[Aunt Phillis’s Cabin by Mary H. Eastman]@TWC D-Link book
Aunt Phillis’s Cabin

CHAPTER X
10/12

Yet she sighed as she thought of his saying, "see that such a thing never happens again." "If it had been a clear night," she thought within herself, "he shouldn't have stayed there.

But it was the Lord himself that sent the storm, and I can't see that he never sends another.

Anyway its done, and can't be helped;" and Phillis busied herself with her work and her children.
I have not given Phillis's cottage as a specimen of the cabins of the negroes of the South.

It is described from the house of a favorite servant.
Yet are their cabins generally, healthy and airy.

Interest, as well as a wish for the comfort and happiness of the slave, dictates an attention to his wants and feelings.


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