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Diddie, Dumps, and Tot : Or, Plantation Child-Life


Pyrnelle, Louise Clarke, 1850-1907 / 2008-07-21 00:00:00

EBOOK, DIDDIE, DUMPS, AND TOT ***


This eBook was produced by Jim Weiler, xooqi.com

DIDDIE, DUMPS, AND TOT
OR
PLANTATION CHILD-LIFE
by
LOUISE-CLARKE PYRNELLE
TO MY DEAR FATHER
DR. RICHARD CLARKE
OF SELMA, ALABAMA
MY HERO AND MY BEAU
IDEAL OF A GENTLEMAN
I DEDICATE THIS BOOK
WITH THE LOVE OF HIS
DAUGHTER
PREFACE
IN writing this little volume, I had for my primary object the idea of
keeping alive many of the old stories, legends, traditions, games,
hymns, and superstitions of the Southern slaves, which, with this
generation of negroes, will pass away. There are now no more dear old
"Mammies" and "Aunties" in our nurseries, no more good old "Uncles" in
the workshops, to tell the children those old tales that have been
told to our mothers and grandmothers for generations-- the stories
that kept our fathers and grandfathers quiet at night, and induced
them to go early to bed that they might hear them the sooner.
Nor does my little book pretend to be any defence of slavery. I know
not whether it was right or wrong (there are many pros and cons on the
subject); but it was the law of the land, made by statesmen from the
North as well as the South, long before my day, or my father's or
grandfather's day; and, born under that law a slave-holder, and the
descendant of slave-holders, raised in the heart of the cotton
section, surrounded by negroes from my earliest infancy, "I KNOW
whereof I do speak"; and it is to tell of the pleasant and happy
relations that existed between master and slave that I write this
story of Diddie, Dumps, and Tot.
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