[Uncle Tom's Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe]@TWC D-Link bookUncle Tom's Cabin CHAPTER XVIII 16/27
Are you sure they can be relied on ?" Augustine laughed immoderately at the grave and anxious face with which Miss Ophelia propounded the question. "O, cousin, that's too good,--_honest!_--as if that's a thing to be expected! Honest!--why, of course, they arn't.
Why should they be? What upon earth is to make them so ?" "Why don't you instruct ?" "Instruct! O, fiddlestick! What instructing do you think I should do? I look like it! As to Marie, she has spirit enough, to be sure, to kill off a whole plantation, if I'd let her manage; but she wouldn't get the cheatery out of them." "Are there no honest ones ?" "Well, now and then one, whom Nature makes so impracticably simple, truthful and faithful, that the worst possible influence can't destroy it.
But, you see, from the mother's breast the colored child feels and sees that there are none but underhand ways open to it.
It can get along no other way with its parents, its mistress, its young master and missie play-fellows.
Cunning and deception become necessary, inevitable habits.
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