[Twenty-Two Years a Slave, and Forty Years a Freeman by Austin Steward]@TWC D-Link book
Twenty-Two Years a Slave, and Forty Years a Freeman

CHAPTER II
13/23

A.'s plantation had to provide and prepare the supper for the expected vast "turn out," which was no light matter; and as slaves like on such occasions to pattern as much as possible after their master's family, the result was, to meet the emergency of the case, they _took_ without saying, "by your leave, Sir," some property belonging to their master, reasoning among themselves, as slaves often do, that it can not be _stealing_, because "it belongs to massa, and so do _we_, and we only use one part of his property to benefit another.

Sure, 'tis all massa's." And if they do not get detected in this removal of "massa's property" from one location to another, they think no more of it.
Col.

Alexander's slaves were hurrying on with their great preparations for the dance and feast; and as the time drew near, the old and knowing ones might be seen in groups, discussing the matter, with many a wink and nod; but it was in the valleys and by-places where the younger portion were to be found, rather secretly preparing food for the great time coming.
This consisted of hogs, sheep, calves; and as to master's _poultry_, that suffered daily.

Sometimes it was missed, but the disappearance was always easily accounted for, by informing "massa" that a great number of hawks had been around of late; and their preparation went on, night after night, undetected.

They who repaired to a swamp or other by-place to cook by night, carefully destroyed everything likely to detect them, before they returned to their cabins in the morning.
The night for the dance _came_ at last, and long before the time, the road leading to Col.


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