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LITR 5535: American
Romanticism Selection
Reader: Cynthia Garza Harriet
Jacobs, Incidents in the Life of a
Slave Girl, N 826-849
Incidents in the Life of a Slave
Girl is the story of Harriet Jacobs published under the pseudonym Linda
Brent. This true account of Harriet
Jacobs’ struggle as a female slave is full of Romanticism.
The following Romantic qualities can all be found in the work: dark and
light in physical and moral terms, quest or journey toward transcendence, desire
and loss, rebellion, individualism, separation from the masses, sublime,
crossing borders (physical, social, and psychological), heroine, and Eden
(paradise, paradise lost, and paradise regained).
Because this work is immersed in Romantic qualities, my primary focus
will be on dark and light in physical and moral terms. Incidents
in the Life of a Slave Girl (p. 831)
" I loved, and I indulged the hope that
the dark clouds around me would turn out a bright lining.
I forgot that in the land of my birth the shadows are too dense for light
to penetrate." ·
In this line, Jacobs lets us into her world, a dark world.
She continues this analogy throughout her work- light, the better life,
the white life, cannot penetrate the “shadows” of her world.
She also lets us know that she has no choice in the matter, it was
decided for her at birth. (p. 834)
" With me the lamp of hope had gone out.
The dream of my girlhood was over. I
felt lonely and desolate." ·
At this point of the story Jacobs has lost all hope to marry a free black
man. She has asked him to leave,
and he has consented. She
again describes the better life, the free life, the life of choice as dark.
The lamp is an interesting turn on the use of light.
It is almost as she chose to turn it on, but “the lamp of hope had gone
out;” and she had no choice in turning it off. (p. 838)
" The stars were shining through the
boughs above me. How they mocked
me, with their bright, calm light!" ·
Here, Jacobs has revealed that she is pregnant with another man’s
child, a white man of her choice. Her
master is infuriated, her grandmother disappointed, and Jacobs is left with few
choices. She thought she had found
a way out, but again, the stars were “mocking” her at the thought that she
had contrived a successful plan. The
light is described as “calm,” obviously the opposite of her mental state. (p. 841)
" There was no admission for either light
or air."
"The air was stifling; the darkness
total."
" ……for in my small den day and night
were all the same. I suffered for
air even more than for light."
"This continued darkness was
oppressive."
"….without one gleam of light." "
But of course this was not safe in the daytime.
It must all be one in darkness."
·
In Jacobs’ description of the small den she lives in, she uses an
abundance of light and dark language; and even adds air to the equation.
Air represents life, actual survival.
Light becomes happiness and is in conflict with air.
She is unable to do anything during the daytime, for fear of being
caught, so her new life takes place in mental and literal darkness. (p.842)
"Now I will have some light.
Now I will see my children." ·
When Jacobs discovers a way to see her children, through a tiny hole, in
the daytime she again has “light” in her life.
“Light,” represents happiness and what her children mean to her. (p. 843)
" One day the doctor took them into a
shop, and offered them some bright little silver pieces and gay handkerchiefs if
they would tell where their mother was." ·
I think the light and dark motif becomes very interesting at this point.
Silver reflects light, it does not possess light, and therefore it is
almost a false light. It seems
fitting that the doctor would try to bribe the children with false light, false
happiness. (p.846)
" God forgive the black and bitter thoughts I indulged on that
Sabbath day!" ·
The use of “black” in this line seems to be the traditional use of
the word, simply meaning dark and/or impure thoughts. (p.848)
" ……black seal." ·
The “black” seal is a dark and sad moment for Jacobs; the arrival of
the letter letting her know of her grandmother’s passing.
" Yet the retrospection is not altogether
without solace: for with those gloomy recollections come tender memories of my
good old grandmother, like light, fleecy clouds floating over a dark and
troubled sea." ·
This is the last sentence of Jacobs’ personal story of slavery.
She ends the story just as she began, with dark and light imagery.
Ironically, here, she refers to her grandmother as clouds that are
“light.” Light has been
reserved for white people throughout the story, but now, it seems to be a
tribute or gift to the woman, her grandmother, who watched over her and gave her
guidance. Though she has come full
circle, and is now a free black woman, Jacobs still labels her life as the
“dark and troubled sea.”
Question for
discussion:
Is it romanticism
when she chooses her own way? Dendy:
Did the children know she was there? Jennifer:
She thought that the children, particularly the oldest son was aware of
her presence. Kelly:
It is, she took her hope and connected to her dream of better things, and
that is Romanticism. Natasha:
She is not innocent or empty of personality, she is self content and
conscious of her and her surroundings. Kelly:
She narrates here to be on her own because it did happen; however, there
is something that she strives to her whole life- Romanticism. Linda:
She reminds me of
Thoreau. The character discussed
how she would rather be in jail.
On page 835- a quote- " I would rather
live and die in jail"
On page 833- " as for the jail there would
be more peace for me there." Cynthia:
She is very boldly
defiant, a Romantic in terms of being an individual in the story Al:
Captivity narrative and slave narrative.
The attic is her prison like Thoreau. Cynthia:
She always wants to
be somewhere else. Linda:
Did the 7 years have an effect on the physical? Al:
Light and dark The
way she looks both she and Douglas mention early in how they were They
both describe their coloring, and she discusses she was mulatto. Dr.
White: She
is a lot like Eliza in Uncle Tom's Cabin. Cynthia:
When
she was free, it is her paradise. David:
If she were to be
seen in New Orleans, she probably would not have had the problems that she did
in other states. Kayla:
The Creole
influence- because of her skin color, she can pass from world to " Cane
River" world. Linda:
Jordan- though
historical Dr.
White:
The slave romantic must have a separate category, though it also has
Romantic aspects. The Federal
Writers Projects was during the Depression and interviewers went around to
gather the stories of slave narratives. Cynthia:
Slave narratives
definitely fit in with local color, like when Linda stays with Mrs. Bruce as a
servant after emancipation. Linda:
The seven years
that Linda spent in the attic is biblical, and she questions whether the
time line was changed in the story. Dendy:
He thinks that the
story has been reworked though the majority of the story is true. Dr.
White: Did
she communicate with Stowe? Cynthia:
Yes.
Stowe suggested that she publish her story with A Key to Uncle Tom’s
Cabin. Through my
readings, studies of Harriet Jacobs, my initial presentation, and the class
discussion, I think it is evident that Jacobs’ slave narrative is a unique
perspective of slave life embracing many Romantic qualities.
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