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r natural condition. They are constantly comparing the time when they used to obtain shoes, dresses, coats, flannels, food, etc., from their masters, with the present when little or nothing is given them. I think it would be _most unwise and injurious_ to _give_ them _lands_,--negro allotments; they should be made to _buy_ before they can feel themselves possessors of a rod. There are some who are now able to buy their houses and two or three acres of land,--by the end of the year their number will probably be greatly increased. These will be the more intelligent, the more industrious and persistent. But _give_ them land, and a house,--and the ease of gaining as good a livelihood as they have been accustomed to would keep many contented with the smallest exertion. I pity some of them very much, for I see that nothing will rouse and maintain their energy but suffering. In regard to the immediate sale,--even should speculators buy some plantations, I don't think the people would suffer much oppression during the years of their possession. It would be for their interest to continue or increase the wages which Government offers,--and probably many would let the places almost alone. Should oppression occur, the negroes will probably have an opportunity to move,--such cases would be closely watched and loudly reported,--and the people would be all the more dependent on their own exertions. I should think the great injury would come at the end of the war, or whenever the speculators sell the lands: then, instead of selling at low prices and in small lots or of consulting the people's interest in any way, they will simply realize the greatest advantage for themselves. Other places, however, will be bought by friends and by the Government,--on the whole, great good would result to the people. Moreover, the work will then have very much more value as a test of their capacity and ambition,--as an experiment in American emancipation. I feel that outside of directly spiritual labor, this emancipation work is the noblest and holiest in the country. FROM H. W. _Jan. 27._ Both schools were very satisfactory. If any one could have looked in, without the children's seeing them, they would have thought we presented quite an ordinary school-like appearance. I have a blackboard with numerals and figures and the second line of the Multiplication Table written on it, all of which the oldest school know tolerably, but they make sorr
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