[Homestead on the Hillside by Mary Jane Holmes]@TWC D-Link book
Homestead on the Hillside

CHAPTER I
7/8

It was the grave of an old negro.

Alas! that to his last resting-place the curse should follow him! Had it been a white person who rested there, not half so fearful would have been the spot; now, however, it was "the old nigger hole"-- a place to run by if by accident you were caught out after dark--a place to be threatened with if you cried in the night and wanted the candle lighted--a landmark where to stop when going part way home with the little girl who had been to visit you, and who, on leaving you, ran no less swiftly than you yourself did, half-fearing that the dusky form in the holly would rise and try his skill at running.

Verily, my heart has beat faster at the thoughts of that dead negro than it ever has since at the sight of a hundred live specimens, "'way down south on the old plantation." The old schoolhouse, too, had its advantages and its disadvantages; of the latter, one was that there, both summer and winter, but more especially during the last-mentioned season, all the rude boys in the place thought they had a perfect right to congregate and annoy the girls in every possible way.

But never mind, not a few wry faces we made at them, and not a few "blockheads" we pinned to their backs! Oh! I've had rare times in that old house and have seen rare sights, too, to say nothing of the fights which occasionally occurred.

In these last brother Joe generally took the lead of one party, while Jim Brown commanded the other.


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