The White Slave, or Memoirs of a Fugitive/Contents
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
CONTENTS | ||
Chapter 1 | Memoirs | 5 |
Chapter 2 | The county in which I was born | 7 |
Chapter 3 | That education is the most effectual | 11 |
Chapter 4 | I was about seventeen years old | 18 |
Chapter 5 | The family of colonel Moore | 21 |
Chapter 6 | I had the same task with those | 28 |
Chapter 7 | It would be irksome to myself | 31 |
Chapter 8 | It was impossible for my wife | 39 |
Chapter 9 | I knew that the place where | 46 |
Chapter 10 | I learned afterwards | 58 |
Chapter 11 | It was past noon before we arrived at | 62 |
Chapter 12 | When I recovered my senses | 66 |
Chapter 13 | The next day I was to be sold | 70 |
Chapter 14 | When my new master learned that | 74 |
Chapter 15 | Some persons perhaps may think that | 84 |
Chapter 16 | It is the lot of the slave | 90 |
Chapter 17 | We were driven into the prison-yard | 98 |
Chapter 18 | I had been in the jail ten days | 102 |
Chapter 19 | We remained in jail some three weeks | 108 |
Chapter 20 | I had not been long in Mr Carleton's | 117 |
Chapter 21 | It seemed to be with the greatest | 125 |
Chapter 22 | Before we had half-finished what we had | 148 |
Chapter 23 | I have before observed that Sunday | 156 |
Chapter 24 | One Sunday morning when the boy | 160 |
Chapter 25 | When I got back to Carleton-Hall | 162 |
Chapter 26 | At length we arrived at Charleston | 168 |
Chapter 27 | Among Mr Carleton's servants | 173 |
Chapter 28 | It is customary in South Carolina | 182 |
Chapter 29 | Since the death of his wife | 189 |
Chapter 30 | The authority of masters over their slaves | 197 |
Chapter 31 | We scraped a shallow grave | 205 |
Chapter 32 | By the end of the winter | 210 |
Chapter 33 | We travelled slowly all that night | 213 |
Chapter 34 | I walked on as fast as I was able | 220 |
Chapter 35 | The favorable breezes | 227 |
Chapter 36 | We had a short passage to Liverpool | 231 |
Chapter 37 | Having formed the resolve recorded | 238 |
Chapter 38 | Having reached Richmond on my | 246 |
Chapter 39 | Returning to Richmond | 249 |
Chapter 40 | I lost not a moment in profiting | 255 |
Chapter 41 | Two or three days after my arrival at | 261 |
Chapter 42 | Returning the next day to Carleton Hall | 267 |
Chapter 43 | Mr Telfair, perhaps from professional | 275 |
Chapter 44 | In leaving Mr Mason's hospitable mansion | 284 |
Chapter 45 | As I began to approach the neighborhood | 291 |
Chapter 46 | When I recovered my senses | 305 |
Chapter 47 | Shortly after arriving at Charleston | 309 |
Chapter 48 | Hitherto, during my journey southward | 314 |
Chapter 49 | The stage coach stopped for dinner at | 321 |
Chapter 50 | As the late clerk, bookkeeper | 325 |
Chapter 51 | Mastering my emotion as well as I could | 332 |
Chapter 52 | It was not very difficult to discover | 343 |
Chapter 53 | Leaving my new acquaintance behind | 347 |
Chapter 54 | As I entered the town of Vicksburg | 351 |
Chapter 55 | Having written a letter of inquiry to | 378 |
Chapter 56 | The new mistress — into whose hands | 389 |
Chapter 57 | On Mr Colter’s suggestion | 390 |
Chapter 58 | Poor Eliza! Poor child indeed | 398 |
Chapter 59 | The very next morning | 430 |