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general no better treated than slaves ; but no slave is a slave to the same lengths, and in so j

full a sense of the word, as a wife is. Hardly any slave, except one immediately attached to the masters person, is a slave at all hours and all *

minutes j in general he has, like a soldier, his !

fixed task, and when it is done, or when he is off duty, he disposes, within certain limits, of his ;

own time, and has a family life into which the master rarely intrudes. Uncle Tom under his ^

first master had his own life in his cabin, 1

almost as much as any man whose work takes i

him away from home, is able to have in his own family. But it cannot be so with the wife. Above all, a female slave has (in Christian countries) an admitted right, and is considered under a moral obligation, to refuse to her master the last fami- l

liarity. Not so the wife : however brutal a tyrant (

she may unfortunately be chained tothough she j

may know that he hates her, though it may be his daily pleasure to torture her, and though she

may feel it impossible not to loathe himhe can j

claim from her and enforce the lowest degrada- 1

tion of a human being, that of being made the instrument of an animal function contrary to her inclinations. While she is held in this worst de­scription of slavery as to her own person, what is her position in regard to the children in whom she and her master have a joint interest?

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