In honor of #WomensHistoryMonth, we are taking a look at this now famous frontispiece portrait of Phillis Wheatley, from her Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral (1773).
Because she arrived in the American colonies as an African slave, the year and location of Phillis Wheatley’s birth remain unknown. She received her name from the slave ship Phillis in which she was transported and acquired the surname of her purchaser, John Wheatley, who intended her to be his wife’s servant in their Boston home. Impressed by her intelligence and manner, the Wheatleys raised Phillis more as a daughter than a slave, allowing their oldest daughters to educate her and allotting her a bedroom and a place at their dining table.
After learning to speak, read, and write English with remarkable ease, Phillis Wheatley began to compose poetry. The verse that made her reputation was an elegy for George Whitefield, a Methodist minister whom Phillis Wheatley had seen preach in Boston shortly before his death in 1770. Her elegy, reprinted throughout the colonies and in London, earned her international fame. As a female African American poet, she captured much attention, and her only published volume, Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral, appeared in 1773 with a foreword attesting to her talent signed by eighteen prominent Bostonian men, and a portrait of the author sitting at her writing table with a pen in hand.
After Mrs. Wheatley died in 1774, the family dispersed and Phillis Wheatley married free black John Peters and settled in Delaware. Later abandoned by her husband, she worked in lodging houses until her health deteriorated and she became totally impoverished. She died alone on the outskirts of Boston of complications resulting from the birth of her third child.
Phillis Wheatley was the first African American to publish and the first American woman to try to support herself through her writing. Regarding slavery, she wrote in a letter in 1774 that “in every human breast, God has implanted a Principle, which we call Love of Freedom; it is impatient of Oppression, and pants for Deliverance.” She supported the American Revolution and admired political figures such as George Washington, with whom she corresponded.
Check out our online exhibition, Portraits of American Women Writers, to see more!
Reblogged 5 years ago from heaveninawildflower (Originally from librarycompany) 133 notes
nikovamvas liked this
caballerodelatristefigura liked this
weallfloatinxanadu reblogged this from dancingphalanges
weallfloatinxanadu liked this nogreatillusion liked this
dancingphalanges reblogged this from librarycompany
likembeefy liked this sinopatientwolf liked this
jackiestone liked this
vw-cixous reblogged this from heaveninawildflower
rebel-girl-queen-of-my-world reblogged this from lionofchaeronea nextdoriskearns liked this
moyarb reblogged this from ucflibrary ucflibrary reblogged this from loynosca
rebel-girl-queen-of-my-world liked this octane liked this
rawrcatisbored liked this
faeries-everywhere reblogged this from assbaka
assbaka reblogged this from lionofchaeronea
raymmax liked this
annavselen-blog liked this deepcoffeelover-blog liked this
njnavyguy liked this
this-ones-alright liked this
biodivlibrary liked this
autumnhobbit liked this
connanro reblogged this from merrilyspinning
connanro liked this merrilyspinning reblogged this from heaveninawildflower
gentlyriseandfall liked this
nottheloveofyourlife liked this
eccentricbrat liked this
mimmy711 liked this
3bunny4 liked this klaus-baudelaire reblogged this from librarycompany
librarycompany posted this
- Show more notes
