Minnie's Sacrifice 
 
Project Gutenberg's Minnie's Sacrifice, by Frances Ellen Watkins 
Harper This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and 
with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away 
or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included 
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Title: Minnie's Sacrifice 
Author: Frances Ellen Watkins Harper 
Release Date: February 12, 2004 [EBook #11053] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ASCII 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MINNIE'S 
SACRIFICE *** 
 
Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Andrea Ball and the Online Distributed 
Proofreading Team. 
 
Transcriber's Note: This document is the text of Minnie's Sacrifice. 
Any bracketed notations such as [Text missing], [?], and those inserting 
letters or other comments are from the original text. 
Transcriber's Note About the Author: Francis Ellen Watkins Harper 
(1825-1911) was born to free parents in Baltimore, Maryland. 
Orphaned at three, she was raised by her uncle, a teacher and radical 
advocate for civil rights. She attended the Academy for Negro Youth 
and was educated as a teacher. She became a professional lecturer, 
activist, suffragette, poet, essayist, novelist, and the author of the first 
published short story written by an African-American. Her work
spanned more than sixty years. 
 
MINNIE'S SACRIFICE 
A Rediscovered Novel by 
Frances E.W. Harper 
Edited By Frances Smith Foster 
 
Chapter I 
Miriam sat in her lowly cabin, painfully rocking her body to and fro; 
for a great sorrow had fallen upon her life. She had been the mother of 
three children, two had died in their infancy, and now her last, her 
loved and only child was gone, but not like the rest, who had passed 
away almost as soon as their little feet had touched the threshold of 
existence. She had been entangled in the mazes of sin and sorrow; and 
her sun had gone down in darkness. It was the old story. Agnes, fair, 
young and beautiful, had been a slave, with no power to protect herself 
from the highest insults that brutality could offer to innocence. Bound 
hand and foot by that system, which has since gone down in wrath, and 
blood, and tears, she had fallen a victim to the wiles and power of her 
master; and the result was the introduction of a child of shame into a 
world of sin and suffering; for herself an early grave; and for her 
mother a desolate and breaking heart. 
While Miriam was sitting down hopelessly beneath the shadow of her 
mighty grief, gazing ever and anon on the pale dead face, which 
seemed to bear in its sad but gentle expression, an appeal from earth to 
heaven, some of the slaves would hurry in, and looking upon the fair 
young face, would drop a word of pity for the weeping mother, and 
then hurry on to their appointed tasks. All day long Miriam sat alone 
with her dead, except when these kindly interruptions broke upon the 
monotony of her sorrow. 
In the afternoon, Camilla, the only daughter of her master, entered her 
cabin, and throwing her arms around her neck exclaimed, "Oh! 
Mammy, I am so sorry I didn't know Agnes was dead. I've been on a
visit to Mr. Le Grange's plantation, and I've just got back this afternoon, 
and as soon as I heard that Agnes was dead I hurried to see you. I 
would not even wait for my dinner. Oh! how sweet she looks," said 
Camilla, bending over the corpse, "just as natural as life. When did she 
die?" 
"This morning, my poor, dear darling!" And another burst of anguish 
relieved the overcharged heart. 
"Oh! Mammy, don't cry, I am so sorry; but what is this?" said she, as 
the little bundle of flannel began to stir. 
"That is poor Agnes' baby." 
"Agnes' baby? Why, I didn't know that Agnes had a baby. Do let me 
see it?" 
Tenderly the grandmother unfolded the wrappings, and presented the 
little stranger. He was a beautiful babe, whose golden hair, bright blue 
eyes and fair complexion showed no trace of the outcast blood in his 
veins. 
"Oh, how beautiful!" said Camilla; "surely this can't be Agnes' baby. 
He is just as white as I am, and his eyes--what a beautiful blue--and his 
hair, why it is really lovely." 
"He is very pretty, Miss, but after all he is only a slave." 
A slave. She had heard that word before; but somehow, when applied 
to that fair child, it grated harshly on her ear; and she said, "Well, I 
think it is a shame for him to be a slave, when he is just as white as 
anybody. Now, Mammy," said she, throwing off her hat, and looking 
soberly into the fire, "if I had my way, he should never be a slave."    
    
		
	
	
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