xt7x959c8s9r https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7x959c8s9r/data/mets.xml Hugo, Victor, 1802-1885 1844 1791 80 pages, 25 cm. Call Number: PQ2285.B8 E1 1844 Imperfect (?) all following p. 80 wanting; p. 79-80 mutilated books PQ2285.B8 E1 1844 English J. Mowatt and Co Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection Bug-Jargal; Or, A Tale of the Massacre in St. Domingo. 1791, 1844 text Bug-Jargal; Or, A Tale of the Massacre in St. Domingo. 1791, 1844 1844 1844 1791 2024 true xt7x959c8s9r section xt7x959c8s9r , w @K/x © Wad-OW 5, a xxx» x g YBJQYEYE 3 xx @3 EYE 02 ' a (an e] A TALE OF THE MASSACRE IN ST. DOMINGO. 1791. BY VICTOR HUGO, AUTHOR OF “NOTRE DAME DE PARIS.” TRANSLATED FROM THE SIXTEENTH FRENCH EDITION- NEW YORK : JAMES MOWATT & 00., At the Depot of New Publications, H 174 BROADWAY, CORNER OF MAIDEN LANE, 0’ w. B. KIMBAL, BOSTON; R. G. BERFORD, 101 CHESNUT 51"., PHILADELPHIA; GEORGE JONES, é, ALBANY; A. BURKE, BUFFALO; J. \V. COOK, PITTSBURGH; WM. TAYLOR, BALTIMORE; 0x..- ROBINSON AND JONES, CINCINNATI; W. N. HALDEMAN, LOUISVILLE; JOHN SLY, 64 RUE ROYAL, NEW ORLEANS. BUG-JARGAL‘? A TALE OF THE MASSACRE IN ST. DOMINGO. 1791. BY VICTOR HUGO;/ AUTHOR OF “NOTRE DAME DE PARIS.” x/‘\/\..‘_"-d" _/‘._/‘\/‘»,«—\,'* V»; > / \, xn; “.1 a, a, ‘,.' ., *~_,.~., < x A .h ’N/N/x/X/xrfl/‘Vr‘x/ TRANSLATED FROM THE SIXTEENTH FRENCH EDITION. NEW YORK: PUBLISHED BY JAMES MOWATT No. 174 Broadway. 1844. I ‘ yv' ’ o ‘ ’1 - _ V ‘ b 7 1 t "' if t _ .1 / I :55 ' \ (A U”.- . Entered according to the Act of Congress, in the year 1844, by JAMES MOWATT a; 00., ‘ in the Clerk's office of the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of New York: _/~!"‘ .f «-.-4- ,. “.1“ Q. ,, s.w. BENEDICT8L co., PRINT. 128 Fulton Street. "PREFACE, lN 1818 the author of the following work had attained the age of sixteen years; it ’\ appears that he wrote a volume in" fifteen days. It was BUG-JARGAL. Sixteen years! It is the age when the mind feels itself equal to any task; the age of young hopes; a dazzling sun, and a glittering horizon : all is improvisation. The present volume, therefore, was written two years before Han d’ Islande .- and although, sevenyears later in life, the author reviewed and rewrote a large portion of the work, it is none the less both in the conception and variety of its details“ the first work of the author. He should, perhaps, beg the indulgence of his readers for detaining them with matters of so little importance to them: but he thought that the small number of persons who delight to classify by the rank of life, and by the order of birth, the various works of a poet, how obscure soever that poet may he, would not be offended at being informed of the age of Bug-Jargali and it Was with him as with the travellers who turn about in the midst of theirpilgrimage and seek to discover in the foggy folds of the horizon the place from which they took their departure. He was anxious to impress the stamp of memory upon that period of his ardor, boldness, and assurance, when he applied himself to so immense a task; a task no less than the dramatic narrative of the revolt of the blacks of St. Domingo 1n 1791—a struggle of giants, three worlds hanging in suspense upon the issue: Europe and Africa as the combatants, and America as the scene of the war Pan's, March, 1832. 1 silainzlnwr‘ 115 12'! \‘I\I\ ,, 5, _ , ...7\. (.5, .\\\v. 2x. , .\v: .3\.l , 85’. Q i ‘1 : ‘\ciél.\» ,5? .~..~.ai..§.,..' .. ”I"... ._ ,i ‘5 , m u 9.1" lNTRODUCTION, THE following episode, the subject of which is the revolt of the slaves of St. Domingo in 17 91, wears such an air of circumstance, that the author came under the ban of the Censor, and was forbidden to publish it. A rough sketch of the work, however, having already been printed, and distributed in a restricted number of copies in 1820, at an epoch When the politics‘of the day was little occupied with Hayti, it is evident, that if the subject he treats has since acquired a new degree of interest, it is not from any fault of the author. These are events, which have adapted themselves to the book, and not the book to the events. However that may be, the author did not dream of rescuing his production from the kind of twilight, in which it had been enshrouded : but being apprised that a publisher in the Capital had proposed to reprint his anonymous sketch, he thought to prevent that reprint by bringing out his own work reviewed, and, in a great measure reconstructed ; a )recaution, which spared his self-love a little ennui, and perhaps saved his publisher a bad speculation. Several distinguished individuals, both colonists and functionaries, who were embroiled in the troubles of St. Domingo, having been apprised of the approach- ing publication, had a desire to communicate to the author materials of a still more valuable character than had been previously embodied in the work. Of this aid the author retains a lively and grateful recollection. The documents, thus obtained, have been singularly useful in rectifying the narrative of D’Auverney, filling up its former incompleteness in respect of local accuracy, and its uncertainty in relation to historical verity. In conclusion, the reader ought to be informed, that Bug-Jargal is only a fragment of a more extensive work, which was intended to be composed under the title of “ TALES UNDER A TENT.” In the supposition of the author, several French officers during the wars of the Revolution agreed to while away the long nights of bivouac by the alternate recital of their several adventures. The following episode constitutes a part of that series of narrations. It can be de- tached from its fellows without the slightest inconvenience : moreover, the original series has never been cornpleted, and never will be: no necessity seems to demand it, and the completeness of the tale gives satisfaction to all parties concerned. ..,.-,. ” '—7:T'./- “ _ - . -- _ - ,f _ . ,7 . -"“-.Z‘"" ,7 ,1f 3., ABUG-JARGAL: A TALE { . ( CHAPTER I. a: as an: 46 44: a: r1 a: ae st at: i: as ah an: at: a: xx: 41: at: it at THE bivouac was set. In the regular series it now came the turn of our cap- tain, Leopold D’Auverney ; with an air of surprise, he assured his comrades that he could recall no event of his life Which could lay claim to their attention. ‘But, captain,’ said Lieutenant Henri ‘apart from all your modesty, it is the common report, that you have been an un- tiring traveller, and haVe seen the world. Have you not paid visits to the Antilles, to Africa, Italy, Spain ?—-Ah, captain, here’s your lame dog.’ D’Auverney started from his chair; the fragrant regalia fell from his fingers, as he turned toward the entrance of the tent at the moment that an enormous dog came limping to his side. As the animal hob- bled past, he crushed the cigar; the cap- tain heeded it not. The dog, with the utmost expression of joy, wagged his tail, licked his master’s feet, uttered many a faint whine, and, af- ter several sorry attempts at antics and - gambols, came and crouched at the cap- tain’s feet. Amid deep and even intense emotion, D’Auverney caressed the faithful ‘fellow with his left hand, musing in a half mechanical reverie, while with the other :‘he loosened the glazed strap of his gor- get ; the words came from his lips like the endless burthen of a song, ‘You here, Rask! you here!’ At length, however, on, OF THE ST. DOMINGO. W‘NW breaking from his trance, he exclaimed, ‘ Who brought you back 2’ ‘ By your leave, my captain.’ For some moments the honest sergeant Thaddeus had been standing at the up- lifted curtain of the tent, his right arm en- veloped in the folds of his riding-coat, hlS eyes moistening with tears, as he watched the denouement of this Odyssey. As It drew near its close, he ventured to open his lips : ‘ By your leave, my Captain.’ . At these words D’Auverney raised his e es. y‘ Thou, Thad? And how the devil wert thou able '9 Poor dog! I thought him in the English camp. Where did you find him then?’ . ‘ Thank God ! you see me, my Captam, as happy as that little nephew. of yours was, when you first introduced him to the mysteries of declension : “ cornu, a horn, cornu, of a horn.”’ ‘Never mind that, didst thou find him '9’ ‘ I did not find him. I merely went off in search.’ The captain rose and extended his hand to the generous sergeant; but that of the latter remained enveloped in his riding- coat. The captain, hardly aroused from his vacant reverie, did not seem to observe the circumstance. ‘ It was because— you see, captain, from the moment poor Rask was lost, I perceived, if Thad may be so hold, by your leave, that there was something miss- ing from our circle. To confess the truth, that very evening, when he failed to come, as usual, and share my honest rations, it but tell me, where , would have taken but little to have made old Thaddeus fall to sobbing and blubber— ing, like a baby. But no, thank God ! twice only in his life has Thaddeus shed tears; the first was when— that is, the day when ’ A The sergeant hesitated, and scanned the countenance of his captain with an evi- dent air of disquietude. ‘ The second was, when it struck the fancy of that odd and merry blade Baltha- zer, corporal in the seventh d‘emi-brigade, to make me tear the hides off a bunch of onions.’ ‘ I think,’ exclaimed Henri, as he burst into a loud laugh, ‘ thatyou omitted to tell us on what occasion you first wept.’ ‘Out with it, Thaddeus. \Vas it not, my old friend, when you were dubbed first grenadier of France, by the sword of La- tour D’Auvergne? Tell the truth,’ said the captain, as he continued his caresses to the happy Rask. ‘ No, captain; if sergeant Thaddeus had tears to shed, they could only have burst from these eyelids on that black day when he shouted “ fire” upon Bug-Jargal, or as he is otherwise called, Pierrot.’ A cloud of successive emotions seemed to flit across the features of D’Auverney. Quickly approaching the sergeant, he made an effort to grasp his hand; but, not- withstanding the great honor of such a condescention, ollehaddeus retained his arm in its hiding-p ace beneath his riding- coat.‘ ‘ Yes, captain,’ continued Thaddeus, re- tiring a few paces, while D’Auverney re- garded his old friend with an expressron bordering upon anguish, ‘ yes, I had tears then to shed ; yes, he was worthy ofa man’s tears. His skin was black, 't is true, but the powder in the cannon is lack, and— and——’ The honest sergeant was racking his brain to give a noble finale to his whimsi- cal comparison. There was something-in the lame approach to a simile which pleased his fancy, but he essayed in vain to give it utterance; and after returning, so to speak, many times to the assault, and charging his ideas at every vulnerable point of its significancy, like a prudent general repulsed from a fortified post, he raised the siege and pursued his narrative, unmindful of the young officers, Who were enjoying the sergeant’s discomfiture. ‘Do you recollect, captain, how the poor negro rushed upon us, all out of breath, at the very moment when ten of his com- rades, who stood hostages for his return, were brought forth? Yes, the cords were already bound upon their arms. 1 had BUG-JARGAL. command of the platoon. When, with his own hands, he tore off the chains of his hostages to take their place, how in- _ flexible he was in resisting their ardent generosity! 0, what a noble man! He was a true Gibraltar. And then, captain, how straight and proud he stood there, just as if he were going to lead off a ballet, and his dog, old Rask there, who seemed to guess what was about to happen, leaped, upon me and seized me by the throat—” ‘ Thad,’ interrupted the captain, ‘you do not usually pass over that part of your story, without bestowing a few caresses on , L Rask. See, how the honest fellow my" gazing at you ! ’ - ‘Right, my captain,‘ answered Thad-y deus, with evident embarrassment, ‘ poor ‘ Rask may be gazing at me, but——-—the old Malagrida used .to tell me it was a bad omen to pat a dog with the left hand.’ ‘ ‘And why not use the right?’ demand- ed D’Auverney with surprise, for the first time observing the arm enveloped in the riding-coat, and the pallid countenance of' Thaddeus. The embarrassment of the sergeant began to deepen. ‘ By yourleave, captain, it is because—-. You already have a maimed dog; I fear you are also to have a maimed sergeant.’ The captain in an instant started from his seat. ‘How ? What ? What say you, my old Thaddeus? Maimed ! Let’s see your arm—maimed! Great God 1’ ’ D’Auverney trembled with suspense; the sergeant slowly unrolled his mantle, and offered to the eye of his captain the arm wrapped in a handkerchief, stiff with the coagulated blood. ‘ Oh! my God!’ murmered the cap- ’ tain, as he carefully raised the bandage. ‘But tell‘me, my old friend, how————? ’ ‘O, that is a very easy matter. I told you that I saw you bewailed the loss of your fine dog, the noble fellow whom the redcoats stole away ; poor Rask, the com‘ panion of Bug—. Enough,enough; I re- solved to fetch him back again this very day, at the risk of my own life. Iwanted to eat one supper again, with something like an appetite. Well, you see, Igave your soldier, Mathelet, his orders, over and over again, to give the best polish to your. best uniform, as the morrow is the day of battle; then I stole softly out of the camp and, with only my sabre in hand, took my way over hedges and ditches, to reach the English camp by the shortest cut. I had hardly gained the first outposts, when, by your leave, captain,I discovered in a little copse upon my left, a riotous troop of the redcoats. Crawling up to spy out their : '\ ,m, if BUG-JARGAL. 9 s of i . . . . . in- 3 busrness, Without their catchinga glimpse lent . ofmy movements, Idiscovered 1n the very He 1 midst of them old Rask, bound to a tree, ain, ' whlle two of the John_Bulls, naked as two just 3 Hottentots, were boxtpg away at each llet, ;: other’s bones, and making as great arack- ned' ,3. et as the bass-drums of a demt-brtgade. ped. '3 They were two English privates, fighting a _n ‘ :3 duel for the ownership of your stolen dog. The moment Rask saw me, he gave so fu- riousa spring in his collar that the cord l snapped, and in a twinkling the good fel- ‘ low was pulling away at my trowscrs. As you might imagine, the troop did not long tad- . sit idle. I plunged into the neighboring I001. rt" copse; Rask follotved. Many a bullet old V whiStled past my head. Rask answered bad them with hearty barks; but, happily, they could not hear his voice amid their nd- own noisy outcry of “ French dog, French irst dog,” as if your dog was not a splendid, the noble blood from St. Domingo._ But let 'of that pass. I traversed (the thicket, and the Was just emerging from the oppOStte Slde, when two redcoats presented their pistols at my breast. My sabre soon rid me of one of them, and was proceeding to de- liver me from his fellow.-—but his pistol 'r was charged with ball. There, there’s my right arm—never mind. French dog fell upon his neck and hugged him, like a ny meeting of old acquaintances; the Eng- )ur lishman strangled and fell, and, I think, he . . found it a rude embrace. Now, why .e, should that devil of man be as eager to Le, catch me as ever a beggar was after a it}: seminariat? \Vell, Thad has got back to camp again, and flash too. I am only sorry that God did not keep that ball to lp' send me in the battle to-morrow ’ ie. The countenance of the old sergeant . darkened at the thought of not having re- )Id l ceived the wound in battle. Of "I‘haddeus,’ cried the captain in an he irritated tone of voice ; but soon softening n— ‘ his manner, he added, ‘ Why were you so re- l foolish as thus to expose your life for a ry it." dog?’ Ed it ‘It was not for a dog, captain; it was 1g i for Rask.’ The features of D’Auverney ve "l in an instant relaxed their stern complex- ld “ ion. The sergeant continued, ‘For Rask, ur . a“ the dog of Bug———’ ‘Enough, enough, my old Thad!’ ex- 1p ‘ claimed the captain, raising his hand to 'Y ,»'his forehead, and stifling a starting tear. 1'3 3 ‘ Come,’ added be after a short pause, ‘let Ld -‘ us be going ; lean upon my arm; attend ’y f me to the quarters of the surgeon.’ le After a, modest resistance, Thaddeus re ' ’ yielded. The dog, who during this scene “- had in his joy half gnawed through a fine ; 2 I . TN?” - ,M—é‘" . a. — bearskin for his master, sprang up at the signal, and followed them from the tent. CHAPTER II. THE preceding episode had awakened the liveliest curiosity in'the breasts of the mirthful story-tellers. Captain Leopold D’Auverney was one of that class of men, who, upon whatever round of the ladder fortune or the fluctua- tions of society may have left them, con- tinue to inspire a high degree of respect and interest. There was nothing, however in his appearance which would impress at first sight. His manners were cold and distant, and his features of an indifferent beauty. A tropical sun, in throwing its bronze tinges over his face, had failed to contribute also that vivacity ofgesture and conversation which is found in the Creole, united with a nonchalance that is fre- quently full of grace and elegance. D’Au- verney was a man of few 'words, rarely a listener, but always exhibited a readiness for action. The first upon his horse, and the last to retire to his tent, he seemed to seek in bodily fatigue a means of distrac— tion front some corroding reminiscences. Upon the early wrinkles of his open brow, sad thoughts had engraven their severe outline. They were not of that kind; of which men can rid themselves by commu- nication, nor of thatspecies which readily mix in the frivolous conversation bf com- panions, and are thus soon absorbed in the ideas and opinions of others. Leopold D’Auverney, whose physical powers the arduous labors of war could not subdue, seemed to experience an insupportable fa- tigue in What are termed the encounters of wit. He shunned controversy and dis- sention as eagerly as he courted the din of arms. Ifhe occasionally allowed himself to be drawn into a dispute, he would throw out a few sentiments, full of good sense and solid reason, and then, at the very point of conquering his adversary, would dismiss the subject with the remark, ‘ To what purpose is all this ?’ and leaving the company, would proceed to his commander to inquire what could be done, while wait- ing the hour for the charge or the assault. His comrades pardoned his cold, taciturn and reserved habits, for they found him on every occasion brave, generous and benevo- lent. The lives of many of their circle he had saved, at the imminent danger of his own, and they had learned, that though his lips were rarely opened, his purse at least was never closed. Beloved by the. iO army, all forgave him a hauteur of con- duct, the sole fruit of which was the re- quisition of a reverence somewhat more formal than his rank could claim. He had seen but few years. Though supposed to be about thirty, he was far from having reached that period of life; and notwithstanding he had fought for some time in the ranks of the Repu'hl'can army, the adventures of his life were un~ known to his companions in arms. . The only being, besides Rask, who ever elicited from him any lively demonstration of at- tachment, was the noble old sergeant Thaddeus, who had with him entered the corps, and never quitted his side. From this individual his comrades had wrung a few vague particulars of his mysterious fortunes. It was known that D’Auverney had suf- fered great reverses of fortune in the West Indies; that having married in St. Do- mingo, he soon after lost his wife and all his relations in the massacres which mark- ed the progress of the Revolution in that magnificent colony. At the present epoch of French history, reverses of this charac- ter were so common that they elicited a kind of universal sympathy, and every one seemed ready to assume and bear a part. But Captain D’Auverney was less com- miserated for the losses he had suffered, than for his manner of enduring their memory ; for, under the thin veil ofan icy . indifference, any one might easily catch glimpses ofa wound that was internal and incurable. . At the commencement of battle, his brow would appear calm. During the ac- tion his spirit was as intrepid as if the eye of hisambition was upon the rank of a marshal; yet after the victory, he was as retiring and modest as ifhis highest desire were to be a private in the ranks. His comrades, observing his contempt of honor and advancement, could not comprehend the reason, why, before a combat, his eye seemed to glisten with an indefinable hope or desire,—not divining that D’Auverney, amid all the chances of war, had but one hope and but one desire—death. On one occasion the National Repre- sentatives despatched a delegation to the army, to nominate him the general of a brigade upon.the very field of battle : he declined the honor because, by separating from his company, it would be necessary to part with his sergeant Thaddeus. A few days after, he offered to head an expe- ditmn of great danger, from which, how- ever, contrary] to universal anticipation, and certainly against his own wishes, he returned in safety. Then was he over BUG-JAR‘GAL-. heard, in a fit of mortification, to regret his former refusal of promotion, ‘for,’ said he, ‘ since the enemy’s cannon is fated to spare me, the guillotine, which is thirsting to decapitate every fortunate aspirant, might haply drop its keen and welcome edge on this neck of mine.’ CHAPTER III. SUCH was the individual whose myste» rious history, the moment he had left the tent, gave rise to the following conversa- non. ‘ I’ll wager,” said Lieutenant Henri, wiping from his red boot a large spot of mud which the dog had left upon it as he hobbled by, ‘I’ll wager that our captain would not exchange his dog’s lame feet even for those ten baskets of Madeira we had a glimpse of the other day in the ge- neral’s wagon.’ ‘Tnt, tut!’ said the aid-de-camp Pas- chal, in a gay tone, ‘ that would be driving a bad bargain. I know something about that affair: the baskets are empty, and,’ he added in a serious tone, ‘thirty bottles with their corks out would, as you are aware, lieutenant, be of no service to the paw of this poor dog, out of which the most that could be fashioned would be but ——a little bell-handle.’ The gravity with which the aid-de— camp pronounced these last words .con- vulsed the company with laughter. A young officer of the Basque-I—Iussars, Al- fred, who alone did notjoin in the merri- ment, exclaimed with an air of chagrin, ‘ 1 do not see, gentlemen, any great subject of mirth in what has transpired. This dog, and this sergeant, whomI ob- serve to be ever attending D’Auverney, ap- pear to me to be objects that should excite a little more curiosity in us to know their history. In fine, this scene—’ Piqued at the chagrin of Alfred and the gay humor of the company, Paschal inter~ rupted him—~ ‘ 1 ‘ Come, come; this scene is getting very sentimental. Merely a dog recovered and an arm broken.’ ‘Captain Paschal, you are in error,’ re- plied Henri, casting the bottle he hadjust emptied out of the tent; ‘this Bug—, or so called Pierrot, has awakened my curiosity most provokingly.’ " Though more than half inclined to be angry,Paschal restrained his passion on ob- serving that the. glass, which he thought empty, was again sparkling to the brim. At this moment D’Auverney re-entered \ \Vhat does it amount to? ‘ . flab/JV. and wot eou pos be ‘ not hin intt rais of} re‘t rid “g nr, no .te» 521' les are the the but de— on- Al- rri- eat ed. ob- ap- :ite teil‘ the , cry :0 ? ‘ rrn re- US! 'so ity be 3b- [ht ‘ed -..Jg/.’r,.._s.c .. , _ V lieutenant. At length he yielded to their .« Api- BUG~JARGAL. 11: and resumed his seat without uttering a word. His air was thoughtful, but his countenance wore an expression of com- posure. So pre-occupied did he appear to be with the foregoing scene, that he heard nothing of the discord-ant chatter around him. Rask, who had followed his steps into the tent, couched at his feet, and raising his generous eyes, gazed in his master’s face, as if he shared the emotions of his internal sorrow. ‘ Yo,ur glass, Captain D’Auverney. Try 1, .— ‘ Ah, thank God l’ replied the captain, with the intention of answering Paschal’s remark, ‘ the wound is not dangerous ; the arm is not broken.’ The involuntary respect which his companions in arms always observed to- wards their captain, was the only motive that restrained the laughter that Was ready to burst from the lips of Henri. , ‘ As you are no longer apprehensive for Thaddeus,’ he replied, ‘ and we are all as- sembled here to abridge this long night of binouac by relating our several adventures, I hope, my dear friend, you will fulfil your engagement by recounting to us the history of your lame door and of Bug—, something or other, I know not What, otherwise called Pierrot, or as your sergeant called him, that true Gibraltar.’ To. this question proposed in a half- serious, half-comical tone of voice, D’Au- verney would not have replied, if all had not joined their entreaties to those of the urgent solicitations. ‘ I will endeavor to gratify you, gentle- men, but you must expect only the rapid narration of an event, in which I played merely a secondary part. If the attach- ment which exists between Rask, Thad- deus and myself, has led you to anticipate the development of some extraordinary mystery,I foresee you will be disappointed. Let us proceed, however, to the narra- tive.’ . Silence was instantly restored in the company. Paschal emptied at one draught his gourd of brandy. Henri wrapped him- self in his bearskin to protect. him from the freshness of the night-breeze, while Alfred finished humming his favorite Gallician catch of mam-perms. D’Auverney remained musing for a mo- ment to refresh his memory with events, which had long since been replaced by others. At length be commenced his nar- rative, at first in a voice almost inaudible and with frequent pauses. CHAPTER IV. THOUGH a native of France, I was sent in my early years to St. Domingo, to an uncle of mine, a colonist of unbounded wealth, whose daughter it had been de-- termined I should eventually espouse. The residence of my uncle was near Fort Galifet, and his plantations occupied the larger portion of the plains of the Acul. This unfortunate position, the men— tion of which may seem to you unimpor- tant, was one of the primary causes of the disasters and total destruction of our family. A body of eight hundred negroes culti- vated the immense domains of my uncle. lmnst confess that the sad and pitiable condition of these slaves was rendered still worse by the insensibility of their master. My uncle might be reckoned of that class of planters—fortunately limited in its numbers—whose hearts a long ha— bit of despotism has contributed to harden. Accustomed to be obeyed at his very glance, the least hesitation on the part of a slave was punished with the severest children frequently served only to increase the strength of his anger. Upon such oc— casions we were constrained to content ourselves with meliorating in secret the.- evils we could not prevent or turn aside.’ ‘ Aha! now for a philanthropic episode,’ said Henri, in an under tone, as be bent over the shoulder of his neighbor. ‘ I hope the captain will not let the misfortunes of the ci-de'vant blacks pass without an inci— dental dissertation upon the duties which humanity imposes on those who hear her insignia, et celera. I’m sure, it would not have been omitted by the Massiac Club.”E * Our readers have perhaps forgotten, that. the Massiac Club of which Lieutenant Henri speaks, was an association of sympathisers, called Negrophilcs. This club, formed in Pa- ris upon the outbreak of the Revolution, had instigated most of the insurrections which at; that time burst forth in the colonies. Some may perhaps be astonished at the bold levity with which the young lieutenant. rails at those philanthropists, some of whom, no thanks to the presiding genius of the guil— lotine, still survive. But we must recollect, that before, during and after “the Reign of Terror,” freedom of thought and speech took refuge in the camp. This noble privilege oc- casionally cost the head of a general, but one circumstance wipes off all reproach from the- glorious escutchoou of those brave soldiers, that the informers of the Convention denomi- nated them, “ the gentlemen of the army of the Rhine.” treatment, while the intercession of his . w—'W’i”—--\t:~¢w _ w, /‘”A’/I’pl‘"r‘¥ V ‘ 12 ‘Itshall thank you, Henri, to spare me your ridicule,’ observed D’Auverney cold- ly, after having listened o the lieutenant’s raillery. He resumed—- ‘Among all these slaves one only had found favor in the eyes of my uncle. He was a Spanish dwarf, a gritfe* in color, and was presented to our family by Lord Effingham, a former governor of Jamaica. ‘ Contracting during a long residence in Brazil, the habits and propensities of Por- tuguese ostentation, my uncleloved to sur- round himself with a retinue correspon- dent to his riches. Numerous slaves, habited in livery like European servants, gave his house the appearance of a knight- ly castle. That nothing might be wanting to this ambitious display, he had dubbed Lord Effingham’s slave his domestic buf- foon, in imitation ofthose old feudal prin- ces who keptjesters at their courts. The griffe Habibrah—such was his name—was one of those singular beings, whose physi- cal formation is so strangely distorted that it would appear to be the shape ofa mon- sterifit were not at the same time so com- ical as to excite a smile. This hideous * An accurate definition of terms will per- haps be necessary to the understanding of this and some other words, which may be used in the course of D’Auverney’s narrative. M. Moreau of St. Méry, developing the sys- tem of Franklin, has classed in their generic species the different tints which the mixture of the colored population presents. In his supposition, man forms by the union of whites with whites and blacks with blacks, a totality capable of division into one hundred and twenty-eight parts. Proceeding on this prin- ciple, he affirms that an individual is near or distant from either extreme color, as he ap- proaches or recedes from the sixty-fourth term, which constitutes the proportional mean. In this system, every man who has not eight parts of white is accounted black. From black to white they distinguish nine principal stocks, which have their interme- diate varieties according to the greater or less number of parts, which they retain of one or the other color. These nine species are the aacatra, the grife, the marabout, the mulatto, the quadroon, the mongrel, the mamelouc, the quarteromté, and the sang-mélé. The sang-me‘lé, continuing its amalgama- tion with the white blood, vanishes in an in- discriminate confusion with the latter color. It is said, however, that there is always per- ceivable on a particular part of the body, the ineffaceable traces of its origin. The grifl'e is the result of five combinations, and may possess from twenty-four to thirty-two parts white, and from eighty-six to one hundred and four black. BUG-JARGAL. dwarf, fat, short and corpulent, moved about on a pair of slender weak legs, which he folded under him when he sat down, as a spider would its branching members. His enormous head, deeply sunken be- tween his projecting shoulders, bristled up with frizzly wool, and was embellished with two ears of such dimensions that his comrades were accustomed to say, that Habibrah made use of them to wipe his eyes when he wept. His face wore an incessant grimace, yet as incessantly changing: it was a singular mobility of features, which threw around his ugliness all the rare charms of variety. My uncle loved him for his uncommon deformity and hisunalterable gaiety. Habibrah was a favorite. While the other slaves were burdened with labor, Habibrah had no oth