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to be dependent on tradition; and, all things considered, no one was so |
well qualified as Mr. Still to reproduce that phase of it with which he |
was so intimately concerned, as chairman of the Acting Committee of the |
Vigilance Committee of Philadelphia. |
Of all the Border States, Pennsylvania was the most accessible to |
fugitives from slavery; and as the organization just named was probably |
the most perfect and efficient of its kind, and served as a distributor |
to the branches in other States, its record doubtless covers the larger |
part of the field of operations of the Underground Railroad; or, in |
other words, of the systematic but secret efforts to promote the escape |
of slaves. |
* * * * * |
_FROM THE CHRISTIAN UNION, N.Y._ |
"The narratives themselves, told with the simplicity and directness of |
obvious truth, are full of terror, of pathos, the shame of human |
baseness and the glory of human virtue; and though the time is not yet |
sufficiently distant from the date of their occurrence to give to this |
record the universal acceptance it deserves, there are few, we think, |
even now, who can read it without amazement that such things could be in |
our very day, and be regarded with such general apathy. When the |
question, still so momentous and exciting, of the relations of the two |
races in this country, shall have passed from the vortex of political |
strife and social prejudice, and taken its place among the ethical |
axioms of a Christian civilization, then this faithful account of some |
of the darkest and some of the brightest incidents in our history--this |
cyclopaedia of all the virtues and all the vices of humanity--will be |
accepted as a most valuable contribution to the annals of one of the |
important eras of the world." |
* * * * * |
_FROM THE "LUTHERAN OBSERVER," PHILADELPHIA._ |
"It is a remarkable book in many respects. Like the 'Key to Uncle Tom's |
Cabin,' by Mrs. Stowe, it reveals many of the most thrilling personal |
dramas and tragedies in the entire history of slavery. That 'truth is |
stranger than fiction' has hundreds of striking illustrations in this |
volume, which is a narrative of facts, the records of which were kept by |
Mr. Still, and are the only records in existence of the famous |
organization known as the Underground Railroad. It was established for |
the purpose of aiding slaves to escape from their masters in the South, |
but its operations were so mysterious and secret that, although |
everybody knew and spoke vaguely of its existence during the time of |
slavery, yet none but the initiated knew the secrets of its management |
and operations. These are now revealed for the first time in this work, |
and are as strange and wonderful as the most absorbing pictures of |
romance." |
* * * * * |
_FROM, THE CHRISTIAN RECORDER, PHILA._ |
There has been no such work produced by any colored man in the country. |
"My Bondage and my Freedom," by Douglass, was a remarkable book, and was |
justly appreciated by the liberty-loving people of the North and of |
England, but it was the story of a single hero. Comparatively, the same |
may be said of the lives of Jermain Logan and others. But all these were |
but the exploits of individuals. The work of Mr. Still, however, takes a |
broader scope. It is the story of scores of heroes--heroes that equalled |
Douglass in nerve, and Logan in tact, and excelled either in thrilling |
adventure. |
* * * * * |
_FROM "ZION'S HERALD," BOSTON._ |
"It is a big book in manner, matter, and spirit; the biggest book |
America has yet written. It is our 'Book of Martyrs,' and William Still |
is our Fox the Chronicler. It is the 'thousand witnesses' of Theodore |
Weld, enlarged and intensified. It is more than Uncle Tom, Wilson's |
'History of the Anti-slavery War,' or the hundred histories of the war |
itself.... |
"The book is well illustrated with portraits of the railroad managers, |
and with scenes taken from life, and is far the most entertaining and |
instructive story ever issued from the American press. Everybody should |
buy, read, and transmit to his children these annals of our heroic age." |
* * * * * |
_FROM THE "MORNING STAR," DOVER, NEW HAMPSHIRE._ |
"The work is intensely interesting. Many of the narratives thrill the |
reader through and through. Some of them awaken an indignation, a |
horror, or a sense of humiliation and shame that makes the blood curdle |
or the cheek flush, or the breathing difficult. The best and the worst |