[Uncle Tom’s Cabin, Young Folks’ Edition by Harriet Beecher Stowe]@TWC D-Link book
Uncle Tom’s Cabin, Young Folks’ Edition

CHAPTER XX
3/5

He talked gently to her, telling her of Uncle Tom's last loving messages.

So she was comforted a little.
One morning, about a month after this, George Shelby called all his servants together, telling them he had something to say to them.
They wondered what it could be, and were very much surprised when he appeared, carrying a bundle of papers in his hand.
They were still more astonished when he gave a paper to each one, and told them all that they were free.
With sobs and tears and shouts they pressed round him, thanking and blessing him.

But some of them came with anxious faces, begging him to take their free papers back again, and not to send them away.
'We don't want to be any freer than we are,' they said.

'We have always had all we wanted.' 'We don't want to leave the old place, and young mas'r and Missis, and the rest.' [Illustration] 'My good friends,' said George, when he could get silence, 'there will be no need for you to leave me.

We want quite as many servants as we did before.


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