[Camp-Fire and Cotton-Field by Thomas W. Knox]@TWC D-Link book
Camp-Fire and Cotton-Field

CHAPTER XI
4/11

One of these slaves was cook and housemaid, and another found the care of four children enough for her attention.

The third was a man upward of fifty years old, who acted as stable-keeper, and manager of the out-door work of the establishment.
The situation of this landholder struck me as peculiar, though his case was not a solitary one.

A house of one room and with no window, a similar house for his human property, and a stable rudely constructed of small poles, with its sides offering as little protection against the wind and storms as an ordinary fence, were the only buildings he possessed.

His furniture was in keeping with the buildings.

Beds without sheets, a table without a cloth, some of the plates of tin and others of crockery--the former battered and the latter cracked--a less number of knives and forks than there were persons to be supplied, tin cups for drinking coffee, an old fruit-can for a sugar-bowl, and two teaspoons for the use of a large family, formed the most noticeable features.


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