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

CHAPTER XXVI
67/119

I know "lots" of good men there, but none good enough to befriend colored people.

They seem to me to have an unconquerable antipathy to them.

But Mrs.Stowe says, _she_ educates them in her own family with her own children.

I am glad to hear she feels and acts kindly toward them, and I wish others in her region of country would imitate her in this respect; but I would rather _my_ children and negroes were educated at different schools, being utterly opposed to amalgamation, root and branch.
She asks the question, "_What_ can any individual do ?" Strange that any one should be at a loss in this working world of ours.
Christian men and women should find enough to occupy them in their families, and in an undoubted sphere of duty.
Let the people of the North take care of their own poor.
Let the people of the South take care of theirs.
Let each remember the great and awful day when they must render a final account to their Creator, their Redeemer, and their Judge.
THE END LIPPINCOTT, GRAMBO & CO.'S PUBLICATIONS.
* * * * * FROST'S JUVENILE SERIES.
TWELVE VOLUMES, 16mo., WITH FIVE HUNDRED ENGRAVINGS.
WALTER O'NEILL, OR THE PLEASURE OF DOING GOOD.

25 Engrav'gs.
JUNKER SCHOTT, and other Stories.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books