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me a lick in her life, anā€™ I belieb in praising de bridge dat carries me ober. Dem Yankees set me free, anā€™ I thinks a powerful heap ob dem. But it does rile me ter see dese mean white men cominā€™ down yere anā€™ settinā€™ up dere grog-shops, tryinā€™ to fedder dere nests sellinā€™ licker to pore culled people. Deys de bery kine ob men dat used ter keep dorgs to ketch de runaways. Iā€™d be chokinā€™ fer a drink ā€™fore Iā€™d eber spenā€™ a cent wid dem, a spreadinā€™ dere traps to git de black folksā€™ money. You jisā€™ go down town ā€™fore sun up to-morrer morninā€™ anā€™ you see ef dey donā€™t hab dem bars open to sell dere drams to dem hard workinā€™ culled people ā€™fore dey goes ter work. I thinks some niggers is mighty big fools.ā€

ā€œOh, Aunt Linda, donā€™t run down your race. Leave that for the white people.ā€

ā€œI ainā€™t runninā€™ down my people. But a foolā€™s a fool, wether heā€™s white or black. Anā€™ I think de nigger who will spenā€™ his hard-earned money in dese yere new grog-shops is de biggest kine ob a fool, anā€™ I sticks ter dat. You know we didnā€™t hab all dese low places in slave times. Anā€™ what is dey fer, but to get the peopleā€™s money. Anā€™ its a shame how dey do sling de licker ā€™bout ā€™lection times.ā€

ā€œBut donā€™t the temperance people want the colored people to vote the temperance ticket?ā€

ā€œYes, but some ob de culled people gits mighty skittish ef dey tries to git em to vote dare ticket ā€™lection time, anā€™ keeps dem at a proper distance wen de ā€™lectionā€™s ober. Some ob dem say dereā€™s a trick behine it, anā€™ donā€™t want to tech it. Dese white folks could do a heap wid de culled folks ef deyā€™d only treat em right.ā€

ā€œWhen our people say there is a trick behind it,ā€ said Robert, ā€œI only wish they could see the trick before itā ā€”the trick of worse than wasting their money, and of keeping themselves and families poorer and more ignorant than there is any need for them to be.ā€

ā€œWell, Bobby, I beliebs we might be a people ef it warnā€™t for dat mizzable drink. Anā€™ Robby, I jisā€™ tells yer what I wants; I wants some libe man to come down yere anā€™ splain things ter dese people. I donā€™t mean a politic man, but a man whoā€™ll larn dese people how to bring up dere chillen, to keep our gals straight, anā€™ our boys from runninā€™ in de saloons anā€™ gamblinā€™ dens.ā€

ā€œDonā€™t your preachers do that?ā€ asked Robert.

ā€œWell, some ob dem does, anā€™ some ob dem doesnā€™t. Anā€™ wen dey preaches, I want dem to practice wat dey preach. Some ob dem says deyā€™s called, but I jisā€™ thinks laziness called some ob dem. Anā€™ I thinks since freedom come deres some mighty pore sticks set up for preachers. Now dereā€™s John Anderson, Tomā€™s brudder; you ā€™member Tom.ā€

ā€œYes; as brave a fellow and as honest as ever stepped in shoe leather.ā€

ā€œWell, his brudder war mighty diffrent. He war down in de lower kentry wen de war war ober. He war mighty smart, anā€™ had a good headpiece, anā€™ a orful glib tongue. He set up store anā€™ sole whisky, anā€™ made a lot ob money. Den he wanted ter go to de legislatur. Now what should he do but make out heā€™d got ā€™ligion, anā€™ war called to preach. He had no more ā€™ligion dan my ole dorg. But he had money anā€™ built a meetinā€™ house, whar he could hole meeting, anā€™ hab funerals; anā€™ you know cullud folks is mighty great on funerals. Well dat jisā€™ tuck wid de people, anā€™ he got ā€™lected to de legislatur. Den he got a fine house, anā€™ his ole wife warnā€™t good ā€™nuff for him. Den dere war a young schoolteacher, anā€™ he begun cuttinā€™ his eyes at her. But she war as deep in de mud as he war in de mire, anā€™ he jisā€™ gib up his ole wife and married her, a fusty thing. He war a mean ole hypocrit, anā€™ I wouldnā€™t senā€™ fer him to bury my cat. Robby, Iā€™se down on dese kine ob preachers like a thousand bricks.ā€

ā€œWell, Aunt Linda, all the preachers are not like him.ā€

ā€œNo; I knows dat; not by a jug full. Weā€™s got some mighty good men down yere, anā€™ weā€™s glad when dey comes, anā€™ orful sorry when dey goes ā€™way. De las preacher we had war a mighty good man. He didnā€™t like too much hollerinā€™.ā€

ā€œPerhaps,ā€ said Robert, ā€œhe thought it were best for only one to speak at a time.ā€

ā€œI specs so. His wife war de nicest and sweetest lady dat eber I did see. None ob yer airish, stuck up folks, like a tarrapin carryinā€™ eberything on its back. She used ter hab meetins fer de mudders, anā€™ larn us how to raise our chillen, anā€™ talk so putty to de chillen. I sartinly did lub dat woman.ā€

ā€œWhere is she now?ā€ asked Robert.

ā€œDe Conference moved dem ā€™bout thirty miles from yere. Deys gwine to hab a big meetinā€™ ober dere next Sunday. Donā€™t you ā€™member dem meetins we used to hab in de woods? We donā€™t hab to hide like we did den. But it donā€™t seem as ef de people had de same good ā€™ligion we had den. ā€™Pears like folks is took up wid makinā€™ money anā€™ politics.ā€

ā€œWell, Aunt Linda, donā€™t you wish those good old days would come back?ā€

ā€œNo, chile; neber! neber! Wat fer you take me? Iā€™d ruther lib in a corncrib. Freedom neednā€™t keep me outer heben; anā€™ ef Iā€™se sich a fool as ter lose my ā€™ligion cause Iā€™se free, I oughtnā€™ ter git dere.ā€

ā€œBut, Aunt Linda, if old Miss were able to take care of you, wouldnā€™t you just as leave be back again?ā€

There was a faint quiver of indignation in Aunt Lindaā€™s voice, as she replied:ā ā€”

ā€œDonā€™t yer want

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