Hang a Thousand Trees with Ribbons

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by Ann Rinaldi




  Hang a Thousand Trees with Ribbons

  The Story of Phillis Wheatley

  Ann Rinaldi

  * * *

  GULLIVER BOOKS

  HARCOURT, INC.

  Orlando Austin New York

  San Diego Toronto London

  * * *

  Copyright © 1996 by Ann Rinaldi

  Reader's guide copyright © 2005 by Harcourt, Inc.

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or

  transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical,

  including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval

  system, without permission in writing from the publisher.

  Requests for permission to make copies of any part of

  the work should be mailed to the following address:

  Permissions Department, Harcourt, Inc.,

  6277 Sea Harbor Drive, Orlando, Florida 32887-6777.

  www.HarcourtBooks.com

  First Gulliver Books paperback edition 1996

  Gulliver Books is a trademark of Harcourt, Inc., registered in

  the United States of America and/or other jurisdictions.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Rinaldi, Ann.

  Hang a thousand trees with ribbons:

  the story of Phillis Wheatley/Ann Rinaldi.

  p. cm.

  "Gulliver Books."

  Includes bibliographical references.

  Summary: A fictionalized biography of the eighteenth-century African

  woman who, as a child, was brought to New England to be a slave,

  and after publishing her first poem when a teenager, gained renown

  throughout the colonies as an important black American poet.

  1. Wheatley, Phillis, 1753–1784—Juvenile fiction. [1. Wheatley, Phillis,

  1753–1784—Fiction. 2. African Americans—Fiction. 3. Women poets—

  Fiction. 4. Salves—Fiction. 5. Poets—Fiction. 6. Massachusetts—

  History—Colonial period, ca. 1600–1775—Fiction.] I. Title.

  PZ7.R459Han 2005

  [Fic]—dc22 2004054033

  ISBN 0-15-205393-X

  Text set in Fournier

  Designed by Kaelin Chappell

  G H

  Printed in the United States of America

  * * *

  In memory of my aunt Jo

  * * *

  TO BE SOLD

  A Parcel of likely Negroes, imported from Africa, cheap for cash or short credit; Enquire of John Avery, at his House next Door to the White-Horse, or at a Store adjoining to said Avery's Distill-House, at the South End, near South Market; Also, if any Persons have any Negro Men, strong and hearty, tho' not of the best moral character, which are proper Subjects for Transportation, may have an Exchange for small Negroes.

  —From an advertisement in both the

  Boston Evening Post and the

  Boston Gazette and Country Journal

  for July 29, 1761, and several weeks thereafter

  Sir You having the Command of my Schooner Phillis your orders Are to Imbrace the First Favorable Opertunity of Wind & Weather & proceed Directly for the Coast of Affrica, Touching First at Sinagall if you fall in with it On your arrival then Cum to Anchor with your VeSsell & go up to the Facktory in your Boat & see if you Can part with Any of your Cargo to Advantage ... if you Could Sell the whole of your Cargo there to a Good Proffett & take Slaves & Cash Viz. Cum Directly Home.... You must Spend as little Time as poSsible at Sinagal & then proceed Down the Coast to Sere Leon & then make the best Trade you Can from place to place till you have disposed of all your Cargo & purchase your Compleat Cargo of Young Slaves which I Suppose will be about 70 or Eighty More or LeSs I would Reacommend to you gowing to the Isle Delos if you Cant Finish at Sereleon ... be sure to bring as Few Women & Girls as possibl ... hope you wont be Detained Upon the Coast Longer than ye 1st of May by Any Means, the Consequence you know We have Experienced to be Bad, You & your people & Slaves will get Sick which will ruin the Voyage. Whatever you have left Upon hand after April, Sell it altogeather for what you Can Get if even at the First Cost Rather than Tarry Any Longer ... be Constantly Upon your Gard Night & Day & Keep good Watch that you may Not be Cutt of by Your Own Slaves tho Neavour So Fiew on Board Or that you Are Not Taken by Sirprise by Boats from the Shore which has often ben the Case Let your Slaves be well Lookd after properly & Carefully Tended Kept in Action by Playing Upon Deck ... if Sick well Tended in ye Half Deck & by All Means Keep up Thare Spirretts & when you Cum off the Coast bring off a Full Allowance of Rice & Water for a Ten Week PaSage Upon this your Voyage Depends in a Grate Measure ... by all Means I Reacommend Industry, Frugality & dispatch which will Reacommend you to farther BuSsiness. Your Wages is Three pounds Ten Sterling per Month Three Slaves, priviledge & three % but of the Cargo of Slaves Delivered at Boston, This is all you are to have...

  —From a letter written by Timothy Fitch,

  a successful merchant in the slave trade,

  to his employee Captain

  Peter Quinn, dated January 12, 1760,

  dateline Boston, Massachusetts

  Chapter One

  MAY 1772

  "What do you remember, Phillis? What do you remember?"

  They are always asking me that. As if I would tell anyone about my life before. The few good memories I have I cherish and hold fast. My people believe that if you give away your memories, you give away part of your spirit.

  It was Nathaniel asking now. We were at breakfast before the rest of the family came down. "If you can remember anything about your life before, you should tell these men today," he said, looking up from the newspaper he was reading.

  Today I must go to the governor's mansion. To stand before a committee of the most noble men in Boston to prove that the poetry I have written is mine.

  Me. Phillis Wheatley. A nigra slave who was taken into the home of the Wheatleys as a kindness. And who responded to that kindness by doing something few well-born white women would do in this year of 1772.

  Put her thoughts to paper. Write down the workings of her mind.

  Now, because I had made so bold as to do such a thing, I must stand before these shining lights of the colony today and answer their questions. Had I truly written this poetry? Or stolen it from somewhere? Was I passing myself off as a lie? The mere thought of their questions made my innards turn over.

  "Don't be anxious, Phillis," Nathaniel was saying.

  "I'm not anxious."

  "You're touching your cowrie shell. You always do that when you are anxious."

  He was right. I drew my hand down from the shell that I wear on a black, velvet ribbon around my neck. My mother gave it to me when we were taken from our home. It gives me comfort when I'm distressed.

  "You look very lovely in that new frock," Nathaniel said, spooning fresh fish into his mouth, "but must you wear that shell for this occasion today?"

  "I always wear it," I said. "It's my good talisman."

  He shrugged and went back to his reading.

  I'd been bought for cowries. Sold by the people of my own land into the hands of Captain Peter Quinn for seventy-two of the lovely creamy white shells that serve as currency in the slave trade.

  Nathaniel does not know this, though he knows me better than anyone. None of the Wheatleys know it. There are certain things that are just not for the telling.

  "Why would these learned men wish to know of the past of a little nigra girl?" I asked.

  "Don't be petulant, Phillis."

  "I'm not."

  "Yes, you are. It won't work with these men. They are all importa
nt and busy and are going out of their way to grant you this time today. But, to answer your question, if they consider your poetry in light of what your life was like before, it could work in your favor."

  "I want them to consider my poetry for what it is. Not for being written by a slave."

  "You're not a slave, Phillis."

  There is the lie. A convenient one, of course, for everyone concerned.

  "I don't see anyone waving free papers under my nose of late, Nathaniel."

  "If I knew you were going to be vile this morning, I would have had you take a tray in your room. Has your position in this household ever been one of a lower order, Phillis?"

  Nathaniel knows I desire my freedom. He considers it a personal affront, an insult to all his family has done for me.

  "No, Nathaniel. My position in this household has always been that of a daughter," I said dutifully.

  "Then don't belabor this freedom business. It's tedious."

  Unless you don't have it, I thought. "I don't mean to be ungrateful, Nathaniel. Yet..." I stopped.

  "Yet you would rather be free. Is that it, Phillis?" He said the word with grievous hurt in his voice.

  "Yes."

  "To do what? What would you do with this precious freedom that you cannot do now?"

  But I had no answer for that. For I do not know what I would do with it.

  "None of us is truly free, Phillis," he said languidly, "but if you wish it so much, then I put forth to you that you will someday be like Terence. Do you recollect who Terence was?" He was playing the teacher now, a role he cherished.

  I knew I must answer. I did so sullenly. "A Roman author who wrote comedies. African by birth. A slave. Freed by the fruits of his pen."

  "As you will someday be. If you follow the course we have set for you. Pray that day does not come too soon. For you will regret it."

  My bones chilled. But I challenged him. "How so?"

  He expected to be challenged. It is the way of things with us, the way he taught me everything I know. By argument, open discourse. "Because then all this"—and he waved his fork to include the polished dining table, the sparkling silver, the shining pewter—"will be lost to you. And you to us. You thrive only under our protection, Phillis. Free, you will perish."

  "Terence did not perish."

  "True. But that was Rome. This is Boston." There was a twinkle in his blue eyes. He was enjoying himself.

  But he was right, and I knew it. He is always right. That is the tedious thing about him.

  "I just thought it might go well for you this morning if these esteemed gentlemen knew what you had been through. With the middle passage, for instance," he said.

  I glared at him. He was debonair, self-assured, the only son in a well-placed family, wearing a satin and brocade waistcoat and a velvet ribbon on his queue, but his question sat ill on me. "What do you know of the middle passage?"

  "Don't take umbrage, Phillis."

  "If we're going to fight, give me fair warning, Nathaniel. I've the mettle for it. But don't pretend kindness and speak to me of such things as the middle passage."

  He lowered his eyes. "So it was as bad as they say, then?"

  "That depends on who is doing the saying."

  "No matter. Some men on the docks."

  "If they work on slavers, then they know, Nathaniel. Everything they say is true. But I have no need in me to speak of it."

  He raised his cup of chocolate. "A proper answer from a proper young woman."

  "I'm not a proper young woman and you know it."

  "My, we're contentious this morning."

  "I wasn't when I came to the table. You've made me so."

  He smiled. "No, you are not a proper young woman, Phillis. No proper young woman writes poetry."

  Well, he spoke no lie.

  "Don't look so distressed. Proper is tedious."

  "Your sister, Mary, is proper, and you think her wonderful."

  "I think her tedious. And prissy and foolish."

  "She loves her reverend."

  "Yes, and likely the loving will kill her. Here she is being brought to bed of a child twice in one year. Such a lot is not for you, Phillis."

  "What is my lot, then?"

  "Grander than that ... If you succeed with these fine gentlemen this morning."

  "And if I don't?"

  "You will, Phillis, you will."

  His words brought tears to my eyes. When all is said and done, Nathaniel always has believed in me. When I first came to this house, ten years ago, he befriended me; while his pious and prissy sister, Mary, his twin, tormented me so.

  I was seven then and they were seventeen. I thought Nathaniel was a god. Or at least a roc, which is the name we give the huge birds that, in our stories, swoop down and fly away with elephants.

  In his own way, Nathaniel swept down on me. And saved me. And now I hate him for it, no-account wretch that I am. In part because I have come to depend on him so.

  And in part because I love him.

  I love him because he is sharp, smart, and not lazy. Because he sees beneath the pious claptrap of Boston and says things we should not speak of.

  Things I think all the time. I love him because there is an excitement about him that bespeaks things about to happen. Or makes them happen, I don't know which.

  I love him because he had a hand in making me write my poetry.

  He does not know I love him, of course. If he did, it would be the end of any discourse between us. Certainly it would be the end of me in this house. Bad enough that I write poetry. To profess love for the master's son would be unforgivable.

  Soon Nathaniel will be the master, with Mr. Wheatley sickly with gout and about to retire. Nathaniel is buying out his father's holdings now, and running things.

  He smiled dourly. "Surely you could share a memory from your past with me one of these days, couldn't you? Haven't we known each other long enough?"'

  I nodded. "What would you know?"

  "I'd be most honored, someday, if you would tell me of your mother. That is, if you have any recollection."

  Do I remember my mother, he wants to know.

  I not only remember, I can still see the deck of the ship we came on. I can smell the salt air, and the hot vinegar the crew uses to clean up the stench belowdecks.

  I can still hear the clamor as the male slaves are being exercised, the fiddle music being played by the crew, the clanking of chains as the slaves commence dancing.

  Once again I am with Obour, my friend. We have just finished our first meal of the day, our boiled rice and millet.

  And I can still hear my mother's screams as she was thrown overboard. Dashed into the sea because, as I was told later, the sailors had found a sore on her face. And they thought it was smallpox.

  "You could not bear my confidences, Nathaniel. I can scarce bear them myself," I said.

  He nodded. "Don't underestimate me, Phillis. This meeting at the governor's mansion this morning could never have come about if you and I did not have an understanding of one another."

  What is he saying? My eyes went moist. Does he know my feelings for him?

  There is no telling what fool thing I would have said if Aunt Cumsee hadn't come into the room then, like some dark conscience, come to refill our cups with chocolate.

  Come to hover over me, was what she was doing. I met her amber eyes.

  Remember yourself those eyes said. Don't hold him in higher esteem than he holds you. Sweet talk is all u be. He is dallying with you because it amuses him to so. You're only a slave to him—chattel. Dally back, but no more. Or it will come to grief.

  Aunt Cumsee knows I love him. I could never keep anything from her.

  I glared at her. "No, thank you, no more chocolate for me. Excuse me, Nathaniel, I must make ready."

  He stood as I rose from my chair. "Ask Prince to bring around the carriage, won't you?"

  "He's cast his spell on you again," Aunt Cumsee whispered to me in the hall, "just
like those witch doctors where you come from."

  "Hush." I pushed her along into the kitchen. "What do you know about witch doctors? You've been here so long, you've forgotten the old ways. All you know is Massachusetts."

  "We gots our share of witches. An' I know what he's doin' to you."

  "He's doing nothing," I said. "And for your information, the witch doctors where I come from don't cast spells. The only magic they do is with herbs. To make people well."

  "But he's castin' his own kinda spell over you. Always does."

  I kissed her. "Don't scold. I know what I'm about. I know that right now, even as we speak, there is some noodleheaded white woman out there who is setting a snare for him."

  She nodded. The look in her eyes was so old it unsettled me. "Still, he's castin' somethin' on you. An' you sit there, dumb as the sundial in the garden, waitin' for him to favor you with his light."

  "Silly," I told her. And I ran for the door. "Wish me luck now, won't you?"

  She shook her head and sighed. "Luck got nuthin' to do with it. Prayers do. An' I done all my prayin'."

  I ran outside. "Prince," I called. "Prince! Master Nathaniel wants the carriage! We're going to Province House!"

  Chapter Two

  "You goin', then, is you?"

  "Yes, Prince."

  He was bringing out the horse and hitching it to the chaise. I stood and watched.

  "Sure she's goin'." Sulie pushed past me with a pan of chicken food in her hands and stood in the yard tossing it about. "Can't wait to take her little behind over to that governor's mansion and talk her fancy talk to all those mens." And she mimicked what I'd said to Nathaniel at breakfast. "'You couldn't bear my confidences, Nathaniel. I can scarce bear them myself! Oh!'" She slapped a hand against her forehead in a mock manner of a white girl about to faint. Chickens clucked around her feet.

  "Shut your mouth, Sulie." Prince glowered at her. "Leave her be. She's doin' what the Lord intended her to do."

  "The Lord intended her to scrub pots and iron the master's shirts," she flung back. "An' all her poetry be is a way to get outa doin' it."

 

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