Fiction has said so much in regret of the old days when there were plantations and overseers and masters and slaves that it was good to come upon such a household as Berry Hamilton's if for no other reason than that it afforded a relief from the monotony of tiresome iteration.
The little cottage in which he lived with his wife Fannie who was housekeeper to the Oakleys and his son and daughter Joe and Kit sat back in the yard some hundred paces from the mansion of his employer. It was somewhat in the manner of the old cabin in the quarters with which usage as well as tradition had made both master and servant familiar. But unlike the cabin of the elder day it was a neatly furnished modern house the home of a typical good-living negro. For twenty years Berry Hamilton had been butler for Maurice Oakley. He was one of the many slaves who upon their accession to freedom had not left the South but had wandered from place to place in their own beloved section waiting working and struggling to rise with its rehabilitated fortunes.