<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_267" id="Page_267">267</SPAN></span></p>
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<ANTIMG src="images/i018.jpg" width-obs="550" height-obs="379" alt="Old Cudjo and the Angel" /></div>
<h2>OLD CUDJO AND THE ANGEL.</h2>
<p><ANTIMG src="images/dct.jpg" alt="T" width-obs="125" height-obs="123" class="floatl" /></p>
<p>HE little wharf at Mandarin is a tiny
abutment into the great blue sea of
the St. John's waters, five miles in
width. The opposite shores gleam out blue
in the vanishing distance; and the small wharf
is built so far out, that one feels there as in
a boat at sea. Here, trundled down on the
truck along a descending tram-way, come the
goods which at this point await shipment on
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_268" id="Page_268">268</SPAN></span>
some of the many steamboats which ply back
and forth upon the river; and here are landed
by almost every steamer goods and chattels for
the many families which are hidden in the shadows
of the forests that clothe the river's shore.
In sight are scarce a dozen houses, all told; but
far back, for a radius of ten or fifteen miles, are
scattered farmhouses whence come tributes of
produce to this point. Hundreds of barrels of
oranges, boxes of tomatoes and early vegetables,
grapes, peaches, and pomegranates, here pause
on their way to the Jacksonville market.</p>
<p>One morning, as the Professor and I were enjoying
our morning stroll on the little wharf, an
unusual sight met our eye,—a bale of cotton,
long and large, pressed hard and solid as iron,
and done up and sewed in a wholly workmanlike
manner, that excited our surprise. It was the
first time since we had been in Mandarin—a
space of some four or five years—that we had
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_269" id="Page_269">269</SPAN></span>
ever seen a bale of cotton on that wharf. Yet
the whole soil of East Florida is especially
adapted not only to the raising of cotton, but of
the peculiar, long staple cotton which commands
the very highest market-price. But for two or
three years past the annual ravages of the cotton-worm
had been so discouraging, that the culture
of cotton had been abandoned in despair.</p>
<p>Whence, then, had come that most artistic
bale of cotton, so well pressed, so trim and tidy,
and got up altogether in so superior a style?</p>
<p>Standing by it on the wharf was an aged
negro, misshapen, and almost deformed. He was
thin and bony, and his head and beard were grizzled
with age. He was black as night itself;
and but for a glittering, intellectual eye, he
might have been taken for a big baboon,—the
missing link of Darwin. To him spoke the Professor,
giving a punch with his cane upon the
well-packed, solid bale:—
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_270" id="Page_270">270</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Why, this is splendid cotton! Where did it
come from? Who raised it?"</p>
<p>"<i>We</i> raise it, sah,—me 'n' dis yer boy," pointing
to a middle-aged black man beside him:
"we raise it."</p>
<p>"Where?"</p>
<p>"Oh! out he'yr a piece."</p>
<p>A lounging white man, never wanting on a
wharf, here interposed:—</p>
<p>"Oh! this is old Cudjo. He lives up Julington.
He's an honest old fellow."</p>
<p>Now, we had heard of this settlement up Julington
some two or three years before. A party of
negroes from South Carolina and Georgia had
been induced to come into Florida, and take up a
tract of government land. Some white man in
whom they all put confidence had undertaken for
them the task of getting their respective allotments
surveyed and entered for them, so that they
should have a solid basis of land to work upon.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_271" id="Page_271">271</SPAN></span>
Here, then, they settled down; and finding, accidentally,
that a small central lot was not enclosed
in any of the allotments, they took it as an indication
that <i>there</i> was to be their church, and accordingly
erected there a prayer-booth, where they
could hold those weekly prayer-meetings which
often seem with the negroes to take the place of
all other recreations. The neighboring farmers
were not particularly well disposed towards the
little colony. The native Floridian farmer is a
quiet, peaceable being, not at all disposed to infringe
the rights of others, and mainly anxious for
peace and quietness. But they supposed that a
stampede of negroes from Georgia and Carolina
meant trouble for them, meant depredations upon
their cattle and poultry, and regarded it with no
friendly eye; yet, nevertheless, they made no
demonstration against it. Under these circumstances,
the new colony had gone to work with untiring
industry. They had built log-cabins and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_272" id="Page_272">272</SPAN></span>
barns; they had split rails, and fenced in their
land; they had planted orange-trees; they had
cleared acres of the scrub-palmetto: and any one
that ever has seen what it is to clear up an acre of
scrub-palmetto will best appreciate the meaning
of that toil. Only those black men, with sinews of
steel and nerves of wire,—men who grow stronger
and more vigorous under those burning suns that
wither the white men,—are competent to the
task.</p>
<p>But old Cudjo had at last brought his land
from the wild embrace of the snaky scrub-palmetto
to the point of bearing a bale of cotton like the
one on the wharf. He had subdued the savage
earth, brought her under, and made her tributary
to his will, and demonstrated what the soil of East
Florida might, could, and would do, the cotton-worm
to the contrary notwithstanding.</p>
<p>And yet this morning he stood by his cotton,
drooping and dispossessed. The white man that
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_273" id="Page_273">273</SPAN></span>
had engaged to take up land for these colonists
had done his work in such a slovenly, imperfect
manner, that another settler, a foreigner, had taken
up a tract which passed right through old Cudjo's
farm, and taken the land on which he had
spent four years of hard work,—taken his log-cabin
and barn and young trees, and the very
piece that he had just brought to bearing that
bale of cotton. And there he stood by it, mournful
and patient. It was only a continuation of
what he had always experienced,—always oppressed,
always robbed and cheated. Old Cudjo
was making the best of it in trying to ship his
bale of cotton, which was all that was left of four
years' toil.</p>
<p>"What!" said the Professor to him, "are you
the old man that has been turned out by that
foreigner?"</p>
<p>"Yes, sah!" he said, his little black eyes kindling,
and quivering from head to foot with excitement.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_274" id="Page_274">274</SPAN></span>
"He take ebry t'ing, ebry t'ing,—my
house I built myself, my fences, and more'n
t'ree t'ousand rails I split myself: he take 'em
all!"</p>
<p>There is always some bitter spot in a great loss
that is sorer than the rest. Those rails evidently
cut Cudjo to the heart. The "t'ree t'ousand
rails" kept coming in in his narrative as the utter
and unbearable aggravation of injustice.</p>
<p>"I split 'em myself, sah; <i>ebry one</i>, t'ree t'ousand
rails! and he take 'em all!"</p>
<p>"And won't he allow you any thing?"</p>
<p>"No, sah: he won't 'low me not'ing. He say,
'Get along wid you! don't know not'ing 'bout
<i>you</i>! dis yer land mine.' I tell him, '<i>You</i> don't
know old Cudjo; but de Lord know him: and
by'm by, when de angel Gabriel come and put
one foot on de sea, and t'odder on de land, and
blow de trumpet, he blow once for old Cudjo!
You mind now!'"
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_275" id="Page_275">275</SPAN></span></p>
<p>This was not merely spoken, but acted. The
old black kindled, and stepped off in pantomime.
He put, as it were, one foot on the sea, and the
other on the land; he raised his cane trumpetwise
to his mouth. It was all as vivid as reality
to him.</p>
<p>None of the images of the Bible are more frequent,
favorite, and operative among the black
race than this. You hear it over and over in every
prayer-meeting. It is sung in wild chorus in
many a "spiritual." The great angel Gabriel,
the trumpet, the mighty pomp of a last judgment,
has been the appeal of thousands of
wronged, crushed, despairing hearts through ages
of oppression. Faith in God's justice, faith in a
final triumph of right over wrong,—a practical
faith,—such had been the attainment of this poor,
old, deformed black. That and his bale of cotton
were all he had to show for a life's labor. He had
learned two things in his world-lesson,—work and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_276" id="Page_276">276</SPAN></span>
faith. He had learned the power of practical industry
in things possible to man: he had learned
the sublimer power of faith in God for things impossible.</p>
<hr class="l30" />
<p>Well, of course we were indignant enough about
poor old Cudjo: but we feared that the distant
appeal of the angel, and the last trump, was all
that remained to him; and, to our lesser faith,
that seemed a long way to look for justice.</p>
<p>But redress was nearer than we imagined. Old
Cudjo's patient industry and honest work had
wrought favor among his white neighbors. He
had lived down the prejudice with which the settlement
had first been regarded; for among quiet,
honest people like the Floridians, it is quite possible
to live down prejudice. A neighboring justice
of the peace happened to have an acquaintance in
Washington from this very district, acquainted
with all the land and land-titles. He wrote to this
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_277" id="Page_277">277</SPAN></span>
man an account of the case; and he interested
himself for old Cudjo. He went to the land-office
to investigate the matter. He found, that, in both
cases, certain formalities necessary to constitute a
legal entrance had been omitted; and he fulfilled
for old Cudjo these formalities, thus settling his
title; and, moreover, he sent legal papers by
which the sheriff of the county was enabled to do
him justice: and so old Cudjo was re-instated in
his rights.</p>
<p>The Professor met him, sparkling and jubilant,
on the wharf once more.</p>
<p>"Well, Cudjo, 'de angel' blew for you quicker
than you expected."</p>
<p>He laughed all over. "Ye', haw, haw! Yes,
massa." Then, with his usual histrionic vigor, he
acted over the scene. "De sheriff, he come down
dere. He tell dat man, 'You go right off he'yr.
Don't you touch none dem rails. Don't you take
one chip,—not one chip. Don't you take'—Haw,
haw, haw!" Then he added,—
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_278" id="Page_278">278</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"He come to me, sah: he say, 'Cudjo, what
you take for your land?' He say he gib me two
hunder dollars. I tell him, 'Dat too cheap; dat
all too cheap.' He say, 'Cudjo, what will you
take?' I say, 'I take ten t'ousand million dollars!
dat's what I take.' Haw, haw, haw!"
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