Howard at Atlanta
"Howard at Atlanta" is an 1868 poem by John Greenleaf Whittier. Whittier based his poem on an interaction between Oliver Otis Howard and Richard R. Wright, who was twelve years old at the time, when Wright told Howard to "tell 'em we're rising".
Background
John Greenleaf Whittier based the poem on an interaction between Oliver Otis Howard, at the time a general in the Union Army, and Richard R. Wright, a young Black man. Howard was visiting a grammar school called the "Storrs School" in autumn 1868. He later wrote in his autobiography that he spoke to the students and then asked them "if anyone had a message" for schoolchildren in the northern United States. Wright, described as wearing "a clean white jacket" and being twelve years old, rose and said "tell them we are rising."[1][2][3]
Writing and publication
Whittier heard the story from
The one curse of the races
Held both in tether:
They are rising, — all are rising,
The black and white together!
"Howard at Atlanta" was published in 1868.[5]
Reception and analysis
Wright wrote Whittier in March 1869, criticizing him for using the word "massa", noting that "I have given up that word.”[4] The phrase "we are rising" became very popular.[4] Whittier references the "Vision of the Valley of Dry Bones" passage from the Bible in the poem, equating the freeing of the slaves to "a resurrection of the dry bones".[5] He describes Atlanta as "rising phoenixlike out of the ashes of war".[6] Steve Courtney considers the poem to be an "optimistic view of the South's future, free from slavery."[3] Another critic highlighted the poem as epitomizing Whittier's vision for "racial harmony and equality."[7]
References
- ISBN 978-0-393-63413-6.
- ^ Howard, Oliver Otis (1908). Autobiography of Oliver Otis Howard, Major-general, United States Army: pt. 2. The civil war. Baker & Taylor. p. 414.
- ^ ISBN 978-0-8203-3056-3.
- ^ OCLC 841229547.
- ^ a b Tegen, Charles Robert (1968). The Religious Poetry of John Greenleaf Whittier (Thesis). University of Georgia.
- ^ OCLC 881805754.
- .
- ISBN 978-0-252-09098-1.
- ISBN 978-0-19-530173-1. Retrieved 2021-01-30.