Clotel or The President's DaughterCourier Corporation, 9 de mar. de 2012 - 160 páginas The first novel by an African-American, this dramatic tale revolves around the fate of a child fathered by Thomas Jefferson with one of his slaves. Although born into slavery, author William Wells Brown escaped bondage to become a prominent reformer and historian. His emotionally powerful depiction of slavery and racial conflict in the antebellum South resounds with the immediacy and honesty of his own experiences. Brown weaves a variety of contemporary sources — sermons, lectures, political pamphlets, and newspaper advertisements — into this innovative work, which appears here in an unabridged republication of the 1853 first edition. |
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Althesa American amongst appeared asked Attakapas beautiful Bible blood boat Carlton CHAPTER child Christian Clotel coloured Connecticut Currer daughter death despotism Devenant dogs dollars escape eyes farm father felt freedom fugitive George George Green Georgiana girl hair hand heard heart hope Horatio Green hour Huckelby human husband inquired John Peck labour lady land liberty look man’s marriage Marser Mary master Miss Peck mistress morning Morton mother mulatto Natchez negro neighbour Jones never nigger night o’clock o’er Ohio river Orleans owner passed persons Pompey poor purchased quadroon replied returned river runaway s’pose seated seen servants slave slave trade slaveholder slavery Snyder sold soon Southern teetotaller tell ten foot pole thought tion told took trader trees Uncle Simon Virginia wife William William Wells Brown wish woman young