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The Man of Honor
Augustine Cardinay, the purchaser of Marion,
was from the Green Mountains of Vermont, and
his feelings were opposed to the holding of
slaves; but his young wife persuaded him
into the idea that it was no worse to own a
slave than to hire one and pay the money to
another. Hence it was that he had been
induced to purchase Marion.
Adolphus Morton, a young physician from the
same State, and who had just commenced the
practice of his profession in New Orleans,
was boarding with Cardinay when Marion was
brought home. The young physician had been
in New Orleans but a very few weeks, and had
seen but little of slavery. In his own
mountain home, he had been taught that the
slaves of the Southern States were Negroes,
and if not from the coast of Africa, the
descendants of those who had been imported.
He was unprepared to behold with composure a
beautiful white girl of sixteen in the
degraded position of a chattel slave.
The blood chilled in his young heart as he
heard Cardinay tell how, by bantering with
the trader, he had bought her two hundred
dollars less than he first asked. His very
looks showed that she had the deepest
sympathies of his heart.
Marion had been brought up by her mother to
look after the domestic concerns of her
cottage in Virginia, and well knew how to
perform the duties imposed upon her. Mrs.
Cardinay was much pleased with her new
servant, and often mentioned her good
qualities in the presence of Mr. Morton.
After eight months acquaintance with Marion,
Morton's sympathies ripened into love, which
was most cordially reciprocated by the
friendless and injured child of sorrow.
There was but one course which the young man
could honorably pursue, and that was to
purchase Marion and make her his lawful
wife; and this he did immediately, for he
found Mr. and Mrs. Cardinay willing to
second his liberal intentions.
The young man, after purchasing Marion from
Cardinay, and marrying her, took lodgings in
another part of the city. A private teacher
was called in, and the young wife was taught
some of those accomplishments so necessary
for one taking a high position in good
society.
Dr. Morton soon obtained a large and
influential practice in his profession, and
with it increased in wealth; but with all
his wealth he never owned a slave. Probably
the fact that he had raised his wife from
that condition kept the hydra headed system
continually before him. To the credit of
Marion be it said, she used every means to
obtain the freedom of her mother, who had
been sold to Parson Wilson, at Natchez. Her
efforts, however, had come too late; for
Agnes had died of a fever before the arrival
of Dr. Morton's agent.
Marion found in Adolphus Morton a kind and
affectionate husband; and his wish to
purchase her mother, although unsuccessful,
had doubly endeared him to her. Ere a year
had elapsed from the time of their marriage,
Mrs. Morton presented her husband with a
lovely daughter, who seemed to knit their
hearts still closer together. This child
they named Jane; and before the expiration
of the second year, they were blessed with
another daughter, whom they named Adrika.
These children grew up to the ages of ten
and eleven, and were then sent to the North
to finish their education, and receive that
refinement which young ladies cannot obtain
in the Slave States.
Clotelle or The Colored Heroine, A tale
of the Southern States
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Clotelle
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