“The Slave Mother, A Tale of Ohio,” by Frances Ellen Watkins Harper

Heard you that shriek? It rose
So wildly on the air,
It seem’d as if a burden’d heart
Was breaking in despair.

Saw you those hands so sadly clasped—
The bowed and feeble head—
The shuddering of that fragile form—
That look of grief and dread?

Saw you the sad, imploring eye?
Its every glance was pain,
As if a storm of agony
Were sweeping through the brain.

She is a mother pale with fear,
Her boy clings to her side,
And in her kyrtle 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.

His love has been a joyous light
That o’er her pathway smiled,
A fountain gushing ever new,
Amid life’s desert wild.

His lightest word has been a tone
Of music round her heart,
Their lives a streamlet blent in one—
Oh, Father! must they part?

They tear him from her circling arms,
Her last and fond embrace.
Oh! never more may her sad eyes
Gaze on his mournful face.

No marvel, then, these bitter shrieks
Disturb the listening air:
She is a mother, and her heart
Is breaking in despair.

Frances Ellen Watkins Harper stands out among the earliest prominent African American poets. Born in Baltimore in 1825, Harper was the only child of free African American parents. At 20-years-old, she published her book of poetry. She continued to write poetry, essays, short stories, and novels throughout her life.

Harper photo from explorepahistory.com

Themes of spirituality, feminism, and civil rights fill Frances E. W. Harper’s ouevre and reflect her time spent advocating abolition, education, and other social causes. She helped slaves escape via the Underground Railroad in 1851. In 1853, she aligned herself with the American Anti-Slavery Society to speak out publicly on the issues of abolition and policy. Harper wrote “The Slave Mother” the following year. Decades later, she went on to help establish the National Association of Colored Women.
In the verse above, we readers rest alongside Harper, flies on the wall, watching but not doing anything to help. What I find most intriguing are the poet’s circular and aquatic symbols. As Harper describes the relationship between the slave mother and the child, she uses both types of symbols to create a metaphor for maternity, fertility, and feminism. First, Harper calls the boy his mother’s “only wreath of household love.”  The wreath recalls the cyclical nature of reproduction and, even more exclusively to women, the curve of a pregnant belly. Historically, a wreath’s purpose ranges from heraldry to holidays to funerals. Here, the slave mother’s child represents her “pains” of labor and celebrates her own womanhood, motherhood, and lineage. This mother, however, is forbidden from rearing her child in a normal domestic condition because of her slave status. They are instead driven apart. The wreath metaphor then warps into the slave mother’s defiance against her oppressed rights to bear and raise her own children and her protection of her family, her “household.”

Next, Harper compares the love between the mother and son to a “fountain gushing ever new,/amid life’s desert wild.” The contradictory images of flowing water and barren wilderness pits fertility against sterility, life against death. The positivity as well as the mysticism connected with fountains in myth (e.g., the Fountain of Life, baptism, Fountain of Youth), makes the boy all the more sacred and holy to the slave mother.  The fountain’s continuity, cyclical flow brings both mother and child together as a “streamlet blent in one.”  Fluidity fuses the two. Until an em dash halts the metaphor and diverts our hope to a cry to “Father,” the third and absent piece of this family. But is this not also a jab at female oppression under patriarchy? The mother bears the most weight and burden throughout pregnancy, birth, and bearing. So why, now, must the speaker refer to “Father” as if he has so much authority?  Why would God even allow, or perhaps even call for, this separation between mother and child?  Harper casts a distant and even dark impression of an absent father, both biological and heavenly. Finally, the mother’s “circling arms,” rounded again like an impregnated stomach, surround the boy in a protective womb.  But the mother’s attempts to conceal and protect the boy fail; their “last and fond embrace” is torn apart, and the circle connecting them is finally terminated. In this poem, Harper paints slavery as the enemy of all of these maternal images. She captures slavery as it deliberately suppresses and strips women of their rights to motherhood and womanhood.

“The Slave Mother” was first published in Poems on Miscellaneous Subjects(1854) and can also be found in American Poetry: The Nineteenth Century(The Library of America, 1993).

Posted by Hendley Badcock


“Waiting for You with the Swallows” by Gibbons Ruark

I was waiting for you
Where the four lanes wander
Into a city street,
Listening to the freight
Train’s whistle and thunder
Come racketing through,

And I saw beyond black
Empty branches the light
Turn swiftly to a flurry
Of wingbeats in a hurry
For nowhere but the flight
From steeple-top and back

To steeple-top again.
I thought of how the quick
Hair shadows your lit face
Till laughter in your voice
Awoke and brought me back
And you stepped from the train.

I was waiting for you
Not a little too long
To learn what swallows said
Darkening overhead:
When we had time, we sang.
After we sang, we flew.

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Gibbons Ruark was born in 1941 in Raleigh, North Carolina. Ruark graduated from the University of North Carolina in 1963. After obtaining his masters at the University of Massachusetts, Ruark was hired by the University of Delaware to teach.  In 1976, he met Irish novelist Benedict Kiely, who was visiting the university for a semester. The two became great friends, and Ruark made his inaugural trip to Ireland in 1978. He fell in love with the country, and has returned many times. Allusions to Ireland can be seen in many of Ruark’s poems.

Ruark’s poetry is known for being very personal, often elegiac. In his poem “Waiting for You with the Swallows,” Ruark showcases his knack for nostalgia.

The entire poem conveys a sense of transiency. He tells the story of a love that he once cherished, but that he seems to have lost. Two images, the freight train and the swallows, illustrate this idea of movement.

Barn Swallow (Hirundo rustica) bringing food to the nest      Swallows are known to be a symbol of love, affection and loyalty, in part because the swallow returns home to the same location every year to mate. Sailors also have a history of getting swallow tattoos, for multiple reasons. First, a swallow tattoo can denote that a sailor has returned home safely after a long trip away at sea. And second, when a sailor drowns at sea, a family member might get a tattoo of a swallow in honor of their lost loved one. It is said that the swallow will make sure that that sailor’s soul makes it safely to heaven.

Knowing this, Ruark’s choice to use the swallow as a metaphor becomes even more interesting. Ruark ends his poem with: “When we had time, we sang. / After we sang, we flew.”

The ending seems to suggest that “his swallow”–his lost lover–has flown away from their shared home. We are left hanging, wondering whether his lover will eventually choose to act like a true swallow and return to him one day.

“Waiting for You with the Swallows” can be found in On the Mason-Dixon Line: an Anthology of Contemporary Delaware Writers.

— posted by Meaghan Latella

 


recent-meR. T. Smith has edited Shenandoah since 1995 and serves as Writer-in-Residence at Washington & Lee. His forthcoming books are Doves in Flight: 13 Fictions and Summoning Shades: New Poems, both due in 2017.