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KEY TO UNCLE TOM'S CABIN.
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not allowed to talk with the other servants, his master fearing a consipiracy. In one of his letters he says, "I have seen more trouble here in one day than I have in all my life." In another, "I would be glad to hear from her [his wife], but I should be more glad to hear of her death than for her to come here."
In his distress, Tom wrote a letter to Mr. Bigelow, of Washington. People who are not in the habit of getting such documents have no idea of them. We give a facsimile of Tom's letter, with all its poor spelling, all its ignorance, helplessness, and misery.
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/54/A_Key_to_Uncle_Tom%27s_Cabin_%281853%29_letter.jpg/500px-A_Key_to_Uncle_Tom%27s_Cabin_%281853%29_letter.jpg)