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[The following is from Solomon Northup’s amazing memoir, 12 Years a Slave. Here, Solomon has been tasked with being a “driver,” a slave that is in charge of whipping other slaves when they aren’t working hard enough in the fields.]

Epps, I soon found, whether actually in the field or not, had his eyes pretty generally upon us. From the piazza, from behind some adjacent tree, or other concealed point of observation, he was perpetually on the watch. If one of us had been backward or idle through the day, we were apt to be told all about it on returning to the quarters, and as it was a matter of principle with him to reprove every offence of that kind that came within his knowledge, the offender not only was certain of receiving a castigation for his tardiness, but I likewise was punished for permitting it.

If, on the other hand, he had seen me use the lash freely, the man was satisfied. “Practice makes perfect,” truly; and during my eight years’ experience as a driver, I learned to handle the whip with marvelous dexterity and precision, throwing the lash within a hair’s breadth of the back, the ear, the nose, without, however, touching either of them. If Epps was observed at a distance, or we had reason to apprehend he was sneaking somewhere in the vicinity, I would commence plying the lash vigorously, when, according to arrangement, they would squirm and screech as if in agony, although not one of them had in fact been even grazed.

Patsey would take occasion, if he made his appearance presently, to mumble in his hearing some complaints that Platt was lashing them the whole time, and Uncle Abram, with an appearance of honesty peculiar to himself, would declare roundly I had just whipped them worse than General Jackson whipped the enemy at New-Orleans.


Source:

Northup, Solomon. “Chapter 16.” Twelve Years a Slave. Graymalkin Media, 2014. 159-60. Print.


Further Reading:

Andrew Jackson

Solomon Northup

[**The following is from Solomon Northup’s amazing memoir, *12 Years a Slave*. Here, Solomon has been tasked with being a “driver,” a slave that is in charge of whipping other slaves when they aren’t working hard enough in the fields.**] >Epps, I soon found, whether actually in the field or not, had his eyes pretty generally upon us. From the piazza, from behind some adjacent tree, or other concealed point of observation, he was perpetually on the watch. If one of us had been backward or idle through the day, we were apt to be told all about it on returning to the quarters, and as it was a matter of principle with him to reprove every offence of that kind that came within his knowledge, the offender not only was certain of receiving a castigation for his tardiness, but I likewise was punished for permitting it. >If, on the other hand, he had seen me use the lash freely, the man was satisfied. “Practice makes perfect,” truly; and during my eight years’ experience as a driver, I learned to handle the whip with marvelous dexterity and precision, throwing the lash within a hair’s breadth of the back, the ear, the nose, without, however, touching either of them. If Epps was observed at a distance, or we had reason to apprehend he was sneaking somewhere in the vicinity, I would commence plying the lash vigorously, when, according to arrangement, they would squirm and screech as if in agony, although not one of them had in fact been even grazed. >Patsey would take occasion, if he made his appearance presently, to mumble in his hearing some complaints that Platt was lashing them the whole time, and Uncle Abram, with an appearance of honesty peculiar to himself, would declare roundly I had just whipped them worse than [General Jackson](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/43/Andrew_jackson_head.jpg) whipped the enemy at New-Orleans. ___________________________ **Source:** Northup, Solomon. “Chapter 16.” *Twelve Years a Slave*. Graymalkin Media, 2014. 159-60. Print. ___________________________ **Further Reading:** [Andrew Jackson](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_Jackson) [Solomon Northup](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solomon_Northup)

2 comments

[–] Justintoxicated 0 points (+0|-0)

Honestly this whole story sounds like something Richard Pryor would've written as a comedy, hilarious!

[–] Giraffestronaut 0 points (+0|-0)

You have to take a lot of this Victoriana with a grain of salt, unfortunately. Northup didn't write these words. The whole book was written by a white man, David Nelson, and it was published about a year after "Uncle Tom's Cabin", which was an enormous financial success. Similar hopes spurred the publication of this book, and it is even dedicated to Harriet Beecher Stowe on the first page, so that white readers would purchase it.