their'n keeps up his objections,
+appeals, and his protests in this way, and finds such men as his
+honor the district-attorney to second him with his nonsense and his
+notions, folks of our business might as well move north of Mason and
+Dixon's."
+
+"I can wake him up to a point," said Grimshaw, "that that abolition
+consul ha'n't learnt before; and if he'd stuck his old petition in
+Charles Sumner's breeches pocket instead of sending it to our
+legislature, he might have saved his old-womanish ideas from the
+showing' up that Myzeck gave 'em. It takes Myzeck to show these
+blue-skin Yankees how to toe the mark when they come to South
+Carolina. If South Carolina should secede, I'd say give us Myzeck
+and Commander to lead our war, and we'd be as sure to whip 'em as we
+won the Mexican war for the Federal Government. There is three
+things about an Englishman, Dusenberry, which you may mark for
+facts. He is self-conceited, and don't want to be advised;--he
+thinks there is no law like the law of England, and that the old
+union-jack is a pass-book of nations;--and he thinks everybody's
+bound to obey his notions of humanity and the dictates of his
+positive opinions. But what's worse than all, they've never seen the
+sovereignty of South Carolina carried out, and according to Consul
+Mathew's silly notions, they think we could be licked by a gun-boat.
+
+"It's no use arguing this thing, you must keep a keen eye upon the
+English niggers; and when a man pretends to dispute the right, tell
+him its 'contrary to law,' and to look at the statute-books; tell
+him it costs more to keep them than they're all worth; and if they
+say the law was never intended for foreign citizens, tell 'em its
+'contrary to law.' South Carolina's not bound to obey the voice of
+the General Government, and what does she care for the federal
+courts? We'll pursue a course according to the law; and any thing
+that is contrary to it we will take care of for the better
+protection of our institutions. Now, don't let one pass, upon the
+peril of your office," continued Mr. Grimshaw.
+
+"It's not a button I'd care for the office," said Dunn. "Sure it's
+yerself be's makin' all the fees, and ourselves getting the paltry
+dollar; and yerself gives us as much trouble to get that as we'd be
+earning two dollars at magistrate Jiles' beyant. Sure! himself's
+liberal and doesn't be afraid to give us a division of the fees when
+the business is good. And sure ye make yer ten times the fees on an
+English nigger, and never gives us beyant the dollar," continued he,
+moving off in high dudgeon, and swearing a stream of oaths that made
+the very blood chill. There was a covert meaning about Mr.
+Grimshaw's language that was not at all satisfactory to Mr. Dunn's
+Irish; especially when he knew Mr. Grimshaw's insincerity so well,
+and that, instead of being liberal, he pocketed a large amount of
+the fees, to the very conscientious benefit of his own dear self.
+The reader must remember that in Charleston, South Carolina, there
+is a large majority of men who care little for law, less for
+justice, and nothing for Christianity. Without compunction of
+conscience, and with an inherited passion to set forward the
+all-absorbing greatness of South Carolina, these men act as a check
+upon the better-disposed citizens. The more lamentable part is, that
+forming a large portion of that species of beings known as bar-room
+politicians, they actually control the elections in the city; and
+thus we may account for the character of the incumbents of office,
+and for the tenacity with which those oppressive laws are adhered
+to.
+
+This almost incompatible conversation between a high sheriff and two
+menial constables, may to many seem inconsistent with the dignity
+that should be observed between such functionaries. Nevertheless,
+all restraint is not only annihilated by consent, but so prominently
+is this carried out, and so well understood by that respectable
+class of citizens whose interests and feelings are for maintaining a
+good name for the city and promoting its moral integrity, that in
+all our conversation with them, we never heard one speak well of
+those functionaries or the manner in which the police regulations of
+the city were carried out.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+THE JANSON IN THE OFFING.
+
+
+
+
+
+AFTER several days' suffering for want of wafer and fatigue of
+labor, several of the crew were reported upon the sick-list. Manuel,
+who had borne his part nobly and cheerfully, was among the number;
+and his loss was more severely felt, having done a double duty, and
+succeeded, as far as the means were at hand, in making everybody on
+board comfortable. He had attended upon those who gave up first,
+like a good nurse, ready at the call, whether night or day, and with
+a readiness that seemed pleasure to him. From the captain to the
+little boy Tommy, his loss was felt with regret; and the latter
+would often go into the forecastle where he lay, lean over him with
+a child-like simplicity, and smooth his forehead with his little
+hand. "Manuel! I wish poor Manuel was well!" he would say, and again
+he would lay his little hand on his head and smooth his hair. He
+would whisper encouragement in his ear; and having learned a
+smattering of Portuguese, would tell him how soon they would be in
+port, and what pleasant times they would have together.
+
+On the 21st they descried land, which proved to be Stono, about
+twenty-five miles south of Charleston. Tommy announced the news to
+Manuel, which seemed to cheer him up. His sickness was evidently
+caused by fatigue, and his recovery depended more upon rest and
+nourishment than medical treatment. That night at ten o'clock the
+wind came strong north-west, and drove the Janson some distance to
+sea again; and it was not until the morning of the 23d that she made
+Charleston light, and succeeded in working up to the bar. Signal was
+made for a pilot, and soon, a very fine cutter-looking boat,
+"Palmetto, No. 4," was seen shooting out over the bar in the main
+channel. Manuel, somewhat recovered, had a few minutes before been
+assisted on deck, and through the captain's orders was laid upon a
+mattrass, stretched on the starboard side of the companion-way. By
+his side sat little Tommy, serving him with some nourishment.
+
+The boat was soon alongside, and the pilot, a middle-sized man, well
+dressed, with a frank, open countenance, rather florid and
+sun-stained, and a profusion of gold chain and seal dangling from
+his fob, came on board. After saluting the captain, he surveyed the
+weather-beaten condition of the craft, made several inquiries in
+regard to her working, and then said in a sang-froid manner, "Well!
+I reckon you've seen some knocking, anyhow." Then turning again and
+giving some orders in regard, to getting more way upon her, he
+viewed the laborious working at the pumps, and walking about
+midships on the larboard side, took a sharp survey of her waist.
+"Don't she leak around her topsides, Captain?" said he.
+
+Receiving an answer in the affirmative, he gave a glance aloft, and
+then at the sky to windward; asked how long he had worked her in
+that condition, and where he took the gale. "It's a wonder she
+hadn't swamped ye before now. I'd a' beached her at the first point,
+if she'd bin mine; I'd never stand at slapping an old craft like
+this on. She reminds me of one o' these down-east sugar-box crafts
+what trade to Cuba," he continued. Then walking across the
+main-hatch to the starboard side, he approached the men who were
+pumping, and after inquiring about freeing her, suddenly caught a
+glimpse of Manuel, as he lay upon the mattrass with his face
+uncovered.
+
+"Heavens! What! have you got the yellow fever on board at this
+season of the year?" he inquired of the mate, who had just come aft
+to inquire about getting some water from the pilot-boat.
+
+"No, we've had every thing else but the yellow fever; one might as
+well bin on a raft as such an infernal unlucky old tub as she is.
+It's the steward, sir--he's got a touch of a fever; but he'll soon be
+over it. He only wants rest, poor fellow! He's bin a bully at work
+ever since the first gale. He'll mend before he gets to town," was
+the reply.
+
+"Ah! then you've had a double dose of it. It gives a fellow bringer
+off them capes once in a while.--The steward's a nigger, isn't he?"
+inquired the pilot.
+
+"Nigger!--not he," said the mate. "He's a Portuguese mixed breed; a
+kind o' sun-scorched subject, like a good many of you Southerners. A
+nigger's mother never had him, you may bet your 'davie on that.
+There's as much white blood in his jacket as anybody's got, only
+them Portuguese are dark-lookin' fellers. He's no fool--his name's
+Manuel, a right clever feller, and the owners think as much of him
+as they do of the Skipper."
+
+"Gammon," said the pilot to himself. "What would he think if we were
+to show him some specimens of our white niggers in Charleston?" And
+turning, he walked past Manuel with a suspicious look, and took a
+position near the man at the wheel, where he remained for some time
+fingering the seals of his watch-chain. The Captain had gone into
+the cabin a few minutes before, and coming on deck again, walked
+toward the place where the pilot stood, and took a seat upon an old
+camp-stool.
+
+"Cap," said the pilot, "ye'll have trouble with that nigger of
+your'n when ye git to town. If you want to save yerself and the
+owners a d--d site o' bother and expense, y' better keep him close
+when y' haul in; and ship him off to New York the first chance. I've
+seen into the mill, Cap, and y' better take a friend's advice."
+
+"Nigger!" said the Captain indignantly, "what do they call niggers
+in Charleston? My steward's no more a nigger than you are!"
+
+"What, sir?" returned the pilot in a perfect rage. "Do you know the
+insulting nature of your language? Sir, if the law did not subject
+me, I would leave your vessel instantly, and hold you personally
+responsible as soon as you landed, sir."
+
+The Captain, unconscious of the tenacity with which the chivalrous
+blood of South Carolina held language that mooted a comparison of
+colors, considered his answer; but could see nothing offensive in
+it.
+
+"You asked me a question, and I gave you a proper answer. If you
+consider such a man as my steward--poor fellow--a nigger, in your
+country, I'm glad that you are blessed with so many good men."
+
+"We polishes our language, Captain, when we speak of niggers in
+South Carolina," said the pilot. "A South Carolinian, sir, is a
+gentleman all over the world. It don't want nothin' further than the
+name of his State to insure him respect. And when foreign folks and
+Northerners from them abolition States bring free niggers into South
+Carolina, and then go to comparing them to white folks, they better
+be mighty careful how they stir about. South Carolina ought to've
+seceded last year, when she talked about it, and sent every Yankee
+home to make shoe-pegs. We wouldn't bin insulted then, as we are
+now. I'll tell you what it is, Cap," said he, rather cooling off,
+"if our folks was only as spunky as they were in eighteen hundred
+and thirty-two times, them fellers what come here to feed upon South
+Carolina, put the devil in the heads of the niggers, and then go
+home again, would see stars and feel bullet-holes."
+
+The Captain listened to the pilot's original South Carolina talk,
+or, as the pilot himself had called it, polished language, without
+exhibiting any signs of fear and trembling at its sublime dignity;
+yet, finding that the pilot had misconstrued the tenor of his
+answer, said, "You must have mistaken the intention of my reply,
+sir; and the different manner in which you appropriate its import
+may be attributed to a custom among yourselves, which makes language
+offensive that has no offensive meaning. We never carry pistols or
+any such playthings in my country. We have a moral security for our
+lives, and never look upon death as so great an enemy that we must
+carry deadly weapons to defend it. In fact, pilot," he said in a
+joking manner, "they're rather cumbersome little bits for a feller's
+pocket: I'd rather carry my supper and breakfast in my pocket. Now
+tell us, who do you call niggers in South Carolina?"
+
+"Why, Captain, we call all what a'n't white folks. Our folks can
+tell 'em right smart. They can't shirk out if it's only marked by
+the seventeenth generation. You can always tell 'em by the way they
+look--they can't look you in the face, if they are ever so white. The
+law snaps 'em up once in a while, and then, if they're ever so
+white, it makes 'em prove it. I've known several cases where the
+doubt was in favor of the nigger, but he couldn't prove it, and had
+to stand aside among the darkies. Dogs take my skin, Cap, if
+theren't a Jew feller in town as white as anybody, and his father's
+a doctor. It got whispered round that he was a nigger, and the
+boarders where he stayed raised a fuss about it. The nigger's father
+had two of them sued for slander, but they proved the nigger by a
+quirk of law that'd make a volume bigger than Blackstone; and
+instead of the old Jew getting satisfaction, the judges, as a matter
+of policy, granted him time to procure further proof to show that
+his son wasn't a nigger. It was a very well-considered insinuation
+of the judges, but the young-un stands about A 1 with a prime
+nigger-feller."
+
+"I should like to have 'em try me, to see whether I was a nigger or
+a white man. It must be a funny law, 'nigger or no nigger.' If a
+feller's skin won't save him, what the devil will?" said the
+Captain.
+
+"Why, show your mother and her generation were white, to be sure!
+It's easy enough done, and our judges are all very larned in such
+things--can tell in the twinkling of an eye," said the pilot.
+
+"I should think the distinguishing points would be to show that
+their mother had nothing to do with a nigger. Do your judges make
+this a particular branch of jurisprudence? If they do, I'd like to
+know what they took for their text-books. If the intermixture is as
+complex as what you say, I should think some of the judges would be
+afraid of passing verdict upon their own kin."
+
+"Not a whit!" said the pilot; "they know enough for that."
+
+"Then you admit there's a chance. It must be an amusing affair, 'pon
+my soul! when a nice little female has to draw aside her vail before
+a court of very dignified judges, for the purpose of having her
+pedigree examined," said the Captain.
+
+"Oh! the devil, Cap; your getting all astray--a woman nigger never
+has the advantage of the law. They always go with the niggers, ah!
+ha! ha!!"
+
+"But suppose they're related to some of your big-bugs. What then?
+Are your authorities so wise and generous that they make allowance
+for these things," asked the Captain, innocently.
+
+"Oh! poh! there you're again: you must live in Charleston a year or
+two, but you'll have to be careful at first that you don't fall in
+love with some of our bright gals, and think they're white, before
+you know it. It doesn't matter seven coppers who they're got by,
+there's no distinction among niggers in Charleston. I'll put you
+through some of the bright houses when we get up, and show you some
+scions of our aristocracy, that are the very worst cases. It's a
+fact, Cap, these little shoots of the aristocracy invariably make
+bad niggers. If a fellow wants a real prime, likely nigger wench, he
+must get the pure African blood. As they say themselves, 'Wherever
+Buckra-man bin, make bad nigger.'"
+
+"Well, Pilot, I think we've had enough about mixed niggers for the
+present. Tell me! do you really think they'll give me trouble with
+my steward? He certainly is not a black man, and a better fellow
+never lived," inquired the Captain earnestly.
+
+"Nothing else, Cap," said the pilot. "It's a hard law, I tell you,
+and if our merchants and business men had a say in it, 'twouldn't
+last long; ye can't pass him off for a white man nohow, for the
+thing's 'contrary to law,' and pays so well that them contemptible
+land-sharks of officers make all the fuss about it, and never let
+one pass. Just take the infernal fees off, and nobody'd trouble
+themselves about the stewards. It all goes into old Grimshaw's
+pocket, and he'd skin a bolt-rope for the grease, and sell the
+steward if he could get a chance. He has sold a much nearer
+relation. I'm down upon the law, you'll see, Cap, for I know it
+plays the dickens with our business, and is a curse to the commerce
+of the port. Folks what a'n't acquainted with shipping troubles, and
+a shipowner's interests, think such things are very small affairs.
+But it's the name that affects us, and when an owner stands at every
+item in the disbursements, and a heavy bill for keeping his steward,
+and another for filling his place, or boarding-house accommodations,
+and then be deprived of his services, he makes a wry face, and
+either begins to think about another port, or making the rate of
+freight in proportion to the annoyance. It has an effect that we
+feel, but don't say much about. I'm a secessionist, but I don't
+believe in running mad after politics, and letting our commercial
+interests suffer."
+
+"But what if I prove my steward a'n't a colored man?" said the
+Captain; "they surely won't give me any trouble then. It would pain
+my feelings very much to see Manuel locked up in a cell for no
+crime; and then to be deprived of his services, is more than I can
+stand. If I'd known it before, I'd suffered the torments of thirst,
+and put for a port farther north."
+
+"It'll cost more than it's worth," said the pilot. "Take my plain
+advice, Cap; never try that; our lawyers are lusty fellows upon
+fees; and the feller'd rot in that old nuisance of a jail afore
+you'd get him out. The process is so slow and entangled, nobody'd
+know how to bring the case, and ev'ry lawyer'd have an opinion of
+his own. But the worst of all is that it's so unpopular, you can't
+get a lawyer worth seven cents to undertake it. It would be as
+dangerous as an attempt to extricate a martyr from the burning
+flames. Public opinion in Charleston is controlled by politicians;
+and an attempt to move in a thing so unpopular would be like a man
+attempting to speak, with pistols and swords pointed to his head."
+
+"Then it's folly to ask justice in your city, is it?" asked the
+Captain. "But your people are generous, a'n't they? and treat
+strangers with a courtesy that marks the character of every
+high-minded society?"
+
+"Yes!--but society in South Carolina has nothing to do with the law;
+our laws are gloriously ancient. I wish, Cap, I could only open your
+ideas to the way our folks manage their own affairs. I'm opposed to
+this law that imprisons stewards, because it affects commerce, but
+then our other laws are tip-top. It was the law that our legislature
+made to stop free niggers from coming from the abolition States to
+destroy the affections of our slaves. Some say, the construction
+given to it and applied to stewards of foreign vessels a'n't legal,
+and wasn't intended; but now it's controlled by popular will,--the
+stewards a'n't legislators, and the judges know it wouldn't be
+popular, and there's nobody dare meddle with it, for fear he may be
+called an abolitionist. You better take my advice, Cap: ship the
+nigger, and save yourself and Consul Mathew the trouble of another
+fuss," continued the pilot.
+
+"That I'll never do! I've made up my mind to try it, and won't be
+driven out of a port because the people stand in fear of a harmless
+man. If they have any souls in them, they'll regard with favor a
+poor sailor driven into their port in distress. I've sailed nearly
+all over the world, and I never got among a people yet that wouldn't
+treat a shipwrecked sailor with humanity. Gracious God! I've known
+savages to be kind to poor shipwrecked sailors, and to share their
+food with them. I can't, pilot, imagine a civilization so degraded,
+nor a public so lost to common humanity, as to ill treat a man in
+distress. We've said enough about it for the present. I'll appeal to
+Mr. Grimshaw's feelings, when I get to the city; and I know, if he's
+a man, he'll let Manuel stay on board, if I pledge my honor that he
+won't leave the craft."
+
+"Humph!--If you knew him as well as I do, you'd save your own
+feelings. His sympathies don't run that way," said the pilot.
+
+The Janson had now crossed the bar, and was fast approaching Fort
+Sumpter. Manuel had overheard enough of the conversation to awaken
+fears for his own safety. Arising from the mattrass, in a manner
+indicating his feeble condition, he called Tommy, and walking
+forward, leaned over the rail near the fore-rigging, and inquired
+what the Captain and the pilot were talking about. Observing his
+fears, the little fellow endeavoured to quiet him by telling him
+they were talking about bad sailors.
+
+"I think it is me they are talking about. If they sell me for slave
+in Charleston, I'll kill myself before a week," said he in his
+broken English.
+
+"What's that you say, Manuel?" inquired the first mate as he came
+along, clearing up the decks with the men.
+
+"Pilot tell Captain they sell me for slave in South Carolina. I'd
+jump overboard 'fore I suffer him," said he.
+
+"Oh, poh! don't be a fool; you a'n't among Patagonians, Manuel; you
+won't have to give 'em leg for your life. They dont sell foreigners
+and outlandish men like you for slaves in Carolina--it's only black
+folks what can't clothe the'r words in plain English. Yer
+copper-colored hide wouldn't be worth a sixpence to a
+nigger-trader--not even to old Norman Gadsden, that I've heard 'em
+tell so much about in the Liverpool docks. He's a regular Jonathan
+Wild in nigger-dealing; his name's like a fiery dragon among the
+niggers all over the South; and I hearn our skipper say once when I
+sailed in a liner, that niggers in Charleston were so 'fraid of him
+they'd run, like young scorpions away from an old he-devil, when
+they saw him coming. He sells white niggers, as they call 'em, and
+black niggers--any thing that comes in his way, in the shape of
+saleable folks. But he won't acknowledge the corn when he goes away
+from home, and swears there's two Norman Gadsdens in Charleston;
+that he a'n't the one! When a man's ashamed of his name abroad, his
+trade must be very bad at home, or I'm no sailor," said the mate.
+
+"Ah, my boys!" said the pilot in a quizzical manner, as he came to
+where several of the men were getting the larboard anchor ready to
+let go,--"if old Norman Gadsden gets hold of you, you're a gone
+sucker. A man what's got a bad nigger has only got to say Old
+Gadsden to him, and it's equal to fifty paddles. The mode of
+punishment most modern, and adopted in all the workhouses and places
+of punishment in South Carolina, is with the paddle, a wooden
+instrument in, the shape of a baker's peel; with a blade from three
+to five inches wide, and from eight to ten long. This is laid on the
+posteriors--generally by constables or officers connected with the
+police. Holes are frequently bored in the blade, which gives the
+application a sort of percussive effect; The pain is much more acute
+than with the cowhide; and several instances are known where a
+master ordered an amount of strokes beyond the endurance of the
+slave, and it proved fatal. at the workhouse. They tell a pretty
+good story about the old fellow. I don't know if it's true, but the
+old fellow's rich now, and he does just what he pleases. It was that
+somebody found one of those little occasional droppings of the
+aristocracy, very well known among the secrets of the chivalry, and
+called foundlings, nicely fixed up in a basket.--It's among the
+secrets though, and mustn't be told abroad.--The finders labelled
+it, 'Please sell to the highest bidder,' and left it at his door.
+There was a fund of ominous meaning in the label; but Norman very
+coolly took the little helpless pledge under his charge, and, with
+the good nursing of old Bina, made him tell to the tune of two
+hundred and thirty, cash, 'fore he was two year old. He went by the
+name of Thomas Norman, the Christian division of his
+foster-father's, according to custom. The old fellow laughs at the
+joke, as he calls it, and tells 'em, when they stick it to him, they
+don't understand the practice of making money. You must keep a
+bright look out for him, Manuel--you'll know him by the niggers
+running when they see him coming."
+
+The pilot now returned to the quarter, and commenced dilating upon
+the beauty of Charleston harbor and its tributaries, the Astley and
+Cooper Rivers--then upon the prospects of fortifications to beat the
+United States in the event of South Carolina's seceding and raising
+an independent sovereignty, composed of her best blood. The Captain
+listened to his unsolicited and uninteresting exposition of South
+Carolina's prowess in silence, now and then looking up at the pilot
+and nodding assent. He saw that the pilot was intent upon
+astonishing him with his wonderful advancement in the theory of
+government, and the important position of South Carolina. Again he
+looked dumbfounded, as much as to acknowledge the pilot's
+profundity, and exclaimed, "Well! South Carolina must be a devil of
+a State: every thing seems captivated with its greatness: I'd like
+to live in Carolina if I didn't get licked."
+
+"By scissors! that you would, Captain; you ha'n't an idee what a
+mighty site our people can do if they're a mind to! All South
+Carolina wants is her constitutional rights, which her great men
+fought for in the Revolution. We want the freedom to protect our own
+rights and institutions--not to be insulted and robbed by the
+General Government and the abolitionists."
+
+"Do you practice as a people upon the same principles that you ask
+of the General Government!" inquired the Captain.
+
+"Certainly, Captain, as far as it was intended for the judicious
+good of all white citizens!"
+
+"Then you claim a right for the whites, but withhold the right when
+it touches on the dark side. You'll have to lick the Federal
+Government, as you call it, for they won't cut the constitution up
+to suit your notions of black and white." * * *
+
+"That's just the thing, Cap, and we can do it just as easy as we now
+protect our own laws, and exterminate the niggers what attempt
+insurrections. South Carolina sets an example, sir, of honor and
+bravery that can't be beat. Why, just look a-yonder, Cap: the
+Federal Government owns this 'er Fort Sumpter, and they insulted us
+by building it right in our teeth, so that they could command the
+harbor, block out our commerce, and collect the duties down here.
+But, Cap, this don't scare South Carolina nohow. We can show 'em two
+figures in war tactics that'd blow 'em to thunder. Ye see yonder!"
+said he, with an earnest look of satisfaction, pointing to the
+south, "That's Morris Island. We'd take Fort Moultrie for a
+breakfast spell, and then we'd put it to 'em hot and strong from
+both sides, until they'd surrender Fort Sumpter. They couldn't stand
+it from both sides. Yes, sir, they shut Fort Moultrie against us,
+and wouldn't let us have it to celebrate independence in. There's a
+smouldering flame in South Carolina that'll burst forth one of these
+days in a way that must teach the Federal Government some
+astonishing and exciting lessons. There's old Castle Pinckney, sir;
+we could keep it for a reserve, and with Generals Quattlebum and
+Commander, from Georgetown and Santee Swamp, we could raise an army
+of Palmetto regiments that would whip the Federal Government troop
+and gun-boat."
+
+We have given this singular conversation of the pilot with a strange
+Captain, which at the time was taken as an isolated case of
+gasconade peculiar to the man; but which the Captain afterward found
+to harmonize in sentiment, feeling, and expression with the general
+character of the people--the only exceptions being the colored
+people.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+ARRIVAL OF THE JANSON.
+
+
+
+
+
+ABOUT five o'clock on the evening of the 23d, the Janson passed
+Castle Pinckney, ran up to the wharf with the flood-tide, let go her
+anchor, and commenced warping into the dock. Her condition attracted
+sundry persons to the end of the wharf, who viewed her with a sort
+of commiseration that might have been taken for sincere feeling. The
+boarding officer had received her papers, and reported her character
+and condition, which had aroused a feeling of speculative curiosity,
+that was already beginning to spread among ship-carpenters and
+outfitters.
+
+Conspicuous among those gathered on the wharf was a diminutive
+little dandy, with an olive-colored frock-coat, black pants,
+embroidered vest, and an enormous shirt-collar that endangered his
+ears. This was secured around the neck with a fancy neckcloth, very
+tastefully set off with a diamond pin, He was very slender, with a
+narrow, feminine face, round popeyes--requiring the application of a
+pocket-glass every few minutes--and very fair complexion, with little
+positive expression of character in his features. His nose was
+pointed; his chin, projected and covered with innumerable little
+pimples, gave an irregular and mastiff-shaped mouth a peculiar
+expression. He wore a very highly-polished and high-heeled pair of
+boots, and a broad-brimmed, silk-smooth hat. He seemed very anxious
+to display the beauty of two diamond rings that glittered upon his
+delicate little fingers, made more conspicuous by the wristbands of
+his shirt. Standing in a very conspicuous place upon the capsill of
+the wharf, he would rub his hands, then running from one part of the
+wharf to another, ordering sundry niggers about making fast the
+lines, kicking one, and slapping another, as he stooped, with his
+little hand. All paid respect to him. The Captain viewed him with a
+smile of curiosity, as much as to say, "What important specimen of a
+miss in breeches is that?" But when the little fellow spoke, the
+secret was told. He gathered the inflections of his voice, as if he
+were rolling them over the little end of a thunderbolt in his mouth.
+As the vessel touched the wharf, he sprang to the corner and cried
+out at the top of his voice, "Yer' welcome to Charleston, Captain
+Thompson! Where did you get that knocking?--where are ye bound
+for?--how many days are you out?--how long has she leaked in that
+way?" and a strain of such questions, which it would be impossible
+to trace, such was the rapidity with which he put them. The Captain
+answered him in accordance with the circumstances; and supposing him
+clothed with authority, inquired where he should find some hands to
+work his pumps, in order to relieve his men. "By-Je-w-hu! Captain,
+you must a' had a piping time, old feller. Oh! yes, you want help to
+work your pumps. Get niggers, Captain, there's lots on 'em about
+here. They're as thick as grasshoppers in a cotton-patch."
+
+"Yes, but I want 'em now, my men are worn out; I must get some
+Irishmen, if I can't get others at once," said the Captain, viewing
+his man again from head to foot.
+
+"Oh! don't employ Paddies, Captain; 'ta'n't popular; they don't
+belong to the secession party; Charleston's overrun with them and
+the Dutch! Why, she won't hurt to lay till to-morrow morning, and
+there'll be lots o' niggers down; they can't be out after bell-ring
+without a pass, and its difficult to find their masters after dark.
+Haul her up 'till she grounds, and she won't leak when the tide
+leaves her. We can go to the theatre and have a right good supper
+after, at Baker's or the St. Charles's. It's the way our folks live.
+We live to enjoy ourselves in South Carolina. Let the old wreck go
+to-night." The little fellow seemed so extremely polite, and so
+anxious to "do the genteel attention," that the Captain entirely
+forgot the tenor of his conversation with the pilot, while his
+feelings changed with the prospect of such respectful attention; and
+yet he seemed at a loss how to analyze the peculiar character of his
+little, pedantic friend.
+
+"You must not think me intrusive, Captain," said he, pulling out his
+segar-pouch and presenting it with at Chesterfieldian politeness.
+"It's a pleasure we Carolinians take in being hospitable and
+attentive to strangers. My name, sir, is--! My niggers call me
+Master George. Yes, sir! our family!--you have heard of my father
+probably--he belongs to one of the best stocks in Carolina--owns a
+large interest in this wharf, and is an extensive cotton-broker,
+factors, we call them here--and he owns a large plantation of niggers
+on Pee-Dee; you must visit our plantation. Captain, certain! before
+you leave the city. But you mustn't pay much attention to the gossip
+you'll hear about the city. I pledge you my honor, sir, it don't
+amount to any thing, nor has it any prominent place in our society."
+
+"Really, sir," replied the Captain, "I shall do myself the honor to
+accept of your hospitable kindness, and hope it may be my good
+fortune to reciprocate at some future day. I'm only too sorry that
+our wrecked condition affords me no opportunity to invite you to my
+table to-night; but the circumstances which you see everywhere
+presenting themselves are my best apology."
+
+"Oh, dear me! don't mention it, I pray, Captain. Just imagine
+yourself perfectly at home. We will show you what Southern
+hospitality is. We don't go upon the Yankee system of Mr. So-and-so
+and What-do-ye-call-'um. Our feelings are in keeping with our State
+pride, which, with our extreme sensibility of honor, forbids the
+countenance of meanness. South Carolinians, sir, are at the very top
+of the social ladder--awake to every high-minded consideration of
+justice and right. We are not moved by those morbid excitements and
+notions that so often lead people away at the North. Make no
+unnecessary preparation, Captain, and I will do myself the honor to
+call upon you in an hour." Thus saying, he shook his hand and left.
+
+The pilot had delivered his charge safe, and was about to, bid the
+Captain good-by for the night. But in order to do the thing in
+accordance with an English custom, that appears to have lost none of
+its zest in South Carolina, he was invited into the Captain's cabin
+to take a little prime old Jamaica. Manuel, who had somewhat
+recovered, brought out the case from a private locker, and setting
+it before them, they filled up, touched glasses, and drank the usual
+standing toast to South Carolina. "Pilot," said the Captain, "who
+is my polite friend--he seems a right clever little fellow?"
+
+"Well, Captain, he's little, but he's first-rate blood, and a
+genuine sprig of the chivalry. He's a devil of a secessionist, sir.
+If ye were to hear that fellow make a stump speech on States'
+rights, you'd think him a Samson on Government. His father is the
+head of a good mercantile house here; 'twouldn't be a bad idea to
+consign to him. But I must bid you good-night, Captain; I'll call
+and see you to-morrow," said the pilot, leaving for his home.
+
+The Janson was hauled well up the dock, and grounded on the
+ebb-tide. Manuel prepared supper for the officers and crew, while
+the Captain awaited the return of his new acquaintance. "Captain,"
+said Manuel, "I should like to go ashore to-night and take a walk,
+for my bones are sore, and I'm full of pains. I think it will do me
+good. You don't think anybody will trouble me, if I walk peaceably
+along?"
+
+"Nobody would trouble you if they knew you, Manuel; but I am afraid
+they will mistake you in the night. You had better keep ship until
+morning; take a good rest, and to-morrow will be a fine day--you can
+then take some exercise."
+
+Manuel looked at the Captain as if he read something doubtful in his
+countenance, and turned away with a pitiful look of dissatisfaction.
+It seems that through his imperfect knowledge of English, he had
+misconceived the position of the celebrated Thomas Norman Gadsden,
+whom he imagined to be something like an infernal machine, made and
+provided by the good citizens of Charleston to catch bad niggers.
+"Nora-ma Gazine no catch-e me, Cap-i-tan, if me go ashore, 'case me
+no make trouble in no part de world where me sail, Oh! no,
+Cap-i-tan, Manuel know how to mine dis bisness," said he returning
+again to the Captain.
+
+"Yes, yes, Manuel, but we can't let the crew go ashore 'till we get
+through the custom-house; you must content yourself to-night, and in
+the morning 'twill be all right. I'm afraid you'll get sick
+again-the night-air is very bad in this climate; old Gadsden won't
+trouble you. He don't walk about at night."
+
+Manuel walked forward, not very well satisfied with the manner in
+which the Captain put him off. The latter felt the necessity of
+caution, fearing he might infringe upon some of the municipal
+regulations that the pilot had given him an account of, which
+accounted for his refusal Manuel sat upon the main-hatch fondling
+Tommy, and telling him what good things they would have in the
+morning for breakfast, and how happy they ought to be that they were
+not lost during the gales, little thinking that he was to be the
+victim of a merciless law, which would confine him within the iron
+grates of a prison before the breakfast hour in the morning. "I like
+Charleston, Tommy," said Manuel; "it looks like one of our old
+English towns, and the houses have such pretty gardens, and the
+people they say are all so rich and live so fine. Tommy, we'll have
+a long walk and look all around it, so that we can tell the folks
+when we get home. The ship, owes me eleven pounds, and I mean to
+take some good things home for presents, to show what they have in
+South Carolina."
+
+"You better buy a young nigger, and take him home as a curiosity to
+show among the Highlands. You can buy a young Sambo for any price,
+just the same as you would a leg of mutton at the butcher's; put him
+in a band-box, lug him across, and you'll make a fortune in the
+North country. But I'd rather buy a young wife, for the young
+niggers are more roguish than a lot o' snakes, and al'a's eat their
+heads off afore they're big enough to toddle. They sell gals here
+for niggers whiter than you are, Manuel; they sell 'em at auction,
+and then they sell corn to feed 'em on. Carolina's a great region of
+supersensual sensibility; they give you a wife of any color or
+beauty, and don't charge you much for her, providing you're the
+right stripe. What a funny thing it would be to show the Glasgow
+folks a bright specimen of a bought wife from the renowned State of
+South Carolina, with genuine aristocratic blood in her veins; yes, a
+pure descendant of the Huguenots!" said the mate, who was leaning
+over the rail where Manuel and Tommy were seated, smoking a segar
+and viewing the beautiful scenery around the harbor.
+
+"Ah!" said Manuel, "when I get a wife and live on shore, I don't
+want to buy one-it might be a dangerous bargain. Might buy the body,
+but not the soul-that's God's."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+A NEW DISH OF SECESSION.
+
+
+
+
+
+ABOUT a quarter past eight o'clock in the evening, Master George, as
+he called himself, the little pedantic man, came skipping down the
+wharf. As soon as he approached the brig, he cried out at the top of
+his voice, "Captain! Captain!!"
+
+The Captain stepped to the gangway, and the little fellow, who had
+stood crossing and working his fingers, reached out his hand to
+assist him ashore. This done, he took the Captain's arm, and
+commencing a discourse upon the wonderful things and people of South
+Carolina they wended their way to the Charleston Theatre. The
+company then performing was a small affair, and the building itself
+perfectly filthy, and filled with an obnoxious stench. The play was
+a little farce, which the Captain had seen to much perfection in his
+own country, and which required some effort of mind to sit out its
+present mutilation. Yet, so highly pleased was Master George, that
+he kept up a succession of applauses at every grimace made by the
+comedian. Glad when the first piece was over, the Captain made a
+motion to adjourn to the first good bar-room and have a punch. It
+was agreed, upon the condition that the little man should "do the
+honor," and that they should return and see the next piece out. The
+Captain, of course, yielded to the rejoinder, though it was
+inflicting a severe penalty upon his feelings. There was another
+piece to come yet, which the little fellow's appetite was as ready
+to devour as the first. The Captain, seeing this, could not refrain
+expressing his surprise. This was taken as a charge against his
+taste, and George immediately commenced a discussion upon the
+subject of the piece, the intention of the author, and the merits of
+the principal performers, whose proper adaptation he admired. The
+Captain knew his subject, and instead of contending in detail,
+advised him to take a peep into the theatres of New York and London.
+Not to be undone, for he was like all little men, who insist upon
+the profoundness of their own opinions, he asserted that it could be
+only the different views which individuals entertained of
+delineating character, and that the Charlestonians were proverbially
+correct in their judgment of music and dramatic performances.
+
+"I pity the judgment that would award merit to such a performance as
+that," said the Captain.
+
+"How strange, that you Englishmen and Scotchmen always find fault
+with every thing we Americans do. Your writers manifest it in their
+books upon us and the people seem of necessity to copy from them,
+and echo their grumblings," rejoined Master George.
+
+"You judge from the common saying, instead of a knowledge front
+observation, I fear," said the Captain.
+
+"Lord, sir! you must not judge me by that rule. Carolinians, sir,
+always appreciate intelligent strangers, for they always exert a
+healthy influence, and never meddle with our institutions; so you
+see it wouldn't do to follow the pestilent notions of petty
+scribblers, lest we should form wrong opinions."
+
+"But tell me," said the Captain, "do you consider yourselves
+Americans in South Carolina?--the pilot must have led me astray."
+
+"Americans! yes, indeed, the true blood at that, and no man of
+tip-top judgment ever questioned it. But you must mark the
+difference; we ha'n't Yankees, nor we don't believe in their
+infernal humbuggery about abolition. If it wasn't for South Carolina
+and Georgia, the New-Englanders would starve for want of our cotton
+and rice. It's the great staple what keeps the country together; and
+as much as they talk about it, just take that away, and what would
+the United States be? We South Carolinians give no symptoms or
+expressions of what we mean to do that we cannot maintain. We have
+been grossly insulted by the Federal Government, but it dar'n't come
+at us and just give us a chance at fair fight. We'd show 'em the
+thunder of the Palmetto, that they'd never trouble our sovereignty
+again. Captain, I pledge you my honor that if there wasn't so many
+infernal Yankees in Georgia, and she'd follow our lead in secession,
+we'd just lick the whole North. Georgia's a big State, but she a'n't
+pluck, and has no chivalry at all among her people. She allows such
+privileges to them Yankees-gives them power to control her
+manufacturing interests-and this is just what will uproot the
+foundation of their slave institution. Georgians a'n't a bit like
+us; first, they are too plebeian in their manners-have no bond of
+guardianship for their laws, and exert no restraints for the proper
+protection of good society. But, Captain, their stock has a
+different origin, and the peculiarity which now marks our character
+may be traced to the offspring of early settlement. We derived our
+character and sentiments from the Huguenots; they, from an
+uncharacterized class of coarse adventurers, whose honesty was
+tinctured with penal suspicion. This, sir, accounts for the
+differences so marked in our character."
+
+The little fellow pressed this kind of conversation in the lobby of
+the theatre, and at the same time took the very particular pleasure
+of introducing the Captain to several of the young bloods, as he
+called them, while they walked to and from the boxes. At length the
+Captain found himself in a perfect hornet's nest, surrounded by
+vicious young secessionists, so perfectly nullified in the growth
+that they were all ready to shoulder muskets, pitchforks, and
+daggers, and to fire pistols at poor old Uncle Sam, if he should
+poke his nose in South Carolina. The picture presented was that of
+an unruly set of children dictating their opinions to a hoary-headed
+old daddy-accusing him of pragmatism, and threatening, if he was
+twice as old, they'd whip him unless he did as they directed. The
+knowledge of South Carolina's power and South Carolina's
+difficulties with the Federal Government he found so universally set
+forth as to form the atmosphere of conversation in the parlor, the
+public-house, the school and the bar-room, the lecture-room and the
+theatre.
+
+The little man extended his invitation to a party of the bloods. The
+Captain was taken by the arms in a kind of bond fellowship, and
+escorted into Baker's eating-saloon, a place adjacent to the
+theatre, and, to a man unaccustomed to the things that are in
+Charleston, a very rowdy place. This is considered by Charlestonians
+one of the finest places in the Southern country; where good suppers
+and secession (the all-engrossing subjects with Charles-tonians)
+form the only important element of conversation. It may be set down
+as a fact, that among seven-tenths of the people of Charleston, the
+standard of a gentleman is measured according to his knowledge of
+secession and his ability to settle the question of hot suppers. We
+say nothing of that vigorous patriotism so often manifested in a
+long string of fulsome toasts that disgrace the columns of the
+Mercury and Courier.
+
+At Baker's the place was literally crowded with all kinds and
+characters, graded from the honorable judge down to the pot-boy; a
+pot-pouri of courtesy and companionship only exhibited in England on
+the near approach of elections. The reader may think this strange,
+but we can assure him that distinctions are strangely maintained; an
+exclusive arrogance being observed in private life, while a too
+frequent and general resort to bar-rooms has established plebeianism
+in public. Voices were sounding at all parts of the counter, and for
+as many different voices as many different mixtures were named. The
+Captain received a great many introductions, and almost as many
+invitations to drink; but the little man, Master George, claimed the
+exclusive honor, and keeping an eye wide awake, took the advantage
+of his own dimensions, and began working his way through a barricade
+of bodies and elbows, until he had reached the counter. His party
+followed close, at his heels. Altogether, they called for cocktails,
+smashes, toddies, cobblers, juleps, and legitimates. These disposed
+of, the company repaired to what is called a "box up-stairs."
+Scarcely seated, Master George rang the bell with such violence that
+he disjointed the cord and tassel, and gave such an alarm that three
+or four darkies came poking their alarmed countenances through the
+curtains at once.
+
+"There's nothing like making the fellows mind; they've got so
+infernal independent here, and old Tom thinks so much of his young
+wife, that his niggers have begun to imitate him. One's enough at a
+time!" said Master George, with all the importance of his character.
+A "bright boy," with his hair nicely parted on the middle of his
+head, and frizzed for the occasion, made a polite bow, while the
+others retired.
+
+"What have you choice for supper, to-night? We want something ripe
+for the palate-none of your leavings, now, you infernal nigger, and
+don't tell us none of your lies."
+
+"Birds, sir, grouse, woodcock, partridge, canvas-backs, and quails;
+meats, venison, and oysters, master-did up in any shape what the
+gentlemen wish. Wines, &c., if they want," replied the servant,
+without any of the negro dialect, at the same time making a low bow
+to Master George.
+
+"Name it! name your dishes, gentlemen! Don't be backward. I suppose
+his birds are as usual, without age to flavor them. It's perfectly
+heathenish to eat birds as they are served here: we never get a bird
+here that is sufficiently changed to suit a gentleman o' taste;
+their beef's tough, and such steak as they make is only fit for
+shoemakers and blacksmiths. I never come into the place but I think
+of my journey in France, where they know the style and taste of a
+gentleman, and things are served to suit your choice." Thus our
+little friend continued his connoisseur remarks, to give the Captain
+a particular idea of his proficiency in the requisite qualities,
+age, and time of keeping necessary to make the adjuncts of a supper
+fit for a gentleman. "D--me! we don't know when edibles are choice,
+and the Yankees are perfect brutes in these things, and have no more
+taste than a cow. Our folks ought to all go to France for a year or
+two, to learn the style of cooking. It's perfect murder to eat a
+bird the very day after it's killed; yes, sir! no man that considers
+his stomach will do it," said George.
+
+The servant waited impatiently-the Captain rubbed his eyes, and
+began to pour out a glass of water; and dryly said he'd no choice,
+which was responded to by the rest. It was left to Master George,
+and he ordered a bountiful supply of grouse, partridges, oyster, and
+champagne of his favourite brand-none other. There was also a
+billiard-room, reading-room, a room for more important gambling, and
+a bar-room, up-stairs. All these were well filled with very well-
+dressed and very noisy people; the latter being a very convenient
+place, the party sent to it for tipplers to fill up time.
+
+"This is but a small portion of what constitutes life in Charleston,
+Captain. We live for living's sake, and don't stand upon those
+blueskin theories of temperance and religion that Yankees do, and
+blame the Father of generations for not making the world better. I
+never saw one of them that wasn't worse than we Southerners before
+he'd been in Charleston a year, and was perfect death on niggers.
+Yes, sir, it's only the extreme goodness of the Southern people's
+hearts that makes the niggers like them so. I never saw a Northerner
+yet that wouldn't work his niggers to death in two years. D--me,
+sir, my servants all love me as if I was a prince. Have you ever
+been in France, sir?" said he, suddenly breaking off. The Captain
+replied in the affirmative.
+
+"Ah! then you can speak French! the most polished language known to
+refined society. I wouldn't part with my French for the world. All
+the first families in Charleston are familiar with it. It's the
+modern gentleman's curt-blanche to society here. There's no language
+like it for beauty and flexibility; but one must go to France and
+learn to acquire its grace and ease," said he, in rapid succession,
+rolling out his words in imitation of a London sprig of the Inner
+Temple, and working his little mastiff mouth.
+
+"No, sir," said the Captain quaintly. "I never stopped long enough
+in France to get hold of the lingo."
+
+"God bless me, what a misfortune! and can't speak it yet, ah? Why,
+Captain, if you wanted to court a petit madmoselle, you'd be in a
+sad fix-she wouldn't understand what you were talking about and
+would take your love-pledges for gammon."
+
+"You're mistaken there, my good fellow. Love grows on trees in
+France, and a French woman can see it. before you begin to tell her
+about it!" retorted the Captain, which brought a "Good! good! hit
+him again!" from the whole party. At this, Master George commenced
+reading the Captain a disquisition upon the best mode of acquiring
+the French language. Supper was brought-in old Tom Baker's best
+flourish-and the party begun to discuss its merits with great gusto.
+What the little, chivalrous fellows lacked in physical dimension,
+they made up in patriotic sentiment in behalf of the grand sove-
+reignty of South Carolina, which they continued to pour out until a
+late hour, every man backing his sayings by the authority of the
+great and wonderful Calhoun.
+
+The Captain sat eating away, and seeming more disposed to enjoy the
+physical consolation of his supper than to elevate his ideas upon
+South Carolina's politics.
+
+"Now, Captain," said Master George, in a very serious tone, after he
+had been striking his hand upon the marble table for more than an
+hour to confirm the points of his reasoning,--"what is your opinion
+of the great question at issue between the Federal Government and
+South Carolina? And what do you think of the Old Dominion? how will
+she stand upon the test-question?"
+
+The poor Captain looked confounded-took another oyster, and began to
+get his mouth. in a fix, while little George worked his fingers
+through his nice curly hair, and the young bloods awaited the
+rejoinder with anxiety.
+
+"Really, sir, you have the advantage of me in your question. It is
+so much beyond my profession that I am entirely ignorant of the
+subject-therefore could not give an opinion. In truth, sir, I do not
+know the purport of the question. It has given me pleasure and
+information to listen to your conversation and the ability you
+displayed in argument, but, as a stranger, I could take no part,"
+replied the Captain very sincerely.
+
+Not content with this, Master George wished to be more direct. "It's
+the right of secession, Captain-the power to maintain the right by
+the constitution."
+
+"Probably; but may I expose my ignorance by inquiring what is meant
+by secession? and to what it is applied so frequently?" inquired the
+Captain.
+
+"Oh! murder Captain; have you never heard of nullification times!
+Well, sir, you must be posted on the affairs of our government." So
+he commenced an analysis of nearly an hour long, and in it gave some
+astonishing accounts of the wonderful statesmanship of Calhoun,
+Butler, and Rhett, tapering down with a perfect fire-and-thunder
+account of the military exploits of General Quattlebum and Captain
+Blanding. The Captain began to stretch and gape, for he labored
+under the fatigue of a perilous voyage, and repose was the only
+sovereign remedy. He felt that the limits of propriety were entirely
+overstepped, and that he would have reason to remember the first
+night spent with little George the secessionist.
+
+"But, Captain! my dear fellow. I see you don't understand our
+position yet. We've been insulted; yes, most rascally insulted by
+the Federal Government, and they keep it up every year. We can't get
+our rights. Oh! no, sir, there's no such thing in the knowledge of
+the Federal officers as justice for South Carolina; and you must
+understand, Captain, that she is the greatest State in the Union,
+and there a'n't nothing like her people for bravery. The political
+power's got North and West, the old constitution is being dissected
+to suit the abolitionists, and they're drawing the cordon around us
+faster and faster; and they're now out like a warrior boldly to the
+conquest, sounding their voices in the halls of Congress, appealing
+to human and divine power to protect their nonsense, and bidding
+defiance to our constitutional rights, Our slaves are our property,
+protected by the law of God-by that inspired and superhuman wisdom
+that founded our great and glorious constitution. Yes, sir! it was
+an institution entailed upon us by our forefathers, and a wise
+providence has provided proper laws by which we shall protect and
+see these poor miserable devils of helpless slaves, that can't take
+care of themselves, straight through."
+
+"But how does this affect you and the Federal Government?" inquired
+the Captain.
+
+"Why, sir, most directly!" replied Master George, screwing his mouth
+and giving his head a very learned attitude. "Directly, sir!--the
+Federal Government is acquiescing in every abolition scheme that is
+put forward by that intriguing Northern compact for the
+establishment of new governments in the territories. She is granting
+unconstitutional privileges to designing politicians, whose chief
+aim is to uproot our domestic institution and destroy the allegiance
+of the slave to his master, by which the slaves would be cast upon
+the world unprotected, and we disarmed of power to protect them. Ah!
+sir, I tell you, of all fruits of the imagination that would be the
+most damnable, and the slave would be the sufferer. It would be
+worse for him, poor fellow; it would be an abuse of human power
+without precedent. So far as political power is concerned, we are
+nearly disarmed. The influx of population finds its way into the
+opened avenues of the North and West. And with opinions predisposed
+against our institutions, and the contaminating influence standing
+ready with open arms to embrace the great current, what can we
+expect? It's the increasing power made by foreign influx that's
+giving tone to our government. If our Southern Convention stand firm
+we are saved; but I'm fearful there's too many doubtful shadows in
+it that won't stand to the gun. That's what's always played the
+devil with us," said George, striking his hand upon the table.
+"There's no limitation to their interpositions, and their resolves,
+and their adjournments; which don't come up to my principles of
+making the issue, and standing to the question with our coffins on
+our backs. These condescensions of thought and feeling arise from
+the misconceived notions of a few, who are always ready to join, but
+never willing to march to action, and must not be taken as a
+specimen of South Carolina bravery. The Federal Government has
+become vicious and even puerile toward South Carolina; and since the
+Herculean power of the great Calhoun is gone, it treats us like a
+semi-barbarous and secluded people, mistaking our character. But
+we'll learn the Federal Government a lesson yet."
+
+"Do not your legislators make laws for your government, or how is it
+that you express such a restive dissatisfaction? Do not the same
+laws which govern you, govern the whole of the slave States?"
+
+Little George had previously monopolized all the conversation, but
+at this juncture five or six voices broke out, each fired with a
+reply to the Captain's question; and yet the answer was of the same
+old stamp: What South Carolina had done-how she had fought and
+gained the Mexican war-how she was interested in slaves, and how she
+yet feared to strike the blow because a set of mere adventurers had
+got the power to vote in her elections, and cowards through them had
+got into the legislature.
+
+"Why, gentlemen, listen to me in this particular. If"--
+
+"Your oysters are getting cold, George," interrupted a blood at his
+left, rather facetiously.
+
+"I claim the respect due a gentleman, sir! A South Carolinian will
+transgress no rules of etiquette," said George, grasping his tumbler
+in a passionate manner and smashing it upon the marble slab, causing
+a sudden emeute in the camp. "Order! order! order!" was sounded from
+every tongue. "You mustn't be afeard, Captain," said one of the
+party. "This is perfectly South Carolinian-just the oscillating of
+the champagne; it won't last long."
+
+The noise was more loud than ordinary, and brought a score of people
+around to hear the trouble. George had got in high dudgeon, and it
+took several persons to hold him, while the remainder, not excepting
+the Captain, were engaged in a pacification. The scene was very
+extravagant in folly; and through the kind interposition of friends,
+the matter was settled to the honorable satisfaction of both
+parties-the question was called for-the Captain called for a
+legitimate, rubbed his eyes, and little George proceeded. "If my
+friend Thomas Y. Simmons, Jr., had been elected to the legislature
+he'd altered the position of things in South Carolina. All these
+corruptions would have been exposed, and the disparity of party
+would have dwindled into obscurity. Every true Carolinian voted for
+him to the hilt, but how was he defeated? Gentlemen, can you answer?
+it will be a favor highly gratifying to me to hear your opinions!" A
+voice answered, "Because he wasn't big enough!" "No, sir," said
+George, "it was because there was intrigue in the party, and the
+Yankee influence went to put him down. The world'll hear from him
+yet. He's my particular friend, and will stand in the halls of
+Congress as great a statesman as ever lisped a political sentiment."
+
+George's account of his particular friend, Thomas Y. S--, Jr., was
+so extravagant, and not having heard of him before, the Captain's
+curiosity was aroused to know who he was and where he resided. We
+will not tax the reader with George's wonderful memoir of his
+friend, but merely inform him that "little Tommy Simmons," as he is
+usually styled in Charleston, is an exact pattern of Master George,
+with the exception of his mouth, which is straight and regular; and
+if we may be allowed to condescend to the extremes, we should say
+that the cordwainer had done more for his heels. Otherwise, no
+daguerreotype could give a counterpart more correct. Tommy is a very
+small member of the Charleston bar, who, though he can seldom be
+seen when the court is crowded, makes a great deal of noise without
+displaying power of elucidation or legal abilities, yet always
+acquitting himself cleverly. Tommy was little George in two
+particulars-he had studied law, and was a great secessionist; and if
+George had never practised, it was only from inclination, which he
+asserted arose from a humane feeling which he never could
+overcome-that he never wished to oppress anybody. But the greatest
+contrast that the reader can picture to himself between mental and
+physical objects existed between Tommy's aspirations and the
+physical man. His mind was big enough, and so was his self-
+confidence, to have led the Assyrian and Chaldean army against the
+Hebrews. To this end, and to further the formula of his
+statesmanship, no sooner was he twenty-one, and the corner just
+turned, than he sounded his war-trumpet-secession or death!--mounted
+the rostrum and "stump'd it," to sound the goodness and greatness of
+South Carolina, and total annihilation to all unbelievers in
+nullification. It was like Jonah and the whale, except the
+swallowing, which spunky Tommy promised should be his office, if the
+Federal Government didn't toe the mark. Yes, Tommy was a candidate
+for the legislature, and for the Southern Congress, (which latter
+was exclusively chivalrous;) and the reader must not be surprised
+when we tell him that he lacked but a few votes of being elected to
+the former. Such was the voice of the Charleston district.
+
+Supper had been discussed down to the fragments, and all expressed
+their satisfaction of the quantity and declined any more; but George
+called on another bottle of champagne, and insisted that the party
+should take a parting glass. The servant had begun to extinguish the
+lights-a sure sign that the success of the bar was ended for the
+night. George reprimanded the negro-the sparkling beverage was
+brought, glasses filled up, touched, and drunk with the standing
+toast of South Carolina. A motion to adjourn was made and seconded,
+and the party, feeling satisfied with their evening's recreation,
+moved off accordingly.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+A FEW POINTS OF THE LAW.
+
+
+
+
+
+IN Charleston, such an adjournment at a bar-room or an eating-house,
+when parties are enjoying what is termed a "pleasant occasion," does
+not mean an adjournment to the domestic fireside; nor are the
+distinctions between married and single men regarded, though
+domestic attachments may be considered as governing the thoughts and
+feelings. The practical definition of such an adjournment means to
+some place where beauty secludes itself to waste in shame.
+
+The party descended into the lower bar-room, which, though rather
+thinned, presented a picture of characters stimulated to the
+tottering point. A motion had been made and strongly seconded to
+visit the voluptuous house of a certain lady, which it is considered
+a stranger has not seen Charleston until he has visited. The Captain
+remonstrated against this, assuring the party that he must go to the
+ship and needed rest. Again and again they insisted, setting forth
+the charms and beauty of the denizens, but he as often declined in
+the most positive manner. Unable to move him in his resolution, one
+by one began to give him a hearty shake of the hand and bid him
+good-night, leaving little Master George to the exclusive honor of
+seeing him home.
+
+Standing in the centre of the room, surrounded by five or six
+persons well-dressed but very weak in the knees, was a
+portly-looking gentleman; with very florid countenance, keen dark
+eyes, and aquiline nose which he frequently fingered. There was an
+air of respectability about him, though his countenance was not
+marked with any particularly prominent feature to distinguish him
+from the ordinary class of respectable men. He spoke well, yet
+without taste or discrimination in his language, was rather bald and
+gray, with small head. and low perceptive powers; and judging from
+the particular tone of his voice and. the cant terms he used, we
+should think he had figured among the Kentucky horse-traders, or
+made stump speeches in Arkansas. His dress was inclined to the
+gaudy. He wore a flashy brown-colored frock-coat with the collar
+laid very far back, a foppish white vest exposing his shirt-bosom
+nearly down to the waistbands of his pants, which were of gray
+stripes. But the more fanciful portions of his dress were a large
+and costly fob-chain, which hung very low and supported an immense
+seal containing a glistening stone, which he seemed very fond of
+dangling with his left hand. Attached to this was a very prominently
+displayed black ribbon, answering the purpose of a guard-chain, and
+laid with great contrasting care over the bosom of his shirt. This,
+with a neckerchief of more flashy colors than Joseph's coat, and a
+late style Parisian hat, with the rim very exquisitely turned upon
+the sides, make up our man.
+
+He was discussing politics, with a great many sensible sayings,
+though nothing like close reasoning; and strange as it may seem, he
+was strongly opposed to the rabid views of several staggering
+secessionists, who surrounded him, and advocated the views set forth
+in convention by Mr. Butler. We remarked this more particularly, for
+it was about the only instance we witnessed of a public man being
+independent enough to denounce the fanaticism of secession. A more
+amusing scene than that presented by the attitudes-the questions in
+regard to South Carolina licking the Federal Government-the strange
+pomp-ribald gasconade, and high-sounding chivalry of the worthies,
+cannot be imagined. They were in a perfect ecstasy with themselves
+and South Carolina, and swore, let whatever come, they were ready to
+meet it.
+
+Little Master George seemed very anxious that the Captain should
+become acquainted with him, and commenced giving him a monstrous
+account of his distinguished abilities. "And that's not all!" said
+George; "he's not only one of the greatest characters in Charleston,
+or perhaps the State, but he's a right good fellow."
+
+We will interrupt, by informing the reader that he was one of the
+good fellows-a numerous family in Charleston-who never use fine
+instruments when they select their company; and pay a large amount
+of worthy tribute to the liquor-dealers. There is no discriminating
+latitude attached to the good-fellow family, for its members may be
+found with alike gratifying inclinations, from the highest
+aristocracy to the negro population.
+
+"That, sir, is Col. S--e; belongs to one of the first families, sir.
+He can beat old Pettigru all hollow; his eloquence is so thrilling
+that he always reminds me of Pericles. He can beat little Thomas Y.
+Simmons, Jr., all to pieces-make the best stump speech-address a
+public assemblage, and rivet all their minds-can make a jury cry
+quicker than any other man-can clear the worst criminal that ever
+committed crime-and he's good-hearted too-can draw the most
+astonishing comparisons to confound the minds of stupid jurors, and
+make them believe the d--dest nonsense that ever man invented. Yes,
+sir-when he makes a speech, everybody goes to hear him, for he says
+what he pleases, and old Judge Withers, whose will is as arbitrary
+as Julius Csar's, and has got the obstinacy of Tom Boyce's mule,
+dar'n't attempt to control the tenor of his plea. And he can tell
+the best invented story of any man in town. He cleared the villanous
+Doctor Hines once upon the color of his pantaloons."
+
+George waited impatiently for the end of the political controversy,
+determined to introduce his friend to the colonel. He soon had an
+opportunity, for the colonel, finding himself beset by a set of
+unreasonable secessionists, made a sweeping declaration.
+"Gentlemen," said he, "let me tell you a modest fact: seven-eighths
+of the secession fire-eaters don't know what the proper meaning of
+government is: I make the charge against my own people-but it is
+true." "Traitor! traitor!--traitor to South Carolina," was sounded at
+the top of a dozen voices.
+
+"Then, if I am such in your opinions, I'm gratified to know that my
+feelings are my own. Good-night!"
+
+Thus saying, he withdrew from the party, and making his way for the
+door, was saluted by George, who introduced him to his friend, the
+Captain. The colonel was a very sociable, communicative man; and
+taking the Captain's arm, as they walked along, entered into an
+interesting conversation about his voyage and first visit to the
+city, at the same time displaying his good sense in not trying to
+force the great things of South Carolina into his mind.
+
+We, a few weeks afterward, had the good fortune to hear the legal
+abilities of this gentleman displayed in a plea at the bar. There
+were many good points in it, which, if not legally pointed, were said
+well; yet we should class him as belonging to the loud school.
+
+The Captain, thinking it a good opportunity to make some inquiries
+about his steward, as they proceeded, commenced in the following
+manner:
+
+Your laws are very stringent in South Carolina, I believe, sir!"
+
+"Well, no sir," said the colonel, "if we except those which govern
+the niggers; they of necessity must be so; we have had so many
+emeutes with them, that no law can be made too strict in its
+bearings. We have so many bad niggers poured in upon us, that the
+whole class is becoming corrupted."
+
+"Your laws, of course, make a distinction between good and bad
+niggers, and free negroes?" interposed the Captain.
+
+"We make no distinction between the colors-some are as white as you
+are; but the grades are so complex that it would be impossible to
+make a sliding-scale law for any fixed complexions. The law which
+governs them is distinctive and comprehensive-made in order to
+shield the white population from their ignorance of law and
+evidence. We never could govern them in their respective spheres,
+unless the laws were made stringent in their effect. As for the free
+niggers, they're the greatest nuisance we have; it is our policy to
+get rid of them, and to that end we tax them severely. The riddance
+of this class of niggers would be an essential benefit to our
+slaves, as upon account of their influence our negro-laws are made
+more stringent. And the worst of it is that they increase faster.
+But we make it a principal point to get all the free men we can
+married to slaves, and the free women run off. You, that are
+accustomed to the free institutions of your country, may think some
+of these things singular at first; but you would soon become
+accustomed to them, and would really admire them when you saw how
+beautifully they worked."
+
+"Is there no discretionary power left?" inquired the Captain. "It
+must be oppressive, if carried out; Good men-whether they be white
+or black-are entitled to the advantages due them; but where laws
+such as you describe are carried out, a good man's evidence being
+black, the intention could not be made white. Now, according to my
+idea of the law of nature, a man's merits are in his moral integrity
+and behaviour; therefore I should establish the rule that a good
+black man was better than a bad white man, and was as much entitled
+to the respect and government of law."
+
+"Hi!--oh! Captain; it won't do to talk so in South Carolina. Just let
+a nigger imagine himself as good as a white man, and all the seven
+codes in Christendom wouldn't keep 'em under. Ah! you've got to
+learn a thing or two about niggers yet," interrupted Master George,
+before the Colonel had time to speak.
+
+"I only speak from my observation of human nature; but I may become
+better acquainted with your laws, if I remain among you," said the
+Captain.
+
+"As I have said before sir," replied the Colonel, "our nigger-laws
+are such as to require a strict enforcement. If we allowed the
+prerogative of a discretionary power, it would open the way to an
+endless system of favoritism, just at the mercy and feelings of
+those exercising it. As it is now, the white or black nigger, male
+or female, gets the same law and the same penalty. We make no
+distinction even at the paddle-gallows. The paddle-gallows is a
+frame with two uprights, and a wrench screw at the top. The negro's
+hands are secured in iron wristlets-similar to handcuffs; a rope is
+then attached to an eye in these, and passing over the wrench, which
+being turned, the negro is raised in an agonizing position until the
+tips of his toes scarcely touch the floor. Thus suspended, with the
+skin stretched to its utmost tension, it not unfrequently parts at
+the first blow of the paddle. Sometimes the feet are secured, when
+the effect of this modern science of demonstrating the tension of
+the human body for punishment becomes more painful under the paddle.
+South Carolinians deny this mode of punishment generally, and never
+allow strangers to witness it. It is not, as some writers have
+stated, practised in Georgia, where, we are happy to say, that so
+far as punishment is conducted in a legal manner, at the jails and
+prisons, it is administered in a humane manner; and instead of
+turning modern barbarity into a science, as is, done in South
+Carolina, a strict regard for the criminal is observed. I will
+relate some singular facts connected with the strictness with which
+we South Carolinians carry out our laws. And now that we are on the
+spot connected with it, its associations are more forcibly impressed
+on my mind. It brings with it many painful remembrances, and, were
+we differently situated, I should wish the cause to be removed. But
+it cannot be, and we must carry out the law without making
+allowances, for in these little leniencies all those evils which
+threaten the destruction of our peculiar institution creep in. In
+fact, Captain, they are points of law upon which all our domestic
+quietude stands; and as such, we are bound to strengthen our means
+of enforcing them to the strictest letter. Our laws are founded upon
+the ancient wisdom of our forefathers, and South Carolina has never
+traduced herself or injured her legal purity. We have reduced our
+system almost to a practical science, so complete in its bearings
+and points of government as to be worthy the highest and noblest
+purposes of our country. And at the same time, such is the spirit
+and magnanimity of our people, that in framing laws to guard against
+the dangerous influences of that wing of our country that spreads
+its ambitious fallacies--its tempting attractions-shallow criticisms
+upon minute and isolated cases-redundant theories without measure or
+observation, and making a standard for the government of slaves upon
+foolish and capricious prejudices, we have been careful to preserve
+a conservative moderation toward the slave. But, to my remarks."
+
+The party had now arrived opposite to what was formerly known as
+Jones's Hotel, where the Colonel made a halt to relate the singular
+case that had pained his feelings, though he held very tenaciously
+to the law as it was, because he believed strongly in the wisdom of
+the South Carolina judiciary.
+
+"Our first and great object is to prevent the interchange of
+sentiment between our domestic niggers, whether bond or free, and
+niggers who reside abroad or have left our State; To do this, it
+became imperative to establish a law prohibiting free negroes from
+coming into the State, and those in the State from going out, under
+penalty of imprisonment and fine, if they returned. The penalty
+amounted to sale upon a peon form; and subjected the offender to the
+slave system in a manner that he seldom retrieved himself. You will
+observe, Captain, the penalty is not desired by our people, the
+object being to prevent them from returning, and as such it must
+be taken in the spirit of its origin. Another very wise provision
+was made by our legislators, and which has prevented a great deal of
+suffering on the part of the slave. A few years ago, our wise
+legislature made a law to revert the power of emancipation from the
+board of magistrates where it had been very much abused, to the
+House itself. And such is the law at the present day, that no master
+can give his slaves their freedom, except by special act of the
+legislature, and that with such a multiplicity of provisions and
+conditions that few even attempt it. But I'm about to refer to cases
+in which some modification might be said to have been necessary,
+because in them are embodied the worst germs for abolition
+speculation.
+
+"That, Captain, is Jones's Hotel," said the Colonel, pointing to an
+odd-looking house of antique and mixed architecture, with a large
+convex window above the hall-entrance, in the second story. This
+house is situated in Broad street, next to the aristocratic St.
+Michael's Church, one of the most public places in the city. "In
+years past, that house was kept by Jones, a free nigger. Jones was
+almost white, a fine portly-looking man, active, enterprising,
+intelligent, honest to the letter, and whose integrity and
+responsibility was never doubted. He lived in every way like a white
+man, and, I think, with few exceptions, never kept company with even
+bright folks. His house was unquestionably the best in the city, and
+had a widespread reputation. Few persons of note ever visited
+Charleston without putting up at Jones's, where they found, not only
+the comforts of a private house, but a table spread with every
+luxury that the county afforded. The Governor always put up at
+Jones's; and when you were travelling abroad, strangers would speak
+of the sumptuous fare at Jones's in Charleston, and the elegance and
+correctness of his house. But if his house and fare were the boast
+of Carolinians, and the remark of strangers, his civility and
+courteous attention could not be outdone. Jones continued in the
+popularity of his house for many years, reared a beautiful,
+intelligent, and interesting family; at the same time accumulated
+about forty thousand dollars. The most interesting part of his
+family was three beautiful daughters, the eldest of whom was married
+to a person now in New York. She was fairer than seven-eighths of
+those ladies who term themselves aristocracy in Charleston, and
+promenade King street in the afternoon.
+
+"She removed to New York with her husband, who now resides in that
+city, engaged in lucrative and respectable business. A short time
+after, her second sister-not dreaming that the law would be so
+stringent as to class her with the lowest nigger, or even lay its
+painful bearings at her door; for the family were very high-minded,
+and would have considered themselves grossly insulted to have the
+opprobrious name of nigger applied to them-paid her a visit. The
+public became acquainted with the fact, and to his surprise, Jones
+was informed by authority that upon no condition could she be
+allowed to return-that the law was imperative, and no consideration
+could be given to the circumstances, for such would be virtually
+destroying its validity, and furnishing a precedent that would be
+followed by innumerable cases. In spite of all the remonstrances
+which Jones could set forth, and the influence of several friends of
+high standing, he was compelled to relinquish all hope of his
+daughter's being allowed to return to the family. The reasoning set
+forth had every plausibility; but such is our respect for the law,
+that we were compelled to forego our hospitality, and maintain it,
+even though the case was painful to our feelings. Thus, you see, we
+maintain the point and spirit of the law above every thing else.
+
+"But the end is not here! A few years after this, Jones received a
+letter, that his daughter was very sick and not expected to
+live-accompanied with a desire to have the last soothing comfort of
+seeing her parents. Jones being an affectionate man, and dotingly
+fond of his children, without regarding the former admonition,
+immediately prepared himself, and left in disguise for New York.
+Mature consideration would have convinced him of the error of one so
+well known as himself trying to elude recognition.
+
+"His son-in-law, Lee, a noble fellow, kept the house, and when Jones
+was inquired for, it was reported that he was confined to his room.
+It would have been well if Jones had kept himself secluded in New
+York; but he was recognised by a Charlestonian, and, as such reports
+have uncommon wings, the news of it soon reached the authorities;
+when a mandate was issued accordingly, and Jones subjected to the
+fate of his daughter. There are many painful circumstances connected
+with the affair, which, if well told, would make quite a romance,"
+said the Colonel, all of which the Captain listened to with profound
+attention. "His family all moved to New York, and his affairs were
+put into the hands of attorneys here, for settlement, by his son-
+in-law, who continued the business for some years."
+
+"Of course he got his property restored to him?" interrupted the
+Captain.
+
+"Most certainly, Captain! The spirit of justice is coequal with that
+of honorable law, in South Carolina," said George, anxious to
+relieve the Colonel of the answer.
+
+"It is somewhat difficult to settle a man's business by legal
+process when the principal is not present. The law's delay and
+lawyers' spoils make time hallowed and costly," said the Captain.
+
+"You're right there, Captain," said the Colonel; "and I doubt-to
+speak honestly-whether Jones ever got much of his property. There's
+a good many stories told, and a great deal of mystery about it
+that's got to be explained to my mind. But you're a stranger,
+Captain, and it would not be interesting to the feelings of a
+Scotchman. I may give you the details more minutely at some future
+day."
+
+"Why, Colonel!" said George, "you should be considerate in your
+statements. Remember the immense difficulty that has attended
+Jones's affairs-they're not all settled yet."
+
+"True, George; and I'm afraid they never will be;--but there are
+some very singular appearances connected with it. I mean no personal
+disrespect toward those cousins of yours who have figured in the
+case. 'Tis bad to call names, but there is a mystery about a certain
+member of our profession getting rich, when poor Jones declares he's
+got nothing, and Lee has had to give up the house,--I don't say what
+for." * * *
+
+"Yes, strange things must be kept strangely secret in some parts of
+the world, and only whispered when there's no wind," said the
+Captain.
+
+"But that's the only case, Captain," said George; "and the Colonel
+was indiscreet in recounting it; for from that you may conceive
+wrong impressions of the best institutions and laws in the world.
+Jones was an old fool, led away by his nigger-like affections for
+them gals of his. He never knew when he was well off, and always
+wanted to be with white folk when he was here. 'Twould been a great
+deal better if he'd let them youngest gals gone with Pingree and
+Allston. They'd have made the tip-top mistresses--been kept like
+ladies, and not been bothered, and brought all this trouble upon
+their heads through these infernal abolitionists. I really believe
+the old fool thought some white man would marry them at one time."
+
+"What harm would there've been in that, providing they're as white
+as anybody, and got plenty of money, and were handsome? There must
+be a singular sensibility, that I don't understand, exerting itself
+in your society," said the Captain laconically.
+
+"Harm! You'd find out the harm. Just live in South Carolina a year
+or two. 'Tisn't the fair complexion-we don't dispute that-but it's
+the blood."
+
+"Oh! then the legal objection," said the Captain, "is what is so
+revolting to society, eh! It may be sown broadcast in
+licentiousness, then, and custom sustains an immoral element that is
+devouring the essential bond of society."
+
+"Excuse me, Captain," interrupted the Colonel. "George, you are
+always taking me upon suppositions. I only related it to the Captain
+in order to show the power and integrity of our law, and how South
+Carolinians frequently sacrifice their own interests to maintain it
+intact. Nothing could be more fatal to its vitality than to make
+provisions which would entail legal preferences. The law in regard
+to free niggers leaving the State should be looked upon in the light
+of protection rather than alienation, for it is made to protect
+property and society. Yet where a case is attended with such
+circumstances as that of Jones's, some disposition to accommodate
+might have been evinced without endangering the State's sovereignty.
+And I must also differ with you, George, so far as the girls
+maintained their self-respect. It was commendable in them to get
+husbands whom they could live with in the bonds of matrimony. My
+word for it, George, though I am a Southerner, and may give rein to
+improprieties at times, nothing can be more pernicious to our
+society than this destructive system of our first people in keeping
+mistresses. It's a source of misery at best, depending upon
+expediency instead of obligation, and results in bringing forth
+children and heirs with an entailed burden upon their lives, to be
+disowned, cast off from paternal rights, and left to the tender
+mercies of the law. We see the curse, yet countenance it-and while
+it devours domestic affections and has cankered the core of social
+obligations, we look upon it as a flowery garden as we pass by the
+wayside.. There may be but a shadow between the rightful heir and
+the doubtful son-the former may enjoy the bounty of his inheritance,
+but the latter is doomed to know not his sire nor his kinsman, but
+to suffer the doubts and fears and the dark gloom which broods over
+a bondman's life."
+
+"By-je-w-hu! Colonel, what in scissors are you preaching about. You
+must a' got a pull too much at Bakers's. You're giving vent to real
+abolition sentiments. Exercise your knowledge of the provision that
+is made for such children. The Captain will certainly draw incorrect
+notions about us," said George, with anxiety pictured on his
+countenance. He knew the Colonel's free, open, and frank manner of
+expressing himself, and feared lest the famous name of the chivalry
+should suffer from his unconscious disclosures.
+
+"Provisions! George, you know my feelings concerning that vice which
+is so universally practised in our community. If you know of any
+provision, it's more than I do. Perhaps you are older and have had
+more experience. 'Tis the want of such a provision that is just
+destroying our institution of slavery!"
+
+At this juncture the Captain interrupted them, and begging that the
+Colonel would finish the story about Jones, said he had a few
+questions to ask them after it was through.
+
+"Well," said the Colonel, "Jones died, I believe; but his family are
+as industrious as ever, and have made money enough to live
+comfortable; but the scamps have turned out perfect helpmates of the
+abolitionists, and make their intelligence figure at the bottom of
+many an escape. But Lee's case is as hard as Jones's. His son went
+to New York to see his grandfather, and was debarred by the same
+statute of limitations. Lee, however, was a very capable fellow, and
+after trying for two years, and finding it would be impossible to
+return to his father, very shrewdly set about some kind of business,
+and is now largely engaged in the preserve and pickle business.
+Lee's celebrated pickle and preserve establishment, New York. The
+father is now in this city, making a living for his family at
+something or other. He has made several efforts to sell out his
+little property, but there's some trouble about the title; and if he
+leaves it to go and see his son, he knows what the consequences will
+be; and to leave it for settlement would be to abandon it, to the
+same fate that swallowed up Jones's. Thus the son cannot come to
+visit his father, nor the father go to visit the son. This, in my
+opinion, is carrying a prohibition to an extreme point; and although
+I believe the law should be maintained, I cannot believe that any
+good arises from it upon such people as the Jones's and Lee's, from
+the very fact that they never associated with niggers. Hence, where
+there is no grounds for fear there can be no cause for action,"
+continued the Colonel.
+
+"Just what I wanted to know," said the Captain. "As I informed you,
+I am driven into your port in distress. Charleston, as you are
+aware, is in an advantageous latitude for vessels to refit that have
+met with those disasters which, are frequent in the gulf and among
+the Bahamas. Thus I expected to find good facilities here, without
+any unkind feeling on the part of the people"--
+
+"Oh! bless me, Captain, you will find us the most hospitable people
+in the world," said the Colonel.
+
+"But your pilot told me I would have trouble with my steward, and
+that the law would make no distinction between his being cast upon
+your shores in distress and subject to your sympathy, and his coming
+in voluntarily."
+
+"What!" said little George. "Is he a nigger, Captain? Old Grimshaw's
+just as sure to nab him as you're a white man. He'll buy and sell a
+saint for the fees, and gives such an extended construction to the
+terms of the act that you need expect no special favor at his hands.
+The law's no fiction with him. I'm sorry, Captain: you may judge his
+conduct as an index of that of our people, and I know him so well
+that I fear the consequences."
+
+"No!" said the Captain. "My steward is a Portuguese, a sort of
+mestino, and one of the best men that ever stepped foot aboard a
+vessel. He is willing, intelligent, always ready to do his duty, and
+is a great favorite with his shipmates, and saves his wages like a
+good man-but he is olive complexion, like a Spaniard. He has sailed
+under the British flag for a great many years, has been 'most all
+over the world, and is as much attached to the service as if he was
+a Londoner, and has got a register ticket. Nothing would pain my
+feelings more than to see him in a prison, for I think he has as
+proud a notion of honesty as any man I've seen, and I know he
+wouldn't commit a crime that would subject him to imprisonment for
+the world. The boys have been pestering the poor fellow, and telling
+him about some old fellow they heard the pilot speak about, called
+Norman Gadsden; they tell him if he catches him they'll sell him for
+a slave."
+
+"The question is one about which you need give yourself no concern.
+Our people are not so inhuman but that they will shelter a castaway
+sailor, and extend those comforts which are due from all humane
+people. The act under which seamen are imprisoned is the law
+provided to prohibit free niggers from entering our port, and, in my
+opinion, was brought into life for the sake of the fees. It's no
+more nor less than a tax and restriction upon commerce, and I doubt
+whether it was ever the intention of the framers that it should be
+construed in this manner. However, so far as your steward is con-
+cerned, the question of how far his color will make him amenable to
+the law will never be raised; the mere circumstance of his being a
+seaman in distress, thrown upon our sympathies, will be all you need
+among our hospitable people. I'm not aware of a precedent, but I
+will guaranty his safety from a knowledge of the feelings of our
+people. Our merchants are, with few exceptions, opposed to the law
+in this sense, but such is the power and control of a class of
+inexperienced legislators, prompted by a most trifling clique of
+office-holders, that their voice has no weight. I am opposed to this
+system of dragging people into courts of law upon every pretext. It
+is practised too much in our city for the good of its name."
+
+Upon this the Colonel and little George accompanied the Captain to
+his ship, and, expressing their heartfelt regrets at her appearance,
+bid him good-night-George promising to call upon him in the morning,
+and the Colonel charging him to give himself no trouble about his
+steward, that he would see Mr. Grimshaw that night, and make all
+things straight.
+
+Thus ended the Captain's first night in Charleston, and represented
+a picture from which he might have drawn conclusions somewhat
+different from the actual result. Alas! that all the good fellowship
+and pleasant associations of a people should be disgraced by an
+absurdity arising from their fears.
+
+The Colonel might have given many other instances equally as painful
+as that connected with the transportation of Jones and his family,
+and the fetters that were placed upon poor Lee. He might have
+instanced that of Malcome Brown, a wealthy, industrious, honest,
+high-minded, and straightforward man, now living at Aiken, in South
+Carolina. Brown conducts a profitable mechanical business, is
+unquestionably the best horticulturist in the State, and produces
+the best fruit brought to the Charleston market. What has he done to
+be degraded in the eyes of the law? Why is he looked upon as a
+dangerous citizen and his influence feared? Why is he refused a
+hearing through those laws which bad white men take the advantage
+of? He is compelled to submit to those which were made to govern the
+worst slaves! And why is he subjected to that injustice which gives
+him no voice in his own behalf when the most depraved whites are his
+accusers? Can it be the little crimp that is in his hair? for he has
+a fairer skin than those who make laws to oppress him. If he inhaled
+the free atmosphere from abroad, can it be that there is contagion
+in it, and Malcome Brown is the dreaded medium of its communication?
+And if the statement rung in our ears be true, "that the free
+colored of the North suffer while the slave is cared for and
+comfortable," why belie ourselves? Malcome's influence is, and
+always has been, with the whites, and manifestly good in the
+preservation of order and obedience on the part of the slaves. He
+pursues his avocation with spirit and enterprise, while he is
+subjected to menial and oppressive laws. His father visited New
+York, and was forbidden to return. He appealed again and again, set
+forth his claims and his integrity to the State and her laws, but
+all was of no avail. He was hopelessly banished, as it were, from
+ever seeing his son again, unless that son would sacrifice his
+property and submit to perpetual banishment from the State. If we
+reflect upon the many paternal associations that would gladden the
+hearts of father and child to meet in happy affection, we may
+realize the effect of that law which makes the separation painful
+and which denies even the death-bed scene its last cheering
+consolation.
+
+We have conversed with poor Brown on many occasions, found him a
+very intelligent man, full of humour, and fond of relating incidents
+in the history of his family-even proud of his good credit in
+Charleston. He frequently speaks of his father and the gratifying
+hope of meeting him at some future day, when he can give vent to his
+feelings in bursts of affection. He wants his father to return and
+live with him, because he says he knows they would be more happy
+together. "I suppose the law was made in justice, and it's right for
+me to submit to it," he would say when conversing upon its
+stringency; and it also seems a sort of comfort to him that he is
+not the only sufferer.
+
+If South Carolina would awake to her own interest, she would find
+more to fear from the stringency of her own laws than from the
+influence of a few men coming from abroad.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+THE PROSPECT DARKENING.
+
+
+
+
+
+AFTER the Colonel and little George left the Captain, as we have
+stated in the foregoing chapter, he descended into the cabin, and
+found Manuel sitting upon one of the lockers, apparently in great
+anxiety. He, however, waited for the mate to speak before he
+addressed the Captain. The mate awoke and informed the Captain that
+a slender, dark-complexioned man had been aboard a few minutes after
+he left, making particular inquiries about the steward; that he
+spoke like an official man, was dressed in black clothes, and wore
+spectacles.
+
+"I asked him if we'd have any trouble with Manuel, and tried to make
+him understand that he wasn't a black, and that our situation might
+excuse us from any annoyance through their peculiar laws. But the
+old chap seemed mighty stupid about every thing, and talked just as
+if he didn't know any thing about nothing. 'A nigger's a nigger in
+South Carolina,' said he dryly, and inquired for a quid of tobacco,
+which I handed him, and he took one big enough for six. Said I,
+'Mister, do you call a man a nigger what's a Portugee and a'n't
+black?' 'It depends on how he was born,' says he. 'Well, but ye
+can't make a white man a nigger nohow, whether it's in South
+Carolina or Scotland,' says I. 'Well, we don't stand upon such
+things here; we can show you niggers as white as you be, Mr. Mate,'
+says he. 'But, Mister, what's to do about our steward, that ye make
+yer inquiries about him; he ha'n't did nothing,' said I. 'Well, Mr.
+Mate; it's contrary to law to bring nigger stewards into our port.
+They're a bad set of fellows generally, and we claim the right to
+lock 'em up to insure their good behavior and keep their bad
+influence away from our slaves. 'Tis not my office. I observed your
+arrival and wrecked condition, and merely came to take a look,' said
+he. 'Well now, Mister, our steward thinks as much of himself as
+anybody and wouldn't mix with your niggers on any account. But
+Mister! won't it make a difference because we're cast upon your
+shore in distress,' says I. 'Not a whit! it's contrary to law, and
+the law's got nothing to do with wind and weather. We love the
+sovereignty of our law too well to make any discrimination. We're a
+hospitable people, and always give folks plenty to eat, but we never
+allow any favors in the law. I'll call and see you in the, morning,'
+said he, and away he went."
+
+This individual was Mr. Grimshaw, the principal mover of the powers
+that be, notwithstanding he asserted that it was not his office, and
+that he just walked round to take a look.
+
+During his visit on board, Manuel was absent on board a Boston bark,
+where he met a white steward, who gave him a sad picture of the
+Charleston jail and the cruel treatment that was inflicted upon
+prisoners there by starvation. He told him that he was once put in
+for a trifling offence, and nearly starved to death before he got
+out. "You will be sure to go there, Manuel," said he, "for they make
+no distinction; and if a man's a foreigner, and can't speak for
+himself, he'll stand no chance at all. I'd give 'em the slip afore
+I'd suffer such another punishment," he continued.
+
+This so worked upon the poor fellow's mind, that it became a matter
+of little moment whether he jumped overboard or remained on the
+ship. He waited until the mate had concluded, and commenced
+appealing to the Captain in a most pitiful manner. The disgrace of
+being imprisoned seemed worse than the punishment; and he did not
+seem to comprehend the intention that he should be imprisoned for no
+crime in the United States, when he had sailed around the world and
+visited a majority of its ports, both barbarous and civilized,
+without molestation. He wanted the Captain to pay him off and let
+him leave by some vessel in the morning. The Captain endeavored to
+soothe his fears by assuring him that there was no danger of his
+being imprisoned; that the people of Charleston had too much good
+feeling in them to be cruel to a distressed sailor; that the power
+of the consul was a sufficient guarantee of protection. "You are not
+among Patagonians, Manuel," said he. "There's no use of working your
+mind into a fever, you'll be as well taken care of here and be
+thought as much of as you would in London." This assurance had the
+effect to soothe his mind, upon which he left the cabin more at
+ease, and went into the forecastle to turn in with his little
+companion Tommy. Men had been detailed for the pumps as soon as the
+flood-tide made, and the Captain retired to his berth.
+
+It seemed there was a mutual understanding between the pilots and
+officers in regard to the arrival of colored stewards; and the
+pilot, after leaving the vessel, went directly to Mr. Grimshaw's
+office and reported a nut for him to crack: this brought him to the
+wharf to "look around."
+
+Early in the morning the crew were at their duty. The mate commenced
+giving orders to clear away the deck, and Manuel to make
+preparations for breakfast. He had scarcely commenced before two
+men, Messrs. Dunn and Dusenberry walked up and down the wharf for
+several minutes, then they would stand together and gaze as if to
+watch the approach of some vessel in the offing. At length,
+Dusenberry, seeing Manuel come to the gangway with a bucket in his
+hand, walked to her side, and, stepping on board, seized him by the
+collar, and drawing a paper from his pocket, said, "You're my
+prisoner! you must go to jail-come, be quick, sir; you must not stop
+to get your things; you must send for them after you're committed."
+
+The mate and several of the crew being near, at once gathered around
+him. At the same time Dunn, who was standing at the end of the wharf
+awaiting the result, thinking Dusenberry was opposed, came to his
+assistance. The officers and crew knew the respect due to the laws
+too well to oppose any obstacles to the constables in executing
+their duty. The mate, in a very polite manner, asked as a favor that
+they would leave the man a few minutes until the Captain came on
+deck. They yielded to his solicitation after a great deal of
+grumbling. The arrest made a deep feeling among the seamen, but none
+felt it more than little Tommy; he heard the noise upon deck, and
+came running with tears in his eyes, and cried, "Oh! Manuel, why
+Manuel, what are they going to take you away for? Won't I see you
+again, Manuel?" The little fellow's simplicity touched the feelings
+of all present. But the lame officer, Dunn, stood with a pair of
+handcuffs in his hand, as unmoved as a stoic, while Dusenberry
+expressed his impatience, and began to push the boy away, and motion
+to march him off.
+
+"Hold a bit!" said the mate. "The Captain will be on deck in a few
+minutes; he wants a word or two with you."
+
+"We can't stop unless we're compensated for our time. 'Tis no use to
+delay-'twon't do any good; he's a nigger to all intents and
+purposes. I know by the curl in his hair-they can't escape me, I've
+had too much to do with them!" said Dunn. "Yes, to be sure, I can
+tell a nigger by his ear, if his skin's as white as chalk!" said
+Dusenberry. "It's all gammon this bringing bright outlandish men
+here, and trying to pass them off for white folks. 'Twon't stick-you
+must come up and be registered, and you'll have a good time at the
+jail, my boy; there's plenty of bright gals in there, and you can
+have a wife, if you know how to do the courting."
+
+The Captain now came upon deck; and began to intercede, begging that
+they would not take Manuel away until he had seen the British
+Consul. "I know I can make every thing straight. There is no
+occasion to imprison my steward-he's neither a nigger nor a bad man;
+and I'll pledge you my honor that he shall not leave the ship, or
+even go upon the wharf, if you will only allow me to see the Consul
+before you take any further action," he continued.
+
+"That is beyond our power, sir; you must see the sheriff-you'll find
+him in his office bright and early. But you might as well put your
+appeal in your pocket, or send it to Queen Victoria, for all Consul
+Mathew can do for you. He's been kicking up a fuss for two years;
+but he might as well whistle agin a brickbat as to talk his nonsense
+about English niggers to South Carolina. He'll get tarred and
+feathered yet, if he a'n't mighty shy about his movements. Sorry,
+Captain, we can't accommodate you, but we're only actin' for the
+sheriff, and his orders are imperative to bring him right up. We
+must lock the fellow up. We don't make the law, nor we ha'n't the
+power to control it." Thus saying, Dunn took a little key from his
+pocket and begun to turn it in the handcuffs.
+
+"What!" said the Captain-"don't attempt to put them things on my
+man, upon your peril. Is that the way you treat a poor shipwrecked
+sailor in South Carolina, the State of boasted hospitality? No, sir!
+I will sacrifice my life before my man shall submit to such a
+thing," said the Captain, with his Scotch energy aroused.
+
+"Captain!" said Dunn, "we'd not be takin' the advantage of ye
+because ye're a stranger, but 'tis the law; and if we accommodates
+ye, sure it'll be at our own risk. But anyhow, Captain, ye'd be
+keepin' meself an' this gentleman a long time waiting, 'twouldn't
+be. amiss to be giving us the usual perquisite. You won't miss it,
+and we've a great deal to do for small fees, that niver compinsate
+for the accommodation we be's to give everybody-an' the loss of
+time's the loss of money."
+
+"Give you a perquisite!--no, indeed; I never pay for such favors.
+Wait a few moments; I will accompany you myself, if you will not
+take my honor for his good conduct on the way to prison," continued
+the Captain.
+
+"Captain, sure ye needn't trouble yerself anyhow; we'll take yer
+honor that he don't run away, and if he does ye'll stand the odds at
+the sheriff's. Sure a case would niver pass Mr. Grimshaw s
+observation; but to plase ye, and considering' the wreck, meself and
+Dusenberry 'll put him up without," said Dunn.
+
+During the conversation, Manuel plead hard to be heard before the
+Consul, having a mistaken idea that the Consul could protect him
+from all danger; and that if he could get a hearing before him, he
+was sure to be released. The Captain shook his hand and told him to
+be contented until the Consul's office opened, when he would come to
+the jail and see him. Manuel then turned to the crew, and shaking
+the hands of each, took his little bundle in one hand, and holding
+little Tommy by the other, (who accompanied him to the head of the
+wharf,) was soon out of sight.
+
+But will the reader believe what was the practice of these petty
+officers? We can assure them that such instances as the one we shall
+relate are not only practised in Charleston to an unlimited extent,
+but the fact is well known to both magistrates and the public; the
+former treat it as moonshine, and the latter rail against it, but
+never take proper action.
+
+Scarcely had little Tommy left them at the head of the wharf, before
+they intimated that it would be well to consider a morning dram. To
+this end, they walked into a "Dutch corner shop," and passing into
+the back room, gave sundry insinuations that could not be
+misunderstood. "Well! come, who pays the shot?" said Dunn, stepping
+up to the counter, and crooking his finger upon his nose at a
+dumpling-faced Dutchman, who stood behind the counter, waiting for
+his man to name it. The Dutchman was very short and very thick,
+leaving the impression that he had been very much depressed in his
+own country when young. He rubbed his hands and flirted his fingers
+in motion of anxiety, "Every ting vat de shentleman vant him--dare
+notin like to my zin and brondty vat him got mit ze zity," said
+Dutchy.
+
+"Gentlemen, I should be glad to have you drink with me, if it be
+proper to ask," said Manuel
+
+"Oh! yes--certainly, yes!--just what we come for, something to cut
+away the cobwebs--'twouldn't do to go out in the morning fog without
+a lining," said Dunn.
+
+"Name it! name it! shentlemen," exclaimed the Dutchman, as he rapped
+his fingers upon the counter, and seemed impatient to draw forth his
+filthy stuff. They named their drinks, each with a different name.
+Manuel not being a Charleston graduate in the profession of mixing
+drinks and attaching slang names to them, Mr. Dusenberry undertook
+to instruct him in a choice. The Dutchman was an adept at mixing,
+and the "morning pulls" were soon set out to the extreme
+satisfaction of Dunn and Dusenberry. "All right! tip her down, my
+old fellow; none o' yer screwed faces over such liquor as that. We
+drink on the legitimate, in Charleston, and can put it down until we
+see stars," said Dusenberry, addressing himself to Manuel, who was
+making a wry face, while straining to swallow the cut-throat stuff.
+
+Dusenberry now left Manuel in charge of Dunn, saying he was going
+out to attend to some business. Manuel drew from his pocket a
+quarter of a Colombian doubloon, and throwing it upon the counter,
+told the Dutchman to give him change. The Dutchman picked it up,
+turned it over several times, and squinting at it, inquired, in a
+very unpretending manner, what its value was. He knew already, yet
+this was only done to try Manuel. At the same moment he winked to
+Dunn, who, stepping up, gave it a significant toss upon the counter.
+"The divil a bit more than two dollars; all right, Swizer," said he.
+
+"'Tis four dollar, West Inge-I want my change," said Manuel,
+shrugging his shoulders. "I no want no more than my own; and no man
+to cheat-e me."
+
+"Don't be bothering with your four dollars-sure ye a'n't in the West
+Inges now; and money's plenty in Charleston, and I can't bring up so
+much-half so much. Don't be bothering with yer West Inge nonsense.
+If ye try to raise a fuss here, I'll make the Captain suffer. Ye
+must learn that it won't do for a nigger to dispute a white man in
+Charleston; we'd twitch ye up by the same law; we'd put it to our
+own niggers, and ye'd git trised up, and about fifty paddles on yer
+bare butt." The Dutchman put down a dollar and seventy cents, but
+Manuel refused to take it up; when this fellow, Dunn, pretending to
+be the friend of Manuel, held out his hand, and telling the
+bar-keeper to put another dollar, which he did, he passed it
+hurriedly into Manuel's hand, and making a pass, told him to put it
+into his pocket.
+
+It was now about good business time for the Dutchman, and his
+customers were coming in with their bottles and pots in great
+numbers. The place was a little filthy hole, very black and dirty,
+about twelve feet long, and seven feet wide, with a high board
+counter almost in the centre. The only stock-in-trade that decorated
+it, was a few barrels of lager beer; several kegs, with names to set
+forth the different qualities of liquors painted upon them; a bushel
+basket about half full of onions, and a few salt fish in a keg that
+stood by the door. Around the room were several benches similar to
+those in guard-houses. Upon two of them were stretched two ragged
+and filthy-looking negroes, who looked as if they had been spending
+the night in debauchery. Dunn, as if to show his authority, limped
+toward them, and commenced fledging their backs with his hickory
+stick in a most unmerciful manner, until one poor old fellow, with a
+lame hand, cried out for mercy at the top of his voice.
+
+"It's a bad business keeping these niggers here all night,
+Swizer-you know I've done the clean thing with you several times,"
+said Dunn, pointing his finger at the Dutchman; who winked, and
+coming from behind the counter, slipped something into his hand, and
+stepping to the door, assumed some threatning language against the
+negroes, should they ever came back to his store. A large portion of
+those who came for liquor were negroes, who looked as if they were
+parting with their last cent for stimulant, for they were ragged and
+dirty, and needed bread more than liquor. Their condition seemed
+pitiful in the extreme, and yet the Dutch "corner-shop keeper"
+actually got rich from their custom, and so craving was he upon
+their patronage, that he treated them with much more courtesy than
+his white customers.
+
+These "Dutch corner-shops" are notorious places in Charleston, and
+are discountenanced by respectable citizens, because they become the
+rendezvous of "niggers," who get into bad habits and neglect their
+masters' or mistresses' business. Yet the keepers exert such an
+influence at elections, that the officials not only fear them, but
+in order to secure their favors, leave their rascality unmolested.
+Well might a writer in the Charleston Courier of August 31, 1852,
+say--
+
+"We were astonished, with many others, at the sweeping charges made
+in the resolutions passed at the HUTCHINSON meeting at Hatch's Hall,
+and were ready to enlist at once to lend our voice to turn out an
+'administration' that for two years permitted 'moral sentiment to be
+abandoned,' 'truthfulness disregarded,' 'reverence for religion
+obliterated,' 'protection to religious freedom refused,'
+'licentiousness allowed,' 'and a due administration for vice,
+neglected.'" These charges stand unrefuted, and with but one or two
+exceptions, we have never known one of those unlawful corner shops
+prosecuted by the present administration. And those single instances
+only where they were driven to notice the most flagrant abuses.
+
+It is strictly "contrary to law in Charleston," to sell liquor to a
+negro without an order from a white man; the penalty being fine and
+imprisonment. Yet, so flagrant has become the abuse, that it is
+notorious that hush-money is paid by a certain class of Dutch
+liquor-sellers to the officers. In nearly all the streets of
+Charleston, where there is a shanty or nook large enough to hold a
+counter and some tumblers, these wretches may be found dealing out
+their poisonous drugs to a poor, half-starved class of negroes, who
+resort to all kinds of dishonest means to get money to spend at
+their counters. These places are nearly all kept by foreigners,
+whose merciless avarice scruples at nothing, however mean. They soon
+become possessed of considerable means, and through their courtesy
+and subserviency to the negro-for they are the only class of whites
+that will beg his pardon, if they have offended him-carry on a sort
+of active rivalry with each other for his custom. It is from these
+miserable hells that seven-tenths of the crimes arise for which the
+poor negro is dragged to the work-house and made to suffer under the
+paddle.
+
+And yet these very men, whose connivance at vice and crime is
+disregarded by the law, rise and take position in society-not only
+entering into more respectable business-but joining in that phalanx
+who are seeking the life-blood of the old Southerner, and like a
+silent moth, working upon his decay. There is a deep significance in
+the answer so frequently given in Charleston to the interrogatory,
+"Who lives in that splendid dwelling-it seems to have been the
+mansion of a prince, but is somewhat decayed?"
+
+"Oh! bless me, yes! It was once the mansion of the So-and-sos, one
+of the first families, but they're very poor now. Mr.
+What-you-may-call-em owns it now-they say he didn't get it honestly.
+He kept a little grog-shop on the Bay, or sold bacon and whisky on
+the Bay, and made awful charges against poor So-and-so, and after a
+long trial in Chancery he got his house. He's a big fellow; now, I
+tell you, and is going to fit the house up for himself!"
+
+Dunn told Manuel to be seated, that there was no occasion for
+hurrying; it would be all right if he got to the sheriffs office at
+nine o'clock; and then commenced descanting upon the fine time he
+would have at the jail. "There's a right good lot of comrades there,
+me boy; ye'll have fiddling and dancing, plenty of gals, and a jolly
+time; and ye a'n't a criminal, ye know, so it won't be any thing at
+all, only keep up a stiff under-lip. Come, let us take another
+drink; I feel mighty husky this morning!" said he.
+
+Just at this time Dusenberry re-entered, puffing and blowing as if
+he had been engaged in a foot-race. "Another bird for old Grimshaw,
+at Commercial Wharf! I know'd she had one aboard, 'cause I seed him
+from the wharf," said he, in perfect ecstasy, pulling out a pencil
+and making a note in a little book.
+
+"Don't be a child," said Dunn. "Come, we have just proposed another
+drink; you join of course; ye niver says no,--eh, Duse?" They
+stepped to the counter, and Dunn, again, pointing his finger upon
+his nose at the Dutchman, who stood with his hands spread upon the
+counter, called for gin and bitters, Stoughton light. Turning to
+Manuel, who was sitting upon a bench with his head reclined upon his
+hand, apparently in deep meditation, he took him by the collar in a
+rude manner, and dragging him to the counter, said, "Come, by the
+pipers, rouse up your spirits, and don't be sulking, my old
+Portugee; take another O-be-joyful, and it'll put ye all right, and
+ye'll dance a hornpipe like a jim-crack."
+
+"Excuse me, sir; I think I have taken enough; do, please, either
+take me back to my vessel, or where you are going to. This is no
+place for me!" said Manuel.
+
+"Sure, what signifies; don't be talking your botheration here; a
+nigger musn't sauce a white man. Come, there's no use backing out;
+you must take a glass of Swizer's lager beer," said Dunn.
+
+Manuel looked around him, and then closing up very reluctantly, the
+Dutchman filled his glass with frothy beer, and the three touched
+glasses and drank. They then retired to a bench and commenced
+discussing the propriety of some point of their official privileges,
+while Manuel was left standing at the counter.
+
+"Who pay de drink vat shu get?" inquired the Dutchman, anxious to
+serve two little niggers who had just come in with bottles in their
+hands.
+
+"It was our friend's treat; come, my good fellow, do the clean thing
+according to Southern science. We'll put a good word in for you to
+the jailer; you won't lose nothing by it," said Dusenberry.
+
+"My friends, I work hard for my money, and have none to spend
+foolishly. The small amount is of little consequence, but I would
+much sooner make you a present of it, than to be drugged by
+pretence. I've no desire to indulge the propensities of others.
+Whatever you are going to do with me, do it; and let me know my
+fate. I am sick and fatigued, and have need for the doctor. Take me
+to a prison or where you please. I have done no crime; I want sleep,
+not punishment. Next time I shipwrecked, I get plank and go
+overboard 'fore I cum to Charleston." So saying, he pulled out fifty
+cents and threw it upon the counter, and the Dutchman swept it into
+the drawer, as if it was all right, and "just the change."
+
+"Shut up, you black rascal, you; you musn't talk that way in South
+Carolina; we'll have you stretched on the frame and paddled for
+insolence to a white man. D--n me, if you're in such a hurry for it,
+just come along," said Dusenberry; and reaching his hand over to
+Dunn, took the handcuffs from him and attempted to put them on
+Manuel's wrists. The poor fellow struggled and begged for more than
+ten minutes, and was wellnigh overpowering them, when Dusenberry
+drew a long dirk-knife from his bosom, and holding it in a
+threatening attitude at his breast, uttered one of those fierce
+yells such as are common to slave-hunters, whose business it is to
+hunt and run down runaway niggers with bloodhounds. "Submit, you
+black villain, or I'll have your heart's blood; bring a rope, and
+we'll trise him up here. Jump, be quick, Swizer!" said he,
+addressing himself to the Dutchman. The Dutchman ran into the front
+apartment; brought out a cord similar to a clothes-line; and
+commenced to undo it.
+
+"Do you give up now?" said Dusenberry, still holding the knife
+pointed at him. Manuel was in the habit of carrying a poniard when
+on shore in foreign countries, and put his hand to his breast-pocket
+to feel for it. He remembered that he had left it in his chest, and
+that resistance would be useless against a posse giving expression
+to such hostility to him. The shackles were put upon his hands with
+ruffianly force.
+
+"Oh! am I a man, or am I a brute? What have I done to receive such
+treatment? May God look down upon me and forgive me my
+transgressions; for in his hands are my rights, and he will give me
+justice," said Manuel, looking his cruel torturers in the face.
+
+"A man! No, by heavens, you're a nigger; an' it's that we'd he
+teaching you! Come, none of yer sermons here, trot off! We'll give
+you a handkerchief to cover your hands, if you're so d--d delicate
+about walking through the streets," said Dunn, throwing him an old
+red handkerchief, and marching him along through Broad street.
+Dusenberry now left him entirely in the charge of Dunn; while, as he
+said, he went to Adger's Wharf to keep his eye on another vessel
+that was approaching the dock. The tricks of this man Dunn were well
+known to those, connected with the police and sheriff's office; but,
+instead of being displaced for his many offences, he was looked upon
+by them as the best officer upon the rolls; and in fishing for
+mischievous niggers he was held as a perfect paragon. In this
+instance he was not contented with the outrages he had inflicted
+upon Manuel at the Dutch grog-shop, which he had forced him into,
+but he would stop in the public street to hold conversation with
+every cove he met, and keep the poor man standing for public gaze,
+like chained innocence awaiting the nod of a villain. The picture
+would have been complete, if a monster in human form were placed in
+the foreground applying the lash, according to the statute laws of
+South Carolina.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+THE SHERIFF'S OFFICE.
+
+
+
+
+
+IT is nine o'clock, on the morning of the 24th March, 1852. Manuel
+was marched into the sheriff's office, situated in the court-house,
+on the corner of Broad and Meeting streets. A large table stood in
+the centre of the room, covered with sundry old papers and an
+inkstand. At one side was an old sofa, bearing strong evidence of
+its being worn out at the expense of the State. A few pine-wood and
+painted book-stands, several tip-staffs, old broken-backed chairs,
+and last, but not least, a wood-sawyer's buck-saw, stood here and
+there in beautiful disorder around the room; while, as if to display
+the immense importance of the office, a "cocked" hat with the
+judicial sword hung conspicuously above the old sofa. A door opened
+upon the left hand, leading into the clerk's office, where the books
+and archives of the office were kept. Mr. Kanapeaux, the incumbent,
+exhibited a great deal of good feeling, which it would have lost the
+sheriff none of his reputation to pattern after, and kept his office
+in very respectable order.
+
+"Come in 'ere, Manwell, or whatever yer name is," said Dunn, as he
+led the way into the presence of Mr. Grimshaw, the lean,
+haggard-looking man we have before described. His dark, craven
+features, as he sat peering through his glasses at the morning news,
+gave him the appearance of a man of whom little was, to be expected
+by those who had the misfortune to fall into his hands.
+
+"Ah! Dunn, you are the best officer in the city; 'pon my soul, these
+fellows can't escape you! Where did you pick up that nigger?" said
+he, with a look of satisfaction.
+
+"A fat fee case, Mr. Grimshaw, 'contrary to law;' he's a Portugee
+nigger. Never had so much trouble with a nigger in my life; I didn't
+know but the fellow was going to preach a sermon. The Captain-he
+belongs to a wrecked Englishman-wanted to come the gammon game with
+him, and pass him for a white man; but sure he couldn't come that
+game over meself and Duse, anyhow," said Dunn.
+
+Without saying a word, Manuel stood up before his accusers, upon
+this strange charge of "contrary to law."
+
+As he looked upon his accusers, he said, "What have I done to suffer
+a murderer's fate? Am I to be sold as a slave, because of the
+visitation of God? I have done no murder! No!--nor have I stolen in
+your land! and why did these men decoy me into"--
+
+"Silence! silence! You are in the sheriff's office," said Dunn,
+pointing his finger at his nose. "You can't come your John Bull
+nigger in South Carolina."
+
+This brought the sheriff's clerk to the door that led into the
+passage. "Dunn, I have warned you about these things several times;
+the public are getting wind of them; they'll bring this office into
+disrepute yet. You ought to know what effect the association of
+officials with these 'corner-shop keepers' is already having in the
+community," said he.
+
+"How the divil do ye know what yer talking about; sure it's his
+honor's bisniss, and not yours at all, at all," said Dunn,
+addressing himself to Mr. Kanapeaux, and then looking at Mr.
+Grimshaw.
+
+"Mr. Kanapeaux, you must not interfere with the officers and their
+duty; attend to your business, and get, your book ready to register
+this nigger-boy," said Grimshaw.
+
+"Well, now, my good fellow," continued Grimshaw, "I dislike this
+business very much; it don't pay me enough for all the bother I have
+with it. 'Tis just a little filtering of fees, which makes the duty
+of my office exceedingly annoying. But we must respect the law. We
+do these things to protect our institutions and make them as light
+as possible. I might give you a great deal of trouble; I have the
+power, but I make it a point to consider men in your case, and we'll
+make you so comfortable that you won't think of being imprisoned.
+You must understand that it is 'contrary to law' to come among our
+niggers in this way; it gives them fanciful ideas. There's such an
+infernal imperfect state of things as these abolitionists are
+getting every thing into, behooves us to watch the communications
+which are going on between, designing people and our slaves. We are
+a hospitable people--the world knows that--and have a religious
+respect for our laws, which we enforce without respect to persons.
+We'd like to let you go about the city, but then it's 'contrary to
+law.' Make up your mind, my good fellow, that you are among humane
+people, who will seek to benefit you among men of your class. Make
+yourself happy--and look upon me as a friend, and you will never be
+deceived. I control the jail, and my prisoners are as much attached
+to me as they would be to a father."
+
+"It must be humanity that puts these symbols of ignominy upon my
+hands," said Manuel; "that confines me in a dungeon lest I should
+breathe a word of liberty to ears that know it only as a fable."
+
+Nobody had asked him to sit down, and, feeling the effect of his
+sickness and fatigue, he turned around as if to look for something
+to rest against. "You must not sit down,--take off your hat!" said
+Grimshaw.
+
+The poor fellow made an effort, but could not effect it with the
+fetters on his hands; at which, Dunn stepped up, and snatching it
+from his head, flung it upon the floor. "You should learn manners,
+my good fellow," said Grimshaw, "when you come into a sheriff's
+office. It's a place of importance, and people always pay respect to
+it when they come into it; a few months in Charleston would make you
+as polite as our niggers."
+
+"Had you not better take the irons off the poor fellow's hands?--he
+looks as if he was tired out," said Mr. Kanapeaux, the clerk, who
+again came to the door and looked upon Manuel with an air of pity.
+The words of sympathy touched his feelings deeply; it was a simple
+word in his favour, so different from what he had met since he left
+the vessel, that he felt a kind friend had spoken in his behalf, and
+he gave way to his feeling in a gush of tears.
+
+"Good suggestion, Mr. Kanapeaux!" said Grimshaw. "Better take 'em
+off, Mr. Dunn; I don't think he'll give you any more difficulty. He
+seems like a 'likely fellow,' and knows, if he cuts up any nigger
+rascality in Charleston, he'll be snapped up. Now, my good fellow,
+put on your best-natured countenance, and stand as straight as a
+ramrod. Mr. Kanapeaux, get your book ready to register him,"
+continued Grimshaw.
+
+Manuel now stood up under a slide, and his height and general
+features were noted in the following manner, in order to appease
+that sovereign dignity of South Carolina law, which has so many
+strange devices to show its importance:--"Contrary to Law."
+Violation of the Act of 1821, as amended, &c. &c. Manuel Pereira vs.
+State of South Carolina, Steward on board British Brig Janson,
+Captain Thompson. Entered 24th March, 1852.
+
+Height, 5 feet 81/2 inches.
+
+Complexion, light olive, (bright.)
+
+Features, sharp and aquiline.
+
+[Hair and eyes, dark and straight; the former inclined to curl.]
+
+General remarks:--Age, twenty-nine; Portuguese by birth; speaks
+rather broken, but politely; is intelligent, well formed, and good
+looking. Fees to Sheriff:
+
+To arrest, $2-Registry, $2 $4 00 To Recog. $1.31-Constable $1 2 31
+To Commitment and discharge, 1 00
+
+$7 31
+
+Jail fees to be added when discharged.
+
+After these remarks were duly entered, and Mr. Grimshaw read another
+lecture to him on the importance of South Carolina law, and the
+kindness he would receive at his hands if he made himself con-
+tented, he was told that he could go and be committed. The poor
+fellow had stood up until he was nearly exhausted; yet, it was not
+enough to gratify the feelings of that miserable miscreant, Dunn.
+Scarcely had he left the sheriff's office, or passed two squares
+from the court-house, before he entered another Dutch grog-shop, a
+little more respectable in appearance-but not in character. They
+entered by a side door, which led into a back apartment provided
+with a table and two wooden settees. As Dunn entered, he was
+recognised by two negro-fellows, who were playing dominoes at the
+table. They arose and ran through the front store, into the street,
+as if some evil spirit had descended among them. The Dutchman sprang
+for the dominoes, and quickly thrust them into a tin measure which
+he secreted under the counter.
+
+"Ah! Drydez!" said Dunn; "you vagabond, you; up to the old tricks
+again? Ye Dutchmen are worse than the divil! It's meself'll make ye
+put a five for that. Come, fork it over straight, and don't be
+muttering yer Dutch lingo!"
+
+"Vat zue drink mit me dis morning? Misser Dunz' te best fellow vat
+comez in my shop," said Drydez.
+
+"Ah! stop yer botheration, and don't be comin' yer Dutch logger over
+an Irishman! put down the five dollars, and we'll take the drinks
+presently; meself and me friend here'll drink yer health," said
+Dunn, pointing to Manuel, who shook his head as much as to decline.
+The Dutchman now opened his drawer, and rolling a bill up in his
+fingers, passed it as if unobserved into the hands of Dunn.
+
+"Now, Drydez," said Dunn, "if ye want to do the clean thing, put a
+couple of brandy smashes-none of your d--d Dutch cut-throat brandy-
+the best old stuff. Come, me old chuck, (turning to Manuel and
+pulling him by the Whiskers,) cheer up, another good stiff'ner will
+put you on your taps again. South Carolina's a great State, and a
+man what can't be happy in Charleston, ought to be put through by
+daylight by the abolitionists."
+
+The Dutchman soon prepared the smashes, and supplying them with
+straws, put them upon the table, and seated chairs close at hand.
+"Excuse me!" said Manuel, "I've drunk enough already, and should
+like to lie down. I am unwell, and feel the effect of what I have
+already taken. I am too feeble. Pray tell me how far the prison is
+from here, and I will go myself."
+
+"Go, is it?--the divil a go ye'll go from this until ye drink the
+smash. None of yer Portugee independence here. We larn niggers the
+politeness of gintlemen in Charleston, me buck!" and seizing him by
+the collar, dragged him to the table, then grasping the tumbler with
+the other hand, he held it before his face. "Do you see that? and,
+bedad, ye'll drink it, and not be foolin', or I'd put the contents
+in your phiz," said he.
+
+Manuel took the glass, while the Dutchman stood chuckling over the
+very nice piece of fun, and the spice of Mr. Dunn's wit, as he
+called it. "Vat zu make him vat'e no vants too? You doz make me
+laugh so ven zu comes 'ere, I likes to kilt myself," said Drydez.
+
+A bright mulatto-fellow was now seen in the front store, making
+quizzical signs to the Dutchman; who understanding its
+signification, lost no time in slipping into his pocket a tumbler
+nearly half full of brandy and water; and stepping behind the
+division door, passed it slily to the mulatto, who equally as slily
+passed it down his throat; and putting a piece of money into the
+Dutchman's hand, stepped up to the counter, as if to wait for his
+change. "All right!" said the Dutchman, looking around at his
+shelves, and then again under the counter.
+
+"No so!" said the mulatto; "I want fourpence; you done' dat befor'
+several times; I wants my money."
+
+"Get out of my store, or I'll kick you out," said the Dutchman, and
+catching up a big club, ran from behind the counter and commenced
+belaboring the negro over the head in a most unmerciful manner. At
+this, the mulatto retreated into the lane, and with a volley of the
+vilest epithets, dared the Dutchman to come out, and he would whip
+him.
+
+Dunn ran to the scene, and ordered the negro to be off, and not use
+such language to a white man, that it was "contrary to law," and he
+would take him to the workhouse.
+
+"Why, massa, I knows what 'em respect white men what be gemmen like
+yersef, but dat Dutchman stand da'h a'n't no gentlem', he done gone
+tieffe my money seven time; an' I whip him sure-jus' lef' him. come
+out here. I doesn't care for true, and God saw me, I be whip at the
+wukhouse next minute. He tief, an' lie, an 'e cheat me." The
+Dutchman stood at the door with the big stick in his hand-the negro
+in the middle of the lane with his fists in a pugilistic attitude,
+daring and threatening, while the limping Dunn stood by the side of
+the Dutchman, acting as a mediator. Manuel, taking advantage of the
+opportunity, emptied his tumbler down a large opening in the
+floor.
+
+It is a notorious fact in Charleston, that although the negro,
+whether he be a black or white one, is held in abject obedience to
+the white man proper, no matter what his grade may be, yet such is
+the covetous and condescending character of these groggery keepers,
+that they become courteous to the negro and submit to an equality of
+sociability. The negro, taking advantage of this familiarity, will
+use the most insulting and abusive language to this class of
+Dutchmen, who, either through cowardice, or fear of losing their
+trade, never resent it. We may say, in the language of Dunn, when he
+was asked if negroes had such liberties with white men in
+Charleston, "A nigger knows a Dutch shopkeeper better than he knows
+himself-a nigger dare not speak that way to anybody else."
+
+The Dutchman gets a double profit from the negro, and with it
+diffuses a double vice among them, for which they have to suffer the
+severest penalty. It is strictly "contrary to law" to purchase any
+thing from a negro without a ticket to sell it, from his master. But
+how is this regarded? Why, the shopkeeper foregoes the ticket,
+encourages the warehouse negro to steal, and purchases his stealings
+indiscriminately, at about one-half their value. We might enumerate
+fifty different modes practised by "good" legal voting
+citizens--totally regardless of the law--and exerting an influence
+upon the negro tenfold more direful than that which could possibly
+arise from the conversation of a few respectable men belonging to a
+friendly nation.
+
+Dunn, after driving the mulatto man from the door and upbraiding the
+Dutchman for his cowardice, returned to the table, and patting
+Manuel upon the back, drank the balance of his smash, saying, "Come,
+me good fellow, we must do the thing up brown, now; we've got the
+Dutchman nailed on his own hook. We must have another horn; it's
+just the stuff in our climate; the 'Old Jug's' close by, and they'll
+be makin' a parson of you when you get there. We've had a right
+jolly time; and ye can't wet your whistle when ye're fernint the
+gates."
+
+"I don't ask such favors, and will drink no more," said Manuel.
+
+"Fill her up, Drydez! fill her up! two more smashes-best brandy and
+no mistake. You must drink another, my old chuck-we'll bring the
+pious notions out o' ye in Charleston," said Dunn, turning around to
+Manuel.
+
+The Dutchman filled the glasses, and Dunn, laying his big hickory
+stick upon the counter, took one in each hand, and going directly to
+Manuel, "There, take it, and drink her off-no humbugging; yer mother
+niver gave such milk as that," said he.
+
+"Excuse me, sir; I positively will not!" said Manuel, and no sooner
+had he lisped the words, than Dunn threw the whole contents in his
+face. Enraged at such outrageous conduct, the poor fellow could
+stand it no longer, and fetched him a blow that levelled him upon
+the floor.
+
+The Dutchman ran to the assistance of Dunn, and succeeded in
+relieving him from his unenviable situation. Not satisfied, however,
+they succeeded, after a hard struggle, in getting him upon the
+floor, when the Dutchman-after calling the assistance of a miserable
+negro, held him down while Dunn beat him with his stick. His cries
+of "Murder" and "Help" resounded throughout the neighbourhood, and
+notwithstanding they attempted to gag him, brought several persons
+to the spot. Among them was a well-known master builder, in
+Charleston-a very muscular and a very humane man. The rascality of
+Dunn was no new thing to him, for he had had practical
+demonstrations of it upon his own negroes,--who had been enticed
+into the "corner shops" for the double purpose of the Dutchmen
+getting their money, and the officers getting hush-money from the
+owner.
+
+The moment he saw Dunn, he exclaimed, "Ah! you vagabond!" and
+springing with the nimbleness of a cat, struck the Dutchman a blow
+that sent him measuring his length, into a corner among a lot of
+empty boxes; then seizing Dunn by the collar, he shook him like a
+puppy, and brought him a slap with his open hand that double-dyed
+his red face, and brought a stream of claret from his nose; while
+the miserable nigger, who had been struggling to hold Manuel down,
+let go his hold, and ran as if his life was in danger. The scene was
+disgusting in the extreme. Manuel arose, with his face cut in
+several places, his clothes bedaubed with filth from the floor, and
+his neck and shirt-bosom covered with blood; while the aghast
+features of Dunn, with his red, matted hair, and his glaring,
+vicious eyes, bespattered with the combined blood of his victim and
+his own nasal organ, gave him the most fiendish look imaginable.
+
+The gentleman, after reprimanding the Dutchman for keeping up these
+miserable practices, which were disgracing the community, and
+bringing suffering, starvation, and death upon the slaves, turned to
+Dunn, and addressed him. "You are a pretty officer of the law! A
+villain upon the highway-a disgrace to your color, and a stain upon
+those who retain you in office. A man who has violated the peace and
+every principle of honest duty, a man who every day merits the worst
+criminal punishment, kept in the favor of the municipal department,
+to pollute its very name. If there is a spark of honesty left in the
+police department, I will use my influence to stop your conduct. The
+gallows will be your doom yet. You must not think because you are
+leagued in the same traffic."
+
+Dunn kept one of the worst and most notorious drinking-shops in
+Charleston, but, to reconcile his office with that strict
+requirement which never allowed any thing "contrary to law" in
+Charleston, he made his wife a "free trader." This special set of
+South Carolina may in effect be classed among its many singular
+laws. It has an exceedingly accommodating effect among bankrupt
+husbands, and acts as a masked battery for innumerable sins in a
+business or official line. It so happens, once in a while, that one
+of the "fair free dealers" gets into limbo through the force of some
+ruthless creditor; and the "Prison Bounds Act," being very delicate
+in its bearings, frequently taxes the gallantry of the chivalrous
+gentlemen of the Charleston bar. that you are to go unpunished. And
+you, Drydez," said he, turning to the Dutchman, "I shall enter you
+upon the information docket, as soon as I go down into the city."
+
+"Zeu may tu vat zeu plas mit me-te mayor bees my friend, an' he
+knowz vot me ams. Yuz sees zel no bronty, no zin! Vot yu to mit de
+fine, ah?" * * *
+
+"I'd like to see you do that same agin Mr.--. It wouldn't be savin'
+yerself a pace-warrant, and another for assault and battery! Sure
+magistrate Gyles is a first-rate friend of me own, and he'd not
+suffer me imposed on. The d--d nigger was obstinate and wouldn't go
+to jail," said Dunn in a cowardly, whimpering manner.
+
+"Oh yez, me heard mit 'im swore, vat he no go to zale!" rejoined the
+Dutchman anxiously.
+
+"Tell me none of your lies," said he; "you are both the biggest
+rascals in town, and carry on your concerted villany as boldly as if
+you had the control of the city in your hands." Manuel was trembling
+under the emotions of grief and revenge. His Portuguese blood would
+have revenged itself at the poniard's point, but fortunately he had
+left it in his chest. He saw that he had a friend at his hand, and
+with the earnestness of a child, resigned himself to his charge.
+
+In a few minutes quiet was produced, and the gentleman expressing a
+desire to know how the trouble originated, inquired of Manuel how it
+was brought about. But no sooner had he commenced his story, than he
+was interrupted by Dunn asserting his right, according to the laws
+of South Carolina, to make his declaration, which could not be
+refuted by the negro's statement, or even testimony at law; and in
+another moment jumped up, and taking Manuel by the collar, commanded
+him to come along to jail; and turning to the gentleman, dared him
+to interfere with his duty.
+
+"I know how you take people to jail, very well. I'll now see that
+you perform that duty properly, and not torture prisoners from place
+to place before you get there. You inflict a worse punishment in
+taking poor, helpless people to jail, than they suffer after they
+get there!" said he; and immediately joined Manuel and walked to the
+jail with him.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+THE OLD JAIL.
+
+
+
+
+
+THERE are three institutions in Charleston-either of which would be
+a stain upon the name of civilization-standing as emblems of the
+time-established notions of a people, and their cherished love for
+the ancestral relics of a gone-by age. Nothing could point with more
+unerring aim than these sombre monuments do, to the distance behind
+the age that marks the thoughts and actions of the Charlestonians.
+They are the poor-house, hospital, and jail; but as the latter only
+pertains to our present subject, we prefer to speak of it alone, and
+leave the others for another occasion. The workhouse may be said to
+form an exception-that being a new building, recently erected upon a
+European plan. It is very spacious, with an extravagant exterior,
+surmounted by lofty semi-Gothic watch-towers, similar to the old
+castles upon the Rhine. So great was the opposition to building this
+magnificent temple of a workhouse, and so inconsistent, beyond the
+progress of the age, was it viewed by the "manifest ancestry," that
+it caused the mayor his defeat at the following hustings. "Young
+Charleston" was rebuked for its daring progress, and the building is
+marked by the singular cognomen of "Hutchinson's Folly." What is
+somewhat singular, this magnificent building is exclusively for
+negroes. One fact will show how progressive has been the science of
+law to govern the negro, while those to which the white man is
+subjected are such as good old England conferred upon them some
+centuries ago. For felonious and burglarious offences, a white man
+is confined in the common jail; then dragged to the market-place,
+stripped, and whipped, that the negroes may laugh "and go see buckra
+catch it;" while a negro is sent to the workhouse, confined in his
+cell for a length of time, and then whipped according to modern
+science,--but nobody sees it except by special permission. Thus the
+negro has the advantage of science and privacy.
+
+The jail is a sombre-looking building, with every mark of antiquity
+standing boldly outlined upon its exterior. It is surrounded by a
+high brick wall, and its windows are grated with double rows of
+bars, sufficiently strong for a modern penitentiary. Altogether, its
+dark, gloomy appearance strikes those who approach it, with the
+thought and association of some ancient cruelty. You enter through
+an iron-barred door, and on both sides of a narrow portal leading to
+the right are four small cells and a filthy-looking kitchen,
+resembling an old-fashioned smoke-house. These cells are the
+debtors'; and as we were passing out, after visiting a friend, a
+lame "molatto-fellow" with scarcely rags to cover his nakedness, and
+filthy beyond description, stood at what was called the kitchen
+door. "That poor dejected object," said our friend, "is the cook. He
+is in for misdemeanor-one of the peculiar shades of it, for which a
+nigger is honored with the jail." "It seems, then, that cooking is a
+punishment in Charleston, and the negro is undergoing the penalty,"
+said we. "Yes!" said our friend; "but the poor fellow has a
+sovereign consolation, which few niggers in Charleston can boast
+of-and none of the prisoners here have-he can get enough to eat."
+
+The poor fellow held out his hand as we passed him, and said,
+"Massa, gin poor Abe a piece o' 'bacca'?" We freely gave him all in
+our possession.
+
+On the left side, after passing the main iron door, are the jailer's
+apartments. Passing through another iron door, you ascend a narrow,
+crooked stairs and reach the second story; here are some eight or
+nine miserable cells-some large and some small-badly ventilated, and
+entirely destitute of any kind of furniture: and if they are badly
+ventilated for summer, they are equally badly provided with means to
+warm them in winter. In one of these rooms were nine or ten persons,
+when we visited it; and such was the morbid stench escaping from it,
+that we were compelled to put our handkerchiefs to our faces. This
+floor is appropriated for such crimes as assault and battery;
+assault and battery, with intent to kill; refractory seamen;
+deserters; violating the statutes; suspicion of arson and murder;
+witnesses; all sorts of crimes, varying from the debtor to the
+positive murderer, burglar, and felon. We should have enumerated,
+among the rest, all stewards, (colored,) whether foreign or
+domestic, who are committed on that singular charge, "contrary to
+law." And it should have been added, even though cast away upon our
+"hospitable shores." Among all these different shades of criminals,
+there must be some very bad men. And we could recount three who were
+pointed out to us, as very dangerous men, yet were allowed the favor
+of this floor and its associations. One was an Irish sailor, who was
+sentenced to three years and nine months' imprisonment by the United
+States court, for revolt and a desperate attempt to murder the
+captain of a ship; the next was a German, a soldier in the United
+States army, sentenced to one year and eight months' imprisonment
+for killing his comrade; and the third was an English sailor, who
+killed a woman-but as she happened to be of doubtful character, the
+presiding judge of the sessions sentenced him to a light
+imprisonment, which the Governor very condescendingly pardoned after
+a few weeks.
+
+The two former acted as attendants, or deputy jailers; with the
+exception of turning the key, which privilege the jailer reserved
+for himself exclusively. The principle may seem a strange one, that
+places men confined upon such grave charges in a superior position
+over prisoners; and may be questionable with regard to the
+discipline itself.
+
+From this floor, another iron door opened, and a winding passage led
+into the third and upper story, where a third iron door opened into
+a vestibule, on the right and left of which were grated doors
+secured with heavy bolts and bars. These opened into narrow portals
+with dark, gloomy cells on each side. In the floor of each of these
+cells was a large iron ring-bolt, doubtless intended to chain
+refractory prisoners to; but we were informed that such prisoners
+were kept in close stone cells, in the yard, which were commonly
+occupied by negroes and those condemned to capital punishment. The
+ominous name of this third story was "Mount Rascal," intended, no
+doubt, as significant of the class of prisoners it contained. It is
+said that genius is never idle: the floor of these cells bore some
+evidence of the fact in a variety of very fine specimens of carving
+and flourish work, done with a knife. Among them was a well-executed
+crucifix; with the Redeemer, on Calvary-an emblem of hope, showing
+how the man marked the weary moments of his durance. We spoke with
+many of the prisoners, and heard their different stories, some of
+which were really painful. Their crimes were variously stated, from
+that of murder, arson, and picking pockets, down to the felon who
+had stolen a pair of shoes to cover his feet; one had stolen a pair
+of pantaloons, and a little boy had stolen a few door-keys. Three
+boys were undergoing their sentence for murder. A man of genteel
+appearance, who had been sentenced to three years imprisonment, and
+to receive two hundred and twenty lashes in the market, at different
+periods, complained bitterly of the injustice of his case. Some had
+been flogged in the market, and were awaiting their time to be
+flogged again and discharged; and others were confined on suspicion,
+and had been kept in this close durance for more than six months,
+awaiting trial. We noticed that this worst of injustice, "the law's
+delay," was felt worse by those confined on the suspicion of some
+paltry theft, who, even were they found guilty by a jury, would not
+have been subjected to more than one week imprisonment. Yet such was
+the adherence to that ancient system of English criminal
+jurisprudence, that it was almost impossible for the most innocent
+person to get a hearing, except at the regular sessions, "which sit
+seldom, and with large intervals between." There is indeed a city
+court in Charleston, somewhat more modern in its jurisprudence than
+the sessions. It has its city sheriff, and its city officers, and
+holds its terms more frequently. Thus is Charleston doubly provided
+with sheriffs and officials. Both aspire to a distinct jurisdiction
+in civil and criminal cases. Prisoners seem mere shuttlecocks
+between the sheriffs, with a decided advantage in favor of the
+county sheriff, who is autocrat in rei over the jail; and any
+criminal who has the good fortune to get a hearing before the city
+judge, may consider himself under special obligation to the county
+sheriff for the favor.
+
+We noticed these cells were much cleaner than those below, yet there
+was a fetid smell escaping from them. This we found arose from the
+tubs being allowed to stand in the rooms, where the criminals were
+closely confined, for twenty-four hours, which, with the action of
+the damp, heated atmosphere of that climate, was of itself enough to
+breed contagion. We spoke of the want of ventilation and the noxious
+fumes that seemed almost pestilential, but they seemed to have
+become habituated to it, and told us that the rooms on the south
+side were lighter and more comfortable. Many of them spoke
+cheerfully, and endeavored to restrain their feelings, but the
+furrows upon their haggard countenances needed no tongue to utter
+its tale.
+
+Hunger was the great grievance of which they complained; and if
+their stories were true--and we afterward had strong proofs that
+they were--there was a wanton disregard of common humanity, and an
+abuse of power the most reprehensible. The allowance per day was a
+loaf of bad bread, weighing about nine ounces, and a pint of thin,
+repulsive soup, so nauseous that only the most necessitated appetite
+could be forced to receive it, merely to sustain animal life. This
+was served in a dirty-looking tin pan, without even a spoon to serve
+it. One man told us that he had subsisted on bread and water for
+nearly five weeks-that he had lain down to sleep in the afternoon
+and dreamed that he was devouring some wholesome nourishment to stay
+the cravings of his appetite, and awoke to grieve that it was but a
+dream. In this manner his appetite was doubly aggravated, yet he
+could get nothing to appease its wants until the next morning. To
+add to this cruelty, we found two men in close confinement, the most
+emaciated and abject specimens of humanity we have ever beheld. We
+asked ourselves, "Lord God! was it to be that humanity should
+descend so low?" The first was a forlorn, dejected-looking creature,
+with a downcast countenance, containing little of the human to mark
+his features. His face was covered with hair, and so completely
+matted with dirt and made fiendish by the tufts of coarse hair that
+hung over his forehead, that a thrill of horror invaded our
+feelings. He had no shoes on his feet; and a pair of ragged
+pantaloons, and the shreds of a striped shirt without sleeves,
+secured around the waist with a string, made his only clothing. In
+truth, he had scarce enough on to cover his nakedness, and that so
+filthy and swarming with vermin, that he kept his shoulders and
+hands busily employed; while his skin was so incrusted with dirt as
+to leave no trace of its original complexion. In this manner he was
+kept closely confined, and was more like a wild beast who saw none
+but his keepers when they came to throw him his feed. Whether he was
+kept in this manner for his dark deeds or to cover the shame of
+those who speculated upon his misery, we leave to the judgment of
+the reader.
+
+We asked this poor mortal what he had done to merit such a
+punishment? He held his head down, and motioned his fevered lips.
+"Speak out!" said we, "perhaps we can get you out." "I had no shoes,
+and I took a pair of boots from the gentleman I worked with," said
+he in a low, murmuring tone,
+
+"Gracious, man!" said we, "a pair of boots! and is that all you are
+here for?"
+
+"Yes, sir! he lives on the wharf, is very wealthy, and is a good
+man: 't wasn't his fault, because he tried to get me out if I'd pay
+for the boots, but they wouldn't let him."
+
+"And how long have you been thus confined?" said we.
+
+"Better than five months-but it's because there a'n't room up
+stairs. They've been promising me some clothes for a long time, but
+they don't come," he continued.
+
+"And how much longer have you to stop in this condition?"
+
+"Well, they say 'at court sets in October; it's somethin' like two
+months off; the grand jury'll visit the jail then, and maybe they'll
+find a bill' against me, and I'll be tried. I dont't care if they
+only don't flog me in that fish-market."
+
+"Then you have not been tried yet? Well, may God give that man peace
+to enjoy his bounty, who would consign a poor object like thee to
+such cruelty!" said we.
+
+"I was raised in Charleston-can neither read nor write-I have no
+father, and my mother is crazy in the poor-house, and I work about
+the city for a living, when I'm out!" said he. There was food for
+reflection in this poor fellow's simple story, which we found to be
+correct, as corroborated by the jailer.
+
+"Do you get enough to eat?" we asked.
+
+"Oh no, indeed! I could eat twice as much-that's the worst on't: 't
+wouldn't be bad only for that. I git me loaf' in the mornin', and me
+soup at twelve, but I don't git nothin' to eat at night, and a
+feller's mighty hungry afore it's time to lay down," said he.
+
+We looked around the room, and not seeing any thing to sleep upon,
+curiosity led us to ask him where he slept.
+
+"The jail allows us a blanket-that's mine in the corner: I spread it
+at night when I wants to go to bed," he answered, quite contentedly.
+We left the poor wretch, for our feelings could withstand it no
+longer. The state of society that would thus reduce a human being,
+needed more pity than the calloused bones reduced to such a bed. His
+name was Bergen.
+
+The other was a young Irishman, who had been dragged to jail in his
+shirt, pantaloons, and hat, on suspicion of having stolen seven
+dollars from a comrade. He had been in jail very near four months,
+and in regard to filth and vermin was a counterpart of the other. A
+death-like smell, so offensive that we stopped upon the threshold,
+escaped from the room as soon as the door opened, enough to destroy
+a common constitution, which his emaciated limbs bore the strongest
+evidence of.
+
+The prisoners upon the second story were allowed the privilege of
+the yard during certain hours in the day, and the debtors at all
+hours in the day; yet, all were subjected to the same fare. In the
+yard were a number of very close cells, which, as we have said
+before, were kept for negroes, refractory criminals, and those
+condemned to capital punishment. These cells seemed to be held as a
+terror over the criminals, and well they might, for we never
+witnessed any thing more dismal for the tenement of man.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+HOW IT IS.
+
+
+
+
+
+IT is our object to show the reader how many gross abuses of power
+exist in Charleston, and to point him to the source. In doing this,
+the task becomes a delicate one, for there are so many things we
+could wish were not so, because we know there are many good men in
+the community whose feelings are enlisted in the right, but their
+power is not coequal; and if it were, it is checked by an opposite
+influence.
+
+The more intelligent of the lower classes look upon the subject of
+politics in its proper light--they see the crashing effect the
+doctrine of nullification has upon their interests; yet, though
+their numbers are not few, their voice is small, and cannot sound
+through the channels that make popular influence. Thus all castes of
+society are governed by impracticable abstractions.
+
+The jail belongs to the county--the municipal authorities have no
+voice in it; and the State, in its legislative benevolence, has
+provided thirty cents a day for the maintenance of each prisoner.
+This small sum, in the State of South Carolina, where provision is
+extremely high, may be considered as a paltry pittance; but more
+especially so when the magnificent pretensions of South Carolina are
+taken into consideration, and a comparison is made between this
+meagre allowance and that of other States. Even Georgia, her sister
+State, and one whose plain modesty is really worthy of her
+enterprising citizens, takes a more enlightened view of a criminal's
+circumstances-allows forty-four cents a day for his maintenance, and
+treats him as if he was really a human being. But for this disparity
+and the wanton neglect of humane feelings South Carolinians excuse
+themselves upon the ground that they have no penitentiary; nor do
+they believe in that system of punishment, contending that it
+creates an improper competition with the honest mechanic, and gives
+countenance to crime, because it attempts to improve criminals. The
+common jail is made the place of confinement, while the
+whipping-post and starvation supply the correctives.
+
+The sheriff being created an absolute functionary, with unlimited
+powers to control the jail in all its varied functions, without
+either commissioners or jail-committee, what state of management may
+be expected? The court gives no specific direction as to the
+apartment or mode of confinement when sentencing a criminal;
+consequently, it becomes an established fact that the legislative
+confidence deposed in the sheriff is used as a medium of favors, to
+be dispensed as best suits the feelings or interests of the
+incumbent. Such power in the hands of an arbitrary, vindictive, or
+avaricious man, affords unlimited means of abuse, and without fear
+of exposure.
+
+It may be inferred from what we have said that the jailer was relax
+in his duty. This is not the case, for we have good authority that a
+more kind-hearted and benevolent man never filled the office. But
+his power was so restricted by those in absolute control, that his
+office became a mere turnkey's duty, for which he was paid the
+pittance of five hundred dollars a year or thereabouts. Thus he
+discharged his duty according to the instructions of the sheriff,
+who, it was well known, looked upon the jail as a means of
+speculation; and in carrying out his purposes, he would give very
+benevolent instructions in words, and at the same time withhold the
+means of carrying them out, like the very good man who always
+preached but never practised.
+
+Now, how is it? What is the regimen of this jail-prison and how is
+it provided? We will say nothing of that arduous duty which the
+jailer performs for his small sum; nor the report that the sheriff's
+office is worth fourteen thousand dollars a year: these things are
+too well established. But the law provides thirty cents a day for
+the prisoner's maintenance, which shall be received by the sheriff,
+who is to procure one pound of good bread, and one pound of good
+beef per day for each man. Now this provision is capable of a very
+elastic construction. The poor criminal is given a loaf of bad
+bread, costing about three cents, and a pound of meat, the most
+unwholesome and sickly in its appearance, costing five cents.
+Allowing a margin, however, and we may say the incumbent has a very
+nice profit of from eighteen to twenty cents per day on each
+prisoner. But, as no provision is made against the possibility of
+the criminal eating his meat raw, he is very delicately forced to an
+alternative which has another profitable issue for the sheriff; that
+of taking a pint of diluted water, very improperly called soup. Thus
+is carried out that ancient law of England which even she is now
+ashamed to own. Our feelings are naturally roused against the
+perpetration of such abuses upon suffering humanity. We struggle
+between a wish to speak well of her whose power it is to practise
+them, and an imperative duty that commands us to speak for those who
+cannot speak for themselves.
+
+These things could not exist if the public mind was properly
+enlightened. It is unnecessary to spend many words in exposing such
+palpable abuses, or to trace the cause of their existence and
+continuance. One cause of this is the wilful blindness and silly
+gasconade of some of those who lead and form public opinion. With
+South Carolinians, nothing is done in South Carolina that is not
+greater than ever was done in the United States-no battles were ever
+fought that South Carolina did not win-no statesman was ever equal
+to Mr. Calhoun-no confederacy would be equal to the Southern, with
+South Carolina at its head-no political doctrines contain so much
+vital element as secession, and no society in the Union is equal to
+South Carolina for caste and elegance-not excepting the worthy and
+learned aristocracy of Boston.
+
+A will to do as it pleases and act as it pleases, without national
+restraint, is the great drawback under which South Carolina sends
+forth her groaning tale of political distress. Let her look upon her
+dubious glory in its proper light-let her observe the rights of
+others, and found her acts in justice!--annihilate her grasping
+spirit, and she will find a power adequate to her own preservation.
+She can then show to the world that she gives encouragement to the
+masses, and is determined to persevere in that moderate and
+forbearing policy which creates its own protection, merits
+admiration abroad, instead of rebuke, and which needs no gorgeous
+military display to marshal peace at the point of the bayonet.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+MANUEL PEREIRA COMMITTED.
+
+
+
+
+
+IT was nearly eleven o'clock as they ascended the jail steps and
+rang the bell for admittance. The jailer, a stout, rough-looking
+man, opened the iron door, and as Manuel was about to step over the
+stone sill, Dunn gave him a sudden push that sent him headlong upon
+the floor. "Heavens! what now?" inquired the jailer with a look of
+astonishment, and at the next moment Dunn raised his foot to kick
+Manuel in the face.
+
+"You infernal beast!" said the jailer, "you are more like a savage
+than a man-you are drunk now, you vagabond," and jumped in between
+them to save him from the effect of the blow. As he did this, the
+gentleman who accompanied them from the "corner-shop," as a
+protection against Dunn's cruelty, fetched Dunn a blow on the back
+of the neck that made him stagger against a door, and created such
+confusion as to arouse the whole jail. Turning to Manuel, he, with
+the assistance of the jailer, raised him from the ground and led him
+into the jail-office. "Mister jailer," said Dunn, "the prisoner is
+mine until such times as you receipt the commitment, and I demand
+protection from you against this man. He has committed two violent
+assaults upon me, when I'd be doing me duty."
+
+"You have violated all duty, and are more like an incarnate fiend.
+You first decoy men into rum-shops, and then you plunder and abuse
+them, because you think they are black and can get no redress. You
+abused that man unmercifully, because you knew his evidence was not
+valid against you!" said the gentleman, turning to the jailer, and
+giving him the particulars of what he saw in the "corner-shop," and
+what cruelties he had seen practised by Dunn on former occasions.
+
+The jailer looked upon Manuel with commiseration, and handed him a
+chair to sit down on. The poor fellow was excited and fatigued, for
+he had eaten nothing that day, and been treated more like a brute
+than a human being from the time, he left the ship until he arrived
+at the jail. He readily accepted the kind offer, and commenced to
+tell the story of his treatment.
+
+"You need' not tell me,--I know too much of that man already. It has
+long been a mystery to me why he is retained in office."--
+
+Here Dunn interrupted. "Sure it's yer master I'd obey and not
+yerself, an' I'd do what I'd plase with prisoners, and, it's his
+business and not yeers. If ye had yer way, sure you'd be makin'
+white men of every nigger that ye turned a key upon."
+
+"Give me none of your insolence," said the jailer. "You have no
+authority beyond my door. Your brutal treatment to prisoners has
+caused me an immense deal of trouble-more than my paltry pay would
+induce me to stay for. Suppose you were indicted for these outrages?
+What would be the result?" asked the jailer.
+
+"Sure it's meself could answer for the sheriff, without yer
+bothering yerself. I'd not work for yer, but for him; and he's yer
+master anyhow, and knows all about it. Give me the receipt, and
+that's all I'd ax yer. When a nigger don't mind me, I just makes him
+feel the delight of a hickory stick."
+
+"Yes, if you had the shame of a man in you, you'd not make a beast
+of yourself with liquor, and treat these poor stewards as if they
+were dogs," said the jailer.
+
+"Indeed, ye might learn a thing or two if ye was a politician like
+meself, and belonged to the secession party. An' if his honor the
+sheriff-for he's a dacent man-knew ye'd be preachin' in that shape,
+ye wouldn't keep the jail f'nent the morning. Be letting me out, and
+make much of the nigger; ye have him there."
+
+The jailer unlocked the door and allowed him to pass out, with a
+pertinent rebuke. This was but a trifling affair in Dunn's ear, for
+he knew his master's feelings too well, and was backed by him in his
+most intolerable proceedings. Returning to the office, he looked at
+the commitment, and then again at Manuel. "This is a 'contrary to
+law' case, I see, Mr. Manuel; you are a likely fellow too, to come
+within that," said he.
+
+"Yes. If I understand him right, he's a shipwrecked sailor,
+belonging to a foreign vessel that was driven in here in distress,"
+said the man. "It's a hard law that imprisons a colored seaman who
+comes here voluntarily; but it seems beyond all manner of precedent
+to imprison a shipwrecked man like this, especially when he seems so
+respectable. There are no circumstances to warrant the enforcement
+of such a law." Thus saying, he left the jail.
+
+Be it said of the jailer, to his honor, so far as personal kindness
+went, he did his utmost--brought him water to wash himself, and gave
+him some clean clothes. After which, he was registered upon the
+criminal calendar as follows:--
+
+"March 24, 1852.--Manuel Peirire.--[Committed by] Sheriff--Sheriff.
+Crime--Contrary to law."
+
+Now the jailer had done his duty, so far as his feelings were
+concerned; but, such were the stern requirements of the law, and his
+functions so restricted by Mr. Grimshaw, that he dare not make
+distinctions. He called Daley, one of the criminal assistants, and
+ordered him to show the prisoner his room.
+
+"Here, my boy, take yer blanket," said Daley; and throwing him a
+coarse, filthy-looking blanket, told him to roll it up and follow
+him. "It's on the second floor we'll put ye, among the stewards;
+there's a nice lot on 'em to keep yer company, and ye'll have a
+jolly time, my boy." Manuel followed through the second iron door
+until he came to a large door secured with heavy bolts and bars,
+which Daley began to withdraw and unlock. "Don't be takin' it amiss;
+it's a right good crib, savin' the' bed, an' it's that's the worst
+of it. Bad luck to old Grimshaw, an' himself thinks everybody's
+bones be's as tuf as his own," said Daley, and threw open the heavy
+doors, sending forth those ominous prison sounds. "All here? Ah! yer
+a pretty set of lambs, as the British consul calls yees. Have ye
+ever a drop to spare?" At this, three or four respectable-looking
+black men came to the door and greeted Manuel. "Come, talk her out,
+for th' auld man'll be on the scent." At this, one of the confined
+stewards, a tall, good-looking mulatto man, ran his hand into a
+large opening in the wall, and drew forth a little soda-bottle
+filled with Monongahela whisky. Without giving reasonable time for
+politeness, Daley seized the bottle, and putting it to his mouth,
+gauged about half its contents into his homony dept, smacked his
+lips, wiped his mouth with his cuff, and, passing the balance back,
+shut and rebolted the door, after saying, "Good luck till yees, an'
+I wish yees a merry time." The reader may imagine what provision the
+State or the sheriff had made for the comfort of these poor men, one
+of whom was imprisoned because it was "contrary to law" to be driven
+into the port of Charleston in distress, and the rest, peaceable,
+unoffending citizens belonging to distant States and countries, and
+guilty of no crime, when we describe the room and regimen to which
+they were subjected. The room was about twenty-six feet long and ten
+feet wide. The brick walls were plastered and colored with some kind
+of blue wash, which, however, was so nearly obliterated with dirt
+and the damp of a southern climate, as to leave but little to show
+what its original color was. The walls were covered with the
+condensed moisture of the atmosphere, spiders hung their festooned
+network overhead, and cockroaches and ants, those domesticated pests
+of South Carolina, were running about the floor in swarms, and
+holding all legal rights to rations in superlative contempt. Two
+small apertures in the wall, about fourteen inches square, and
+double-barred with heavy flat iron, served to admit light and air.
+The reader may thus judge of its gloomy appearance, and what a
+miserable unhealthy cell it must have been in which to place men
+just arrived from sea. There was not the first vestige of furniture
+in the room, not; even a bench to sit upon, for the State, with its
+gracious hospitality, forgot that men in jail ever sit down; but it
+was in keeping with all other things that the State left to the
+control of its officials.
+
+"Am I to be punished in this miserable place? Why, I cannot see
+where I'm going; and have I nothing to lay down upon but the floor,
+and that creeping with live creatures?" inquired Manuel of those who
+were already inured to the hardship.
+
+"Nothing! nothing! Bring your mind to realize the worst, and forget
+the cruelty while you are suffering it; they let us out a part of
+the day. We are locked up to-day because one of the assistants stole
+my friend's liquor, and he dared to accuse him of the theft, because
+he was a white man," said a tall, fine-looking mulatto man by the
+name of James Redman, who was steward on board a Thomastown (Maine)
+ship, and declared that he had visited Charleston on a former
+occasion, and by paying five dollars to one of the officers,
+remained on board of the ship unmolested.
+
+"And how long shall I have to suffer in this manner?" inquired
+Manuel. "Can I not have my own bed and clothing?"
+
+"Oh, yes," said Redman; "you can have them, but if you bring them
+here, they'll not be worth anything when you leave; and the
+prisoners upon this floor are so starved and destitute, that
+necessity forces them to steal whatever comes in their way; and the
+assistants are as much implicated as the prisoners. You'll fare
+hard; but just do as we do in a calm, wait for the wind to blow, and
+pray for the best. If you say any thing, or grumble about it, the
+sheriff will order you locked, up on the third story, and that's
+worse than death itself. The first thing you do, make preparations
+for something to eat. We pay for it here, but don't get it; and
+you'd starve afore you'd eat what they give them poor white
+prisoners. They suffer worse than we do, only they have cleaner
+rooms."
+
+"I pray for my deliverance from such a place as this."
+
+His manners and appearance at once enlisted the respect of those
+present, and they immediately set to work, with all the means at
+hand, to make him comfortable. Joseph Jociquei, a young man who had
+been taken from a vessel just arrived from Rio, and was more
+fortunate than the rest, in having a mattrass, seeing Manuel's weak
+condition, immediately removed it from its place, and spreading it
+upon the floor, invited him to lay down. The invitation was as
+acceptable as it was kind on the part of Jociquei, and the poor
+fellow laid his weary limbs upon it, and almost simultaneously fell
+into a profound sleep. Manuel continued to sleep. His face and head
+were scarred in several places; which were dressed and covered with
+pieces of plaster that the jailer had supplied. His companions, for
+such we shall call those who were confined with him, sat around him,
+discussing the circumstances that brought him there, and the manner
+in which they could best relieve his suffering. "It's just as I was
+sarved," said Redman. "And I'll bet that red-headed constable, Dunn,
+brought him up: and abused him in all them Dutch shops. I didn't
+know the law, and he made me give him three dollars not to put the
+handcuffs upon me, and then I had to treat him in every grog-shop we
+came to. Yes, and the last shop we were in, he throw'd liquor in me
+face, cursed the Dutchman that kept the shop, kick'd me, and tried
+every way in the world to raise a fuss. If I hadn't know'd the law
+here too well, I'd whipt him sure. I have suffered the want of that
+three dollars since I bin here. 'Twould sarved me for coffee. We
+have neither coffee nor bread to-night, for we gave our allowance of
+bad bread to the white prisoners, but we must do something to make
+the poor fellow comfortable. I know the constable has kept him all
+day coming up, and he'll be hungry as soon as he awakes."
+
+"Won't he receive his allowance to-day like another prisoner?"
+inquired Copeland, a thick-set, well made, dark-skinned negro
+steward, who had formerly conducted a barber shop in Fleet street,
+Boston, but was now attached to the schooner Oscar Jones, Kellogg,
+master.
+
+"Oh! no, sir," said Redman, "that's against the rules of the
+jail-every thing is done by rule here, even to paying for what we
+don't get, and starving the prisoners. A man that don't come in
+before eleven o'clock gets no ration until the next morning. I know,
+because I had a fuss with the jailer about it, the first day I was
+brought in; but he gin me a loaf out of his own house. The old
+sheriff never allows any thing done outside the rules, for he's
+tighter than a mantrap. 'T a'n't what ye suffers in this cell, but
+it's what ye don't get to eat; and if that poor feller a'n't got
+money, he'll wish himself alongside the caboose again 'fore he gets
+out." The poor fellows were driven to the extreme of providing
+sustenance to sustain life. They mustered their little means
+together, and by giving a sum to the sheriff's black boy, (a man
+more intelligent, gentlemanly, and generous-hearted than his
+master,) had a measure of coffee, sugar, and bread brought in.
+Necessity was the mother of invention with them, for they had
+procured a barrel for twenty-five cents, and made it supply the
+place of a table. With a few chips that were brought to them by a
+kind-hearted colored woman that did their washing, and bestowed many
+little acts of kindness, they made a fire, endured the annoyance of
+a dense smoke from the old fire-place, and prepared their little
+supper. As soon as it was upon the table, they awoke Manuel, and
+invited him to join in their humble fare. The poor fellow arose, and
+looking around the gloomy, cavern-like place, heaved a deep sigh.
+"It's hard to be brought to this for nothing!" said he; "and my
+bones are so sore that I can scarcely move. I must see the Captain
+and consul."
+
+"That won't do any good; you might as well keep quiet and drink your
+coffee. A prisoner that says the least in this jail is best off,"
+returned Redman.
+
+Manuel took his bowl of coffee and a piece of bread, eating it with
+a good appetite, and asking what time they got breakfast. "It's the
+first time I was abused in a foreign country. I'm Portuguese, but a
+citizen of Great Britain, and got my protection.-When it won't save
+me, I'll never come to South Carolina again, nor sail where a flag
+won't protect me. When I go among Patagonians, I know what they do;
+but when I sail to United States or be cast away on them, I don't
+know what they do, because I expect good people." * * *
+
+"Never mind, my good fellow," said Redman; "cheer up, take it as a
+good sailor would a storm, and in the morning you'll get a small
+loaf of sour bread and a bucket of water for breakfast, if you go to
+the pump for it. Be careful to moderate your appetite when you
+breakfast according to the State's rules; for you must save enough
+to last you during the day, and if you can keep "banyan day," as the
+Bluenose calls it, you're just the man for this institution, and no
+mistake. Come, I see you're hungry; drink another bowl of coffee,
+and eat plenty of bread; then you'll be all right for another good
+sleep."
+
+"Yes, but I don't expect to be in here long. But tell me, do we get
+nothing more than a loaf? didn't the jail give us this supper?" he
+inquired with surprise.
+
+"Supper, indeed!--it's against the rules for prisoners to have
+coffee; that's our private fixings; but you'll get a pound of bloody
+neck-bone, they call beef, in the morning. I have twice thrown mine
+to the dog, but he doesn't seem to thank me for it; so I told the
+cook he needn't trouble his steelyards for me again."
+
+Redman's conversation was interrupted by a noise that seemed to be a
+ring of the prison bell, and an anxious expression which Manuel gave
+utterance to, indicated that he expected somebody would come to see
+him. He was not disappointed, for a few minutes after, the bolts
+were heard to withdraw and the heavy door swung back. There, true to
+his charge, was little Tommy, in his nicest blue rig, tipped off a
+la man-o'-war touch, with his palmetto-braid hat,--a long black
+ribbon displayed over the rim,--his hair combed so slick, and his
+little round face and red cheeks so plump and full of the sailor-boy
+pertness, with his blue, braided shirt-collar laid over his jacket,
+and set off around the neck, with a black India handkerchief,
+secured at the throat with the joint of a shark's backbone. He
+looked the very picture and pattern of a Simon-Pure salt. He had
+wended his way through strange streets and lanes, with a big
+haversack under his arm, which Daley had relieved him of at the
+door, and brought into the room under his arm. As soon as Manuel
+caught a glimpse of him, he rose and clasped the little fellow in
+his arms with a fond embrace. No greeting could be more affecting.
+Manuel exulted at seeing his little companion; but Tommy looked
+grieved, and asked, "But what has scarred your face so, Manuel? You
+didn't look that way when you left the brig. We have had a site o'
+folks down to see us to-day."
+
+"Oh, that's nothing!--just a little fall I got; don't tell the
+Captain: it'll all be well to-morrow."
+
+"Here, Jack, take your knapsack; did yer bring ever a drop o' liquor
+for the steward?" said Daley, addressing himself to Tommy, and
+putting the package upon the floor.
+
+"Yes, Manuel!" said Tommy, "the Captain sent you some nice bread and
+ham, some oranges and raisins, and a bottle of nice claret,--for he
+was told by the consul that they didn't give 'em nothing to eat at
+the jail. And I had a tug with 'em, I tell you. I got lost once, and
+got a good-natured black boy to pilot me for a Victoria
+threepence,--but he did not like to carry the bundle to the jail,
+for fear of his master. Captain 'll be up first thing in the
+morning, if he can get away from business," said the little tar,
+opening the haversack and pulling out its contents to tempt the
+hungry appetites of those around him.
+
+Daley very coolly took the bottle of claret by the neck, and holding
+it between himself and the light, took a lunar squint at it, as if
+doubting its contents; and then, putting it down, exclaimed, "Ah!
+the divil a red I'd give you for your claret. Sure, why didn't ye
+bring a token of good old hardware?" "Hardware! what is hardware?"
+inquired Manuel. "Ah! botheration to the bunch of yees--a drap of
+old whiskey, that 'd make the delight cum f'nent. Have ye ne'er a
+drap among the whole o' yees?" Receiving an answer in the negative,
+he turned about with a Kilkenny, "It don't signify," and toddled for
+the door, which he left open, to await Tommy's return. Redman knew
+Daley's propensity too well, and having ocular proof that he had wet
+t'other eye until it required more than ordinary effort to make
+either one stay open, he declined recognising his very significant
+hint.
+
+As soon as Daley withdrew, Manuel invited his companions to partake
+of the Captain's present, which they did with general satisfaction.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+THE LAW'S INTRICACY.
+
+
+
+
+
+WHILE the scenes we have described in the foregoing chapter were
+being performed, several very interesting ones were going through
+the course of performance at the consul's office and other places,
+which we must describe. The British Government, in its instructions
+to Mr. Mathew, impressed upon him the necessity of being very
+cautious lest he should in any manner prejudice the interests of the
+local institutions within his consular jurisdiction; to make no
+requests that were incompatible with the local laws; but to pursue a
+judicious course in bringing the matter of Her Majesty's subjects
+properly to the consideration of the legal authorities, and to point
+to the true grievance; and as it involved a question of right
+affecting the interests and liberties of her citizens, to ask the
+exercise of that judicial power from which it had a right to expect
+justice. The main object was to test the question whether this
+peculiar construction given to that local law which prohibits free
+colored men from coming within the limits of the State, was legal in
+its application to those who come into its ports connected with the
+shipping interests, pursuing an honest vocation, and intending to
+leave whenever their ship was ready. The consul was censured by the
+press in several of the slaveholding States, because he dared to
+bring the matter before the local legislature. We are bound to say
+that Consul Mathew, knowing the predominant prejudices of the
+Carolinians, acted wisely in so doing. First, he knew the tenacious
+value they put upon courtesy; secondly, the point at issue between
+South Carolina and the Federal Government, (and, as a learned friend
+in Georgia once said, "Whether South Carolina belonged to the United
+States, or the United States to South Carolina;") and thirdly, the
+right of State sovereignty, which South Carolina held to be of the
+first importance. To disregard the first, would have been considered
+an insult to the feelings of her people; and if the question had
+first been mooted with the Federal Government, the ire of South
+Carolinians would have been fired; the slur in placing her in a
+secondary position would have sounded the war-trumpet of Abolition
+encroachments, while the latter would have been considered a breach
+of confidence, and an unwarrantable disregard of her assertion of
+State rights. The Executive transmitted the documents to the
+Assembly, that body referred them to special committees, and the
+Messrs. Mazyck and McCready, reported as everybody in South Carolina
+expected, virtually giving the British consul a very significant
+invitation to keep his petitions in his pocket for the future, and
+his "black lambs" out of the State, or it might disturb their
+domesticated ideas. Thus was the right clearly reserved to
+themselves, and the question settled, so far as the State
+Legislature was concerned. The next course for Mr. Mathew was to
+appeal to the Judiciary, and should redress be denied, make it the
+medium of bringing the matter, before the Federal courts.
+
+We cannot forbear to say, that the strenuous opposition waged
+against this appeal of common humanity arose from political
+influence, supported by a set of ultra partisans, whose theoretical
+restrictions, assisted by the voice of the press, catered to the
+war-spirit of the abstractionists.
+
+The British consul, as the representative of his government, knowing
+the personal suffering to which the subjects of his country were
+subjected by the wretched state of the Charleston prison, and its
+management, sought to remove no restriction that might be necessary
+for protecting their dangerous institutions, but to relieve that
+suffering. He had pointed the authorities to the wretched state of
+the prison, and the inhuman regimen which existed within it; but,
+whether through that superlative carelessness which has become so
+materialized in the spirit of society--that callousness to
+misfortune so strongly manifested by the rich toward the industrious
+poor and the slaves-or, a contempt for his opinions, because he had
+followed out the instructions of his government, things went on in
+the same neglected manner and no attention was paid to them.
+
+Now, we dare assert that a large, portion of the excitement which
+the question has caused has arisen from personal suffering,
+consequent upon that wretched state of jail provisions which exists
+in South Carolina, and which, to say the least, is degrading to the
+spirit and character of a proud people. If a plea could be made, for
+excuse, upon the shattered finances of the State, we might tolerate
+something of the abuse. But this is not the case; and when its
+privileges become reposed in men who make suffering the means to
+serve their own interests, its existence becomes an outrage.
+
+A stronger evidence of the cause of these remonstrances on the part
+of the British Government, is shown by the manner in which it has
+been submitted to in Georgia. The British consul of the port of
+Savannah, a gentleman whose intelligence and humane feelings are no
+less remarkable than Mr. Mathew's, has never had occasion to call
+the attention of the Executive of Georgia to the abuse of power
+consequent upon the imprisonment of colored seamen belonging to the
+ships of Great Britain in that port. The seaman was imprisoned,
+consequently deprived of his liberty; but there was no suffering
+attendant beyond the loss of liberty during the stay of the vessel;
+for the imprisonment itself was a nominal thing; the imprisoned was
+well cared for; he had good, comfortable apartments, cleanly and
+well ordered, away from the criminals, and plenty of good, wholesome
+food to eat. There was even a satisfaction in this, for the man got
+what he paid for, and was treated as if he were really a human
+being. Thus, with the exception of the restriction on the man's
+liberty, and that evil, which those interested in commerce would
+reflect upon as a tax upon the marine interests of the port to
+support a municipal police, because it imposes a tax and burdensome
+annoyance upon owners for that which they have no interest in and
+can derive no benefit from, the observance of the law had more
+penalty in mental anxiety than bodily suffering. We have sometimes
+been at a loss to account for the restriction, even as it existed in
+Georgia, and especially when we consider the character of those
+controlling and developing the enterprising commercial affairs of
+Savannah.
+
+But we must return to South Carolina. If we view this law as a
+police regulation, it only gives us broader latitude. If a community
+has that within itself which is dangerous to its well-being, it
+becomes pertinent to inquire whether there is not an imperfect state
+of society existing, and whether this policy is not injurious to the
+well-being of the State. The evil, though it be a mortifying fact,
+we are bound to say, arises from a strange notion of caste and
+color, which measures sympathy according to complexion. There is no
+proof that can possibly be adduced, showing that colored seamen have
+made any infections among the slaves, or sought to increase the
+dangers of her peculiar institution.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+PLEA OF JUST CONSIDERATION AND MISTAKEN CONSTANCY OF THE LAWS.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE consul's office opened at nine o'clock,--the Captain, with his
+register-case and shipping papers under his arm, presented himself
+to Mr. Mathew, handed him his papers, and reported his condition.
+That gentleman immediately set about rendering every facility to
+relieve his immediate wants and further his business. The consul was
+a man of plain, unassuming manners, frank in his expressions, and
+strongly imbued with a sense of his rights, and the faith of his
+Government,--willing to take an active part in obtaining justice,
+and, a deadly opponent to wrong, regardless of the active hostility
+that surrounded him. After relating the incidents of his voyage, and
+the circumstances connected with Manuel's being dragged to
+prison,--"Can it be possible that the law is to be carried to such
+an extreme?" said he, giving vent to his feelings.
+
+"Your people seem to have a strange manner of exhibiting their
+hospitality," said the Captain, in reply.
+
+"That is true; but it will not do to appeal to the officials." Thus
+saying, the consul prepared the certificate, and putting on his hat,
+repaired to the jail. Here he questioned Manuel upon the
+circumstances of his arrest, his birthplace, and several other
+things. "I am not sure that I can get you out, Manuel, but I will do
+my best; the circumstances of your being driven in here in distress
+will warrant some consideration in your case; yet the feeling is not
+favorable, and we cannot expect much."
+
+From thence he proceeded to the office of Mr. Grimshaw, where he met
+that functionary, seated in all the dignity of his office.
+
+"Good morning, Mr. Consul. Another of your darkies in my place, this
+morning," said Mr. Grimshaw.
+
+"Yes; it is upon that business I have called to see you. I think you
+could not have considered the condition of this man, nor his rights,
+or you would not have imprisoned him. Is there no way by which I can
+relieve him?" inquired the consul, expecting little at his hands,
+but venturing the effort.
+
+"Sir! I never do any thing inconsistent with my office. The law
+gives me power in these cases, and I exercise it according to my
+judgment. It makes no exceptions for shipwrecks, and I feel that you
+have no right to question me in the premises. It's contrary to law
+to bring niggers here; and if you can show that he is a white man,
+there's the law; but you must await its process."
+
+"But do you not make exceptions?" inquired the consul. "I do not
+wish to seek his relief by process of law; that would increase
+expense and delay. I have made the request as a favor; if you cannot
+consider it in that light, I can only say my expectations are
+disappointed. But how is it that the man was abused by your officers
+before he was committed?"
+
+"Those are things I've nothing to do with; they are between the
+officers and your niggers. If they are stubborn, the officers must
+use force, and we have a right to iron the whole of them. Your
+niggers give more trouble than our own, and are a set of unruly
+fellows. We give 'em advantages which they don't deserve, in
+allowing them the yard at certain hours of the day. You Englishmen
+are never satisfied with any thing we do," returned Mr. Grimshaw,
+with indifference, appearing to satisfy himself that the law gave
+him the right to do what he pleased in the premises. There seemed
+but one idea in his head, so far as niggers were concerned, nor
+could any mode of reasoning arouse him: to a consideration of any
+extenuating circumstances. A nigger was a nigger with him, whether
+white or black-a creature for hog, homony, and servitude.
+
+"I expected little and got nothing. I might have anticipated it,
+knowing the fees you make by imprisonment. I shall seek relief for
+the man through a higher tribunal, and I shall seek redress for the
+repeated abuses inflicted upon these men by your officers," said the
+consul, turning to the door.
+
+"You can do that, sir," said Mr. Grimshaw; "but you must remember
+that it will require white evidence to substantiate the charge. We
+don't take the testimony of your niggers."
+
+Just as the consul left the office, he met Colonel S--entering. The
+colonel always manifested a readiness to relieve the many cases of
+oppression and persecution arising from bad laws and abused official
+duty. He had called upon Mr. Grimshaw on the morning of the arrest,
+and received from him an assurance that the case would be
+considered, the most favorable construction given to it, and every
+thing done for the man that was in his power. Notwithstanding this
+to show how far confidence could be put in such assurances, we have
+only to inform the reader that he had despatched the officers an
+hour previously.
+
+The colonel knew his man, and felt no hesitation at speaking his
+mind. Stepping up to him, "Mr. Grimshaw," said he, "how do you
+reconcile your statement and assurances to me this morning with your
+subsequent conduct?"
+
+"That's my business. I act for the State, and not for you. Are you
+counsel for these niggers, that you are so anxious to set them at
+liberty among our slaves? You seem to have more interest in it than
+that interfering consul. Just let these Yankee niggers and British
+niggers out to-night, and we'd have another insurrection before
+morning; it's better to prevent than cure," said Grimshaw.
+
+"The only insurrection would have been in your heart, for the loss
+of fees. If you did not intend what you said, why did you deceive me
+with such statements? I know the feelings of our people, as well as
+I do yours for caging people within that jail. Upon that, I
+intimated to the Captain what I thought would be the probable
+result, and this morning I proceeded to his vessel to reassure him,
+upon your statement. Imagine my mortification when he informed me
+that his steward had been dragged off to jail early in the morning,
+and that those two ruffians whom you disgrace the community with,
+behaved in the most outrageous manner. It is in your power to
+relieve this man, and I ask it as a favor, and on behalf of what I
+know to be the feelings of the citizens of Charleston."
+
+"Your request, colonel," said Mr. Grimshaw, with a little more
+complacency, "is too much in the shape of a demand. There's no
+discretion left me by the State, and if you have a power superior to
+that, you better pay the expenses of the nigger, and take the
+management into your own hands. I never allow this trifling
+philanthropy about niggers to disturb me. I could never follow out
+the laws of the State and practise it; and you better not burden
+yourself with it, or your successors may suffer for adequate means
+to support themselves. Now, sir, take my advice. It's contrary to
+law for them niggers to come here; you know our laws cannot be
+violated. South Carolina has a great interest at stake in
+maintaining the reputation of her laws. Don't excite the nigger's
+anxiety, and he'll be better off in jail than he would running about
+among the wenches. He won't have luxuries, but we'll make him
+comfortable, and he must suit his habits to our way of living. We
+must not set a bad example before our own niggers; the whiter they
+are the worse they are. They struggle for their existence now, and
+think they're above observing our nigger laws. We want to get rid of
+them, and you know it," returned Grimshaw.
+
+"Yes; I know it too well, for I have had too many cases to protect
+them from being 'run off' and sold in the New Orleans market. But
+when you speak of white niggers, I suppose you mean our brightest; I
+dispute your assertion, and point you to my proof in the many men of
+wealth among them now pursuing their occupations in our city. Can
+you set an example more praiseworthy? And notwithstanding they are
+imposed upon by taxes, and many of our whites take the advantage of
+law to withhold the payment of debts contracted with them, they make
+no complaint. They are subject to the same law that restricts the
+blackest slave. Where is the white man that would not have yielded
+under such inequality? No! Mr. Grimshaw, I am as true a
+Southerner-born and bred-as you are; but I have the interests of
+these men at heart, because I know they are with us, and their
+interests and feelings are identical with our own. They are Native
+Americans by birth and blood, and we have no right to dispossess
+them by law of what we have given them by blood. We destroy their
+feelings by despoiling them of their rights, and by it we weaken our
+own cause. Give them the same rights and privileges that we extend
+to that miserable class of foreigners who are spreading pestilence
+and death over our social institutions, and we would have nothing to
+fear from them, but rather find them our strongest protectors. I
+want to see a law taking from that class of men the power to lord it
+over and abuse them."
+
+A friend, who has resided several years in Charleston, strong in his
+feelings of Southern rights, and whose keen observation could not
+fail to detect the working of different phases of the slave
+institution, informed us that he had conversed with a great many
+very intelligent and enterprising men belonging to that large class
+of "bright" men in Charleston, and that which appeared to pain them
+most was the manner they were treated by foreigners of the lowest
+class; that rights which they had inherited by birth and blood were
+taken away from them; that, being subjected to the same law which
+governed the most abject slave, every construction of it went to
+degrade them, while it gave supreme power to the most degraded white
+to impose upon them, and exercise his vindictive feelings toward
+them; that no consideration being given to circumstances, the least
+deviation from the police regulations made to govern negroes, was
+taken advantage of by the petty guardmen, who either extorted a fee
+to release them, or dragged them to the police-office, where their
+oath was nothing, even if supported by testimony of their own color;
+but the guardman's word was taken as positive proof. Thus the laws
+of South Carolina forced them to be what their feelings revolted at.
+And I want to see another making it a penal offence for those men
+holding slaves for breeding purposes. Another, which humanity calls
+for louder than any other, is one to regulate their food, punish
+these grievous cases of starvation, and make the offender suffer for
+withholding proper rations."
+
+"Well-pretty well!" said Grimshaw, snapping his fingers very
+significantly. "You seem to enjoy the independence of your own
+opinion, colonel. Just prove this nigger's a white, and I'll give
+you a release for him, after paying the fees. You better move to
+Massachusetts, and preach that doctrine to William Lloyd Garrison
+and Abby Kelly."
+
+"Give me none of your impudence, or your low insults. You may
+protect yourself from personal danger by your own consciousness that
+you are beneath the laws of honor; but that will not save you from
+what you deserve, if you repeat your language. Our moderation is our
+protection, while such unwise restrictions as you would enforce, fan
+the flame of danger to our own households," said the colonel,
+evidently yielding to his impulses; while Mr. Grimshaw sat
+trembling, and began to make a slender apology, saying that the
+language was forced upon him, because the colonel had overstepped
+the bounds of propriety in his demands.
+
+"I'm somewhat astonished at your demand, colonel, for you don't seem
+to comprehend the law, and the imperative manner in which I'm bound
+to carry it out. Shipowners should get white stewards, if they want
+to avoid all this difficulty. I know the nature of the case, but we
+can't be accountable for storms, shipwrecks, old vessels, and all
+these things. I'll go and see the fellow to-morrow, and tell the
+jailer-he's a pattern of kindness, and that's why I got him for
+jailer-to give him good rations and keep his room clean," said
+Grimshaw, getting up and looking among some old books that lay on a
+dusty shelf. At length he found the one, and drawing it forth,
+commenced brushing the dust from it with a dust-brush, and turning
+his tobacco-quid. After brushing the old book for a length of time,
+he gave it a scientific wipe with his coat-sleeve, again sat down,
+and commenced turning over its pages.
+
+"It's in here, somewhere," said he, wetting his finger and thumb at
+every turn.
+
+"What's in there, pray? You don't think I've practised at the
+Charleston bar all my life without knowing a law which has called up
+so many questions?" inquired the colonel.
+
+"Why, the act and the amendments. I believe this is the right one. I
+a'n't practised so long, that I reckon I've lost the run of the
+appendix and everything else," adding another stream of tobacco-spit
+to the puddle on the floor.
+
+"That's better thought than said. Perhaps you'd better get a
+schoolboy to keep his finger on it," continued the colonel,
+laconically.
+
+"Well, well; but I must find it and refresh your memory. Ah! here it
+is, and it's just as binding on me as it can be. There's no mistake
+about it-it's genuine South Carolina, perfectly aboveboard." Thus
+saying, he commenced reading to the colonel as if he was about to
+instruct a schoolboy in his rudiments. "Here it is-a very pretty
+specimen of enlightened legislation-born in the lap of freedom,
+cradled in a land of universal rights, and enforced by the strong
+arm of South Carolina."
+
+"An Act for the better regulation and government of free negroes and
+persons of color, and for other purposes," &c. &c. &c., Mr. Grimshaw
+read; but as the two first sections are really a disgrace to the
+delegated powers of man, in their aim to oppress the man of color,
+we prefer to pass to the third section, and follow Mr. Grimshaw as
+he reads:--
+
+"That if any vessel shall come into any port or harbor of this
+State, (South Carolina,) from any other State or foreign port,
+having on board any free negroes or persons of color, as cooks,
+stewards, or mariners, or in any other employment on board said
+vessel, such free negroes or persons of color shall be liable to be
+seized and confined in jail until said vessel shall clear out and
+depart from this State; and that when said vessel is ready to sail,
+the captain of said vessel shall be bound to carry away the said
+free negro or person of color, and pay the expenses of detention;
+and in case of his refusal or neglect to do so, he shall be liable
+to be indicted, and, on conviction thereof, shall be fined in a sum
+not less than one thousand dollars, and imprisoned not less than two
+months; and such free negroes or persons of color shall be deemed
+and taken as absolute slaves, and sold in conformity to the
+provisions of the act passed on the twentieth day of December, one
+thousand eight hundred and twenty aforesaid.'"
+
+Mr. Grimshaw's coolness in the matter became so intolerable, that
+the colonel could stand it no longer; so, getting up while Mr.
+Grimshaw was reading the law, he left the office, perfectly
+satisfied that further endeavors at that source would be fruitless.
+
+After Mr. Grimshaw had concluded, he looked up, perfectly amazed to
+find that he was enjoying the reading of the act to himself. "Had I
+not given it all the consideration of my power, and seen the
+correctness of the law, I should not have given so much importance
+to my opinion. But there it is, all in that section of the Act, and
+they can't find no convention in the world to control the
+Legislature of South Carolina. There's my principles, and all the
+Englishmen and Abolitionists in Christendom wouldn't change me. Now,
+I've the power, and let 'em get the nigger out of my place, if they
+can," said Grimshaw, shutting the book, kicking a good-sized,
+peaceable-looking dog that lay under the table, and deliberately
+taking his hat and walking into the street.
+
+Here is an Act, bearing on its face the arrogant will of South
+Carolina, setting aside all constitutional rights, and denying the
+validity of stipulations made by the United States in her general
+commercial laws. She asserts her right to disregard citizenship, to
+make criminals of colored men, because they are colored, and to sell
+them for slaves to pay the expenses which she had incurred to make
+them such. And what is still worse, is, that the exercise of this
+misconceived and unjust law is so unrelentingly enforced, and so
+abused by those who carry it out.
+
+During this time the consul had been unremitting in his endeavors to
+procure the man's release. The mayor had no power in the premises;
+the attorney-general was not positive in regard to the extent of his
+power in such a case, though he admitted the case to be an
+aggravated one; the judges could only recognise him as a nigger,
+consequently must govern their proceedings by legislative acts. Upon
+the whole, he found that he was wasting his time, for while they all
+talked sympathy, they acted tyranny. Cold, measured words about
+niggers, "contrary to law," constitutional rights, inviolable laws,
+State sovereignty and secession, the necessary police regulations to
+protect a peculiar institution, and their right to enforce them,
+everywhere greeted his ears. There was about as much in it to
+relieve Manuel, as there would have been had a little bird perched
+upon the prison-wall and warbled its song of love to him while
+strongly secured in his cell-more tantalizing because he could hear
+the notes, but not see the songster.
+
+Notwithstanding the commendable energy of the consul, he had the
+satisfaction of knowing that several very improbable reports
+touching his course, and construing it into an interference with the
+institution of slavery, had been widely circulated, and were
+creating a feeling against him among a certain class of
+"fire-eating" secessionists. He was too well aware of the source
+from which they originated to awaken any fears, and instead of
+daunting his energy they only increased it, and brought to his aid
+the valuable services of the Hon. James L. Petigru, a gentleman of
+whom it is said, (notwithstanding his eminence at the bar,) that had
+it not been for his purity of character, his opinions in opposition
+to the State would have long since consigned him to a traitor's
+exile. The truth was-and much against Mr. Petigru's popularity in
+his own State-that he was a man of sound logic, practical judgment,
+and legal discrimination. Thus endowed with the requisite qualities
+of a good statesman, and pursuing a true course to create a
+conservative influence in the State, he failed to become popular
+beyond his legal sphere. Had he espoused that most popular of all
+doctrines in South Carolina-nullification and secession-and carried
+abstraction to distraction, James L. Petigru would have added
+another "Roman name" to that which has already passed from South
+Carolina's field of action.
+
+The consul did his duty, but effected nothing; and such was the
+opposition manifested by the officials who were interested in the
+spoils of law, and politicians who could not see any thing important
+beyond secession, that there was no prospect of it. And, as the last
+resort, he appealed to the Judiciary through the "habeas corpus,"
+the result of which we shall show in a subsequent chapter.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+LITTLE GEORGE, THE CAPTAIN, AND MR. GRIMSHAW.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE consul had returned to his office rather discomfited at not
+being able to relieve Manuel, yet satisfied that he had placed
+matters in their proper light before the public. The Captain
+reported and left his manifest at the custom-house, after entering
+his protest and making the necessary arrangements for survey, &c.
+&c. And Colonel S--became so well satisfied of the affectation of
+law protectors, and that his services in behalf of humanity were
+like straws contending against a foaming current, that,
+acknowledging his regrets to the Captain, he preferred to make up in
+attention what he could not do for Manuel through the law.
+
+Little George paid his respects to the Janson between ten and eleven
+o'clock, duly dressed. "Mr. Mate, where's your, skipper?" he
+inquired, with an air of consequence that put an extra pucker on his
+little twisting mouth.
+
+"Gone to jail, or to see Doctor Jones, I expect, not giving ye an
+ill answer," replied the old mate, gruffly.
+
+"Perhaps you don't know who I am, sir. Your answer's not polite. You
+must remember, sir, you're in South Carolina, the sunny city of the
+South," said the little secessionist.
+
+"I al'a's make my answer to suit myself. I study hard work and
+honesty, but never was known to carry a grammar in my pocket. But,
+my taut friend, I should know'd I was in South Carolina if you
+hadn't said a word about it, for no other nation under the sky would
+a dragged a poor cast-away sailor to prison because he had the
+misfortune to have a tawny hide. It's a ten-to-one, my hearty, if
+you don't find the skipper in jail, and all the rest of us, before
+we leave. I'm lookin' now to see some body-grabber coming down with
+a pair of handcuffs," continued the mate.
+
+"What! do you mean to insult me again, Mr. Mate? Explain yourself!
+I'm not accustomed to this ironical talk!"
+
+"Well, it's something like your laws. They dragged our steward off
+to jail this morning, without judge or jury, and with about as much
+ceremony as a Smithfield policeman would a pickpocket."
+
+"What! you don't say. Well, I was afraid of that. Our officers are
+mighty quick, but I'd hoped differently. But, sir, give my
+compliments to the Captain. Tell him I'll make the matter all right;
+my influence, sir, and my father's--he is one of the first men in the
+city--tells mightily here. I have promised my services to the
+Captain, and I'll see him through. Just pledging my word to Grimshaw
+will be enough to satisfy the judicial requisites of the law," said
+George, switching his little cane on his trowsers.
+
+"My good fellow," said the mate, "if you can get our steward out a
+limbo, you'll be doing us all a good turn, and we'll remember you as
+long as we pull a brace."
+
+"You may reckon on me, Mister Mate; and if I a'n't down before six
+o'clock, my father will certainly take the matter in hand; and he
+and Mazyck belong to the secession party, and control things just as
+they please at Columbia." So saying, George bid the old mate good
+morning, and bent his course for the head of the wharf.
+
+"There," said the old mate, "it's just what I thought all along; I
+knew my presentiment would come true. I'll wager a crown they treat
+Manuel like a dog in that old prison, and don't get him out until he
+is mildewed; or perhaps they'll sell him for a slave a'cos he's got
+curly black hair and a yellow skin. Now I'm a hardy sailor, but I've
+sailed around the world about three times, and know something of
+nature. Now ye may note it as clear as the north star, prisons in
+slave countries a'n't fit for dogs. They may tell about their fine,
+fat, slick, saucy niggers, but a slave's a slave--his master's
+property, a piece of merchandise, his chattel, or his
+football-thankful for what his master may please to give him, and
+inured to suffer the want of what he withholds. Yes, he must have
+his thinking stopped by law, and his back lashed at his master's
+will, if he don't toe the mark in work. Men's habits and
+associations form their feelings and character, and it's just so
+with them fellers; they've become so accustomed to looking upon a
+nigger as a mere tool of labor--lordin' it over him, starving him,
+and lashing him-that they associate the exercise of the same
+feelings and actions with every thing connected with labor, without
+paying any respect to a poor white man's feelings," continued the
+mate, addressing himself to his second, as they sat upon the
+companion, waiting for the Captain to come on board and give further
+orders.
+
+Never were words spoken with more truth. The negro is reduced to the
+lowest and worst restrictions, even by those who are considered
+wealthy planters and good masters. We say nothing of those whose
+abuse of their negroes by starvation and punishment forms the theme
+of complaint among slaveholders themselves. His food is not only the
+coarsest that can, be procured, but inadequate to support the system
+for the amount of labor required. Recourse to other means becomes
+necessary. This is supplied by giving the slave his task, which, so
+far as our observation extends, is quite sufficient for any common,
+laborer's day's-work. This done, his master is served; and as an act
+of kindness, (which Sambo is taught to appreciate as such,) he is
+allowed to work on his own little cultivated patch to raise a few
+things, which mass'r (in many cases) very condescendingly sells in
+the market, and returns those little comforts, which are so much
+appreciated by slaves on a plantation-tea, molasses, coffee, and
+tobacco-and now and then a little wet of whiskey. This is the
+allowance of a good man doing a good week's work, and getting two
+pounds of bacon and a peck of corn as his compensation. But, in
+grateful consideration, his good master allows him to work nights
+and Sundays to maintain himself. In this way was "Bob's bale of
+cotton" raised, which that anxious child of popular favor, the
+editor of the "Savannah Morning News," so struggled to herald to the
+world as something magnificent on the part of the Southern
+slave-masters. At best, it was but a speck. If the many extra hours
+of toil that poor Bob had spent, and the hours of night that he had
+watched and nursed his plants, were taken into account, there would
+be a dark picture connected with "Bob's bale of cotton," which the
+editor forgot to disclose.
+
+Every form of labor becomes so associated with servitude, that we
+may excuse the Southerner for those feelings which condemn those
+devoted to mechanical pursuits as beneath his caste and dignity.
+Arrogance and idleness foster extravagance, while his pride induces
+him to keep up a style of life which his means are inadequate to
+support. This induces him to subsist his slaves on the coarsest
+fare, and becoming hampered, embarrassed, and fretted in his fast-
+decaying circumstances, his slaves, one by one, suffer the penalty
+of his extravagance, and finally he himself is reduced to such a
+condition that he is unable to do justice to himself or his children
+any longer; his slaves are dragged from him, sold to the terrors of
+a distant sugar-plantation, and he turned out of doors a miserable
+man.
+
+We see this result every day in South Carolina; we hear the comments
+in the broadways and public places, while the attorney and bailiff's
+offices and notices tell the sad tale of poverty's wasting struggle.
+
+George, in passing from the wharf into the bay, met the Captain, who
+was shaping his course for the brig. He immediately ran up to him,
+and shook his hands with an appearance of friendship. "Captain, I'm
+right sorry to hear about your nigger. I was not prepared for such a
+decision on the part of Mr. Grimshaw, but I'm determined to have him
+out," said he.
+
+"Well!" said the Captain, "I'm sorry to say, I find things very
+different from what I anticipated. My steward is imprisoned, for
+nothing, except that he is a Portuguese, and everybody insists that
+he's a nigger. Everybody talks very fine, yet nobody can do any
+thing; and every thing is left to the will of one man."
+
+"Why, Captain, we've the best system in the world for doing
+business; you'd appreciate it after you understood it! Just come
+with me, and let me introduce you to my father. If he don't put you
+right, I'll stand convicted," said little George.
+
+Accepting the invitation, they walked back to the "old man's"
+counting-room. George had given the Captain such an extended account
+of his father's business and estates, that the latter had made up
+his mind to be introduced to an "India Palace' counting-room. Judge
+of his surprise, then, when George led the way into an old,
+dirty-looking counting-room, very small and dingy, containing two
+dilapidated high desks, standing against the wall. They were made of
+pitch pine, painted and grained, but so scarred and whittled as to
+have the appearance of long use and abuse. In one corner was an
+old-fashioned low desk, provided with an ink-stand, sundry pieces of
+blotting-paper, the pigeon-holes filled with loose invoices,
+letters, and bills of lading, very promiscuously huddled together;
+while hanging suspended on a large nail, driven in the side, and
+exposed to view, was an enormous dust-brush. A venerable-looking
+subject of some foreign country stood writing at one desk, a little
+boy at the other, and George's veritable "old man" at the low desk.
+Here and there around the floor were baskets and papers containing
+samples of sea-island and upland cotton. George introduced the
+Captain to his father with the suavity of a courtier. He was a
+grave-looking man, well dressed, and spoke in a tone that at once
+enlisted respect. Unlike George, he was a tall, well-formed man,
+with bland, yet marked features, and very gray hair. He received the
+Captain in a cold, yet dignified manner-inquired about his voyage,
+and who he had consigned to, and what steps he had taken to proceed
+with his business,--all of which the Captain answered according to
+the circumstances.
+
+"What! then you have consigned already, have you?" said little
+George, with surprise.
+
+"Oh yes," returned the Captain, "I have left my business in the
+hands of the consul, and shall follow his directions. It's according
+to my sailing orders. But there's so much difficulty, I shouldn't
+wonder if I had to leave the port, yet!"
+
+"Not so, Captain; I'll take care of that!" said George, giving his
+father a statement of the Captain's trouble about Manuel's
+imprisonment, and begging that he would bestow his influence in
+behalf of his friend the Captain. Although George coupled his
+request with a seeming sincerity, it was evident that he felt
+somewhat disappointed at the consignment. The old gentleman looked
+very wise upon the subject, lifted his gold-framed spectacles upon
+his forehead, gratified his olfactory nerves with a pinch of snuff,
+and then said in a cold, measured tone, "Well, if he's a nigger, I
+see no alternative,--the circumstances may give a coloring of
+severity to the law; but my opinion has always been, that the
+construction of the law was right; and the act being founded upon
+necessity, I see no reason why we should meddle with its
+prerogative. I think the interference of the consul unwarrantable,
+and pressed upon mere technical grounds. These stories about the bad
+state of our jail, and the sufferings of criminals confined in it,
+arise, I must think, from the reports of bad prisoners. I have never
+been in it. Our people are opposed to vice, and seldom visit such a
+place; but the sheriff tells me it is comfortable enough for
+anybody. If this be so, and I have no reason to doubt his word, we
+can exercise our sympathy and kindness for his shipwrecked
+circumstances, and make him as comfortable there as we could
+anywhere else. There are many different opinions, I admit, touching
+the effect of this law; but I'm among those who support stringent
+measures for better protection. His color can form no excuse,
+Captain, so long as there is symptoms of the negro about him. We
+might open a wide field for metaphysical investigation, if we
+admitted exceptions upon grades of complexion; for many of our own
+slaves are as white ar the brightest woman. Consequently, when we
+shut the gates entirely, we save ourselves boundless perplexity. Nor
+would it be safe to grant an issue upon the score of intelligence,
+for experience has taught us that the most intelligent 'bright
+fellows' are the worst scamps in creating discontent among the
+slaves. I only speak of these things, Captain, in a general sense.
+Your man may be very good, noble, generous, and intelligent; and,
+more than all, not inclined to meddle with our peculiar
+institution,--but it would be a false principle to make him an
+exception, setting an example that would be entirely incompatible
+with our greatest interests. So far as my word will affect the
+sheriff, and enlist his better feelings in making him comfortable, I
+will use it," said the 'old man,' again adjusting his specs.
+
+Little George seemed dumbfounded with mortification, and the Captain
+felt as though he would give a guinea to be on board his brig. It
+was no use for him to enter into the extenuating circumstance of his
+voyage, or the character of the man, Manuel. The same cold opinions
+about the law, and the faith and importance of South Carolina and
+her peculiar institutions, met his ears wherever he went. The
+Captain arose, took his hat, and bidding the old gentleman good
+morning, again left for his brig.
+
+"Don't be worried about it-I'll do what I can for you," said the old
+man, as the Captain was leaving. George followed him into the
+street, and made a great many apologies for his father's opinions
+and seeming indifference, promising to do himself what his father
+did not seem inclined to undertake. The Captain saw no more of him
+during his stay in Charleston, and if his influence was exerted in
+Manuel's behalf, he did not feel its benefits.
+
+Business had so occupied the Captain's attention during the day,
+that he had no time to visit Manuel at the jail; and when he
+returned to the vessel, a message awaited him from the British
+consul. One of the seamen had been detailed to fill Manuel's place,
+who, with his dinner all prepared, reminded the Captain that it was
+awaiting him. He sat down, took dinner, and left to answer the
+consul's call. Arriving at the office, he found the consul had left
+for his hotel, and would not return until four o'clock. As he passed
+the post-office, a knot of men stood in front of it, apparantly in
+anxious discussion. Feeling that their conversation might be
+interesting to him, or have some connection with his case, he walked
+slowly back, and as he approached them, observed that the
+conversation had become more excited. The principals were Mr.
+Grimshaw, and a factor on the bay, deeply interested in shipping.
+
+"A man acting in your capacity," said the factor, "should never make
+use of such expressions-never give encouragement to mob law. It's
+not only disgraceful to any city, but ruinous to its interests.
+Officials never should set or encourage the example. Want of order
+is already in the ascendant, and if the populace is to be led on to
+riot by the officials, what check have we? God save us from the
+direful effects!"
+
+"Well, perhaps I went too far," said Mr. Grimshaw, "for I think as
+much of the name of our fair city as you do. But we ought to teach
+him that he can't pursue this open, bold, and daring course,
+endangering our institutions, because he's consul for Great Britain.
+I would, at all events, treat him as we did the Yankee HOAR from
+Massachusetts, and let the invitation be given outside of official
+character, to save the name; then, if he did not move off, I'd go
+for serving him as they did the Spanish consul, in New Orleans.
+These English niggers and Yankee niggers are fast destroying the
+peace of Charleston."
+
+"You would, would you?" said another. "Then you would incite the
+fury of an ungovernable mob to endanger the man's life for carrying
+out the instructions of his government."
+
+"That don't begin to be all that he does, for he's meddling with
+every thing, and continually making remarks about our society," said
+Grimshaw, evidently intending to create ill feeling against the
+consul, and to make the matter as bad as possible.
+
+"Now, Mr. Grimshaw," said the factor, "you know your jail is not fit
+to put any kind of human beings into, much less respectable men.
+It's an old Revolutionary concern, tumbling down with decay,
+swarming with insects and vermin; the rooms are damp and unhealthy,
+and without means to ventilate them; the mildew and horrible stench
+is enough to strike disease into the strongest constitution; and you
+aggravate men's appetites with food that's both insufficient and
+unwholesome, I know, because I visited a friend who was put in there
+on 'mesne process.'"
+
+"There is little confidence to be placed in the stories of
+prisoners; they all think they must be treated like princes, instead
+of considering that they are put there for cause, and that a jail
+was intended for punishment," interrupted Grimshaw, anxious to
+change the subject of conversation, and displaying an habitual
+coldness to misfortune which never can see the gentleman in a
+prisoner.
+
+"Yes, but you must not measure men by that standard. Circumstances
+which bring them there are as different as their natures. I've known
+many good, honest, and respectable, citizens, who once enjoyed
+affluence in our community, put in there, month after month, and
+year after year, suffering the persecution of creditors and the
+effects of bad laws. Now these men would not all complain if there
+was no cause, and they all loved you, as you state. But tell me, Mr.
+Grimshaw, would it not be even safer for our institutions to make a
+restriction confining them to the wharf, which could be easily done,
+and with but small expense to the city? Niggers on the wharves could
+have no communication with them, because each is occupied in his
+business, and ours are too closely watched and driven during working
+hours. As soon as those hours end, they are bound to leave, and the
+danger ends. Again, those niggers who work on the wharves are
+generally good niggers, while, on the other hand, bad niggers are
+put into jail; and during the hours these stewards are allowed the
+privilege of the yard, they mix with them without discrimination or
+restraint. Their feelings, naturally excited by imprisonment, find
+relief in discoursing upon their wrongs with those of their own
+color, and making the contamination greater," said the factor, who
+seemed inclined to view the matter in its proper light.
+
+"Oh! what sir? That would never do. You mistake a nigger's feelings
+entirely. Privileges never create respect with them. Just make a law
+to leave 'em upon the wharf, and five hundred policemen wouldn't
+keep 'em from spoiling every nigger in town, just destroying the
+sovereignty of the law, and yielding a supreme right that we have
+always contended for. It's 'contrary to law,' and we must carry out
+the law," replied Grimshaw.
+
+"Pshaw! Talk such stuff to me! Just take away the sixteen hundred or
+two thousand dollars that you make by the law; and you'd curse it
+for a nuisance. It would become obsolete, and the poor devils of
+stewards would do what they pleased; you'd never trouble your head
+about them. Now, Grimshaw, be honest for once; tell us what you
+would do if circumstances compelled the Captain to leave that nigger
+boy here?"
+
+"Carry out the letter of the law; there's no alternative. But the
+Captain swears he's a white man, and that would give him an
+opportunity to prove it."
+
+"How is he to prove it, Grimshaw? We take away the power, and then
+ask him to do what we make impossible. Then, of course, you would
+carry out the letter of the law and sell him for a slave. * * *
+Well, I should like to see the issue upon a question of that kind
+carried out upon an English nigger. It would be more of a curse upon
+our slave institution than every thing else that could be raised,"
+said the factor.
+
+"Gentlemen, you might as well preach abolition at once, and then the
+public would know what your sentiments were, and how to guard
+against you. I must bid you good-by." So saying, Mr. Grimshaw
+twisted his whip, took a large quid of tobacco, and left the company
+to discuss the question among themselves.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+LITTLE TOMMY AND THE POLICE.
+
+
+
+
+
+WE must take the reader back to the old jail, and continue our scene
+from where we left little Tommy spreading the Captain's present
+before the imprisoned stewards, whose grateful thanks were showered
+upon the head of the bestower. Kindness, be it ever so small, to a
+man in prison, is like the golden rays of the rising sun lighting up
+the opening day. They all partook of the refreshments provided for
+them with grateful spirits.
+
+It was near ten o'clock when Daley came to announce that it was time
+to close the prison, and all strangers must withdraw. Tommy had
+insisted upon stopping with Manuel during the night, but Daley,
+
+This man Daley was a proverbial drunkard, a tyrant in the exercise
+of his "little brief authority," and a notorious--. Singular as it
+may seem, considering his position, he would quarrel with the men
+for a glass of whiskey, had given the jailer more trouble than any
+other man, and been several times confined in the cells for his
+incorrigible vices. If any thing more was wanting to confirm our
+note, we could refer to Colonel Condy, the very gentlemanly United
+States marshal. in a very rude manner, told him it was against the
+rules, and putting his hand to his back, pushed him out of the cell
+and secured the bolts. The little fellow felt his way through the
+passage and down the stairs in the dark until he reached the
+corridor, where the jailer stood awaiting to let him pass the outer
+iron-gate. "You've made a long stay, my little fellow. You'll have
+a heap o' trouble to find the wharf, at this time o' night. I'd o'
+let you stopped all night, but it's strictly against the sheriff's
+orders," said the jailer, as, he passed into the street, at the same
+time giving him a list of imperfect directions about the course to
+proceed.
+
+The jail is in a distant and obscure part of the city, surrounded by
+narrow streets and lanes, imperfectly laid out and undefined. In
+leaving the walls of the prison, he mistook his direction, and the
+night being very dark, with a light, drizzling rain, which commenced
+while he was in the prison, the whole aspect of things seemed
+reversed. After travelling about for some time, he found himself
+upon a narrow strip of land that crossed a basin of water and led to
+Chisholm's mill. The different appearance of things here convinced
+him of his error. Bewildered, and not knowing which way to proceed,
+he approached a cross road, and sitting down upon a log, wept
+bitterly. He soon heard a footstep, and as it approached, his cares
+lightened. It proved to be a negro man from the mill,
+
+These mills are worked all night, and the poor negroes, wishing to
+follow an example which massa sets on a grand scale, save that they
+have an excuse in the fatigue of labor, will delegate some shrewd
+one of their number to proceed to a Dutch "corner-shop" in the
+suburbs, run the gauntlet of the police, and get a bottle of
+whiskey, When interrogated, they are always "going for a bottle of
+molasses." They keep a keen watch for the police, and their cunning
+modes of eluding their vigilance forms many amusing anecdotes. They
+are bound to have a pass from master, or some white man; but if they
+can reach the shop in safety, the Dutchman will always furnish them
+with one to return. It not unfrequently happens that the guard-men
+are much more ignorant than the slaves. The latter knowing this,
+will endeavor to find their station and approach by it, taking with
+them either an old pass or a forged one, which the guard-man makes a
+wonderful piece of importance about examining and countersigning,
+though he can neither read nor write. Thus Sambo passes on to get
+his molasses, laughing in his sleeve to think how he "fool ignorant
+buckra." A change of guard often forms a trap for Sambo, when he is
+lugged to the guard-house, kept all night, his master informed in
+the morning, and requested to step up and pay a fine, or Sambo's
+back catches thirty-nine, thus noting a depression of value upon the
+property. Sometimes his master pays the municipal fine, and
+administers a domestic castigation less lacerating. bound into the
+city on the usual errand of procuring a little of molasses. When
+he first discovered Tommy, he started back a few paces, as if in
+fear; but on being told by Tommy that he was lost, and wanted to
+find his way to the wharves, he approached and recovering,
+confidence readily, volunteered to see him to the corner of Broad
+street. So, taking him by the hand, they proceeded together until
+they reached the termination of the Causeway, and were about to
+enter Tradd street, when suddenly a guard-man sprang from behind an
+old shed. The negro, recognising his white belt and tap-stick, made
+the best of his time, and set off at full speed down a narrow lane.
+The watchman proceeded close at his heels, springing his rattle at
+every step, and pouring out a volley of vile imprecations. Tommy
+stood for a few moments, but soon the cries of the negro and the
+beating of clubs broke upon his ear; he became terrified, and ran at
+the top of his speed in an opposite direction. Again he had lost his
+way, and seemed in a worse dilemma than before; he was weary and
+frightened, and hearing so many stories among the sailors about
+selling white children for slaves, and knowing the imprisonment of
+Manuel, which he did not comprehend, his feelings were excited to
+the highest degree. After running for a few minutes, he stopped to
+see if he could recognize his position. The first thing that caught
+his eye was the old jail, looming its sombre walls in the gloomy
+contrast of night. He followed the walls until he reached the main
+gate, and then, taking an opposite direction from his former route,
+proceeded along the street until he came to a lantern, shedding its
+feeble light upon the murky objects at the corner of a narrow lane.
+Here he stood for several minutes, not knowing which way to proceed:
+the street he was in continued but a few steps farther, and turn
+which ever way he would, darkness and obstacles rose to impede his
+progress. At length he turned down the lane, and proceeded until he
+came to another junction of streets; taking one which he thought
+would lead him in the right direction, he wandered through it and
+into a narrow, circuitous street, full of little, wretched-looking
+houses. A light glimmered from one of them, and he saw a female
+passing to and fro before the window. He approached and rapped
+gently upon the door. Almost simultaneously the light was
+extinguished. He stood for a few minutes, and again rapped louder
+than before; all was silent for some minutes. A drenching shower had
+commenced, adding to the already gloomy picture; and the rustling
+leaves on a tree that stood near gave an ominous sound to the
+excited feelings of the child. He listened at the door with anxiety
+and fear, as he heard whispers within; and as he was about to repeat
+his rapping, a window on the right hand was slowly raised. The
+female who had been pacing the floor protruded her head with a
+caution that bespoke alarm. Her long, black hair hanging about her
+shoulders, and her tawny, Indian countenance, with her ghost-like
+figure dressed in a white habiliment, struck him with a sort of
+terror that wellnigh made him run.
+
+"Who is that, at this time of night?" inquired the woman, in a low
+voice.
+
+"It's only me. I'm lost, and can't find my way to our vessel," said
+Tommy, in a half-crying tone.
+
+"Mother," said the woman, shutting the window, "it's only a little
+sailor-boy, a stranger, and he's wet through."
+
+She immediately unbarred and opened the door, and invited him to
+come in. Stepping beyond the threshold, she closed the door against
+the storm, and placing a chair at the fire, told him to sit down and
+warm himself. They were mulatto half-breeds, retaining all the
+Indian features which that remnant of the tribe now in Charleston
+are distinguished by a family well known in the city, yet under the
+strictest surveillance of the police. Every thing around the little
+room denoted poverty and neatness. The withered remnant of an aged
+Indian mother lay stretched upon a bed of sickness, and the
+daughter, about nineteen years old, had been watching over her, and
+administering those comforts, which her condition required. "Why,
+mother, it's a'most twelve o'clock. I don't believe he'll come
+to-night."
+
+She awaited her friend, or rather he whose mistress she had
+condescended to be, after passing from several lords. The history of
+this female remnant of beautiful Indian girls now left in
+Charleston, is a mournful one. The recollection of their noble
+sires, when contrasted with their present unhappy associations,
+affords a sad subject for reflection. and this little boy can stop
+till morning in our room up-stairs," said she, looking up at an old
+Connecticut clock that adorned the mantel-piece.
+
+"Oh! I could not stay all night. The mate would be uneasy about me,
+and might send the crew to look for me. I'm just as thankful, but I
+couldn't stop," said Tommy.
+
+"But you never can find the bay on such a night as this; and I've no
+pass, or I would show you into Broad street, and then you could find
+the way. I am afraid of the guardmen, and if they caught me and took
+me to the station, my friend would abuse me awfully," said Angeline,
+for such was her name; and she laid her hand upon his arm to feel
+his wet clothes.
+
+He now arose from the chair, and putting on his hat, she followed
+him to the door and directed him how to proceed to find Broad
+street.
+
+He proceeded according to her directions, and soon found it. Now, he
+thought, he was all right; but the wind had increased to a gale, and
+having a full sweep through the street, it was as much as he could
+do to resist it. He had scarcely reached half the distance of the
+street when it came in such sudden gusts that he was forced to seek
+a refuge against its fury in the recess of a door. He sat down upon
+a step, and buttoning his little jacket around him, rested his head
+upon his knees, and while waiting for the storm to abate, fell into
+a deep sleep. From this situation he was suddenly aroused by a
+guardman, who seized him by the collar, and giving him an unmerciful
+twitch, brought, him headlong upon the sidewalk.
+
+"What are you at here? Ah! another miserable vagrant, I suppose.
+We'll take care of such rascals as you; come with me. We'll larn ye
+to be round stealing at this time o' night."
+
+"No, sir! no, sir! I didn't do nothing"--
+
+"Shut up! None of your lyin' to a policeman, you young rascal. I
+don't want to hear, nor I won't stand your infernal lies."
+
+"Oh do, mister, let me tell you all about it, and I know you won't
+hurt me. I'm only going to the vessel, if you'll show me the way,"
+said the little fellow imploringly.
+
+"Stop yer noise, ye lying young thief, you. Ye wouldn't be prowling
+about at this time o' night if ye belonged to a vessel. 'Pon me
+soul, I believe yer a nigger. Come to the light," said the guardman,
+dragging him up to a lamp near by. "Well, you a'n't a nigger, I
+reckon, but yer a strolling vagrant, and that's worse," he
+continued, after examining his face very minutely. So, dragging him
+to the guardhouse as he would a dog, and thrusting him into a sort
+of barrack-room, the captain of the guard and several officials
+soon gathered around him to inquire the difficulty. The officers
+listened to the guardman's story, with perfect confidence in every
+thing he said, but refused to allow the little fellow to reply in
+his own behalf. "I watched him for a long time, saw him fumbling
+about people's doors, and then go to sleep in Mr. T--'s recess.
+These boys are gettin' to be the very mischief-most dangerous
+fellows we have to deal with," said the policeman.
+
+"Oh, no! I was only goin' to the brig, and got turned round. I've
+been more than two hours trying to find my way in the storm. I'm
+sure I a'n't done no harm. If ye'll only let me tell my story," said
+Tommy.
+
+"Shut up! We want no stories till morning. The mayor will settle
+your hash to-morrow; and if you belong to a ship, you can. tell him
+all about it; but you'll have the costs to pay anyhow. Just lay down
+upon that bench, and you can sleep there till morning; that's better
+than loafing about the streets," said the captain of the guard, a
+large, portly-looking man, as he pointed Tommy to a long bench
+similar to those used in barrack-rooms.
+
+The little fellow saw it was no use to attempt a hearing, and going
+quietly to the bench, he pulled off his man-a-war hat, and laying it
+upon a chair, stretched himself out upon it, putting his little
+hands under his head to ease it from the hard boards.
+
+But he was not destined to sleep long in this position, for a loud,
+groaning noise at the door, broke upon their ears though the pelting
+fury of the storm, like one in agonizing distress.
+
+"Heavens! what is that!" said the captain of the guard, suddenly
+starting from his seat, and running for the door, followed by the
+whole posse. The groans grew louder and more death-like in their
+sound, accompanied by strange voices, giving utterance to horrible
+imprecations, and a dragging upon the floor. The large door opened,
+and what a sight presented itself! Three huge monsters, with
+side-arms on, dragged in the poor negro who proffered to show Tommy
+into Broad street. His clothes were nearly torn from his back,
+besmeared with mud, from head to foot, and his face cut and mangled
+in the most shocking manner. His head, neck, and shoulders, were
+covered with a gore of blood, and still it kept oozing from his
+mouth and the cuts on his head. They dragged him in as if he was a
+dying dog that had been beaten with a club, and threw him into a
+corner, upon the floor, with just about as much unconcern.
+
+"Oh! massa! massa! kill me, massa, den 'em stop sufferin'!" said the
+poor fellow, in a painful murmur, raising his shackled hands to his
+head, and grasping the heavy chain that secured his neck, in the
+agony of pain.
+
+"What has he done?" inquired the officer.
+
+"Resisted the guard, and ran when we told him to stop!" responded a
+trio of voices. "Yes, and attempted to get into a house. Ah! you
+vagabond you; that's the way we serve niggers like you!--Attempt to
+run again, will you? I'll knock your infernal daylights out, you
+nigger you," said one of the party.
+
+"It does seem tome that you might have taken him, and brought him up
+with less severity," said the officer.
+
+"What else could we do, sure? Didn't we catch him prowling about
+with a white fellow, and he runn'd till we couldn't get him. Indeed
+it was nothing good they were after, and it's the like o' them that
+bees doing all the mischief beyant the city."
+
+"An' 'imself, too, struck Muldown two pokes, 'efore he lave de
+hancuffs be pat upon him, at all!" said another of the guardmen; and
+then turning around, caught a glimpse of poor little Tommy, who had
+been standing up near a desk, during the scene, nearly "frightened
+out of his wits."
+
+"By the pipers,--what! and is't here ye are? The same that was with
+himself beyant! Come here, you spalpeen you. Wasn't ye the same what
+runn'd whin we bees spaken to that nigger?" said the same guardman,
+taking hold of Tommy's arm, and drawing him nearer the light.
+
+"Yes, he was coming along with me, to show me"--
+
+"Stop!--you know you are going to lie already. Better lock 'em both
+up for the night, and let them be sent up in the morning," said
+another.
+
+"Then you won't let me speak for myself--"
+
+"Hush, sir!" interrupted the officer; "you can tell your story in
+the morning! but take care you are not a vagrant. If it's proved
+that you were with that nigger at the improper hour, you'll get your
+back scarred. Come, you have owned it, and I must lock you up."
+
+Without attempting to wash the blood off the negro, or dress his
+wounds, they unlocked the handcuffs, and loosened the chain from his
+neck, handling him with less feeling than they would a dumb brute.
+Relieved of his chains, they ordered him to get up.
+
+The poor creature looked up imploringly, as if to beg them to spare
+his life, for he was too weak to speak. He held up his hands,
+drenched with blood, while beneath his head was a pool of gore that
+had streamed from his mounds. "None of your infernal humbuggery-you
+could run fast enough. Just get up, and be spry about it, or I'll
+help you with the cowhide," said the officer, calling to one of the
+guardmen to bring it to him. He now made an effort, and had got upon
+his knees, when the guardman that seemed foremost in his brutality
+fetched him a kick with his heavy boots in the side, that again
+felled him to the ground with a deep groan.
+
+"Ot-tut! that will not do. You mus'n't kill the nigger; his master
+will come for him in the morning," said the officer, stooping down
+and taking hold of his arm with his left hand, while holding a
+cowhide in his right. "Come, my boy, you must get up and go into the
+lock-up," he continued.
+
+"Massa! oh, good massa, do-don't! I's most dead now, wha'for ye no
+lef me whare a be?" said he in a whining manner; and making a second
+attempt, fell back upon the floor, at which two of them seized him
+by the shoulders, and dragging him into a long, dark, cell-like
+room, threw him violently upon the floor. Then returning to the
+room, the officer took Tommy by the arm, and marching him into the
+same room, shut the door to smother his cries. The little fellow was
+so frightened, that he burst into an excitement of tears. The room
+was dark, and as gloomy as a cavern. He could neither lie down,
+sleep, nor console himself. He thought of Manuel, only to envy his
+lot, and would gladly have shared his imprisonment, to be relieved
+from such a horrible situation. Morning was to bring, perhaps, worse
+terrors. He thought of the happy scenes of his rustic home in
+Dunakade, and his poor parents, but nothing could relieve the
+anguish of his feelings. And then, how could he get word to his
+Captain? If they were so cruel to him now, he could not expect them
+to be less so in the morning. In this manner, he sat down upon the
+floor with the poor negro, and, if he could do nothing more,
+sympathized with his feelings. The poor negro murmured and groaned
+in a manner that would have enlisted the feelings of a Patagonian;
+and in this way he continued until about three o'clock in the
+morning, when his moaning became so loud and pitiful, that the
+officer of the guard came to the door with an attendant, and
+unbolting it, entered with a lantern in his hand. He held the light
+toward his face, and inquired what he was making such a noise about?
+"Oh! good massa, good massa, do send for docta; ma head got a pile
+o' cuts on him," said he, putting his hand to his head. The officer
+passed the lantern to his attendant, and after putting a pair of
+gloves on his hands, began to feel his head, turn aside his torn
+clothes, and wipe the dirt from the places where the blood seemed to
+be clotted. "Good gracious! I didn't conjecture that you were cut so
+bad. Here, my good fellow, (addressing himself to Tommy,) hold the
+lantern. Michael, go get a pail of water, and some cloths," said he,
+very suddenly becoming awakened to the real condition of the man,
+after he had exhibited a coldness that bordered on brutality.
+
+Water and cloths were soon brought. The attendant, Michael,
+commenced to strip his clothes off, but the poor fellow was so sore
+that he screeched, in the greatest agony, every time he attempted to
+touch him. "Be easy," said the officer, "he's hurt pretty badly. He
+must a' been mighty refractory, or they'd never beaten him in this
+manner," he continued, opening a roll of adhesive plaster, and
+cutting it into strips. After washing, him with water and whiskey,
+they dressed his wounds with the plaster, and bound his head with an
+old silk handkerchief which they found in his pocket, after which
+they left the light burning and retired.
+
+After they retired, Tommy inquired of the negro how they came to
+keep him so long, before they brought him to the guard-house? It
+proved, that as soon as they came up with him, the first one knocked
+him down with a club; and they all at once commenced beating him
+with their bludgeons, and continued until they had satisfied their
+mad fury. And while he lay groaning in the streets, they left one of
+their number in charge, while the others proceeded to get handcuffs
+and chains, in which they bound him, and dragged him, as it were,
+the distance of four squares to the guard-house. What a sublime
+picture for the meditations of a people who boast of their bravery
+and generosity!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+THE NEXT MORNING, AND THE MAYOR'S VERDICT.
+
+
+
+
+
+SHORTLY after daylight, Tommy fell into a dozing sleep, from which
+he was awakened by the mustering of the prisoners who had been
+brought up during the night, and were to appear before the mayor at
+nine o'clock. A few minutes before eight o'clock, an officer opened
+the cell-door, and they were ordered to march out into a long room.
+In this room they found all the prisoners gathered. There were three
+blacks and five whites, who had been arrested on different charges;
+and as the mayor's court was merely a tribunal of commitment-not
+judgment-if the charges upon which the prisoners were brought up
+were sustained-which they generally were, because the policeman who
+made the arrest was the important witness, they were committed to
+await the tardy process of the law.
+
+Considerable uneasiness had been felt on board of the Janson for
+Tommy, and the Captain suggested that he might have got astray among
+the dark lanes of the city, and that the mate had better send some
+of the crew to look for him. The mate, better acquainted with
+Tommy's feelings and attachment for Manuel than he was with the
+rules of the prison and Mr. Grimshaw's arbitrary orders, assured the
+Captain that such a course would be entirely unnecessary, for he
+knew when he left that he would stop all night with Manuel. This
+quieted the Captain's apprehensions, and he said no more about it
+until he sat down to breakfast. "I miss Tommy amazingly," said the
+Captain. "If he stopped all night, he should be here by this time. I
+think some one had better be sent to the jail to inquire for him."
+Just as he arose from the table, one of the crew announced at the
+companion that a person on deck wished to see the Captain. On going
+up, he found a policeman, who informed him that a little boy had
+been arrested as a vagrant in the street, last night, and when
+brought before the mayor a few minutes ago, stated that he belonged
+to his vessel, and the mayor had despatched him to notify the
+master. "Circumstances are suspicious; he was seen in company with a
+negro of very bad habits; but if you can identify the boy, you had
+better come quick, or he'll be sent to jail, and you'll have some
+trouble to get him out," said the messenger, giving the Captain a
+description of the boy.
+
+"Oh yes!" said the Captain, "that's my Tommy. I verily believe
+they'll have us all in jail before we get away from the port."
+Numerous appointments engrossed his time, and he had promised to
+meet the consul at an early hour that morning. Notwithstanding this,
+he gave a few orders to the mate about getting the hatches ready and
+receiving the port-wardens, and then immediately repaired to the
+all-important guard-house. He was just in time to receive the
+mortifying intelligence that the mayor's court had concluded its
+sitting, and to see little Tommy, with a pair of handcuffs on his
+hand, in the act of being committed to jail by a Dutch constable. He
+stopped the constable, and being told that his honor was yet in the
+room, put a couple of dollars into his hand to await his
+intercession. Another fortunate circumstance favored him; just as he
+stopped the constable, he saw his friend, Colonel S--, approaching.
+The colonel saw there was trouble, and with his usual,
+characteristic kindness, hastened up and volunteered his services.
+
+We must now return to the arraignment, as it proceeded after the
+messenger had been despatched.
+
+The negro confined with Tommy presented a wretched picture when
+brought into the light room among the other prisoners. His head was
+so swollen that no trace of feature was left in his face. Cuts and
+gashes were marked with plaster all over his neck and face; his head
+tied up with an old red handkerchief; his eyes, what could be seen
+of them, more like balls of blood than organs of sight; while the
+whiskey and water with which his head had been washed, had mixed
+with the blood upon his clothes, and only served to make its
+appearance more disgusting. Altogether, a more pitiful object never
+was presented to human sight.
+
+Some minutes before the clock struck nine, an intelligent-looking
+gentleman, very well dressed, and portly in his appearance, entered
+the room. He was evidently kindly disposed, but one of those men
+whose feelings prompt them to get through business with despatch,
+rather than inquire into the circumstances of aggravated cases. He
+held a consultation with the officer for some minutes with reference
+to the prisoners. After which he mounted a little tribune, and
+addressing a few words to the white prisoners, (a person who acted
+the part of clerk announced court by rapping upon a desk with a
+little mallet,) inquired whether the officers had notified the
+owners of the negroes. Being informed that they had, he proceeded
+with the negroes first. One, by some good fortune, was taken away by
+his master, who paid the usual fee to swell the city treasury;
+another was sentenced to receive twenty paddles on the frame at the
+workhouse; and the third, the man we have described, being brought
+forward, weak with the loss of blood, leaned his hand upon the back
+of a chair. "Stand up straight!" said the officer, in a commanding
+tone.
+
+"Now, my boy, this is twice you have been before this court. Your
+master has left you to the mercy of the law, and given strict orders
+to the police in the event that you were caught a third time. Your
+crime is worse now, for you were caught in company with that white
+boy-probably on some errand of villany, prowling about the streets
+after drum-beat. I shall, in consideration of the facts here stated
+by the police, whose evidence I am bound to recognise, sentence you
+to nineteen paddles on the frame, and to be committed to jail, in
+accordance with your master's orders, there to await his further
+directions.
+
+"Arraign the white prisoners according to the roll, Mr.--. Have you
+sent a message to the Captain about that boy?" inquired the mayor.
+
+"No, yer honor; but I will send at once," said the officer, stepping
+into the passage and calling an attendant.
+
+The little fellow was arraigned first. He stood up before the mayor
+while the ruffianly policeman who arrested him preferred the charges
+and swore to them, adding as much to give coloring as possible.
+"Now, my man, let me hear what you have got to say for yourself. I
+have sent for your captain," said the mayor, looking as if he really
+felt pity for the little fellow.
+
+He commenced to tell his simple story, but soon became so convulsed
+with tears that he could proceed no further. "I only went to the
+jail to see Manuel, the steward, and I got lost, and begged the
+black man to show me the way"--said he, sobbing.
+
+"Well, I have heard enough," said the mayor, interrupting him. "You
+could not have been at the jail at that time o' night-impossible. It
+was after hours-contrary to rules-and only makes the matter worse
+for yourself. You can stand aside, and if the Captain comes before
+court is through, we will see further; if not, you must be committed
+as a vagrant. I'm afraid of you young strollers."
+
+The officer of the guard, as if the poor boy's feelings were not
+already sufficiently harassed, took him by the arm, and pushing him
+into a corner, said, "There, you young scamp, sit down. You'll get
+your deserts when you get to the jail."
+
+He sat down, but could not restrain his feelings. The presence of
+the Captain was his only hope. He saw the prisoners arraigned one by
+one, and join him as they were ordered for committal. He was
+handcuffed like the rest, and delivered to the constable. The reader
+can imagine the smile of gladness that welcomed the Captain's timely
+appearance. The latter's exhibition of feeling, and the simple
+exclamation of the child's joy, formed a striking picture of that
+fondness which a loving child manifests when meeting its parents
+after a long absence.
+
+"Take the irons off that child," said the colonel to the constable.
+"A man like you should not put such symbols of ignominy upon a youth
+like that."
+
+"I would do any thing to oblige you, colonel; but I cannot without
+orders from the mayor," returned the man, very civilly.
+
+"I'll see that you do, very quick," rejoined the colonel,
+impatiently; and taking the little fellow by the arm in a
+compassionate manner, led him back into the presence of the mayor,
+followed by the Captain.
+
+"I want to know what you are committing this lad for," said the
+colonel, setting his hat upon the table, while his face flushed with
+indignation.
+
+"Vagrancy, and caught prowling about the streets with a negro at
+midnight. That is the charge, colonel," replied the mayor, with
+particular condescension and suavity.
+
+"Was there any proof adduced to substantiate that fact?"
+
+"None but the policeman's; you know we are bound to take that as
+prima facie."
+
+"Then it was entirely ex parte. But you know the character of these
+policemen, and the many aggravated circumstances that have arisen
+from their false testimony. I wish to cast no disrespect, your
+honor; but really they will swear to any thing for a fee, while
+their unscrupulous bribery has become so glaring, that it is a
+disgrace to our police system. Have you heard the boy's story?" said
+the colonel.
+
+"Well, he began to tell a crooked story, so full of admissions, and
+then made such a blubbering about it, that I couldn't make head or
+tail of it."
+
+"Well, here is the Captain of his vessel, a friend of mine, whom I
+esteem a gentleman-for all captains ought to be gentlemen, not
+excepting Georgia captains and majors," said the colonel, jocosely,
+turning round and introducing the Captain to his honor. "Now, your
+honor, you will indulge me by listening to the little fellow's
+story, which will be corroborated in its material points by the
+statements of the Captain, which, I trust, will be sufficient; if
+not, we shall recur to the jailer."
+
+"It will be sufficient. I am only sorry there has been so much
+trouble about it," said the mayor.
+
+The boy now commenced to tell his story, which the mayor listened to
+with all learned attention. No sooner had Tommy finished, and the
+Captain arose to confirm his statements, than the mayor declared
+himself satisfied, apologized for the trouble it had caused, and
+discharged the boy upon paying the costs, the amount of which the
+colonel took from his pocket and threw upon the table. Thus was
+Tommy's joy complete; not so the poor negro whose ill luck he
+shared. This high-sounding mayor's court was like Csar's court,
+with the exceptions in Csar's favor.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+EMEUTE AMONG THE STEWARDS.
+
+
+
+
+
+SEVERAL days had passed ere we again introduce the reader to the
+cell of the imprisoned stewards. The captain of the Janson had been
+assured by Mr. Grimshaw that every thing was comfortable at the
+jail, and Manuel would be well cared for. Confiding in this, the
+activity of the consul to bring the matter before the proper
+authorities-and the manner in which his own time was engrossed with
+his business-left him no opportunity to visit Manuel at the jail.
+Tommy and one of the sailors had carried him his hammock, and a few
+things from the ship's stores; and with this exception, they had but
+little to eat for several days. Copeland had but a few days more to
+remain, and, together with those who were with him, had exhausted
+their means, in providing from day to day, during their
+imprisonment. The poor woman who did their washing, a
+generous-hearted mulatto, had brought them many things, for which
+she asked no compensation. Her name was Jane Bee, and when the rules
+of the jail made every man his own washerwoman, she frequently
+washed for those who had nothing to pay her. But her means were
+small, and she worked hard for a small pittance, and had nothing to
+bring them for several days. They were forced to take the allowance
+of bread, but could not muster resolution to eat the sickly meat.
+
+Those who had suffered from it before, took it as a natural
+consequence, looking to the time of their release, as if it was to
+bring a happy change in their lives. But Manuel felt that it was an
+unprecedented outrage upon his feelings, and was determined to
+remonstrate against it. He knocked loudly at the door, and some of
+the prisoners hearing it, reported to the jailer, who sent Daley to
+answer it. As soon as the door was opened, he rushed past, and
+succeeded in gaining the iron door that opened into the vestibule,
+where he could converse with the Jailer, through the grating, before
+Daley could stop him.
+
+The jailer seeing him at the grating, anticipated his complaint.
+"Well, Pereira,--what's the matter up-stairs?" said he.
+
+"For God's sake, jailer, what am I put in here for-to starve? We
+cannot eat the meat you send us, and we have had little else than
+bread and water for three days. Do give us something to eat, and
+charge it to consul, or Captain, an' I'll pay it from my wages when
+I get out, if I ever do," said he.
+
+"My dear fellow!" said the jailer, "no one knows your case better
+than I do; but I am poor, and the restrictions which I am under
+allow me no privileges. You had all better take your meat in the
+morning-if you won't take soup-and try to cook it, or get Jane to do
+it for you. I will give you some coffee and bread from my own table,
+to-night, and you better say as little about it as possible, for if
+Grimshaw hears it, he may lock you up."
+
+"Do, I shall be very thankful, for we are really suffering from
+hunger, in our cell, and I pay you when I get money from Captain,"
+said Manuel, manifesting his thankfulness at the jailer's kindness.
+
+"I will send it up in a few minutes, but you needn't trouble
+yourself about pay-I wouldn't accept it!" said the jailer; and as
+good as his word, he sent them up a nice bowl of coffee for each,
+and some bread, butter, and cheese. They partook of the humble fare,
+with many thanks to the donor. Having despatched it, they seated
+themselves upon the floor, around the faint glimmer of a tin lamp,
+while Copeland read the twentieth and twenty-first chapters of the
+Acts of the Apostles. Copeland was a pious negro, and his behaviour
+during his imprisonment enlisted the respect of every one in jail.
+Singular as the taste may seem, he had his corner in the cell
+decorated with little framed prints. Among them we noticed one of
+the crucifixion, and another of the Madonna. After reading the
+chapters, they retired to their hard beds. About nine o'clock the
+next morning, Daley came to the door with a piece of neck meat, so
+tainted and bloody that its smell and looks more than satisfied the
+stomach.
+
+"Here it is, boys," said he; "yer four pound, but ye's better take
+soup, cos ye'll niver cook that bone, anyhow."
+
+"Do you think we're like dogs, to eat such filth as that? No! I'd
+rather starve!" said Manuel.
+
+"Indeed, an' ye'll larn to ate any thing win ye'd be here a month.
+But be dad, if ye don't watch number one about here, ye's won't get
+much nohow," replied Daley, dropping the bloody neck upon the floor,
+and walking out.
+
+"Better take it," said Copeland. "There's no choice, and hunger
+don't stand for dainties, especially in this jail, where everybody
+is famished for punishment. If we don't eat it, we can give it to
+some of the poor prisoners up-stairs."
+
+"While I have good ship-owners, and a good Captain, I never will eat
+such stuff as that; oh! no," returned Manuel.
+
+The meat was laid in a corner for the benefit of the flies; and when
+dinner time arrived, the same hard extreme arrived with it-bread and
+water. And nobody seemed to have any anxieties on their behalf; for
+two of them had written notes to their Captains, on the day
+previous, but they remained in the office for want of a messenger to
+carry them. Fortunately, Jane called upon them in the afternoon, and
+brought a nice dish of rice and another of homony.
+
+We will here insert a letter we received from a very worthy friend,
+who, though he had done much for the Charleston people, and been
+repaid in persecutions, was thrown into jail for a paltry debt by a
+ruthless creditor. Cleared by a jury of twelve men, he was held in
+confinement through the wretched imperfection of South Carolina law,
+to await nearly twelve months for the sitting of the "Appeal Court,"
+more to appease the vindictiveness of his enemies than to satisfy
+justice, for it was well understood that he did not owe the debt.
+His letter speaks for itself. Charleston Jail, March 31, '52.
+
+MY DEAR FRIEND,--I could not account for your absence during the
+last few days, until this morning, when Mr. F***** called upon me
+for a few moments, and from him I learnt that you had been quite
+unwell. If you are about to-morrow, do call upon me; for a more
+dreary place, or one where less regard is paid to the calls of
+humanity, cannot be found among the nations of the earth.
+
+Such is the ordinary condition of suffering within this
+establishment, that men, and even women, are forced to all kinds of
+extremes to sustain life; and, to speak what experience has taught
+me, crime is more increased than reduced by this wretched system.
+There seems to be little distinction among the prisoners, and no
+means to observe it, except in what is called Mount Rascal on the
+third story. Pilfering is so common, that you cannot leave your room
+without locking your door. The jailer is a good, kind-hearted old
+man, very often giving from his own table to relieve the wants of
+debtors, many of whom repay him with ingratitude. I have suffered
+many privations from shipwreck and cold, but never until I came to
+South Carolina was I compelled to endure imprisonment and subsist
+several days upon bread and water.
+
+Talk about chivalry and hospitality! How many men could join with me
+and ask, "Where is it?" But why should I demur, when I see those
+abroad who have been driven from this State to seek bread; when I
+hear the many voices without tell of struggling to live, for want of
+system in mechanical employment, and when I look upon several within
+these sombre walls who are even worse than me. Here is a physician,
+with a wife and large family, committed for a debt which he was
+unable to pay. His father's name stands among the foremost of the
+State--a General of distinction, who offered his life for her in
+time of war, and whose name honors her triumphs, and has since
+graced the councils of state.
+
+General Hammond, whose name occupies such a conspicuous place in the
+military history of South Carolina. The father's enthusiasm for his
+country's cause led him to sacrifice his all, and by it he entailed
+misfortune upon his descendants. When I consider the case of
+Shannon, whose eleven years and seven months' imprisonment for debt,
+as it was called, but which eventually proved to be a question
+turning upon technicalities of law, gave him, body and soul, to the
+vindictiveness of a persecutor, whose unrelenting malignity was kept
+up during that long space of time. It was merely a breach of
+limitation between merchants, the rights of which should be governed
+by commercial custom. Shannon had, amassed about twenty thousand
+dollars by hard industry; his health was waning, and he resolved to
+retire with it to his native county. The gem proved too glaring for
+the lynx eye of a "true Carolinian," who persuaded him to invest his
+money in cotton. Moved by flattering inducements, he authorized a
+factor to purchase for him upon certain restrictions, which,
+unfortunately for himself, were not drawn up with regard to legal
+enforcement-one of those singular instruments between a merchant and
+an inexperienced man which a professional quibbler can take
+advantage of. Cotton was at the tip-top, and very soon Shannon was
+presented with an account of purchase, and draft so far beyond his
+limits, that he demurred, and rejected the purchase entirely; but
+some plot should be laid to entrap him. The factor undertook the
+force game, notified him that the cotton was held subject to his
+order, and protested the draft for the appearance of
+straightforwardness. Cotton shortly fell to the other extreme, the
+lot was "shoved up" for sale on Shannon's account, Shannon was sued
+for the balance, held to bail, and in default committed to prison.
+His confinement and endurance of it would form a strange chapter in
+the history of imprisonment for debt. Carrying his money with him,
+he closed the door of his cell, and neither went out nor would allow
+any one but the priest to enter for more than three years; and for
+eleven years and seven months he paced the room upon a diagonal line
+from corner to corner, until he wore the first flooring, of two-and-
+a-quarter-inch pine, entirely through.
+
+I might go on and tell of many others, whose poverty was well known,
+and yet suffered years of imprisonment for debt; but I find I have
+digressed. I must relate an amusing affair which took place this
+morning between Manuel Pereira, the steward of the English brig
+Janson, which put into this port in distress, and the jailer. He is
+the man about whom so much talk and little feeling has been
+enlisted--a fine, well-made, generous-hearted Portuguese. He is
+olive-complexioned--as light as many of the Carolinians--intelligent
+and obliging, and evidently unaccustomed to such treatment as he
+receives here.
+
+Manuel appeared before the jailer's office this morning with two
+junks of disgusting-looking meat, the neck-bones, tainted and
+bloody, in each hand. His Portuguese ire was up. "Mister Poulnot,
+what you call dis? In South Carolina you feed man on him, ah? In my
+country, ah yes! we feed him to dog. What you call him? May-be
+somethin' what me no know him. In South Carolina, prison sailor when
+he shipwreck, starve him on nosin', den tell him eat this, ah! I
+sails 'round ze world, but never savage man gives me like zat to
+eat! No, I starve 'fore I eat him, be gar! Zar, you take him," said
+he, throwing the pieces of meat upon the floor in disdain.
+
+"Meat! Yes, it's what's sent here for us. You mustn't grumble at me;
+enter your complaints to the sheriff, when he comes," said the
+jailer, with an expression of mortification on his countenance.
+
+"Meat, ah! You call dat meat in South Carolina? I call him
+bull-neck, not fit for dog in my country. I see, when Capitan come,
+vat he do," said Manuel, turning about and going to his room in a
+great excitement.
+
+"You'd better be careful how you talk, or you may get locked up when
+the sheriff comes."
+
+It seems that the Captain had received a note from him, addressed by
+one of the white prisoners on the same floor, and reached the jail
+just as Manuel had ascended the stairs. He rang the bell and
+requested to see Manuel.
+
+"Manuel Pereira?" inquired the jailer.
+
+"Yes," said the Captain, "he is my steward."
+
+He heard the Captain's voice, and immediately returned to the lobby.
+The tears ran down his cheeks as soon as he saw his old protector.
+"Well, Manuel, I am glad to see you, but sorry that it is in
+imprisonment. Tell me what is the matter. Don't they use you well
+here?" inquired the Captain.
+
+Stepping within the office door, he caught up the pieces of meat,
+and bringing them out in his hands, held them up. "There, Capitan,
+that no fit for man, is it?" said he. "Law send me prison, but law
+no give not'ing to eat. What I do dat people treat me so? Ah,
+Capitan, bull neck, by gar, yes-bull born in South Carolina, wid two
+neck. Ils sont rduits l'extrmit," said he, concluding with
+broken French.
+
+"That cannot be; it's against the law to kill bulls in South
+Carolina," interrupted the jailer jocosely.
+
+"Must be. I swear he bull-neck, 'cas he cum every day just like him.
+Bull born wid one neck no cum so many. What I get for breakfast,
+Capitan, ah?--piece bad bread. What I get for dinner, ah?--bull-neck.
+Yes, what I get for supper, too?--piece bread and bucket o' water.
+May-be he bad, may be he good, just so he come. You think I live on
+dat, Capitan?" said he, in reply to the Captain's questions.
+
+The Captain felt incensed at such treatment, and excused himself for
+not calling before; yet he could not suppress a smile that stole
+upon his countenance in consequence of Manuel's quaint earnestness.
+
+"That is certainly strange fare for a human being; but the supper
+seems rather a comical one. Did you drink the bucket of water,
+Manuel?" inquired the Captain, retaining a sober face.
+
+"Capitan, you know me too well for dat. I not ask 'em nozin' what he
+no get, but I want my coffee for suppe'. I no eat him like zat,"
+throwing the putrid meat upon the floor again.
+
+"Hi, hi! That won't do in this jail. You're dirtying up all my
+floor," said the jailer, calling a negro boy and ordering him to
+carry the bull-necks, as Manuel called them, into the kitchen.
+
+"You call him dirt, ah, Miser Jailer? Capitan, just come my room; I
+shown him," said Manuel, leading the way up-stairs, and the Captain
+followed. A sight at the cell was enough, while the sickly stench
+forbid him to enter beyond the threshold. He promised Manuel that he
+would provide for him in future, and turning about suddenly,
+retreated into the lower lobby.
+
+"Jailer, what does all this mean? Do you allow men to starve in a
+land of plenty, and to suffer in a cell like that?" asked the
+Captain in a peremptory tone.
+
+"I feel for the men, but you must enter your complaints to the
+sheriff-the ration of the jail is entirely in his hands."
+
+"But have you no voice in it, by which you can alleviate their
+situation?"
+
+"Not the least! My duty is to keep every thing-every thing to
+rights, as far as people are committed. You will find the sheriff in
+his office, any time between this and two o'clock," said the jailer.
+And the Captain left as suddenly as he came.
+
+You will think I have written you an essay, instead of a letter
+inviting you to come and see me. Accept it for its intention, and
+excuse the circumstances. Your obedient servant,
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+THE CAPTAIN'S INTERVIEW WITH MR. GRIMSHAW.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE appearance of things at the jail was forlorn in the extreme. The
+Captain knew the integrity of Manuel, and not only believed his
+statement, but saw the positive proofs to confirm them. He repaired
+to the sheriff's office, and inquiring for that functionary, was
+pointed to Mr. Grimshaw, who sat in his large chair, with his feet
+upon the table, puffing the fumes of a very fine-flavored Havana, as
+unconcerned as if he was lord in sovereignty over every thing about
+the city. "I am captain of the Janson, and have called to inquire
+about my steward?" said the Captain.
+
+"Ah! yes,--you have a nigger fellow in jail. Oh! by-the-by, that's
+the one there was so much fuss about, isn't it?" said Mr. Grimshaw,
+looking up.
+
+"It is an imperative duty on me to seek the comfort of my officers
+and crew," said the Captain. "I received a note from my steward,
+this morning,--here it is, (handing him the note,) you can read it.
+He requested me to call upon him at the jail, where I lost no time
+in going, and found what he stated there to be too true. How is it!
+From the great liberality of tone which everywhere met my ears when
+I first arrived, I was led to believe that he would be made
+comfortable; and that the mere confinement was the only feature of
+the law that was a grievance. Now I find that to be the only
+tolerable part of it. When a man has committed no crime, and is
+imprisoned to satisfy a caprice of public feeling, it should be
+accompanied with the most favoring attendants. To couple it with the
+most disgraceful abuses, as are shown here, makes it exceedingly
+repugnant. If we pay for confining these men, and for their living
+while they are confined, in God's name let us get what we pay for!"
+
+The reader will observe that Mr. Grimshaw was a man of coarse
+manners and vulgar mind, with all their traces preserved on the
+outer man. He looked up at the Captain with a presumptuous frown,
+and then said, "Why, Mr. Captain, how you talk! But that kind o'
+talk won't do here in South Carolina. That nigger o' yourn gives us
+a mighty site of trouble, Captain. He doesn't seem to understand
+that he must be contented in jail, and live as the other prisoners
+do. He gets what the law requires, and if he gives us any further
+trouble, we shall lock him up in the third story."
+
+"You cannot expect him to be contented, when you furnish the means
+of discontent. But I did not come here to argue with you, nor to ask
+any thing as a favour, but as a right. My steward has been left to
+suffer! Am I to pay for what he does not get? Or am I to pay you for
+the pretence, and still be compelled to supply him on account of the
+owners? You must excuse my feelings, for I have had enough to
+provoke them!" returned the Captain.
+
+"That business is entirely my own! He gets what the State allows,
+and I provide. Your steward never wrote that note; it was dictated
+by some of them miserable white prisoners. I can hear no complaints
+upon such cases as them. If I were to listen to all these
+nonsensical complaints, it would waste all my time. I wish the devil
+had all the nigger stewards and their complaints; the jail's in a
+fuss with them all the time. I can hear nothing further, sir-nothing
+further!" said Grimshaw emphatically, interrupting the Captain as he
+attempted to speak; at which the Captain became so deeply incensed,
+that he relieved his feelings in that sort of plain English which a
+Scotchman can best bestow in telling a man what he thinks of his
+character.
+
+"You must remember, sir, you are in the office of the sheriff of the
+county-parish, I mean,--and I am, sir, entitled to proper respect.
+Begone!--avaunt! you have no right to come here and traduce my
+character in that way. You musn't take me for a parish beadle," said
+Grimshaw, contorting the unmeaning features of his visage, and
+letting fly a stream of tobacco juice in his excitement.
+
+"If you have no laws to give me justice, you have my opinion of your
+wrongs," returned the Captain, and taking his hat, left the office
+with the intention of returning to the jail. On reflection, he
+concluded to call upon Colonel S--, which he did, and finding him in
+his office, stated the circumstances to him.
+
+"These things are the fruits of imbecility; but I am sorry to say
+there is no relief from them. We are a curious people, and do a
+great many curious things according to law, and leave a great many
+things undone that the law and lawmakers ought to do. But I will go
+with you to the jail, and whatever my influence will effect is at
+your service," said the Colonel, putting on his hat, and
+accompanying the Captain to the jail.
+
+Mr. Grimshaw had forestalled them, and after having given the jailer
+particular instructions to lock Manuel up if he made any further
+complaint, and to carry out his orders upon the peril of his
+situation, met them a few steps from the outer gate, on his return.
+"There, Captain!" said Grimshaw, making a sort of halt, "I have
+given the jailer particular orders in regard to your grumbling
+nigger!"
+
+Neither the Captain nor Colonel S--took any notice of his remarks,
+and passed on into the jail. Colonel S--interceded for the man,
+explaining the circumstances which had unfortunately brought him
+there, and begged the jailer's kind consideration in his behalf. The
+jailer told them what his orders had been, but promised to do as far
+as was in his power, and to see any thing that was sent to him
+safely delivered.
+
+After leaving the jail, Colonel S--proposed a walk, and they
+proceeded along a street running at right angles with the jail,
+until they came to a corner where a large brick building was in
+process of erection. The location was not in what might strictly be
+called "the heart of the city," nor was it in the suburbs.
+Carpenters and masons, both black and white, were busily employed in
+their avocations, and from the distance all seemed fair and moving
+with despatch. As they approached nearer, cries and moans sounded
+upon the air, and rose high above the clatter of the artisans' work.
+The Captain quickened his pace, but the colonel, as if from a
+consciousness of the effect, halted, and would fain have retraced
+his steps. "Come!" said the Captain, "let us hasten-they are killing
+somebody!" They approached the building, and entered by an open door
+in the basement. The passage, or entry-way, was filled with all
+sorts of building materials; and on the left, another door opened
+into a long basement apartment, with loose boards laid upon the
+floor-joists overhead. Here in this dark apartment was the suffering
+object whose moans had attracted their attention. A large billet of
+wood, about six feet long and three feet square, which had the
+appearance of being used for a chopping-block, laid near. A poor
+negro man, apparently advanced in years, was stripped naked and bent
+over the block, in the shape of a horse-shoe, with his hands and
+feet closely pinioned to stakes, driven in the ground on each side.
+His feet were kept close together, and close up to the log, while he
+was drawn over, tight by the hands, which were spread open. Thus,
+with a rope around his neck, tied in a knot at the throat, with each
+end carried to the pinion where his hands were secured, his head and
+neck were drawn down to the tightest point. The very position was
+enough to have killed an ordinary human being in less than six
+hours. His master, a large, robust man, with a strong Irish brogue,
+started at their appearance, as if alarmed at the presence of
+intruders, while holding his hand in the attitude of administering
+another blow. "There! you infernal nigger; steal again, will you?"
+said he, frothing at the mouth with rage--with his coat off, his
+shirt-sleeves rolled up, and his face, hands, arms and shirt-bosom
+so bespattered with blood, that a thrill of horror ran through the
+Captain. On the ground lay several pieces of hoop, broken and
+covered with blood, while he held in his hand another piece, (which
+he had torn from a lime-cask,) reeking with blood, presenting the
+picture of a murderer bestained with the blood of his victim. But
+the poor sufferer's punishment had wasted his strength,--his moans
+had become so faint as to be scarcely perceptible. His posteriors
+were so cut and mangled that we could compare them to nothing but a
+piece of bullock's-liver, with its tenacity torn by craven dogs. His
+body was in a profuse perspiration, the sweat running from his neck
+and shoulders, while the blood streamed from his bruises, down his
+legs, and upon some shavings on the ground. Just at this moment a
+boy brought a pail of water, and set it down close by the tyrant's
+feet. "Go away, boy!" said he, and the, boy left as quick as
+possible. The Captain stood dismayed at the bloody picture.
+
+"Unmerciful man!" said the colonel in a peremptory tone; "what have
+you been doing here? You fiend of hell, let the man up! You own
+slaves to bring disgrace upon us in this manner! Epithets of
+contempt and disgust are too good for you. It is such beasts as you
+who are creating a popular hatred against us, and souring the
+feelings of our countrymen. Let the man up instantly; the very
+position you have him in is enough to kill him, and, if I'm not
+mistaken, you've killed him already."
+
+"Indeed, he's me own property, and it's yerself won't lose a
+ha'penny if he's kilt. An' I'll warrant ye he's cur't of stalin'
+better than the man beyant at the wurk'o'se would be doin' if. Bad
+luck to the nager, an' it's the second time he'd be doin' that same
+thing," said he, as unconcernedly as if he had just been killing a
+calf.
+
+"I'll 'your own' you, you miserable wretch! Your abuse and cruel
+treatment of your slaves is becoming a public thing; and if you
+a'n't very careful, something will be done about it before council.
+If they are your own, you must not treat them worse than dogs; they
+have feeling, if you have no compassion. Be quick! release him at
+once!" demanded the colonel, feeling the man's wrist and head.
+
+The tyrant vent deliberately to work, unloosing the cords. This
+provoked the colonel still more, and taking his knife from his
+pocket, he severed the cords that bound his hands and feet, while as
+suddenly the Captain sprang with his knife and severed those that
+bound his hands and neck. "Stop, Captain, stop! take no part," said
+the colonel, with a significant look.
+
+"Gintlemen, I wish yes wouldn't interfere with my own business,"
+said the master.
+
+"Take him up, you villanous wretch! I speak to you as you deserve,
+without restraint or respect," again the colonel repeated.
+
+He called to the boy who was bringing the pail of water when they
+entered. He came forward, and taking the poor fellow by the
+shoulders, this beast in human form cried out, "Get up now, ye
+miserable thief, ye." The poor fellow made a struggle, but as the
+black man raised his head-which seemed to hang as a dead
+weight-exhaustion had left him without strength, and he fell back
+among the bloody shavings like a mutilated mass of lifeless flesh.
+
+"None of your humbugging; yer worth a dozen dead niggers anyhow,"
+said he, taking up the pail of water and throwing nearly half of it
+over him; then passing the bucket to the black man and ordering him
+to get more water and wash him down; then to get some saltpetre and
+a sponge to sop his flesh.
+
+"Well," said the colonel, "I have seen a good deal of cruelty to
+slaves, but this is the most beastly I have ever beheld. If you
+don't send for a doctor at once, I shall report you. That man will
+die, to a moral certainty. Now, you may depend upon what I say-if
+that man dies, you'll feel the consequences, and I shall watch you
+closely."
+
+"Sure I always takes care of me own niggers, an' it's himself that
+won't be asked to do a stroke of work for a week, but have the same
+to git well in," said the tyrant as the colonel and Captain were
+leaving.
+
+"God be merciful to us, and spare us from the savages of mankind.
+That scene, with its bloody accompaniment, will haunt me through
+life. Do your laws allow such things?" said the Captain, evidently
+excited.
+
+"To tell the truth, Captain," said the colonel, "our laws do not
+reach them. These men own a few negroes, which, being property, they
+exercise absolute control over; a negro's testimony being invalid,
+gives them an unlimited power to abuse and inflict punishment;
+while, if a white man attempts to report such things, the cry of
+'abolitionist' is raised against him, and so many stand ready to
+second the cry, that he must have a peculiar position if he does not
+prejudice his own interests and safety. I am sorry it is so; but it
+is too true, and while it stigmatizes the system, it works against
+ourselves. The evil is in the defects of the system, but the remedy
+is a problem with diverse and intricate workings, which, I own, are
+beyond my comprehension to solve. The reason why I spoke to you as I
+did when you cut the pinions from the man's hands, was to give you a
+word of precaution. That is a bad man. Negroes would rather be sold
+to a sugar plantation in Louisiana any time than be sold to him. He
+soon works them down; in two years, fine, healthy fellows become
+lame, infirm, and sickly under him; he never gives them a holiday,
+and seldom a Sunday, and half-starves them at that. If his feelings
+had been in a peculiar mood at the instant you cut that cord, and he
+had not labored under the fear of my presence, he would have raised
+a gang of his stamp, and with the circumstance of your being a
+stranger, the only alternative for your safety would have been in
+your leaving the city."
+
+"That vagabond has beaten the poor creature so that he will die; it
+can't be otherwise," said the Captain.
+
+"Well, no; I think not, if he is well taken care of for a week or
+so; but it's a chance if that brute gives him a week to get well.
+When proud-flesh sets in, it is very tedious; that is the reason, so
+far as the law is concerned, that the lash was abolished and the
+paddle substituted--the former mangled in the manner you saw just
+now, while the latter is more acute and bruises less. I have seen a
+nigger taken from the paddle-frame apparently motionless and
+lifeless, very little bruised, and not much blood drawn; but he
+would come to and go to work in three or four days," said the
+colonel as they passed along together.
+
+We would print the name of this brute in human form, that the world
+might read it, were it not for an amiable wife and interesting
+family, whose feelings we respect. We heard the cause of this cruel
+torture a short time after, which was simply that he had stolen a
+few pounds of nails, and this fomented the demon's rage. In the
+manner we have described, this ferocious creature had kept his
+victim for more than two hours, beating him with the knotty hoops
+taken from lime-casks. His rage would move at intervals, like gusts
+of wind during a gale. Thus, while his feelings raged highest, he
+would vent them upon the flesh of the poor pinioned wretch; then he
+would stop, rest his arm, and pace the ground from wall to wall, and
+as soon as his passion stormed, commence again and strike the blows
+with all his power, at the same time keeping the black boy standing
+with a bucket of water in his hand ready to pour upon the wretch
+whenever signs of fainting appeared. Several times, when the copious
+shower came over him, it filled his mouth, so that his cries
+resounded with a gurgling, death-like noise, that made every
+sensation chill to hear it. During this space of time, he inflicted
+more than three hundred blows. Our information is from the man who
+did his master's bidding--poured the water--and dared not say, "Good
+massa, spare poor Jacob." We visited the place about a month
+afterward, on a pretext of examining the basement of the building,
+and saw the unmistakable evidences of civilized torture yet
+remaining in the ground and upon the shavings that were scattered
+around.
+
+"Captain, you must not judge the institution of slavery by what you
+saw there; that is only one of those isolated cases so injurious in
+themselves, but for which the general character of the institution
+should not be held answerable," said the colonel.
+
+"A system so imperfect should be revised, lest innocent men be made
+to suffer its wrongs," said the Captain.
+
+They continued their walk through several very pretty parts of the
+city, where fine flowering gardens and well-trimmed hedges were
+nicely laid out; these, however, were not the habitations of the
+"old families." They occupied parts of the city designated by
+massive-looking old mansions, exhibiting an antiqueness and mixed
+architecture, with dilapidated court-yards and weather-stained
+walls, showing how steadfast was the work of decay.
+
+The colonel pointed out the many military advantages of the city,
+which would be used against Uncle Sam if he meddled with South
+Carolina. He spoke of them ironically, for he was not possessed of
+the secession monomania. He had been a personal friend of Mr.
+Calhoun, and knew his abstractions. He knew Mr. McDuffie; Hamilton,
+(the transcendant, of South Carolina fame;) Butler, of good
+component parts-eloquent, but moved by fancied wrongs; Rhett,
+renouncer of that vulgar name of Smith, who hated man because he
+spoke, yet would not fight because he feared his God; and betwixt
+them, a host of worthies who made revenge a motto; and last, but not
+least, great Quattlebum, whose strength and spirit knows no bound,
+and brought the champion Commander, with his enthusiastic devotion,
+to lead unfaltering forlorn hopes. But he knew there was deception
+in the political dealings of this circle of great names.
+
+Returning to the market, they took a social glass at Baker's, where
+the colonel took leave of the Captain; and the latter, intending to
+repair to his vessel, followed the course of the market almost to
+its lowest extreme. In one of the most public places of the market,
+the Captain's attention was attracted by a singular object of
+mechanism. It seemed so undefined in its application, that he was
+reminded of the old saying among sailors when they fall in with any
+indescribable thing at sea, that it was a "fidge-fadge, to pry the
+sun up with in cloudy weather." It was a large pedestal about six
+feet high, with a sort of platform at the base for persons to stand
+upon, supplied with two heavy rings about eight inches apart. It was
+surmounted by an apex, containing an iron shackle long enough for a
+sloop-of-war's best bower chain, and just, beneath it was a
+nicely-turned moulding. About three feet from the ground, and twelve
+inches from the pedestal, were two pieces of timber one above the
+other, with a space of some ten inches between them, the upper one
+set about five inches nearest the pedestal, also containing two
+rings, and both supported by posts in the ground. Above the whole
+was a framework, with two projecting timbers supplied with rings,
+and standing about fourteen inches in a diagonal direction above the
+big ring in the apex of the shaft. It was altogether a curious
+instrument, but it designated the civilization of the age, upon the
+same principle that a certain voyager who, on landing in a distant
+country, discovered traces of civilization in the decaying remains
+of an old gallows.
+
+He viewed the curious instrument for some time, and then turning to
+an old ragged negro, whose head and beard were whitened with the
+flour of age, said, "Well, old man, what do you call that?"
+
+"Why, massa, him great t'ing dat-what big old massa judge send
+buckra-man to get whip, so color foke laugh when 'e ketch 'im on de
+back, ca' bim; an' massa wid de cock-up hat on 'e head put on big
+vip jus' so," said the old negro.
+
+It was the whipping-post, where white men, for small thefts, were
+branded with ignominy and shame.
+
+"Are you a slave, old man?" inquired the Captain.
+
+The old man turned his head aside and pulled his ragged garments, as
+if shame had stung his feelings.
+
+"Do, good massa-old Simon know ye don'e belong here-give him piece
+of 'bacca," replied the hoary-headed veteran evidently intending to
+evade the question. The Captain divided his "plug" with him, and
+gave him a quarter to get more, but not to buy whiskey. "Tank-e,
+massa, tank-e; he gone wid ole Simon long time."
+
+"But you haven't answered my question; I asked you if you were a
+slave."
+
+"Ah! massa, ye don'e know him how he is, ah ha! ha! I done gone now.
+Massa Pringle own 'im once, but 'im so old now, nobody say I own
+'im, an' ole Simon a'n't no massa what say I his fo' bacon. I don't
+woff nofin' nohow now, 'cos I ole. When Simon young-great time
+'go-den massa say Simon his; woff touzan' dollars; den me do eve'
+ting fo' massa just so. I prime nigga den, massa; now I woff nosin',
+no corn and bacon 'cept what 'im git from Suke-e. She free; good
+massa make her free," said he.
+
+"How old are you, old man?" inquired the Captain.
+
+"Ah, Massa Stranger, ye got ole Simon da! If me know dat, den 'im
+know somefin' long time ago, what buckra-man don' larn. I
+con'try-born nigger, massa, but I know yonder Massa Pringle house
+fo' he built 'im." Just at this moment several pieces of cannon and
+other ordnance were being drawn past on long, low-wheeled drays.
+"Ah, massa, ye don'e know what 'em be," said the old negro, pointing
+to them. "Dem wa' Massa South Ca'lina gwan to whip de 'Nited States
+wid Massa Goberna' order 'em last year, an 'e jus' come. Good masse
+gwan' to fight fo' we wid 'em." The poor old man seemed to take a
+great interest in the pieces of ordnance as they passed along, and
+to have inherited all the pompous ideas of his master. The negroes
+about Charleston have a natural inclination for military tactics,
+and hundreds of ragged urchins, as well as old daddies and mammies,
+may be seen following the fife and drum on parade days.
+
+"Then I suppose you've a home anywhere, and a master nowhere, old
+man?" said the Captain, shaking him by the hand, as one who had worn
+out his slavery to be disowned in the winter of life.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII.
+
+COPELAND'S RELEASE, AND MANUEL'S CLOSE CONFINEMENT.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE Captain of the Janson, finding that no dependence was to be
+placed upon the statements of the officials, after returning to his
+vessel, gave orders that Tommy should be sent to the jail every day
+with provisions for Manuel. The task was a desirable one for Tommy,
+and every day about ten o'clock he might be seen trudging to the
+jail with a haversack under his arm. There were five stewards
+confined in the cell, and for some days previous to this attention
+on the part of the Captain they had been reduced to the last stage
+of necessity. The quantity may be considered as meagre when divided
+among so many, but added to the little things brought in by Jane,
+and presents from several of the crew of the Janson, they got along.
+Still it was a dependence upon chance and charity, which any
+casual circumstance might affect. For several days they made
+themselves as contented and happy as the circumstances would admit;
+and always being anxious to enjoy the privilege of their time in the
+yard, they would leave their cell together, and mix with the
+prisoners of their own color under the stoop.
+
+After a few days, they found that their cell had been entered, and
+nearly all their provisions stolen. Not contented with this, the act
+was repeated for several days, and all the means they provided to
+detect the thief proved fruitless. The jailer made several searches
+through their remonstrances, but without effecting any thing. They
+kept their provisions in a little box, which they locked with a
+padlock; but as Daley had the keys of the cell, they had no means of
+locking the door. At length Manuel set a trap that proved effectual.
+One morning Tommy came puffing into the jail with a satchel over his
+back. "I guess Manuel won't feel downhearted when he sees this--do
+you think he will?" said the little fellow, as he put the satchel
+upon the floor and looked up at the jailer. "An' I've got some
+cigars, too, the Captain sent, in my pocket," said he, nodding his
+head; and putting his hand into a side-pocket, pulled out one and
+handed it to the jailer.
+
+"Ah! you are a good little fellow-worth a dozen of our boys. Sit
+down and rest yourself," said the jailer, and called a monstrous
+negro wench to bring a chair and take the satchel up to the cell.
+Then turning to the back-door, he called Manuel; and, as if
+conscious of Tommy's arrival, the rest of the stewards followed. He
+sprang from the chair as soon as he saw Manuel, and running toward
+him, commenced telling him what he had got in the satchel and at
+the same time pulled out a handful of segars that the Captain had
+sent for himself. Manuel led the way up-stairs, followed by Tommy
+and the train of stewards. Tommy opened the satchel, while Manuel
+laid the contents, one by one, on the table which necessity had
+found in the head of a barrel.
+
+"Now eat, my friends, eat just as much as you want, and then I'll
+catch the thief that breaks my lock and steals my meat. I catch
+him," said Manuel. After they had all done, he locked the balance up
+in his box, and sent everybody down-stairs into the yard, first
+covering himself with two mattrasses, and giving orders to Copeland
+to lock the door after him. Every thing was ready to move at the
+word. In this position he remained for nearly half an hour. At
+length he heard a footstep approach the door, and then the lock
+clink. The door opened slowly, and the veritable Mr. Daley limped
+in, and taking a key from his pocket, unlocked the little box, and
+filling his tin pan, locked it, and was walking off as independent
+as a wood-sawyer, making a slight whistle to a watch that was
+stationed at the end of the passage. "It's you, is it?" said Manuel,
+suddenly springing up and giving him a blow on the side of the head
+that sent him and the contents of the pan into a promiscuous pile on
+the floor. Daley gathered himself up and made an attempt to reach
+the door, but Manuel, fearing what might be the consequence if the
+other prisoners came to his assistance, shut the door before him and
+fastened it on the inside.
+
+"Bad luck to yer infernal eyes, will ye strike a white man, ye nager
+ye, in a country like this same?" said Daley, as he was gathering
+himself up. This incensed Manuel's feelings still more. To have
+insult added to injury, and a worthless drunkard and thief abuse
+him, was more than he could bear. He commenced according to a
+sailor's rule of science, and gave Daley a systematic threshing,
+which, although against the rules of the jail, was declared by
+several of the prisoners to be no more than he had long deserved. As
+may have been expected, Daley cried lustily for help, adding the
+very convenient item of murder, to make his case more alarming.
+Several persons had crowded around the door, but none could gain
+admittance. The jailer had no sooner reached the door, than (most
+unfortunately for Manuel) he was called back to the outer door, to
+admit Mr. Grimshaw, who had just rung the bell. The moment he
+entered, Daley's noise was loudest, and reached his ears before he
+had gained the outside gate. He rushed up-stairs, followed by the
+jailer, and demanded entrance at the cell door, swearing at the top
+of his voice that he would break it in with an axe if the command
+was not instantly obeyed.
+
+The door opened, and Manuel stood with his left hand extended at
+Daley. "Come in, gentlemen, I catch him, one rascal, what steal my
+provision every day, and I punish him, what he remember when I
+leave."
+
+Daley stood trembling against the wall, bearing the marks of serious
+injury upon his face and eyes. "At it again, Daley? Ah! I thought
+you had left off them tricks!" said the jailer.
+
+Daley began to tell a three-cornered story, and to give as many
+possible excuses, with equally as many characteristic bulls in them.
+"I don't want to hear your story, Daley," said Mr. Grimshaw. "But,
+Mr. Jailer, I command you to lock that man up in the third story,"
+pointing to Manuel. "I don't care what the circumstances are. He's
+given us more trouble than he's worth. He tried to pass himself off
+for a white man, but he couldn't come that, and now he's had the
+impudence to strike a white man; lock him up! lock him up!! and keep
+him locked up until further orders from me. I'll teach him a lesson
+that he never learnt before he came to South Carolina; and then let
+Consul Mathew sweat over him, and raise another fuss if he can."
+
+"If he's guilty of violating the rules of the jail, Daley is guilty
+of misdemeanour, and the thieving has been aggravatingly continued.
+If we put one, we must put both up," said the jailer.
+
+"Just obey my orders, Mr. Jailer. I will reprimand Daley to-morrow.
+I shall just go to the extent of the law with that feller," said
+Grimshaw peremptorily.
+
+"You may lock me up in a dungeon, do with me as you will, if the
+power is yours; but my feelings are my own, and you cannot crush
+them. I look to my consul, and the country that has protected me
+around the world, and can protect me still," said Manuel, resigning
+himself to the jailer, whose intentions he knew to be good.
+
+Poor little Tommy stood begging and crying for his friend and
+companion, for he heard Mr. Grimshaw give an imperative order to the
+jailer not to allow visitors into his cell. "Never mind, Tommy, we
+shall soon meet again, and sail companions for the old owners. Don't
+cry; the jailer will let you see me to-morrow," said Manuel.
+
+"No, I can't do that; you heard my orders; I must obey them. I
+should like to do it, but it's out of my power," returned the
+jailer, awaiting with a bunch of keys in his hand.
+
+Manuel turned to the little fellow, and kissing him as he would an
+affectionate child, bade him adieu, and ascended, the steps leading
+to the third story (Mount Rascal) in advance of the jailer, to be
+confined in a dark, unhealthy cell, there to await the caprice of
+one man. To describe this miserable hole would be a task too
+harrowing to our feelings. We pass it for those who will come after
+us. He little thought, when he shook the hand of his little
+companion, that it was the last time he should meet him for many
+months, and then only to take a last parting look, under the most
+painful circumstances. But such is the course of life!
+
+Copeland had received notice to hold himself in readiness, as his
+vessel would be ready for sea the next morning. He was not long in
+getting his few things in order, and when morning came he was on
+hand, prepared to bound from the iron confines of the Charleston
+jail, like a stag from a thicket. As he bade good-by to his
+fellow-prisoners in the morning, he said, "This is my last
+imprisonment in Charleston. I have been imprisoned in Savannah, but
+there I had plenty to eat, comfortable apartments, and every thing I
+asked for, except my liberty. Never, so long as I sail the water,
+shall I ship for such a port as this again." He requested to see
+Manuel, but being refused, upon the restraint of orders, he left the
+jail. It was contrary to law; and thus in pursuing his vocation
+within the limits of South-Carolina, his owners were made to pay the
+following sum, for which neither they nor the man who suffered the
+imprisonment received any compensation. "Contrary to Law." Schooner
+"Oscar Jones," Captain Kelly, For William H. Copeland, Colored
+Seaman. To Sheriff of Charleston District. 1852,
+
+To Arrest, $2; Registry, $2, $4.00 To Recog. $1.31; Constable, $1,
+2.31 To Commitment and Discharge, 1.00 To 15 Days' Jail Maintenance
+of Wm. H. Copeland, at 80 cts. per day, 4.50 Received payment,
+$11.81 J. D--, Per Charles E. Kanapeaux, Clerk.
+
+God save the sovereignty of South Carolina, and let her mercy and
+hospitality be known on earth!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII.
+
+IMPRISONMENT OF JOHN PAUL, AND JOHN BAPTISTE PAMERLIE.
+
+
+
+
+
+IN order to complete the four characters, as we designed in the
+outset, we must here introduce the persons whose names fill the
+caption. The time of their imprisonment was some two months later
+than Manuel's release; but we introduce them here for the purpose of
+furnishing a clear understanding of the scenes connected with
+Manuel's release.
+
+John Paul was a fine-looking French negro, very dark, with
+well-developed features, and very intelligent,--what would be called
+in South Carolina, "a very prime feller." He was steward on board of
+the French bark Senegal, Captain--. He spoke excellent French and
+Spanish, and read Latin very well,--was a Catholic, and paid
+particular respect to devotional exercises,--but unfortunately he
+could not speak or understand a word of English. In all our
+observation of different characters of colored men, we do not
+remember to have seen one whose pleasant manner, intelligence, and
+civility, attracted more general attention. But he could not
+comprehend the meaning of the law imprisoning a peaceable man
+without crime, and why the authorities should fear him, when he
+could not speak their language. He wanted to see the city-what sort
+of people were in it-if they bore any analogy to their good old
+forefathers in France; and whether they had inherited the same
+capricious feelings as the descendants of the same generation on the
+other side of the water. There could be no harm in that; and
+although he knew something of French socialism, he was ignorant of
+Carolina's peculiar institutions, her politics, and her fears of
+abolition, as a "Georgia cracker"
+
+A sort of semi-civilized native, wearing a peculiar homespun dress;
+with a native dialect strongly resembling many of the Yorkshire
+phrases. They are generally found located in the poorer parishes and
+districts, where their primitive-looking cabins are easily
+designated from that of the more enterprising agriculturist. But few
+of them can read or write,--and preferring the coarsest mode of
+life, their habits are extremely dissolute. Now and then one may be
+found owning a negro or two,--but a negro would rather be sold to
+the torments of hell, or a Louisiana sugar-planter, than to a
+Georgia cracker. You will see them approaching the city on
+market-days, with their travelling-cart, which is a curiosity in
+itself. It is a two-wheeled vehicle of the most primitive
+description, with long, rough poles for shafts or thills. Sometimes
+it is covered with a blanket, and sometimes with a white rag, under
+which are a few things for market, and the good wife, with sometimes
+one or two wee-yans; for the liege lord never fails to bring his
+wife to market, that she may see the things of the city. The
+dejected-looking frame of some scrub-breed horse or a half-starved
+mule is tied (for we can't call it harnessed) between the thills,
+with a few pieces of rope and withes; and, provided with a piece of
+wool-tanned sheep-skin, the lord of the family, with peculiar
+dress, a drab slouched hat over his eyes, and a big whip in his
+hand, mounts on the back of the poor animal, and placing his feet
+upon the thills to keep them down, tortures it through a heavy,
+sandy road. The horses are loaded so much beyond their strength,
+that they will stop to blow, every ten or fifteen minutes, while the
+man will sit upon their backs with perfect unconcern. Remonstrate
+with them in regard to the sufficient draught added to the
+insupportable weight upon their backs, and they will immediately
+commence demonstrating how he can draw easier when there is an
+immense weight upon his back. The husband generally exchanges his
+things for whiskey, rice, and tobacco, while the wife buys calico
+and knick-knacks. Sometimes they get "a right smart chance o'
+things" together, and have a "party at home," which means a blow-out
+among themselves. Sometimes they have a shucking, which is a great
+affair, even. among the little farmers in Upper Georgia, where,
+only, corn-shuckings are kept up with all the spice of old custom,
+and invitations are extended to those at a distance of ten or
+fifteen miles, who repay the compliment with their presence, and
+join in the revelry. There are two classes of the cracker in
+Georgia, according to our observation, differing somewhat in their
+dialect, but not in their habits. One is the upper, and the other
+the low country, or rather what some call the "co-u-n-try-b-o-r-n"
+cracker. The up-country cracker gives more attention to farming,
+inhabits what's known as the Cherokee country and its vicinity, and
+is designated by the sobriquet of "wire-grass man." would be of
+Greek. Like his predecessors in confinement, he fell into the hands
+of the veritable Dunn, without the assistance of his friend Duse, as
+he called him; but had it not been for the timely appearance of a
+clerk in the French consul's office, who explained the nature of the
+arrest, in his native tongue, Mr. Dunn would have found some trouble
+in making the arrest. Already had the officers and crew of the bark
+gathered around him, making grimaces, and gibbering away like a
+flock of blackbirds surrounding a hawk, and just ready to pounce.
+"Don't I'se be tellin' yees what I wants wid 'im, and the divil a
+bit ye'll understand me. Why don't yees spake so a body can
+understand what yees be blatherin' about. Sure, here's the paper,
+an' yees won't read the English of it. The divil o' such a fix I was
+ever in before wid yer John o' crapue's an' yer chatter. Ye say
+we-we-we; sure it's but one I wants. Ah! whist now, captain, and
+don't ye be makin' a bother over it. Shure, did ye niver hear o'
+South Carolina in the wide world? An' ye bees travellin' all over
+it, and herself's such a great State, wid so many great gintlemen in
+it," said Dunn, talking his green-island Greek to the Frenchman.
+
+"We, we! mon Dieu, ah!" said the Frenchman.
+
+"Ah, shure there ye are again. What would I be doin' wid de 'hole o'
+yees? It's the nager I want. Don't ye know that South Carolina don't
+allow the likes o' him to be comin ashore and playing the divil wid
+her slaves," continued Dunn, stretching himself up on his lame leg.
+
+The clerk stepped up at this moment. "It's 'imself'll be telling yes
+all about it, for yer like a parcel of geese makin' a fuss about a
+goslin." Mr. Dunn had got his Corkonian blood up; and although the
+matter was explained, he saw the means at hand, and fixed his
+feelings for a stiff compensation. The clerk, after explaining to
+the captain, turned to John Paul and addressed him. As soon as he
+was done, John commenced to pack up his dunnage and get money from
+the captain, as if he was bound on an Arctic Expedition. Dunn's eyes
+glistened as he saw the money passing into Paul's hand; but he was
+not to be troubled with the dunnage, and after hurrying him a few
+times, marched him off. He went through the regular system of
+grog-shop sponging; but his suavity and willingness to acquiesce in
+all Mr. Dunn's demands, saved him some rough usage. There was this
+difference between John Paul and Manuel, that the former, not
+understanding the English language, mistook Dunn's deception for
+friendship, and moved by that extreme French politeness and warmth
+of feeling, which he thought doing the gentleman par excellence;
+while the latter, with a quicker perception of right and wrong, and
+understanding our language, saw the motive and disdained its
+nefarious object. For when Paul arrived at the jail he was minus a
+five-dollar gold-piece, which his very amiable official companion
+took particular care of, lest something should befall it. Poor John
+Paul! He was as harmless as South Carolina's secession and
+chivalry-two of the most harmless things in the world, not excepting
+Congressional duelling.
+
+As soon as he entered the jail and found that the jailer could speak
+French, he broke out in a perfect tornado of enthusiasm. "Je serai
+charm de lier connaissance avec un si amiable compagnon," said he,
+and continued in a strain so swift and unabated that it would have
+been impossible for an Englishman to have traced the inflections.
+
+The jailer called Daley, and telling him to take his blanket, the
+State's allotment, ordered him shown to his cell. Daley took the
+blanket under his arm and the keys in his hand, and Paul soon
+followed him upstairs to be introduced to his cell. "There, that's
+the place for yees. We takes the shine off all ye dandy niggers whin
+we gets ye here. Do ye see the pair of eyes in the head o' me?" said
+Daley, pointing to his blackened eyes; "an' he that done that same
+is in the divil's own place above. Now, if ye have ever a drap of
+whiskey, don't be keepin' it shy, an' it'll be tellin' ye a good
+many favors."
+
+"Ah! mon Dieu! Cela fait dresser les cheveux la tte," said Paul,
+shrugging his shoulders.
+
+"Bad luck to the word of that I'd be understandin' at all, at all.
+Can't ye spake so a body'd understand what ye'd mane?"
+
+"C'est ma grande consolation d'avoir. * * * Les Etats-Unis est une
+modle de perfection rpublicaine," said he, taking the blanket from
+Daley and throwing it upon the floor. He was but a poor companion
+for his fellow-prisoners, being deprived of the means to exercise
+his social qualities. He went through the same course of suffering
+that Manuel did; but, whether from inclination or necessity, bore it
+with more Christian fortitude, chanting vespers every morning, and
+reading the Latin service every evening. The lesson which Manuel
+taught Daley proved of great service to Paul, who gave Daley the
+jail-ration which it was impossible for him to eat, and was saved
+from his pilfering propensities. Thus, after John Paul had suffered
+thirty-five days' imprisonment, in mute confinement, to satisfy the
+majesty of South Carolina, he was released upon the following
+conditions, and taken to his vessel at early daylight, lest he
+should see the city or leave something to contaminate the slaves.
+"Contrary to law." State vs. "Contrary to law." French bark
+"Senegal," Capt.--For John Paul, Colored Seaman. To Sheriff
+Charleston Dist.
+
+July 18, 1852. To Arrest, $2; Registry, $2, $4.00" "Recog. $1.31;
+Constable, $1, 2.31" "Commitment and discharge, 1.00" "35 Days'
+Maintenace of John Paul, at 30 cents per day, 10.50
+
+Recd. payment, $17.81 J. D--, S. C. D. Per Chs. E. Kanapeaux, Clerk.
+
+A very nice item of disbursements to present to the owners-a premium
+paid for the advanced civilization of South Carolina!
+
+We have merely noticed the imprisonment of John Paul, our limits
+excluding the details. We must now turn to a little, pert, saucy
+French boy, eleven years old, who spoke nothing but Creole French,
+and that as rotten as we ever heard lisped. The French bark Nouvelle
+Amelie, Gilliet, master, from Rouen, arrived in Charleston on the
+twenty-ninth of July. The captain was a fine specimen of a French
+gentleman. He stood upon the quarter-deck as she was being
+"breasted-in" to the wharf, giving orders to his men, while the
+little child stood at the galley looking at the people upon the
+wharf, making grimaces and pointing one of the crew to several
+things that attracted his attention. Presently the vessel hauled
+alongside of the dock, and Dusenberry, with his companion Dunn, who
+had been watching all the movements of the vessel from a
+hiding-place on the wharf, sprang out and boarded her ere she had
+touched the piles.
+
+The "nigger," seeing Dusenberry approach him, waited until he saw
+his hand extended, and then, as if to save himself from impending
+danger, ran aft and into the cabin, screaming at the top of his
+voice. The crew began to run and move up into close quarters. The
+issue was an important one, and rested between South Carolina and
+the little "nigger." Dusenberry attempted to descend into the cabin.
+"Vat you vant wid my John, my Baptiste? No, you no do dat, 'z my
+cabin; never allow stranger go down 'im," said the captain, placing
+himself in the companionway, while the little terrified nigger
+peeped above the combing, and rolled his large eyes, the white
+glowing in contrast, from behind the captain's legs. In this
+tempting position the little darkie, knowing he was protected by the
+captain and crew, would taunt the representative of the State with
+his bad French. Dunn stood some distance behind Dusenberry, upon the
+deck, and the mission seemed to be such a mystery to both captain
+and crew, that their presence aroused a feeling of curiosity as well
+as anxiety. Several of the sailors gathered around him, and made
+antic grimaces, pointing their fingers at him and swearing, so that
+Dunn began to be alarmed by the incomprehensible earnestness of
+their gibberish, turned pale, and retreated several steps, to the
+infinite amusement of those upon the wharf.
+
+Vat 'e do, ah, you vant 'im? Vat you do vid 'im ven zu gets him, ah?
+Cette affaire dlicate demande," said one of the number, who was
+honored with the title of mate, and who, with a terrific black
+moustache and beard, had the power of contorting his face into the
+most repugnant grimaces. And, at the moment, he drew his
+sheath-knife and made a pretended plunge at Dunn's breast, causing
+him to send forth a pitiful yell, and retreat to the wharf with
+quicker movements than he ever thought himself capable of.
+
+"Il n'y a pas grand mal cela," said the Frenchman, laughing at
+Dunn as he stood upon the capsill of the wharf.
+
+"Bad luck to ye, a pretty mess a murderous Frinchmin that ye are. Do
+yees be thinkin' ye'd play that trick in South Carolina? Ye'll get
+the like o' that taken out o' ye whin yer before his honor in the
+mornin'," said Dunn.
+
+Dusenberry had stood parleying with the captain at the
+companion-door, endeavoring to make the latter understand that it
+was not a case which required the presence of the silver oar. There
+is a prevailing opinion among sailors, that no suit in Admiralty can
+be commenced, or seaman arrested while on board, without the
+presence of the silver oar. And thus acting upon this impression,
+the captain and officers of the Nouvelle Amelie contended for what
+they considered a right. The mate and crew drew closer and closer
+toward Dusenberry, until he became infected with the prevailing
+alarm. "Captain, I demand your protection from these men, in the
+name of the State of South Carolina," said he.
+
+"Who he? De State Souf Ca'lina, vat I know 'bout him, ah? Bring de
+silver oar when come take my man. II y a de la malhomm, tet dans
+sou procs," said Captain Gilliet, turning to his mate.
+
+"Avaunt! avaunt!" said the big man with the large whiskers, and they
+all made a rush at Dusenberry, and drove him over the rail and back
+to the wharf, where he demanded the assistance of those anxious
+spectators, for and in the name of the State. It was a right good
+vaudeville comique, played in dialogue and pantomime. The point of
+the piece, which, with a little arrangement, might have made an
+excellent production, consisted of a misunderstanding between an
+Irishman and a Frenchman about South Carolina, and a law so peculiar
+that no stranger could comprehend its meaning at first and as
+neither could understand the language of the other, the more they
+explained the more confounded the object became, until, from piquant
+comique, the scene was worked into the appearance of a tragedy. One
+represented his ship, and to him his ship was his nation; the
+other represented South Carolina, and to him South Carolina was the
+United States; and the question was, which had the best right to the
+little darkie.
+
+The spectators on the wharf were not inclined to move, either not
+wishing to meddle themselves with South Carolina's affairs-wanting
+larger game to show their bravery-or some more respectable officer
+to act in command. The little darkie, seeing Dusenberry driven to
+the wharf, ran to the gangway, and protruding his head over the
+rail, worked his black phiz into a dozen pert expressions, showing
+his ivory, rolling the white of his eyes, and crooking his finger
+upon his nose in aggravating contempt.
+
+"Shure, we'll turn the guard out and take ye an' yer ship, anyhow.
+Why don't yees give the nager up dasently, an' don't be botherin'.
+An' isn't it the law of South Carolina, be dad; an' be the mortis,
+ye'd be getting' no small dale of a pinalty for the same yer doin',"
+said Dunn.
+
+A gentleman, who had been a silent looker-on, thinking it no more
+than proper to proffer his mediation, perceiving where the
+difficulty lay, stepped on board and introducing himself to the
+captain, addressed him in French, and explained the nature of the
+proceeding. The captain shook his head for some time, and shrugged
+his shoulders. "La police y est bien administre," said he, with an
+air of politeness; and speaking to his mate, that officer again
+spoke to the men, and Dusenberry was told by the gentleman that he
+could come on board. Without further ceremony, he mounted the rail
+and made a second attempt at the young urchin, who screamed and ran
+into the cook's galley, amid the applause of the seamen, who made
+all sorts of shouts inciting him to run, crying out, "Run, Baptiste!
+run, Baptiste!" In this manner the little darkie kept the officer at
+bay for more than fifteen minutes, passing out of one door as the
+officer entered the other, to the infinite delight of the crew. At
+length his patience became wearied, and as he was about to call Dunn
+to his assistance, the captain came up, and calling the child to
+him-for such he was-delivered him up, the little fellow roaring at
+the top of his voice as the big officer carried him over the rail
+under his arm. This ended the vaudeville comique on board of the
+French bark Nouvelle Amelie, Captain Gilliet.
+
+The dignity of the State was triumphant, and the diminutive nigger
+was borne off under the arm of its representative. What a beautiful
+theme for the painter's imagination! And how mutely sublime would
+have been the picture if the pencil of a Hogarth could have touched
+it. The majesty of South Carolina carrying a child into captivity!
+
+After carrying John Baptiste about halfway up the wharf, they put
+him down, and made him "trot it" until they reached the Dutch
+grog-shop we have described in the scene with Manuel. Here they
+halted to take a "stiff'ner," while Baptiste was ordered to sit down
+upon a bench, Dunn taking him by the collar and giving him a hearty
+shake, which made the lad bellow right lustily. "Shut up, ye whelp
+of a nigger, or ye'll get a doz for yeer tricks beyant in the ship,"
+said Dunn; and after remaining nearly an hour, arguing politics and
+drinking toddies, Mr. Dunn got very amiably fuddled, and was for
+having a good-natured quarrel with every customer that came; into
+the shop. He laboured under a spirit-inspired opinion that they must
+treat or fight; and accordingly would attempt to reduce his opinions
+to practical demonstrations. At length the Dutchman made a courteous
+remonstrance, but no sooner had he done it, than Dunn drew his
+hickory stick across the Dutchman's head, and levelled him upon the
+floor. The Dutchman was a double-fisted fellow, and springing up
+almost instantly, returned the compliment. Dusenberry was more
+sober, and stepped in to make a reconciliation; but before he had
+time to exert himself, the Dutchman running behind the counter, Dunn
+aimed another blow at him, which glanced from his arm and swept a
+tin drench, with a number of tumblers on it, into a smash upon the
+floor. This was the signal for a general mele, and it began in
+right earnest between the Dutch and the Irish,--for the Dutchman
+called the assistance of several kinsmen who were in the front
+store, and Dunn, with the assistance of Dusenberry, mustered
+recruits from among a number of his cronies, who were standing at a
+corner on the opposite side, of the street. Both came to the rescue,
+but the O'Nales and Finnegans outnumbering the Dutch, made a
+Donnybrook onset, disarming and routing their adversaries, and
+capsizing barrels, boxes, kegs, decanters, and baskets of onions,
+into one general chaos,--taking possession of the Dutchman's
+calabash, and proclaiming their victory with triumphant shouts.
+
+They had handcuffed the boy Baptiste as soon as they entered the
+store, and in the midst of the conflict he escaped without being
+observed, and ran for his vessel, handcuffed, and crying at the top
+of his voice. He reached the Nouvelle Amelie, to the consummate
+surprise of the officers and crew, and the alarm of pedestrians as
+he passed along the street. "Mon Dieu!" said the mate, and taking
+the little fellow to the windlass-bits, succeeded in severing the
+handcuffs with a cold-chisel, and sent him down into the forecastle
+to secrete himself.
+
+When Dunn's wild Irish had subsided, Dusenberry began to reason with
+him upon the nature of the affair, and the matter was reconciled
+upon the obligations that had previously existed, and a promise to
+report no violations of the ordinances during a specified time.
+Looking around, Dunn exclaimed, "Bad manners till ye, Swizer, what
+a' ye done with the little nager? Where did ye put him?--Be dad,
+Duse, he's gone beyant!" An ineffectual search was made among
+barrels and boxes, and up the old chimney. "Did ye see him?"
+inquired Dunn, of a yellow man that had been watching the affray at
+the door, while Dusenberry continued to poke with his stick among
+the boxes and barrels.
+
+"Why, massa, I sees him when he lef de doo, but I no watch him 'till
+'e done gone," said the man.
+
+Dunn was despatched to the vessel in search, but every thing there
+was serious wonderment, and carried out with such French navet,
+that his suspicions were disarmed, and he returned with perfect
+confidence that he was not there. A search was now made in all the
+negro-houses in the neighborhood; but kicks, cuts, and other abuses
+failed to elicit any information of his whereabouts. At length Dunn
+began to feel the deadening effects of the liquor, and was so
+muddled that he could not stand up; then, taking possession of a bed
+in one of the houses, he stretched himself upon it in superlative
+contempt of every thing official, and almost simultaneously fell
+into a profound sleep. In this manner he received the attention of
+the poor colored woman whose bed he occupied, and whom he had abused
+in searching for the boy. In this predicament, Dusenberry continued
+to search alone, and kept it up until sundown, when he was
+constrained to report the case to the sheriff, who suspended Mr.
+Dunn for a few days. The matter rested until the next morning, when
+the case of the little saucy nigger vs. South Carolina was renewed
+with fresh vigor. Then Mr. Grimshaw, accompanied by Dusenberry,
+proceeded to the barque, and there saw the boy busily engaged in the
+galley. Mr. Grimshaw went on board, followed by Duse, and
+approaching the cabin door, met the captain ascending the stairs.
+"Captain, I want that nigger boy of yourn, and you may just as well
+give him up peaceably," said he.
+
+"Yes, monsieur,--but you no treat 'im like child wen you get 'im,"
+said the captain. Retiring to the cabin, and bringing back the
+broken manacles in his hand, he held them up to Mr. Grimshaw, "You
+put such dem thing on child like 'im, in South Carolina, ah? What
+you tink 'im be, young nigger, ox, horse, bull, ah! what? Now you
+take'e him! treat him like man, den we no 'struct to laws wat South
+Carolina got," continued he.
+
+Mr. Grimshaw thanked the captain, but made no reply about the
+manacles; taking them in his hand, and handing the boy over into the
+charge of Dusenberry. In a few minutes he was ushered into the
+sheriff's office, and the important points of his dimensions and
+features noted in accordance with the law. We are not advised
+whether the pert characteristics of his nature were
+emblazoned,--if they were, the record would describe a singular
+specimen of a frightened French darkie, more amusing than judicial.
+But John Baptiste Pamerlie passed the ordeal, muttering some rotten
+Creole, which none of the officials could understand, and was
+marched off to the jail, where the jailer acted as his interpreter.
+Being so small, he was allowed more latitude to ware and haul than
+the others, while his peculiar bon point and pert chatter afforded a
+fund of amusement for the prisoners, who made him a particular butt,
+and kept up an incessant teasing to hear him jabber. The second day
+of his imprisonment he received a loaf of bread in the morning, and
+a pint of greasy water, misnamed soup. That was the allowance when
+they did not take meat. He ran down-stairs with the pan in hand,
+raising an amusing fuss, pointing at it, and spitting out his Creole
+to the jailer. He was disputing the question of its being soup, and
+his independent manner had attracted a number of the prisoners. Just
+at the moment, the prison dog came fondling against his legs, and to
+decide the question, quick as thought, he set the pan before him;
+and as if acting upon an instinctive knowledge of the point at
+issue, the dog put his nose to it, gave a significant scent, shook
+his head and walked off, to the infinite delight of the prisoners,
+who sent forth a shout of acclamation. Baptiste left his soup, and
+got a prisoner, who could speak Creole, to send for his captain, who
+came on the next morning and made arrangements to relieve his
+condition from the ship's stores. The following day he whipped one
+of the jailer's boys in a fair fight; and on the next he killed a
+duck, and on the fourth he cut a white prisoner. Transgressing the
+rules of the jail in rejecting his soup-violating the laws of South
+Carolina making it a heinous offence for a negro to strike or insult
+a white person--committing murder on a duck--endeavoring to get up a
+fandango among the yard niggers, and trying the qualities of cold
+steel, in a prisoner's hand, thus exhibiting all the versatility of
+a Frenchman's genius with a youthful sang-froid, he was considered
+decidedly dangerous, and locked up for formal reform. Here he
+remained until the seventeenth of August, when it was announced that
+the good barque Nouvelle Amelie, Captain Gilliet, was ready for sea,
+and he was forthwith led to the wharf between two officers, and
+ordered to be transferred beyond the limits of the State, the
+Captain paying the following nice little bill, of costs. "Contrary
+to Law." "French Barque Nouvelle Amelie, Captain Gilliet, from
+Rouen, For John Baptiste Pamerlie, Colored Seaman. 1852. To Sheriff
+of Charleston District. August 26th, To Arrest, $2; Registry, $2, $4.00"
+
+"Recog. 1.31; Constable, $1, 2.31"
+
+"Commitment and Discharge, 1.00"
+
+"20 days' Jail Maintenance of John Baptiste Pamerlie, at 30 cts.
+per day, $6.00
+
+"Received payment, 13.31 J. D., S. C. D. Per Charles E. Kanapeaux,
+Clerk."
+
+Thus ended the scene. The little darkie might have said when he was
+in jail, "Je meurs de faim, et l'on ne m'apport rien;" and when he
+left, "Il est faufite avec les chevaliers d'industrie."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV.
+
+THE JANSON CONDEMNED.
+
+
+
+
+
+WE must now return to Manuel. He was in close confinement, through
+Mr. Grimshaw's orders. Tommy continued to bring him food from day to
+day, but was not allowed to see him. The mate and several of the
+crew were also refused admittance to him. This was carrying power to
+an unnecessary limit, and inflicting a wanton punishment without
+proper cause, at the same time exhibiting a flagrant disrespect for
+personal feelings. Tommy did not report the affair to the Captain,
+lest it should be misconstrued, and worse punishment be inflicted;
+but when the men were refused, they naturally mistrusted something,
+and made inquiries of the jailer, who readily gave them all the
+information in his power concerning the affair, and his orders. This
+they reported to the Captain, who immediately repaired to the
+consul's office, where he found Mr. Mathew reading a note which he
+had just received from Manuel. It stated his grievances in a clear
+and distinct manner, and begged the protection of that government
+under whose flag he sailed, but said nothing about his provisions.
+The consul, accompanied by the Captain, proceeded to the sheriff's
+office, but could get no satisfaction. "I never consider
+circumstances when prisoners violate the rules of the jail,--he must
+await my orders! but I shall keep him closely confined for two
+weeks, at least," said Mr. Grimshaw.
+
+This incensed the consul still more, for he saw the manner in which
+a clique of officials were determined to show their arbitrary power.
+It was impossible for him to remain indifferent to this matter,
+affecting, as it did, the life and liberty of his fellow-countryman.
+He could invoke no sympathy for the man, and the extent of
+punishment to which he had been subjected was evidently excited by
+vindictive feelings. He applied for a writ of habeas corpus,--but
+mark the result.
+
+The Captain proceeded to the jail, and demanded to see his steward;
+the jailer hesitating at first, at length granted his permission. He
+found Manuel locked up in a little, unwholesome cell, with scarcely
+a glimmer of light to mark the distinction of day and night; and so
+pale and emaciated, that had he met him in the street he should
+scarcely have recognised him. "Gracious God! What crime could have
+brought such an excess of punishment upon you?" inquired the
+Captain.
+
+Manuel told him the whole story; and, added to that, the things
+which had been sent to him during the seven days he had been
+confined in that manner, had seldom reached him. He had lost his
+good friend Jane, and the many kind acts which she was wont to
+bestow upon him, and had been compelled to live upon bread and water
+nearly the whole time, suffering the most intense hunger. Upon
+inquiry, it was ascertained that the few things sent to make him
+comfortable had been intrusted to Daley to deliver, who appropriated
+nearly the whole of them to his own use, as a sort of retaliatory
+measure for the castigation he received from Manuel. He had not
+failed to carry him his pan of soup at twelve o'clock every day, but
+made the "choice bits" serve his own digestion. The jailer felt the
+pain of the neglect, and promised to arrange a safer process of
+forwarding his things by attending to it himself, which he did with
+all the attention in his power, when Manuel's condition became more
+tolerable. The Captain told Manuel how his affairs stood-that he
+should probably have to leave him in charge of the consul, but to
+keep up good spirits; that he would leave him plenty of means, and
+as soon as his release was effected, to make the best of his way to
+Scotland and join the old owners. And thus he left him, with a heavy
+heart, for Manuel did read in his countenance what he did not speak.
+
+The Janson had been discharged, a survey held upon the cargo,
+protest extended, and the whole sold for the benefit of whom it
+might concern. Necessary surveys were likewise held upon the hull,
+and finding it so old and strained as to be unworthy of repair, it
+was condemned and sold for the benefit of the underwriters. Thus the
+register "de novo" was given up to the consul, the men discharged,
+and paid off according to the act of William IV., which provides
+that each man shall receive a stipend to carry him to the port in
+Great Britain from which he shipped, or the consul to provide
+passage for him, according to his inclination, to proceed to a point
+where the voyage would be completed. The consul adopted the best
+means in his power to make them all comfortable and satisfied with
+their discharge. Their several register-tickets were given up to
+them, and one by one left for his place of destination; Tommy and
+the second mate only preferring to remain and seek some new voyage.
+The old chief mate seemed to congratulate himself in the
+condemnation of the unlucky Janson. He shipped on board an English
+ship, laden with cotton and naval stores, and just ready for sea.
+When he came on board to take a farewell of the Captain, he stood
+upon deck, and looking up at the dismantled spars, said, "Skipper, a
+shadow may save a body after all. I've always had a presentment that
+this unlucky old thing would serve us a trick. I says to meself that
+night in the Gulf, 'Well, old craft, yer goin' to turn yer old ribs
+into a coffin, at last,' but I'll praise the bridge that carries me
+safe over, because I've an affection for the old thing after all,
+and can't part without saying God bless her, for it's an honest
+death to die in debt to the underwriters. I hope her old bones will
+rest in peace on terra-firma. Good-by, Captain,--remember me to
+Manuel; and let us forget our troubles in Charleston by keeping away
+from it."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV.
+
+GEORGE THE SECESSIONIST, AND HIS FATHER'S SHIPS.
+
+
+
+
+
+AS we have said, the second mate and little Tommy remained to seek
+new voyages. Such was the fact with the second mate; but Tommy had
+contracted a violent cold on the night he was locked up in the
+guard-house, and had been a subject for the medicine-chest for some
+time; and this, with his ardent attachment for Manuel, and hopes to
+join him again as a sailing companion, was the chief inducement for
+his remaining. The Captain gave them accommodations in the cabin so
+long as he had possession of the ship, which afforded the means of
+saving their money, of which Tommy had much need; for
+notwithstanding he received a nice present from the consul, and
+another from the Captain, which, added to the few dollars that were
+coming to him for wages, made him feel purse-proud, though it was
+far from being adequate to sustain him any length of time, or to
+protect him against any sudden adversity.
+
+The Captain had not seen little George, the secessionist, since his
+assurance that he would make every thing right with Mr. Grimshaw,
+and have Manuel out in less than twenty-four hours. It was now the
+fourteenth of April, and the signs of his getting out were not so
+good as they were on the first day he was committed, for the vessel
+being condemned, if the law was carried to the strictest literal
+construction, Manuel would be tied up among the human things that
+are articles of merchandise in South Carolina. He was passing from
+the wharf to the consul's office about ten o'clock in the morning,
+when he was suddenly surprised in the street by little George, who
+shook his hand as if he had been an old friend just returned after a
+long absence. He made all the apologies in the world for being
+called away suddenly, and consequently, unable to render that
+attention to his business which his feelings had prompted. Like all
+secessionists, George was very fiery and transitory in his feelings.
+He expressed unmeasurable surprise when the Captain told him the
+condition of his man in the old jail. "You don't say that men are
+restricted like that in Charleston? Well, now, I never was in that
+jail, but it's unsuited to the hospitality of our society," said he.
+
+"Your prison groans with abuses, and yet your people never hear
+them," replied the Captain.
+
+George seemed anxious to change the subject, and commenced giving
+the Captain a description of his journey to the plantation, his
+hunting and fishing, his enjoyments, and the fat, saucy, slick
+niggers, the fine corn and bacon they had, and what they said about
+massa, ending with an endless encomium of the "old man's" old
+whiskey, and how he ripened it to give it smoothness and flavor. His
+description of the plantation and the niggers was truly wonderful,
+tantalizing the Captain's imagination with the beauties of a growing
+principality in itself. "We have just got a new vessel added to our
+ships, and she sails for the Pedee this afternoon. We got the right
+stripe of a captain, but we have made him adopt conditions to be
+true to the secession party. As soon as I get another man, we'll
+despatch her in grand style, and no mistake."
+
+The Captain thought of his second mate, and suggested him at once.
+"Just the chap. My old man would like him, I know," said George, and
+they returned directly to the Janson, where they found the second
+mate lashing his dunnage. The proposition was made and readily
+accepted. Again the Captain parted with little George, leaving him
+to take the mate to his father's office, while he pursued his
+business at the consul's.
+
+George led the mate into the office. "Here, father, here's a man to
+go in our vessel," said he. The old man looked upon him with a
+serene importance, as if he was fettered with his own greatness.
+
+"My shipping interests are becoming very extensive, my man; I own
+the whole of four schooners, and a share in the greatest steamship
+afloat-I mean screw-ship, the South Carolina--you've heard of her, I
+suppose?" said the old man.
+
+Jack stood up with his hat in his hand, thinking over what he meant
+by big interests, and "reckoning he hadn't seen the establishment of
+them ship-owners about Prince's Dock, what owned more ships apiece
+than there were days in the month."
+
+"Now, my man," continued the old man, "I'm mighty strict about my
+discipline, for I want every man to do his duty for the interests of
+the owners. But how many dollars do you want a month, my man?"
+
+"Nothing less than four pounds starling; that's twenty dollars your
+currency, if I reckon right," said Jack, giving his hat a twirl upon
+the floor.
+
+"Wh-e-w! you belong to the independent sailors. You'll come down
+from that afore you get a ship in this port. Why, I can get a good,
+prime nigger feller sailor for eight dollars a month and his feed."
+
+Jack concluded not to sail in any of the old man's big ships, and
+said, "Yes, I joined them a long time ago, and I ha'n't regretted
+it, neither; wouldn't pull a bow-line a penny less. I don't like
+drogging, no-how. Good morning, sir," said he, putting on his hat.
+and backing out of the door.
+
+"I wish you'd a' taken a chance with my father, old fellow; he'd a'
+made you captain afore a year," said George, as he was leaving the
+door.
+
+"The like o' that don't signify. I've been skipper in the West Ingie
+trade years ago. There isn't much difference between a nigger and a
+schooner's captain," said Jack, as he walked off to the Janson,
+preparatory to taking lodgings ashore.
+
+That afternoon about five o'clock, a loud noise was heard on board a
+little schooner, of about sixty tons' register, that lay in a bend
+of the wharf a few lengths ahead of the Janson. Captain Thompson and
+his second mate were seated on a locker in the cabin, conversing
+upon the prospects ahead, when the noise became so loud that they
+ran upon deck to witness the scene.
+
+George stood upon the capsill of the wharf, with mortification
+pictured in his countenance. "Well, captain, you needn't make so
+much noise about it; your conduct is decidedly ungentlemanly. If you
+don't wish to sail in father's employ, leave like a gentleman," said
+George, pulling up the corners of his shirt-collar.
+
+It was the great craft that George had distended upon, and the
+veritable captain of the right stripe, who promised to toe the mark
+according to secession principles, but made no stipulations for the
+nigger feed that was the cause of the excitement. The captain, a
+Baltimore coaster, and accustomed to good feed in his vessels at
+home, had been induced by a large representations to take charge of
+the craft and run her in the Pedee trade, bringing rice to
+Charleston. On being told the craft was all ready for sea, he
+repaired on board, and, to his chagrin, found two black men for a
+crew, and a most ungainly old wench, seven shades blacker than
+Egyptian darkness, for a cook. This was imposition enough to arouse
+his feelings, for but one of the men knew any thing about a vessel;
+but on examining the stores, the reader may judge of his feelings,
+if he have any idea of supplying a vessel in a Northern port, when
+we tell him that all and singular the stores consisted of a shoulder
+of rusty Western bacon, a half-bushel of rice, and a jug of
+molasses; and this was to proceed the distance of a hundred miles,
+But to add to the ridiculous farce of that South Carolina notion,
+when he remonstrated with them, he was very indifferently told that
+it was what they always provided for their work-people.
+
+"Take your' little jebacca-boat and go to thunder with her," said
+the captain, commencing to pick up his duds.
+
+"Why, captain, I lent you my gun, and we always expect our captains
+to make fresh provision of game as you run up the river," said
+George.
+
+"Fresh provisions, the devil!" said the captain. "I've enough to do
+to mind my duty, without hunting my living as I pursue my voyage,
+like a hungry dog. We don't do business on your nigger-allowance
+system in Maryland." And here we leave him, getting one of the
+negroes to carry his things back to his boarding-house.
+
+A few days after the occurrence we have narrated above little Tommy,
+somewhat recovered from his cold, shipped on board a little
+centre-board schooner, called the Three Sisters, bound to the Edisto
+River for a cargo of rice. The captain, a little, stubby man, rather
+good looking, and well dressed, was making his maiden voyage as
+captain of a South Carolina craft. He was "South Carolina born,"
+but, like many others of his kind, had been forced to seek his
+advancement in a distant State, through the influence of those
+formidable opinions which exiles the genius of the poor in South
+Carolina. For ten years he had sailed out of the port of Boston, had
+held the position of mate on two Indian voyages under the well-known
+Captain Nott, and had sailed with Captain Albert Brown, and received
+his recommendation, yet this was not enough to qualify him for the
+nautical ideas of a pompous South Carolinian.
+
+Tommy got his baggage on board, and before leaving, made another
+attempt at the jail to see his friend Manuel. He presented himself
+to the jailer, and told him how much he wanted to see his old friend
+before he left. The jailer's orders were imperative. He was told if
+he came next week he would see him; that he would then be released,
+and allowed to occupy the cell on the second floor with the other
+stewards. Recognising one of the stewards that had joined with them
+when they enjoyed their social feelings around the festive barrel,
+he walked into the piazza to meet him and bid him good-by. While he
+stood shaking hands with him, the poor negro
+
+The name of this poor fellow was George Fairchild. After being sent
+to the workhouse to receive twenty blows with the paddle when he was
+scarcely able to stand, he was taken down from the frame and
+supported to the jail, where he remained several weeks, fed at a
+cost of eighteen cents a day. His crime was "going for whiskey at
+night," and the third offence; but there were a variety of pleadings
+in his favor. His master worked his negroes to the very last tension
+of their strength, and exposed their appetites to all sorts of
+temptation, especially those who worked in the night-gang. His
+master flogged him once, while he was in the jail, himself, giving
+him about forty stripes with a raw hide on the bare back: not
+satisfying his feelings with this, he concluded to send him to New
+Orleans. He had an affectionate wife and child, who were forbidden
+to see him. His master ordered that he should be sent to the
+workhouse and receive thirty-nine paddles before leaving, and on the
+morning he was to be shipped, his distressed wife, hearing the sad
+news, came to the jail; but notwithstanding the entreaties of
+several debtors, the jailer could not allow her to come in, but
+granted, as a favor, that she should speak with him through the
+grated door. The cries and lamentations of that poor woman, as she
+stood upon the outside, holding her bond-offspring in her arms,
+taking a last sorrowing farewell of him who was so dearly cherished
+and beloved, would have melted a heart of stone. She could not
+embrace him, but waited until he was led out to torture, when she
+threw her arms around him, and was dragged away by a ruffian's hand.
+
+Poor George Fairchild! We heard him moaning under the acute pain of
+the paddle, and saw him thrust into a cart like a dog, to be shipped
+as a bale of merchandise for a distant port. who had suffered with
+him in the guard-house came up and saluted him with a friendly
+recognition. Some two weeks had passed since the occurrence, and yet
+his head presented the effects of bruising, and was bandaged with a
+cloth. "Good young massa, do give me a' fo' pence, for Is'e mose
+starve," he said in a suppliant tone. Tommy put his hand into his
+pocket, and drawing out a quarter, passed it to the poor fellow, and
+received his thanks. Leaving a message for Manuel that he would be
+sure to call and see him when he returned, he passed from the house
+of misery and proceeded to his vessel.
+
+The captain of the schooner had been engaged by parties in
+Charleston, who simply acted as agents for the owners. He had been
+moved to return to Charleston by those feelings which are so
+inherent in our nature, inspiring a feeling for the place of its
+nativity, and recalling the early associations of childhood. Each
+longing fancy pointed back again, and back he came, to further
+fortune on his native soil. His crew, with the exception of Tommy,
+consisted of three good, active negroes, one of whom acted as pilot
+on the Edisto River. Accustomed to the provisioning of Boston ships,
+he had paid no attention to his supplies; for, in fact, he only took
+charge of the little craft as an accommodation to the agents, and
+with the promise of a large vessel as soon as he returned; and
+sailing with a fine stiff breeze, he was far outside the light when
+the doctor announced dinner. "What have you got that's good, old
+chap?" said he to the cook.
+
+"Fust stripe, Massa Cap'en. A right good chance o' homony and bacon
+fry," returned the negro.
+
+"Homony and what? Nothing else but that?"
+
+"Why, massa! gracious, dat what Massa Whaley give all he cap'en, an'
+he tink 'em fust-rate," said the negro.
+
+As they were the only whites on board, the captain took little Tommy
+into the cabin with him to sit at the same table; but there was too
+much truth in the negro's statement, and instead of sitting down to
+one of those nice dinners which are spread in Boston ships, both
+great and small, there, on a little piece of pine board, swung with
+a preventer, was a plate of black homony covered with a few pieces
+of fried pork, so rank and oily as to be really repulsive to a
+common stomach. Beside it was an earthen mug, containing about a
+pint of molasses, which was bedaubed on the outside to show its
+quality. The captain looked at it for a minute, and then taking up
+the iron spoon which stood in it, and letting one or two spoonfuls
+drop back, said, "Old daddie, where are all your stores? Fetch them
+out here."
+
+"Gih, massa! here 'em is; 'e's jus' as Massa Stoney give 'em," said
+the negro, drawing forth a piece of rusty and tainted bacon,
+weighing about fifteen pounds, and, in spots, perfectly alive with
+motion; about a half-bushel of corn-grits; and a small keg of
+molasses, with a piece of leather attached to the bung.
+
+"Is that all?" inquired the captain peremptorily.
+
+"Yes, massa, he all w'at 'em got now, but git more at Massa Whaley
+plantation win 'em git da."
+
+"Throw it overboard, such stinking stuff; it'll breed pestilence on
+board," said the captain to the negro, (who stood holding the
+spoiled bacon in his hand, with the destructive macalia dropping on
+the floor,) at the same time applying his foot to the table, and
+making wreck of hog, homony, molasses, and plates.
+
+"Gih-e-wh-ew! Massa, I trow 'im o'board, Massa Whaley scratch 'em
+back, sartin. He tink 'em fust-rate. Plantation nigger on'y gits
+bacon twice week, Massa Cap'en," said he, picking up the wreck and
+carrying it upon deck, where it was devoured with great gusto by the
+negroes, who fully appreciated the happy God-send.
+
+The captain had provided a little private store of crackers, cheese,
+segars, and a bottle of brandy, and turning to his trunk, he opened
+it and drew them out one by one, passing the crackers and cheese to
+Tommy, and imbibing a little of the deacon himself, thus satisfying
+the cravings of nature. Night came on; they were crossing the bar
+and approaching the outlet of the Edisto, which was broad in sight;
+but there was neither coffee. nor tea on board, and no prospect of
+supper-nothing but a resort to the crackers and cheese remained, the
+stock of which had already diminished so fast, that what was left
+was treasured among the things too choice to be eaten without
+limitation. They reached the entrance, and after ascending a few
+miles, came to anchor under a jut of wood that formed a bend in the
+river. The baying of dogs during the night intimated the vicinity of
+a settlement near, and in the morning the captain sent one of the
+negroes on shore for a bottle of milk. "Massa, dat man what live
+yonder ha'n't much no-how, alwa's makes 'em pay seven-pence," said
+the negro. Sure enough it was true; notwithstanding he was a planter
+of some property, he made the smallest things turn to profit, and
+would charge vessels going up the river twelve and a half cents per
+bottle for milk.
+
+The captain had spent a restless night, and found himself blotched
+with innumerable chinch-bites; and on examining the berths and
+lockers, he found them swarming in piles. Calling one of the black
+men, he commenced overhauling them, and drew out a perfect
+storehouse of rubbish, which must have been deposited there, without
+molestation, from the day the vessel was launched up to the present
+time, as varied in its kinds as the stock of a Jew-shop, and rotten
+with age. About nine o'clock they got under weigh again, and
+proceeding about twenty miles with a fair wind and tide, they came
+to another point in the river, on which a concourse of men had
+assembled, armed to the teeth with guns, rifles, and knives. As he
+passed up, they were holding parley with a man and boy in a canoe a
+few rods from the shore. At every few minutes they would point their
+rifles at him, and with threatening gestures, swear vengeance
+against him if he attempted to land. The captain, being excited by
+the precarious situation of the man and his boy, and anxious to
+ascertain the particulars, let go his anchor and "came to" a few
+lengths above.
+
+Scarcely had his anchor brought up than he was hailed from the shore
+by a rough-looking man, who appeared to be chief in the manouvre,
+and who proved to be no less a personage than a Mr. S--k, a wealthy
+planter.
+
+"Don't take that man on board of your vessel, at the peril of your
+life, captain. He's an abolitionist," said he, accompanying his
+imperative command with a very Southern rotation of oaths.
+
+The man paddled his canoe on the outside of the vessel, and begged
+the captain "for God's sake to take him on board and protect him;
+that an excitement had been gotten up against him very unjustly, and
+he would explain the circumstances if he would allow him to come on
+board."
+
+"Come on board," said the captain. "Let you be abolitionist or what
+you will, humanity will not let me see you driven out to sea in that
+manner; you would be swamped before you crossed the bar."
+
+He came on board, trembling and wet, the little boy handing up a
+couple of carpet-bags, and following him. No sooner had he done so,
+than three or four balls whizzed past the captain's head, causing
+him to retreat to the cabin. A few minutes intervened, and he
+returned to the deck.
+
+"Lower your boat and come on shore immediately," they cried out.
+
+The captain, not at all daunted, lowered his boat and went on shore.
+"Now, gentlemen, what do you want with me?" said he, when S--k
+stepped forward, and the following dialogue ensued:--
+
+"Who owns that vessel, and what right have you to harbor a d--d
+abolitionist?"
+
+"I don't know who owns the vessel; I know that I sail her, and the
+laws of God and man demand that I shall not pass a man in distress,
+especially upon the water. He protests that he is not, and never was
+an abolitionist; offers to prove it if you will hear him, and only
+asks that you allow him to take away his property," rejoined the
+captain.
+
+"What! then you are an abolitionist yourself?"
+
+"No, sir. I'm a Southern-born man, raised in Charleston, where my
+father was raised before me."
+
+"So much, so good; but just turn that d--d scoundrel ashore as quick
+as seventy, or we'll tie your vessel up and report you to the
+Executive Committee, and stop your getting on more freight on the
+Edisto."
+
+"That I shall not do. You should have patience to investigate these
+things, and not allow your feelings to become so excited. If I turn
+him and his son adrift, I'm answerable for their lives if any
+accident should occur to them," rejoined the captain.
+
+"Are you a secessionist, captain, or what are your political
+principles? You seem determined to protect abolitionists. That
+scoundrel has been associating with a nigger, and eating at his
+house ever since he has been here."
+
+"Yes, yes, and we'll be d--d if he isn't an abolitionist," joined in
+a dozen voices, "for he dined at Bill Webster's last Sunday on a
+wild-turkey. Nobody but an infernal abolitionist would dine with a
+nigger."
+
+"As for politics, I never had much to do with them, and care as
+little about secession as I do about theology; but I like to see men
+act reasonably. If you want any thing more of me, you will find me
+at Colonel Whaley's plantation to-morrow." Thus saying, he stepped
+into his boat and returned on board of his vessel. Just as he was
+getting under-weigh again, whiz! whiz! whiz! came three shots, one
+in quick succession after the other, the last taking effect and
+piercing the crown of his hat, at which they retired out of sight.
+Fearing a return, he worked his vessel about two miles farther up
+and came to anchor on the other side of the channel, where he waited
+the return of the tide, and had an opportunity to put his affrighted
+passengers on board a schooner that was passing down, bound to
+Charleston.
+
+The secret of such an outrage is told in a few words. The man was a
+timber-getter from the vicinity of New Bedford, Massachusetts, who,
+with his son, a lad about sixteen years of age, had spent several
+winters in the vicinity of the Edisto, getting live-oak, what he
+considered a laudable enterprise. He purchased the timber on the
+stump of the inhabitants, at a price which left him very little
+profit, and had also been charged an exorbitant price for every
+thing he got, whether labor or provisions; and so far had that
+feeling of South Carolina's self-sufficiency been carried out
+against him in all its cold repulsiveness, that he found much more
+honesty and true hospitality under the roof of a poor colored man.
+This so enraged some of the planters, that they proclaimed against
+him, and that mad-dog cry of abolitionist was raised against him.
+His horse and buggy, books and papers were packed up and sent to
+Charleston-not, however, without some of the most important of the
+latter being lost. His business was destroyed, and he and his child
+taken by force, put into a little canoe with one or two carpet-bags,
+and sent adrift. In this manner they had followed him two miles down
+the river, he begging to be allowed the privilege of settling his
+business and leave respectably-they threatening to shoot him if he
+attempted to near the shore, or was caught in the vicinity. This was
+his position when the captain found him. He proceeded to Charleston,
+and laid his case before James L. Petigru, Esq., United States
+District Attorney, and, upon his advice, returned to the scene of
+"war on the banks of the Edisto," to arrange his business; but no
+sooner had he made his appearance than he was thrown into prison,
+and there remained when we last heard of him.
+
+This is one of the many cases which afford matter for exciting
+comment for the editors of the Charleston Mercury and the Courier,
+and which reflect no honor on a people who thus set law and order at
+defiance.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI.
+
+A SINGULAR RECEPTION.
+
+
+
+
+
+IT was about ten o'clock on the night of the fifteenth of April when
+the schooner "Three Sisters" lay anchored close alongside of a dark
+jungle of clustering brakes that hung their luxuriant foliage upon
+the bosom of the stream. The captain sat upon a little box near the
+quarter, apparently contemplating the scene, for there was a
+fairy-like beauty in its dark windings, mellowed by the shadowing
+foliage that skirted its borders in mournful grandeur, while stars
+twinkled on the sombre surface.
+
+The tide had just turned, and little Tommy, who had rolled himself
+up in a blanket and laid down close to the captain, suddenly arose.
+"Captain, did you hear that?" said he.
+
+"Hark! there it is again," said the captain. "Go and call the
+men,--we must get under weigh."
+
+It was a rustling noise among the brakes; and when little Tommy went
+forward to call the men, two balls came whistling over the quarter,
+and then a loud rustling noise indicated that persons were
+retreating. The captain retired to the cabin and took Tommy with
+him, giving orders to the negro pilot to stand to the deck, get her
+anchor up, and let her drift up stream with the tide, determined
+that if they shot any person, it should be the negroes, for whose
+value they would be held answerable. Thus she drifted up the stream,
+and the next morning was at the creek at Colonel Whaley's
+plantation.
+
+A number of ragged negroes came down to the bank in high glee at the
+arrival, and making sundry inquiries about corn and bacon. One old
+patriarchal subject cried out to the pilot, "Ah, Cesar, I 'now'd ye
+wah cumin'. Massa, an' young Massa Aleck, bin promis' bacon mor' den
+week, gess he cum' now."
+
+"Got sum corn, but ven ye gets bacon out o' dis craf' ye kotch
+wesel, dat a'n't got no hair on 'im," said Cesar.
+
+The scene around was any thing but promising-disappointing to the
+captain's exalted ideas of Colonel Whaley's magnificent plantation.
+The old farm-house was a barrack-like building, dilapidated, and
+showing no signs of having lately furnished a job for the painter,
+and standing in an arena surrounded by an enclosure of rough slats.
+Close examination disclosed fragments of gardening in the arena, but
+they showed the unmistakable evidences of carelessness. At a short
+distance from this was a cluster of dirty-looking negro-huts, raised
+a few feet from the ground on palmetto piles, and strung along from
+them to the brink of the river were numerous half-starved cattle
+and hogs, the latter rooting up the sod.
+
+It was now nearly slack water, on a high flood, and the schooner lay
+just above the bend of the creek. Presently a large, portly-looking
+man, dressed like as Yorkshire farmer, came, to the bank, and in a
+stentorious voice ordered the captain to haul into the creek at
+once! The manner in which the order was given rather taxed the
+captain's feelings, yet he immediately set his men to work heaving
+up the anchor and carrying out "a line" to warp her in. But that
+slow motion with which negroes execute all orders, caused some
+delay, and no sooner had he, begun to heave on the line than the
+tide set strong ebb and carried him upon the lower point, where a
+strong eddy, made by the receding water from the creek, and the
+strong undertow in the river, baffled all his exertions. There she
+stuck, and all the warps and tow-lines of a seventy-four, hove by
+the combined strength of the plantation, would not have started her.
+When the tide left, she careened over toward the river, for there
+was no means at hand to shore her up.
+
+One of the drivers went up and reported "Massa captain got 'im ship
+ashore," and down came Colonel Whaley, with all the pomp of seven
+lord mayors in his countenance. "What sort of a feller are you to
+command a ship? I'd whip the worst nigger on the plantation, if he
+couldn't do better than that. Rig a raft out and let me come o'
+board that vessel!" said he, accompanying his demands with a volley
+of vile imprecations that would have disgraced St. Giles'.
+
+"Do you know who you're talking to? You mus'n't take me for a
+nigger, sir! I know my duty, if you don't good manners," rejoined
+the captain.
+
+"Do you know who owns that ship? you impudent feller, you! Take the
+sails off her, immediately-at once! or I'll shoot you, by heavens!"
+he bawled out again.
+
+"Why didn't you say mud-scow? Call such a thing as this a ship? I
+don't care who owns her, I only know it's a disgrace to sail her;
+but I've got the papers, and you may help yourself. When you pay me
+for my time, and give me something for myself and these men to eat,
+you may take your old jebac--car-boat,--but you don't put a foot
+aboard her till you do!"
+
+This made the colonel rage worse. "I'll teach you a lesson how you
+disobey my orders. Go get my rifle, Zeke," said the colonel, turning
+to an old negro who stood close by. And then calling to the men on
+board, he ordered them to take charge of the vessel and take the
+sails off her at once.
+
+"Don't you move a hand to unbend a sail, Cesar! I don't know that
+man ashore there. This vessel is mine until further orders from the
+persons who shipped me," rejoined the captain with an imperative
+demand to his men.
+
+"Why, la! massa, he own em dis ere vessel, an' he shoot em sartin if
+we done do him; ye done know dat massa, as I does," said Cesar.
+
+"Don't touch a hand to those sails, I command one and all of you.
+There's two can play at shooting, and I'll shoot you if you disobey
+my orders." Then turning to those on shore, he warned them that he
+would shoot the first nigger that attempted to make a raft to come
+on board. The reader will observe that the poor negroes were in a
+worse dilemma than the captain; goaded on the one side by a ruthless
+master, who claims ownership and demands the execution of his
+orders, while on the other extreme the hired master proclaims his
+right, and warns them against the peril of varying one iota from his
+commands. Here the clashing feelings of arbitrary men come together,
+which have placed many a good negro in that complex position, that
+he would be punished by one master for doing that which he would
+have been punished by the other if he had left undone.
+
+It may be said to the colonel's credit, he did not return, rifle in
+hand, nor did the captain see him afterward; but a young gentleman,
+a son, who represented the father, came to the bank about an hour
+after the occurrence, and making a lame apology for his father's
+temper, requested the captain to come on shore. The latter had
+concluded to await the return of the tide, run the vessel back to
+Charleston, report his reception, and deliver the vessel up to the
+agents; but on further consideration, there was nothing to eat on
+board, and what could he do? He went on shore, and held a parley
+with the young man, whom he found much more inclined to respect his
+color. "Your father took me for a nigger, and as such he presumed
+upon the dignity of his plantation. Now I know my duty, and have
+sailed in the finest ships and with the best masters in the country.
+All I want is proper respect, something to eat, what there is coming
+to me, and my passage paid back to Charleston by land. No! I will
+not even request so much as that; give me something to eat, and my
+passage to Charleston, and you may do what you please with the
+vessel, but I shall deliver the papers to nobody but the persons who
+shipped me. And I shall want you to see this little boy attended to,
+for he's quite sick now," said the captain, pointing to Tommy, and
+calling him to him.
+
+"Oh yes," replied the young man, "we'll take care of the little
+fellow, and see him sent safely back," and took leave, promising to
+have another interview in the afternoon. About twelve o'clock a
+negro boy came to the vessel with a tin pan covered with a towel,
+and presenting it to Cesar, for "massa cap'en and buckra boy." Cesar
+brought it aft and set it upon the companion. It contained some
+rice, a piece of bacon, corn-cake, and three sweet-potatoes.
+
+"Coarse fare, but I can get along with it. Come Tommy, I guess
+you're hungry, as well as myself," said the captain, and they sat
+down, and soon demolished the feast of Southern hospitality. About
+five o'clock in the evening, the young man not making his
+appearance, the Captain sent Tommy ashore to inquire for him at the
+house, telling him (in order to test their feelings) that he could
+stop and get his supper. Tommy clambered ashore, and up the bank
+wending his way to the house. The young man made his appearance,
+offering an apology for his delay and inattention, saying the
+presence of some very particular friends from Beaufort was the
+cause. "My father, you are aware, owns this vessel, captain!--You got
+a good dinner, to-day, by-the-by," said he.
+
+"Yes, we got along with it, but could have eaten more," rejoined the
+captain.
+
+"Ah! bless me, that was the nigger's fault. These niggers are such
+uncertain creatures, you must watch 'em over the least thing. Well
+now, captain, my father has sent you five dollars to pay your
+passage to Charleston!"
+
+"Well, that's a small amount, but I'll try and get along with it,
+rather than stop here, at any rate," said the captain, taking the
+bill and twisting it into his pocket, and giving particular charges
+in regard to taking care of the boy. That night, a little after
+sundown, he took passage in a downward-bound coaster, bid a long
+good-by to the Edisto and Colonel Whaley's plantation, and arrived
+in Charleston the next night. On the following morning he presented
+himself to the agents, who generously paid him, all his demands, and
+expressed their regrets at the circumstance. Acting upon the smart
+of feeling, the captain enclosed the five-dollar bill and returned
+it to the sovereign Colonel Whaley.
+
+The Savannah Republican, of the 11th September, says-"We have been
+kindly furnished with the particulars of a duel which came off at
+Major Stark's plantation, opposite this city, yesterday morning,
+between Colonel E. M. Whaley, and E. E. Jenkins, of South Carolina."
+Another paper stated that "after a single exchange of shot, * * * *
+the affair terminated, but without a reconciliation." The same
+Colonel Whaley! Either 'of these journals might have give
+particulars more grievous, and equally as expressive of Southern
+life. They might have described a beautiful wife, a Northern lady,
+fleeing with her two children, to escape the abuses of a faithless
+husband-taking shelter in the Charleston Hotel, and befriended by
+Mr. Jenkins and another young man, whose name we shall not
+mention-and that famous establishment surrounded by the police on a
+Sabbath night, to guard its entrances-and she dragged forth, and
+carried back to the home of unhappiness.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII.
+
+THE HABEAS CORPUS.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE Captain of the Janson had settled his business, and was anxious
+to return home. He had done all in his power for Manuel, and
+notwithstanding the able exertions of the consul were combined with
+his, he had effected nothing to relieve him. The law was imperative,
+and if followed out, there was no alternative for him, except upon
+the ground of his proving himself entitled to a white man's
+privileges. To do this would require an endless routine of law,
+which would increase his anxiety and suffering twofold. Mr. Grimshaw
+had been heard to say, that if an habeas corpus were sued out, he
+should stand upon the technicality of an act of the legislature,
+refuse to answer the summons or give the man up. No, he would
+himself stand the test upon the point of right to the habeas corpus,
+and if he was committed for refusing to deliver up the prisoner, he
+would take advantage of another act of the legislature, and after
+remaining a length of time in jail, demand his release according to
+the statutes. So far was Mr. Grimshaw impressed with his own
+important position in the matter, and of the course which he should
+pursue, that he several times told the prisoners that he should be a
+prisoner among them in a few days, to partake of the same fare.
+
+Judge Withers, however, saved him the necessity of such important
+trouble. To those acquainted with Judge Withers it would be needless
+to dwell upon the traits of his character. To those who are not, we
+can say that his were feelings founded upon interest-moving in the
+foremost elements of secession-arbitrary, self-willed, and easily
+swayed by prejudice-a man known to the public and the bar for his
+frigidity, bound in his own opinions, and yielding second to the
+wishes and principles of none-fearful of his popularity as a judge,
+yet devoid of those sterling principles which deep jurists bring to
+their aid when considering important questions, where life or
+liberty is at stake-a mind that would rather reinstate monarchy than
+spread the blessings of a free government. What ground have we here
+to hope for a favorable issue?
+
+Thus when the consul applied for the writ of habeas corpus, the
+right was denied him, notwithstanding the subject was heir-inherent
+to all the rights of citizenship and protection, which the laws of
+his own nation could clothe him with. To show how this matter was
+treated by the press-though we are happy to say the feelings of the
+mercantile community are not reflected in it-we copy the leader from
+the "Southern Standard," a journal published in Charleston, the
+editor of which professes to represent the conservative views of a
+diminutive minority. Here it is:--"CHARLESTON, APRIL 23, 1852.
+"Colored Seamen and State Rights.
+
+" Our readers have not forgotten the correspondence which some time
+since took place between His Excellency Governor Means and Her
+British Majesty's Consul, Mr. Mathew. We published in the Standard,
+of the 5th December last, the very temperate, dignified, and
+well-argued report of Mr. Mazyck, chairman of the special committee
+of the Senate, to whom had been referred the message of the
+Governor, transmitting the correspondence. In our issue of the 16th
+December, we gave to our readers the able report of Mr. McCready, on
+behalf of the committee of the other house, on the same subject.
+
+"We have now to call the attention of the public to the fact, that
+the practical issue has been made, by which the validity of the laws
+in regard to colored seamen arriving in our port is to be submitted
+to the judicial tribunals of the country. For ourselves we have no
+fears for the credit of the State in such a controversy. The right
+of the State to control, by her own legislation, the whole
+subject-matter, can, as we think, by a full discussion, be
+established upon a basis which, in the South at least, will never
+hereafter be questioned. If there be defects in the details of the
+regulations enacted, the consideration of them is now precluded,
+when the issue presented is the right of the State to act at all
+times in the premises.
+
+"The writ of habeas corpus was applied for before Judge Withers,
+during the term of the court which has just closed, by the British
+consul, through his counsel, Mr. Petigru, in behalf of one Manuel
+Pereira, a colored sailor, who claims to be a Portuguese subject,
+articled to service on board an English brig driven into this port
+by stress of weather; the said Manuel Pereira being then in jail
+under the provisions of the act of the legislature of this State,
+passed in 1835, emendatory of the previous acts on the subject.
+Judge Withers, in compliance with the requirements of the act of
+1844, refused the writ of habeas corpus, and notice of appeal has
+been given. Thus is the issue upon us.
+
+"We have but one regret in the matter, and that is that the case
+made is one where the party asking his liberty has been driven into
+our harbor involuntarily. Great Britain, it is true, is the last
+power which should complain on this account, with her own example in
+the case of the Enterprise before her eyes; but we do not, we
+confess, like this feature of the law. We have no doubt, however,
+that this fact being brought to the notice of the executive, he will
+interfere promptly to release the individual in the present case,
+provided the party petitions for the purpose, and engages at once to
+leave the State. But we shall see nothing of this. Mr. Manuel
+Pereira, like another John Wilkes, is to have settled in his person
+great questions of constitutional liberty. The posterity which in
+after times shall read of his voluntary martyrdom and heroic self-
+sacrifice in the cause of suffering humanity, must be somewhat
+better informed than Mr. Pereira himself; for we observe that his
+clerkly skill did not reach the point of enabling him to subscribe
+his name to the petition for habeas corpus, which is to figure so
+conspicuously in future history, it being more primitively witnessed
+by his 'mark.'"
+
+An appeal was taken from this refusal, and carried before the appeal
+court, sitting at Columbia, the capital of the State. How was this
+treated? Without enlisting common respect, it sustained the opinion
+of Judge Withers, who was one of its constituted members. Under such
+a state of things, where all the avenues to right and justice were
+clogged by a popular will that set itself above law or justice,
+where is the unprejudiced mind that will charge improper motives in
+asking justice of the highest judicial tribunal in the country.
+
+In the year 1445, a petition was presented, or entered on the rolls
+of the British Parliament, from the commons of two neighboring
+counties, praying the abatement of a nuisance which promised fearful
+interruptions to the peace and quiet of their hamlets, in
+consequence of the number of attorneys having increased from eight
+to twenty-four, setting forth that attorneys were dangerous to the
+peace and happiness of a community, and praying that there should
+be no more than six attorneys for each county. The king granted the
+petition, adding a clause which left it subject to the approval of
+the judges. Time works mighty contrasts. If those peaceable old
+commoners could have seen a picture of the nineteenth century, with
+its judiciary dotted upon the surface, they would certainly have put
+the world down as a very unhappy place. The people of Charleston
+might now inquire why they have so much law and so little justice?
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII.
+
+THE CAPTAIN'S DEPARTURE AND MANUEL'S RELEASE.
+
+
+
+
+
+AFTER remaining nearly three weeks in close confinement in a cell on
+the third story, Manuel was allowed to come down and resume his
+position among the stewards, in the "steward's cell." There was a
+sad change of faces. But one of those he left was there; and he,
+poor fellow, was so changed as to be but a wreck of what he was when
+Manuel was confined in the cell.
+
+After little Tommy left, the Captain deposited a sum of money with
+the jailer to supply Manuel's wants. The jailer performed his duty
+faithfully, but the fund was soon exhausted, and Manuel was forced
+to appeal to his consul. With the care for its citizens that marks
+the course of that government, and the characteristic kindness of
+its representative in Charleston, the appeal was promptly
+responded to. The consul attended him in person, and even provided
+from his own purse things necessary to make him comfortable. We
+could not but admire the nobleness of many acts bestowed upon this
+humble citizen through the consul, showing the attachment and faith
+of a government to its humblest subject. The question now was, would
+the Executive release him? Mr. Grimshaw had interposed strong
+objections, and made unwarrantable statements in regard to his
+having been abandoned by his captain, the heavy expenses incurred to
+maintain the man, and questioning the validity of the British
+consul's right to protect him. Under the effect of these
+representations, the prospect began to darken, and Manuel became
+more discontented, and anxiously awaited the result.
+
+In this position, a petition was despatched to the Executive, asking
+that the man might be released, on the faith of the British
+Government that all expenses be paid, and he immediately sent beyond
+the limits of the State.
+
+But we must return and take leave of Captain Thompson, before we
+receive the answer to the petition. The day fixed for his departure
+had arrived. He had all his papers collected, and arose early to
+take his accustomed walk through the market. It was a little after
+seven o'clock, and as he approached the singular piece of wood-work
+that we have described in a previous chapter as the Charleston
+Whipping-post, he saw a crowd collected around it, and negroes
+running to the scene, crying out, "Buckra gwine to get whip! buckra
+get 'e back scratch!" &c. &c. He quickened his pace, and, arriving
+at the scene, elbowed his way through an immense crowd until he came
+to where he had a fair view. Here, exposed to view, were six
+respectably dressed white men, to be whipped according to the laws
+of South Carolina, which flog in the market for petty theft. Five of
+them were chained together, and the other scientifically secured to
+the machine, with his bare back exposed, and Mr. Grimshaw (dressed
+with his hat and sword of office to make the dignity of the
+punishment appropriate) laying on the stripes with a big whip, and
+raising on tip-toe at each blow to add force, making the flesh
+follow the lash. Standing around were about a dozen huge constables
+with long-pointed tipstaffs in their hands, while two others
+assisted in chaining and unchaining the prisoners. The spectacle was
+a barbarous one, opening a wide field for reflection. It was said
+that this barbarous mode of punishment was kept up as an example for
+the negroes. It certainly is a very singular mode of inspiring
+respect for the laws.
+
+He had heard much of T. Norman Gadsden, whose fame sounded for being
+the greatest negro-seller in the country, yet he had not seen him,
+though he had witnessed several negro-sales at other places. On
+looking over the papers after breakfast, his eye caught a flaming
+advertisement with "T. Norman Gadsden's sale of negroes" at the
+head. There were plantation negroes, coachmen, house-servants,
+mechanics, children of all ages, with descriptions as various as the
+kinds. Below the rest, and set out with a glowing delineation, was a
+description of a remarkably fine young sempstress, very bright and
+very intelligent, sold for no fault. The notice should have added an
+exception, that the owner was going to get married.
+
+He repaired to the place at the time designated, and found them
+selling an old plantation-negro, dressed in ragged, gray clothes,
+who, after a few bids, was knocked down for three hundred and fifty
+dollars. "We will give tip-top titles to everything we sell here
+to-day; and, gentlemen, we shall now offer you the prettiest wench
+in town. She is too well-known for me to say more," said the
+notorious auctioneer.
+
+A number of the first citizens were present, and among them the
+Captain recognised Colonel S--, who approached and began to descant
+upon the sale of the woman. "It's a d--d shame to sell that girl,
+and that fellow ought to be hung up," said he, meaning the owner;
+and upon this he commenced giving a history of the poor girl.
+
+"Where is she? Bring her along! Lord! gentlemen, her very curls are
+enough to start a bid of fifteen hundred," said the auctioneer.
+
+"Go it, Gadsden, you're a trump," rejoined a number of voices.
+
+The poor girl moved to the stand, pale and trembling, as if she was
+stepping upon the scaffold, and saw her executioners around her. She
+was very fair and beautiful-there was something even in her graceful
+motions that enlisted admiration. Here she stood almost motionless
+for a few moments.
+
+"Gentlemen, I ought to charge all of you sevenpence a sight for
+looking at her," said the auctioneer. She smiled at the remark, but
+it was the smile of pain.
+
+"Why don't you sell the girl, and not be dogging her feelings in
+this manner?" said Colonel S--.
+
+Bids continued in rapid succession from eleven hundred up to
+thirteen hundred and forty. A well-known trader from New Orleans
+stood behind one of the city brokers, motioning him at every bid,
+and she was knocked down to him. We learned her history and know the
+sequel.
+
+The Captain watched her with mingled feelings, and would fain have
+said, "Good God! and why art thou a slave?"
+
+The history of that unfortunate beauty may be comprehended in a few
+words, leaving the reader to draw the details from his imagination.
+Her mother was a fine mulatto slave, with about a quarter Indian
+blood. She was the mistress of a celebrated gentleman in Charleston,
+who ranked among the first families, to whom she bore three
+beautiful children, the second of which is the one before us. Her
+father, although he could not acknowledge her, prized her highly,
+and unquestionably never intended that she should be considered a
+slave. Alice, for such was her name, felt the shame of her position.
+She knew her father, and was proud to descant upon his honor and
+rank, yet must either associate with negroes or nobody, for it would
+be the death of caste for a white woman, however mean, to associate
+with her. At the age of sixteen she became attached to a young
+gentleman of high standing but moderate means, and lived with him as
+his mistress. Her father, whose death is well known, died suddenly
+away from home. On administering on his estate, it proved that
+instead of being wealthy, as was supposed, he was insolvent, and the
+creditors insisting upon the children being sold. Alice was
+purchased by compromise with the administrator, and retained by her
+lord under a mortgage, the interest and premium on which he had
+regularly paid for more than four years. Now that he was about to
+get married, the excuse of the mortgage was the best pretext in
+the world to get rid of her.
+
+The Captain turned from the scene with feelings that left deep
+impressions upon his mind, and that afternoon took his departure for
+his Scottish home.
+
+Time passed heavily at the jail, and day after day Manuel awaited
+his fate with anxiety. At every tap of the prison-bell he would
+spring to the door and listen, asserting that he heard the consul's
+voice in every passing sound. Day after day the consul would call
+upon him and quiet his fears, reassuring him that he was safe and
+should not be sold as a slave. At length, on the seventeenth day of
+May, after nearly two months' imprisonment, the glad news was
+received that Manuel Pereira was not to be sold, according to the
+statutes, but to be released upon payment of all costs, &c. &c., and
+immediately sent beyond the limits of the State. We leave it to the
+reader's fancy, to picture the scene of joy on the reception of the
+news in the "stewards' cell."
+
+The consul lost no time in arranging his affairs for him, and at
+five o'clock on the afternoon of the 17th of May, 1852, Manuel
+Pereira, a poor, shipwrecked mariner, who, by the dispensation of an
+all-wise Providence, was cast upon the shores of South Carolina, and
+imprisoned because hospitality to him was "contrary to law," was led
+forth, pale and emaciated, by two constables, thrust into a closely
+covered vehicle, and driven at full speed to the steamboat then
+awaiting to depart for New York. This is but a faint glimpse, of the
+suffering to which colored stewards are subjected in the Charleston
+jail.
+
+There were no less than sixty-three cases of colored seamen
+imprisoned on this charge of "contrary to law," during the calendar
+year ending on the twelfth of September, 1852. And now that abuses
+had become so glaring, a few gentlemen made a representation of the
+wretched prison regimen to his Excellency, Governor Means, who, as
+if just awoke from a dream that had lasted a generation, addressed a
+letter to the Attorney-General, dated on the seventh of September,
+1852, requesting a statement in regard to the jail-how many
+prisoners there were confined on the twelfth day of September, under
+sentence and awaiting trial, the nature of offences, who committed
+by, and how long they had awaited trial; what the cost of the jail
+was, how much was paid by prisoners, and how much by the State, &c.
+&c. In that statement, the number of colored seamen was, for reasons
+best known to Mr. Grimshaw, kept out of the statement; so also was
+the difference between thirty cents and eight cents a day, paid for
+the ration for each man. The real statement showed a bounty to the
+sheriff of fourteen hundred and sixty-three dollars on' the
+provisions alone-a sad premium upon misery. Now add to this a medium
+amount for each of these sixty-three sailors, and we have between
+eight and nine hundred dollars more, which, with sundry jail-fees
+and other cribbage-money, makes the Charleston jail a nice little
+appendage to the sheriff's office, and will fully account for the
+tenacity with which those functionaries cling to the "old system."
+
+We conclude the bills by giving Manuel's as it stands upon the
+books:--"Contrary to law." British brig "Janson," Capt. Thompson.
+For Manuel Pereira, Colored Seaman. 1852. To Sheriff of Charleston
+District.
+
+May 15th. To Arrest, $2; Register, $2, $4.00" "Recog., $1.31;
+Constable, $1, 2.31" "Commitment and Discharge, 1.00" "52 Days'
+Maintenance of Manuel Pereira, at 30 cents per day, 15.60
+
+$22.81 Rec' payment, J. D--, S. C. D. Per Chs. Kanapeaux, Clerk.
+
+This amount is exclusive of all the long scale of law charges and
+attorney's fees that were incurred, and is entirely the perquisite
+of the sheriff.
+
+Now, notwithstanding that high-sounding clamor about the laws of
+South Carolina, which every South Carolinian, in the redundance of
+his feelings, strives to impress you with the sovereignty of its
+justice, its sacred rights, and its pre-eminent reputation, we never
+were in a country or community where the privileges of a certain
+class were so much abused. Every thing is made to conserve popular
+favor, giving to those in influence power to do what they please
+with a destitute class, whether they be white or black. Official
+departments are turned into depots for miserable espionage, where
+the most unjust schemes are practised upon those whose voices cannot
+be heard in their own defence. A magistrate is clothed with, or
+assumes a power that is almost absolute, committing them without a
+hearing, and leaving them to waste in jail; then releasing them
+before the court sits, and charging the fees to the State; or
+releasing the poor prisoner on receiving "black mail" for the
+kindness; giving one man a peace-warrant to oppress another whom he
+knows cannot get bail; and where a man has served out the penalty of
+the crime for which he was committed, give a peace-warrant to his
+adversary that he may continue to vent his spleen upon him. In this
+manner, we have known a man who had served seven months'
+imprisonment for assault and battery, by an understanding between
+the magistrate and the plaintiff, continued in jail for several
+years upon a peace-warrant, issued by the magistrate from time to
+time, until at length he shot himself in jail. The man was a
+peaceable man, and of a social temperament. He had been offered the
+alternative of leaving the State, but he scorned to accept it. To
+show that we are correct in what we say respecting some of the
+Charleston officials, we insert an article which appeared in the
+Charleston Courier of Sept. 1, 1852:--[For the Courier.]
+
+"Many of the quiet and moral portion of our community can form no
+adequate conception of the extent to which those who sell liquor,
+and otherwise trade with our slaves, are now plying their illegal
+and demoralizing traffic. At no period within our recollection has
+it prevailed to such an alarming extent; at no period has its
+influence upon our slave population been more palpable or more
+dangerous; at no period has the municipal administration been so
+wilfully blind to these corrupt practices, or so lenient and
+forgiving when such practices are exposed.
+
+* * * *
+
+"We have heard it intimated that when General Schnierle is a
+candidate for the mayoralty, they are regularly assessed for means
+to defray the expenses of the canvass. Instances are not wanting
+where amounts of money are paid monthly to General Schnierle's
+police as a reward for shutting their eyes and closing their lips
+when unlawful proceedings are in progress. We have at this moment in
+our possession a certificate from a citizen, sworn to before Mr.
+Giles, the magistrate, declaring that he, the deponent, heard one of
+the city police-officers (Sharlock) make a demand for money upon one
+of these shop-keepers, and promised that if he would pay him five
+dollars at stated intervals, 'none of the police-officers would
+trouble him.' This affidavit can be seen, if inquired for, at this
+office. Thus bribery is added to guilt, and those who should enforce
+the laws are made auxiliaries in their violation. Said one of these
+slave-destroyers to us, 'General Schnierle suits us very well. I
+have no trouble with General Schnierle'--remarks at once repugnant
+and suggestive. * * * We are told by one, that Mr. Hutchinson, when
+in power, fined him heavily (and, as he thought, unjustly) for
+selling liquor to a slave; hence he would not vote for him. An
+additional reason for this animosity toward Mr. Hutchinson arises
+from the fact that the names of offenders were always published
+during that gentleman's administration, while under that of General
+Schnierle they are screened from public view. On any Sunday evening,
+light may be seen in the shops of these dealers. If the passer-by
+will for a few moments stay his course, he will witness the ingress
+and egress of negroes; if he approach the door, he will hear noise
+as of card-playing and revelry within. And this is carried on
+unblushingly; is not confined to a shop here and a shop there, but
+may be observed throughout the city. The writer of this article,
+some Sundays since, witnessed from his upper window a scene of
+revelry and gambling in one of these drinking-shops, which will
+scarcely be credited. A party of negroes were seen around a
+card-table, with money beside them, engaged in betting; glasses of
+liquor were on the table, from which they ever and anon regaled
+themselves with all the nonchalance and affected mannerism of the
+most fashionable blades of the beau monde.
+
+"This may not be a 'desecration of the Sabbath' by the municipal
+authorities themselves, but they are assuredly responsible for its
+profanation. Appointed to guard the public morals, they are
+assuredly censurable if licentiousness is suffered to run its wild
+career unnoticed and unchecked. We do not ask to be believed. We
+would prefer to have skeptical rather than credulous readers. We
+should prefer that all would arise from the perusal of this article
+in doubt, and determine to examine for themselves. We believe in the
+strength and sufficiency of ocular proof, and court investigation.
+
+* * *
+
+"We are abundantly repaid if we succeed in arousing public attention
+to the alarming and dangerous condition of our city. * * * Let
+inquiry be entered into. We boldly challenge it. It will lead to
+other and more astonishing developments than those we have revealed.
+(Signed)
+
+"A RESPONSIBLE CITIZEN."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX.
+
+MANUEL'S ARRIVAL IN NEW YORK.
+
+
+
+
+
+WHEN we left Manuel, he was being hurried on board the steamship, as
+if he was a bale of infected goods. Through the kindness of the
+clerk in the consul's office, he was provided with a little box of
+stores to supply his wants on the passage, as it was known that he
+would have to "go forward." He soon found himself gliding over
+Charleston bar, and took a last look of what to him had been the
+city of injustice. On the afternoon of the second day, he was
+sitting upon the forward deck eating an orange that had been given
+to him by the steward of the ship, probably as a token of sympathy
+for his sickly appearance, when a number of passengers, acting upon
+the information of the clerk of the ship, gathered around him. One
+gentleman from Philadelphia, who seemed to take more interest in the
+man than any other of the passengers, expressed his indignation in
+no measured terms, that such a man should be imprisoned as a slave.
+"Take care," said a bystander, "there's a good many Southerners on
+board."
+
+"I don't care if every slaveholder in the South was on board,
+holding a knife at my throat; I'm on the broad ocean, where God
+spreads the breezes of freedom that man cannot enslave," said he,
+sitting down beside Manuel, and getting him to recount the details
+of his shipwreck and imprisonment. The number increased around him,
+and all listened with attention until he had concluded. One of the
+spectators asked him if he would have something good to eat? but he
+declined, pulling out the little box that the consul had sent him,
+and, opening it before them, showed it to be well-stored with little
+delicacies.
+
+The Philadelphian motioned that they take up a subscription for him,
+and almost simultaneously took his hat off and began to pass it
+around; but Manuel, mistaking the motive, told them that he never
+yet sought charity-that the consul had paid him his wages, and he
+had money enough to get home. But if he did not accept their
+contributions, he had their sympathies and their good wishes, which
+were more prized by him, because they were contrasted with the cold
+hospitality he had suffered in Charleston.
+
+On the morning of the twentieth he arrived in New York. Here things
+wore a different aspect. There were no constables fettering him with
+irons, aggravating his feelings, and dragging him to a miseerable
+cell overrun with vermin. He had no scientific ordeal of the
+statutes to pass through, requiring the measure of his form and
+features; and he was a man again, with life and liberty, and the
+dark dread of the oppressor's power far from him. He went to his
+comfortable boarding-house, and laid his weary limbs down to rest,
+thanking God that he could now sleep in peace, and awake to liberty.
+His system was so reduced that he was unable to do duty, although he
+was anxious to proceed on his way to join the old owners, but wanted
+to work his way in the capacity of steward. Thus he remained in New
+York more than four weeks, gaining vigor and strength, and with a
+lingering hope that he should meet his little companion.
+
+On the twenty-first of June, being well recruited, he sailed for
+Liverpool, and after a remarkably calm passage of thirty-four days,
+arrived in the Mersey, and in forty-eight hours more the ship was
+safely within the Princess' Dock, and all hands ready to go on
+shore. In the same dock was a ship taking in cargo and passengers
+for Charleston, South Carolina. Manuel went on board, and found, in
+conversation with the steward, that she had sailed from that port on
+the 23d of May. A short conversation disclosed that they had been
+old shipmates from the Thames, on board of the Indiaman, Lord
+William Bentick, and were on board of that ship when an unfortunate
+circumstance occurred to her on entering a British North American
+port, many years ago. Here they sat recounting the many adventures
+through which they had passed since that period, the ships they had
+sailed in, the sufferings they had gone through, and the narrow
+escapes they had had for their lives, until past midnight. Manuel
+wound up by giving a detailed account of his sufferings in
+Charleston.
+
+"What!" said the steward of the Charleston ship, "then you must have
+known our cabin-boy, he belonged to the same vessel!"
+
+"What was his name?" inquired Manuel.
+
+"Tommy Ward! and as nice a little fellow as ever served the cabin;
+poor little fellow, we could hardly get him across."
+
+"Gracious! that's my Tommy," said Manuel. "Where is he? He loves me
+as he does his life, and would run to me as a child would to its
+father. Little as he is, he has been a friend through my severest
+trials, and a companion in my pleasures."
+
+"Ah, poor child! I'm afraid you wouldn't know him now. He has
+suffered much since you saw him."
+
+"Is he not aboard? Where can I find him?" inquired Manuel, hastily.
+
+"No, he is not aboard; he is at the hospital in Dennison street. Go
+there to-morrow, and you will find him."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX.
+
+THE SCENE OF ANGUISH.
+
+
+
+
+
+WE are sorry, that having traced the details of our narrative as
+they occurred, without adding for dramatic effect, we are
+constrained to conclude with a picture at once painful and harrowing
+to the feelings. We do this that we may be sustained by records, in
+what we have stated, rather than give one of those more popular
+conclusions which restore happiness and relieve the reader's
+feelings.
+
+Manuel retired to his berth, full of meditation. His little
+companion was before him, pictured in his child-like innocence and
+playfulness. He saw him in the youthful zeal and freshness of the
+night when he brought the well-laden haversack into his dreary cell,
+and which kind act was repaid by a night of suffering in the
+guard-house. There was too much of life and buoyancy in the picture
+his imagination called up, to reconcile the belief that any thing
+serious had befallen him; and yet the man spoke in a manner that
+aroused the intensity of his feelings. It was a whisper full of
+fearful forebodings, and filled his mind with anxious expectation.
+He could not sleep-the anxiety of his feelings had awakened a
+nervvous restlessness that awaited the return of morning with
+impatience.
+
+Morning came. He proceeded to the hospital and rang the bell. An
+aged gentleman came to the door, and to his questions about Tommy
+being there, answered in the affirmative, and called an attendant to
+show him the ward in which the little sufferer lay. He followed the
+attendant, and after ascending several flights of stairs and
+following a dark, narrow passage nearly to its end, was shown into a
+small, single-room on the right. The result was suggestive in the
+very atmosphere, which had a singular effect upon the senses. The
+room, newly-whitewashed, was darkened by a green curtain tacked over
+the frame of the window. Standing near the window were two
+wooden-stools and a little table, upon which burned the faint light
+of a small taper, arranged in a cup of oil, and shedding its feeble
+flickers on the evidences of a sick-chamber. There, on a little,
+narrow cot, lay the death-like form of his once joyous companion,
+with the old nurse sitting beside him, watching his last pulsation.
+Her arm encircled his head, while his raven locks curled over his
+forehead, and shadowed the beauty of innocence even in death.
+
+"Is he there? is he there?" inquired Manuel in a low tone. At the
+same time a low, gurgling noise sounded in his ears. The nurse
+started to her feet as if to inquire for what he came. "He is my
+companion-my companion," said Manuel.
+
+It was enough. The woman recognised the object of the little
+sufferer's anxiety. "Ah! it is Manuel. How often he has called that
+name for the last week!" said she.
+
+He ran to the bedside and grasped his little fleshless hand as it
+lay upon the white sheet, bathing his cold brow with kisses of
+grief. Life was gone-the spirit had winged its way to the God who
+gave it. Thus closed the life of poor Tommy Ward. He died as one
+resting in a calm sleep, far from the boisterous sound of the
+ocean's tempest, with God's love to shield his spirit in another and
+brighter world.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CONCLUSION.
+
+
+
+
+
+IN a preceding chapter, we left the poor boy on the plantation of
+Colonel Whaley, affected by a pulmonary disease, the seeds of which
+were planted on the night he was confined in the guard-house, and
+the signs of gradual decay evinced their symptoms. After Captain
+Williams--for such was the name of the captain of the Three
+Sisters--left the plantation, no person appeared to care for him, and
+on the second day he was attacked with a fever, and sent to one of
+the negro cabins, where an old mulatto woman took care of him and
+nursed him as well as her scanty means would admit. The fever
+continued for seven days, when he became convalescent and able to
+walk out; but feeling that he was an incumbrance to those around
+him, he packed his clothes into a little bundle and started for
+Charleston on foot. He reached that city after four days' travelling
+over a heavy, sandy road, subsisting upon the charity of poor
+negroes, whom he found much more ready to supply his wants than the
+opulent planters. One night he, was compelled to make a pillow of
+his little bundle, and lay down in a corn-shed, where the planter,
+aroused by the noise of his dogs, which were confined in a kennel,
+came with a lantern and two negroes and discovered him. At first he
+ordered him off, and threatened to set the dogs upon him if he did
+not instantly comply with the order; but his miserable appearance
+affected the planter, and before he had gone twenty rods one of the
+negroes overtook him, and said his master had sent him to bring him
+back. He returned, and the negro made him a coarse bed in his cabin,
+and gave him some homony and milk.
+
+His hopes to see Manuel had buoyed him up through every fatigue, but
+when he arrived, and was informed at the jail that Manuel had left
+three days before, his disappointment was extreme. A few days after
+he shipped as cabin-boy on board a ship ready for sea and bound to
+Liverpool. Scarcely half-way across, he was compelled to resign
+himself to the sick-list. The disease had struck deep into his
+system, and was rapidly wasting him away. The sailors, one by one in
+turns, watched over him with tenderness and care. As soon as the
+ship arrived, he was sent to the hospital, and there he breathed his
+last as Manuel entered the sick-chamber. We leave Manuel and a few
+of his shipmates following his remains to the last resting-place of
+man.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX.
+
+
+
+
+
+SINCE the foregoing was written, Governor Means, in his message to
+the Legislature of South Carolina, refers to the laws under which
+"colored seamen" are imprisoned. We make the subjoined extract,
+showing that he insists upon its being continued in force, on the
+ground of "self-preservation"--a right which ship-owners will please
+regard for the protection of their own interests:--
+
+"I feel it my duty to call your attention to certain proceedings
+which have grown out of the enforcement of that law of our State
+which requires the Sheriff of Charleston to seize and imprison
+colored seamen who are brought to that port. You will remember that
+the British Consul addressed a communication to the legislature in
+December, 1850, on the subject of a modification of this law. A
+committee was appointed by the House and Senate to report upon it at
+the next session of the legislature. These committees reported
+adverse to any modification. On the 24th March, 1852, Manuel Pereira
+was imprisoned in accordance with the law alluded to. The vessel in
+which he sailed was driven into the port of Charleston in distress.
+This was looked upon as a favorable case upon which to make an
+issue, as so strong an element of sympathy was connected with it.
+Accordingly, a motion was made before Judge Withers for a writ of
+'habeas corpus,' which was refused by him. These proceedings were
+instituted by the British Consul, it is said, under instructions
+from his government, to test the constitutionality of the Act. I
+think it here proper to state, that Pereira was at perfect liberty
+to depart at any moment that he could get a vessel to transport him
+beyond the limits of the State. In truth, in consideration of the
+fact that his coming into the State was involuntary, the Sheriff of
+Charleston, with his characteristic kindness, procured for him a
+place in a ship about to sail for Liverpool. Early in April, Pereira
+was actually released, and on his way to the ship, having himself
+signed the shipping articles, when, by interposition of the British
+Consul, he was again consigned to the custody of the sheriff. A few
+days after this, the British Consul insisted no longer on his
+detention, but voluntarily paid his passage to New York. This was
+looked upon as an abandonment of that case. The statement of Mr.
+Yates, together with the letter of the British Consul, are herewith
+transmitted.
+
+"While these proceedings were pending, the Sheriff of Charleston had
+my instructions not to give up the prisoners even if a writ of
+habeas corpus had been granted. I considered that the 'Act of 1844,'
+entitled, 'An Act more effectually to prevent negroes and other
+persons of color from entering into this State, and for other
+purposes,' made it my duty to do so.
+
+"On the 19th May, Reuben Roberts, a colored seaman, a native of
+Nassau, arrived in the steamer Clyde, from Baracoa. The Sheriff of
+Charleston, in conformity with the law of the State, which has been
+in force since 1823, arrested and lodged him in the district jail,
+where he was detained until the 26th of May, when, the Clyde being
+ready to sail, Roberts was put on board, and sailed the same day.
+
+"On the 9th of June, a writ in trespass, for assault and false
+imprisonment, from the Federal Court, was served upon Sheriff Yates,
+laying the damage at $4000.
+
+"The Act of 1844, I take it, was intended to prevent all
+interference on the part of any power on the face of the earth, with
+the execution of this police regulation, which is so essential to
+the peace and safety of our community. Had the legislature which
+passed it ever dreamed that the sheriff was to be subjected to the
+annoyance of being dragged before the Federal Court for doing his
+duty under a law of the State, I am sure it would have provided for
+his protection. As no such provision has been made for so unexpected
+a contingency, I recommend that you so amend this Act of 1844, that
+it may meet any case that may arise.
+
+"It is certainly wrong to tolerate this interference with the laws
+enacted for the protection of our institution. In the general
+distribution of power between the Federal and State Governments, the
+right to make their own police regulations was clearly reserved to
+the States. In fact, it is nothing more nor less than the right of
+self-preservation-a right which is above all constitutions, and
+above all laws, and one which never was, nor never will be,
+abandoned by a people who are worthy to be free. It is a right which
+has never yet been attempted to be denied to any people, except to
+us.
+
+"The complaint against this law is very strange, and the attempt to
+bring us in conflict with the General Government on account of it,
+is still more remarkable; when, so far from its being at variance
+with the laws of the United States, it is only requiring the State
+authorities to enforce an Act of Congress, approved February 28th,
+1803, entitled, An Act to prevent the importation of certain persons
+into certain States, where, by the laws thereof, their importation
+is prohibited. By referring to this Act, you will see that the
+plaintiff in the action alluded to was prohibited by it from
+entering into this State. I deem it unnecessary, however, to enter
+fully into the argument. If any doubt should be entertained by you,
+as to its constitutionality, I beg leave to refer to the able
+opinion of the Hon. J. McPherson Berrien, delivered at the time he
+was Attorney-General of the United States, which I herewith send
+you.
+
+"On the subject of the modification of this law, I am free to say,
+that when Her B. M.'s Government, through its consul, made a
+respectful request to our legislature to that effect, I was anxious
+that it should be made. It was with pleasure that I transmitted his
+first communication to the last legislature. I would have made a
+recommendation of its modification a special point in my first
+message, but that I thought it indelicate to do so, as the matter
+was already before the legislature, and committees had been
+appointed to report upon it. Another reason for the neglect of this
+recommendation, was the then excited state of party politics, which
+might have precluded the possibility of a calm consideration of the
+subject. But for the proceedings instituted in the premises, I would
+even now recommend a modification of the law, so as to require
+captains to confine their colored seamen to their vessels, and to
+prevent their landing under heavy penalties. For while I think the
+State has a perfect right to pass whatever laws on this subject it
+may deem necessary for its safety, yet the spirit of the age
+requires that while they should be so formed as to be adequate to
+our protection, they should be at the same time as little offensive
+as possible to other nations with whom we have friendly relations.
+But since an attempt has been made to defy our laws, and bring us in
+conflict with the Federal Government, on a subject upon which we are
+so justly sensitive, our own self-respect demands that we should not
+abate one jot or tittle of that law, which was enacted to protect us
+from the influence of ignorant incendiaries."
+
+We are under many obligations to Governor Means for his remarks upon
+this subject. We esteem his character too highly to entertain an
+idea that he would knowingly make an incorrect statement; but, with
+a knowledge of the facts, we can assure him that he was misled by
+those whom he depended upon for information. And also, though his
+name deserves to stand pre-eminent among the good men of Carolina,
+for recurring to that frightful state of things which exists in the
+Charleston prison, that he did not receive a correct statement in
+regard to it. In this want, his remarks lose much of their value.
+Subjects and grievances exist there which he should know most of,
+and yet he knows least, because he intrusts them to the caretakers,
+who make abuses their medium of profit.
+
+Under the influence of that exceedingly suspicious, and yet
+exceedingly credulous characteristic of a people, few know the power
+that is working beneath the sunshine of South Carolina, and those
+who do, stand upon that slaveworn ostentation which considers it
+beneath notice.
+
+We have no interest nor feeling beyond that of humanity, and a right
+to expose the mendacity of those who have power to exercise it over
+the prisoners in Charleston. That mendacity has existed too long for
+the honor of that community, and for the feelings of those who have
+suffered under it.
+
+It may be true that this case was considered a favorable one to try
+the issue upon, but no elements of sympathy were sought by the
+consul. That functionary to whom the Governor has attributed
+"characteristic kindness," said, in our presence, and we have the
+testimony of others to confirm what we say, that if Judge Withers
+had granted the habeas corpus, he would not have given up the
+prisoner, but rather gone to jail and suffered the same regimen with
+the prisoners. Had he tried the accommodations, he would have found
+the "profits" more than necessary to appease common hunger.
+
+The Governor says, "Pereira was at liberty to depart at any moment
+that he could get a vessel to transport him beyond the limits of the
+State." How are we to reconcile this with the following sentence,
+which appears in the next paragraph:--"While these proceedings were
+pending," (meaning the action instituted by the consul to release
+the prisoner,) "the sheriff of Charleston had my instructions not to
+give up the prisoner, even if a writ of habeas corpus had been
+granted?" According to this, the sheriff assumed a power independent
+of and above the Governor's prerogative. We have attempted to
+picture the force of this in our work, and to show that there are
+official abuses cloaked by an honorable dishonesty, which dignifies
+the business of the local factor and vendor of human property, and
+which should be stayed by the power of the Executive.
+
+The singular fact presents itself, that while Judge Withers was
+deliberating upon the question of granting the "habeas corpus," the
+proceedings pending, and the Governor's instructions to the contrary
+before him, the sheriff takes it upon himself to smuggle the
+prisoner out of port. Now what was the object of this Secret and
+concerted movement? Was it "kindness" on the part of that
+functionary, who has grasped every pretence to enforce this law? We
+think not. The reader will not require any extended comments from us
+to explain the motive; yet we witnessed it, and cannot leave it
+without a few remarks.
+
+It is well known that it has been the aim of that functionary, whose
+"characteristic kindness" has not failed to escape the Governor's
+notice, to thwart the consul in all his proceedings. In this
+instance, he engaged the services of a "shipping master" as a
+pretext, and with him was about to send the man away when his
+presence was essential to test his right to the habeas corpus, and
+at this very time, more than two months wages, due him from the
+owners, lay in the hands of the consul, ready to be paid on his
+release.
+
+The nefarious design speaks for itself.
+
+The consul was informed of the proceeding, and very properly refused
+to submit to such a violation of authority, intended to annul his
+proceedings. He preferred to await the "test," demanding the
+prisoner's release through the proper authorities. That release,
+instead of being "a few days after this," as the message sets forth,
+was-not effected until the fifteenth of May.
+
+Let the Governor institute an inquiry into the treatment of these
+men by the officials, and the prison regimen, and he will find the
+truth of what we have said. Public opinion will not credit his award
+of "characteristic kindness" to those who set up a paltry pretext as
+an apology for their wrong-doing.
+
+If men are to be imprisoned upon this singular construction of law,
+(which is no less than arming the fears of South Carolina,) is it
+any more than just to ask that she should pay for it, instead of
+imposing it upon innocent persons? Or, to say the least, to make
+such comfortable provision for them as is made in the port of
+Savannah, and give them what they pay for, instead of charging
+thirty cents a day for their board, and making twenty-two of that
+profit?
+
+Had the Governor referred to the "characteristic kindness" of the
+jailer, his remarks would have been bestowed upon a worthy man, who
+has been a father to those unfortunates who chanced within the turn
+of his key.
+
+In another part of his message, commenting upon the existence of
+disgraceful criminal laws, the management and wretched state of
+prisons, he says, "The attorney-general, at my request, has drawn up
+a report on the subject of prisons and prison discipline." Now, if
+such were the facts, the reports would be very imperfect to be drawn
+up by one who never visits the prisons.
+
+We are well aware that he called for this report, and further, that
+the attorney-general, in a letter to the sheriff, (of which we have
+a copy,) propounded numerous questions in regard to the jail,
+calling for a statement in full, particularly the amount of fees
+paid to certain functionaries; those charged to the State, and the
+average number of prisoners per month, from Sept. 1851, to Sept.
+1852, &c. &c. That letter was transmitted to the jailer-a man whose
+character and integrity is well known, and above reproach in
+Charleston-with a request that he would make out his report. He drew
+up his report in accordance with the calendar and the facts, but
+that report was not submitted. Why was it not submitted? Simply
+because it showed the profit of starving men in South Carolina
+prisons.
+
+We have the evidence in our possession, and can show the Executive
+that he has been misled. We only ask him to call for the original
+statement, made out in the jailer's handwriting, and compare it with
+the calendar; and when he has done that, let us ask, Why the average
+of prisoners per month does not correspond? and why the enormous
+amount of fees accruing from upward of fifty "colored seamen,"
+imprisoned during the year, and entered upon the calendar "contrary
+to law," was not included?
+
+It is a very unhealthy state of things, to say the least; but as the
+sheriff considers it his own, perhaps we have no right to meddle
+with it.
+
+All this clamor about the bad influence of "colored seamen" is kept
+up by a set of mendicant officials who harvest upon the fees, and
+falls to naught, when, at certain hours of the day during their
+imprisonment, they are allowed to associate with "bad niggers,"
+committed for criminal offences and sale. If their presence is
+"dangerous," it certainly would be more dangerous in its connection
+with criminals of the feared class.
+
+Take away the fees--the mercantile community will not murmur, and
+the official gentry will neither abuse nor trouble themselves about
+enforcing the law to imprison freemen.
+
+THE END.
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Manuel Pereira
+by F. C. Adams
+******This file should be named mnlpr10.txt or mnlpr10.zip******
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+End of The Project Gutenberg EBook of Manuel Pereira
+by F. C. Adams
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