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        <title>From log cabin to the pulpit :or fifteen years in
        slavery</title>
        <author>W.H. Robinson</author>
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        <date>2007</date>
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        <pb facs="00010357_0004" n="2" />
        <head>THIRD EDITION</head>
        <p>PUBLISHED BY THE AUTHOR,</p>
        <p>REV. W. H. ROBINSON,</p>
        <p>Reminiscences of my early life</p>
        <p>while in slavery.</p>
        <p>DEDICATED TO MY</p>
        <p>DAUGHTER, MARGUERITE.</p>
        <p>JAMES H. TIFFT,</p>
        <p>PUBLISHING PRINTER, EAU CLAIRE, WIS.</p>
        <p>1913.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0004" n="3" />
        <head>OLD GLORY</head>
        <p>The old tattered flag, that passed through the siege of
        the</p>
        <p>"Civil War" which freed the colored race from slavery
        and saved the Union from disruption. The old flag was
        fought under by the colored as well as the white boys, and
        was preserved as the Nation's emblem of freedom. "Long may
        it wave o'er the land of the free and the home of the
        brave."</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0006" n="6" />
        <head>PRESENTATION.</head>
        <p>I present this work to the public on its merits; there
        is no fiction about it, every incident is taken from
        reality. The author has either passed through or been an
        eye witness to every trying ordeal and incident, with a
        very few exceptions, and he has authentic history to
        sustain him in these. Every line is dictated by the author,
        W. H. Robinson, and written by his secretary, Miss Florence
        Mitchell, of Louisville, Kentucky.</p>
        <head>ENDORSEMENTS.</head>
        <p>Having read the within pages I can conscientiously
        recommend the book as being of intense interest from first
        to last: full of interesting narrative, valuable historical
        information, good suggestions and whole-some inspiration.
        It is more than worth the price asked for it.</p>
        <p>J. M. GASS,</p>
        <p>Editor "News," Albia, Iowa.</p>
        <p>April 14, 1913.</p>
        <p>To Whom It May Concern:</p>
        <p>It gives me pleasure to be permitted to state that the
        Rev. W. H. Robinson is personally known to me as a man whom
        God is most wonderfully using in the extension of His
        Kingdom. He is most favorably known in the state awl enjoys
        the highest esteem of the churches. His evangelistic labors
        have been signally successful, churches being quickened,
        church members reclaimed and large numbers truly converted.
        His book I consider of great value, presenting as it does,
        a vivid and truthful story of the remarkable manner in
        which God by His grace, can use one who is consecrated to
        the service of the Master.</p>
        <p>Yours very truly,</p>
        <p>GEO. R. STAIR,</p>
        <p>Pastor First Baptist Church. Eau Claire, Wisconsin.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0006" n="7" />
        <p>REV. W. H. ROBINSON, AUTHOR.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0007" n="8" />
        <p>THE LATE MRS. W. H. Robinson</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0007" n="9" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 9</head>
        <head>Author's Preface.</head>
        <p>My friends, it is not the purpose of the writer to place
        before the public something to bias the minds of the people
        or instill a spirit of hatred. My book reveals in every
        chapter either the pathetic moan of slaves in almost utter
        despair, yet panting, groaning, bitterly wailing and still
        hoping for freedom, or of slaves with their hearts lifted
        to God, praying for deliverance from the cruel bonds, the
        auction block, and years of unrequited grinding toil for
        those who had no right to their labor.</p>
        <p>Realizing, as I do, the injunction of the Lord Jesus,
        when he said, in Matthew VII, 12: "Therefore, all things
        whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even
        so to them, for this is the law of the prophets." My
        deliberations have been many and constant that God would
        take out of my heart all the spirit of retaliation or
        revenge. This is why my book has not been before the public
        years ago. I wanted to be assured of the fact that I could
        give to the world at least some thoughts that would not
        only be a remembrance, but would prove beneficial to all in
        whose hands this book may chance to fall. I would not have
        this all important fact pass from the mind and memory of
        men, that they should not give their consent, nor cast
        their ballot for the enslavement of any human being.</p>
        <p>To some of the noble men of this country, yea to many
        whose blood has stained the earth at Fairfax</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0008" n="10" />
        <head>10 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</head>
        <p>Courthouse, Virginia, Roanoke Island. North Carolina,
        Fort Donelson, Pea Ridge Arkansas, Shiloh or Pittsburg
        Landing, Tennessee, Williamsburg, Virginia, and many other
        places too numerous to mention. it is but as yesterday
        since the noble men, who are sleeping in unknown graves,
        left their homes and loved ones to lay their lives on the
        sacrificial altar of their country, to perpetuate this
        government and help) to shake the shackles of bondage from
        a race hewn from a slab of ebony. It is but yesterday, in
        our memories, since mothers gave their only sons, wives
        their husbands, sisters their brother, sweethearts, their
        intended, to</p>
        <p>take part in shaking the manacles from this unfortunate
        race. It is but yesterday since the sad message came that
        many of those loved ones had fallen in the forefront of the
        battle, saturated in their own blood, fighting for human
        liberty.</p>
        <p>Gratitude will not pay for the loss of those dear ones,
        nor for those who returned limbless, and with shattered
        health, but it is the greatest gift in human reach. May God
        ever bless, and he will bless, the Caucasian race for the
        Moses, in the person of an Abraham Lincoln, who led us
        across the Red Sea of slavery into the promised land of
        liberty, where today we can worship God under our own vine
        and fig tree, and no one dare molest us or make us
        afraid.</p>
        <p>Having given you this short preface I will at once
        proceed to give you a history of my life as a slave, and of
        slavery from a historical standpoint; also eleven months of
        my life in England, where I received my first alphabetical
        training.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0008" n="11" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 11</head>
        <head>CHAPTER I.</head>
        <p>I was born in Wilmington, a town in North Carolina,
        March 11, 1848. Wilmington is situated near the mouth of
        the Cape Fear river, on the Atlantic coast. It has a good
        harbor on the tidal waters of Cape Fear</p>
        <p>river. The chief exports are cotton and tobacco from the
        uplands, and lumber, rosin and turpentine from the yellow
        pine forests of the coastal plains. The swampy coastal
        lowlands produce great quantities of rice.</p>
        <p>In reading Stanley and Livingston on Africa we notice
        that the negro race is divided into different tribes. Among
        them is the Madagascar tribe, who are noted for their
        mechanical skill. To this tribe my parents both
        belonged.</p>
        <p>My parents, Peter and Rosy, belonged to it very wealthy
        ship and slave holder, who owned two farms and over five
        hundred slaves.</p>
        <p>My father was an engineer and towed vessels in and out
        of Wilmington harbor into the Atlantic ocean. He pursued
        this occupation for over fifteen years and received many
        tips by being courteous and always on the</p>
        <p>alert for ships heaving in sight. While the master
        received pay for the towage, my father by constant contact
        with white men, received money in many other ways. "As
        association breeds assimilation&#8221; so my father learned
        the art of making and saving money until he had accumulated
        about eleven hundred dollars.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0009" n="12" />
        <head>12 FROM THE LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</head>
        <p>My mother was a cook at the great house, but hired her
        time from her mistress, for which she paid three dollars
        per month.</p>
        <p>It becomes necessary to explain how slaves would get
        money to pay for their time. There were shipped from
        Wilmington a great many ground-peas or peanuts. as we now
        call them. They were brought from the country in bulk and
        so had to be sacked and sewed up. The slaves were hired for
        this work, for which they received one cent and a half per
        sack. This is one of the great mediums through which they
        made money. Another was, a great many hogsheads of molasses
        were brought from New Orleans and unloaded on the docks,
        and the hot sun would cause them to ferment and run out
        through the chimes. The negro women would catch this
        molasses by running their hands over the hogshead and
        wiping the molasses from their hands into a pail. I am
        often made to wonder now when I see people gagging at the
        idea of eating bread made up by black hands, when in those
        days the poor whites were truly glad to buy the molasses
        caught in the hands of our mothers, and like Elijah, who
        was fed by the ravens, they ate it and asked no
        questions.</p>
        <p>Father enjoyed the friendship of two very distinguished
        Quakers, Mr. Fuller and Mr. Elliott, who owned oyster
        sloops, and stood at the head of what is known in our
        country as the underground railroad, or an organization
        filled with love of freedom for suffering humanity, that
        had for its end the liberation of slaves and that only.
        Hundreds of men belonging to this organization sacrificed
        their lives in carrying out this noble purpose.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0009" n="13" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 13</head>
        <p>Father was with Messrs Fuller and Elliott every day
        towing them in and out from the oyster bay. This gave them
        an opportunity to lay and devise plans for getting many
        into Canada the only safe refuge for the negro this side
        the Atlantic, and my father was an important factor in this
        line.</p>
        <p>The system of deliverance by the underground rail road
        was to divide the country off into sections, and at every
        fifteen or twenty miles would be a station or depot. One
        man would haul the slaves at night to the end of his
        station and get back home before daylight, undiscovered,
        then they would be conveyed the next night in wagons, from
        that station to the next, and so on until they reached
        Canada.</p>
        <p>Often the wagons had double linings, with corn or Wheat
        visible, while the cavity was filled with women and
        children.</p>
        <p>Father, having a foretaste of Liberty to some extent,
        and growing weary of the life of a slave, with the
        assistance of his Quaker friends plans were laid for him to
        purchase his own freedom and go to Canada. Then his family
        would be sent to him by the underground railroad. If any
        one connected with the underground railroad was caught the
        penalty was a heavy fine and expulsion from the state.</p>
        <p>Allow me to state here that in 1875, while on the train
        going to Wilmington, North Carolina, in search of a sister
        and brother, met a white man having the appearance of a
        lawyer. He talked very freely with me and I soon learned
        that he was from Boston,</p>
        <p>Massachusetts, and that he was a merchant instead of
        a</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0010" n="14" />
        <head>14 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</head>
        <p>lawyer. His continued conversation with me attracted the
        attention of nearly all the passengers in the car, and they
        were not careful or considerate in their criticism, for
        they were heard to say several times, "he is a Northern
        negro lover," or, "one of Lincoln's hirelings," and such
        like expressions We were truly glad when we reached
        Wilmington and could get away from the scrutinizing eyes
        and listening ears of the passengers in the ear. He asked
        me if Wilmington was my home. I told him it was, but that I
        did not love a grain of sand of that soil. He assured me
        that this was the case with him, for said he, "my father
        lost his life here trying to help a colored man to
        liberty." I asked him who his father was. He said, "Sam
        Fuller." When he learned that I had known his father from
        my childhood days it seemed to draw him closer to me, and
        we were both dumbfounded for a moment when it was made
        known that his father had lost his life because he had
        tried to help my father secure his freedom. We both broke
        down and wept for a few moments, but I recognized the
        danger we were in, even in 1875, in a southern state. So we
        parted with the understanding that we keep in touch with
        each other until we got to Indianapolis, Indiana. As there
        was danger of both being murdered we passed each other
        almost as strangers on the streets of Wilmington for over a
        week, and finally we both left on the same train. We spent
        a week together in the city of Indianapolis,</p>
        <p>Indiana. From the way he spent money on me it seemed
        that he thought he owed me some gratitude instead of my
        owing it to him.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0010" n="15" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 15</head>
        <p>He now told me the story of the death of his father and
        how it came about. My master became suspicious, or
        mistrusted from surrounding circumstances, that Mr. Fuller
        was the deviser of father's attempt to buy his freedom. A
        few nights after father was sold from Wilmington a posse of
        men notified Mr. Fuller to leave the state at once, and
        they left a crossbone and skull on a stick in front of his
        door. He left his wife and four children, Samuel, Jr., the
        man I met on the train being the oldest, with the
        understanding that he would send for them in a few days. He
        has never been heard from since. The supposition is that he
        was murdered. The family remained there until the
        rebellion, when they left for Indiana, afterward going from
        there to Massachusetts.</p>
        <p>The young man's business in Wilmington was to look after
        the little homestead, which was about forty acres of land.
        I was not successful in finding my sister and brother, but
        felt amply paid by meeting an old friend to the negro race
        and one who helped my father in many different ways.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0011" n="16" />
        <head>16 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</head>
        <head>CHAPTER II.</head>
        <p>The plans to free father were put into execution in
        1858. My father went to his master to ascertain what he
        would take for him. The first question master asked him
        was, what white man had put him up to this? His suspicion
        at once fell on these two Quakers. Father finally succeeded
        in convincing him that no white man was implicated. Then
        his next question was, "how much money have you? Father
        told him $450, so he agreed to take $1,150 for him. This
        was an exorbitant price and he didn't think father would
        ever be able to pay it. He could have paid him the amount
        down, but in counsel the Quakers had thought it would not
        be the best thing to do for fear it would confuse the whole
        plan and jeopardize their lives.</p>
        <p>He was to pay for himself on the installment plan,
        paying $450 down, with the understanding that he continue
        six months on the tug to teach another man to run it, then
        he could work wherever he pleased. Every year he was to pay
        as much as he could, which he did, together with the
        interest.</p>
        <p>At this time the subject of slavery was being greatly
        agitated in the north, and slaves were depreciating in
        value. In 1859 my father went to California with a
        surveying company, staying one year. He returned</p>
        <p>during the holidays, paying $350 more on himself,</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0011" n="17" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 17</head>
        <p>making a total of $800 paid on his debt. He went back to
        California after the holidays and was gone about three
        months, when the news came to us that he was returning in
        chains. We knew exactly what that meant; to rob him of what
        he had paid and sell him away from us, and we were not
        mistaken, for this was the exact purpose.</p>
        <p>You may wonder how we received the news, knowing we had
        no access to the telegraph or postoffice. Now, to explain
        this. To get news from one farm to another one slave would
        tell the other, and so on, until by this means and that of
        the underground railroad, it would reach its destination.
        So father sent us the news in this way, clear from
        California to North Carolina.</p>
        <p>For two months we went every day when the boat came, to
        see if father was on it. At last the sad hour came when the
        boat arrived, bringing father bound in chains. We saw him
        pulling his whiskers (a mark of deep sorrow with him. When
        they took him off the boat we found he had worn handcuffs
        fourteen days and his ankles, from the manacles, were as
        raw as a piece of beef.</p>
        <p>That night they took him to the jail, or negro pen, and
        there we left them trying to unlock the handcuffs, for the
        flesh had swollen so it made it almost impossible to unlock
        them. The negro trader ordered mother and five of us
        children to go home, assuring us that we would see father
        in the morning.</p>
        <p>That night I saw mother in every attitude of prayer a
        human being could assume. Sometimes she would</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0012" n="18" />
        <p>18 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</p>
        <p>be prostrate on her face on the floor; sometimes on her
        knees ; and again in a sitting posture, imploring God to
        use his power in some way to keep father from being sold
        from us.</p>
        <p>Then about twelve o'clock that night mother said we
        would go to the great house, and so we went,
        notwithstanding the rigidness of the law; for there was a
        standing law, that any negro caught out after nine o'clock
        at night should be struck thirty-nine lashes. But now, as
        the war was dawning, they were more rigid than ever, and
        raised it to forty-nine lashes.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0012" n="19" />
        <p>MISS MARGUERITE ROBINSON.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0013" n="20" />
        <p></p>
        <p>20 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</p>
        <head>CHAPTER III.</head>
        <p>There were four classes of men who made their living on
        the blood of the negro. The first class is the master
        proper. He feels himself too honorable to drive the slave
        from two or three o'clock in the morning until nine or ten
        at night, therefore he sees the necessity of the second
        class, so he hires a poor white man as overseer, to do
        this: dirty work.</p>
        <p>The overseer had the authority, if the slave man, woman
        or child--failed to do his task, to tie him up and whip
        him. but not to exceed one hundred and I fifty lashes. If
        the crime demanded more than that he must get special
        authority from the master. The punishment, as will be shown
        further on, was very high for trivial offenses</p>
        <p>Sometimes the task was too heavy for the negro and he
        could not complete it, and would rise up in his manhood and
        would not be whipped. Then his only alternative was to run
        away, and this usually was the first thought in his mind.
        The third man raised blood hounds and trained them to hunt
        nothing but negroes. He made his living by catching runaway
        negroes, receiving the paltry sum of three dollar per head.
        The fourth man is the negro trader, who made a perpetual
        business of buying and selling negroes, as men do cattle in
        this country. He would buy up eight, ten or twenty, as the
        case might be, and locate</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0013" n="21" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 21</head>
        <p>them at some central point until he had from three to
        five hundred. Then he would have a long chain and handcuff
        them on either side of the chain and march them to
        Richmond, Virginia, which was the central slave market of
        the south, owned and conducted by the Lees and known as
        Lee's negro trader's pen, and when there they would auction
        them off to the highest bidder.</p>
        <p>The prosperity of the poor whites, with but few
        exceptions, depended upon the amount of brutality that he
        showed towards the negro. His word was not valued as highly
        as that of the negro if it was not in favor with that of
        his employer. He lived in no better homes, and many of them
        not as good as the negro quarters. I need not say that they
        had but little or no aspirations, save that of raising
        blood hounds to catch the slaves with when they ran away.
        They were usually very illiterate, many of them had no
        education at all: they had no association only among
        themselves and the negroes. Their wives were glad to do the
        drudgery for that class of whites who would not own slaves.
        There were no free school systems, and they had not
        aspirations enough to pay for schooling their children.
        When they went before their employer they put their hats
        under their arms, as any negro would do, and usually were
        as afraid of him as the negro was of the overseer. They
        dressed as hideously as they possibly could in order to
        strike terror to the hearts of the negroes: they wore broad
        brimmed slouch hats, their pants down in their boots and a
        long blacksnake whip across their shoulders:</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0014" n="22" />
        <head>22 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</head>
        <p>they trained their voices to be as harsh as possible,
        Their very appearance would cause one to shiver. Their
        living was not as good as that of the average negro, for
        the slaves were industrious and would work by the light of
        the moon to earn a few pennies, while the overseer was lazy
        and seemed to be satisfied with most any kind of fare.</p>
        <p>Every week he drew a certain amount of fat meat, corn
        meal, and a little flour from his master's smoke houses
        just the same as the slaves did. He often hired the slaves
        to steal hogs or chickens for him and if caught the slaves
        would have to take it all upon them-selves in order to keep
        the good will of the overseer. They used the same dialect
        as the negro in every respect. While the negro looked for a
        day of deliverance the overseer looked for nothing. He was
        at the height of his ambition while driving the negro.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0014" n="23" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 23</head>
        <head>CHAPTER IV.</head>
        <p>Let us go back to the "great house" where we left my
        mother. She awoke Master Tom and thought she would reach
        him through his religious views, so she said: "Master Tom,
        have you forgotten your religion? Have you the heart to
        sell my husband from me and my children after he has served
        you all these days and made you a fortune?" He said, "No,
        Rosy, I've nothing to do with that. Your husband is in the
        hands of the state of California, but I'll see that he is
        not taken out of this state."</p>
        <p>Of course he knew that mother was ignorant as to the
        laws of the state, that he would have had to have been
        tried in the state where the offense was committed had
        there been any offense, but this was only a pre-text he
        used to rob her of her husband, and her children of their
        father; the father of his money and liberty.</p>
        <p>Mother asked why he was brought back as a slave when he
        was buying himself and had already paid eight hundred
        dollars. He told her that father had become intimate with a
        white lady. She could not have been a lady and be intimate
        with a negro, and that negro a slave.) After assuring
        mother that father would not again be taken out, of the
        state, Master Tom wrote us it pass and we went back
        home.</p>
        <p>About three a. m, mother concluded we had better</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0015" n="24" />
        <head>24 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</head>
        <p>go to the jail, so we went, and saw father standing at
        the window. I called him once, but he waved his hand to us,
        as if to tell us some one was down stairs, and motioned for
        us to go back home.</p>
        <p>Mother cooked a good breakfast for him, and between
        eight and nine o'clock we went back to the negro trader's
        pen, but before we got there we heard singing of two
        classes. Some religious songs, such as "God has delivered
        Daniel," and other melodies, while others were singing the
        songs of the world, all seemingly rejoicing in their own
        way. Some were rejoicing because they were sold, hoping to
        fall into the hands of better masters, while others were
        rejoicing because of the hope of meeting their mother,
        father or child.</p>
        <p>We knew exactly what that meant: we knew that the number
        was complete and about to start for Richmond, and we were
        not mistaken, for there were three hundred men, women and
        children ready to start within thirty minutes from the time
        we got there. We hastily scanned the line over for father,
        but he was not in that gang. But there was a vehicle built
        something like our omnibuses, which convey passengers from
        the depot, only it was built of heavy oak boards, with
        staples driven in them. They would handcuff men that were
        valuable and men that would not be</p>
        <p>whipped. I climbed upon the wheel of this vehicle and
        saw father sitting with his face buried in his hands. As I
        spoke he came to the iron grating or window, and asked
        where mother was. I told him she was there, then he said to
        me, "William, never pull</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0015" n="25" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 25</head>
        <p>off your shirt to be whipped. I want you to die in
        defense of your mother, for once I lay in the woods eleven
        months for trying to prevent your mother from being
        whipped." He shook my hands and kissed me</p>
        <p>good bye through the iron bars. Then three sisters and
        two brothers climbed upon the wheel and bade him good bye.
        Now the most trying scene of all is at hand. Mother climbed
        upon the wheel and father said, "Rosy, I'm bound for
        Richmond, Virginia, and from there to some Southern market,
        I don't know where. We may never meet again this side of
        the shores of time, but Rosy, keep the faith in God, and
        meet me in heaven. I want this one assurance from you
        before we part: I want to know if you believe the charge
        brought against me, for which they are robbing me of my</p>
        <p>liberty?" My mother assured him she did not believe</p>
        <p>it.</p>
        <p>The trader came up, ordered mother down from the wheel,
        and the vehicle to start. Father kissed her good bye, with
        a mutual agreement that they would never marry any one
        else, even though they never met again. Forty years passed
        into eternity from that sad hour until mother's death, in
        1898, and father and mother never met again until they met
        on the other</p>
        <p>shore.</p>
        <p>This was the beginning of sorrow in our home. It was not
        over three weeks from the time that father was sold away
        until mother and three children were taken to the great
        house, and the other children scattered around on the
        different farms. I was taken into the house to wait on
        table.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0016" n="26" />
        <p>26 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</p>
        <p>About a month after I entered upon my new occupation my
        master told me one day, while sitting on the porch, to
        light his pipe. He smoked a pipe with a long reed stem and
        would rest the bowl of it on a shelf. After I lit the pipe
        he ordered me to bring him a glass of water. I went for it,
        but on returning I found he had turned a sallow complexion.
        I spoke to him but he did not answer. I called old
        mistress, (this is the way we distinguished her from the
        children, as we called all, from the least to the biggest,
        mistress and master.) She came and spoke to him, but
        there</p>
        <p>was no reply. He had died sitting there in his
        chair.</p>
        <p>It was the custom among the slave holders to have the
        older slaves come and view the remains of their masters or
        mistresses while they lay in state, and if the master was a
        man of any humanity, or what we termed a good master, they
        would actually shed tears over his body. So as usual, they
        called the slaves in, but old mistress did not know that
        Master Tom had incurred the ill-will of every slave on the
        place by selling father.</p>
        <p>Father was almost a prophet among my people because he
        secured all the new through his Quaker friends, and other
        white men that were friendly to him, with whom he came in
        contact, then he would tell it to our people. Of course the
        slaves held him in high esteem, and when Master Tom sold
        him they never again had any good feeling for him. They
        came as usual, but just outside the door they wet their
        fingers with saliva and made "crocodile tears" and passed
        on pretending to be crying and saying, "Poor Massa</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0016" n="27" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 27</head>
        <p>Tom is gone." Of course they didn't say where he had
        gone.</p>
        <p>This may appear very deceptive, but had we not made some
        demonstration of grief our very lives would have been in
        danger.</p>
        <p>$figure$</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0017" n="28" />
        <head>28 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. </head>
		<head>CHAPTER V.</head>
        <p>About three weeks later they began to look up the will
        for boys then were like a good many are today, just waiting
        for the old man to die, so they could run through with what
        he had accumulated. We have many young men of that class
        today. They are not worthy to bear their father's name. It
        was found in the will that mother and three of the children
        had fallen to Scott Cowens--the meanest of all the Cowens
        family. He was a drunkard and a gambler, for he had taken
        three different women's sons, between the ages of twelve
        and fourteen years, and gambled them off and came back home
        without them, leaving the parents in anguish. We went to
        his home, mother as cook, the rest as servants in
        general</p>
        <p>We had been there but a few months when he called my
        mother one day and asked her why she said "that God had
        sent swift judgment upon his father." Of course mother
        denied but in her grief she had thoughtlessly said it, and
        somehow it had reached his ears.He threatened mother very
        strongly, but didn't strike her.</p>
        <p>He left home one evening, telling me to be ready to
        accompany him when he returned. He did not come back until
        the next morning. I saw at once that he had been drinking
        heavily. He sat down to the breakfast table and ordered me
        to bring him a glass of</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0017" n="29" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 29</head>
        <p>cool water right from the spring. I put the glass of
        water in front of him. He immediately picked it up and
        threw the water in my face, saying &#8220;I will show you
        how to bring me dirty water to drink."</p>
        <p>One morning a few days later, he found fault with the
        biscuits and asked me what was the matter with them. I told
        him I didn't know. He then jumped up from the table and
        called mother. We, from the least to the largest, were
        taught when called by our mistress, or master to answer and
        go toward that voice. So mother was coming to him and he
        met her on the porch, between the kitchen and the dining
        room. He asked mother why she was crying. I had told her
        about his throwing the water in my face and before she
        could answer him he knocked her from the porch to the
        ground. This was more than I could endure. An ax handle was
        on the opposite side from which mother fell. He stood over
        her, cursing and kicking her, and I knocked him down with
        the ax handle.</p>
        <p>I knew my only hope of escape was to run away, so I
        started at once. I had often heard ex-runaway slaves, men
        and women, tell the adventures of when they were in the
        woods and about their hiding places or rendezvous. I had
        heard it told so often at my father's fireside that I knew
        almost directly where they were, for I had passed close by
        them many times, so I</p>
        <p>started to look for them.I went to the three mile farm,
        arriving there about the time they were going to dinner. I
        went to an old mother we were taught to call each old woman
        mother, and they called us son or daughter. It seemed there
        was a natural bond of</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0018" n="30" />
        <p>30 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</p>
        <p>sympathy existing in the heart of every woman for the
        children of others. I told her what I had done. She gave me
        a chunk of fat meat and half of a corn dodger and directed
        me the way to a hiding place. Then with her hand upon my
        head she prayed one of those fervent prayers for God to
        hasten the day when the cruel chains of slavery would fall,
        and women&#8217;s children would not be forced to leave
        home and take refuge among the beasts of the forest for
        trying to protect their mothers.</p>
        <p>Quite late that night I got opposite the hiding place.
        It was a low swampy place back of a thick cane brake. It
        was so dark and the cane so thick when I got to the place
        where I had been directed to turn in I was afraid to
        venture. But as I stood there I imagined I could hear the
        baying of blood hounds, and so strong was the imagination
        that it drove me in, 1 had several things to fear, for that
        country was infested with bears. More than once I had seen
        a bear come out of a corn field with his arms full of corn,
        go up to the fence and throw it over, get over, pick it up
        like a man, and walk off. Then we had reptiles, such as
        water moccasins and rattle snakes. Sometimes I could walk
        up-right, sometimes I was compelled to crawl through the
        cane. About three o'clock the next morning I came out of
        the came brake on the banks of a large pond of almost
        stagnant water. I could see the rocky mound or cave that I
        had heard so much, talk of.</p>
        <p>There was no boat around and I was afraid to go into the
        water, but the same impulse that drove me into the cane
        brake caused me to go into the water.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0018" n="31" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 31</head>
        <p>With a long reed for a staff I waded into the water
        until I heard the voice of a man, in the real coarse negro
        dialect. "who is dat?" My hair was not extremely long, yet
        it seemed so to me, as I imagined I felt my hat going up,
        and I answered, 'dis is me." (Of course he knew who "me"
        was. He then began to question me as to my name and my
        parents' name. It was necessary for him to be very cautious
        whom he admitted, because white men often disguised
        themselves and played the role of a runaway, and in this
        way many runaways had been captured. I finally succeeded in
        convincing him that I was not a spy but an actual runaway.
        Then he allowed me to advance, and as I sat on the top of
        the rocky mound with him he prayed long and earnestly for
        the time to come when God would raise up a deliverer to
        lead us in some way out of bondage. And while he was thus
        praying I heard this peculiar sound, "gaw goo." The old man
        saw I was in a terrible dilemma and he said, "son, you need
        not be uneasy, that is only some men below snoring. In a
        few minutes I looked across the field and saw two men
        coming with poles on their backs, and I got excited again,
        and called his attention to the fact. He assured me that
        they were men who had been off seeking food. They were
        stealing.</p>
        <p>Our people in those days were naturally good hunters,
        but never shot anything larger than a coon nor smaller than
        a chicken, always good on the wing with the latter. They
        threw their game down. It consisted of some fat hens and
        meat they had returned to their homes and secured.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0019" n="32" />
        <p>32 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT</p>
        <p>There was always an understanding between the slaves,
        that if one ran away they would put something to eat at a
        certain place; also a mowing scythe, with the crooked
        handle replaced with a straight stick with which to tight
        the bloodhounds.</p>
        <p>The cook came out, made a hot tire of hickory bark,
        thoroughly wet the chickens and wrapped them in cabbage
        leaves and put them in the bed of ashes: then he proceeded
        to make his bread by mixing the corn meal in an old wooden
        tray and forming it into dodgers, rolling them in cabbage
        leaves and baking in the ashes These are known as ash
        cakes, the most nutritious bread ever eaten. Of course the
        chickens retained all their nutriment because the
        intestines had not been taken out of them. But now he
        returned to them and catching them by both feet he stripped
        the skin and feathers off, then took the intestines out and
        put red pepper and salt in them and then returned them to
        the oven to brown. Parched some corn meal for coffee.
        Breakfast being ready, the guests came from the sleeping
        place, fifteen in number, the two huntsmen made seventeen,
        the old man and myself making nineteen in all, all
        runaways.</p>
        <p>Among them was a man named Frank Anderson. His father,
        James Anderson, a white man of Wilmington, was his master.
        Yet he was a runaway slave, with a standing reward of one
        hundred dollars for his head.</p>
        <p>He had been a fugitive eleven months, and had stripes on
        his back like the ridges of a wash board, put there by his
        father's overseer and by the command of that father, simply
        because he had so much of his father's blood in him that he
        would not allow them to lacerate his back only when they
        overpowered him.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0019" n="33" />
        <p>MISS FLORENCE MITCHELL, SECRETARY, Louisville, Ky.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0020" n="34" />
        <head>34 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</head>
        <head>CHAPTER VI.</head>
        <p>Uncle Amos, as the watchman was called, was a prophet
        among us. He would watch every night, and took: me as his
        companion, as I was the only boy. So I slept in the day and
        watched with him at night. He was a great astrologer,
        although he could not read a word: but strange to say, he
        would go out and lie flat on his back and watch the moon
        and stars, go through some peculiar movement with his
        hands, then the next morning he could tell almost anything
        you wanted d to know. Many times it came just as he
        prophesied.</p>
        <p>One morning, after I had been to the hiding place about
        three weeks, the runaways inquired, as was the Custom, "if
        everything was all right, or what would happen." If he
        answered them in the affirmative, they were perfectly
        satisfied with his decision. But on this memorable morning
        he told them that we would have to get away at once, for if
        we did not we would be attacked within three days by negro
        hunters, for said he, "God has shown me the hounds and the
        men, and that some one, will lose his life if the attack is
        made here."</p>
        <p>So they decided to go to another rendezvous four-teen
        miles away, Uncle Amos advised each one to get his weapon
        in shape, and get provisions enough that night to last a
        few days, or until they learned some-</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0020" n="35" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 35</head>
        <p>thing about the country surrounding the other hiding
        place.</p>
        <p>When men ran away, if in the day, they returned at night
        and secured a mowing scythe and took the crooked handle off
        and put a straight handle on it. Then they made a scabbard
        of bark, and would swing their saber to their side. This
        was; to fight blood bounds with, and if the negro hunters
        got too close, many times they were hew n down.</p>
        <p>On that, night three different parties were out
        foraging, and returned with considerable provisions. But
        the next morning, while we were eating breakfast, negro
        hunters suddenly appeared with shot guns and drawn
        revolvers, and demanded every one of us to wade over to
        them. They had negro men to bold the hounds and cut the
        cane so they could pass through. These men had worked
        noiselessly all night, cutting the way through the
        cane.</p>
        <p>I told Uncle Amos several times that I thought I heard
        something, but he seemed to think it more fear in me than
        reality, and he failed to give the proper attention.</p>
        <p>We all jumped to our feet, with instructions from the
        old man to march over in a body, and each choose his man
        and dog to cut down when they reached the other shore, but
        the hunters were on the alert and demanded all to stand in
        a row, then march over one at a time. One of the hunters
        said to Frank Anderson, "if you run I'll blow your brains
        out." We formed a line and in a moment Frank Anderson
        bounded off like a deer. We heard the crack of a gun, saw
        Frank</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0021" n="36" />
        <p>36 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</p>
        <p>throw up both his hands and fall, and in a minute he lay
        cold in death. Murdered because he wouldn't consent to be
        tied up and whipped when he was late returning home from a
        Saturday night dance.</p>
        <p>One by one we all marched over and were hand-cuffed to
        each other and marched off to the road, and the colored men
        who were with the hunters carried Frank over and put him in
        the mule cart which they had with them, and he could be
        tracked for thirteen miles by the hood which dropped
        through the cracks in the cart. His father rode over the
        sand stained by the blood of his son, whom he had commanded
        to be murdered.</p>
        <p>This is but a small portion of the horrors through which
        my people passed. No tongue has ever been able to utter,
        nor has the pen been forged that can pen the horrors
        through which my people have passed. But they kept a
        constant knocking by faith at mercy's door, until God moved
        in his mighty power and touched the heart of Lincoln, who
        was a type of a second Moses, through whom he delivered us.
        They surrendered us to the jailor or keeper of the negro
        pen. There was no jail after all, only negro pens for
        slaves. If a poor white man transgressed the law, they
        simply took what he had and gave him time to get out of the
        country. The Lords, who were our masters, hoodwinked the
        law. If the negro transgressed, he paid the penalty with a
        lacerated back, from fifty to three hundred lashes. So you
        see there was no need for jails, only negro pens where
        slaves were bought and sold as goods and chattels.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0021" n="37" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 37</head>
        <p>These men received for capturing us the paltry sum of
        three dollars per head as the reward for the capture of
        runaway negroes, and the additional two hundred offered for
        the head of Frank Anderson, which had been a standing
        reward from his master, as he couldn't be captured in the
        first six months after he ran away. This was equivalent to
        his father's saying that it was better his own son should
        die than have all the other negroes spoiled. Nearly all of
        us were struck thirty-nine lashes according to the law,
        then returned to our several masters.</p>
        <p>For some cause I was among the few exempted from the
        thirty-nine lashes. My master paid the stipulated amount of
        three dollars and ordered me home. I walked off in front of
        him under a storm of oaths and threats, and expecting him
        to kick me or knock me down at every step, But I was
        agreeably' disappointed.</p>
        <p>$figure$</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0022" n="38" />
        <p>REV. W. H. ROBINSON</p>
        <p>AND DAUGHTER, MARGUERITE.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0022" n="39" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 39</head>
        <head>CHAPTER VII.</head>
        <p>When I arrived home I found that my mother, one brother
        and one sister that were with her when I left, had been
        sold to negro traders, and three brothers who fell to
        Hezekiah Cowens were also sold away, and no one could tell
        me anything about their whereabouts. Of course my master
        wouldn't tell me. This was the hour of great sorrow and
        distress with me. My master gave me the task of piling up
        stove wood, and for three weeks nearly every stick of wood
        I picked up was wet with tears of grief and sorrow, weeping
        for that mother who was the best friend on earth to me, and
        for my brothers and sisters, and expecting every day to be
        whipped. And this suspense was one of the most severe
        punishments or whippings I could have undergone.</p>
        <p>There was another oh l woman whom I called mother, doing
        the cooking. One day at the expiration of the third week,
        master sent me to the store to get some goods, and in the
        packages there was a cow-hide in its crude state, but I
        didn't see it wrapped up. After unwrapping the cow-hide my
        master asked me how I liked the looks of it. I told him
        that I didn't like it, at all. We were in his bed room. He
        stood between me and the door. His wife came in with his
        decanter of whiskey, glass and water and he locked the
        door, then demanded me to pull off my shirt. I had not</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0023" n="40" />
        <p>40 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</p>
        <p>forgotten the promise I made my father, so I fully made
        up my mind to fight him until I got a chance to jump out of
        the window. But I looked toward the bureau and saw an old
        fashioned pistol which you load from the muzzle and tired
        with a cap. My master was standing very close to this and
        the sight of it knocked all the manhood out of me, so I
        reluctantly pulled off my shirt with their assistance, and
        he tied my hands behind me, my feet together, and ran a
        stick between them. This left me in a doubled up position
        on the floor. He whipped and cursed me until he had cut my
        back to pieces. My mistress tried to take the whip from
        him, but he pushed her away so violently that once she fell
        on the floor. The second time she fell on the bed, but had
        secured the whip. He gave me a kick in my side, from which
        I have never recovered, and staggered from the room, being
        too drunk to whip me any more. His wife untied me and at
        the same time the old mother came to the door and said,
        "Master Scott, I came here to break this door open, for
        it's a shame for any woman's son to be cut up as you have
        done that child." He knocked the old lady down. I went up
        stairs and lay down on my stomach with my face across my
        arms. The next morning when I awoke the blood had dried the
        shirt in the wounds on my back. The cook had to grease the
        shirt so as to get it out of the wounds. Then he gave her
        medicine to heal my back. Every day after this when I would
        go to pile up wood I had to stoop my whole body, for my
        back was so sore that couldn't bend it, and if I had not
        been so young (I was only</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0023" n="41" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 41</head>
        <p>eleven years,) the marks would have been visible until
        now, and like many other slaves, I would have carried them
        to judgment as a testimony against him.</p>
        <p>After four or five weeks, when my back had become
        somewhat healed up, he told me one day if any one asked me
        if I had ever been whipped to tell them no. Is it not a
        wonder that negroes are not inveterate thieves and liars!
        They worked all the week for their masters, with only a
        peck of meal and three pounds of fat bacon, and after each
        day's labor they were compelled to go to their master's
        smoke house or chicken roost and steal enough to subsist
        upon the next day, to do that master's work, then, after
        this master had cut his back all to pieces he would compel
        him to tell a lie in order to sell him. But, thank God, we,
        like other nations, are born with the same natural instinct
        that others are, and although manhood was crushed for two
        hundred and forty odd years, yet, with' the same
        surroundings and opportunities to develop them, we have
        risen above our environments.</p>
        <p>One afternoon five negro traders came; my master called
        me, met me at the door, and repeated his former command "if
        any one asked me had I been whipped to tell them no." I
        walked into the parlor; there sat five men wearing broad
        brimmed straw hats, their pants in their boots and a black
        snake whip across their shoulders. The first question they
        ad-dressed to me was, had I ever been whipped. I suspect I
        was too slow in speaking, for the punishment had been too
        severe, and was too fresh in my memory for me to tell a lie
        on the spur of the moment. I had</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_tn_00024" n="42" />
        <p>42 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</p>
        <p>on a long straight gown which reached to my feet. The
        trader raised that and looked at my back and that told the
        story. They offered my master a small price for me, he
        refused and they left. I remained with him about three or
        four weeks longer, when one day he wrote a note and sent me
        to the trader's pen. The keeper, Mr. Howard, read it and
        told me to take it back to James, the negro turnkey, who
        also did all the whipping in the jail. He ordered me put in
        a cell and closed the big iron door, which told me that I
        was bound for Richmond, or some other slave market, and I
        was truly glad, for I now hated the soil upon which I was
        born.</p>
        <p>I was in the traders pen about three weeks. There were
        from one to ten slaves brought in every day. All of my
        brothers and sisters save two had been sold from
        Wilmington. Other slaveholders passing through had bought
        them, and it was said they were taken to Georgia. At the
        end of three weeks the gang of three hundred and fifty was
        made up and we were chained and started for Richmond,
        Virginia. In this gang was a woman named Fannie Woods. She
        had two children, the oldest about eight years, the other a
        nursing baby. She was not handcuffed as the others were,
        but tied above the elbow so she could shift the nursing
        baby in her arms. She led the older one by the hand. The
        first half of the day the little boy kept up pretty well:
        after that he became a hindrance in the march. The trader
        cane back several times and ordered her to keep up. She
        told him she was doing the best she could. He threatened
        each time to whip</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0024" n="43" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 43</head>
        <p>her if she did not keep up, and finally he ordered a
        negro, a strong muscular man six feet in height, who went
        along to give us water and help drive, to untie her, made
        her give the baby to another woman, then ordered her to
        take off her waist. They buckled a strap around each wrist
        and strapped her to a large pine tree less than ten feet
        from the rest of us, and with a blacksnake whip the colored
        man was made to hit her fifty lashes on her bare back. The
        blood ran down as water, but she never uttered a sound. She
        was ordered to put on her waist. They retied her and told
        her to see if they could keep up.</p>
        <p>After going a few miles farther they sold the little boy
        she was leading to a man along the way. I heard the wail.
        of the Mother and the mourning of the other slaves on
        account of her sorrow, and heard the gruff voice of the
        trader as he ordered them to shut up. We marched until nine
        or ten o'clock, when we came to a boarding house that was
        kept especially for the accommodation of negro traders.
        This was a large log house of one room; about eighteen by
        twenty feet, with staples driven in all around the room and
        hand-cuffs attached to chains about four feet long. They
        would handcuff two or three slaves to each chain. In the
        summer they had nothing but the bare floor to lie upon: in
        the winter straw was put upon the floor. There was a very
        large fire place in this room.</p>
        <p>We stopped at this boarding house. This was our first
        night's stop after leaving Wilmington. The keeper of the
        boarding house tried to buy Fannie Wood's baby, but there
        was a disagreement regarding the</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0025" n="44" />
        <head>44 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</head>
        <p>price. About five the next morning we started on. When
        we had gone about half a mile a colored boy came running
        down the road with a message from his master, and we were
        halted until his master came bringing a colored woman with
        him, and he bought the baby out of Fannie Woods' arms. As
        the colored woman was ordered to take it away I heard
        Fannie Woods cry, "Oh God, I would rather hear the clods
        fall on the coffin lid of my child than to hear its cries
        because it is taken from me," She said, "good bye, child."
        We were ordered to move on, and could hear the crying of
        the child in the distance as it was borne away by the other
        woman, and I could hear the deep sobs of a broken hearted
        mother. We could hear the groans of many as they prayed for
        God to have mercy upon us, and give us grace to endure the
        hard trials through which we must pass.</p>
        <p>IN c marched all that day, and the second and third
        nights we stopped in the same kind of a place as the first
        night. They were buying and selling all along the way, so
        when we reached Richmond about ten o'clock the fourth
        night, there were about four hundred and fifty of us,
        footsore, hungry and broken-hearted.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0025" n="45" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 45</head>
        <head>CHAPTER VIII.</head>
        <p>We were taken to Lee's negro traders' auction pen, which
        was a very large brick structure with a high brick wall all
        around it. A very large hall ran through the center. There
        was no furniture in it, not even a chair to sit upon. In
        this pen the handcuffs were taken off for the first time
        since we left home. There were possibly three or four
        hundred in there when we arrived. Many found relatives. One
        woman found her husband who had been sold from her three or
        four years before. But I was not so fortunate as to find
        any of my people.</p>
        <p>The next morning the back door was open and we went down
        to wash. There were three or four pumps in the yard and
        long troughs near each. Some one would pump these troughs
        full of water and we would wash our faces and hands. There
        were no towels to wipe on, so some woman would give us her
        apron or dress skirt to dry our faces with. We then waited
        for our breakfast. The cooks handed out our tin pans with
        cabbage, or beans and corn bread, without knife, fork or
        spoon. Many having been sold before, and knowing how they
        would fare, carried such things with them. We sat around on
        the floor and ate our breakfast, after which we were
        ordered into a long hall, where we found wire cards, such
        as are used for wool, flax or hemp. We were ordered to comb
        our</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0026" n="46" />
        <p>46 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT</p>
        <p>hair with them. Of course when we started we had on our
        best clothes, which consisted of a pair of hemp pants and
        cotton shirt: most of us were barefoot. The women, and
        sometimes the men, wore red cotton bandanas on their heads.
        After our toilets were completed we were ordered into a
        little ten by twelve room: we went in, ten or twelve at
        once. There were five or six young ladies in the gang I
        went in with. The traders, forgetting the sacredness of
        their own mothers and sisters, paid no respect to us, but
        compelled each one of us to undress, so as to see if we
        were sound and healthy. I heard Fannie Woods as she pleaded
        to be exempt from this exposure. They gave her to
        understand that they would have her hit one hundred lashes
        if she did not get her clothes off at once. She still
        refused, and when they tried to take them off by force,
        fought them until they finally let her alone.</p>
        <p>After this humiliating ordeal of examination was over we
        went into the auction room. This was a large room about
        forty by sixty feet, with benches around the sides, where
        we were permitted to sit until our turn came to get on the
        auction block. The auctioneering began about nine o'clock
        each day and lasted until noon, began again at one o'clock
        and continued until five p. m. This was a perpetual
        business every day in the year, and the prices were quoted
        on the bulletin and in the papers the same as our stock and
        wheat are quoted today. At these sales we could find the
        best people of the South buying and selling.</p>
        <p>I remember when I got on the block, the first bid</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0026" n="47" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 47</head>
        <p>was one hundred and fifty dollars. It went up to seven
        hundred, when the bidding ceased. The negro trader went to
        the auctioneer and told him that I came from the Madagascar
        tribe, and that my father was an engineer and a skilled
        mechanic. Then the bidding became brief. I recall that the
        auctioneer said, "right and title guaranteed," as he
        slapped me on the head, then continued by saying "he's
        sound as a silver dollar." I was knocked off at eleven
        hundred and fifty dollars.</p>
        <p>A poor man in East Virginia, mimed William Scott, bought
        me, paying four hundred and fifty dollars cash and giving a
        mortgage on his sixty acres of land, his stock and
        everything he owned, including one colored girl, whom he
        had bought four years before. The next morning after I was
        sold they brought a man to the traders' pen to be whipped.
        This man would not allow his overseer to whip him. He had
        chains on him that looked as though they were welded on.
        They took him upstairs in the big building where there were
        about seven or eight hundred men, women and children. It
        was about noon and they left him handcuffed while they went
        to dinner. He explained to us why they were about to whip
        him. He had gone to church without a pass on two occasions
        and refused to allow his master to whip him for so doing.
        Hi- master declared he would whip him or kill him. They
        took the irons of, and ordered him to strip himself of all
        of his clothing. He promptly did so. His master said, "you
        might just as well have done this at home and you might
        have gotten off with a few hundred lashes."</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0027" n="48" />
        <p>48 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT</p>
        <p>But to their surprise, when they told him to lie down,
        he began to knock men down right and left, with his feet
        and hands. Many went down before him. Then they picked out
        ten or twelve strong colored men, made them run in upon
        him, and though he knocked many of them down they were too
        many for him, so they overpowered him, and with straps
        fastened him taut upon the floor to six strong rings. These
        rings were arranged in two rows of three rings each,
        opposite each other and covering a space something over six
        feet in length.</p>
        <p>Then his master, with four or five other men, came up to
        see him whipped, one man with his tally book, and a negro
        with his black snake whip and paddle; they brought their
        demijohn of whiskey, each one taking a drink before they
        began their bloody work. They even gave the negro who was
        compelled to do the whipping, a drink After they were well
        drunk the whipping began. One man would count out until he
        counted nine, then with the tenth he would cry tally. When
        the whipping first began the slave would not say a word,
        but after awhile as they cut his back all to pieces, he
        would cry out, "pray, master," and in this way he pleaded
        for mercy until he grew so weak he could not utter a word.
        They gave him three hundred lashes, then washed his back
        with salt water and paddled it with a leather paddle about
        the size of a man's hand, with six holes in it. As they
        paddled him it sounded as a dead thud; you could hardly
        hear him grunt as each lick fell upon him. He was whipped
        from head to foot and the floor, where he was lying was</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0027" n="49" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 49</head>
        <p>a pool of blood when the brutal work was ended. His
        master congratulated the negro whipping master for the way
        he accomplished his part of the work, gave him another big
        drink of whiskey and ordered him to untie the man.</p>
        <p>They all went down stairs and the other colored people
        who were in the room put the man's clothing on him. This
        was late in the afternoon. The next morning when I awoke I
        saw the men and women kneeling around in a circle, praying,
        groaning and crying. I walked up and looked to see what the
        trouble was, and I found the man they had whipped the day
        before cold in death. He was swollen so that his clothing
        had bursted off. A jury of white men came up and held a
        mock inquest. I never heard what the verdict was. The
        colored men came with a mule cart, rolled him up in a sheet
        and took him to his last resting place.</p>
        <p>I stayed in this traders pen three days after my new
        master bought me, and during this time I saw hundreds of
        mothers separated from their children. I heard the wail of
        many a child for its mother, and of the mother for her
        child. While one buyer had the mother, going in one
        direction, another with the child would be going the
        opposite way. I saw husband and wife bidding each other
        farewell and sisters and brothers being separated. There
        could not have been any darker days to them than these; it
        was with them as it was with Job, when he spake in the
        Third Chapter of Job, and said:</p>
        <p>"Let the day perish wherein I was born, and the</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0028" n="50" />
        <head>50 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</head>
        <p>night in which it is said there is a man child
        conceived, let that day be darkness; let not God regard it
        from above, neither let the light shine upon it."</p>
        <p>"Let darkness and the shadow of death stain it: let a
        cloud dwell upon it, let the blackness of the day terrify
        it. As for that night, let darkness seize upon it; let it
        not be joined unto the days of the year, let it not come
        into the number of the months. Lo, let that night be
        solitary, let no joyful voice come therein. Let them curse
        it that curse the day, who are ready to raise up their
        mourning. Let the stars of the twilight thereof be dark:
        let it look for light, but have none, neither let it see
        the dawning of the day; be-cause it shut not up the doors
        of my mother's womb, nor hid sorrow from mine eyes."</p>
        <p>These were the lamentations of the poor slaves, but
        still they prayed for the dawn and light of a better day,
        Like Israel, many looked long and eagerly for freedom but
        died without the sight. 'thank God, over three million
        lived to see the sunlight in all its brilliancy, and we can
        now look back and say: "The Lord has done great things for
        us, whereof we are glad."</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0028" n="51" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 51</head>
        <head>CHAPTER IX.</head>
        <p>On the fourth morning after I was sold, I got on the
        horse behind my new master. I had a handcuff on my right
        wrist, with a chain extending down to my right foot and
        locked around my ankle. We rode until late in the
        afternoon, when we stopped at a hotel. He chained me to the
        porch and left me until after supper time: then gave me a
        piece of bread and meat, and left me until about ten
        o'clock at night, while he talked. Then he came after me
        and we went up stairs to his room. He chained me to his bed
        post and gave me a quilt to lie on by the side of his bed,
        on the floor.</p>
        <p>The next morning we had breakfast by daylight and
        started again on our journey; to my surprise he didn't
        handcuff me this time. He talked very freely with me, told
        me he had a nice girl and if I acted all right we would
        have a good time, and he would soon buy my mother and
        father, when the poor fellow was not able to buy me; he had
        just finished paying the mortgage which he gave when he
        bought the girl, and re-mortgaged to buy me. About nine
        o'clock the succeeding night we arrived home; when quite a
        distance from the house he called out in a loud voice for
        Fanny to open the gate. As we neared the gate, she
        threw</p>
        <p>it open. I had ridden until my limbs would not held me
        up when I slid off the horse, so I fell prostrate upon the
        ground, but with the assistance of the girl and my master,
        I was able to get on my feet.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0029" n="52" />
        <head>52 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</head>
        <p>His residence was a large log building of one room.</p>
        <p>He left me at the door and told me to stay there
        until</p>
        <p>he called me. Now, it was a custom with my people,</p>
        <p>when a white man went on the inside and closed the door
        and left a black man, woman or child outside,</p>
        <p>just so sure a black ear went to the key hole. I didn't
        want to make an exception to this rule, so when he went in,
        my ear went to the key hole. After the usual mode of family
        greeting of a man that had been away from home a week or
        ten days, he said: "The one who guesses what I have
        brought, may have it." The oldest boy said, "A pair of
        boots, for von promised me a pair;" the nine-year-old girl
        said, "A large china doll," but when the guessing came to
        the smallest one, a little girl between the age of three
        and four years, to my surprise she said, "A nigger."
        &#8220;Correct," said my master, "the nigger's yours; come
        in here, Bill " I went in and the formal introduction was
        made. He said, beginning with the boy, "This is your master
        Charles, this is your Miss Mary." but when it came to the
        youngest girl, he said, this is your Miss Alice and you
        belong to her. Now, if you are a good and obedient nigger,
        when she is grown and at her death she will set you free."
        If I had believed this story I would have prayed to God to
        kill her then, wicked as it was. Then he gave me an
        introduction to his wife. As long as I had been with him he
        had not introduced himself until now. He really grew
        enthusiastic in introducing himself; his face grew red, and
        his voice trembled as he said: "I want you to understand
        that I'm a nigger breaker. I hear</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0029" n="53" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 53</head>
        <p>you came from a family of niggers that won't be whipped,
        but I'll break you or kill you." I knew he could not afford
        to do the latter, for I had overheard Robert E. Lee, from
        whom he had bought me, say to him. "I understand you have
        abused the girl you bought from me, shamefully. If you
        abuse this boy it will cost you all you are worth."</p>
        <p>He then called the girl, who was once a pretty octoroon,
        but now her face was much disfigured where the mistress had
        stuck the hot tongs to it because she was so overworked she
        would fall asleep while she would be carding wool at night.
        You could hardly see the traces of a once beautiful girl,
        now about fourteen years old.</p>
        <p>He said, "you two have got a good home and can be happy
        here together." Jokingly, he said, "I'll have the preacher
        come over and marry you.&#8221; He thought through this
        union-&#8212;he had formed in his mind--that he would raise
        his own slaves.</p>
        <p>After supper the mistress ordered her to bring in her
        tin pan and quart cup, at the same time wondering what
        dishes to give me to use. My master said. "Oh yes, I forgot
        to tell you I bought Bill a new pan and cup." The children
        scampered away for the old saddle bags. They brought my cup
        and pan, and after using the latter for a looking glass for
        a time, handed it to me. In the tin pans she put a little
        gravy and a corn dodger on each, and filled the cups with
        skimmed milk-&#8212;the milk had been skimmed and skimmed
        until there was not an eye of cream to be seen on it.
        We</p>
        <p>called it blue John. Fannie and I went into the
        kitchen.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0030" n="54" />
        <p>54 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</p>
        <p>She said to me, "don't eat yet, we&#8217;ll milk first."
        I was very hungry, but did as she asked me. We took our
        milk buckets and went to the cow pen; there were two cows,
        so we got them close together. Fannie milked both, for I
        had never before tried to milk. We poured our cup of blue
        John into the milk pail. She milked both our cups full, and
        with our hoe cakes of corn bread, we ate our supper,
        drinking the warm, unstrained milk. The mistress often
        complained, and spoke of selling the cows because they gave
        such poor milk. We would then milk the cows into the pail
        where we had poured our skimmed milk and return it to our
        mistress. We continued this as long as I was there, which
        was three or four months.</p>
        <p>My master was overseer for a man on an adjoining farm,
        named Howard, for which he was paid thirty dollars per
        month. He would leave home at three o'clock in the morning,
        giving the girl and me our task the night before. He would
        eat his dinner each day in the field with the slaves, and
        return home at about nine or ten o'clock at night. He hired
        the slaves at night, and sometimes in the day he would slip
        them over to work in his crop. I have known the slaves many
        times to work in his field from ton o'clock at night until
        near day-break the next morning; yet he never allowed the
        girl or me to visit the slaves on any other farm, or then
        to visit us. He was the meanest overseer in that section of
        the country, for he would have a whipping bee every Monday
        morning.</p>
        <p>He had whipping posts on the farm and the slaves were
        tied to this and whipped; you could hear the cries</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0030" n="55" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 55</head>
        <p>of slaves all around from that place. I have heard him
        laugh many times and tell how the slaves would squirm under
        the lash.</p>
        <p>The farm on the other side of us belonged to a man named
        Wilkerson; he had seventy five or a hundred slaves, and he,
        also, was a cruel man. Every day, in going for the cows I
        would have to pass his farm. I heard him say to one of the
        rail splitters, If you don't have your task of rails split
        tomorrow I will hit you one hundred lashes.&#8221; The man
        told him he was doing all he could do and would die before
        he would take a single lick. I made It my business the next
        day to go after the cows about the time for him to go out:
        I saw him and four or five other men; he asked the rail
        splitter if he had his task completed. The man answered in
        the negative: he then ordered him to pull off his shirt,
        which the man did, then tied his pants around his waist
        with his suspenders. The reason the slaves would so readily
        pull off their shirts was so they could not have anything
        to hold them by, their flesh being moist they could not
        easily hold them. When his master told him to cross his
        hands he began to fight, knocking white men down as fast as
        they could come to him. Finally they made five or six other
        rail splitters, working near by, help take him. There were
        saw logs from five to six feet through, all round; some of
        the colored men caught him by the head and hands, while
        others had hold of his feet, and they bent him back over
        one of the saw-logs while he was fighting and cursing. His
        master seized the maul, which the man had been using to
        split rails with, and</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0031" n="56" />
        <p>56 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</p>
        <p>struck him across the abdomen: bent over in the position
        he was the lick sounded like a pop-gun, and the man's
        intestines ran out, and he died across the log: murdered
        because he could not perform the task imposed upon him.
        There are some of the horrible deeds which have stained the
        pages of American history, and which it will take centuries
        to mitigate.</p>
        <p>It was a common thing to hear the cries of the slaves
        all around on Monday morning. Some being whipped for one
        thing, some for another. Some were whipped for attending
        religious services on Sunday; some for going to frolics;
        sometimes a man's wife was owned by other masters, five or
        six mile away they would slip-off after their work was done
        at night to see them; sometimes they would be late
        returning, so they would be whipped for that. There would
        be a perfect pandemonium around that community all the
        time.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0031" n="57" />
        <p>$figure$</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0032" n="58" />
        <head>58 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</head>
        <head>CHAPTER X</head>
        <p>I would often talk to Fannie about running away; she
        would plead with me and beg me not to, because it would be
        so lonesome for her, but there was a constant yearning in
        my soul for that freedom which God intended for all human
        beings. Ultimately, after a careful planning of the route
        to be taken and a survey of the country, as far as I had
        been over, I made up my mind to leave. One morning my
        master sent me to the field to gather corn. I carried a
        basket and two sacks, and at noon I was to fill them and
        hitch up the mule cart and bring them home. I got the corn
        ready and sat down in the corn row, I realized then for the
        first time that there must be some efficacy in prayer. My
        mother had taught me to get on my knees and say m prayers,
        as far back as I could remember, yet I never knew the power
        there was in prayer, until on this memorable morning, I
        knelt down in a corn row and prayed with that fervent,
        childlike simplicity for God in some way to get me back to
        my mother or into Canada, or else let me die and go to
        heaven. The Queen of England had said that if the slaves
        could reach the shores of Canada she would protect them, if
        it took the whole navy of England to do so. While I was
        thus in prayer it seemed that all nature was in sympathy
        with me, for not even the rustling of the leaves could be
        heard. The only thing to break the</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0032" n="59" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 59</head>
        <p>monotony was the wooing of a turtle dove that sat in the
        branches of a distant tree, and seemed to be saying to me,
        "I am in deep sympathy with you." Reasoning came to me as
        audibly as though some one was speaking to me, saying, "you
        shall see your mother again."</p>
        <p>I became so much elated over this message, though
        received from an unseen power, that I jumped up and at once
        fully decided what course to take. Immediately I proceeded
        to put my decision into action, so I emptied the corn out
        of the two sacks and the basket; pit the sacks in the
        basket on my arm and left that corn field with the full
        intention of going back to Richmond, Virginia.</p>
        <p>It may seem strange to the reader that I would go back
        to this place of human misery; but I had learned from older
        men and women who had been sold to some poor man, that if
        they would run away and go back to their former master, and
        tell him "that your master was so mean that you could not
        live with him, and for this reason you had run away and
        come back to him," nine times out of ten he would accept
        this piece of deception practiced by the slave, and compel
        the poor man to take his money back, believing that the
        negro thought more of him than of the man he had said him
        to, and for this reason I was going back to Richmond,
        Virginia</p>
        <p>I went about seven or eight miles that day through the
        woods, and about dusk I came in sight of a cabin in the
        distance. I was satisfied this was the home of some old
        mother or father who had outlived the days of</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0033" n="60" />
        <head>60 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</head>
        <p>their usefulness, and was given a peck of meal each week
        and cast off to fish or hunt for the rest of their living.
        I was not disappointed, for I found an old woman eighty
        years old; it was hard to discover until she spoke whether
        she was white or slave. The first words the old lady said
        were, "Son, you is a runaway, aint you? I told her that I
        was, and she told me "the overseer haven't been around yet
        cause dey aint done milking yit, but you take this path (as
        she pointed to a path and follow it till you come to a log
        across de creek, with a fish box upon it; you sit there
        until on hear me singing this song, 'God has delivered
        Daniel, and why not deliver me?" She went into the house,
        while 1 went to the log mentioned. I sat there for
        three-quarters of an hour. I heard the milk maids while
        milking singing different melodies, then I heard the
        command of the overseer for them to take the cows to
        pasture, and in a short while I heard the feeble voice of
        the old mother as it rang out on the still, balmy air,
        singing:</p>
        <p>He delivered Daniel from the lion's den,</p>
        <p>Jonah from the body of the whale,</p>
        <p>The Hebrew children from the fiery furnace,</p>
        <p>And why not deliver poor me?</p>
        <p>Hold up your head with courage bold,</p>
        <p>And do not be afraid;</p>
        <p>For my God delivered Daniel.</p>
        <p>And He will deliver poor you.</p>
        <p>I started for the house and met her coming. We went into
        the cabin where she had prepared supper,</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0033" n="61" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 61</head>
        <p>and I assure you I enjoyed it. The supper consisted of
        boiled fresh fish and "ash cake." As I ate she sat with her
        hands on my head, telling me how to get along in the world,
        and pointing me to that friend that sticketh closer than a
        brother. She repeatedly said, "if God be for you it is more
        than all the world against you." She made me a pallet upon
        the floor, and I slept there until about three-thirty
        o'clock the next morning, when she awoke me and gave me
        break-fast of the same diet I had had the night previous
        for supper. She also gave me four or five onions, and told
        me upon the peril of my life, not to eat a single one of
        these onions, because they would make me sleepy and I would
        be liable to be caught. But she said negro hunters came
        along there every two or three hours in the day; and I
        learned for the first time how to decoy the blood hounds,
        for she told me whenever I heard the baying of hounds on my
        trail, to rub the onions on the bottoms of my feet and run,
        and after running a certain distance to stop and apply the
        onions again, then when I came to a large bushy tree, to
        rub the trunk as high up as I could reach, then climb the
        tree.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0034" n="62" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</head>
        <head>CHAPTER XI.</head>
        <p>About four o'clock in the morning, at the old woman's
        command, I knelt by her side, she placed her hand upon my
        head and prayed fervently for my safe return to Richmond,
        and that God would touch Massa Lee's heart, that he might
        buy me back from my present owner. When she quit praying
        she told me that I would reach Richmond safely. She kissed
        me good bye, with tender, parting words, as a mother would
        her own son, and I left, with directions from her how to
        reach my intended destination. I had not gone far when an
        opportunity presented itself to test the efficacy of the
        onions, for about nine o'clock that day I heard the baying
        of the blood hounds in the distance behind me. I rubbed the
        onions on my feet as directed, and ran as fast as I could
        the distance of half a mile, when I repeated the
        application. I continued this process for about one mile
        and a half, going across the fields and through the woods,
        dodging the roads and farms where people were at work. I
        came to a thickly branched out tree in the woods. I rubbed
        onions on the trunk and climbed the tree. 1 could tell when
        the hounds came to the place where I first put the onions
        on my feet, because they would retrace their steps, until
        finally their Voices died away, and I heard them no more
        that day. I traveled all of that day, and that night I
        slept in a low, swampy place</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0034" n="63" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 63</head>
        <p>between two huge logs, on some brush, with the two sacks
        over me which I took when I left the corn field. By
        daylight the next morning I started on my journey but had
        not gone many miles when I came in sight of a river. I saw
        that I was not far from a home, and went close enough to
        see that a ford was near the house where they crossed the
        river. The white man who had charge of the ford lived in
        the home. So I knew I couldn't get across the river without
        taking a boat, and that he wouldn't hire me one without
        word from my master, therefore that necessitated my waiting
        until night, so I went back in the woods to wait.</p>
        <p>I saw some colored men coming across the field and went
        to meet them, and learned through them their master's name
        and three or four slaves that he owned, and name of a
        farmer on the other side of the river. They told me to go
        to the ferryman and tell him that Mr. Howard, my master,
        had sent me to take the basket and two sacks to Mr. Owens,
        who lived on the other side of the river. They told me that
        the ferry-Man would question me very minutely, but if he
        asked how long Mr. Howard had owned me to tell him he
        bought me from negro traders two weeks before--for traders
        had crossed there just two weeks ago with three or four
        hundred slaves. They then left me and told me to wait until
        they returned. I did so, but under great suspense, because
        one of the men belonged to a tribe of negroes known as the
        Guineas, who would divulge any secret for a little whiskey
        or wheat bread; therefore I was afraid I would be betrayed.
        But in a</p>
        <p>short time they returned, relieving me of the great</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0035" n="64" />
        <head>64 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</head>
        <p>suspense, and bringing me something to eat. They told me
        I was in an easy day's walk of Richmond after I crossed the
        river; told me what to say to Massa Lee when I got back,
        but not to go into Richmond until after dark. They prayed
        an ardent prayer for God's protection and guiding hand to
        go with me, and bade me good bye and God speed. I went to
        the ford, called out hello; the harsh voice of the ferryman
        cried out, "whose thar." At the same time he was coming
        towards the river, I was fast rehearsing in my mind the
        story I was to tell him. When he got near me his first
        words were, "where in hell are you going this time of
        night?" I started to tell him that Mr. Howard had sent me
        to Mr. Owen's to take the basket and sacks, but before I
        could finish telling him, he ordered me to pull off my hat:
        that he would teach me some manners if I came there talking
        to him with my hat on. He then asked how long Mr. Howard
        had owned me, at the same time flashing his lantern in my
        face. But when I told him he said, "yes, I remember seeing
        you in that gang; untie the boat." He sat down and lit his
        pipe while I pulled the boat over. When we reached the
        other side he said "tie her up than" He looked at his watch
        and said "its a quarter up that and a quarter back." I'll
        give you fifteen minutes each way, if you aint back in that
        time I'll skin you alive." If he's waiting he is having a
        good long wait. I went on my way rejoicing and saying, as
        the little colored boy said who had been accustomed to
        climbing the ladder and sleeping in one of his mistress's
        bed rooms when his master was not at home.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0035" n="65" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 65</head>
        <p>But one memorable night when he got to the bed he found
        old master was there, so he said. "may I, old master, may
        I?" Master said, "may you what, you black rascal, you."
        Sambo as quick as lightning, said, "may I feed the little
        pigs with the big ones?" With an oath his master told him
        yes; for him to get out of there. Sambo was so much elated
        over his success that he said, as he started down the
        ladder, "wasn't dat well turned!" The master hearing him,
        inquired "what's that well turned?"</p>
        <p>Sambo was ready again with an answer. He said, "my foot
        slipped and I fell twice around de ladder and cotched
        myself and didn't fall yit."</p>
        <p>After crossing the river that night I went but a short
        distance, when I made me a bed in a shock of fodder. The
        next morning before daylight as I came out of the shock two
        more runaways came out of the shock ahead of me. When they
        saw me they ran as fast as they could go and I after them.
        They did not wait to see whether I was white or black. They
        ran across a large field, and came to a fence. One, a very
        tall man, put his hand on the top and vaulted over. The
        other one attempted to follow but fell back. By that time I
        had caught up with him. He asked me why I did not tell him
        I was colored. I replied, "I couldn't cotch you."</p>
        <p>They were men who had been sold from Richmond and were
        now running away from their masters as I was, and trying to
        get back to Lee. They had with them plenty to eat, so we
        had about as good a time that day as runaways could have in
        the woods. Long</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0036" n="66" />
        <head>66 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</head>
        <p>before dusk we could see the statue of George
        Washington, which stood at Richmond, Virginia, with a negro
        boy chained at its base, and Washington pointing with his
        right hand, saying, "take the negro south." This very great
        man, who, with Hancock, in 1776, signed the Declaration of
        Independence, and said the colonies were, and ought to be
        free, loosed them from the iron hand of Great Britain: and
        yet that was the inscription written on his statue, which
        adorned the public square of the once Capitol of the
        Southern Confederacy.</p>
        <p>We hid around until dusk, when We Went down to a spring
        and ate our lunch, slaking our thirst from the clear, cool
        water as it bubbled out from the spring, by lying that down
        and lapping the water. I happened to</p>
        <p>be the first of the three to get up and to my surprise
        there stood five negro hunters with their guns and
        revolvers pointing toward us. I said to my companions "here
        is some white men." They said "whar." Their eyes looked
        like great balls of cotton. The men commanded us to come to
        them. I can best illustrate how we appeared when we found
        out that we had been captured, by a cartoon which I once
        saw. The cartoon represented an old colored man who saw an
        opossum in a tree close to his house: he was so elated over
        the idea of possum and sweet potatoes that</p>
        <p>he climbed the tree. The possum jumped upon the limb the
        man was on, but it got between him and the trunk of the
        tree: the old man had his saw and began in earnest to saw
        the limb off, thinking of nothing but the possum: he said
        to his boy and dog below, &#8212;look</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0036" n="67" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 67</head>
        <p>out down dar, cause sumphin gwine to drap." And
        "something did drap," but it was the old man himself.
        Likewise, when we three looked up into the muzzles of the
        guns and revolvers we thought something was going to drop,
        and sure enough something did, for we dropped, each one of
        us in handcuffs, and we were marched into Richmond.</p>
        <p>$figure$</p>
        <p>S. J. Richardson,</p>
        <p>Editor Bedford, Ind., Enterprise, who has given valuable
        assistance and friendship to the author.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_tn_00037" n="68" />
        <p>68 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</p>
        <head>CHAPTER XII.</head>
        <p>When we arrived at the negro trader's pen, Mr. Lee
        happened to be there. He wanted to know of the negro
        hunters where they found us: they told him. Then he began
        to interrogate each of us: I told him that "Massa Scott was
        so mean to me that I could not live with him, so I ran off
        and came back to you." The other two men told the same kind
        of story: so Mrs. Lee ordered the negro hunters to take the
        handcuffs off, and it they wanted to make money to go and
        find negroes that were not coining back to hon. They, with
        their hats in their hands, the same as the slaves, began to
        form excuses, when Lee ordered them off the premises ithout
        any reward. Had we not been returning to Mr. Lee they would
        have been entitled to three dollars per head. According to
        the law they were entitled to it at any rate, for we were
        runaways, but they were poor men with low occupations and
        their word didn't go as far as that of the slaves they were
        driving. One of the men he ordered locked up stairs,
        telling him that he had a good master, and it he behaved
        himself he would be treated all right. The man begged Very
        hard not to be sent back, but his begging was all in vain.
        This man's master was wealthy, while mine and the other
        man's master were poor men, so he kept us and sent the
        other man back.</p>
        <p>Mr. Lee told me that the man who had my mother</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0037" n="69" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 69</head>
        <p>had been there twice and wanted to buy me, and Scott, he
        said "was behind anyhow." I think he meant that his second
        payment was overdue--and he assured me that he shouldn't
        have me back. Mr. Lee wrote a note and sent me to his own
        house. I met an old colored mammy at the gate. She asked
        me, "where is you gwine?" I said, "to see Miss Lee." She
        said, "You look like gwine to see Miss Lee. Wha dat you got
        in your han?" I said, "a letter for her." She said, "gin it
        to me." She took the note, telling me to wait. Mrs. Lee
        raised the window and called to me to come up. She asked
        about my parents, and said Mr. Scott should not take me
        back again. She told the colored mammy to take me and clean
        me up. When I got in the cabin I discovered it was wash
        day, for she had a kettle of hot water on the tire place.
        She took a couple of handfuls of soft soap out of the gourd
        and stirred it in the water, When she found I was not
        undressing she looked very much surprised and said, "gwine
        out of dem rags." She scrubbed my back till my flesh
        burned. About the time she was through the sixteen-year old
        maid came in with clothing for me. I tried to hide behind
        the old mother. The girl threw the clothes down and ran
        out. I put the clothes on and stayed at the trader's pen
        that evening. After that I was privileged to stay at the
        house, or pen, as I chose. I thought I was almost a free
        man, for I had on a pair of shoes, a nice suit of clothes
        and a large brass watch and chain.</p>
        <p>Master Lee told me that a man named Jake Hadley, who
        lived in Greenville, Tennessee, had my mother,</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0038" n="70" />
        <p>70 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT</p>
        <p>two brothers and a sister. He also said Mr. Hadley drove
        a big black horse, so it seems that I thought there was
        only one black horse in all Virginia and that the Jew owned
        him: therefore met with many disappointments. I waited and
        watched for more than a month for my new Master to come,
        during which time I assisted Peter around the pen. Peter
        looked after the slaves, and did all the whipping. I
        cleaned the</p>
        <p>office and was errand boy. Most of my work was about the
        office. During the time I was there I saw thousands of
        slaves bought and sold. I saw one woman who had five
        children; she and two children, one a nursing baby, and a
        girl about eleven years old, were sold to negro traders,
        while the husband and the other three children were bought
        by a farmer who lived somewhere in east Virginia. The
        farmer went with the father and three children to see the
        mother</p>
        <p>and the other two children leave for Mississippi. As the
        boat pulled out from the shore and the husband and wife
        bade each other good bye, the woman, with one loud scream,
        made a sudden leap and landed in the deep water, with her
        baby clasped in her arms and the little girl handcuffed to
        her. She had preferred death to life separated from her
        husband and children. They were not picked up until the
        next day.</p>
        <p>I saw another woman whipped seventy-five lashes on her
        bare back because she wouldn't strip her clothing any
        further down than her waist, to be examined. They took her
        back the second time, but she fought them until they were
        compelled to leave her alone.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0038" n="71" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 71</head>
        <p>These last two incidents remind me of the pilgrim in the
        following song:</p>
        <p>"I saw a blood washed traveler in garments white as
        snow, While traveling up the highway, where heavenly
        breezes blow;</p>
        <p>His path was full of trials, but yet his face was
        bright,</p>
        <p>He shouted as he journeyed, I'm glad the burden's
        light.</p>
        <p>CHORUS.</p>
        <p>Then It's palms of victory, Crowns of glory,</p>
        <p>Palms of victory, you shall wear.</p>
        <p>I saw him 'mong his neighbors, they mocked his soul's
        alarm;</p>
        <p>The vilest wretch among them could scoff and do no harm:
        Forsaken by his kindred and banished from their sight,</p>
        <p>An outcast, yet he shouted. I'm glad the burden's
        light.</p>
        <p>I saw him in the conflict, where all around was strife,
        Where wicked men with malice, connived to take his life; I
        saw him cast in prison, a dungeon dark as night,</p>
        <p>And there I heard him shouting, I'm glad the burden's
        light.</p>
        <p>I saw him led from prison, and chained unto the
        stake,</p>
        <p>I heard him cry triumphant, 'tis all for Jesus sake.</p>
        <p>I saw the fires when kindled, the faggots burning
        bright,</p>
        <p>He said the yoke is easy, the burden is so light."</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0039" n="72" />
        <head>72 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</head>
        <head>CHAPTER XIII.</head>
        <p>This is now the year of 1860. I was twelve years of age
        and had been a runaway twice in that time. I had now been
        at Lee's trader's pen four or five weeks, when one day I
        saw a man coming with a black horse and buggy: something
        from within seemed to whisper to me, "this is the man who
        owns your mother." My aspirations ran so high that I went
        out the back way and prayed that this might be he. He came
        into the office of the pen, and after a general
        conversation with Mr. Lee, he asked "if he had heard
        anything of that boy yet." I was watching every move and
        listening to every word passed. With a wink of the eye,
        Mr., Lee said, "no," Then he sent me to do something in the
        rear end of the building. I did it very quickly and
        returned to the office again; was very busily engaged with
        my dust brush. Never since I had been there had I found so
        much to be done in the office, and whenever I was sent away
        I would do my errand as quickly as possible and return to
        the office again.</p>
        <p>Finally Mr. Hadley, for it was he, said: "boy, how would
        you like to belong to me and go down to Tennessee to live?"
        While I was satisfied that he was the man who owned my
        mother, I said, "I wouldn't like to go with you at
        all,'cause Massa Lee said the man that had my mother was
        coming after me," As I spoke I couldn't keep from crying,
        and Mr.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0039" n="73" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</head>
        <p>Lee could refrain no longer, so he said, "William, this
        is Mr. Hadley, the man who has your mother, and brothers
        and sisters&#8221; And for once I saw that seemingly
        heartless man, who separated thousands of husbands and
        wives, mothers and children, sisters and brothers, touched
        to the very core, for he drew his handkerchief and wiped
        his eyes, instead of his nose, as he pretended to be
        doing.</p>
        <p>Mr. Hadley was a very kind, fatherly acting man. He
        bought me a nice suit of clothes, and gave me money,
        telling me to buy my mother, brothers and sisters some
        presents. As a general thing all Jew slave owners were more
        lenient to their slaves than any other nationality, perhaps
        because they had been in bondage themselves. In a few days
        we started for home; we had to stop along the way in many
        little towns to at-tend to business, so that we were nearly
        four days in making the trip. These were four of the
        longest days I had ever experienced in my life, for I was
        anxious to meet my mother again. I was constantly inquiring
        "how much farther is it." On the fourth day in the
        afternoon I asked, "how long yet before we will reach
        home!" He said, "in a few days now." The words had scarcely
        left his lips, when I saw coming down the road my mother
        and new mistress. Mother came upon the side of the buggy-
        my master was on, and almost dragged me out of the buggy
        across my master. She was rejoicing and blessing master for
        his deeds of kindness. In a few minutes my new mistress
        came up on the other side of the buggy; site pulled me
        over, and to my surprise, and for the first time in my</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0040" n="74" />
        <head>74 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</head>
        <p>life, a white woman kissed me. This was a very new
        feature to me, and naturally embarrassed me very much, so
        much so that I mentioned it many times afterwards. I
        couldn't understand how it was, I, a slave, and she my
        mistress, as others had been, and they were so heartless
        and cruel, and she so kind. But I afterwards learned that
        all the white people were not mean and cruel, for when I
        arrived home I found my mistress had prepared a grand
        dinner for us and invited in all the slaves. My mistress
        had two children, Samuel and Laura. I didn't call them
        master and mistress as I had heretofore called the white
        children, but called</p>
        <p>them each by their given name. I had a glorious time in
        that home and felt almost as if I were free. My master
        owned a large farm three miles from Greenville, where we
        lived. But during the month of February he concluded to go
        to the old country-&#8212;I think it was on account of the
        agitation of the slave question--he saw the war was coming
        on, so he decided to take us back to Wilmington and leave
        us there, with his wife and children, on his brother's
        farm, until he returned. Accordingly we all packed up and
        went back to Wilmington, N. C., my old birthplace. On
        arriving there we found another brother and sister, making
        mother and six children together again; father and the
        other six children we knew nothing of Mr. Hadley went away
        hut was gone only three weeks, when he returned, saying he
        had not gone any farther than Richmond, Virginia.</p>
        <p>He stayed in Wilmington a month, and when he was ready
        to go back home he asked me and my sister</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0040" n="75" />
        <p>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT 75</p>
        <p>&#8220;if we didn't want to stay with his brother awhile
        longer and come home later on." We, not having the least
        suspicion that he had sold us, told him that we would. So
        they went home, leaving us. After a couple of weeks, Mr.
        Dave Hadley-&#8212;that was his brother's name--told us
        that he had bought us, but we could go every two or three
        months to Greenville to see mother.</p>
        <p>It was not more than two weeks from the time I found
        that Massa Dave Hadley had bought me, when Joseph Cowens,
        the son of my original old master, came to Mr. Hadley's; he
        met me out in the yard and stopped me for a talk. He said,
        "it was a shame that his father had allowed my father to be
        sold away, that he was going to buy us all back and get us
        together again."</p>
        <p>With this conversation he naturally won me, so when he
        asked me if I wouldn't like to belong to him, of course I
        said "yes." He went into the house and in a short time he
        and Massa Dave came out together, and Massa Dave told me
        that I now belonged to Joseph Cowens, and that he had
        bought my two brothers also, and in the next two months he
        was going to buy mother amid the other two children. But
        when I got to his house and asked for my brothers, he said
        that he had hired them out for a year. I soon found out
        different: he had never bought my brothers, nor had any
        intention of buying them; or my mother, either.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0041" n="76" />
        <head>76 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</head>
        <head>CHAPTER XIV.</head>
        <p>I am now back in the Cowens family, my original master's
        son, and brother to Scott Cowens--the man I knocked off the
        porch for hitting my mother, and who was afterwards
        drowned. I went to Joseph Cowen's as general servant boy in
        the house, and was treated as well as could be expected
        from a Cowen. I stayed there quite satisfied, thinking that
        mother and the other children would come in a few months,
        as he had promised they would. The last of March we moved
        out on the Summer farm, three miles from town, and I had to
        drive him to town every morning and go for him every
        evening. He was a merchant and owned several ships. Now I
        had a great deal of freedom out on the farm, for I did
        nothing but drive Massa Joseph back and forth, to and from
        town, and wait table. I was in the cabins and among the
        slaves the most of Inv time in the day, but I slept at the
        "great house" in Massa Joseph's room. I had become almost a
        prophet among my people, because I would get the news from
        the white people, and in the day would tell it to the
        slaves in the fields and cabins.</p>
        <p>He owned another farm five miles from town, and had a
        colored overseer on this farm. Uncle Tom was the meanest
        man yon ever saw, in the presence of the white folks. He
        would draw back his whip as though he was going to knock
        down all around him,</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0041" n="77" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 77</head>
        <p>but I never knew him to strike an old person in my
        life.</p>
        <p>The leading white men from town would come out two or
        three nights in a week and stay half of the night and
        gamble. I would take the whiskey, glasses and water in to
        them, then Massa Joe would send me off to bed, but I stood
        many an hour listening to them talk and discuss the
        question of the war, and whether it would be advisable to
        arm the negroes. They finally decided, as did the
        Egyptians, that if they did arm the negroes when the enemy
        came the slaves would join with the enemy and tight against
        them, so they thought it would not be expedient to do so.
        About this time, or in February, 1861, delegates from South
        Carolina, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana and Texas, met at
        Montgomery, Alabama, and formed a government called the
        Confederate States of America. Jefferson Davis, of
        Mississippi, was chosen president. Davis came to Wilmington
        and was given a great ovation, and in his speech he
        appealed very strongly to the ladies; he asked, "which lady
        there was not willing to give her husband, son, brother or
        sweetheart, to go upon the battle field and fight for their
        rights." The women became frantic with their cries, "I will
        give mine," "I wouldn't marry a man who wouldn't go," etc.
        Then he made another appeal to the ladies, asking "which
        one of them would like to live to see the day when a nigger
        wench would be on equality with them?" At this point they
        grew raving mad, and cried, "they never wanted to see that
        day." Jeff said he would wade in blood to his saddle skirts
        rather</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0042" n="78" />
        <p>78 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</p>
        <p>than live to see that day, and vet he tried to escape in
        his wife's skirts.</p>
        <p>About this time the laws were very strict on the slaves,
        and they were not allowed a pass to go to a public
        gathering of any kind. Men who belonged to one man and
        whose wives were owned by another, and had been given a
        pass every Saturday night to go to see them, were now
        permitted to go only once a month. But the slaves would
        slip off to church and frolics and the patrollers were
        continually after them, but the slaves would play all kinds
        of tricks on them I re-member one time while at a prayer
        meeting in an old deserted cabin on the back part of a
        farm, the slaves were singing and praying, but had several
        stationed all around the house, watching. They saw the
        patrollers coming and notified those in the house, and to
        my surprise five or six men had shovels, and each man got a
        shovel full of hot embers out of the fireplace and stood at
        the door and windows. They continued to sing and pray until
        the patrollers got to the door and ordered it opened. One
        man snatched the door open while the others threw the fire
        all over them: when the patrollers recovered consciousness
        the slaves were all gone.</p>
        <p>At another time I went to a dance in the woods: the
        music consisted of tambourine, banjo and bones, but before
        the dance began they tied grapevines across the road, just
        high enough to catch a man riding horse back across the
        face or neck. When they heard the patrollers coming they
        ran, and the patrollers right after them: many of them were
        crippled, but not a</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0042" n="79" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 79</head>
        <p>slave was hurt or caught. So you see, there were some
        negro as well as Yankee tricks.</p>
        <p>The slaves would have to devise many schemes in order to
        serve God. Of course they had church once or twice a month,
        but some white man would do the preaching, and his text
        would always be, 'Servants obey your masters." But this was
        not what our people wanted to hear, so they would
        congregate after the white people had retired, when you
        would see them with their cooking utensils, pots and
        kettles, go into a swamp and put the pots and kettles on
        the fence, with the mouths turned toward the worshipers.
        They would sing and pray, the kettles catching the sound.
        In this way they were not detected. I did not learn until
        just before the war why they carried the vessels with them
        to worship.</p>
        <p>In order to notify the slaves on other farms when there
        was going to be a meeting they would sing this song, and
        the slaves would understand what it meant. White people
        would think they were only singing for</p>
        <p>amusement:</p>
        <p>"Get you ready, there's it meeting here tonight." Matt.
        7: 16.</p>
        <p>1 Get you ready, there's a meeting here tonight,</p>
        <p>Come along there's a meeting here tonight,</p>
        <p>I know you by your daily walk,</p>
        <p>There's a meeting here tonight.</p>
        <p>2 Oh, hallelujah, to the lamb,</p>
        <p>There's a meeting here tonight,</p>
        <p>For the Lord is on the given hand,</p>
        <p>There's a meeting here tonight.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0043" n="80" />
        <head>80 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</head>
        <p>3 If ever I reach the mountain top.</p>
        <p>I'll praise my Lord and never stop,</p>
        <p>Get you ready, there's a meeting here tonight.</p>
        <p>4 Go down to the river when you're dry</p>
        <p>And there you'll get your full supply,</p>
        <p>Get ready, there's a meeting here tonight.</p>
        <p>5 You may hinder me here,</p>
        <p>But you cannot there,</p>
        <p>God sits in heaven</p>
        <p>And he answers prayer.</p>
        <p>There's a meeting here tonight.</p>
        <p>They would carry with them iron lamps, with a greasy rag
        for a wick, and they would attach a sharp spike to the lamp
        so as to stick it in a tree. In this way they would light
        up the swamp, while they held their meeting.</p>
        <p>$figure$</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0043" n="81" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 81</head>
        <head>CHAPTER XV.</head>
        <p>SLAVE HOLDERS' CONSISTENT FAMILY WORSHIP</p>
        <p>THE SLAVE HOLDERS' MORNING SERVICE.</p>
        <p>SLAVEOWNERS' WORSHIP.</p>
        <p>Air&#8212;-any long metre.</p>
        <p>"Come let us join, our God to praise,</p>
        <p>Who lengthens out our fleeting days.</p>
        <p>The shades of one more night have passed</p>
        <p>Which has to many been the last.</p>
        <p>And thus, Kind Providence, it seems,</p>
        <p>Has kept us through our midnight dreams.</p>
        <p>Our dogs have guarded well the door</p>
        <p>And Lord, what could we ask Thee more?</p>
        <p>Thy promise. Lord, has been our stay:</p>
        <p>Not e'en a slave has run away,</p>
        <p>While scores have left on every side</p>
        <p>To seek Lake Erie's doleful tide.</p>
        <p>O: grant us, lord, a great display</p>
        <p>Of Thy rich mercies through this day.</p>
        <p>May we in strength our work pursue.</p>
        <p>And love Thee as slave-holders do."</p>
        <p>Let us unite in prayer:</p>
        <p>"Supremely great, and worthy of all adoration art Thou,
        0 Lord, our heavenly Father. The cattle upon a thousand
        hills, and the negroes in a thousand fields are Thine.
        We</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0044" n="82" />
        <head>82 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</head>
        <p>thank Thee, lord, for the manifold blessings with which
        Thou art supplying us, Thine humble and obedient servants,
        notwithstanding our merits deserve them all, for Thou hast
        said the righteous shall enjoy the good of the land. Now,
        Lord, we have not much time to pray, for Thou see'st how
        those devilish slaves are squandering away their time.
        Lord, revive Thy work in our midst. Grant us all a large
        increase of slaves for the traders this fall, that we may
        obtain the means. through Thy well directed providence, to
        rear Thee a magnificent temple in which Thou wilt love to
        dwell, and where Thou wilt love to pour out Thy spirit upon
        Thy Zion. O' Lord God, when we go into the fields among
        those ignorant, hard headed creatures, (over whom Thou hast
        made us to rule), may Thy glory so shine in our
        countenances that one of us shall subdue a thousand, and
        bind ten thousand upon the racks from the ungovernable
        malice of enraged negroes. Deliver us from the influence of
        a guilty conscience; deliver us from the abolition creeds,
        and from the slanderous tongues of enthusiastic
        politicians. Deliver us from insurrections and perplexity
        of minds, good Lord, deliver us. Give us and our dogs our
        daily bread, and our negroes their full pecks of parched
        corn or cotton seeds per week. Strengthen the horse and his
        rider, and make the limbs of the fugitive weak. Confound
        the cunning schemes of anti-slavery men. Bless the
        government which Thou didst redeem from the British yoke of
        oppression, and didst wash and make clean by the precious
        blood of the heroes of '76. Bless the star spangled banner,
        which floats over the land of the free and the home of the
        brave. May her stars increase in number and brightness, and
        eagle's wings be extended o'er all the virgin soil of our
        continent until his beak shall pick the fugitive from his
        lurking places in the cold regions of British</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0044" n="83" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 83</head>
        <p>America, while his tail shall overshadow the slaves in
        Yucatan. And may his pinions cast their pleasant shade over
        all the free born sons of America, from Providence to
        Monterey, while he shall bear in his mighty talons, for
        ages to come, four millions of ignorant slaves with all
        their posterity. Hear us, good lord, and according to Thy
        manifold mercies, bless and sanctify us. Give us more than
        we are able to ask for at this time, and in the end save
        all the white people who have supported Thy holy
        institution and performed Thy will, through Jesus Christ,
        our Redeemer, Amen."</p>
        <p>SLAVE HOLDERS CONSISTENT FAMILY WORSHIP.</p>
        <p>THE SLAVE HOLDERS HYMN TO BE SUNG AT EVENING</p>
        <p>PRAYERS. (Short Metre.)</p>
        <p>"A charge to keep I have,</p>
        <p>A negro to maintain.</p>
        <p>Help me. O Lord, whilst here I live,</p>
        <p>To keep him bound in chain.</p>
        <p>We thank Thee, Lord, for grace</p>
        <p>That's brought us safe this far.</p>
        <p>While many of our dying race</p>
        <p>Were summoned to Thy bar.</p>
        <p>No negroes have I lost&#8212;</p>
        <p>Not one has run away.</p>
        <p>I have been faithful to my trust</p>
        <p>Through this, another day.</p>
        <p>Lord, we cannot lie down</p>
        <p>Till we implore Thy grace,</p>
        <p>For if we do a mighty frown</p>
        <p>Will cover o'er Thy face.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0045" n="84" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</head>
        <p>Draw nigh, just now, O Lord,</p>
        <p>And listen while we. pray,</p>
        <p>And each petition&#8212;every word,</p>
        <p>Pray Answer and Obey.</p>
        <p>SLAVE-HOLDERS' CONSISTENT SERMON.</p>
        <p>Copied from imagination's parchment roll, where this,
        and many other things, have been on perpetual record from
        child-hood. Ficticious, as it is, and as ridiculous as it
        may appear, I defy any minister, white or black, who
        preaches to the slaves in the south, to preach any better
        doctrines and have his preaching harmonize with the
        institution of slavery. The whole sentiment is consistent
        with slavery, and the old experienced southerner will read
        many things in this discourse which he has heard before.
        This is preached more generally on the Sabbath, previous to
        the usual holidays by the "Rt. Rev. Bishop Policy."</p>
        <p>"Well, darkies, I am happy to see so many shining eyes,
        and greasy faces today. It speaks two great truths; first,
        that you are all awake to your own welfare; and secondly,
        that your masters treated you well and gave you meat. You
        have come out today to hear the word of God. I hope you
        will pay strict attention to what is said, and treasure it
        up in good and honest hearts. My text is not taken directly
        from the Bible, that is, not our Bible, but yours. We all
        respect your Bible more than we do the white man's Bible,
        or otherwise the word of God, for your Bible you can obey,
        but ours you cannot. The text is recorded in the laws of
        Maryland, A. D. 1715, Chapter 44, Section 22. "All negroes
        and other</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0045" n="85" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 85</head>
        <p>slaves already imported, or hereafter to be imported
        into this province, and all children born, or hereafter to
        be born of such negroes and slaves, shall be slaves during
        their natural lives." In the first place, I shall show
        God's wisdom displayed in the system of slavery. Second,
        the master's great responsibility. Third and last, the
        consequence of disobedience. God's wisdom is displayed in
        the system of slavery. The text declares positively that
        you shall all be slaves during your natural lives. What a
        great blessing God has brought to you, my colored friends,
        through the economy of His divine grace. A greater blessing
        never was conferred on mortals. From the birth of Adam
        until the present (lay we are taught in our Bible that God
        wrought miracles upon the Egyptians&#8212;brought the
        children of Israel over the Red Sea&#8212;preserved them in
        the wilderness in safety. But by and by they entered into
        the land of Canaan, a land of freedom, and immediately they
        began to have trouble and discord. But you, my colored
        friends, have been prepared with a perpetual home through
        life. You are as trees planted by the river of waters,
        whose branches fail not. O that you might praise the Lord
        for his goodness and for His wonderful works toward you
        black people.</p>
        <p>Again, God's wisdom is displayed in the institution of
        slavery, in its great plan of perpetuating the negro race.
        "The white men, the masterpiece of God's creation." when
        tracing nature through various windings, while the good
        Samaritans were seeking upon the face of God's earth for
        objects of pity and compassion, somehow, very mysteriously,
        were wafted by the kind breezes of heaven to the burning
        shores of Africa. There they found the sooty tribes of that
        hot climate very much degraded. At first they scarcely knew
        what to call them; they so much resembled the</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0046" n="86" />
        <p>86 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</p>
        <p>orangoutang as to cause a grew controversy among God's
        people. Finally they were seen to bow with reverence and
        adore an image of their own making. Again, they were seen
        warring, slaying and eating each other, and sacrificing one
        another by thousands to their deities.</p>
        <p>This disposition was so much like that of the low class
        of whites that they felt the spirit of pity and compassion
        move towards those poor God forsaken creatures, and a plan
        was immediately formed for their protection and elevation.
        They were at once taken on board ship, kindly treated, and
        safely brought to America, where they were put in the care
        of kind men who provided for them, clothed and fed them,
        and comforted them in sickness and in health. And here you
        have been until the present day. Now you can see what God
        has done for you in instituting this system of slavery. You
        were found an ignorant set, no top on your heads &#8212;and
        it is doubtful whether you had any soul&#8212;more than the
        apes that played around you. But through the economy of
        God's grace you have been transplanted upon American soil,
        and through much toil on the part of the white man, you are
        becoming quite intelligent. The white man, through
        amalgamation, has not only imparted to you his straight
        hair, high nose, blue eyes, thin lips and perfect form, but
        it is to be hoped that you have a soul much resembling his,
        which will, by his care and attention, and your obedience
        to his precepts, stand a great chance to be admitted upon
        the ground floor of God's glorious temple in
        heaven&#8212;this is better than a thousand lives in
        Africa, and who would despise his chains, which are but for
        a moment, and then passeth away&#8212;for the blessings
        which flow out of the system of slavery. The text declares
        that you shall he slaves your natural lives, which may
        signify that it is your</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0046" n="87" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 87</head>
        <p>nature to be slaves. That is, that you are created to be
        servants of the white mar, and all the children to be born
        of you are to be slaves. Yes, Susan, that little blue-eyed
        boy you are now trotting upon your knee&#8212;-the express
        image of his young master Thomas, is to be a slave, and
        should you ever see the least disposition of his young
        master exciting his aspirations to freedom, you must crush
        that disposition immediately, and repeat to him the
        language of the text.</p>
        <p>Again God's wisdom is displayed in making you with
        strong constitutions. See what large, robust, fat, greasy
        looking fellows you all are. See what clear. white teeth
        you have. Just look at me. See what a puny, slender,
        delicate, pale looking creature I am, my teeth all decayed.
        I could not crack parched corn and cotton seeds and get fat
        like you all do. If I should take a hoe or pitchfork in my
        hands they would be soiled, and if I should work an hour
        they would be blistered so badly that I could not correct a
        slave again for a month. Just look at my hand now. The
        other day I took hold of a rough cowhide without my gloves
        on, and gave a young impudent wench, who told my wife
        something, forty lashes, and it raised this great blister
        you see. I was never made to work. Look at those great,
        broad-sided, good, healthy looking wenches sitting before
        me. What arms they have. Any of them can work from daylight
        until dark in the field, when the sun is so hot that the
        overseer has to ride under an umbrella, and your mistress
        would almost faint just walking out in the garden. Thus,
        you can plainly see that God has not made the white man to
        work. He is only to think, plead law, make laws, preach,
        pray, and carry the gospel to the heathen, and superintend
        God's works, while the blacks were made to do the hard and
        dirty work. For this</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0047" n="88" />
        <head>88 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</head>
        <p>they had constitutions peculiarly adapted. But again;
        God's wisdom is further displayed in the economy of slavery
        by creating you void of natural affections, as regards
        family sociability, and maternal and parental love for your
        husbands, wives and children. Therefore, our conscience is
        void of offense toward God or you negroes, when we separate
        the bus) bands from their wives and children, for it is for
        the purpose of rearing up fine temples for the glory of God
        and his Kingdom.</p>
        <p>$figure$</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0047" n="89" />
        <p>$figure$</p>
        <p>ABRAHAM LINCOLN,</p>
        <p>Emancipater of over four and a half million slaves;
        elected President</p>
        <p>November, 1860; assassinated April 12, 1865, by Wilkes
        Booth.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0048" n="90" />
        <head>90 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</head>
        <p>$figure$</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0048" n="91" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 91</head>
        <head>CHAPTER XVI. THE SORROW OF PARTING CHILD.</head>
        <p>O, tell me papa, when mother dies,</p>
        <p>Will she come home again?</p>
        <p>Or will we meet above the skies,</p>
        <p>Where Christ the Savior reigns?</p>
        <p>Would you not like to die tonight,</p>
        <p>If mother, too. would die?</p>
        <p>And with sweet angels dressed in white,</p>
        <p>Meet her above the sky?</p>
        <p>FATHER.</p>
        <p>O, yes, my child, my life is dear,</p>
        <p>And you I love full well;</p>
        <p>But I no longer can tarry here,</p>
        <p>I soon will bid this world farewell:</p>
        <p>I cannot live, my heart is broke,</p>
        <p>My grief is more than I can bear;</p>
        <p>This very strap and that great oak;</p>
        <p>Will end my life in deep despair.</p>
        <p>Early Friday morning, April 12, 1861 took my master to
        Wilmington. On the way we stopped and took in another man.
        As we neared Wilmington we could hear the booming of
        cannons, for the rebels had tired upon Ft. Sumter, and we
        could hear the echo of the guns as it came down the Cape
        Fear river and was</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0049" n="92" />
        <head>92 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</head>
        <p>borne out of the broad bosom of the Atlantic. My master,
        in great excitement, slapped his hands together, and with
        an oath, said, "its come." Both of them grew deathly pale,
        and looked at each other as though they were surprised. My
        master hastily wrote a short note. sealed it and gave it to
        me, with directions to hurry home, cautioning me very
        particularly not to stop until I reached home and delivered
        the note to his wife.</p>
        <p>I saw that every white man in Wilmington was greatly
        agitated and wore a look of anxiety. In a moment everything
        that had been told me by the Yankee soldiers, and by the
        underground railroad men, flashed in my mind; for many of
        them had told me that I would some day be free, and we
        looked forward to that day with great expectations.</p>
        <p>I drove as fast as I could to the five mile farm, which
        was ill charge of the colored overseer. Uncle Tom could
        read and write, and I wanted to know what was in the note.
        I had many times slipped him the newspapers from the house,
        and carried them back early the next morning before master
        called for them, and he taught me to listen carefully to
        every conversation held between the white people. I drove
        up to the fence, where fifty or sixty men and women worked
        in the field. I could hear them singing and shouting, for
        they too, had heard the booming of the cannon, and Uncle
        "Tom had told them that that was a token of liberty. But
        when they saw the old &#8220;carry-all" drive up, each one
        ran to his or her work; the overseer came to the carriage,
        supposing master wanted to see him,</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0049" n="93" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 93</head>
        <p>but to his surprise master was not there. He called the
        slaves around and had me explain how master acted at the
        sound of the guns, then he made a speech to them, telling
        them to pray as they had never prayed before. I gave him
        the note I had for mistress: he looked at the envelope,
        studied for a moment, rubbed his head, and then thoroughly
        wet the seal; he opened the letter and read it. The letter
        read as follows:</p>
        <p>&#8220;We have tired on Fort Sumter. I may possibly be
        called away to help whip the Yankees: may be gone three
        days, but not longer than that. You write a note and send
        William to Sawyer, [that is the overseer on the farm where
        we live] and tell him to keep a very close watch on the
        negroes, and see that there's no private talk among them.
        Have Martin, the overseer's son, aid you, and if Elliott or
        Fuller come on the place, give them no opportunity to talk
        with the negroes.</p>
        <p>Your husband,</p>
        <p>JOE COWENS"</p>
        <p>(This Fuller referred to in the note is the son of the
        Fuller mentioned in a previous chapter, and who was
        murdered because he was suspected of being connected with
        the underground railroad, and also of aiding my father, who
        had already partially paid for his freedom, in trying to
        get away.)</p>
        <p>After reading the note Uncle Tom told me to drive back
        and go around by the Salisbury road. This took me nearly
        two miles out of the way, but in the middle of this road
        was a large mud puddle. He told me to</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0050" n="94" />
        <head>94 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</head>
        <p>drive in there, very fast, then get out and wade in the
        water, and get the envelope wet and muddy. He showed me how
        to smear it over with my hands so mistress would not detect
        that it had been opened. He also showed me how to make
        saliva or crocodile tears. He said mistress would be on the
        porch watching for me, and that I should pretend to cry, at
        the same time get the envelope from my pocket, handing it
        to her with the left hand. She would take it with her right
        hand, tear it open and drop the envelope on the ground. As
        soon as she was gone I was to pick it up and destroy it.
        Mr. Fuller was in the house, having come to see master on
        business, so when mistress heard the carriage coining she
        came to the big rate to meet it, thinking master was
        returning, and left Mr. Fuller in the house. When I saw her
        coming I made some crocodile tears by wetting my fingers
        with saliva. As soon as she saw that Twister was not with
        me, she came rushing to the buggy and found me shedding
        tears as fast as I could. In a very tender tone, with her
        hand upon my head, she asked me what was the matter. At
        this I broke down completely and cried aloud, at the same
        time feeling in my pocket for the envelope, and telling my
        sad story, between sobs of how I had dropped it in the mud
        hole. She eagerly grasped it and tore it open, not noticing
        that it had ever been opened before, and patting me on the
        head, she said, "hush, mistress can read it." That
        instantly healed my pretended broken heart and dried up my
        manufactured tears.</p>
        <p>She started for the house, forgetting she had not</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0050" n="95" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 95</head>
        <p>cautioned me, so she came back and told me "that Mr.
        Fuller was in the house, and for me not to mention anything
        to him, or any one on the place concerning the cannon
        firing.&#8221; She then wrote a note and gave it to me to
        take to Mr. Sawyer. She had dropped the envelope and I was
        glad when she was out of sight. Picking up the envelope I
        put it in my mouth, chewed it up, removed a harness peg,
        put the pulp in the hole, and replaced the peg. If the old
        barn is still standing the envelope is there yet. I took
        the note to Mr. Sawyer and in a short time he was at the
        house in close</p>
        <p>consultation with her. Then he went after his son
        Marlin, and they both went over to the five mile farm,
        where Uncle Tom was overseer. She wrote another note to Mr.
        Bailey, a poor white man living about a mile away, and he
        came at once and took charge of our farm. He was once
        overseer on our place, but was so cruel that massa
        discharged him. So now he served as an extra two or three
        days at a time for the different overseers in the
        community, for which he received seventy-five cents per
        day, and what he could get the slaves to steal for him, for
        notwithstanding their inhumanity to the slaves, they kept
        up a constant trade with them. They stole their master's
        corn, wheat, chickens, hogs, etc., and carried them to the
        overseer, for which he would give them a little flour, and
        occasionally a dime or two, and very often when he was
        about to whip them he would let them off by their promising
        to bring him some meat or chickens. Master came home that
        night, and after supper five or six of the leading men from
        Wilmington came. After</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0051" n="96" />
        <head>96 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</head>
        <p>I brought in the demijohn, glasses and water, master
        told me that I could go to bed, because he would want me to
        go away with him early the next day. But, instead of going
        to bed I pulled off my shoes, tip-toed down stairs and
        peeped through the keyhole, and not making an exception to
        the rule, my ear did its share of listening. They got into
        a hot discussion, and I heard one of them say, "if the
        Yankees whipped, every negro would be free." I became
        satisfied that the negro was the bone of contention, and
        that the light of liberty was probably about to dawn, so I
        went to lied.</p>
        <p>On the morning of April 15th, 1861, I left home with my
        master to go to the war and whip the Yankees in three days;
        I carried a club for the first three days to knock off
        Yankees' horns with, for my master told me that they had
        horns. We were gone more than three months; we didn't whip
        them, but were gaining a victory in every battle that was
        fought, and this was encouraging to the rebels. You could
        hear the southern ladies singing "Old Lincoln and his
        hireling troops would never whip the South." We came home
        on a week's furlough, then returned to be gone six months,
        but before the expiration of the six months, my master was
        killed by a shell bursting at Greenville, Tennessee, near
        the place where John Morgan was killed.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0051" n="97" />
        <p>$figure$</p>
        <p>W. H. ROBINSON, a captured colored servant, taking the
        oath of allegiance, dressed in a Rebel General's uniform,
        before General Thomas. This was but one of the Union
        soldiers' jokes played on us.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0052" n="98" />
        <p>98 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. CHAPTER XVII.</p>
        <p>At first the northern people were chagrined and
        disheartened. Then came a renewed determination, they saw
        the real character of the war, and no longer dreamed that
        the south could be subdued by a mere</p>
        <p>display of military force. They were to fight a
        bravepeople--Americans--who were to be conquered only by a
        desperate struggle. During the first year of the war the
        Confederates had captured the large arsenals at Harper's
        Ferry, near Norfolk. They had been successful in the two
        great battle, of the yell' -Bull Run and Wilson's (reek;
        also in the minor engagements at Big Bethel, Carthage.
        Lexington, Belmont, and Ball's Bluff. The Federals had
        saved Fort Pickens and Fort Monroe, and captured the forts
        at Hatteras Inlet and Port Royal. They had gained the
        victories</p>
        <p>of Phillippi, Rich Mountain. Boonville, Carricks' Ford,
        Cheat Mountain, Carnifex Ferry and Danville. They had saved
        for the union, Missouri, Maryland, and West Virginia.
        Principally, however, they had thrown the whole south into
        a state of siege--the armies on the north and the west by
        land, and the navy in the east by sea, maintaining a
        vigilant blockade.</p>
        <p>After the death of my master I remained as cook for the
        company until November, when at Blue Springs. "Tennessee,
        Generals Thomas and Burnside</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0052" n="99" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 99</head>
        <p>routed Hood and Forrest, after a short contest; and in
        the retreat, I, with many others, was captured. I was with
        the cooks' brigade. There were about fifty of us, and each
        one was riding one of those long eared fellows, that lean
        against the fence and say, "I ha e no one to love me."</p>
        <p>In the retreat we had quite a deep ditch, or gully, to
        cross. My animal was heavily loaded with camp kettles, tin
        pans and kitchen utensils in general. When the cavalry got
        to this ditch they commanded their horses to mount, and the
        horses leaped over, but I suspect in the excitement I
        forgot to give the necessary commands, for my long eared
        friend's fore feet reached the other shore safely, but his
        hind feet fell short of the mark, and down in the ditch we
        went; such a scramble you never saw. But I found that there
        were many rebel soldiers in there, who were tired of the
        Yankee lead and wanted to be captured. [ was scrambling to
        get out, but they told me to lie still, and in a few
        moments Yankee soldiers&#8212;both cavalry and infantry,
        seemed to have popped up out of the earth; while some
        pursued the fleeing rebels, others took us to the generals
        headquarters. The rebels were sent to the northern prisons,
        and the cooks and colored servants that had been captured,
        were next brought before General Thomas and disposed of. I
        was the last man in the line, and when I came before the
        general, his first words to me were, "you're a fine looking
        fellow. Here we are fighting to free you and you are here
        dressed up in a suit of rebel uniform." He then called his
        cook-&#8212;a quaint looking, cross-eyed old man,</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0053" n="100" />
        <p>100 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</p>
        <p>who like myself, was "hewn out of a slab of ebony." He
        said, "Nathan, what shall we do with this boy?" "Hang him
        to the highest tree we can find," said Nathan. "Well, bring
        me the best rope you can find." Nathan obeyed. He came with
        a rope as large around as his wrist, and about twenty feet
        long. The general asked him if he thought that would hold
        me: he answered in the affirmative, and General Thomas told
        him to throw it over the limb of a tall oak which stood
        near by. But an officer by the name of Lane rode up and
        said: "General, maybe this boy will take the</p>
        <p>oath of allegiance." I would have taken most anything
        about this time. Then the general inquired of me if I would
        take the oath. I told him I would. By this time some one
        said, "hold up your right hand." Another said, "hold up
        your left hand," another said, "your right foot," and
        another said, "your left foot." I obeyed orders as fast as
        they were given until it came to the left foot. I had up
        all I could possibly get up. After having all the fun they
        wanted with me, the general told Nathan to take me back and
        wash and clean me up. Uncle Nathan took me to</p>
        <p>his tent, where he had a kettle of boiling water. It
        looked as if he were going to scald a hog: then began the
        washing process. After the old man had rubbed and washed me
        until my flesh burned, and I had put on a castaway suit of
        General Thomas'. I went to headquarters. After standing
        before the large mirror in the general's tent, I thought I
        was the richest, freest man in America. They had carried
        the joke to such an extent-&#8212;for I really thought they
        were going</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0053" n="101" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 101</head>
        <p>to hang me--that I was sick. They administered some
        medicine to me and I lay down across the general's bed,
        General Thomas himself having told me to. When I awoke
        about 3 p. m. I was between the two generals, Burnside and
        Thomas. When I moved towards one he would crowd against me,
        and if I moved towards the other he would crowd in, until I
        was squeezed as tightly as possible between the two. They
        were both awake, and I could feel their sides heaving until
        they could not restrain their laughter any longer, then
        General Thomas said, "lie still boy, this white wont rub
        off" This was my first day of freedom.</p>
        <p>General Thomas questioned me concerning my parents, and
        on learning that my mother was in Greenville, Tennessee, he
        said, you will see her within three days if the rebels
        don't whip us." Accordingly we left Blue Springs that day
        enroute to Madison Court House Virginia, which brought its
        through Greenville where mother was. It was hard to prevent
        me from being the advance guard. For two days they were
        trying to hold me back, until we finally reached
        Greenville, and I saw the house in which mother lived.
        Seeing that no rebels were near, the officers allowed me to
        advance. Before I reached the house I saw mother and my
        Jewish mistress, Mrs. Hadley, standing on the porch.
        Everybody seemed very much excited, and the rebel army was
        retreating.</p>
        <p>Having changed my uniform from the rebel gray to the
        Yankee blue, my mother did not recognize me until I was at
        the gate: then she came running and shouting "this is
        William." I was saying in one</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0054" n="102" />
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        <p>breath--not waiting for one question to be answered
        Before I asked another, "how are you?" I am free, are you?
        Get ready to go to the Yankees; has master the same black
        horse and buggy?" She told me he</p>
        <p>had. I told her to go pack up while I hitched the horse
        to the buggy. When I returned to the house the soldiers had
        surrounded it and asked me where my mother was. I ran up
        stairs, tried to open mother's door, when she informed me
        that Massa Jake had locked her in. The soldiers were
        hurrying me to get my mother and come on. I told them Massa
        had</p>
        <p>locked her in, and one of them gave me an ax and told me
        to break the door open. I told mother to stand back from
        the door. At the same time Massa Jake came in with a shot
        gun in his hand, but before he could raise it dozens of
        muskets were aimed at him. By this time I had the door
        open, and there stood mother with a rope around the bureau,
        and every loose article she could get hold of was wrapped
        in her straw tick, all tied up ready for moving. She was
        expecting to move the whole cargo in a buggy.</p>
        <p>I had her unpack as quickly as possible and gather up
        her clothes and little keep-sakes, so we could be out of
        the yard as soon as possible. I shall never forget the
        courtesy shown mother by two or three soldiers</p>
        <p>in helping her in the buggy. Being all ready, and our
        buggy placed in line with the other contrabands for there
        were between one hundred and fifty and two hundred wagons,
        mule carts, pack horses, mules and even mulch cows, we
        started on our journey.</p>
        <p>Most of the southern men had gone to war, and</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0054" n="103" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 103</head>
        <p>those who were too old to go had taken the women and
        gone to the cities, leaving the farms and country homes
        virtually in charge of the colored people. I had an uncle
        who was left in charge of a farm three miles from town. We
        passed by his place on our way to Virginia, and when we
        came in sight of the farm we could see colored people by
        the hundreds, who had gathered from other farms. The news
        spread like wild fire all over the country that the Yankees
        had come.</p>
        <p>The "great house" was kept furnished the year round and
        left in the colored overseer's charge, because the family
        would come back and forth, sometimes staying weeks at a
        time. The veranda was filled with men, women and children,
        singing, shouting and praising God in the highest. I
        hastened into the yard and was soon the center of
        attraction. Uncle Isaac was soon by my side, picking me up
        and carrying me around, shouting at the top of his voice,
        while I was struggling to get down, and trying to drown his
        voice so I could tell him that he was free and to pack up
        at once and go with us.</p>
        <p>I was inviting him to liberty, yet I had not a shelter
        in all the world to put my head save the canopy of Heaven.
        But I had heard of a country where all men were free, and
        like Bunyan's Pilgrim I had started to make it my home.</p>
        <p>I finally succeeded in loosing myself from his strong
        embrace, and then I made a short speech to all, telling
        them to hitch their ox and mule carts, and load up their
        things and go to the Yankees. There was</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0055" n="104" />
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        <p>considerable fear about their doing as I said, until
        some of the soldiers appeared, and helped to dispel this
        fear by confirming what I had said. It was not long until
        the yard was fairly lined with wagons, carts and every
        conceivable beast of burden. They began to tear down their
        old bedsteads, built against the walls of their cabins, and
        gather up their rude furniture, when the Yankees asked what
        was in the "great house." On learning that it was furnished
        they demanded that it he opened, and that the people lake
        everything they wanted and load their wagons. My uncle had
        the key hut refused to open the door, saying "that belongs
        to old Master." Fifteen or twenty soldiers then seized a
        huge log of wood and broke the door down.</p>
        <p>Twas but a few minutes until the great place was gutted.
        The piano was the only piece of furniture remaining, and
        some women wanted to take that for their girls when they
        became educated. Now the wagons were loaded to their utmost
        capacity. I can't afford to spoil a good joke because of
        race, color or nationality. Then the children were put on,
        and it seems to me now that the mothers must have taken
        some kind of paste and put on the hacks of the children, -o
        as to stick them up against the furniture. They were so
        thick around the wagons it seemed there was not a spot left
        where there was not a baby. They were of all sizes and
        colors; they were black, dark brown, pumpkin colored,
        yellow and half white. And they were all crying with a
        different voice, giving different tunes to the song they
        were singing. It was</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0055" n="105" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 105</head>
        <p>certainly a menagerie when the procession left the farm.
        Some of the babies were crying alto, some soprano, some
        bass, but most of them baritone because it was bare of all
        music.</p>
        <p>Of course all of our masters were honorable, and these
        children were all called by their master's name--but they
        didn't call them papa all the time. Many of their mothers
        were as honorable as a woman could be under the
        circumstances, but many times in order to save their backs
        from being lacerated they obeyed the command of their
        master, and their commands were not always honorable.</p>
        <p>The soldiers now moved forward toward Knoxville,
        Tennessee. We had four or five hundred men, women and
        children in this great march from a land of servitude to a
        land of liberty. Sometimes, like Pharaoh of old, the old
        masters would pursue their slaves, and even come into the
        camp, but the slaves' fears would soon be dispelled by the
        stern command of some Yankee soldier or officer, who would
        order the rebs to leave the camp. Many times they subjected
        them to some humiliating treatment &#8212;such as riding
        the rail horse, or carrying it barrel up the hill and
        rolling it down again, and they would continue this process
        for hours. After skirmishing for a week or ten days we
        arrived at Knoxville, Tennessee, where we sold the horses,
        mules, oxen, buggies and wagons to General Thomas. I bought
        an old log cabin on the old battle field for my mother. I
        was to give seventeen dollars for this property. I could
        count from one to fifty, hut I could not tell the
        denominations: I didn't know a</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0056" n="106" />
        <p>106 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</p>
        <p>ten dollar bill from a one, so I counted out seventeen
        bills and paid for the place. Later I learned that I had
        paid some forty or fifty dollars for it.</p>
        <p>About this time, in 1863, Frederick Douglas went to
        Washington to see President Lincoln, telling him "that our
        people were digging breast works, exposed to the shot and
        shell, and why not give them guns and let them have a hand
        in freeing themselves and saving the union." Lincoln's
        reply was that the feeling at the north was running so high
        he didn't know what the result would he, for no measure of
        the war was more bitterly opposed than the project of
        arming slaves. It was denounced at the north, and the
        confederate congress passed a law which threatened with
        death any white officer captured while in command of negro
        troops, leaving the men to be dealt with according to the
        laws of the state in which they were taken. Douglas said he
        returned home, but slept but little that night, for he
        continually called on God to in some way bring peace out of
        the confusion, and open the tray for colored men to get on
        the field of battle as enlisted soldiers. The next morning
        by nine o'clock Douglas said he was at the capitol and
        closeted with the president. To his surprise Lincoln told
        him that Grant</p>
        <p>had sent for a division of colored soldiers. Lincoln
        commissioned Douglas as recruiting officer, and sent him to
        Boston, Massachusetts where he mustered in the 54th and
        55th colored regiments. These were the</p>
        <p>first colored regiments organized in the free
        states.</p>
        <p>Col. Shaw led the 54th regiment in its first battle at
        Fort Wagner. After keeping us in reserve for three</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0056" n="107" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 107</head>
        <p>hours while the union soldiers were falling like wheat
        before the sharpened sickle, Col. Shaw asked to lead the
        black phalanx into the battle, notwithstanding he knew it
        meant certain death to him if he was captured, the
        confederates having said they would not take any onion
        soldier prisoner who was in command of colored troops, for
        they did not recognize the colored men as citizens or
        soldiers, therefore would not consider them or their
        leaders as prisoners of war. Col. Shaw sent his orderly
        hack to the wagon train lie returned in a few moments and
        handed the Colonel a bundle, which contained a regimental
        silk flag with the inscription. "To the 54th Colored
        Regiment, Robert G. Shaw. Colonel. Presented by the White
        Ladies of Boston, Massachusetts." Our regiment went wild at
        the sight of the flag. They carried Col. Shaw up and down
        the line on their shoulders, cheering like mad. As he
        handed the flag to Carney, the flag bearer, the Colonel
        said. "Carney, will you return this flag to us in honor?"
        His answer was, "Colonel, I will do so or report to God the
        reason I do not." The roll was called and twelve hundred
        men and officers answered to their names. The battle was
        on. Our gallant Colonel's side was torn by a shell a few
        moments after. His dying words</p>
        <p>were, "boys, don't let the flag go down." His body never
        touched the ground, being borne to the rear by his colored
        troops, one of whom was instantly killed. His place was
        immediately filled by another. Carney's right arm was shot
        off during the battle. As he fell, holding the flag with
        his left hand and in his teeth, he shouted, "boys, don't
        let the old flag go down."</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0057" n="108" />
        <p>108 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</p>
        <p>When the roll was called after the battle seventy-seven
        had answered to their last roll call, having fallen
        defending the flag and fighting for their liberty. Colonel
        Shaw was buried with his many black soldiers who lost their
        lives in this fierce battle.</p>
        <p>At one time, in order to be in season for an assault,
        these regiments marched two days through heavy sands and
        drenching storms. After only five minutes rest, we took our
        place at the front of the attacking column. The men fought
        with unflinching gallantry, and planted their flags. So
        willing were the negroes to enlist, and so faithful did
        they prove themselves in service, that in December, 1863,
        over fifty thousand had been enrolled, and before the close
        of the war that number was quadrupled.</p>
        <p>I recognized then that I was to take part in one of the
        greatest wars of modern times. The war of the rebellion was
        now on, when the numbers engaged in it, and the extent of
        territory affected are considered. It was primarily a war
        based on sentiment. The long, but peaceful and prayerful
        contest of the abolitionist against the slave power, and
        the earnest and faithful prayer of the slave himself, all
        crowded the throne of a just God, and had aroused the whole
        country, so that everywhere, in every state in the union,
        there was a sharp division of opinion among the people. It
        is true always, however, that God makes the wrath of man to
        serve him, and out of the war of the rebellion the slave
        fought his way to freedom. What a glorious record the
        Afro-American made in that war! It is one</p>
        <p>of the brightest pages in all history. In the early</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0057" n="109" />
        <p>FROM THE LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 109</p>
        <p>stages of the war he was not even allowed to drive the
        teams, to dig trenches or to throw up breastworks for the
        union army. The soldiers of the north declared that this
        was a white man's war, and that sentiment had made it very
        difficult for the government at Washington to call for
        colored troops, but before the close of the war he was a
        regularly enlisted soldier in all the departments, to the
        number of 200,000, and had fought with such valor, such
        heroism, from Fort Wagner to Fort Fisher, from New Market
        heights to Petersburg, that when the victorious union army
        at last marched into Richmond, the fallen and deserted
        capitol of the lost cause, he was accorded the first place
        of honor at the head of the column! Thirty six years
        afterwards Colonel Theodore Roosevelt, of the rough riders,
        commented on the bravery of the black soldiers after the
        brilliant charge of a successful capture of San Juan Hill.
        Thirty six years after Colonel Robert Gould Shaw was buried
        with his negroes, in the sands of Morris Island, the world
        has looked with enthusiasm Upon the heroic deeds and
        gallantry of the negro soldier, and today he is filling his
        station from West Point, the military center of the world,
        to the navy that plows the distant seas and watches the
        gate way to this nut ion. This fact is demonstrated when
        you recall to memory the 25th of January, 1898, when the
        battleship Maine steamed into the harbor of Havana. She
        went there on an errand of peace, the representative of a
        friendly power. On the 15th of February the Maine was blown
        to atoms by a floating mine, together with two hundred
        sixty-six American sailors, of whom more than thirty were
        negroes.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0058" n="110" />
        <p>$figure$</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0058" n="111" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 111</head>
        <head>CHAPTER XVIII.</head>
        <p>In 1864, near Blue Springs, Tennessee, three union
        soldiers became separated from their army, and when passing
        through a small oak grove one of them got into the
        quicksand. The others, supposing their companion was
        closely following them, pursued their course.</p>
        <p>This poor hero was left behind, struggling for his life
        in the quicksand, for three days and nights, buoying
        himself up from sinking, with the aid of such sticks and
        brush as he could reach. This location was but a short
        distance from a large southern mansion. The men had all
        gone to war and there were left but a few old colored
        mothers to protect the old mistress.</p>
        <p>Aunt Nancy Jordan dreamed one night, or saw a vision, as
        she termed it, that she saw a man in trouble near the
        spring, and that she heard a voice saying: "Nancy, go to
        the east spring." She claimed to have heard that call three
        different times that night in her dreams, and early the
        next morning she took her pail and went to the spring. When
        near the place, she heard a human voice pleading for help.
        She then realized her dream or presentiment, and on looking
        saw a union soldier buried to his arm pits in the
        quicksand. She knew just what it meant, and started toward
        him. He murmured for her not to come too close. Her reply
        was "God bless you chile. I knows</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0059" n="112" />
        <p>112 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</p>
        <p>all about dis place." She felt her way as close to him
        as possible, or until she felt the quicksand giving way
        under her, then she gathered brush and bridged her way over
        to him, or near enough to reach him with a long handled
        gourd. She then went to the spring, which was not over
        twenty feet away, and secured water for him, as his tongue
        was so badly swollen that he could scarcely speak. She held
        the gourd to his lips, slaked his thirst, and then began
        the work of rescue, piling brush around him. She then got
        hold of his arms and assisted him out so that he could sit
        upon the brush.</p>
        <p>That spring was never used by the people from the
        mansion on account of the quicksand, and alkali in the
        water. Nancy returned to the house with her pail of water,
        then hurried back with food in the pail upon her head. In
        this way she fed him for three weeks, at the end of which
        time one morning she heard the tramp, tramp of a mighty
        army. Bands were playing</p>
        <p>and bugles sounding. Then she saw old Missie scampering
        for the cellar, for, said she: &#8220;Nancy, they are
        Lincoln's hirelings, for they are all dressed in blue."
        Aunt Nancy hurried to the spring and told the soldier that
        the Yankees were coming. He at once came from his hiding
        place. When he reached the yard of that mansion he found it
        swarming with union soldiers. He said to Aunt Nancy, "I
        cant leave you here, for you must go with us." She replied:
        "I promised old master not to leave old missie 'till he
        comes back from de wah." But he assured her that it meant
        her freedom, and asked if she had not prayed to</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0059" n="113" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 113</head>
        <p>be free! She replied: "Yas sah," and that if it meant
        her freedom she would bid old missie good bye.</p>
        <p>There was a pathetic scene at this parting. Old mistress
        ventured to the porch and took her last long look at her
        old ex-slave, as the Yankee soldier was helping her into
        the wagon.</p>
        <p>Aunt Nancy became cook in the camp for the officers, and
        this soldier, whom she had rescued, looked after her as
        though she were his mother. He was an Englishman, and had
        come to this country about the time of the beginning of the
        war. He naturalized and enlisted. When he was discharged he
        took Aunt Nancy to England with him and presented her to
        his mother as the preserver of his life. She had been in
        London two years or more when I arrived there, and was
        among the most honored women of the city.</p>
        <p>She came back to America on the same steamer that I came
        on. She was certainly looked upon as a sanctified,
        christian woman.</p>
        <p>The soldier who took her over was bringing her back. He
        would have her dress in the same costume she wore when she
        rescued him from the quicksands and thus gave an exhibition
        every few days. She was not now the same illiterate Aunt
        Nancy that she was three years ago, for contact with
        educated and refined people had polished her up
        wonderfully.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0060" n="114" />
        <p>$figure$</p>
        <p>MARTYRED PRESIDENT MCKINLEY</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0060" n="115" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 115</head>
        <head>CHAPTER XIX. THE NEGRO IN IT.</head>
        <p>1 In the last civil war,</p>
        <p>The white folks they began it.</p>
        <p>But before it could close,</p>
        <p>The negro had to be in it.</p>
        <p>2 At the battle of San Juan hill,</p>
        <p>The rough riders they began it;</p>
        <p>But before victory could be won</p>
        <p>The negro had to be in it.</p>
        <p>3 The negro shot the Spaniard from the trees,</p>
        <p>And never did regret it,</p>
        <p>The rough riders would have been dead today,</p>
        <p>Had the negro not been in it.</p>
        <p>4 To Buffalo McKinley went,</p>
        <p>To welcome people in it.</p>
        <p>The prayer was played, the speeches made,</p>
        <p>The negro he was in it.</p>
        <p>5 September sixth, in Music Hall,</p>
        <p>With thousands, thousands in it,</p>
        <p>McKinley fell from the assassin's hand--</p>
        <p>And the negro, he got in it.</p>
        <p>6 He knocked the murderer to the floor,</p>
        <p>He struck his nose, the blood did flow;</p>
        <p>He held him fast, all near by saw it,</p>
        <p>When for the right the negro is in it.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0061" n="116" />
        <head>116 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</head>
        <p>7 J. R. Parke is his name,</p>
        <p>He from the state of Georgia came:</p>
        <p>He worked in Buffalo for his bread,</p>
        <p>And there he saw McKinley dead.</p>
        <p>8 They bought his clothes for souvenirs,</p>
        <p>And may they ever tell it--</p>
        <p>That when the president was shot,</p>
        <p>A brave negro was in it</p>
        <p>9 McKinley now in heaven rests,</p>
        <p>Where he will ne'er regret it:</p>
        <p>And well he knows, that in all his joys,</p>
        <p>There was a negro in it.</p>
        <p>10 White man, stop lynching and burning</p>
        <p>This black race, trying to thin it&#8212;</p>
        <p>For if you go to heaven or hell,</p>
        <p>You will find some negro in it.</p>
        <p>11 You may try to shut the negro out</p>
        <p>The courts, they began it,</p>
        <p>But when we meet at the judgment bar</p>
        <p>God will tell you the negro is in it.</p>
        <p>12 Pay them to swear a lie in court,</p>
        <p>Both whites and blacks will do it:</p>
        <p>Truth will shine, to the end of time.</p>
        <p>And you will find a negro in it.</p>
        <p>13 If there's a position to be filled,</p>
        <p>In congress or in senate,</p>
        <p>We people of this nation pray</p>
        <p>This negro may get in it.</p>
        <p>MRS. LENA MASON.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0061" n="117" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 117</head>
        <p>I enlisted in the 54th Massachusetts, where I remained
        nine months; was transferred to the 28th Indiana, on
        account of having an uncle in that regiment. I remained in
        the army from July, 1863, until December, 1865. Was in the
        following regular battles: Battle of the Wilderness,
        Kenesaw Mountain, Chancellorsville, Virginia, Culpepper,
        Virginia, Antietam, Maryland, Blue Springs, Missionary
        Ridge, Nashville, and Greenville, Tennessee and many other
        skirmishes.</p>
        <p>I was mustered out on December 22, 1865, with no home to
        go to, no starting point or object in life. The rebels had
        raided Knoxville, Tennessee, and mother, with all the
        colored people, had left there, and I could gain no
        knowledge concerning her whereabouts. I saw my mother in
        1863, when I left her in the little log cabin in Knoxville,
        and I never saw her again for fifteen years. The medium
        then used in finding any of our people was the church. Any
        one looking for a lost relative would send letters of
        inquiry to all the different churches in the United States
        and Canada, describing the person, and giving names of
        masters they had belonged to, so far as they knew. So I
        tried to find my mother, and at the expiration of a few
        years I heard of a woman in Huntsville, Alabama, answering
        the description. There was great difficulty in finding our
        people because they were sold so often, and had to take the
        name of each master. Knowing that my mother was a christian
        woman, and would be identified with some church, I wrote to
        all the churches iii Huntsville, and finally received an
        answer, stating that a</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0062" n="118" />
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        <p>woman answering that description had lived there, but
        not of that name--for I inquired for Rosy Hadley, the name
        of her last master.</p>
        <p>I then went to Huntsville, and after spending a month of
        constant research and inquiry I had to give it up as
        futile. I returned to Nashville, but did not give up the
        search through the medium of letters. Finally I received a
        letter from Chattanooga. I went there and spent more than
        two months, hut to no avail. After this I heard nothing
        from her, or concerning her, for over six years. During
        this time I learned that I had a brother in Philadelphia,
        Pennsylvania. After the exchange of a few letters we were
        satisfied that we were brothers, and he came to see me. It
        proved to be my oldest brother, James, who had run away
        from Wilmington in 1860. He went to an underground railroad
        station twelve miles from Wilmington. Here he was put in a
        box, this box was enclosed in another box, and the second
        box in a third box, and sent by express to New York, where
        he was released from his somewhat cramped quarters in Rev.
        Henry Ward Beecher's parlor. To give him air, holes were
        bored in each box, care being taken that they were not
        opposite each other. From New York he went to Toronto,
        Canada, was educated by the Presbyterian</p>
        <p>church, serving many years as a pastor. He died in 1890.
        About three hours before his death he sat propped up in
        bed, and preached a sermon, using as his text "Blessed is
        the man who dyeth in the Lord. He shall rest from his
        labors and his works do follow</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0062" n="119" />
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        <p>him." After his remarkable escape he always went by the
        name of "Box Brown."</p>
        <p>Through him I found another brother, who was a
        locomotive engineer over the Grand Rapids and Indiana
        railroad. We three were soon together and again began a
        zealous search for mother, ultimately locating her in
        Lebanon, Tennessee. It was not long until we found her,
        though not in Lebanon, for when we reached there we learned
        that she had been gone from that place for nearly a Year.
        She had gone hack to Knoxville, in which city I found her,
        and when she saw me, she exclaimed, like Simeon of old on
        seeing Jesus, "Now Lord, let me die in peace, for mine eyes
        have seen my son William!"</p>
        <p>That memorable morning, as I left the city of Nashville,
        with my fireman's uniform on, and two hundred dollars in my
        pockets, my heart was buoyant with expectation, for it was:
        no more hope, but a grand reality, that I would see the
        faces of the dearest earthly friends I had--a mother and
        two sisters. The arrangements for the meeting had been made
        unbeknown to mother. At train time my sisters were on the
        alert for me, and as I neared the house they called
        mother's attention to some one coming. Mother came to the
        door, walking with a cane: she said, "that walks some-thing
        like my William." But the sight of mother so elated me that
        I bent my steps quick and fast toward the house. When I was
        close enough for her to recognize my face, she uttered the
        words before stated.</p>
        <p>I am lost for language to describe the scene which
        followed. The only thing which cast a shadow over</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0063" n="120" />
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        <p>the pleasure of our meeting was when mother asked, "if
        we had heard anything from father?" The house of joy was
        turned into lamentation, but after a while quiet was
        restored. We never saw or heard from father after he was
        sold. We learned that another brother, named Andrew, was
        about eight miles from Knoxville. In a few days he joined
        us and we spent a glorious time together. There were now
        mother and six children together----two sisters and four
        brothers.</p>
        <p>$figure$</p>
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        <head>CHAPTER XX.</head>
        <p>I returned to Nashville&#8212;which I considered
        home&#8212;after several weeks visit with mother. I
        re-entered on my duties as fireman&#8212;for I was a member
        of the City Fire Department, and had been engaged as
        hose-cart driver for eight months. Shortly after my re-turn
        we were called out to a large fire. While fighting the fire
        the captain called to "Jim Howard." After calling several
        times and no one seemingly hearing him, he called "Jim
        Cowens," and that attracted my attention. I looked to see
        who would answer, and seeing a man on top of the house
        answering, I immediately climbed on the building.</p>
        <p>I inquired of Jim "where he came from," and many similar
        questions, and it was but a few minutes until we recognized
        each other as brothers. Now you can better imagine what
        followed than I can express it. It came to the ears of the
        City Council of the City of Nashville, "that two brothers
        who had served eight months in No. 2 Hose Company, had just
        recognized each other as brothers&#8212;having been
        separated for sixteen years." In honor of our meeting they
        gave us a public reception.</p>
        <p>One extreme always follows another, for in three weeks
        from the time of our recognition, my brother was thrown
        seventy-two feet from the hook and ladder</p>
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        <p>against the stone custom house, and every bone in his
        body was broken: he died instantly.</p>
        <p>I served seventeen months in the fire department and
        resigned to accept a situation as singer and banjo player
        in a troupe gotten up by S. C. Wallace. The troupe was
        known as the &#8220;Tennessee Singers" (not the original
        Tennessee Jubilee Singers, yet we attracted the attention
        of the public at large to the extent that we were
        constantly in demand.) We made a tour from Nashville.
        Tennessee, to Indianapolis, Indiana, thence to Terre Haute,
        Indiana, from there to Chicago, Springfield, Bloomington,
        Illinois, LaPorte, Indiana, Detroit, Michigan, and Windsor,
        Canada. On our return trip we sang in the following cities
        in Michigan: Grand Rapids, Rattle Creek, Kalamazoo and
        Niles, then back through Indiana and Kentucky to Nashville,
        Tennessee. We sang nothing but the southern
        melodies&#8212;songs composed by our fathers and mothers in
        the days of slavery. We disbanded in November, 1868.</p>
        <p>In January, 1869, I hired to what was known as the
        Hanlon's Wizard Oil Company, with seven others, at twelve
        dollars per month and board. The contract was for one year.
        If there was any one thing I was accomplished in it was
        picking the banjo and singing: and I soon became the center
        of attraction along these lines. We gave street concerts
        for advertising the oil, W e made a tour of the leading
        cities of Indiana, Illinois and Michigan, thence to New
        York City, where we took passage, May 21, 1869, on the
        steamer "City of New York," for London, England.</p>
        <p>Everyone treated me so different than I was used to</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0064" n="123" />
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        <p>during the time of slavery, that I forgot, to some
        extent, the hardships through which I had passed, and more
        than once stopped and inquired of myself &#8220;is this
        heaven, and am I in it?"</p>
        <p>The passage over was a very pleasant one, and we arrived
        in London the 27th day of June, 1869. We neared
        London&#8212;the metropolis of the world. I saw hundreds of
        vessels, the White winged messengers of commerce, coming
        from all directions, loaded for London harbor.</p>
        <p>The news had been cabled before us that we would arrive
        June 27th and hundreds of the populace were at the harbor.
        Their curiosity had been aroused to the highest tension. We
        repaired to hotel de France. Where we were the center of
        attraction: hundreds followed the carriages in which we
        rode to the hotel, and ran over each other in order to get
        a look at the ladies and gentlemen from America. After
        supper we went to St. Paul's Cathedral&#8212; which had a
        seating capacity of over two thousand. Here we gave our
        first concert. The people were wild with enthusiasm, and
        fairly rained shillings, three cent pieces and bouquets to
        us on the stage.</p>
        <p>At the close of this first concert, a gentleman by the
        name of William S. Beckenworth known as Lord Beckenworth,
        with one son and two daughters, made their way to the
        stage. After introducing themselves they requested me to go
        home with them that night, which I could not do without the
        consent of the manager, Mr. Howard. They at once went to
        him, and he promised them that I could go the next
        night.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0066" n="126" />
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        <p>The second night was almost a repetition of the first. I
        was like the country lad who went to the city to visit a
        lady friend. He used a little of the weed. Not being
        accustomed to use a cuspidor he spat over in a corner, the
        lady noticing it, pushed the cuspidor to one side of him.
        He shoved it away. She tried putting it in front of him.
        Finally, in desperation, he blurted out, "if you don't take
        that gol darned thing</p>
        <p>away I'll spit in it." I looked at the night shirt and
        said to myself, "if that is here another night. I will put
        it on," also the breakfast robe, I thought the same thing
        concerning it. So the third night, finding the night shirt
        still there, I put it on: the next morning on going down to
        breakfast I put on the breakfast robe. I saw the girls cast
        glances at each other and wink, as much as to say "he's
        learning."</p>
        <p>I was in England eleven months and a half, and during
        that time I slept only three nights out of Lord
        Beckenworth's house. We went to the different hamlets, as
        far as forty miles from London, but always returned there
        at night. The roads in London were so carefully kept that
        you could drive forty miles there while driving half that
        distance in America. But the first five months of our time
        were spent principally in the different cathedrals and
        opera houses in London. During the first three or four
        weeks of that time there were from twenty to twenty-five
        guests at Lord Beckenworth's house every night to hear me
        talk about my slave life. But after that his two daughters
        conceived, and put into execution, the grandest thought
        that could have entered their minds. That was, to try
        to</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0066" n="127" />
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        <p>instill in me the idea of education. They bought books
        and started on their laborious work, excusing the visitors
        that came each night, and inviting them to come only on
        Friday nights, and this they did in large numbers. At first
        the two sisters were both teachers, one sitting in class
        with me, while the other taught, and vice versa. Many
        nights we sat up from 10 to 12 o'clock for I was very
        anxious to learn. After getting the rudiments in my mind I
        learned with surprising quickness and knew my letters as if
        by magic. I could have worn out both of these girls
        physically, so they decided to take turn about, one each
        night. And for ten consecutive months I attended school in
        this home, these two angels of mercy being my teachers.
        They were faithful, tireless and unfeigned in their efforts
        to give me some educational light. When I got so I could
        spell words of two syllables I was like the old fellow when
        he had learned his alphabet. He said "he had too much
        education to stay here or any whar else.&#8221;</p>
        <p>Once a week the visitors would attend in large numbers
        to see how much I had advanced, and I delighted very much
        in reciting before them. They were very much amused when I
        came to spell certain words, especially "baker." I spelled
        it in that dialectical way, pronouncing each syllable in
        such a way that it would cause it burst of laughter each
        time. As I have said before, I learned very rapidly, had an
        uncommon verbal memory, and in eight months&#8217; time was
        able to read plain reading and could write fairly well. I
        recall the first letter I wrote. It was to Ulysses S.
        Grant, at</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0067" n="128" />
        <p>128 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</p>
        <p>that time president of the United States. I wanted to
        write to the greatest man in the world, and I thought after
        Lincoln Grant was next. I reminded him of an incident that
        occurred during the battle of Kenesaw Mountain, in 1864. He
        and his staff rode up, a tree limb knocked his hat off, and
        I thoughtlessly stepped out of my ranks, picked up the hat
        and handed it to the general. I received a very severe
        reprimand from my captain, hut General Grant called him and
        in a few words, unheard by me, he satisfied the captain.
        Then he said to me, "boy, if we both live to get out of the
        war, let me know where you are and I'll remember you for
        this favor."</p>
        <p>So I wrote to President Grant, informing him that I was
        alive, and had risen from the ranks of a private soldier in
        the union army to a Lord, (in title but not in wealth) in
        England. Miss Emeline--the older daughter of Lord
        Beckenworth wrote also, as I dictated and wrote--for I
        spoke audibly every word I wrote of course, when I had
        finished my letter it looked as if blueing had been poured
        into a plate and it chicken had walked into it, then over
        the paper. All the lawyers in the United States could not
        have read it. But Miss Emeline&#8217;s letter was enclosed
        with mine. This was the first letter I ever wrote in my
        life, and a day or two after I mailed it I began to trouble
        the postmaster. I went twice a day, expecting an answer
        front my letter, not considering it had to cross the sea. I
        was like two negro men, one a runaway from the south, who
        had crossed the line and gotten safely into the north: the
        other was a barrister in the north. The</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0067" n="129" />
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        <p>runaway negro inquired of the Lawyer the way into
        Canada. The latter scratched his cranium for a moment,
        cleared his throat, pulled off his gloves, looked over his
        spectacles and said, "well, sa-ar, if you go by de
        steamboat and it blowed down, whar is you? If you go on the
        steam kears and dey blowed up, dar you is: but if you go on
        the junegraph (meaning telegraph) you are dar now."</p>
        <p>I wrote my letter to America and thought by the next day
        it was "dar now." But in about thirty days the post master
        was made glad, and I made to rejoice. It certainly must
        have been a source of joy to him to be honored with the
        privilege of handing me the first letter I ever received
        for myself in my life: but he must have been gladdened to
        be relieved of a troublesome customer. The president paid
        me a very high compliment for the exalted station I had
        reached in so short a time, and invited me to visit the
        White House on my return to America. He advised me to
        remain in England until I was thoroughly polished at the
        hand, of this noble family, so that I might return a useful
        man to my race and the nation. He wrote Miss Emeline a fine
        letter, commending me as a soldier, and thanking her for
        the interest she and her sister had taken in the new
        citizen of America, hewn out of a slab of ebony.</p>
        <p>Eleven months spent almost entirely away from my people,
        save a few hours at night, and constant association with
        the Caucasian race, wrought quite a wonderful change in
        myself and habits. As association breeds assimilation, I
        had gotten almost entirely rid of</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0068" n="130" />
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        <p>that southern dialect. My aspirations began to mount
        above my environments and from that time I began to seek
        higher things in life. The spirit of manhood which lay
        slumbering in my chest began to awaken.</p>
        <p>This ambition to make something of myself was further
        strengthened by an incident which occurred at this time.
        Frederick Douglas, marshall of the District of Columbia,
        was paying London a visit. Queen Victoria, in order to give
        the people an opportunity of seeing this great man, took
        him in the royal carriage through the principal streets of
        the city. The carriage was drawn by twelve horses, and each
        horse was led by a man in uniform. All London turned out to
        do honor to America's famous colored orator. The sight of
        Mr. Douglas as he stood up in the carriage, hat in hand,
        his silvery hair falling to his shoulders, bowing right and
        left to the crowds of people who were shouting themselves
        hoarse in their enthusiasm, fired me with the desire to
        become a public speaker.</p>
        <p>Soon I began to get ready to embark for America again. I
        had made many friends during my stay in England, who proved
        to be friends indeed, for the night before my departure
        they gave me a grand reception, two hundred and twenty
        dollars and enough clothing to last me a year. This was to
        enable me to attend school, and every year for four years,
        they sent me fifty dollars. It was as sad to me parting
        from these English friends as it ever was to part with my
        brothers and sisters. When I got in the carriage the next
        day dozens of friends stood around bidding me adieu, and
        God's blessings. But thank God, I am not</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0068" n="131" />
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        <p>returning the same "William Cowens," in appearance or
        knowledge, as when I left : for new thoughts and new ideas,
        that had lain slumbering under the iron heel of oppression
        for twenty-one years, groaning for light and liberty, are
        now awakened, and thank God, the light of a new day is
        dawning upon me.</p>
        <p>On board the vessel, instead of entertaining the guests
        with banjo picking and southern songs. I could talk of
        things of a higher life, and the passengers soon became
        interested in me. So much so that for thirty</p>
        <p>nine days a gentleman, by the name of Joseph P. Ray, and
        his wife, became my tutors; taking up my lessons Where I
        had left off in England, hearing my last lesson the day we
        landed in New York.</p>
        <p>I wandered around this large city for two months trying
        to find a permanent location, but everything seemed either
        too high or too fast for me, so I decided to go back to
        Nashville, Tennessee. I soon put my decision into execution
        and arrived in Nashville in June. The Methodist Episcopal
        church established a school known as the Freedman's Bureau,
        from which sprang the great Central Tennessee College. At
        this time it was only an obscure log hut: today, it is the
        Atheneum of Education. I entered school here, and continued
        three years, until my money was exhausted. I then went to
        work half the day and attended school the other half, and
        continued in school in this manner for one term many times
        I had nothing in my dinner pail but corn bread and stewed
        apples. Often I was ashamed for others to see how I was
        faring, and went off by myself to eat my lunch. My teacher,
        noticing</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0069" n="132" />
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        <p>that I had about the same thing each day, asked me if I
        never ate anything else but corn bread and dried apples. I
        felt very much humiliated to tell her that that was all I
        was able to have. She encouraged me very much by telling me
        of others that had become great men in this country, who
        had had even less opportunities than I, yet they pushed
        their way to the topmost round of the ladder of fame. She
        also told me that a path of great success was before me, if
        I only continued as I had started. After that day she never
        failed to divide her dinner with me. I learned very fast
        under her, but finally had to quit school entirely and go
        to work. I worked one year&#8212;taking care of three
        different persons' horses, and making fires in the winter.
        I saved my money, and when school opened the next year I
        started again. After that term I went to night school.</p>
        <p>$figure$</p>
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        <p>$figure$</p>
        <p>STEPHEN D. LEE.</p>
        <p>Commander-in-Chief Confederate Veterans.</p>
        <p>Gen. Lee is direct in line of the famous Lee families,
        and is loved by all people who knew him. On Decoration day,
        1907, he gave out the following, which is typical of the
        feeling between the people of all sections of the
        country;</p>
        <p>For myself, I believe the day is near at hand when our
        descendants</p>
        <p>north and south&#8212;will be just as proud of the
        Confederate soldiers as the Union soldiers, and they will
        be quite satisfied to believe and say of each soldier: "He
        fought for the right as he saw the right; he measured his
        life up to the highest and best he knew; he bore himself
        like a brave man and a true patriot."</p>
        <p>Upon the mossy marble of many Union and many a
        Confederate soldier can be written: "He was a very perfect,
        gentle knight."</p>
        <p>STEPHEN D. LEE</p>
        <p>Commander-in-Chief, Grand Camp, Confederate Veterans,
        Columbus, Miss., May 30. 1907.</p>
        <p>(The author, Rev. W. H. Robinson, was at one time owned
        by the Lee family.)</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0070" n="134" />
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        <head>CHAPTER XXI.</head>
        <p>In 1874 I entered the freshman class in college: I met
        with another embarrassment here, for every one in the class
        was ahead of me. As I did not complete the high school
        course it made it more difficult for me in</p>
        <p>college. But I had that spirit of determination, and
        studied with a will, and by the close of the term I had
        caught up with all the class but three: had made many
        friends, and was considered by all far from being the
        dullest boy in the class.</p>
        <p>About this time I became very much interested in
        politics, and the issue of the day was so common that it
        did not require a man of great ability to become a stump
        speaker. All I had to do was to remind my people of the
        fact that the Yankees freed them, and that these Yankees
        were the present republican party: frequent mentioning of
        the name of Abraham Lincoln would stir all the patriotism
        there was in them. I soon became very popular among my
        race, so much so that I was consulted on every point of the
        least importance. I was an ardent lover of books, and read
        quite extensively. I would read many nights all night, and
        my memory served me well. It was the height of my ambition
        to be a political orator, for I had in me that retaliating
        spirit, and thought there was no better way</p>
        <p>To vent to my feelings towards the southern people than
        to tongue-lash them in politics. But after</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0070" n="135" />
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        <p>consulting a few men I saw that I had the wrong spirit,
        and that if I accomplished anything it must be through the
        spirit of love and not of vengeance. If I wanted to be a
        useful man to my people and country, I would have to learn
        "that vengeance belongeth to the Lord."</p>
        <p>Later I was hired at Lebanon, Tennessee, as teacher.</p>
        <p>I had a class of forty. The majority of them was old
        people forty-five and fifty years old. I taught them two
        terms--each term being only four months. The other four
        months in the years I worked at most anything I could
        catch. I became impatient with that slow way of making
        money, so I resigned my school and went back to Nashville.
        Through a friend I was given a situation as porter for the
        Woodruff Sleeping Car Company, which was afterwards bought
        out by the Pullman Company, I continued in the employment
        of George L. Pullman for six consecutive years, during
        which time I was on every road of any importance in the
        United Mates and old and New Mexico.</p>
        <p>While running from Mackinaw City, Michigan, to
        Cincinnati, I came near being killed. At Ft. Wayne,
        Indiana, I stepped off my car while in motion, and was
        dragged seventy-two feet on my back, all the while hanging
        to the boxing of the car, the wheels running between my
        legs. The people turned their backs to keep from seeing me
        cut to pieces. As the car stopped I relaxed my hold, and
        they picked me up unconscious, and for some time they
        thought that life was extinct. They telegraphed my wife
        that I was dead, but finally I regained consciousness and
        was returned</p>
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        <p>home that night on the same train. This laid me up for
        three months.</p>
        <p>After I was restored to my natural strength I accepted a
        position on board a steamboat on Lake Michigan, as steward
        or cook, for the Graham Passenger Steamboat Company, plying
        between St. Joseph and Benton</p>
        <p>Harbor, Michigan, and Chicago, Illinois. During this
        time I saw some very stormy seasons. I especially recall
        one of them--the night the Alpena went down with her human
        cargo of seventy souls. I was on the steamer Traitor,
        enroute for Chicago from Green Bay; it was one of the most
        ferocious seas--so said some of the old captains who had
        sailed the sea for many years, that they had ever seen. We
        answered the signals for</p>
        <p>help sent out by the ill-fated Alpena. Our captain
        called a council to decide whether we would attempt to go
        to her aid in the midst of the terrific storm then raging.
        It was unanimously agreed to take our chances, and the ship
        was turned about, several times nearly capsizing. Before we
        succeeded in reaching her the signals ceased and we knew
        that our efforts had been in vain, for the beautiful
        steamer Alpena, with every soul on board, had gone down to
        a watery grave. We finally weathered the storm and landed
        safely in Chicago harbor. On the return trip I fell over
        board and had a very narrow escape from death, but the
        captain soon hauled his vessel to, and picked me up after I
        had one down and come up the second time.</p>
        <p>In 1877, while cooking at the New England hotel, in
        Clark street, Chicago, I was one night in the third story
        of a gambling den, owned and run by two brothers</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0071" n="137" />
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        <p>--Dan and Jim Scott, two very wealthy colored men. They
        kept hotel, roomers, and ran a gambling den, all in one
        building. I had drifted away during my railroad and sailing
        careers into a class of company that led me to this
        miserable life. It seemed for a time that all the good that
        had been accomplished through my many friends, and self
        denial and perseverance, were all overshadowed with
        darkness, in immorality and sin. But thank God, on New
        Year's night, 1877, while standing at the gambling table, I
        heard my mother's voice, as I thought, as audibly as I ever
        heard it in my life. She said, "my son," in that tender,
        motherly way in which none save a mother can speak, "is
        this what you promised me when you were wearing the
        shackles of bondage?"</p>
        <p>I at once recalled the day when mother left me in
        Wilmington to go back to Greenville, Tennessee, when she
        said, "son, I have nothing in this world to give you, but
        remember that manners and good behavior will carry you
        through the world: get the religion of Jesus in your heart,
        and if we never meet again on earth meet me heaven." I
        resolved on that night</p>
        <p>that I would not stop until I was converted. All the
        entreaties and prayers of my mother came rushing upon my
        mind, and I decided at one that they should not be in vain.
        My mind fully made up. I left the gambling den that night,
        never to enter it again.</p>
        <p>The next day I accepted a situation as head cook in
        Evanston, Illinois, eighteen miles from Chicago. I was
        deeply convicted and began to reason of righteousness,
        temperance and the judgment to come. The</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0072" n="138" />
        <p>138. FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</p>
        <p>more I reasoned, the deeper was my conviction, until it
        seemed that the clock on the wall as it ticked said
        &#8220;repent." I became so interested concerning my soul's
        welfare, that I could not keep my mind on my business, so I
        began to seek the Lord in prayer. In June of the same year
        I walked out of the hotel about eleven o'clock, didn't stop
        to draw my money; the train was due for Chicago and was at
        the depot when I arrived there. I was so completely
        absorbed in thought, and stirred about the salvation of my
        soul that I walked by the train, up the track towards
        Chicago. It seemed as though a voice was constantly saying
        to me, "repent." I had not walked very far when a voice
        said, "you had better pray." Of course it was the reasoning
        of the spirit within. I walked down the embankment and for
        the first time since I was ten years old, I called on God
        for redemption through the blood of Jesus. I became so
        intensely earnest that I did not notice the section hands
        working near by. I arrived in Chicago about dusk, went to a
        saloon and called for a drink--a very unusual thing for me,
        because I never went into a saloon before alone. I had
        often taken a drink through the influence of company. But
        now, Satan, finding that I was trying to extricate myself
        from sin, and from the wrath of a sin avenging God, made
        his greatest struggle to impede my progress. He knew that
        the wine cup was a sure remedy to</p>
        <p>carry out his wishes. I never was a lover of strong</p>
        <p>drink, but now I walked up to the bar and called for in,
        as one of the regular hard drinkers would do.</p>
        <p>This was one of the remedies that the devil
        furnished</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0072" n="139" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 139</head>
        <p>me to drive away trouble, but it failed in this case;
        for I took two drinks and it took no effect whatever upon
        me, for my soul was crying for deliverance. I left the bar
        room, went to the Union depot and bought a ticket for La
        Porte, Indiana, but I got off at a little station before I
        got to La Porte, as I thought of a Baptist preacher I knew
        about three Miles from there. It was midnight, and very
        dark when I got off the</p>
        <p>train. I inquired of the depot agent the way to this
        preacher's home. The road lay through a dense, thick woods,
        and after wandering until about two o'clock in the morning
        I found the place.</p>
        <p>I remained at his home about three weeks, and would go
        each day to the woods with him and help him pile up brush,
        trim trees, etc. I imagined all the while that a tree was
        going to fall upon me and kill me. The very axe the
        preacher was chopping with seemed to be crying "repent,"
        and I became so troubled that all hunger and thirst seemed
        to have left me. There was but one thought uppermost in my
        mind, and that was, "that I might find peace with God."</p>
        <p>One day the preacher persuaded me to stay at the house,
        saying I was too weak to go with him to the woods. He knew
        what was ailing me. I could tell that in his morning and
        evening devotion, as he would offer me to the throne of
        grace with so much fervor. After he was gone I took the
        shot gun, saying to his wife that I would go hunting. I had
        gone but a short distance when something seemed to say to
        me, "you might as well take that gun and blow your brains
        out."</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0073" n="140" />
        <head>140 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</head>
        <p>Of course this was the reasoning of the devil, making
        his last great effort to decoy me and destroy my soul. But
        God has promised in His word that he will be a help in
        every time of need, and this great truth demonstrated
        itself to me in this hour of peril, for when my foot had
        almost slipped, and my soul was almost into eternity where
        hope is a stranger, and mercy could never reach my undone
        condition, the great spirit of God whispered in my soul,
        "woe be unto your damnation."</p>
        <p>I hid the gun beneath a brush pile, and started to a
        man's house about two miles away. As soon as I went into
        the house he told his wife to hurry dinner and clean up the
        dinner dishes, and that they would have a word of prayer. I
        knelt down behind a big drum stove in that log cabin, with
        my mind fully made up to stay there until God converted me:
        and in less time than it will take me to tell it I was
        happily converted to Christ.</p>
        <p>$figure$</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0073" n="141" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 141</head>
        <head>CHAPTER XXII.</head>
        <p>It seemed as though I had been wearing a heavy logging
        chain about my body, and in a moment it fell from me. It
        looked as if the entire end of the house had given way, and
        I could see with that eve of faith into the very kingdom of
        God. I expect one day to behold Christ in His glory, yet I
        am satisfied that I shall never see Him any plainer, and he
        will never look any more natural than He did that day in my
        vision. While beholding this great panorama, Christ handed
        me a little testament, and pointed towards a large body of
        woods, saying, "preach my word to these people." In a
        moment every tree was transformed into a vast multitude of
        people, and I stepped upon a stump, and began to preach
        from Romans, First Chapter and sixteenth verse---"Now I'm
        not ashamed of the gospel of Christ; for it is the power of
        God unto salvation to every one that believeth; to the Jews
        first, and also to the Greek."</p>
        <p>I need not say to any soul that has been awakened by the
        light of the gospel that we had a wonderful downpouring of
        the spirit that day, and of all the places on earth, that
        is the dearest to me.</p>
        <p>I had worn the shackles of a literal bondage for fifteen
        years, but in due season God emancipated me from being the
        goods and chattels of other men, so I could think and act
        for myself as a man: but thank</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0074" n="142" />
        <p>142 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</p>
        <p>God, in 1877, he liberated my soul from a greater
        bondage, for human bondage enslaves only the body, while
        sin enslaves both soul and body. But I can now praise God
        in the highest and sing this song, composed</p>
        <p>and sung by my people of the southland. It was a song of
        notification, and alluded to the underground railroad and
        their preparation for escape into Canada.</p>
        <p>Free at last, free at last,</p>
        <p>Thank God Almighty. I'm free at last.</p>
        <p>1. When I was a sinner just like you,</p>
        <p>Thank God Almighty, I'm free at last,</p>
        <p>I prayed and mourned till I came through.</p>
        <p>Thank God Almighty, I'm free at last.</p>
        <p>2. I never shall forget that day.</p>
        <p>Thank God Almighty,. I'm free at last;</p>
        <p>When Jesus washed my sins away.</p>
        <p>Thank God Almighty, I'm free at last.</p>
        <p>3. The very time I thought I was lost,</p>
        <p>Thank God Almighty, I'm free at last;</p>
        <p>y dungeon shook and my chains fell off.</p>
        <p>Thank God I'm free at last.</p>
        <p>4. This is religion, I do know,</p>
        <p>Thank God Almighty, I'm free at last;</p>
        <p>For I never felt such a love before,</p>
        <p>Thank God Almighty, I'm free at last."</p>
        <p>The first night after I was converted, I lay down before
        the tire place &#8212;for it was a log house, with a large,
        old fashioned tire place. The preacher and his family were
        eating supper in the same room. He</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0074" n="143" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 143</head>
        <p>said he had not stopped talking to me over five minutes
        when he noticed me clapping my hands and praising God. But
        in that few minutes I had found my-self in a dense
        wilderness; I could hear the howling and roaring of some
        kind of a hideous beast that would strike terror to any
        living soul, and all was gloom and darkness around me. By
        faith I looked towards the hill of Zion, and, like Peter of
        old, I cried out, "Lord, save me or I perish." In a moment
        the darkness dispersed, and the light, in all its splendor
        and beauty, shone around me. The same man who handed me a
        testament in the first vision, gave me the same kind of a
        book, pointed to the trees and said, "preach My word to
        these people." In a moment every free and bush was
        transformed into a multitude of people. I stepped upon the
        stump and preached from the same text as before. This was
        Saturday night and I was sixteen miles from La Porte,
        Indiana.</p>
        <p>Sunday morning the preacher, Rev. Bailey, and myself
        started for La Porte. There were no trains on Sunday
        morning, so we rode half the distance on a hand-car with
        the section men, and walked the remainder of the way. We
        sat on a fence to rest, facing a beech woods, and I rested
        my head in my hands and closed my eyes. I had a repetition
        of the same vision, this being the third time that I saw
        the same thing. I did not tell this part of my conversion
        for two years afterwards, for I was satisfied that it was a
        Divine call to the ministry of the Lord Jesus. Ultimately,
        an old minister, by the name of Andy Ferguson, a member of
        the A. M. E. church, who was</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0075" n="144" />
        <head>144 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</head>
        <p>traveling the La Porte circuit&#8212;after hearing me
        talk in class meeting several times, asked me to tell him
        exactly how I was converted. After two years I told him the
        whole story of my conversion, and he said, "son, I knew God
        had called you to the ministry." I was wonderfully moved to
        preach the gospel but felt that I could not afford to give
        up my occupation of cooking, at which I was making from
        seventy-five to a</p>
        <p>hundred dollars per month, for an uncertainty. I knew
        how hard it was to raise money for the ministers, and like
        Jonah, I went for nearly five years before I entered the
        field of Labor which God would have me do.</p>
        <p>I made several vows and broke them. Finally I vowed if I
        could accumulate a certain amount of money I would take up
        the cross and bear it the best I could. I made and saved
        the amount so quickly that I hardly knew how it came, and
        avenues were opened to my advantage on every side.</p>
        <p>I joined the Missionary Baptist Church, though I was of
        Methodist belief: but I was cooking where there was no
        other church save the Baptist. I joined them and gave them
        fifty dollars toward the building of a new church, with the
        understanding that if ever a Methodist church was organized
        there they were to give me a letter of recommendation, and
        refund twenty-five dollars to the Methodist Church. I was
        soon made a member of the Chain Lake Association of
        Michigan.</p>
        <p>In 1884 a Methodist church was organized and although I
        was not there, the Baptists refunded the twenty-five
        dollars. I remained in the Baptist church until 1891, when
        I joined Simpson's Chapel</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0075" n="145" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 145</head>
        <p>M. E. church. Indianapolis, Indiana. I was admitted that
        same year as a member of the Indiana District conference.
        In March, '92 , at Shelbyville, Kentucky, Bishop Foster
        took up my credentials as elder in the Baptist church, and
        gave me a sheep skin or credentials, as elder in the
        Methodist Episcopal church.</p>
        <p>$figure$</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0076" n="146" />
        <p>146 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</p>
        <head>CHAPTER XXIII.</head>
        <p>In 1877 I married Miss Alice Goins, of Riverside,
        Michigan, who held up my arms in the ministry for sixteen
        years while I tried to preach Christ. There were born to us
        three children, Dora, Marguerite and William. William died
        in his infancy. The grim monster, consumption, seized upon
        my companion, and for five years she bore up like a
        heroine, many times almost compelling me to go to church
        and preach, when I was fearful that she would die before I
        returned. But she would say, "my dear, I'm all right, you
        may save one soul tonight." She would also quote that
        passage of scripture: Luke 15th Chapter and 10th verse,
        which reads, "Likewise I say unto you, there is joy in the
        presence of the angels of God over one sinner that
        repenteth."</p>
        <p>On the morning of April 14, 1892, she sat in the door of
        our home in Grape Creek, Indiana, looking so constantly and
        distant that it attracted my attention. I asked her what
        she was looking at so steadily, and her answer was like a
        thunder bolt to my heart. She said. "I am looking at the
        beautiful carpet this day for the last time on earth, for I
        shall eat my supper in heaven tonight." She had me call our
        daughters. When they came she said, "girls, I am going to
        leave you and papa. I want you to hold up your papa's arms
        as I have done for the last sixteen years. I want</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0076" n="147" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 147</head>
        <p>you to stay with him until he marries again." She then
        said to me, William, I want you to marry as soon as you can
        find some settled woman. I know you could easily marry some
        young girl, for you don't look very old, but I want you to
        marry a settled woman." She continued by saying, "William,
        you know how I used to set the light in the window for you,
        and watch for you to come home when I was not able to go
        with you to your preaching place." I said, "yes, Alice."
        "Well," said she, "I will set the Lamp in the window of
        heaven, and will wait and watch for you until you come."
        "Dora, I don't want you to do anything that will hinder
        your father in the ministry, and pray for him daily that
        God may sustain him in his labor; be a good girl and meet
        mamma in heaven."</p>
        <p>I called in my family physician: he was so wonderfully
        touched with the spiritual force and power with which she
        talked that he could scarcely contain him-self. He wrote
        upon the back of a book, saying: "Reverend, your wife can
        live but a very short time," and bade me good bye.</p>
        <p>The incident relative to the lamp occurred in Lexington,
        Kentucky, while I was holding a series of revival meetings.
        She was so low that we did not like to leave her alone
        while we were at church, but she insisted on the lamp being
        placed on a table near the bed, so she could read, and said
        that just at 9:30 she would put it in the window. We could
        see the light when we reached the top of a hill, and she
        said, &#8220;if you do not see the light in the window when
        you get to the top of the hill you will know that I have
        passed</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0077" n="148" />
        <head>148 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</head>
        <p>over the river." I recall different times when I thought
        I had reached the spot where I should see it, and not
        seeing it fell in despair, thinking she had gone, but
        others ran ahead and told me that the light was in the
        window.</p>
        <p>None but they who have passed through the trying ordeal
        of the loss of a wife or husband, can sympathize with one
        in this dark and trying hour.</p>
        <p>At half past eight that night members and friends filled
        my home; at eight forty-five she began to sing a song which
        she used to sing while in health. &#8220;I know my name is
        written in the Lamb's book of life, I know my name is
        written in heaven." A few minutes before nine she took my
        hand and said, "husband, have I been a good wife?" With the
        very fountains of my heart running over with grief I could
        say nothing else but "yes, a thousand times, yes."</p>
        <p>Though it was my daily study to make her happy yet I
        could never be able to pay the debt of gratitude I owe her.
        I feel that all that I am I owe to her for her patience and
        kindness towards me: for when I would despair, and the
        gloom of disappointment would gather around me, she would
        put her arms around my neck, kiss me, and say, "papa, let's
        pray." and in that plaintive, simple way she would take me
        and my troubles to God. It was her constant study to see
        and know that I was happy.</p>
        <p>Five minutes past nine the chariot swung low, and a
        loving wife and mother was gone, as we thought. I was on my
        knees by the bed, with her head resting on my arm: in my
        excitement I raised her up, and she</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0077" n="149" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 149</head>
        <p>opened her eyes, sang another verse of the same song,
        asked the church to take care of her husband and daughters,
        bade us all good bye, and in a moment her spirit had moved
        out of the old tenement house of clay, and she</p>
        <p>Is now drinking at the fountain,</p>
        <p>Where she always will abide;</p>
        <p>For she has tasted life's pure water</p>
        <p>And her soul is satisfied."</p>
        <p>I can never describe that night of sorrow, but thank God
        the consolation which she left in her dying testimony, and
        her life for sixteen years, sustained me through every
        conflict, and has been a great source of joy since her
        departure. Often since that night, when the clouds would
        hang low and heavy over me, in my imagination I could hear
        her say, "be of good cheer."</p>
        <p>$figure$</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0078" n="150" />
        <p>150 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</p>
        <head>CHAPTER XXIV.</head>
        <p>After the funeral services of my wife I returned to my
        lonely home and tried to make some plans for the future.
        Left with two girls, one a small child, I was forced to
        take almost a new start in life. Keeping the younger girl,
        Marguerite, in school, my daughter Dora and I went out to
        battle with life and for the Kingdom of God. Many trying
        incidents and perplexities came to me, but the tender,
        loving voice that had encouraged me in days gone by was
        hushed in death, and I must needs meet them almost
        alone.</p>
        <p>Finally my plans were laid for five years of
        Evangelistic service. We began our work in Michigan, and
        the result of our first year's labor was over eighteen
        hundred souls brought to Christ. The next year I purchased
        a tabernacle, with a seating capacity of over fifteen
        hundred. I hired four good singers, and that was indeed a
        wonderful year. My record showed over two thousand saved.
        We then went to Indiana, and for three consecutive years
        continued in this line of work, after which I accepted the
        pastorate of a circuit at Greenfield and Martinsville,
        Indiana. We built a splendid church at Martinsville. From
        here we went to</p>
        <p>Laurenceville, Illinois where our success was
        wonderful.</p>
        <p>In this town a saloon keeper was happily converted one
        night. He invited the congregation and my-self to his
        saloon at nine o'clock the next morning for a feast.
        Curiosity brought a large crowd at the appointed hour. When
        we had gathered, the saloon-keeper, with two other men,
        rolled out three barrels</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0079" n="151" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 151</head>
        <p>of whiskey, several kegs and cases of beer and other
        intoxicants, and broke them open. Whiskey and beer ran like
        water in the streets, and the town was intoxicated with the
        fumes. We praised the Lord for this external instead of
        internal application.</p>
        <p>After two years in this town I returned to Evangelistic
        work, and have continued in it until the present time.
        Great meetings have been held in Ohio, Illinois and
        Wisconsin. The greatest meeting in Illinois was about three
        year ago. In eight weeks we saw nine hundred people
        converted and added to the different churches. In Waymond
        Chapel, Chicago, we held an all night meeting, at which
        there were seventy conversions. The church quickened and
        spiritualized, for which I give God the glory.</p>
        <p>My daughter Dora helped me in my work until 1897 when
        she married and went to live in San Francisco, California.
        Three years later she was taken suddenly ill. After a
        partial recovery her husband was bringing her to
        Louisville, Kentucky, to spend the summer with us. Upon
        reaching Chicago she was taken worse and was hurried to a
        hospital. I received a letter one morning, asking me to
        meet her in Chicago. The same afternoon a telegram came
        from her husband, telling me to come at once if I would see
        her alive. I started on the first train. I shall never
        forget that</p>
        <p>race with death. I reached Chicago the next morning, but
        too late; her spirit had taken its flight. Her dying words
        were, that she had gone to join mother, and for me to meet
        her in glory. With God's help I expect to do so.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0079" n="152" />
        <head>152 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</head>
        <head>CHAPTER XVIII.</head>
        <p>THE CHILD'S INQUIRY.</p>
        <p>As much as unfeeling men talk and preach about "Negro
        insensibility and as much as slavery dotes upon her
        mysterious power of blotting out and annihilating the
        principles of humanity, yet it is plainly seen that God has
        planted in the bosom of the black man a quality of His own
        nature, that the ruthless hand of time and the strong arm
        of oppression has not extinguished.</p>
        <p>To make my point clearer I will explain the usual form
        of marriage between house slaves. When a couple wished to
        marry, if the marriage was agreeable to the owners, a
        wedding feast was spread by them, the colored people
        furnishing coon, possum and sweet potatoes. When everything
        was ready the old negro preacher, (who by the way could not
        read a word) went through a certain form prescribed by the
        master. If the couple marrying was young, the young
        mistresses held a broom stick knee high. If the bride and
        groom were more advanced in years, older ladies held it. At
        the end of the ceremony the colored preacher said to the
        bride and groom, "now, when you jump the broom stick I
        announce you man and wife." This is how the expression you
        are all so familiar with originated,</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0080" n="153" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 153</head>
        <p>I will relate an incident which came under my
        observation, which will better illustrate this marriage
        farce. A loving couple, united in the usual way, had lived
        in harmony for five years and eight months, during which
        time not a cloud of discord had come between them: nothing
        had marred their peace but the thought that they must spend
        their lives in the midst of groaning and cracking of whips,
        of which they themselves must share a common fate. To make
        the nuptial ties stronger they had been blessed, as they
        thought, with a little girl, whose dark eyes and waving</p>
        <p>hair satisfied Henry that the child was his. One
        pleasant evening a South Carolinian was seen talking with
        the master of that happy pair, and coming before the door
        they both came to a full halt, while the stranger gazed
        full in the faces of the three, and after a few moments,
        passed in profound silence, he said to the master: "I'll
        give it." As they turned away from the door, the silence
        was broken by a low whisper from the lips of little Mary,
        saying, "one of us is sold, papa." Like the diciples, they
        each asked, "is it I?" Morning found them undisturbed, and
        Mary hurried the work over, and as usual, left the cabin
        for the cotton field, repeating in her mind, "is it I?" So
        excited was her mind that she spent another sleepless
        night, and so conscious was she that she was the victim
        from reading in the eye of the Carolinian his predominating
        passions, that when she left the house she kissed her child
        and pressed it against her bosom as though she would crush
        it to death. Reluctantly she closed</p>
        <p>the door and departed, to return no more forever.
        The</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0080" n="154" />
        <p>154 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</p>
        <p>husband's ears were made sad at noon, when a slave boy
        said to him as he called him to the gate, "your wife is
        sold to South Carolina. I saw her chained in the gang and
        the last words I heard her say, were, "O! that I had never
        seen a husband! O! that I had hugged my child to death this
        morning." But the child's inquiry and the father's answer
        will show whether humanity was extinct in them:</p>
        <p>$figure$</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0081" n="155" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 155</head>
        <p>THE INFANT'S DREAM.</p>
        <p>CHILD</p>
        <p>"O, where has mother gone, papa?</p>
        <p>What makes you look so sad?</p>
        <p>Why sit you here alone, papa?</p>
        <p>Has anyone made you mad?</p>
        <p>O, tell me, dear papa.</p>
        <p>Has master punished you again?</p>
        <p>Shall I go bring the salt, papa,</p>
        <p>To rub your back and cure the pain?</p>
        <p>FATHER.</p>
        <p>Go away my child, you are too bad:</p>
        <p>You notice things too soon;</p>
        <p>Did you not see that I was sad,</p>
        <p>When I came home at noon?</p>
        <p>Go to the gate and call mamma,</p>
        <p>And see if she's in sight.</p>
        <p>The hour is late, I fear your ma</p>
        <p>Will not be home tonight.</p>
        <p>CHILD.</p>
        <p>O no, papa, I am afraid</p>
        <p>To go to the gate alone;</p>
        <p>I fear there's men in the high-grass laid,</p>
        <p>To catch little Mary Jones.</p>
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        <p>But what makes mother stay so long?</p>
        <p>Tis getting very late.</p>
        <p>Papa, go bring my mother home.</p>
        <p>And I'll stay at the gate.</p>
        <p>When mother left me early this morn,</p>
        <p>She kissed me and she wept:</p>
        <p>I saw the tears come trickling down</p>
        <p>Upon the pillow where I slept.</p>
        <p>She pressed me to her bosom, hard,</p>
        <p>As though it was the last embrace.</p>
        <p>She sobbed, but did not say a word,</p>
        <p>Nor would she let me see her face.</p>
        <p>FATHER.</p>
        <p>Pull off your shoes, my dearest child,</p>
        <p>And say your evening prayer:</p>
        <p>And go to bed and after a while,</p>
        <p>Perhaps your mother will be there.</p>
        <p>Go hush those little eye to sleep,</p>
        <p>And dream some pretty dream tonight,</p>
        <p>Perhaps in the morning when you wake</p>
        <p>You'll find all things all right.</p>
        <p>CHILD.</p>
        <p>O! tell me, papa, don't drive me away,</p>
        <p>Tis dark, the stars are thick and bright.</p>
        <p>Is mother sold. O, tell me, I pray,</p>
        <p>I fear she'll not be home tonight:</p>
        <p>O come papa, come go with me,</p>
        <p>Perhaps we'll meet her in the lane;</p>
        <p>And then she'll sing a song to me,</p>
        <p>And take me in her arms again.</p>
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        <p>FATHER.</p>
        <p>Come here my daughter, come to me,</p>
        <p>I find that I must tell you true.</p>
        <p>Come now, and sit upon my knee&#8212;</p>
        <p>The dismal tale I'll tell to you.</p>
        <p>Your mothers sold: she's sold, my dear,</p>
        <p>Her face you'll see no more.</p>
        <p>Her cheering voice no more you'll hear</p>
        <p>On this side of Canaan's peaceful shore."</p>
        <p>$figure$</p>
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        <head>CHAPTER XXV.</head>
        <p>I have gone by the name of "Cowens" in this history, and
        the reader may be curious to know how I came by the name of
        "Robinson" as I have not</p>
        <p>mentioned any of my masters by that name.</p>
        <p>Two of my masters were named Cowens, one was Robert E.
        Lee, commander-in-chief of the confederate army, another
        was Scott, and the fifth was Hadley.</p>
        <p>I have told you that my father was prince of a tribe in
        South Africa known as the Madagascar tribe. They heard the
        ficticious story of Robinson Cruso. In the African dialect
        the definition was "Rob-o-bus-sho," meaning Robinson
        Cruso.</p>
        <p>An aunt, who spent sixteen years in South Africa as a
        missionary, found some of father's relatives, and one of
        his brothers, supposed to be over ninety years old, gave
        her a great deal of information concerning our family
        history.</p>
        <p>After a diligent search of over fourteen years for the
        different members of our family, nine children met with
        mother and held what today would be known as a family
        reunion, but then we called it a three days' feast in the
        wilderness. Each of us had a different name. Our missionary
        aunt was with us, and after her explanation to us of how
        father was brought away in slavery we decided to establish
        a family name and record. After carefully talking it over,
        a unanimous</p>
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        <p>vote was taken to discard all other names and hereafter
        answer to our father's name, which meant Robinson. I am
        prouder of my father's heathen name than of all the
        professed Christian names that I was compelled to
        acknowledge while a slave. I pray God that none of us who
        bear the name of our father will ever bring dishonor to it,
        and may God help my daughter and me to carry the gospel to
        his native land.</p>
        <p>Will you help us by purchasing our book?</p>
        <p>Yours for Christ and Africa.</p>
        <p>W. H. ROBINSON.</p>
        <p>$figure$</p>
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        <p>$figure$</p>
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        <p>$figure$</p>
        <p>THE OLD ORGAN USED IN THE SONG SERIVICE</p>
        <p>OF REV. ROBINSON'S MEETINGS.</p>
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        <head>CHAPTER XXVI.</head>
        <p>KEEPING THE CHARGE OF THE LORD.</p>
        <p>A charge to keep I have.</p>
        <p>A God to glorify</p>
        <p>A never dying soul to save,</p>
        <p>And fit it for the sky:</p>
        <p>To serve the present age,</p>
        <p>My calling to fulfill:</p>
        <p>O may it all my powers engage,</p>
        <p>To do my Master's will!</p>
        <p>Arm me with jealous care,</p>
        <p>As in Thy sight to live;</p>
        <p>And O, Thy servant, Lord, prepare,</p>
        <p>A strict account to give!</p>
        <p>Help me to watch and pray,</p>
        <p>And on Thyself rely,</p>
        <p>Assur'd if I my trust betray,</p>
        <p>I shall for ever die.</p>
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        <p>SERMON ON "THE EXALTATION OF CHRIST."</p>
        <p>Text. Philippians, 2nd, 9. 10, II.</p>
        <p>"Wherefore God also hath highly exalted Him, and given
        Him a name which is above every name, that at the name of
        Jesus every knee should bow, of things in heaven and things
        in earth, and things under the earth and that every tongue
        should confess that jest's Christ is Lord to the Glory of
        God the Father."</p>
        <p>The text represents Christ as the most exalted Being in
        existence. The cause which moved the pen of inspiration to
        this divine utterance grew out of a consideration of the
        degraded and relapsed condition of the church at Philippi,
        a famous city of the province of Macedonia, situated on the
        great highway between Thrace and Anapolis.</p>
        <p>It was founded possibly by the descendants of Jashet,
        through the line of Gomer. Philip, the king of the
        province, remodeled it and gave it its present name, after
        which it became the metropolis of Western Asia. It was also
        noted for the products of gold, silver, etc, in whose mines
        men were engaged in great numbers, thousands of feet
        beneath the surface. This lucrative traffic brought to
        Philippi strangers from every nation, hence the city became
        the central point of scholastic lore and the strong hold of
        Grecian mythology. Paul had visited this empire of
        Paganism, A.D. 52, organized the church, and preached
        Christ unto them, etc.</p>
        <p>Date and occasion of the Epistle to the Philippians,
        A.D. 62. Paul found himself a prisoner at Rome, where he
        had been sent from Caesasea for trial in the Roman court.
        The</p>
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        <p>church at Philippi on learning of his imprisonment
        raised a collection for him and sent it by Epaphroditus
        their minister, who on his arrival at Rome called at the
        jail, where he found the object of his mission with a chain
        around his waist and ankle, and hard at work on a tent, for
        he was a tent maker by trade. The preacher from Philippi
        informed Paul of the re-lapsed and degenerated condition of
        his church in the polluted city of Philippians. Object of
        the epistle was, first to encourage and confirm the faith
        of the church in Christ Jesus. Second, to caution it
        against idolatry and heathen mythology. Third, he warns
        them to shun Judaizing teachers, and fourth, he sets forth
        the Divinity of Christ and the exalted position of His dual
        nature, the last of which is the theme of our discourse,
        "The Exaltation of the Humanity of Christ."</p>
        <p>May we not pause a moment, and with unshod feet approach
        the holy ground of this sacred mystery, and inquire into
        this sublime and peerless act of exaltation of humanity? On
        the last day of creation man was left at the foot of the
        ladder of the intelligent being, just a little lower than
        the angels, but the language of the text through the
        hyposative union clothes him with divinity, lifts him far
        above all creatures, and makes him a life member of the
        triune God Head, hence the union of the divine, and human
        nature stands without a parallel in the annals of events.
        For this mysterious act the invisible curtains of divinity
        were drawn back, and the human soul thrown upon the
        dissecting table of infinite wisdom. The infinity of days
        steps behind the screen of his incomprehensibleness, stoops
        and absolves himself into the spiritual and carnal elements
        of the finite, passes under the fierce rod of chastisement,
        enters Joseph's tomb, binds the king of terrors to his
        chariot wheel and leads to captivity the captive, and
        gives</p>
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        <p>gifts unto men by removing Eden to Paradise, and the
        renewal of the moral image of God in the soul by the
        indwelling of the Holy Spirit.</p>
        <p>Hosanna to our conquering King.</p>
        <p>All hail Incarnate Love,</p>
        <p>Ten thousand songs and glories wait</p>
        <p>To crown Thy head above.</p>
        <p>Thy victories and thy deathless flame</p>
        <p>Through all the world shall run,</p>
        <p>And everlasting ages sing</p>
        <p>The triumphs Thou hast won.</p>
        <p>For through the incarnation man and God are brought face
        to face; by the death and resurrection they are made
        friends, and man is placed in a position where he can leap
        from the eventful stage of immortality to the drama of the
        immortal, where he can stand in the blazing Light of the
        throne and see Jesus, the second Adam, clothed in divine
        majesty and ruling the world. Wherefore God also hath
        highly exalted him, and given him a name which is above
        every name, that at the name of last's every knee should
        bow, of things in heaven, and things in earth and things
        under the earth, and that every tongue should confess that
        Jesus Christ is Lord to the glory of God the Father. Things
        in heaven. Where is heaven, and what are the things
        referred to in the text? The poet answers the first in the
        following lines:</p>
        <p>"There is a land far away amid the stars</p>
        <p>Where they know not the sorrow of time,</p>
        <p>Where the pure waters wander through valleys of
        gold,</p>
        <p>And life is a treasure sublime.</p>
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        <p>Our gaze cannot soar to that beautiful land</p>
        <p>But our visions have told of its bliss,</p>
        <p>And our souls by the gates of its garden are fanned,</p>
        <p>When we faint in the desert of this,"</p>
        <p>The didactive import of the above delineation directs
        the eyes of the soul at once to the center of the universe,
        the sensorium of the Godhead. the home of the angels; a
        city with blazing walls, and towering spires, shining domes
        and pearly gates, and whose streets are paved with gold,
        upon which the feet of the redeemed walk, and where
        cherubic legions dance upon a sea of glass all mingled with
        fire, and phalanx of seraphim bask in the golden sunlight
        of the city of God. These are the things which are in
        heaven, and they have been described and classified by Dr.
        Bright, as follows: First, the seraphim, whose duty it is
        to give glory to God as creator of all things,
        acknowledging his triune character by crying, Holy, Holy,
        Holy, Lord God of hosts, the whole earth is full of Thy
        glory. Second, the cherubim. They form the highest order of
        intelligent creatures, stand in an especial nearness to
        God, and are engaged in the loftiest adoration and are
        associated with the mercy seat. Third: This is a superior
        order of angels, who, under the command of Gabriel, stand
        as connecting links between God, as creator, and Jesus
        Christ as mediator, between God and mall. Fourth: The
        fourth is under Michael, the angel liaison of heavens.
        Warriors who fought the dragon and threw him over the
        battlement of heaven, down nine times the space that
        measures day and night to mortal men. The fifth order is
        under the supervision of Uriel. They compose the fire
        department, and execute vengeance upon the earth by hurling
        forth sheeted</p>
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        <p>flames of red tongued lightning and hot thunder bolts,
        and belching out liquid and sulphurious flames from burning
        craters. The sixth order is commanded by the angel Raphael.
        They are the health officers of the world. The seventh and
        last is composed of the glorified saints of all ages. The
        general assembly and church of the first born, which are
        written in heaven, and the spirits of just men made
        perfect. All the above are the things which are in heaven,
        and they are the ones who are commanded in the text to bow
        at the name of Jesus, for we read in the gospel of peace,
        that when the incarnate feet of the immaculate touched the
        Bethlehemic manger chanting legates from glory came to
        proclaim the Savior's name, the sound was heard upon the
        plane that God and man were reconciled again. [Things in
        earth.] "In surveying the great system of nature with a
        christian and philosophic eye, it may be considered from a
        different point of view," says the learned Dr. Dick. Hence,
        in explaining this part of the text, we shall start from a
        scientific point by noticing, first, the surface of the
        earth, second, the atmosphere. The student of science is
        confronted upon the threshold of his observation with
        countless phenomena, all dissimilar one from another, yet
        controlled by law of the survival of the fittest. The
        surface of the earth contains a multiplicity of objects all
        dissimlar in shape, size, color, motion and substance;
        craggy cliffs and towering mountains, verdant hills arrayed
        with clumps of trees and beds of flowers, broad and
        spacious plains, dotted with cities, towns and hamlets,
        waving fields of grain, blooming vineyard, meandering
        rivulets, flowing streams. roaring cataracts and belching
        volcanoes, bubbling springs, stagnated ponds, spacious
        lakes and rolling rivers. But let me lengthen the horoscope
        of imagination a little. Go see the outlines of a pic-</p>
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        <p>ture whose phenomenal background is far more sublime
        than the one whose negative lingers in the mental camera of
        the vision. See the erect form of him who is made in the
        image of his creator, and around him are gathered the
        rational and intelligent children of his flesh and blood,
        beneath whose shadow fifty thousand animal species are
        leaping and dancing. They are all sizes, from the mite to
        the elephant, from the creatures of which, if ten thousand
        of them were united they would not form an object one half
        the size of a grain of sand; yet all of these animals have
        organs, joints, limbs, feet, claws, hoofs, wings, fins;
        some flying, some crawling, some rolling, some walking on
        two feet, some on four, some on eight and some on eight
        thousand. Some with two eyes, some with ten thousand. These
        are some of the things in the earth. Now the chief. Hence,
        after he fell the whole creation groaned and travailed in
        pain together, until Calvary's bleeding conqueror burst the
        seals of Joseph's new tomb and sent up a shout of victory
        from the church militant to the church triumphant.</p>
        <p>&#8220;Look, ye saints, the sight is glorious.</p>
        <p>See the man of sorrow now,</p>
        <p>From the fight returns victorious.</p>
        <p>Every knee to Him shall bow.</p>
        <p>Hark! those loud triumphant chords!</p>
        <p>Jesus takes the highest station,</p>
        <p>O what joy the sight affords."</p>
        <p>The atmosphere is teeming with rational spirits, sent
        from God to look after the souls of men. The air we breathe
        swarms with legions of invisible insects, every drop of
        water abounds with millions of living beings. The blood is
        a living</p>
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        <p>stream of insects, crawling and flowing through the
        trunk of the animal kingdom, and for aught we know these
        insects are the underlying principles of our intelligence,
        for they work on and on from birth until death, as though
        they were conscious of what they were doing. Hence, these
        and the spirits in the air, are called upon to bow at the
        name of Jesus.</p>
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        <head>CHAPTER XXVII.</head>
        <p>SUBJECT, PRAYER--LUKE 18:--1.</p>
        <p>Sermon delivered in Allen Chapel, Kansas City, Missouri.
        July 15th, 1906, by Rev. W. H. Robinson.</p>
        <p>"And he spake a parable unto them to this end, that men
        ought always to pray, and not to faint. Who can pray so
        that God will hear?" First Ps., 66:&#8212;18. "If I regard
        iniquity in my heart the Lord will not hear me." It means
        to look at "with favor," to "respect," "approve," "regard."
        God will not hear the man who in his heart looks upon sin
        with any favor or allowance. God looks at sin with
        abhorence. He is of purer eyes than to behold evil, and
        cannot look on iniquity, etc. We must have the same
        attitude toward sin that He has to be heard of Him. If we
        regard in He will not regard its when we pray. Herein lies
        the very simple explanation why many of us pray and are not
        heard. Second Prov. 28-29. "He that turneth away his ear
        from hearing the law, even his prayer shall be
        abomination." He can-not pray so that God will hear. If we
        turn our ears away from what God says to us in His law, He
        will turn His ears away from what we say to Him in our
        prayers. We have an illustration of this in Zach. 7 11-13.
        "But they refused to hearken and pulled away the shoulder,
        and stopped their ears that they should not hear. Yea, they
        made their hearts as an adamant stone lest they should hear
        the law and the words which the Lord of Hosts hath
        sent."</p>
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        <p>In His spirit by the former prophets, therefore came a
        great wrath from the Lord of Hosts. Then it came to pass as
        He cried and they would not hear, so they cried and I would
        not hear, saith the lord of Hosts. Many are saying: "The
        promises of God are not true, God does not hear my prayer."
        Has God ever promised to hear your prayer? God plainly
        described the class whose prayers He hears. I Do you belong
        to that class? Are you listening to His words? If not lie
        has distinctly said He will not listen to your prayers. And
        in not listening to you He is simply keeping His word. Let
        us notice (Prov. 1:24-25-28. R. V.) "Because I have called
        and you have refused! I have stretched out my hand and no
        man regarded. But ye have set at naught all my counsel and
        would none of my reproof. Then shall they call upon me, but
        I will not answer; they shall seek me diligently but they
        shall not find me." Third, Prov. 21-13. "Whoso stoppeth his
        ears at the cry of the poor, he also shall cry but shall
        not be heard." Third proposition: &#8220;Whosoever stoppeth
        his ears at the cry of the poor cannot pray so God will
        hear. If we will not listen to the poor when they cry unto
        us in their need, the Lord will not hearken unto us. The
        world's maxim is, "the Lord helps those who help
        themselves." Luke IS-u-10-11-12. And he spake this parable
        unto certain ones which trusted in themselves that they
        were righteous and despised others. Two men went up into
        the temple to pray; the one a Pharisee, and the other a
        Publican. The Pharisee stood and prayed thus with himself;
        "God I thank thee that I am not as other men are;
        extortioners, unjust, adulterers, or even as this Publican.
        1 fast twice in the week, I give of all that I
        possess."</p>
        <p>The truth is, the Lord helps those who help others.
        Fourth, Luke 18-13-14. "And the Publican standing afar
        off</p>
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        <p>would not lift up so much as his eyes unto heaven, but
        smote upon his breast, saying, 'God be merciful to me a
        sinner." I tell you this man went down to his house
        justified rather than the other, for "every one that
        exalteth himself shall be abased, and he that humbleth
        himself shall be exalted." This prayer itself is the first
        act of faith. The first and most natural and most proper
        thing for one who honestly wishes to turn from sin and
        believe on Christ and to be saved, is to pray. The Lord
        Jesus looked on with delight when he could say to Ananias
        of the stubborn rebel, Saul of Tarsus, "behold he prayeth."
        Acts 9-11. "And the Lord said unto him, arise and go into
        the street which is called Straight, and inquire in the
        house of Judas for one called Saul of Tarsus, for behold he
        prayeth."</p>
        <p>We should be sure, however, that the sinner really is
        sorry for sin, and really wishes to forsake it before we
        tell him to pray for pardon. You can get him on his knees
        even before this, and so get him to realize that he is in
        God's presence, so that his rebellious heart may be
        humbled, but do not have him pray until he really does wish
        to turn from sin.</p>
        <p>Fourth Proposition. The great sinner who is sorry for
        and humbled by his sin, and who desires pardon, can pray so
        that God will hear. The question is often asked, "shall we
        get unconverted people." If a man is sorry for his sin and
        wishes to forsake it and find mercy, and is willing to
        humble himself before God and ask for pardon, he is taking
        the very steps by which a man turns around, or is
        converted. To tell a man he must not pray under such
        circumstances, is to tell him that he must not be converted
        until he is converted that he must not turn until he is
        turned round. To get him to pray is just the thing to do,
        "for whosoever shall call upon the name of the Lord shall
        be saved. (Rom. 10-3). But how, some one</p>
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        <p>may ask, can he pray until he has faith? The answer is
        very simple, hence the necessity of prayer. The text says,
        men ought always to pray and not to faint. You see when the
        Lord commanded Ananias to go to the house of Judas, how he
        shook and trembled and even reminded the Lord of the fact
        that Saul had come there on a mission of persecution, and
        at that very moment he had letters of authority from the
        High Priest to bring back to Jerusalem all that he found
        calling on the name of Jesus, but when he was informed by
        the great High Priest and captain of our salvation, that
        "behold he prayeth," it destroyed every vestige of fear,
        and he went rejoicing on his mission and greeted him as
        brother Saul, and Saul laid his desire before Him at once,
        and that was that His eyes might be opened. It was a prayer
        from an humble and contrite heart. Hence it was answered.
        He told him how he was struck blind on the way from
        Jerusalem to Damascus. He told of the blazing magnetic sun
        light that shone in his pathway. He told of the voice that
        spake unto him, (Acts 9-4.) He told of his answer (Acts 5.)
        It was Saul's first real prayer, though it took the heavy
        rod of chastisement to bring him to it. God heard and
        answered his prayer, and will hear yours, sinner, if you
        will humble yourself before Him. As soon as Paul received
        strength he began to preach redemption through the blood of
        Christ. (notice Rom. 1-16). For I am not ashamed of the
        gospel of Christ; for it is the power of God unto salvation
        to every one that believeth; to the Jew first and also to
        the Gentile. Hence, men ought always to pray and not to
        faint. Prayer is the key that unlocks heaven's door, and
        gives man a fore glimpse of that house not made with hands,
        and brings him back into fall unity with his Father who art
        in heaven. It takes him back through the moulds of God's
        eternal power,</p>
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        <p>and restores the image that was defaced by sin into the
        likeness of his creator. "For, as in Adam, all die; even so
        in Christ shall all be made alive." (1st Cor. 15-22).</p>
        <p>In the year of 1871, when the gold fever was at its
        height in Cheyenne, Wyoming, two young men, inspired by the
        thought of wealth, sacrificed everything, left home and
        friends for the wilds of that unsettled territory, seeking
        their fortune. They were quite fortunate and obtained
        considerable gold, but their anxiety is greater now than it
        was when they were going, for they were not afraid of
        losing their lives when they had no gold, but now they are
        in constant fear. Therefore they had to be on the alert day
        and night for fear of the band of robbers who would murder
        them for their gold. Hence one would walk his beat with gun
        in hand, with a vigilant eye, while the other slept, and
        vice versa, and they continued this for twenty-eight days
        until they finally reached the bolder states. One night the
        picket discovered a dim light in the distance, quietly
        awoke his partner and prepared to defend themselves from
        their supposed enemies. Upon reconnoitering they soon
        discovered they had reached the border of civilization, and
        that the dim light discovered was the home of an old
        Christian man and his wife, who were only too glad to give
        them shelter, and food such as they had. After supper they
        went up in the loft to go to bed, but not being fully
        satisfied of their safety, neither undressed. One slept
        with rifle in hand, while the other sat at the head of the
        stairs as a sentinel until a late hour in the night, when
        the angelic voice of the old mother was heard singing one
        of Zion's praises. The sentinel sprang to his feet, with
        joy in his soul, as she continued to sing:</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0091" n="175" />
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        <p>&#8220;I'm a poor wayfaring stranger,</p>
        <p>While journeying through this world of woe.</p>
        <p>Yet there's no sickness, toil nor danger,</p>
        <p>In that bright world to which I go.</p>
        <p>I'm going there to see my father,</p>
        <p>I'm going there no more to roam.</p>
        <p>I'm just a going over Jordan</p>
        <p>I'm just a going over home."</p>
        <p>He rushed to the bed, shook his partner, saying: "John,
        come here quick." His partner seized his gun and started,
        but he said, "John, lay down your gun and listen." The old
        folks continued to sing:</p>
        <p>"I know dark clouds will gather round me.</p>
        <p>I know my way is rough and steep.</p>
        <p>Yet brighter fields lie just before me,</p>
        <p>Where God's redeemed their vigil keep.</p>
        <p>I'm going there to see my mother,</p>
        <p>She said she'd meet me when I come.</p>
        <p>I'm just a going over Jordan,</p>
        <p>I'm just a going over home."</p>
        <p>In a moment they stood in silence in each other's arms,
        with their hearts overflowing with joy. When the silence
        was broken one said to the other, "John, that sounds like
        our mothers in old Indiana." About this time the old mother
        sang the last verse:</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0092" n="176" />
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        <p>"I'll soon be free from every trial.</p>
        <p>My body will sleep in the old church yard.</p>
        <p>I'll drop the cross of self denial,</p>
        <p>And enter on my great reward</p>
        <p>I'm going there to see my Savior,</p>
        <p>To sing His praise in heaven's dome;</p>
        <p>I'm just a going over Jordan</p>
        <p>I'm just a going over home."</p>
        <p>After this the old mother prayed one of those earnest,
        fervent prayers, asking God to watch over and protect the
        strangers in their home. John said to his partner, "let's
        undress and go to bed for were all right; we are in a
        praying home."</p>
        <p>Men ought always to pray and not to faint. Paul, the
        great Gentile preacher, with Silas, his brother, was cast
        into the Philippian jail for preaching Christ as the only
        hope of salvation. They were thrust into prison with their
        feet in the stocks. (Acts 16-22-28th verse). Paul might
        have asked this question of his companion; "why do we stay
        in this dungeon, with our feet in the stocks and our backs
        bleeding? Where is the Christ that met me on the highway to
        Damascus? Where is the God of our fathers, Abraham, Isaac
        and Jacob, who trusted in God and conquered every foe? He
        has promised not to leave nor forsake us." Let us sing one
        of the songs of Zion, after which they prayed until the
        heavens vibrated and reverberated with the prayers of these
        saints, and God sent down some of heaven's embassadors,
        some of the swift winged messengers, and as they hovered
        above that prison the prison was shaken from center to
        circumference, and the bolts and bars were loosened, and
        God unlocked the</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0092" n="177" />
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        <p>shackles and manacles that held them in the stocks, and
        they walked out into the corridor of the jail praising God
        in the highest. The jailer felt the shaking of the prison
        as a mighty earthquake. He rushed into the prison and
        seeing the doors all opened, and seeing no man he drew his
        sword and would have taken his own life, for it was certain
        death for a Roman soldier to allow a prisoner to escape.
        But Paul cried with a loud voice, saying; "Do thyself no
        harm, for we are all here." Then he called for a light, and
        sprang in and came trembling and fell down before Paul and
        Silas and brought them out, and said. "Sirs, what must I do
        to be saved?" And they said, "believe on the Lord Jesus
        Christ and thou shalt be saved, and thy house," and that
        night the Philippian jailer and his house were converted
        and baptized unto God, the result of prayer.</p>
        <p>Men ought always to pray and not to faint.</p>
        <p>"Prayer is the soul's sincere desire,</p>
        <p>Unuttered or expressed.</p>
        <p>The motion of a hidden fire</p>
        <p>That trembles in the breast</p>
        <p>Prayer is the simplest form of speech</p>
        <p>That infant lips can try;</p>
        <p>It lifts us from the mire and clay</p>
        <p>And plants our feet on high.</p>
        <p>Oh, Thou, by whom to God, we come,</p>
        <p>The truth, the life, the way,</p>
        <p>The path of prayer Thyself hath trod,</p>
        <p>Lord, teach us how to pray."</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0093" n="178" />
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        <head>CHAPTER XXVIII.</head>
        <p>SUBJECT, STANDARD.</p>
        <p></p>
        <p>Sermon delivered by Rev. W. H. Robinson, Albia, Iowa, A.
        M. E. Church. March 28th, 1907.</p>
        <p>Go through, go through the gates, prepare ye the way of
        the people, cast up, cast up the highway, gather out the
        stones, lift up a standard for the people." This is the
        prophet's fervent zeal for God's promises to his church.
        Ministers are incited to like importunity. Isaiah, the son
        of Amos, prophesied B. C. 760 years, or about that time.
        God has had a</p>
        <p>man for every time, emergency and purpose. When He would
        raise up a people to Himself, he called Abraham, a
        Chaldean. When He would preserve</p>
        <p>that people's life He prepared a Joseph. When He would
        lead those people to a land of promise he called a Moses, a
        fugitive from Egypt. When He heard the cries from the
        Babylonian captives, who cried by reason of their sore
        affliction, He had a Nehemiah. When he heard the cries of
        the slaves in the southland He called in Abraham Lincoln,
        from the Log Cabin in Kentucky, to be the chief magistrate
        of this great nation. Although the nation was baptized in
        human blood, and Lincoln died the death of a martyr, he
        became the great standard of liberty in</p>
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        <p>America. When the voices of the Cubans and the
        Philipinoes reached the throne of our God He gave to us a
        William McKinley, who dared to do and to die because he was
        inspired by the Holy Ghost, all of whom became great
        standards for God and suffering humanity.</p>
        <p>Isaiah declared for Zion's sake he would not hold peace,
        and for Jerusalem's sake I will not rest until the
        righteousness thereof go forth as brightness, and the
        salvation thereof as a lamp that burneth, and the Gentiles
        shall see their righteousness and all Kings thy Glory, and
        thou shalt be called by a new name which the mouth of the
        Lord shall name. Thou shall also be a crown of glory in the
        hands of the Lord and a royal</p>
        <p>diadem in the hand of thy God. This subject has a
        two-fold meaning; a spiritual and a literal. The spiritual
        and literal. The spiritual, Isaiah points the people to the
        coming King, and said to his kingdom there</p>
        <p>should be no end. See Isaiah. For unto us a child is
        born, unto us a son is given, and the government shall be
        upon His shoulders, and His name shall be called wonderful
        counselor, the almighty God, the everlasting father, the
        Prince of Peace. (Isaiah 9-7) Of the increase of His
        government and peace there shall be no end. Upon the throne
        of David and upon his kingdom, to order it and to establish
        it with judgement and with</p>
        <p>justice from henceforth, even forever. (See Isaiah 63;
        1st to 6th verses). Who is this that cometh from Edom with
        dyed garments from Bozrah? This that is glorious in his
        apparel, traveling in the greatness of his strength? I that
        speak in righteousness</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0094" n="180" />
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        <p>mighty to save. Wherefore art thou red in thine apparel,
        and thy garments like him that treadeth in the wine fat? I
        have trodden the wine-press alone and of the people.</p>
        <p>There was none with me, for I will tread them in my
        fury, and their blood shall be sprinkled upon my garments,
        and I will stain all my raiment:, for the day of vengeance
        is m my heart, and the year of my redeemed is come. And I
        looked and there was none to help, and I wondered that
        there was none to uphold; therefore mine own arms brought
        salvation unto me, and my fury it upheld me, and this is
        the great standard that was to lie a light to the feet of
        the Gentiles, and a lamp to the pathway that was to shine
        away the darkness of the valley of the shadow of death.
        (Text) "Go through, go through the gates, prepare ye the
        way of the people. Cast up, cast up the highway, gather out
        the stones, lift up a standard for the people," The four
        gates to the garden of Eden were closed by the fall of
        Adam. The four gates of the city of New Jerusalem were
        opened by the birth, suffering death, resurrection, and
        ascension of the Lord Jesus Christ. For death reigned from
        Adam to Christ, but life shall reign from time to eternity,
        for Jesus said (St. John 11:25). "I am the resurrection and
        the life, he that believeth in me, though he were dead, yet
        shall he live (26th) and whosoever liveth and believeth in
        me shall never die." (See Matthew 3: 1st to 4th verses,)
        "In those days came John the Baptist preaching in the
        wilderness of Judea, and saying, repent ye, for the kingdom
        of Heaven is at hand. For this is he that</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0004" n="181" />
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        <p>was spoken of by the prophet Isaiah, saying, the voice
        of one crying in the wilderness, prepare ye the way of the
        Lord. Make His path straight." John was the great standard
        of righteousness in the wilderness. Then cometh Jesus from
        Gallilee to Jordan unto John to be baptized of him. But
        John forbade Him, saying, &#8220;I have need to be baptized
        of thee; and cometh Thou to me?" And Jesus answering said
        unto him: "Suffer it to be so now, for thus it becometh us
        to fulfill all righteousness " Then He suffered Him, and
        Jesus, when he was baptized, went up straightway out of the
        water, and lo the heavens were opened unto Him, and He saw
        the spirit of God ascending and descending like a dove and
        lighting upon Him, and lo, a voice from heaven saying, this
        is my beloved son, in whom I am well pleased, and this is
        the standard that Isaiah saw through the spirit more than
        760 years before he came, and prophesied concerning Him.
        Priests and prophets prayed to see the light of the coming
        King, who was to redeem Israel from the curse of a broken
        law, for the sentence of death was passed upon all men.
        Therefore (Job 14-14) ask this question: "If a man die
        shall he live again?" And Jesus, the standard of salvation,
        answered and said, "because I live ye shall live also,"
        (John 14-19.) And he said unto Mary and Martha, the two
        orphan girls who had lain their only brother in the silent
        city of the dead, and were now kneeling at the feet of
        Jesus and bewailing their loss, when Martha said unto Him,
        "if thou hadst been here my brother had not died, but I
        know that even now whatsoever</p>
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        <p>thou ask of God, God will give it thee," Jesus said unto
        her, "thy brother shall rise again." Martha said unto Him,
        "I know that he will rise again in the resurrection at the
        last day." Jesus said unto her, "I</p>
        <p>am the resurrection and the life, he that believeth me,
        though he were dead yet shall he live:" (John 11-21 and
        25th verses). So the world need not worry or have any fear
        concerning eternal life, for God has so declared that
        before one lot or title of His word shall fail, heaven and
        earth shall pass away. (Rev. 21: 1-3). And John declared
        "he saw a new heaven and a new earth, for the first heaven
        and the first earth Were passed away, and there was no more
        sea, and I, John, saw the holy city, New Jerusalem, coming
        down from God out of heaven, prepared as a bride adorned
        for her husband." And we know that it must have been</p>
        <p>a beautiful sight that dazzled the eyes of the most
        expectant.</p>
        <p>"And I heard a great voice out of heaven saying, behold,
        the tabernacle of God is with men, and He will dwell with
        them and they shall be His people, God himself shall be
        with them and be their God." This is a glorious promise.
        This destroys the very fear of death from the minds of Gods
        true pilgrims, so that they wade out into the turbulent
        waters of the valley and shadow of death, and, like David
        the shepherd king, defy the presence of death. And as he
        sees the approaching of the grim monster, he buckles on
        armour, his habiliment, girds up his loins&#8212; with a
        girdle of God's eternal truth, tries his shield that bears
        the marks of many spears shot at him by the enemy,</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0095" n="183" />
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        <p>unsheathes his sword and marches out to meet the last
        enemy to be conquered, which is death.</p>
        <p>Hush! I hear the din of the battle. It is fierce, long
        and loud. The combatants on one side are fighting for truth
        and righteousness: the other side for death and
        destruction. The captain on one side is</p>
        <p>Apolian, the prince of the powers of the air. The other
        one is the Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end, the
        first and the Last, who conquered the powers of death and
        hell, robbed the grave of her victory and death of its
        sting, mounted the clouds of the morning with a convoy of
        angels as his escort, soared back to his father's house
        with a promise of another comforter to the world, and
        sitteth at the right hand of God the Father Almighty, Where
        he maketh intercession for the Saints.</p>
        <p>The great standard of righteousness, the literal side of
        the prophet's definition, points to the Babylonian
        captivity. Looking down through the telescope of time, he
        sees the Israelites, the chosen people of God, the
        Abrahamic seed, 767 years before the event really takes
        place, led away from Jerusalem, and their native land, by
        Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon, captives. Isaiah heard the
        echo of their wails, and the deep groaning of their souls
        as they are marching from their native Land destined to a
        life of servitude which must last for 70 years. They yet
        bear the scars and sore feet of weary Years of an Egyptian
        bondage, where they toiled 450 years under Pharaoh, the
        King of Egypt. Led out by Moses, God's standard bearer,
        they could hear the hoof and steel of Pharaoh's horses</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0095" n="184" />
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        <p>and chariots. They could hear the stern command of that
        mighty king, urging his army on to overtake them. I can
        hear their wails to Moses, their leader and standard
        bearer. I can see Moses, God's standard bearer, as he goes
        to headquarters for orders, as he listens to the tramp of
        his enemies, and the rumbling of their chariot wheels. He
        makes this inquiry: "Lord, what shall I do?" God said to
        him; "tell the people to stand still and see the salvation
        of God, for the enemy you see today you shall soon see them
        no more forever." He commanded Moses to take the staff that
        he had in his hand, and pass it three times over the waters
        of the Red Sea, and the water became frightened at itself,
        for God sent down a trade wind that night and divided the
        water from the water. Having thus pontooned the Red Sea,
        dry land appeared, and the people marched over dry shod.
        God put a pillar of cloud by day and a pillar of fire by
        night, so it was darkness to the Egyptians by day and by
        night, but</p>
        <p>light to the Israelites. When Israel had crossed the Red
        Sea and the Egyptians attempted to do the same, God spoke
        to the waters, and the Egyptians were destroyed. Israel
        looked back, and sang this triumphant song:</p>
        <p>"Isaac, a ransom while he lay</p>
        <p>Upon the altar bound;</p>
        <p>Moses, an infant cast away,</p>
        <p>By Pharaoh's daughter found.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0096" n="185" />
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        <p>Didn't old Pharaoh get lost,</p>
        <p>Get lost: get lost!</p>
        <p>Oh, didn't old Pharoh get lost,</p>
        <p>All in the Red Sea?"</p>
        <p>Said they, the horseman and his rider are overthrown,
        and God has delivered his people from the hand of
        Pharaoh?"</p>
        <p>[Text] Lift up a standard for the people. They wandered
        forty years in the wilderness, they were unfaithful and
        unthankful. They murmured and complained all the time. When
        they were hungry, God fed them bread made up by the spoken
        word of His Power and fed it to them fresh and flakey every
        morning. And Jesus says I am the bread of life. Jesus is to
        the soul what the manna was to the body of the Israelites.
        For forty years they wandered in the wilderness, because of
        their disobedience, and today the church of God is
        wandering because of retrogration from the true standard of
        God. We are taking on too much of the world, and too little
        of God. Israel's sins led them into many pitfalls. Finally
        they were bitten by the fiery serpents, and died by the
        thousands. God commanded Moses, the standard bearer, to
        mould a serpent of brass and lift it up in the wilderness
        and to tell the people to look upon it and they should be
        healed. But thousands died because they would not look.
        Jesus said, "as Moses lifted up the serpent in the
        wilderness, even so must the son of man be lifted up." As
        the great standard of the human family, the Lord help us to
        look and live. Sinners, which will</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0004" n="186" />
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        <p>you do? Look and live, or close your eyes and die?
        (Text) Lift up a standard for the people. (See
        illustration). In 1869 your humble servant made a trip to
        London, England. While there I met a German whose sympathy
        was very strong for me and my people in this country, and
        we were together nearly every day while there. He had been
        a sailor for forty years, and I, being a natural born
        mariner it blended us very close together. We would stand
        upon the pier of that great harbor, where we could see the
        white winged doves of commerce coming from every civilized
        quarter of the earth, and as I saw the different flags at
        the mastheads I would say to my friend, "Where does that
        ship come from?" Without waiting to read the inscription on
        the ensign he would say, "from Italy". "And this one?"
        "from France." "And this?" "from Germany." "And this?"
        "from Russia." "And this" "from Spain, ect." but when I saw
        the old star spangled banner, I did not have to ask any
        questions. I knew it was the standard that was unfurled
        over me at Blue Springs, Tennessee. In November, 1863, just
        after being captured from the confederate army, General
        Thomas had me stand in the door of his tent, and ordered
        the national flag unfurled. It was very calm, not a breath
        of air stirring, but just as General Thomas stepped to my
        side it seemed as if God sent a providential breeze along,
        and it wrapped the old flag all around us. General Thomas,
        who controlled the union army of the Tennessee said, "today
        this flag makes you a free man." I wept for joy, standing
        under the great standard of liberty, for I could now sing
        the</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0096" n="187" />
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        <p>national air, the land of the free and the home of the
        brave. In the true sense of patriotism I had worn the
        shackles of literal bondage for years, but in due season
        God emancipated me from being the goods and chattels of
        other men, so I could think and act for myself as a man.
        But thanks be to God, in 1877, he emancipated my soul from
        the bondage of sin.</p>
        <p>When I saw the standard of America I asked no questions.
        So it ought to be with every true child of God, Who has
        been freed from the bondage of sin, and made heirs and
        joint heirs of the Lord Jesus Christ and become such lofty
        standards that we would be living epistles, read and known
        of all men as the standards of Jesus. (Text). Lift up a
        standard for the people. There are so many ways we can be
        standards. First, by faithfulness to the cause we
        represent. Second, by our Christian fidelity, truth and
        righteousness. Love God supremely. Be at peace with all
        men. In order to do this we must keep aloft the standard of
        prayer, which is a weapon sharper than any two edged sword.
        It is a standard of power that even the heathen in the
        jungles of Africa recognize and reverence, though their
        deity is nothing but a dumb idol. They bow down to it and
        utter some form of prayer. Hence we can see the necessity
        of the standard of prayer. (See illustration). In 1871 this
        country sent a representative to Madrid, Spain. In the
        Spanish courts they found some technicality in the official
        acts of Mr. Woods. They gave him a trial and sentenced him
        to death, and within three days of the time of execution
        the law said, a man sentenced to death must be executed</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0097" n="188" />
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        <p>the very day and minute specified in his sentence.</p>
        <p>If not, it gave him sufficient grounds for a new trial.
        The honorable James G. Blaine was at that time secretary of
        war, and saw the necessity of prolonging the time, so that
        Mr., Woods could have a fair and impartial trial, that he
        might vindicate himself. He asked Queen Victoria, of
        England, to order her representatives, with the flag of her
        country, to be on the spot of execution, e also made the
        same request to the czar of Russia. He ordered an American
        representative, with the stars and stripes, with the other
        nations, and it few minutes before the time of execution
        they wrapped Mr. Woods up in these three flags. Twenty four
        men, with loaded guns, are waiting for orders to send the
        leaden messenger of death into the body of Mr. Woods. The
        time is up. Attention is called. But there is no command to
        fire. The question is asked, "why don't you give the
        command to shoot? The time is up." The answer is, "how can
        we shoot a man through the flags of three great
        nations?&#8221; The time of execution is past. Mr. Woods
        was taken back to prison, had a fair and impartial trial,
        and was set at liberty. Now, if the standards of three
        nations can save a man from a literal death, what must the
        standard of Calvary do? Every strand of thread in that flag
        is stained in the blood of Calvary's Iamb. And Jesus said
        unto the dying thief, "today shalt thou be with me in
        paradise." (Text) Lift up the standard for the people. He
        was crucified, dead and buried. The third day he arose from
        the dead, and said, "I am he that liveth, and was dead, and
        behold I am alive forevermore, and have the keys of death
        and hell, Amen."</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0097" n="189" />
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        <p>MY THANKS BE UNTO YOU.</p>
        <p>The following are a few voluntarily contributed
        testimonials by friends who have read my life's history
        work entitled, "From Log Cabin to the Pulpit," all of which
        I most heartily appreciate and extend my sincere and
        earnest thanks to those who have thus taken such warm
        interest in both myself and daughter, and in the work we
        are endeavoring to accomplish for humanity through the aid
        of and in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ, our Savior,
        and the Savior of all mankind who wish his help and are
        willing to follow him and his teachings, God extends his
        help to all.</p>
        <p>W. H. Robinson.</p>
        <p>EAU CLAIRE, WIS., July 8, 1913.</p>
        <p>TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:</p>
        <p>I have been personally acquainted with Rev. W. H.
        Robinson. of this city, for several years, I have read his
        book, "From Log Cabin to the Pulpit," which contains his
        life's history and reminiscences of the Civil war, which
        gave him his freedom from slavery, and I cannot recommend
        either him or his publication too highly, and hope all my
        friends will read this history of his life.</p>
        <p>Respectfully Yours,</p>
        <p>G. E. CLARK, D. D. S.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0098" n="190" />
        <p>190 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</p>
        <p>EAU CLAIRE, WIS., JUNE 14, 1913.</p>
        <p>I believe that the story of the life of W. H. Robinson,
        as told by himself, is one of those interesting bits of
        personal history, reaching back into the slavery days of
        our nation. I also believe that the purpose of the man
        himself is high and earnest. He is trying to make his life
        count for the best things.</p>
        <p>Sincerely,</p>
        <p>A. E. LEONARD,</p>
        <p>First Congregrational Church.</p>
        <p>EAU CLAIRE, WIS., JUNE 27, 1913.</p>
        <p>I have known W. H. Robinson for some time, and am glad
        to give personal testimony to my belief in him as an
        earnest, honest, consecrated christian gentleman. I have
        not read his autobiography, but having heard him in the
        lecture on his life, am sure that the book will be found
        intensely interesting, and profitable reading.</p>
        <p>L. E. OSGOOD, Pastor Second Congregational Church,</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0098" n="191" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 191</head>
        <p>EAU CLAIRE, WIS., JUNE 2, 1913.</p>
        <p>I have read the book entitled "From Log Cabin to the
        Pulpit," by the Rev. W. H. Robinson, and find many
        interesting narrations of striking events. The book is well
        worthy the attention of all interested in the history of
        our country.</p>
        <p>M. BENSON,</p>
        <p>Minister in Methodist Episcopal Church.</p>
        <p>CHICAGO, ILL., JUNE 27, 1910</p>
        <p>TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:</p>
        <p>This is to certify that I am personally acquainted with
        Evangelist Wm. H. Robinson, who has been in this city for
        the past few months doing excellent service. His work in
        the churches of this city has been</p>
        <p>Great. I therefore recommend him to the ministers of the
        A. M. E. Zion church or in any other field. He will render
        you valiant service. I am sure that whatever you may do for
        him will be appreciated. His daughter is one of the
        sweetest singers in Israel, and a faithful christian
        worker. I am,</p>
        <p>Very truly yours,</p>
        <p>J. B. COLBERT,</p>
        <p>Pastor of</p>
        <p>Walter's A. M. E.</p>
        <p>Zion Church.</p>
        <p>B. G. SHAW,</p>
        <p>Presiding Elder,</p>
        <p>Chicago District,</p>
        <p>of the Michigan Conference.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0099" n="192" />
        <p>192 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</p>
        <p>EAU CLAIRE DISTRICT WEST WISCONSIN CONFERENCE</p>
        <p>LAKE STREET METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH</p>
        <p>FRANK LEE ROBERTS, PASTOR,</p>
        <p>Residence 3211 Lake Street.</p>
        <p>EAU CLAIRE, WISCONSIN</p>
        <p>TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:</p>
        <p>This is to certify that the Rev. Wm. H. Robinson is
        personally known to me as a devout, consecrated christian,
        and a man of considerable ability. His time is devoted to
        the building of God's Kingdom on earth.</p>
        <p>and his labors have been abundantly blessed. Many,
        because of his ministry, can testify to the saving power of
        Jesus Christ. I have read his book entitled, "From Log
        Cabin to the Pulpit" and am of the opinion that it merits a
        wide reading. To whomsoever this book is allowed to present
        its message, I predict a wider vision of true usefulness
        and a firmer desire to live a holy life. Such is the
        testimony herein that one must needs marvel at the
        wonderful way in which God leads the way upward for a human
        soul.</p>
        <p>Sincerely yours,</p>
        <p>FRANK LEE ROBERTS,</p>
        <p>Pastor Lake Street Methodist Episcopal Church.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0099" n="193" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 193</head>
        <p>METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH.</p>
        <p>(EAU CLAIRE DISTRICT)</p>
        <p>REV. S. A. BENDER.</p>
        <p>SUPERINTENDENT.</p>
        <p>EAU CLAIRE, WIS., JUNE 6, 1913.</p>
        <p>It is a genuine pleasure to write a word of appreciation
        of "From Log Cabin to the Pulpit." It is a pleasure because
        of the intrinsic worth of the book, and the writer's
        appreciation of the personal character of the author. No
        one of a religious spirit can read this book without having
        his faith in the fact of God's providential care in the
        behalf of the humblest of His children greatly
        strengthened. The book is of worth also as a contribution
        to the history of the institution of slavery, and of the
        epoch of emancipation. This autobiography makes for
        optimism, and inspires the reader to a more manful fight to
        attain spiritual freedom. He who reads this book will be a
        better man for spending a time with our author in the
        recital of this own God guided life from slavery to
        freedom.</p>
        <p>We wish for this book a large circulation, and bid it
        God speed on its mission.</p>
        <p>S. A. BENDER.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0100" n="194" />
        <p>194 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</p>
        <p>A LETTER TO THE PEOPLE OF EAU CLAIRE, WISCONSIN.</p>
        <p>In 1910 we became residents of Eau Claire. I want to say
        that I have traveled quite extensively, at home, and
        abroad, but I have never met such a body of warm hearted
        ministers as in Eau Claire: men who at once became
        interested in my daughter and self, and seemed to have no
        thought of the "black rubbing off." They belong to that
        class of men who look beyond the color of the skin or the
        texture of the hair, and they immediately extended a
        brotherly hand. "As the priest, so the people.&#8221; Like
        a strong cable they have held me up. With one hand in
        God's, and the other in the hands of the good people in Eau
        Claire I could not fall.</p>
        <p>My first service here was in the Lake Street Methodist
        Episcopal Church, by invitation of Rev. Guy W. Campbell and
        his good people I preached four nights and gave a lecture
        entitled, "From Log Cabin to the Pulpit." God raised up in
        a very short time many, many warm hearted friends in that
        church. See letter of recommendation written to Rev. C. H.
        Harris, pastor of the Holcombe Methodist Episcopal Church,
        Holcombe, Wisconsin.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0100" n="195" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 195</head>
        <p>LAKE STREET METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH,</p>
        <p>WEST WISCONSIN CONFERENCE.</p>
        <p>EAU CLAIRE DISTRICT,</p>
        <p>GUY W. CAMPBELL, PASTOR.</p>
        <p>EAU CLAIRE, WIS., OCT. 18, 1910.</p>
        <p>REV. C. H. HARRIS,</p>
        <p>Holcombe, Wis.</p>
        <p>Dear Brother:--I tried to get you by phone Sunday
        evening but could not. Now I will try you by letter.</p>
        <p>I have recently had a negro and his daughter hold a few
        nights' services in my church. He is an ex-slave and a very
        good speaker. He spoke three nights in succession the
        subject, "From Log Cabin to the Pulpit." His sermons and
        lecture were good.</p>
        <p>Now he wants to put in a few weeks around here before he
        goes to Texas to take up Evangelistic work there. I could
        get him for you for the first of next week, beginning the
        24th, if you desire him. He will come on this arrangement.
        Your church will provide entertainment, he will preach
        three nights and then give the lecture for 23 and I0 cents
        a ticket, the proceeds of which he takes as his
        compensation.</p>
        <p>He was at the Salvation Army Barracks here last week,
        and they were so pleased with his work that they insisted
        on his staying this week also.</p>
        <p>I spoke to Brother Straw last week about getting this
        man a few nights' appointments about here, and he
        immediately suggested Holcombe. He has heard</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0101" n="196" />
        <p>196 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</p>
        <p>him preach and give his lecture, and desired me to
        convey his unqualified recommendation to you.</p>
        <p>We will not have many opportunities from now on to
        secure such men. Their ranks are being thinned about as
        fast as those of the old soldiers. This will give your
        young people an opportunity to hear and see a real
        ex-slave.</p>
        <p>Now if you want this man write me as soon as possible.
        His name is W. H. Robinson. He and his daughter are fairly
        good singers also.</p>
        <p>Sincerely,</p>
        <p>GUY W. CAMPBELL.</p>
        <p>We spent two weeks in Holcombe, with the result that
        twenty-five were happily converted and united with the
        church. From there we went to other points in Wisconsin. In
        Eau Claire and vicinity, to date, we have seen over eight
        hundred people born into the Kingdom of God, for which we
        give Him the glory, for God forbid that I glory in anything
        save the cross</p>
        <p>of Christ. May God bless the people of Eau Claire for
        their kindness to us.</p>
        <p>I want to thank my landlord, Mr. Stephen D. Hoover, and
        Mr. A. V. Mayhew, who made it possible for me to finance
        this edition of my history. I appreciate their true
        friendship. May they live long to do much good for the
        Master's Kingdom; also Mr. B. R. Barland, real estate man,
        for his untiring interest in us.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0101" n="197" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 197</head>
        <p>Believing that the large and fruitful work extending
        over a series of years by the Rev. W. H. Robinson, as an
        Evangelist, and his daughter assisting him as a singer, is
        worthy of recognition, and to the end that loyal effort, in
        the cause of truth and righteousness may not go
        unrewarded.</p>
        <p>I believe the good people of Eau Claire will join with
        me in the sentiment and aid which have enabled the worthy
        Evangelist to publish in book form a narrative of his very
        interesting life: a life beginning as a slave, with its
        atrocious incidents: his experiences as a union soldier:
        the acquiring of an education, and the consecrated use of
        that education for the uplifting of humanity: the object of
        such publication being the very commendable desire to carry
        the gospel to his people in Africa, his father's native
        land.</p>
        <p>If we, as citizens, and friends of humanity, will each
        purchase a copy, we will certainly get value received from
        the contents of this valuable book, and at the same time
        help him to answer the call of His Master, "Go ye into all
        the world and preach the gospel to every creature."</p>
        <p>B. R. Barland.</p>
        <p>I wish also to thank the publisher and his helpers for
        the interest taken in me, and for the good work they have
        done in getting out a more presentable book than the former
        ones were. Their suggestions and help in various ways have
        enabled me to re-edit my book, and to bring this edition up
        to a higher standard.</p>
        <p>I send this little book on its mission of love to all.
        Yours for Christ. W. H. ROBINSON.</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0102" n="198" />
        <p>198 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</p>
        <p>INDEX.</p>
        <p>Presentation&#8212;Endorsements 6</p>
        <p>Author's preface 9</p>
        <p>CHAPTER I--My family history, etc.--The Underground Ry.
        11-13</p>
        <p>CHAPTER II&#8212;Plan for father's freedom--Our Quaker
        friends&#8212;Father buys his freedom--The trip to
        California&#8212;The betrayal--His return in chains
        16-18</p>
        <p>CHAPTER III--The overseer and taskmaster--The slave
        hunter&#8212;Lee's negro raders' pen at Richmond, Virginia
        20-22</p>
        <p>CHAPTER IV--The false charge against father--Returned to
        slavery again--Pathetic parting--Our family scattered
        23-27</p>
        <p>CHAPTER V--Mother and three children willed to Scott
        Cowens&#8212;Cowens strikes mother and I strike him--I run
        away 28-32</p>
        <p>CHAPTER VI--Uncle Amos, the prophet--Murder of Frank
        Anderson&#8212;Lincoln, our second Moses--Three dollars
        paid for return of runaway negroes 31-37</p>
        <p>CHAPTER VII--Separated from my mother--Terrible whipping
        from my master-- In the traders' pen at
        Richmond&#8212;Heinous treatment of Fannie Woods and her
        babies 39-44</p>
        <p>CHAPTER VIII--Humiliating treatment of the ladies--I was
        sold on the block for $1.150&#8212;A slave whipped to
        death--Mothers separated from their children 45-50</p>
        <p>CHAPTER IX--Another new master--My first supper and the
        clever ruse of the milk-maid--Horrible murder of a slave
        whose task was too heavy 51-56</p>
        <p>CHAPTER X--My second runaway--The old colored mother who
        befriended me-- The efficacy of onions 58-61</p>
        <p>CHAPTER XI&#8212;The hounds after me and the use of
        onions--My ruse to cross the ferry--Quick witted
        Sambo&#8212;Captured again 62-67</p>
        <p>CHAPTER XII--Back to Lee's traders' pen again--A mother
        drowns herself and child--I learn of my mother 65-71</p>
        <p>CHAPTER XIII&#8212;Bought by Mr. Hadley and see mother
        again--I am kissed by a white woman--My happiness with
        mother soon ended 72-75</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0102" n="199" />
        <head>FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT. 199</head>
        <p>CHAPTER XIV--Back to Cowens family again--Uncle Tom, the
        overseer--The war approaching--The Southern Confederacy
        first meets at Montgomery, Alabama-Jefferson Davis elected
        president--His speech at Wilmington--How</p>
        <p>the slaves held church&#8212;Negro tricks 76-80</p>
        <p>CHAPTER XV--Slave holders' consistent family worship and
        sermon 81-88</p>
        <p>CHAPTER XVI--Ft. Sumter fired upon--The war begun in
        earnest--Joy of Uncle Tom and the slaves--How I delivered a
        note to my mistress--I go to the war with my master to
        "whip the Yankees in three days" 91-96</p>
        <p>CHAPTER XVII&#8212;The first battles of the war--Death
        of my master and my capture by the Yankees--incident before
        "Pap" Thomas--Am now a soldier for the union--Meet my
        mother at Greenville--Taking a load of contrabands with us
        on the march--How I paid for a cabin&#8212;The first
        colored troops from the free states 98-109</p>
        <p>CHAPTER XVIII--Rescue of union soldier by Aunt Nancy
        Jordan 111-113</p>
        <p>CHAPTER XIX--The negro in it--My enlistment--Regular
        battles I was in--Search for mother--My brother's escape
        from slavery--Mother found--Reunion of mother and six of
        the children 115-120</p>
        <p>CHAPTER XX--My work in the Nashville fire
        department--Finding of another brother--Reception given
        us--Brother's terrible death--Tour with Tennessee
        Singers--Engagement with Hanlon's Wizard Oil
        Company&#8212;Trip to London, England--Education
        begins&#8212;Letter to President Grant--Return to America
        121-132</p>
        <p>CHAPTER XXI&#8212;Entrance into college and politics--I
        teach school&#8212;Enter employment of car company--Narrow
        escape from death--My great conviction--Happily converted
        134-140</p>
        <p>CHAPTER XXII--My visions--I join Baptist
        church--Afterward join M. E. church and become member of
        Indiana District conference--Credentials given me by Bishop
        Foster 141-145</p>
        <p>CHAPTER XXIII My marriage&#8212;Children--Death of wife
        146-149</p>
        <pb facs="00010357_0103" n="200" />
        <p>200 FROM LOG CABIN TO THE PULPIT.</p>
        <p>CHAPTER XXIV--Taking up Evangelistic work--My daughter
        Dora's death 150-151</p>
        <p>The child's inquiry 152-157</p>
        <head>CHAPTER XXV--Origin of my family name 158-159</head>
        <p>CHAPTER XXVI--Keeping the charge of the
        Lord&#8212;Sermon, &#8220;The Exaltation of Christ"
        162-169</p>
        <head>CHAPTER XXVII&#8212;Sermon, "Prayer" 170-177</head>
        <head>CHAPTER XXVIII&#8212;Sermon, "Standards" 178-188</head>
        <p>Testimonials 189-193</p>
        <p>Author's letter of thanks 194-197</p>
        <p>ILLUSTRATIONS.</p>
        <p>&#8220;OLD GLORY." the Tattered Flag Frontispiece.</p>
        <p>Title page, "From Log Cabin to the Pulpit" 5</p>
        <p>Rev. W. H. Robinson, author 7</p>
        <p>Mrs. W. H. Robinson 8</p>
        <p>Miss Marguerite Robinson 19</p>
        <p>Miss Florence Mitchell 33</p>
        <p>Rev. W. H. Robinson and daughter, Marguerite 38</p>
        <p>The Angel of Liberty guarding the negro 57</p>
        <p>Mr. S. J. Richardson 67</p>
        <p>Abraham Lincoln 89</p>
        <p>The Lincoln Log Cabin 90</p>
        <p>W. H. Robinson taking the oath of allegiance 97</p>
        <p>Tribute to the heroes 110</p>
        <p>President McKinley 114</p>
        <p>Stephen D. Lee 133</p>
        <p>A Retrospection 160</p>
        <p>The old organ 161</p>
      </div>
    </body>
  </text>
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