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Updated: May 23, 2025
Monday Gell stated in his confession, that Vesey, on first broaching the plan to him, said "he was satisfied with his own condition, being free; but, as all his children were slaves, he wished to see what could be done for them."
"What with havin' first mother to nurse when I was a little gell, and then havin' Johnnie to look after, I've never had time to make myself look pretty and to get a beau, like other gells. And now I'm too old for that sort of thing, and yet I've never had my chance, as you may say." "Poor lass! It's a hard life as you've had, and no mistake." "That it is, Mr. Bateson.
Daughter of Colonel Hugh Duncan Baillie, of Tarradale and Redcastle. March. Embarked on an excursion to Paestum, with Sir William Gell and Mr. Laing-Meason, in order to see the fine ruins.
And we got through the winter somehow, and the baby was born, as fine a gell as ever you see; and what I said come true, for we couldn't none of us 'ave loved the baby more if its father and mother 'ad been married by an archbishop in Westminster Abbey. And the folks we knew along the banks would have been kind to my Pretty, but she wouldn't never show her face to any of them.
Gell, before quoted, says "Words conceived only in an earthly mind, and uttered out of the memory by man's voice, which make a noise in the ears of flesh and blood, are not, nor can be accounted a prayer, before our father which is in Heaven." Dr.
"Yes, I won't if I don't 'member. Then she ran to the bureau, perched herself before it on an ottoman, and talked to herself in the glass. "Now you be good gell all day, Katie Clifford not dishbey your mamma, not hide her freds o' spools, say fank you please. O my shole!" So Katie was made happy for twenty-four hours. "After we sleep one more time," said she, "then we shall go."
That a blind man should know how he looked, was beyond the philosophy of the visitor; and this piece of rather cheap ingenuity carried the day. Other leaders were appointed also. Monday Gell was the scribe of the enterprise; he was a native African, who had learned to read and write. He was by trade a harness-maker, working chiefly on his own account.
Gell preached before King Charles the first on Ephesians 4. 10. at New-Market, in the year 1631, a bold discourse, yet becoming him, testifying before the King that doctrine he taught to his life's end, "the possibility, through grace, of keeping the law of God in this life." Whoever reads these venerable Remains, will find this doctrine inculcated in them. Monro, who lived some time after Dr.
"Then I don't want to be a monkey; I want to be a ape. I wish I could go puffing round the world in a ship." "Well, Dotty, this isn't keeping school. What letter have you learned?" "I didn't learn a letter; I learned a story. You're a funny gell to keep a story-school!" Prudy held up the block. "O, that picked thing? You called it a ape!" "Why, Dotty Parlin! that's A." "A what?"
And the firmness of this purpose did not leave him, even after the betrayal of his cherished plans. "After the plot was discovered," said Monday Gell, in his confession, "Vesey said it was all over, unless an attempt were made to rescue those who might be condemned, by rushing on the people and saving the prisoners, or all dying together."
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