To-day will probably decide the fate of the Confederacy. If
Lincoln is reelected I think our fate is a hard one, but we are in the hands of
a merciful God, and if He sees that we are in the wrong, I trust that He will
show it unto us. I have never felt that slavery was altogether right, for it is
abused by men, and I have often heard Mr. Burge say that if he could see that
it was sinful for him to own slaves, if he felt that it was wrong, he would
take them where he could free them. He would not sin for his right hand. The
purest and holiest men have owned them, and I can see nothing in the scriptures
which forbids it. I have never bought or sold slaves and I have tried to make
life easy and pleasant to those that have been bequeathed me by the dead. I
have never ceased to work. Many a Northern housekeeper has a much easier time
than a Southern matron with her hundred negroes.
SOURCE: Dolly Lunt Burge, A Woman's Wartime Journal,
p. 13-4
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