'' 1838 based on a passage from Ball's memoir: Ball meets Paul, a starving fugitive with an iron collar supporting bells around his neck. The next time Ball comes to Paul's hiding place, he sees that Paul has killed himself. Recalling the brutal conditions in enslaved life, he describes the heartache of having family members sold away—as his mother and father were, and as he was separated from his wife and children, taken south chained to a line of other enslaved people. The horrific conditions on slave ships bound for the West are also described. On this enslaved person's journey, he recounts that 1/3 of the enslaved people on board the vessel died during the passage to Charleston, South Carolina. In the autobiography, Ball presents himself (or is presented by the writer) as a kind of model enslaved person who is determined to serve his master "obediently and faithfully" and is proud of the "good character, for industry, sobriety, and humility, which I had established in the neighbourhood". But still, he had to suffer horrible cruelties. As a boy of twelve, he fell into the hands of a severe master who made him work hard while exposing him to hunger and cold. He was forcefully separated from his wife and his children without even being allowed to say goodbye to them. He was kept in chains day and night during a march of four weeks and five days, not even being able to wash the clothes, so that the vermin became "extremely tormenting". One day, he was falsely accused of murder, and without any investigation, his legal owner prepared to have him
flayed (skinned) alive. His life was saved only by the coincidental arrival of a white witness of the crime. On another occasion, he was whipped without any reason. He also related his observations of the life of his fellow enslaved people, e.g., "one very old man, quite crooked with years and labour", being compelled to work although he was no longer able to keep up with the other ones who "had no clothes on him except the remains of an old shirt, which hung in tatters from his neck and arms". On another plantation, in winter, when the frost "was sometimes very heavy and sharp", shoes were distributed only to those forced to pick cotton. "This deprived of shoes, the children, and several old persons, whose eye-sight was not sufficiently clear, to enable them to pick cotton." Enslaved people had to work even while fever-shaken. Several methods of
torture are described in detail. On one occasion, he cites a fellow slave relating the discussion of the slaveholders on how "the greatest degree of pain could be inflicted on me, with the least danger of rendering me unable to work". ==Slavery in Maryland compared to the Deep South==