“She is a mother pale
with fear,
Her boy clings to her side,
And in her kirtle vainly tries
His trembling form to hide.
“He is not hers, although she bore
For him a mother's pains;
He is not hers, although her blood
Is coursing through his veins!
“He is not hers, for cruel hands
May rudely tear apart
The only wreath of household love
That binds her breaking heart.”—African-American poet, abolitionist and temperance and women's suffrage activist Frances Ellen Watkins Harper (1825-1911), “The Slave Mother,” originally published in her Poems on Miscellaneous Subjects (1854), anthologized in American Poetry: The Nineteenth Century, Volume Two: Melville to Stickney, American Indian Poetry, Folk Songs and Spirituals, edited by John Hollander (1993)
I am glad to see
historians’ growing attention to Reconstruction and the far longer Jim Crow era
of reaction to the political and economic gains of African-Americans. It’s
important to realize how easily such advances can be reversed.
But with the federal
holiday of Juneteenth occurring today, I think it’s also important to remember
that emancipation—and the horrifying Civil War that made it possible—also ended
practices that would never be repeated. One of these was the breakup of slave
families by their owners, a dread evoked in the above verses.
I had never heard of Frances Ellen Watkins Harper before I began looking for a quote in observation of
Juneteenth—she never came up in my college courses on American literature nor
American history in the 19th century—but I think her life and career
are worth recalling.
Particularly in the antebellum
era, this child of free blacks bore witness, through her writing and lectures,
to the horrors of slavery—and implicitly refuted whites who perpetuated the
myth of innate African-American intellectual inferiority.
For a deeper
consideration of what Harper meant—for her time and ours—I recommend Eric Gardner’s 2015 post on OUPblog, Ohio University Press’s Website offering “Academic
Insights for the Thinking World.”
The image accompanying
this post, Kentucky painter Thomas Satterwhite Noble's The Modern Medea (1867),
was inspired by Margaret Garner, a runaway slave who, after being recaptured in
the North through the Fugitive Slave Act, killed her own daughter rather than
allow her to be returned to slavery.
Garner’s case—an example
of the plight faced by African-American women under slavery depicted by Harper—also
gave rise, a century later, to Nobel Literature laureate Toni Morrison’s novel Beloved
(1987), as well as her libretto for the opera Margaret Garner (2005).
Her boy clings to her side,
And in her kirtle vainly tries
His trembling form to hide.
“He is not hers, although she bore
For him a mother's pains;
He is not hers, although her blood
Is coursing through his veins!
“He is not hers, for cruel hands
May rudely tear apart
The only wreath of household love
That binds her breaking heart.”—African-American poet, abolitionist and temperance and women's suffrage activist Frances Ellen Watkins Harper (1825-1911), “The Slave Mother,” originally published in her Poems on Miscellaneous Subjects (1854), anthologized in American Poetry: The Nineteenth Century, Volume Two: Melville to Stickney, American Indian Poetry, Folk Songs and Spirituals, edited by John Hollander (1993)
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