David Selzer is a writer of poetry, prose fiction, screenplays and stage plays. He embraces digital platforms to share his work of more than fifty years… READ MORE


  • PHILLIS WHEATLEY: 1753-1784

    Enslaved in the Gambia or Senegal,
    scholars surmise, she survived the nauseous
    and violent bottom line of the
    Triangular Trade to be bought aged eight
    as a maid for his wife by John Wheatley,
    merchant and tailor of British-ruled Boston,
    a known progressive in education.

    She was christened ‘Phillis’ after the slave ship
    that took her childhood. She was prodigious
    and was removed from domestic duties.
    Tutored by his daughter, at twelve she knew
    Latin, Greek, the Bible and, later,
    became a genius of Augustan
    couplets – their wit, their beat, their certainty.
    With her master’s son, she went to London,
    where her poems were published to some acclaim.
    Her encomium to George Washington
    was re-published by Thomas Paine. ‘Proceed…
    A crown, a mansion, and a throne that shine,
    With gold unfading, WASHINGTON! be thine.’

    Ah, how we tolerate unflinchingly,
    unthinkingly absurd and absolute
    contradictions – freedom and servitude,
    enlightenment and doctrinal dogma!
    ‘Twas mercy brought me from my Pagan land,
    Taught my benighted soul to understand
    That there’s a God, that there’s a Saviour too:
    Once I redemption neither sought nor knew.
    Some view our sable race with scornful eye,
    “Their colour is a diabolic die.”
    Remember, Christians, Negros, black as Cain,
    May be refin’d, and join th’ angelic train.’

    On Wheatley’s death she was freed – all that his will
    left her: liberty without means. She married
    a free black grocer. They lived in poverty.
    Two infant children died. And yet she wrote –
    but without white, male or titled patrons
    was unpublished. Her husband was jailed for debt.
    She supported herself and her sickly son
    as a scullery maid. One December day
    they died in squalor, were laid in unmarked graves.

    What did she choose to remember of the seas
    pounding against the timbers and the cries
    and the chains days after days after days?
    Or the drums into the night; or the smoke
    from the cooking fires at dawn; the bright clothes;
    the songs; her mother’s voice?

     

     

     


    2 responses to “PHILLIS WHEATLEY: 1753-1784”


    1. Jenny Avatar
      Jenny

      Oh David, your poems never fail to make me weep or smile, sometimes both together In wry appreciation.

    2. John Chapman Avatar
      John Chapman

      So infinitely sad. Brought back my finding of an ancestor married in Sierra Leone to a slaver at the height of the slave trade, that too made me sad. Sadness too that slavery is still alive and flourishing even on our own doorsteps.

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