- George Harris: [after crossing the border into freedom with his family] We got no money, no food, no home, and I feel like we own the world.
- Uncle Tom: [after Simon threatened him] If you take my blood, that is nothing. No. You can hurt me no more!
- [last lines]
- George Harris: [narrating] Uncle Tom was right. Only his body died at the hands of Simon Legree. Tom's spirit rose out of the pages of Harriet Beecher Stowe's novel to agitate the conscience of a nation. A war was fought; the black people were legally freed. Today, 120 years later, the battle for true freedom still continues.
- Christopher at 17: [after Uncle Tom's death] You put chains on all your slaves, sir.
- Simon Legree: Yeah, son.
- Christopher at 17: Well, I ain't got no chains on right now, and neither do you.
- Simon Legree: What you talkin' about?
- Christopher at 17: THIS!
- [Chris punches Simon three times, the third sends Simon into a puddle of mud, as Chris and the two slaves leave him, Simon sobs holding himself]