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Angelina Weld Grimke Essay Research Paper The (стр. 2 из 2)

not, in this instance, adept in the use of black diction, but the content of the poem

reveals her attitude toward the limited possibilities available to black adults in the

United States:

Ain’t you quit dis laffin’ yet?

Don’ you know de sun’s done set?

Wan’ me kiss dis li’l han’?

Well, well, laf de w’ile you can,

You won’ laf w’en you’se a man,

Dere! Dere! Sleep! Sleep!

Grimk?’s fiction is more stark in portraying the horror, the accents, and the future

of black children. An infant is smothered in "The Closing Door," and in

"Goldie" and "Blackness,’" an unborn child is cut from the womb of a

lynched woman, revealing the full horror of African-American life in the United States.

Grimk? wrote a few poems presenting her overall world view and background philosophy.

Among these are "Life [(1)]" and "The Puppet-Player." In "Life

[(1)]," for example, human beings are out of control of the destiny of their lives

and overwhelmed by the "Ocean, boundless, infinite" of life:

Thou ne’er hast known nor dead nor living

One single braggart man as master, . . .

And some are lost on rocks relentless;

And some are drowned mid storms tremendous, . . .

The waters close again impenetrably:–

Each one must make his way alone—

And

this is Life!

"The Puppet-Player" is even more pessimistic and ascribes conscious and evil

intention to the power that controls the world:

Sometimes it seems as though some puppet-player

A clench?d claw cupping a craggy chin,

Sits just beyond the border of our seeing,

Twitching the strings with slow, sardonic grin.

Other poems directly examine the value of life for the narrator. "Epitaph on a

Living Woman" describes the annihilation of emotion and joy for the speaker:

"There were tiny flames in her eyes,/ Her mouth was a flame,/ And her

flesh……………………….. / Now she is ashes." "Life [(2)]" is

Grimk?’s only acknowledgment in verse that the narrator’s life, in spite of its grim

sadness, has at least been more dynamic than other people’s:

What though I die mid racking pain,

And heart seared through and through by grief,

I still rejoice for I, at least, have lived.

By contrast, a rare poetic encounter with hope and joy is found in "A Mood":

Up mocking, teasing, little, hill;

Past dancing, glancing, little, rills,

And up or down to left or right

The same compelling, wild, delight!

"The Visitor" is Grimke’s only poem in which the narrator repudiates rather

than longs for death:

I beg you come not near!

See! Though I am so proud

I’ll fall upon my knees,

And beg, and pray, of you

To spare this little soul!

Some of Grimk?’s poems use such forms as the sonnet, the triolet, and the roundel.

Sonnets are particularly solemn forms for Grimk?, who uses them to commemorate the life

of the philanthropist Mary Porter Tileston Hemenway in "Two Sonnets to Mrs.

Hemenway," and to represent stern authoritarian sentiments about God in "As We

Have Sowed":

I

As we have sowed so shall we also reap;

And it were sweet indeed if blossoms fair

Grow from the seeds to scent the sunlit air,

But oh! How sad if weeds that hide and creep

Grow in their stead to prick and sting our feet.

Too soon we’ll meet the Master on our path,

And in His deep sad eyes we’ll feel the wrath

Of justice or the thrill of praises sweet.

I do but pray within this humble breast,

That little flowers may blossom on my way,

But yet so pure they change the night to day,

I beg that one more fair than all the rest

So please the Master that with glad surprise

He proudly plucks it, smiling in my eyes.

II

As we have sowed so shall we also reap:–

How sweet if by our path the blossoms fair

Grow from the seeds to scent the sunlit air;

But Oh! How sad if weeds that hide and creep

Grow in their stead to prick and sting our feet.

We know not when the Master passing by

May pause, nor when from out his deep sad eye

May leap the flame of wrath or praises sweet

The sweetest flowers are those not proudly drest,

But little ones that brighten all the way,

They are so pure and white. For me I pray

That one white flower more pure than all the rest

May burst in blossom ‘neath the Master’s eyes,

That only He may know the sacrifice.

In the first of these sonnets, the Master plucks the narrator’s most beautiful flower,

and in the second the narrator’s one white flower bursts into bloom as an expression of

her sacrifice. The stern taskmaster in the poem is surely an extension of Grimk?’s own

father, who often chastised her verbally for her inadequacies and demanded that she

fulfill all the restraining public roles that were expected of an educated middle-class

African-American woman of her time.

"A Triolet," on the other hand, with its repeated line "Molly raised shy

eyes to me," is an expression of joy in lesbian affection:

Molly raised shy eyes to me,

On an April day;

Close we stood beneath a tree,

Molly raised shy eyes to me,

Shining sweet and wistfully,

Wet and yet quite gay;

Molly raised shy eyes to me,

On an April day.

The rounded "Vigil" inhabits the intersection between hope and despair. The

narrator repeatedly insists that her departed loved one will return—"You will

come back"—but these words are surrounded by such a strong hint of impending

hopelessness—"But if it will be bright or black"—that the act of hope

appears to be merely the subterfuge of holding back despair:

You will comeback, sometime, somehow;

But if it will be bright or black

I cannot tell; I only know

You

will come back.

Does not the spring with fragrant pack

Return unto the orchard bough?

Do not the birds retrace their track?

All things return. Some day the glow

Of quick’ning dreams will pierce your lack;

And when you know I wait as now

You

will come back.

For the most part, Grimk? uses the poetic rhythms and styles characteristics of

Anglo-American poetry as a whole. The African-American distinctiveness of her work is most

visible in content and plot rather than in style. In those works dealing directly with the

problem of being black in the United States, she attempts to tear down the master’s

house by using the master’s tools. That is, she calls on the moral conscience of

white Americans to correct and improve their relationship with their black fellow

citizens. This mode of expression is particularly evident in her play Rachel. In

fact, in an essay about the play, Grimk? declared that Rachel had been written to

educate whites and to correct their attitudes about lynching and its effects on African

Americans.

Variously called The Pervert, The Daughter, and Blessed Are the Barren

before receiving the title Rachel, the play is about a young African-American woman

who prefers to forego both marriage and motherhood so as not to provide whites with more

black people to destroy through lynching and other racial atrocities. Indeed, the play may

be said to encourage a for of self-genocide of African-American people. Although Grimk?

attempts to justify this attitude in terms of the cruelties that African Americans are

forced to endure in the United States, it is probable that in this plot she is using a

psychic energy that repudiates heterosexuality on a personal level to accentuate her

passion for annihilating that marital and familial expectations in African-American

culture. Her denial of the possibility and hopefulness of heterosexual union appears more

explicitly in "The Laughing Hand," a short story that does not have

African-American characters. In this story, a young woman is forced to break her

engagement to her fianc? because he has contracted cancer and has suffered a disfiguring

and silencing operation in which his tongue is cut out. This castration of language is

more that an expression of the impossibility of heterosexual union; it may also comment on

Grimk?’s closeted sexuality. Unendurable marriage is also the subject of the short

story "The Drudge," whose white characters are of a lower economic class than

those in "The Laughing Hand." Here a beaten, oppressed wife manages to get some

control over her husband by refusing to accommodate herself to his adultery.

Grimk? is essentially appalled at her incapacity to have a lover in this world. And

she is appalled at the restricted world that the United States allows for its

African-American citizens. Her inner astonishment at her failure to find sexual and

romantic companionship, and her outer astonishment at finding herself in a world that

denigrates her value because she is a black woman, combine to give terrifying but

effective power to stories like "The Closing Door," "Goldie,"

"Blackness," and "Black Is, As Black Does," all of which, like Rachel,

take lynching as their theme. Two of the stories, "The Closing Door," and

"Goldie," were published in the Birth Control Review to encourage black

women not to have children.

Although Grimk?’s consciousness of African-American culture is restricted primarily to

plot, one large exception to this rule appears in "Jettisoned," a story written

almost entirely in African-American English. It is probably not accidental that this short

story, which adopts African-American style more overtly than do her other works, is the

only one with an optimistic ending, though to get to that point her characters go through

hell with problems of poverty, threatened suicide, and the pain of having relatives who

pass for white.

Grimk?’s most radical works on African-American culture, including the short stories

on lynching and the poems "Trees," "Surrender," "The Black

Finger," "Tenebris," and "Beware Lest He Awakes," all lean toward

a refusal to accept the given conditions of being black in the United States. But probably

because of publication restrictions, these works often stop just short of demanding

unapologetic revenge for acts against African-American people.

The poem "Beware Lest He Awakes," for example, has three versions, and

Grimk?’s changes, when compared with the published text, reveal that she may have been

coerced into making revisions in order for the poem to be published. The original

statement of the poem, that African Americans would eventually wake up and take revenge

for the actions against them, was changed from the definite statement, "Beware when

he awakes" to the more suppositional, "Beware lest he awakes." Thus the

final version leads us to believe that the African-American people may or may not wake up

and take revenge. Further, the line "Beware lest he awakes," which in the

earlier versions ("Beware when he awakes") ends the two stanzas and thereby

gains greater importance than any other portion of the poem, is–in the published

version–buried in the middle of the first verse. Though it still ends the poem, the

line’s message has nevertheless been diffused.

Similarly, the short story "Goldie," which is a revised version of

"Blackness," ends with the statement that the African-American man who takes

revenge for lynching is himself lynched as well: "And Victor Forrest died, as the

other two had died, upon another tree." "Blackness," however, implies that

the vindicator escapes safely: "I have reason, to believe, he escaped. But I have

never heard from him or seen him since." Although this unnamed vindicator must leave

his position in the North to escape the retribution of Southerners who come after him, we

are given to understand that, with the money he has saved and with support from friends,

he is able to live a life in another country or community and is not hunted to the death.

Evidently, the revised story, "Goldie," was more palatable to, and therefore

deemed more publishable by, the Birth Control Review whose subscribers were more

likely to accept fiction that encouraged African Americans not to have children in order

to avoid having them lynched. The same subscribers, who were primarily white, would

probably not have been willing to read about African Americans successfully taking revenge

for lynching. In addition, Grimk? leaves the successful revenge taker unnamed, perhaps to

imply that he is still at large, still among us, and therefore his name must be protected.

Finally, Angelina Weld Grimk? places herself within the tradition of African-American

writers who are interested in identifying what is distinctive about African-American

literary works. In her "Remarks on Literature," she describes the coming black

literary genius in these words:

In preparation of the coming of this black genius I believe there must be among us a

stronger and a growing feeling of race consciousness, race solidarity, race pride. It

means a training of the youth of to-day and of to-morrow in the recognition of the

sanctity of all these things. Then perhaps, some day, somewhere black youth, will come

forth, see us clearly, intelligently, sympathetically, and will write about us and then

come into his own.

Grimk? herself is a participant in this coming genius, which is the forerunner of

contemporary and emerging African-American artistic excellence. The oppressive stance of

having to assume a white male narrative persona in her poetry in order to accommodate the

"freedom" to describe sexual interest and encounters with other women gave

Grimk? profound information about the strategies of being closeted through concerns of

race, gender, and sexual preference. The two major themes of her writings, the desire for

romantic and sexual companionship and the desire for social and political equity for

African Americans, give her work the import, if not the discrete form, of the blues–that

musical and poetic cultural form which is the repository for African-American heroic

anguish over love, lost love, and political disenfranchisement. The blues, whether in form

or content or both, may indeed be characterized as the African-American epic song, and

Grimk? sings that song as an artist creating through the triple cultural blows of being

black, female, and lesbian.

Much of her work has been rigorously ignored. Most of the poems were too lesbian and

too sentimental for audiences during and after the Harlem Renaissance. Her fiction, on the

other hand, was too stark in its unflinching descriptions of the violence of lynching.

Indeed, the directness of her scenes of violence were unknown in African-American

fictional literature prior to the work of Richard Wright. Further, her short stories with

their promulgation of racial self-genocide have been too politically and emotionally

threatening for African Americans and others to receive and accept. As Toni Morrison

writes in the conclusion to Beloved, a more recent tale of infanticide, "This

is not a story to pass on." Thus it is a painful gift to participate in the

self-investigation this work has required of me; it is an honor finally to assist in

passing on this story that was not to be passed on.

From Selected Works of Angelina Weld Grimk?. Ed. Carolivia Herron. Copyright ?

1991 by Oxford University Press.