Twelve Years a Slave. Solomon Northup

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Twelve Years a Slave - Solomon Northup

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but they were innocent of the great wickedness of which I now believe them guilty. Whether they were accessory to my misfortunes – subtle and inhuman monsters in the shape of men – designedly luring me away from home and family, and liberty, for the sake of gold – those who read these pages will have the same means of determining as myself. If they were innocent, my sudden disappearance must have been unaccountable indeed; but revolving in my mind all the attending circumstances, I never yet could indulge, towards them, so charitable a supposition.

      After receiving the money from them, of which they appeared to have an abundance, they advised me not to go into the streets that night, inasmuch as I was unacquainted with the customs of the city. Promising to remember their advice, I left them together, and soon after was shown by a colored servant to a sleeping room in the back part of the hotel, on the ground floor. I laid down to rest, thinking of home and wife, and children, and the long distance that stretched between us, until I fell asleep. But no good angel of pity came to my bedside, bidding me to fly – no voice of mercy forewarned me in my dreams of the trials that were just at hand.

      From early in the morning, I was constantly in the company of Hamilton and Brown. They were the only persons I knew in Washington. We stood together as the funeral pomp passed by. I remember distinctly how the window glass would break and rattle to the ground, after each report of the cannon they were firing in the burial ground. We went to the Capitol, and walked a long time about the grounds. In the afternoon, they strolled towards the President's House, all the time keeping me near to them, and pointing out various places of interest. As yet, I had seen nothing of the circus. In fact, I had thought of it but little, if at all, amidst the excitement of the day.

       Painful Meditations—James H. Burch—Williams' Slave Pen in Washington—The Lackey, Radburn—Assert My Freedom—The Anger of the Trader—The Paddle and Cat-O'-Ninetails—The Whipping—New Acquaintances—Ray, Williams, and Randall—Arrival of Little Emily and Her Mother in The Pen—Maternal Sorrows—The Story of Eliza

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