Slave Narratives: A Folk History of Slavery in the United States - From Interviews with Former Slaves - Arkansas Narratives, Part 2 by Work Projects Administration
page 112 of 341 (32%)
page 112 of 341 (32%)
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here. I emigrated here. I left Raleigh, North Carolina Christmas Eve
1883. I've seen ninety-six Christmases. "I member the folks said the war was to keep us under bondage. The South wants us under bondage right now or they wouldn't do us like they do. "When I come to this country of Arkansas I brought twelve chillun and left four in North Carolina. I've had six wives and had twenty-nine chillun by the six wives. "I've seen them Ku Klux in slavery times and I've cut a many a grapevine. We'd be in the place dancin' and playin' the banjo and the grape vine strung across the road and the Ku Klux come ridin' along and run right into it and throw the horses down. "Cose I believe in hants. They're in the air. Can't everybody see em. Some come in the shape of a cat or a dog--you know, old folks spirits. I ain't afeared of em--ain't afeared of anything cept a panter. Cose I got a gun--got three or four of em. You can't kill a spirit cept with silver. "I was in the road one time at night next to a cemetery and I see somethin' white come right up side of me. I didn't run then. You know you can git so scared you can't run, but when I got so I could, I like to killed myself runnin'. "I'm not able to work now, but I just go anyhow. I got a willin' mind to work and a strong constitution but I ain't got nothin' to back it. I never was sick but twice in my life. |
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