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Clotel; Or, The President's Daughter

Chapter 6 THE SEPARATION

Word Count: 1491    |    Released on: 01/12/2017

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lower. It was the same seat where they had spent the first evening in this beautiful cottage, consecrated to their first loves. The same calm, clear moonlight looked in through the trellis. The vine then planted had now a luxuriant growth; and many a time had Horatio fondly twined its sacred blossoms with the glossy ringlets of her raven hair. The rush of memory almost overpowered poor Clotel; and Horatio felt too much oppressed and ashamed to break the long deep silence. At length, in words scarcely audible, Clotel said: "Tell me, dear Horatio, are you to be married next week?" He dropped her hand as if a rifle ball had struck him; and it was not until after long hesitation, that he began to make some reply about the ne

raceful figure, weeping in the moonlight, haunted him for years. It stood before his closing eyes, and greeted him with the morning dawn. Poor Gertrude, had she known all, what a dreary lot would hers have been; but fortunately she could not miss the impassioned tenderness she never experienced; and Horatio was the more careful in his kindness, because he was deficient in love. After Clotel had been separated from her mother and sister, she turned her attention to the subject of Christianity, and received that consolation from her Bible that is never denied to the children of God. Although it was against the laws of Virginia, for a slave to be taught to read, Currer had employed an old free Negro, who lived near her, to teach her two daughters to read and write. She felt that the step she had taken in resolving never to meet Horatio again would no doubt expose her to his wrath, and probably cause her to be sold, yet her heart was too guileless for her to commit a crime, and therefore she had ten times rather have been sold as a slave than do wrong. Some months after the marriage of Horatio and Gertrude their barouche rolled along a winding road that skirted the forest near Clotel's cottage, when the attention of Gertrude was suddenly attracted by two figures among the trees by the wayside; and touching Horatio's arm, she exclaimed, "Do look at that beautiful child." He turned and saw Clotel and Mary. His lips quivered, and his face became deadly pale. His young wife looked at him intently, but said nothing. In returning home, he took another road; but his wife seeing this, expressed a wish to go back the way they had come. He objected, and suspicion was awakened in her heart, and she soon after learned that the mother of that lovely child bore the name of Clotel, a name which she had often heard Horatio murmur in uneasy slumbers. From gossiping tongues she soon learned more than she wished to know. Sh

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Clotel; Or, The President's Daughter
Clotel; Or, The President's Daughter
“Born a slave and kept functionally illiterate until he escaped at age nineteen, William Wells Brown refashioned himself first as an agent of the Underground Railroad and then as an antislavery activist and self-taught orator and author, eventually becoming a foundational figure of African American literature. His most ambitious work, Clotel; or, the President's Daughter (1853), the first novel written by an African American, purports to be the history of Thomas Jefferson's black daughters and granddaughters. Dramatizing the victimization of black women under slavery, the novel measures the yawning chasm between America's founding ideals and the brutal realities of bondage.”
1 Chapter 1 THE NEGRO SALE2 Chapter 2 GOING TO THE SOUTH3 Chapter 3 THE NEGRO CHASE4 Chapter 4 THE SLAVE MARKET5 Chapter 5 THE RELIGIOUS TEACHER6 Chapter 6 THE SEPARATION7 Chapter 7 THE PARSON POET8 Chapter 8 A SLAVE HUNTING PARSON9 Chapter 9 DEATH OF THE PARSON10 Chapter 10 RETALIATION11 Chapter 11 ESCAPE OF CLOTEL12 Chapter 12 A TRUE DEMOCRAT13 Chapter 13 THE CHRISTIAN'S DEATH14 Chapter 14 A RIDE IN A STAGE-COACH15 Chapter 15 THE ARREST16 Chapter 16 DEATH IS FREEDOM17 Chapter 17 THE ESCAPE18 Chapter 18 THE HAPPY MEETING19 Chapter 19 CONCLUSION