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Wheatley, Phillis, 1753-1784We have 1 book for this author.
Phillis Wheatley (1753 – December 5, 1784) was the first African American writer to publish a book in America. Her book Poems on Various Subjects was published in 1773, two years before the American Revolutionary War began, and is seen as one of the first examples of African American literature. Early yearsBorn in what is the modern day Senegal, then Gambia, Africa, Wheatley was captured by Africans, named for the slave ship the Phillis, and sold into slavery at the age of 7. She was brought to Boston, Massachusetts on July 11, 1761, where John Wheatley purchased her and made her a Christian. John Wheatley was a prominent Boston merchant with a wholesale business, real estate, warehouses, wharfage, and the schooner London Packet. Susannah Wheatley was an ardent Christian and admirer of George Whitefield. Between seven and eight years of age, Wheatley was frail and was chosen to be a domestic servant and companion to Mrs. Wheatley in her later years.
Her owners, the Wheatleys, made certain that she was educated. She published her first poem in 1767 in the Newport Mercury. She became the first African American woman to have a book published when her "Poems on Various Subjects" was published in 1773. At the age of fourteen, Wheatley drew much acclaim in the Boston area with the writing of her first poem titled “On the Death of the Rev. Mr. George Whitefield, 1770.” This piece established her trademark of “morality” as well as her “giftedness” and her habit of honoring God through verse. PoetryWheatley's poetry overwhelmingly revolves around Christian themes, with many poems dedicated to famous personalities. Over one-third consist of elegies, the remainder being on the religious, classical and abstract themes she had likely learned about through the classical education the Wheatleys provided.[1]. She rarely mentions her own situation in her poems, a concession to the sensitivities of her primarily white audience. One of the few poems in which Wheatley refers to slavery is "On being brought from Africa to America":
The poem reflects one of the main justifications for the slave trade common at the time, i.e. that Africans were thereby rescued from Paganism and into Christianity, with the corollary that once having become Christian they deserved to be treated as equals. Because many white people of the time found it hard to believe that a black woman could be so intelligent as to write poetry, in 1772 Wheatley had to defend her literary ability in court. She was examined by a group of 17 Boston luminaries including John Erving, Reverend Charles Chauncey, John Hancock, Thomas Hutchinson, the governor of Massachusetts, and his Lieutenant Governor Andrew Oliver. They concluded that she had in fact written the poems ascribed to her and signed an attestation which was published in the preface to her book Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral published in Aldgate, London in 1773. The book was published in London because publishers in Boston had refused to publish the text. Wheatley became ill and was prescribed “fresh sea air” as a remedy for her respiratory distress. With her master's son, Nathanial Wheatley, she went to London where Selina, Countess of Huntingdon and the Earl of Dartmouth helped with the publication. In 1778, the African American poet Jupiter Hammon wrote an ode to Wheatley. Later yearsWheatley’s popularity both in the United States and England ultimately brought her freedom from slavery on October 18, 1773. She read her poetry before General George Washington in March, 1776 and strongly supported independence during the Revolutionary War. However, the death of the Wheatley Family effectively deprived Phillis Wheatley of her access to white intellectual society. Her marriage to a free black grocer, John Peters, proved a failure. Two of her three children died soon after birth, and Peters left her to support herself and their one surviving child as a scullery maid. In December 1784 she died in poverty at the age of 31. Her remaining child died only a few hours after her death. At the time of her death, a second volume of her poetry reportedly existed in manuscript, but neither it nor any other late works of hers have ever been found. Poems by Phillis Wheatley
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This biographical information was gathered from the Phillis_Wheatley page, courtesy of the Wikipedia project. BooksReligious and Moral Poems |
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