I
Mystery of Market Speech and Prayer-Meeting
âGood morninâ, Bob; howâs butter dis morninâ?â
âFresh; just as fresh, as fresh can be.â
âOh, glory!â said the questioner, whom we shall call Thomas Anderson, although he was known among his acquaintances as Marster Andersonâs Tom.
His informant regarding the condition of the market was Robert Johnson, who had been separated from his mother in his childhood and reared by his mistress as a favorite slave. She had fondled him as a pet animal, and even taught him to read. Notwithstanding their relation as mistress and slave, they had strong personal likings for each other.
Tom Anderson was the servant of a wealthy planter, who lived in the city of Câ ⸺, North Carolina. This planter was quite advanced in life, but in his earlier days he had spent much of his time in talking politics in his State and National capitals in winter, and in visiting pleasure resorts and watering places in summer. His plantations were left to the care of overseers who, in their turn, employed negro drivers to aid them in the work of cultivation and discipline. But as the infirmities of age were pressing upon him he had withdrawn from active life, and given the management of his affairs into the hands of his sons. As Robert Johnson and Thomas Anderson passed homeward from the market, having bought provisions for their respective homes, they seemed to be very lighthearted and careless, chatting and joking with each other; but every now and then, after looking furtively around, one would drop into the ears of the other some news of the battle then raging between the North and South which, like two great millstones, were grinding slavery to powder.
As they passed along, they were met by another servant, who said in hurried tones, but with a glad accent in his voice:â â
âDid you see de fish in de market dis morninâ? Oh, but dey war splendid, jisâ as fresh, as fresh kin be.â
âThatâs the ticket,â said Robert, as a broad smile overspread his face. âIâll see you later.â
âGood morninâ, boys,â said another servant on his way to market. âHowâs eggs dis morninâ?â
âFust rate, fust rate,â said Tom Anderson. âBobâs got it down fine.â
âI thought so; mighty long faces at de posâ-office dis morninâ; but Iâd better move âlong,â and with a bright smile lighting up his face he passed on with a quickened tread.
There seemed to be an unusual interest manifested by these men in the state of the produce market, and a unanimous report of its good condition. Surely there was nothing in the primeness of the butter or the freshness of the eggs to change careless looking faces into such expressions of gratification, or to light dull eyes with such gladness. What did it mean?
During the dark days of the Rebellion, when the bondman was turning his eyes to the American flag, and learning to hail it as an ensign of deliverance, some of the shrewder slaves, coming in contact with their masters and overhearing their conversations, invented a phraseology to convey in the most unsuspected manner news to each other from the battlefield. Fragile women and helpless children were left on the plantations while their natural protectors were at the front, and yet these bondmen refrained from violence. Freedom was coming in the wake of the Union army, and while numbers deserted to join their forces, others remained at home, slept in their cabins by night and attended to their work by day; but under this apparently careless exterior there was an undercurrent of thought which escaped the cognizance of their masters. In conveying tidings of the war, if they wished to announce a victory of the Union army, they said the butter was fresh, or that the fish and eggs were in good condition. If defeat befell them, then the butter and other produce were rancid or stale.
Entering his home, Robert set his basket down. In one arm he held a bundle of papers which he had obtained from the train to sell to the boarders, who were all anxious to hear from the seat of battle. He slipped one copy out and, looking cautiously around, said to Linda, the cook, in a low voice:â â
âSplendid news in the papers. Secesh routed. Yankees whipped âem out of their boots. Papers full of it. I tell you the eggs and the butterâs mighty fresh this morning.â
âOh, sho, chile,â said Linda, âI canât read de newspapers, but ole Missusâ face is newspaper nuff for me. I looks at her ebery morninâ wen she comes inter dis kitchen. Ef her face is long anâ she walks kine oâ droopy den I thinks things is gwine wrong for dem. But ef she comes out yere looking mighty pleased, anâ larffin all ober her face, anâ steppinâ so frisky, den I knows de Secesh is gittinâ de besâ ob de Yankees. Robby, honey, does you really bâlieve for good and righty dat dem Yankees is got horns?â
âOf course not.â
âWell, I yered so.â
âWell, you heard a mighty big whopper.â
âAnyhow, Bobby, things goes mighty contrary in dis house. Ole Miss is in de parlor prayinâ for de Secesh to gain de day, and weâs prayinâ in de cabins and kitchens for de Yankees to get de besâ ob it. But wasnât Miss Nancy glad wen dem Yankees runâd away at Bullâs Run. It was nuffin but Bullâs Run anâ run away Yankees. How she did larff and skip âbout de house. Anâ den me thinks to myself youâd better not holler till you gits out ob de woods. I specs âfore dem Yankees gits froo youâll be larffin tother side ob your mouf. While you was gone to market ole Miss comâd out yere, her face looking as long as my arm, tellinâ us all âbout de war and saying dem Yankees whipped our folks all to pieces. And she was âfraid deyâd all be down yere soon. I thought they couldnât come too soon for we. But I didnât tell her so.â
âNo, I donât expect you did.â
âNo, I didnât; ef you buys me for a fool you loses your money shore. She said when dey comâd down yere she wanted all de men to hide, for deyâd kill all de men, but dey wouldnât tech de women.â
âItâs no such thing. Sheâs put it all wrong. Why them Yankees are our best friends.â
âDatâs jisâ what I thinks. Ole Miss was jisâ tryin to skeer a body. Anâ when she war done she jisâ set down and sniffled anâ cried, anâ I war so glad I didnât know what to do. But I had to hole in. Anâ I made out I war orful sorry. Anâ Jinny said, âO Miss Nancy, I hope dey wonât come yere.â Anâ she said, âIâse jisâ âfraid dey will come down yere and gobble up eberything dey can lay dere hands on.â Anâ she jisâ looked as ef her heart war mosâ broke, anâ den she went inter de house. Anâ when she war gone, we jisâ broke loose. Jake turned somersets, and said he warnt âfraid ob dem Yankees; he knowâd which side his brad was buttered on. Dat Jake is a cuter. When he goes down ter git de letters he cuts up all kines ob shines and capers. Anâ to look at him skylarking dere while de folks is waitinâ for dere letters, anâ talkinâ bout de war, yer wouldnât think dat boy had a thimbleful of sense. But Jakeâs listeninâ all de time wid his eyes and his mouf wide open, anâ ketchinâ eberything he kin, anâ a heap ob news he gits dat way. As to Jinny, she jisâ capered and danced all ober de flore. Anâ I jisâ had to put my hanâ ober her mouf to keep ole Miss from yereing her. Oh, but we did hab a good time. Boy, yer oughter been yere.â
âAnd, Aunt Linda, what did you do?â
âOh, honey, I war jisâ ready to crack my sides larffin, jisâ to see what a long face Jinny puts on wen ole Miss is talkinâ, anâ den to see dat face wen missusâ back is turned, why itâs good as a circus. Itâs nuff to make a horse larff.â
âWhy, Aunt Linda, you never saw a circus?â
âNo, but Iâse hearn tell ob dem, and I thinks dey musâ be mighty funny. Anâ I know itâs orful funny to see how straight Jinnyâs face looks wen sheâs almosâ ready to bust, while ole Miss is frettinâ and fuminâ âbout dem Yankees anâ de war. But, somehow, Robby, I ralely bâlieves dat we cullud folks is mixed up in dis fight. I seed it all in a vision. Anâ soon as dey fired on dat fort, Uncle Danâel says to me: âLinda, weâs gwine to git our freedom.â Anâ I says: âWat makes you think so?â Anâ he says: âDeyâve fired on Fort Sumter, anâ de Norf is bounâ to whip.âââ
âI hope so,â said Robert. âI think that we have a heap of friends up there.â
âWell, Iâm jisâ gwine to keep on prayinâ anâ bâlievinâ.â
Just then the bell rang, and Robert, answering, found Mrs. Johnson suffering from a severe headache, which he thought was occasioned by her worrying over the late defeat of the Confederates. She sent him on an errand, which he executed with his usual dispatch, and returned to some work which he had to do in the kitchen. Robert was quite a favorite with Aunt Linda, and they often had confidential chats together.
âBobby,â she said, when he returned, âI thinks we ort ter hab a prayer-meetinâ putty soon.â
âI am in for that. Where will you have it?â
âLem me see. Lasâ Sunday we had it in Gibsonâs woods; Sunday âfore lasâ, in de old cypress swamp; anâ nexâ Sunday weâel hab one in McCulloughâs woods. Lasâ Sunday we had a good time. I war jisâ chock full anâ runninâ ober. Aunt Millyâs daughterâs bin monin all summer, anâ sheâs jisâ come throo. We had a powerful time. Eberythinâ on dat grounâ was jisâ alive. I tell yer, dere was a shout in de camp.â
âWell, you had better look out, and not shout too much, and pray and sing too loud, because, âfore you know, the patrollers will be on your track and break up your meetinâ in a mighty big hurry, before you can say âJack Robinson.âââ
âOh, we looks out for dat. Weâs got a nice big pot, dat got cracked lasâ winter, but it will hole a lot oâ water, anâ we puts it whar we can tell it eberything. We has our own good times. Anâ I want you to come Sunday night anâ tell all âbout the good eggs, fish, and butter. Mark my words, Bobby, weâs all gwine to git free. I seed it all in a vision, as plain as de nose on yer face.â
âWell, I hope your vision will come out all right, and that the eggs will keep and the butter be fresh till we have our next meetinâ.â
âNow, Bob, you senâ word to Uncle Danâel, Tom Anderson, anâ de rest ob dem, to come to McCulloughâs woods nexâ Sunday night. I want to hab a sin-killinâ anâ debil-dribinâ time. But, boy, youâd better git out er yere. Ole Missâll be down on yer like a scratch cat.â
Although the slaves were denied unrestricted travel, and the holding of meetings without the surveillance of a white man, yet they contrived to meet by stealth and hold gatherings where they could mingle their prayers and tears, and lay plans for escaping to the Union army. Outwitting the vigilance of the patrollers and home guards, they established these meetings miles apart, extending into several States.
Sometimes their hope of deliverance was cruelly blighted by hearing of some adventurous soul who, having escaped to the Union army, had been pursued and returned again to bondage. Yet hope survived all these disasters which gathered around the fate of their unfortunate brethren, who were remanded to slavery through the undiscerning folly of those who were strengthening the hands which were dealing their deadliest blows at the heart of the Nation. But slavery had cast such a glamour over the Nation, and so warped the consciences of men, that they failed to read aright the legible transcript of Divine retribution which was written upon the shuddering earth, where the blood of Godâs poor children had been as water freely spilled.