Bricks Without Straw
war was over. The struggle for autonomy and the inviolability of slavery, on the part of the South, was ended, an
ce shackles again upon hands which had been raised in her defence, which had fought for her life and at her request. So the slave was a slave no
trustee for their benefit. Regarded from the legal standpoint it was, indeed, a strange position in which they were. A race despised, degraded, penniless, ignorant, houseless, homeless, fatherless, childless, nameless. Husband or wife there was not one in four millions. Not a child might call upon a father fo
which looked ignorantly on the fruits of the deliverance it had wrought. The North did not comprehend its w
omplacency for many a generation. All at once it was perceived to be a great enormity that four millions of Christian people, in a Christian land, should dwell together without marriage rite or family tie. While they were slaves, the fact that they might be bo
mblies that met in the various States, after the
sband and wife in the days of slavery, might, upon application to an
a certain time should be liable to indict
constitute such parties husband and wife, as of the
fficer should be entitled to receive the sum o
o earn at once their living and the money for this fee, and when they had procured it walked a score of miles in order that they might be "registered," and, for the brief period that remained to them of life, know that the law had sanctioned the relation which years of love and suffering had sanctified. It was the first act of freedom, the first step of legal recognition or manly responsibility! It was a proud hour and a proud fact for the race which had so long been bowed in thralldom and forbidden even the most common though the holiest of God's ordinances. What the law had taken little by little, as the science of Christian slavery grew up under the brutality of our legal progress, the law returned in bulk. It was the first
been reared, the temple of justice was as strange to their feet, and the ways and forms of ordinary business as marvelous to their minds as the etiquette of the king's palace to a peasant who has only looked from afar upon its pinnacled roof. The recent statute had imposed upon the clerk a labor of no little difficulty because of this ver
man, whose clothing had a hint of the soldier in it, a
ancing up, but not intermittin
we wants to be marr
, you mean,
t, sah; we m
to get a license and be marrie
ard der w
iving together a
dat we hab, d
gistered. This is the p
s,
s hav
difficulty endeavored to make a selection; finally,
one-doll
five, but I c
nto his pockets, brought out some pieces of fractional currency and
up his pen and prepared to fill
's Nimbu
bus
es' Nimbus." "But you m
at fer twenty-odd years,
you wo
r mysel
hose land d
ds at de same place, I does. An' my name's Nimbus
our old mas
lonel Pote
ughingly, "from the durned outlandish name.
r his name? He nebber gib it ter me no
to argue with you. He
sah? I hain't got no lar
certificate that Nimbus and Lugena Desmit had been duly registered as husband and wife,
e put in dat
act is, a man can't be married ac
hould hev ole Mahs'r's name widout his gibb
ut that's the
'n I knows what ter do wid, jes' kase I's free. But d
othing to d
in't de law a doin dis ter
tain
hich is de lawful chillen ef
t. "That would have been a good idea, but, y
ster Clerk, couldn't you jes' put dat on dis
taking back the certificate; "
ls him Lone for short-he's gwine on fo'; dis yer gal Wicey, she's two past; and dis little brack cuss
er, with a short certificate that they were present, and were acknowledged
nto the "contraband" and mercenary soldier Georg