Sunday, December 30, 2012

DJANGO UNCHAINED ANSWERS THE RACE QUESTION THAT RECENT FILM “LINCOLN” LEFT DANGLING…


 

As recent film release, “Django Unchanined” opened up before me I experienced all of the trusted hallmarks of an epic Tarentino film: a 1970’s aesthetic, realness and depth of field; a hyper graphic depiction of death and dismemberment; an ironic humorous digression to humanize the villains; a nitty-gritty 1970’s stlye in your face language; morbidity served up as undeniable humor; the distinctly rich, soulful flavor of blacksploitation a la carte; astute attention to detail and an iron-clad plot with surprises galore… But what I did not expect was an eloquently developed proof that the assumptions of racial superiority used to justify slavery and racism are utterly bankrupt.  As such Django did the job that its contemporary film, “Lincoln” did not complete!  This begs an argument regarding what exactly is the role of an historical drama?  Is it acceptable to merely present a dramatisation of the facts as they are, typically, only loosely known or conjectured or does the director have a larger role to interpret the facts while telling a story and bring it full circle to the present?  Most importantly is Django an historic drama at all?  I will let the viewer answer this question but I will interject that unlike Lincoln, the character Django and his story are not historically verifiable.  In my opinion the genre in which I would comfortably place Django is that of an Historical Fiction. 

 

But based solely on the treatment of the subject of slavery, an historically verifiable condition they have in common I will continue to compare these two films if only because they had the fortune of coming out at the same time.  Some would say do not tamper with history, after all it is what it is.  Others would say that since most historical dramas are nearly as much fictional interpretation as fact it is impossible and therefore unacceptable to ignore the affective domain which defines our humanity.  Lincoln views and tells the story of slavery from the perspective of a white man but Django is a story whose reality emanates closer to the perspective of a black man.  Whilst sitting in the theater I closely watched the reactions of the audience which was shocked in various ways, some were clearly distressed but others refreshed that this version of Hollywood slave reality was not cleaned up to suit its viewing audiences… it was realness at its best! 

 

The entire climate of Lincoln but mostly the tired debate between pampered, vain, potbellied, privileged white men in tight breeches nearly popping the satin buttons of their waistcoats, making sordid deals in brothels, back rooms and parlours whilst hundreds of thousands of slaves suffered the most degrading and inhuman existence in history took a back seat to the dynamic, larger than life, albeit, fictitious Django.  The power and attraction of this gunslinging, sassy, buttkicking, ex-slave who in a few days seemed to accomplish what Nat Turner and John Brown combined could not do also made me realize that the two films were also truly worlds apart thematically but this in the scheme of things did not absolve either of them from unequivocally exposing the true nature of slavery and leaving its audience with the clear message that the racist principles upon which it was then justified are utterly bankrupt!  Slavery is the kind of horror that demands this absolute clarification. 

 

Now the two films were both period pieces that would have occurred only a year or two apart but in juxtaposition, Lincoln appeared to sympathize more with the romantic view of the racial superiority of whites treating the ratification of Emancipation under the 13th Amendment as a mixed bag of guilt and punishment for the rebel south which, many will argue is more closely aligned with the actual intent and sentiment of the times.  Django juxtaposed the depraved and psychopathic realities of slavery with the surreal and demonic indifference of whites to its horror, floating in a displaced state of religious and political fantasy, intoxicated by the chemical fumes of a reprehensible cloud of lies… the real irony is that Spielberg, as the household name for horror, so sadly missed the mark…  What is the lesson?  That no longer can any story involving slavery in America avoid portrayal of the true horror of that evil institution.  There is no blithe, immaculate, or even politically correct way to portray what was one of the truly most barbaric practises in human history, that of African and Black American enslavement!  Cleaning slavery up to make it marketable for white audiences is a thing of the past! We are all grown up, we have moved forward as people, Black Americans do not blame or hate whites living today for the deeds of their ancestors and hopefully whites do not see Black Americans the way their ancestors did; it is time to put our adult hats on and see slavery as it truly was so that we can all move on…

 

The second point of distinction was the overall power and social relevance of the role of the Hero, Django.  Detractors may attempt to draw a parallel to the larger than life blacksploitation heroes of the 1960’s and 1970’s such as Shaft and Dolomite.  Django is undoubtedly the Shaft of the early twenty-first century.   The character Django was not based on any true persons story it is an artifice of Hollywood.  The existence of Mandingo fighting was probably a reality in the south although it would be difficult to verify since it would have been an underground affair treated as cock or dog fighting leaving no physical records of cash transactions and without any posters or tickets.  We can safely credit Tarentino or some other 1970’s blackspoitation film aesthete with the coining of the term, “Mandingo Fighting”, since there is similarly no historical record in existence where that name was used to identify the alleged fighting matches between strong, “black bucks” in the south.  Conclusion:  It was not the intention of Quentin Tarantino to create a drama based on any historically verifiable character so the genre should be treated as fictional entertainment…  Django is not real, he is not live he is not Memorex; he is made of the illusionary dream-stuff of Hollywood!  But is Django a positive black male role model?  Does he personify a core group of wholesome, uplifting and positive human characteristics that not only young black males but all young males can use as a healthy prototype?  Does the nature of his character real or fictitious represent qualities that can assist young men in successfully defining and asserting themselves as working parts of the socioeconomic structure in America?  I will leave it to the viewer to answer these questions… this leads to my third point.

 

Django is not a real character at all, he never existed.  Even if he did the viewer is charged with their own evaluation of the quality of a film based on whether or not and to what degree or not they were ultimately entertained.  In my opinion Django is an entertainment overload.  It is funny, witty, horrifying, emotional and charged with that kind of nonstop action and good old fashioned acting skill that makes you forget you are actually watching a movie and not experiencing it firsthand…  

 

Jamie Fox was the Heroic Legend Django, the slave from which the film drew its breath, it is his story.  His relationship with the older Christopher Waltz, who portrayed Dr. King Shultz, doctor turned bounty hunter, was one of father and son; it personifies the real collaboration between white abolitionists and slaves and proclaims emancipation as a victory to the tireless efforts of both races.  Jamie and Christopher worked so well together and owned their roles so naturally at times I forgot it was really a movie.  Leonardo DiCaprio  is the consummate, charismatic villain equally appealing as he is sinister, who portrays the role of Calvin Candie a wealthy, immaculately well-mannered and influential Mississippi Plantation owner.  Samuel L. Jackson masterfully portrays Stephen, a loyal, dyed-in-the wool second generation head house slave who is more like a father to Calvin Candie his role is equally villainous as the slave of Candie who carries out his masters dirty day to day slave business. 

 

As a critic it is not my intent, or style to provide a synopsis of any film, I prefer to leave it up to the viewer’s personal experience, my purpose is to magnify the distinguishing hallmarks of a film, if ever I find there are none to distinguish then I will not write a review.  Lincoln was a distinguished film but in comparison it’s cold, clinical rendition of one of the most emotional events in the history of America was eclipsed by Django.   Django, although an historical fiction nails the ever difficult subject of slavery on the head!  The acting in Django is superb; it is filled with what will become classic performances to future generations of movie lovers.  I do strongly suggest that you go to see the movie Django Unchained at the theater were you can enjoy its full cinematic beauty.  After you have seen it you decide whether it measured up to your expectations and standards for entertainment! 
 
 

 FIN

David Vollin

 
 

Friday, December 21, 2012

SOURWOOD: CHRISTMAS ON THE PLANTATION


CRISTMAS ON THE PLANTATION…
CHAPTER ONE: A SEASON OF MIXED BLESSINGS



Exploding beneath his feet, the dry crack of autumn’s late-falling acorns splintered against the tough Carolina Pines as Ojibwe crossed the short trail between the slave quarters and the livery.  His footfall was otherwise quieted by the dense bed of soft pine needles underfoot.  Ojibwe was of mixed ethnicity; part Algonquin from the Tappahannock region in Virginia and part African from whence in that vast continent he did not know.  He learned to hunt from his Native American father using the cushioning needle bed of the forest’s floor to conceal his approach of unwary game.  Even now, although he was not hunting he practised walking noiselessly dodging the acorns though occasionally crushing one buried in the needles of in the mixed deciduous and coniferous forest.  The woods were filled with Pitch Pines and Shagbark Hickories as well as a dozen other species he could name straightway; names like Slippery Elm, Pin Cherry, Sycamore, Boxelder, Swamp Chestnut Oak, and Blackjack Oak...  He had learned all the names of primary and secondary woods, shrubs and bushes as a child.  His was a life-long fascination with plant life, he could describe the content of a forest just by smell alone.  Ojibwe developed the habit of collecting fallen hickory branches for kindling and for smoking the small game he caught during the short winter months whenever he passed through the woods. It would have been safe to say that he knew every tree and fern, every foxhole, birds roost and snakes hole.  Even though he did not own any land, a reality made a thousand times more poignant by the cruel, unjustified condition of slavery,  he had a profound love and respect for the land.  Though it was his lot to be enslaved to the land he made peace with it; he served it and it served him.  He had already smoked some squirrel and possum for the upcoming holiday feast a humble but highly spirited occasion the slaves were permitted to enjoy.  Of course there were many dark sides to the most brilliant of pleasures enjoyed by slaves.  For men women and children worked like machines it would have been more sensible to just sleep or huddle close in their cold, decaying cabins but if there was any meaning at all for their suffering if they existed for any reason at all save to be deprived of their humanity, to be used and worked to death, dispensable, reprehensible, invisible, then they had to work even harder to make a special time in which to celebrate the humanity and purpose they saw within themselves.  A bee is celebrated for the sweet honey it makes; a moth is admired for the silk it spins. How then can a slave toil until his life is spent from weariness and not be celebrated or thanked for the things he has bought into being?  How can the fruit of his labor or the labor itself be relegated as dumb and how could any other human being with any conscience or intelligence view their plight as the just outcome of a race divinely sentenced to ignorance, poverty, inequality and servitude.  Were they merely automatons chained to the white mans will and purpose or were they truly independent men equal in favor and stature, identical in all save the most obvious of physical aspects to the divine source that drove them all?  Similar the way one flower is to another, the way oak is to pine, brethren in the all-seeing eyes of creation…

During off season the slaves were given new tasks some of which included preparing the fallow fields, maintenance of the livestock, fixing or making new tools, repairing the plantations many buildings and roads and weather permitting the construction of new buildings in anticipation of the upcoming planting season.  Ojibwe was a carpenter, cabinetmaker and stonemason and he was going to meet his master’s eldest son to discuss the reconstruction and expansion of an old dependency of the main house and the expansion of the livery among other outbuildings that were falling into decay.  When he was a young boy Ojibwe had been sent away to Charleston S.C. to work as an apprentice under a fine cabinetmaker but in his off hours he was also commissioned out to assist the shipbuilders with their work, so he had learned that craft as well although there was scarcely any need for it on the large landlocked plantation with only a small manmade pond and a slow mosquito infested rivulet on its grounds.  The plantation was named “Sourwood” after the proliferation of sourwood trees across its lands. 

Ojibwe was so named by his father but his master had named him Kallicrates after the ancient Greek architect of the Parthenon.  His father was enslaved as a teenager though born free, sold from a James River Plantation to his present owner.  The circumstances surrounding his father’s enslavement and death were never revealed by his mother who seemed determined to take those details with her to the grave.  When he asked her of his father’s life as a child she would sing him a song in the little Algonquin she could manage or remember…  Ojibwe mused over the little-known details of his father’s death as he made stealth his captive down the path and then he noticed a recently fallen Red Oak whose dense four foot diameter bole stretched across his way dwarfing the narrow pathway.  The tree had stood over ninety feet tall and it had been a favorite of his since childhood; it was one of the few truly ancient trees left that had not fallen victim to the violent summer storms.  He took a few moments to inspect the ruined tree, its leaves were three-pronged like crow’s feet with wide spurs pointing out like thumbs opposite from a central finger, he noticed the leaves were still green, lustrous and supple indicating that the tree had fallen only a few hours ago.  He followed the widening trunk left-ways into the woods by the swell of the trunk until he found the base trumpeting outward and upward in a jagged circle like a fan, its gnarled roots still clinging to clumps of stone and to mossy patches of the black loam that had nurtured it.  It stood more twice his height indicating there would be a huge hole on the other side where the tree had been rooted. A deep chasm opened behind the upended roots revealing the depth of the fertile layer of pine needles and leaves, grubs, black beetles and centipedes scrambled aimlessly attempting to find cover before curious birds, rodents and other creatures spied them for a quick meal.  The black earth lining the immense aperture in the earth where the trees roots had once fastened themselves to the earth was still moist, the dry winter wind had not yet sucked the life from it… At the bottom of the pit the black soil turned to a dark brown sand, now to loose river stones in sand now to clay, sanguine coloured clay…  Ojibwe saw in the fallen oak many board-feet of fine wood perhaps to furnish masters new addition.  Eager as he was to surprise him with the timely discovery he knew in the end it would require back breaking labor to hew the majestic tree into manageable pieces in the tight interstices of the dense forest floor.  Oak was one of the heaviest woods to carry but they would need to act quickly before mites worms, insects and grubs tunneled into its decaying flesh, it would need to be cut, dressed and dried out for the rest of the winter before it could be useful for anything other than firewood. 

Ojibwe pressed on after making mental measurements of the cache of wood.  Fining it again would not be a problem but he was sure there was not adequate storage in the small lumber-shed; he figured it would take about 10 slaves up to three or four days to get the all the good wood into the lumber-shed including the bole and its huge branches.  The rest would be taken to the blacksmiths foundry at the edge of the plantation. 

A million things had gone through Ojibwe’s mind after he left the wind-felled oak many paces behind.  Many of them were merely transient thoughts that focused on the sights and smells of the winter forest around him.  Only a few tenacious leaves continued to fasten themselves to their branches  but they made such a clamour whistling as they did in the midst of a almost noiseless realm of majestic tree-skeletons reaching in vain to capture the warming juice of the sun.  He noticed the trees were beginning to thin out, patches of grasses and brambles became more frequent and the path diverted to the bed of a now extinct river bed.  The hoary trunks of primordial trees leant inward perhaps still remembering a time so far off when they might have drunk from the missing river, their roots driven deep beneath its bottom, their branches kissing its surface after a heavy rain…  Animals of all kinds would have gathered along its cliff-like shores bending their long necks downward to taste the woodland waters, cold as the stony heart of the mountains whence it issued in the west. 



As the path rose from a ramp-like shoulder that might have been shaped over hundreds of years by animals seeking an easy escape from the riverbed the land began to open up rising to an open field.  At its crest Sourwood could be glimpsed still far off in the distance, a low lying mélange of ancient buildings ranging from one architectural style to another.  The string of structures was tied together by crude, massive chimneys projecting upward along its length.  An attempt to unify the facades was indelicately executed nearly 50 years ago entailing the stuccoing of the façade and the application of a belt course at the lower half to unify the height since each addition had been built with varying floor and therefore window heights.  The most impressive of the structures was a huge section built entirely of cherry brick.  Its cellar was a honeycomb of masonry arches and from its thick walls peeked small windows appearing desperate to allow light into the fortress like interior.  The principal windows were trimmed in a loamy sandstone, secondary windows in molded brick.  Massive cypress shutters bound with heavy iron protected its valuable contents from harm…





CHAPTER TWO: THE SECRETS MEN KEEP

The owner of Sourwood Plantation was a gentle-spirited man of Scottish Descent who proudly wore the name of McClure.  The plantation was established in the late 1600s by an ancestor who acquired the land through marriage with an English Noblewoman who was a distant cousin of George III, king of England.  Since the McClure’s of his lineage landed in the new world they had been a driving force in the history of the region.  His grandfather had been instrumental in convincing the May 2, 1776 South Carolina Delegation to be the first to vote to Declare Independence from England in what was then called, The Province of St. Charles.  His grandfather, Matthew McClure was also a very close associate of William Hooper from Orange County North Carolina one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence.  Matthew McClure was reputed to have been one of the authors of the Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence from May 20, 1775 signed in Charlotte N.C. nearly a year earlier than the one authored by Thomas Jefferson and signed into law on July 4, 1776.  The plantation was the seat of his family in America set in the fields of Mecklenburg North Carolina But the familial ties with England had all but died after the American Revolution. For many years now there had been unrest concerning the spectre of secession from the newly formed Union.  James McClure, the family patriarch, was proud of the legacy of his ancestors who had fought and died to create this sublime and unprecedented union of states.   His hesitance to support the first kernels of the Confederacy carried the power to split his family and community apart.  In his heart he longed to have the slaves freed but he was alone in his sentiment.  His kindness toward the slaves was interpreted merely as the confidence and comfort gleaned by a highly successful planter.  He understood all too well that a southern gentleman of his position could not support abolition; it would be the equivalent of heresy to his southern brethren since his ownership of Sourwood had been inherited father unto son as a matter of divine right.  As the proprietor of one of the largest plantations in the region he was expected to side on the cause of slavery. 

His grandfather, Matthew McClure, like many of the framers of the Union had romantically envisioned America as the re-creation of the Greek City-States of ancient legend.  He embraced the new spirit of Federalism and it’s overture’s to ancient Greco-Roman policy, fashion and architecture as a means of identity for the new Republic but just as quickly as the Union of States had been created this vision came under fire by the southern slaveholding states that threatened it with permanent erasure in a mortal battle over the divine right of white men to own human slaves stolen from Africa!  The framers had had a unique chance to end slavery in 1776 but they fell short of the very ideals they imagined they had captured in the Declaration of Independence.  Instead, they chose to uphold the traditional view that white men were divinely superior to black men.  Whether for political, philosophical or other reasons, that is the hand that fate had dealt the children of African descent forced into slavery in the young United States of America, it could be argued that had they pressed to abolish slavery as a condition of the Constitution the southern colonies would have pulled away leaving a dis-unified 13 colonies to fend for themselves against the tyranny of Great Britain.  It was a calculated risk that the question of slavery would resurface at a later time when the sentiment of Americans was more favorable towards the Emancipation of slaves but the south was inexorably entrenched in slavery and whether it was profitable or not did not matter anymore; it was a matter of tradition.  The question of slavery and specifically the ending of slavery was one that every white man and woman of conscience surely must have contemplated many times over, their hugest concern being the destiny of the slaves once they were freed? Freeing the slaves would have been a great humanitarian gesture but the conditions of institutional racism that pervaded the country on every level would hardly have allowed them to live peacefully. Would freedom mean citizenship and would citizenship mean equality with white men?  Without affording the freed slaves full equality with whites in every respect including citizenship these people would have been forced to exist in a sociopolitical and economic vacuum.  What good would freedom be if only on paper? 

Ojibwe had been listening closely to everything discussed by his master, his eldest son and a select contingency of other affluent men of Charlotte while surveying portions of the property with masters eldest son Briarton or whilst waiting in the main house to receive instructions regarding the repair of one of the tobacco barns within the plantation.  What he did not hear or missed was adequately filled-in by Phaedra one of the house servants whose duties centered around the parlours, drawing rooms and other reception areas of the house.  Briarton’s father James McClure could often be heard reciting his most famous commentary regarding the Secession, “By the spirit of my ancestor Matthew McClure signer of the Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence I will not so easily dissolve that which so many young and innocent lives were sacrificed to build!”  But in his heart James McClure knew that he had no choice real choice in the matter, he was expected to support the rebel forces with every inch of the reach of his great influence.  He had already donated signifiacant financial support to the effort, a matter that weighed heavily on his conscience.  On the contrary, his son Briarton McClure was all in with secession from the Grand Old Union.  Ignorant of the hardships and horrors of real warfare Briarton romanticized himself as a monumental, equestrian hero brandishing his families’ ancestral sword before the Yankee usurpers!  Briarton could not have been more unlike his father, he anticipated his inheritance as master of a large and affluent plantation as a divine right for a southern gentleman of noble descent that was rendered meaningless by the American Revolution.  He sided with his cousins across the Atlantic and longed to escape to Europe leaving the baseness of slavery and his families’ plantation to his younger brother to manage while he enjoyed the life of a young aristocrat amongst those of his own kind.  His father refused to have him educated in England as he had wished so that he could prepare him for the realistic task of husbanding the family business, a formidable plantation with over 2,000 slave but finally compromised allowing him to complete half of his education in Paris and England.

From what Ojibwe had gathered, the southern planters had been orchestrating the secession for nearly 20 years since John C.  Calhoun’s Fort Hill Address.  He has secretly been communicating with a Yankee spy telling him everything he could find out about the progress of the rebellion.  The spy had posed as a botanist and ornithologist who was studying the local flora and fauna giving him a reason to wander around the wild places across the plantations of North and South Carolina.  The botanist pretended to be a Frenchman commissioned by the government of Napoleon III, who was a known sympathizer with the Confederacy.  He went by the faux name of Thierry De Montvert and his papers had been carefully forged, even the contacts in his official chain of command had been bribed into collusion with this dangerous scheme should anyone question his pedigree. 

Ojibwe met Briarton in the south park of the main house in the orangery where he had been drawing up the plans for the new building.  The structure was to be erected beside an existing storage warehouse for cotton further out in the southern fields nearly a mile from the main house.  A new train track was being constructed to connect it with the existing tracks leading from the warehouse to downtown Charlottesville.  He had designed the building to be a long low wooden factory designed for the manufacturing of confederate uniforms and other articles such  as tents, back packs and etc.  He knew this because he had overheard Briarton’s conversation with another white man who was to supervise the manufacturing process.  The building was very small and would be equipped to accommodate an intake area where fabric and materials would be stored, a work area where the material would be measured and cut against patterns an assembly line of sewing machines where the primary panels would be assembled and finally a detailing section where finishing touches, buttons, embroidery, etc., would be applied.  At the far end of the room were high racks of shelving where finished uniforms would be stored until they could be shipped out to Charlottsville, a loading berth and platform opened up directly outside the storage racks and the train tracks would pull up directly to the loading berth.  The cieif concern at this meeting was the location of the windows.  Briarton had shown Ojibwe’s preliminary plans to one of the conspirators and they had determined that it was too open to view.  They wanted fewer windows and decided to add a guard booth at the entry and at the loading berth, they had also decided to more than double the size of the structure so that it could also store ordnance.  Because they wanted to conceal the true purpose of the structure the arsenal was to be constructed of brick but as a freestanding building within the shell of the wood frame building.  The entire complex would be designed to take on the appearance of a large barn of the type typically used to store tobacco and cotton until it could be moved to market.  Ojibwe responded to Briartons revisions with encouragement but noted that the revisions would take a couple of days before they could be turned into comprehensive plans.  He said,

“Briarton, Surh, I see’s jus what you means by dis here change and I can have some new plans drawed up by the next two days fo sho if’n I starts out rhight now Surh.” 

Briarton nodded his head in agreement saying simply,

“Allright then Kallicrates, you know we need these plans as soon as they can be readied.  I expect you will need at least 60 nigrus to get started.  Go to the woodshed to see how much wood we have and how much more we need to order from the lumberyard in Charlottesville.  We will also need to know how many bricks and roughly how much stone to get from the quarry.  That tree you found will do just fine for shingles and finishes by the time we are ready to put the roof on.  I’ll make sure Lydia comes by to bring you whatever you need in the nature of provisons.  I have to go to Richmond and I won’t be back for at least a week but my brother will check with you in two days to get the plans.  You are not to discuss this with nobody else! Is that clear! Other than my brother Justice you are not to utter a word about what we’s doing here.  If any white men come lookin around claimin they’s from Charlotte come out t’find out what provisions we need you tell em you don’t know nu’thin and send em to Justice, you got that now boy?” 

Ojibwe nodded yes to Briarton’s commands and continued to make reassuring overtures to reassure him hoping it would hasten his departure to Richmond.  From what he had learned from Thierry, Richmond was the focal point of all the activity with regards to the southern states pulling out from the Union.  He had a bad feeling about the rebellion like an aching sense of dread as if he would never live to see life as a free man.  If the southerners were successful he and his people would be doomed to dumb servitude forever, they’d have to do the bidding of men with half their wits and pretend to be happy about the prospect like children taking candy.  Most white folks really believed blacks were docile sycophants panting like dogs by their master’s feet, wagging their tails just to get a morsel of fat or a bone thrown to them from the kitchen.  He didn’t know much about business but he did know that white men got payed a whole lot of money to do what he was doing for free.  Hell, most white people didn’t even have the knowledge to design buildings and draw up plans, even his owners could not do that but yet they owned him and even the most ignorant drunkard, hell even a crazy white man that could not feed himself or speak a word of plain English was considered to be superior to him just because of the color of his skin.  If white men were so much smarter than him then why didn’t Briarton let one of them draw up the plans for the uniform factory and arsenal?  But what bothered him more than anything else was the fact that Briarton expected a slave to help further the cause, to tighten the choke hold, to redouble the chains of his own enslavement!  It was an arrogance and ignorance that was completely incomprehensible to him because he could not escape the reality of slavery it pinned him down from every angle.  Although he possessed far greater intelligence than most of the white people he encountered he was never permitted to forget the crippling brand of inferiority slavery had scorched into every square inch of his being.  While it was his experience that most white folks were living in a fantasy of racial and intellectual superiority to blacks he also knew that many mean spirited and lucid whites were keen as the devil about the way most blacks thought about them.  Usually it was those who had inflicted the most pain and dehumanization upon black men, they knew in their hearts that racially or intellectually inferior or not black men had the ability to strike back and should they be caught at unawares, return the same harsh treatment.  That was the whole point of racism, to scare blacks into submission since they could never truly convince them that their servitude was just.  Even institutionalized Christianity was ultimately impotent in the face of oppression, it merely offered slaves a moralistic platform from which to argue equality.  No where in the bible did it say that white men were so created to oppress and own black men.  The concept of divine right was an affectation white men imposed upon Christianity to suit their own needs, to justify and ease their guilt and fear in the face of the omnipotent.  Every god fearing white man and woman knew in the back of their clouded minds the price for playing God in this life meant eternal damnation in the next!  Blinded by hatred and ignorance it was clearly a risk they were willing to take for a few brief years of wealth and comfort frontwards of the grave…

When Ojubwe was a child he saw a beloved slave man being carried to his death bed after having been beaten by a white man to within a quarter-inch of his life.  To the white man he was just another nigger who moved him the wrong way and needed to be taught a lesson.  But to the slaves he was a distinguished and wise elder who had shown much compassion to his people and to many whites as well.  The slaves called him “Speaker” because of his gift of the spoken word…  Ojibwe was his favorite and when he was permitted to see him he asked why the white man had beat him so badly, nut yet understanding the mortal implications of Speaker’s wounds.  Speaker motioned the crying boy to come closer and to sit on his twisted legs while he explained, he must have been in excruciating pain but endured it because he knew he was near to death… Speaker said to him,

“Ojibwe, the white man wants to convince himself that we are dogs, that we are unfit to be men and so he in his ignorance has lied to himself to justify his anger and hatred of the black man because no matter what he does he knows we will not submit to his lies.  He knows we are not like his pigs and horses and chickens who are no less content with captivity but who do not possess the will to challenge him.  He see’s in us himself though darker and stronger and he understands that save with guns and torture he could not keep us captive for long.  In his evil mind he imagines what he would do to a man who had abused him so and he sees only the evil he would do to himself if in our place.  He fears retaliation because he is consumed by evil and ignorance  he has to do this in order to make the lie seem real.  He is acting from the gut of mankind, the basest, most barbaric fiber of mankind.  He cannot comprehend understanding…He is so invested in the lies of racism and the fear of retaliation that he is utterly blinded to the possibility that men can be compassionate and move on when they have been freed.  But even greater than his fear of retaliation he fears the probability that once freed, a black man would beat him at everything he holds important.  He knows we are hungry, having been so long denied and he knows hunger is a greater driving force than comfort, but it is tantamount to fear!  The white man fears us because he knows his evil must eventually be paid for.  He has lied about a God even he does not believe in.  It is a God of his convenience, perpetrated to poison the minds of the weak and to render them docile.  That is why God and religion alone are not sufficient, the white man needs guns to enforce his superiority and he does not strike the black man alone but in groups.  His fear is so great he thinks he has left nothing to chance.  Any man who understands the power of revenge and has wronged another man lives in fear that at some time, perhaps unexpectedly, that man or some other will move against him to exact repayment for wrongdoing.  So a man who has killed fears he will be murdered in retaliation, a man who has enslaved fears enslavement.  That is what you must learn to understand as a man.  Study closely the white man’s fears and you will learn his mind for he is driven so intensely by fear.  Now there are white men of noble heart but they are very few and they will not reveal their true heart openly.  If you should ever find such a man hold him dear and when you know there is mutual love between you then you should be confident you have made a brother of the white man.  But do not push him to side with your cause publicly, allow him to do so of his own will because it is a danger he alone must accept.”  Ojibwe watched as Speaker died in front of his eyes.  He died holding Ojibwe’s hand and he felt the power and compassion of that old man pass into him. 


CHAPTER III:  A DESPERATE PLAN REVEALED…

Ojibwe had taken a walk into the woods just at high noon to watch the bold rays of the sun wash his body through the skeletons of the trees.  The air was bitterly cold so the sun could lend him nothing more than a means to light his way save when the wind ceased to comb the whistling treetops allowing the thin layers of wool to gather heat ere the wind sucked it away again.  Ojibwe had been working on the foundation design for the gunpowder magazine and armory based on one he had seen in Charleston South Carolina.  That structure was reputed to have been constructed in 1713 and besieged in 1780 leading to an eventual surrender of the Continental Army to the British.  He anticipated the scale of this Powder Magazine and Arsenal to greatly exceed that of the Revolutionary War edifice but was concerned about the ability of the soft organic soil at the proposed site to carry the large masonry structure.  He was concerned that the masonry would settle more aggressively pulling the frame structure down and causing structural damages in the roof walls and floors.  He had seen this happen to a masonry structure to which a frame porch had been added encircling the original structure entirely. His mind drifted to the forest and as the shadows lengthened he became fascinated with a spiders web.  He marked how the web had been spun between the branches of a ring of brambles at the floor but spun around a large fern.  Suddenly he got it, the spider had not attached his web to the fern because of it’s tendency to blow violently in the wind therefore eventually rupturing the web.  He utilised the stronger, firmer branches of the low, lying shrubs to secure his web well over and around the flailing fronds of the fern.  Therein was his solution.  In his mind’s eye he saw the gunpowder magazine and arsenal as an independent structure hidden within the wood frame warehouse and factory.  It could be constructed first having its own foundations, walls and roof.  Afterwards, the wooden structure could be built around it.  In this way the two buildings could settle independently.  He had already completed the plans in his mind when he was accosted on the path by a white man who seemed to have materialized directly in front of him as if from the wind itself.  The man was dressed as a proper gentleman and carried with him a large back pack bulging with instruments.  Several finely wrought tripod stands had been lashed to the sides of the pack and numerous lenses protruded from individual pockets lining the outside of his gear.

At first Ojibwe was startled by the sudden appearance of the gentleman so engrossed in the matter of his design but after at least a strong minute of careful examination of his face in the waning forest light he recognized and greeted him as if some great caution had arrested him.

“Mister Thierry De Montvert, how might I help you Sir? I see you is still stud’n the birds and trees down these parts.  You be careful that you don’t run into any bears or cats out here, they start lurk’in out bout now”

He fashioned in a hurried breath before pausing again as if to check the man’s face to verify if it had been received as sufficiently polite enough.  The man did not smile back to affirm his graciousness but he did respond to him perhaps unwittingly in a rather agitated and aloof tone.

“Kallicrates, right now isn’t one for exchanging southern pleasantries, I need to talk to you now but this place is way too open and I daren’t keep you for long but we must talk tonight.  I’ve been looking for you away’s back near the slave cabins but you haven’t been there for the past two or three days now so I took a chance that I could find you nearer to the Plantation House.  There’s a lot going on and I need to get some information from you by tonight as I am heading back up to Washington, D.C. in the morning.  I do not know what schedule your masters have set for you but what time seems to you to be the best for a brief meeting of an hour or more?”

Ojibwe thought long on his question, there was definitely something afoot.  An ill ease began to encroach upon what had been a thoughtful walk through the woods ere nightfall shuttered its stark, brilliance away.  Briarton now quite obsessively consumed with preparations for the succession of the southern states from the union had left unexpectedly 3 days ago for Richmond with little preparation and now Mr. Thierry De Montvert typically the portrait of calm and patience was feverishly hunting him down with some unnamed dread upon his tongue.  Things moved very slowly amidst the tall Carolina pines; ironically all of the recent agitation around him was in full due to the South’s resistance to change.  The prospect of war was discussed secretly amongst the slaves speculating on how they might be used by the white man to further the cause of their own enslavement.  They imagined that they would be given only the most menial and undesirable of chores, digging trenches and transporting explosives on the front line.  Their lives would be easily given away to the Yankees in exchange for the safety of a southern white man.  None of them had experienced or remembered war of any kind save that of slavery itself which had surely proven enough to survive.  He finally did manage a short response to the gentleman:

“Mr. Thierry De Montvert Sir, I reckons I be able to get free anytime tonight but I cant stay for long I’s got to get them plans drawed up for Master Briarton an I spect he’ll be back by tomorruh mownin wantin them done.  It wouldn’t be proper for you to meet me on the grounds so I’ll slip away round 3:00 A.M. and meet you right here.  Spec I be gett’n back myself now Mr. Thierry De Montvert Sir.”
 
No other words were shared between them at that time.  Mr. Thierry De Montvert had posted his horse about a half mile away.  He had been permitted to stay in a small but brilliantly appointed guest house on a neighboring plantation belonging to a distant relative.  His eccentricities were entertained only because he was a relative and while he stayed there he was constantly being set up with southern dames by his cousin Daphne who imagined herself to be the county matchmaker.  Fortunately he was already going to be terribly late for dinner tonight.  Daphne had presaged a matching with one of the local ladies with whom he was only vaguely acquainted but who he remembered as having no conversation at all save upon the subject of the misconduct and rudeness’s of her many slaves who had had the unfortunate fate to have been given by her the silliest and most demeaning names.  He understood why she remained unmarried in spite of her great inheritance for surely no gentleman southern or northern would entrust his household to such a buffoon!  Her voice alone was intolerable, a shrill braying instrument that might shatter stone.  Perhaps, he thought, she might marry a deaf gentleman as she seemed to be otherwise the picture of beauty and ladylike charm.

Ojibwe finished the preliminary plans just around midnight finally having a chance to eat the cold supper that Lydia had bought hot from the kitchen house nearly 6 hours ago.  He mused over the elevations and sections for a while.  He had solved the problem of concealment masterfully.  His design placed the powder magazine and arsenal in a subterranean chamber ventilated and lit by a vertical shaft made to look like a chimney stacks lined on axis and a cupola.  The actual size of the flue would be only a fourth of the structure allowing light and ventilation to get into the subterranean chamber.  In this way the volatility of the ordnance would be checked as it would be safely buffered by the earth behind 2 ft thick masonry walls and a huge vaulted masonry roof covered by earth.  A dumbbell waiter would be placed directly beneath the loading berth so that ordnance could be hoisted directly onto the platform and loaded easily onto the ammunitions train.  If there was an explosion the fire would be contained and at the very worst the heavy masonry structure would implode quelling the fire and containing the explosion.  On the exterior no trace would be discernible that might disclose the secret that there ever had been anything other than a warehouse inside.  The dumbbell waiter operated in a large brick-lined shaft heavily weighted so that it could easily be hoisted and equipped with a geared winch so that fine, precision could be employed to match the elevator with the level of the train or wagon to be loaded.  The short distance between the powder magazine and the dumbbell waiter shaft was equipped with a conveyor of wooden rollers.  Ojibwe was proud of his design and he knew that master Briarton would be pleased. 

At 3:00 sharp Ojibwe was waiting in the small clearing for Montvert to arrive.  Mr. Thierry De Montvert  was 15 minutes late and there was rouge smeared about his cravat as if he had been with a lady.  Without any greeting Montvert dove into the particulars.  One of his contacts in Richmond had informed him that there was going to be an important gathering of folk in Richmond at the Governors Mansion to discuss the preparations for defense should the southern states decide to secede earlier than planned.  Preparations that had been underway for two decades would be redoubled.  A man to man, gun to gun, cannon to cannon assessment of the readiness of each side would be made.  Critical contacts from every region of the south including spies in the north would be carefully recorded and maps updated to include the locations of militia, and weapons.  Monies which had been donated by wealthy southern planters would be directed toward the production of weapons, uniforms and railroads.  The final drafts of the new constitution uniting the rebel forces would be voted on in Richmond.  The first rough draft would undoubtedly be rejected but it would set a dangerous and virtually irreversible precedent that once given wind would be impossible to turn back to shore.  Mr. Thierry De Montvert had surmised that the McClure family, having played a significant role in the Revolutionary War and representing the largest financial interest in the region would play a pivotal role in gearing the Carolinas up for secession and almost inevitably war.  He wanted to know everything that Ojibwe had heard and seen of late as the fate of the Union and the possibility of the freedom of the slaves were on the plate.  He passed a small, embossed silver flask smelling of bourbon to Ojibwe to soothe him in the cold night air as he thought upon Mr. Thierry De Montvert’s words.  Ojibwe drank slowly at first but as he realized the fineness of the spirit took another healthy draught. Ojibwe was in the perfect position to filter intelligence regarding the plans of the rebel south to Washington, D.C. and he had already resolved to do so.  He updated Montvert with everything he knew including names, places and he even informed him about the plans he was working on but would not disclose the location yet.  As he did so a terrible fear overtook him and he realized that if word ever got out that he had informed a Yankee spy of the confederate plans for war he would have to run for his life or die enslaved.  Thierry assured him that the information he shared then and in the future would be kept in utmost confidence to protect his life.  Thierry mentioned that he knew of the meeting in Richmond but it was far too dangerous for him to go there, then he mentioned other spies within his midst of which he had no knowledge that would approach him in his absence.  He bade him to be weary of just anyone identifying themselves as a spy and warned him not to consort with anyone that he did not personally introduce to him as an ally.    He went on saying:

“Things are about to change here my friend Kallicrates, The world as you and I know it will no longer exist if matters press themselves into being.  Whether the south wages war against the north and whether it wins or loses, we will all be looking at a country caught in a great rush to catch up to the rest of the world.  If it gets to the point where it is too dangerous for you to remain at Sourwood Plantation be sure to get word to me well in advance of any evil, time will not be our friend if things get difficult.  I can assure you safe passage to freedom in the north, after all it is the very least I can do.  But until such time I will need you to watch everything around you closely and to speak nothing, do not even let on that you are paying attention to what the white men here are doing and thinking.  Do not give them any reason to second guess the level of confidence they have placed in you.  It is fate that in their arrogance underestimating the slave, treating them as if they were beasts; they have excluded a mighty force of men who might otherwise prove brave and loyal to their cause.   But no man will be loyal to a cause that spells his demise.  In the ensuing days especially if war comes and the south begins to see its doom the attitudes of white men will drastically change toward black men and you will be looked upon as potential enemies.  They will never arm you lest you side with the north in the hope of winning your freedom.  But they have set themselves up for the most strategically obvious sabotage by the very people they fight to enslave.  As a reaction to bitter defeat these cowards may slay the slaves rather than see them freed!  Beware of their treachery Kallicrates, in the ensuing months lend a close ear to whomever I reveal as our ally, your life may depend upon your ability to connect with them as the world drastically changes around you.  But if you survive I see great hope for you, for unlike many of your kind who work on the land or clean great houses you have a talent that not many slaves or white men possess.  When this is all done you should go from here and work for your peoples in the north or in some enclave of freedmen who will want to establish their own churches and homes and communities.  They will be in need of such talent and from one who understands their ways and will treat them with dignity.  Once you are freed do not depend on the white man to employ you as an architect for hire, his vanity is far too great and do not allow any white man to lease your services out to other white men, always remain in control of your fate!”

A heaviness passed between the two men, both realized that they might not speak again in this life.  Ojibwe had never been spoken to with such respect by a white man and he expected it would never happen again.  People do and say strange things when they see their mortality before them, his mother used to say to him.  But a dying man has no longer any lies to tell… he is already free of this life.  A stubborn man who yet clings to the evils of his life will lie ere he dies thinking to confound those who know no better but secrets taken to the grave are forgotten utterly opening a new promise to replace the lie.  In the end all that ever counts is what is true…  He could almost hear his mother’s voice and feel her rough hands stroke his brow as she spoke to him.  They had both drifted into their own musings when Montvert started up again:

“You will not see my face again for nearly a month; I have urgent business in Washington, D.C.  If war ensues and I am not able to get back there is only one man whom you may trust, that is yourself!  A contact of mine will come to check on you but you must not let on that you know of him nor engage him at all in public or if you hear his name called show no interest or knowledge of it.  He will come to you in secret in the slave cemetery this Sunday night at 2:00 A.M. if you are unable to make it wear this scarf around your neck when you call on Ms. Eugenia Pettiford Lyles as you do every Wednesday morning when you come into town to pick up your masters handkerchiefs and personal effects.  A man by the name of Dearborn will introduce himself to you and you should both hasten to some remote place where you can speak freely and secretly.”

Montvert’s dark form was quickly lost to the darkness of the bare, winter woodland.  It was nearly Christmas but Ojibwe not being religious at all thought it odd that Montvert would not wish him Seasons Tidings ere he left.   An unmasked urgency within him bade him hasten back to the plantation house so he crept back to the old mansion finding every window lit brightly as if something had happened.  Damn, he thought, hoping he had not been missed.  What were the odds that anything would happen at such an hour?  He slipped into the window of the small room where he had been posting up while preparing the architectural plans.  Beneath the heavy walnut table he had fashioned a small, uncomfortable berth to rest if he pretended to sleep he might find the excuse that he had been sleeping soundly through all the commotion.  He had left a small pebble behind the door as a marker to check if anyone had entered the room while he was gone but the stone remained unmoved.  Rather than creep up to the house claiming he had awakened to find lights burning and decided to see what was going on, he chose to remain and wait to discover the news when he was awakened in the morning.  Something bad had happened; he heard crying and much indistinguishable conversation.  Someone passed by his window on their way to the stables, by the uneven footfall he surmised they had been drinking and then he heard them ride up to the house, dismount, re-enter the house and then leave hastily down the main road to the city. Whoever it was had taken Showboat, a beautiful and gentle horse; he could tell by the horse’s trot and his champing.  In about an hour or so he had fallen into an uneasy sleep haunted by the many unexpected happenings of the day. 

At exactly 6:30 A.M. Lydia woke Ojibwe up, straw was sticking out of his wooly hair and he let out a huge sneeze due to his allergy to the hay.  He read the graveness upon her face, she was not smiling and appeared to have been crying as her eyes watered still and were red and swollen as were her lips.  In spite of the fact he had not slept well he was uncertain that wakefulness would be any better at least no today.  He braced himself for what portended to be very bad news but wished he had been able to tell her to go away for a couple of more hours.  Although he could not guess what sorrowful news would eventually escape from her lips he knew that he was neither interested nor prepared to manage the crisis but somehow he knew he would figure out a way to cope until he had got back the sleep he missed last night.  The first time Lydia spoke he did not hear her at all and motioned to her to repeat herself.  Lydia was markedly irritated at his lack of compassion and at his apparent disinterest but she was far too caught up in her own grief to linger on his lack of grief for too long.  At length she managed the lugubriously delivered announcement again, and her words seemed to fall out off of her tongue and freeze momentarily in the air until they could be fully comprehended…

“Y’all wuz sleep’n so sound las night wile Massuh James had a misery in his chest.  Well he tried t’ make it out to duh hallway but he couldn’t breathe an his legs jus give out right there before duh stairs.  Was a good thing too cuz he jus passed out right there on duh stairs.  Dhat doctor came by this morning an said Massuh James had him a stroke.  We wuz all thinking he would be fine after a couple days of rest but he never did wake up from pass’n out on dem stairs an doctor Burdock says he died in his sleep dhis morning right befo duy sun rose.  Now you know dhat means Mastuh Briarton’s in charge of the house and doe nobody know wheres he at!  We sent a message t’ Richmond early dhis morning but it could be a’lese two days before he get here if’n they can find him a’tol.  Duh slaves is get’n things ready fo his burial now dhey done already took his body down to duh family chapel, we’s gone have tuh bury him least by tomorruh. Dhis morning I said t’ myself why he had tuh go an die right befo Christmas like dhat?”

Montvert’s words had proven uncannily accurate, now everything had changed indeed, so suddenly in fact that Ojibwe was reeling from the possibile implications.  With the death of James McClure years of mutual respect between master and slave had come to an end.  Briarton, unlike his father, did not see any nobility or equality in his slaves, to him they were merely chattel.  He frequented the violent toned meetings held by the poor white men deep in the woods these men were responsible for the deaths and beatings of countless innocent black men, good and proud men.  His father would not even allow them on his land.  Now, he supposed, they would be all over the plantation like vermin rats posturizing as if they were someones master… truth is they owned nothing and they were dumb as wood.  The only thing of value they imagined they had, and this itself was an illusion, was their white skin.  Dumb as they were they had the potential to cause trouble and Ojibwe knew they would target him because of his skills, calling him an uppity nigga when it was really their own ignorance and hollow arrogance they despised.  For the first time Ojibwe did not know where he stood on the plantation he had come to call home.  Master James had been so good to him, if keeping him enslaved could ever be seen as good, he had not had to imagine what it would be like if the tide should turn… and this time it had turned.  He immediately saw a narrow window of opportunity to satisfy the needs of Montvert and make his escape from what he knew would end up as a ruinous saga. 

Ojibwe did not know much about politics or warfare but he did know that these rebels were acting at a disadvantage to the northern states who already had a soundly established foundation and infrastructure with which to deal with traitors.  In his mind he knew the rebels would fail, and fail to the ruination of all they had known.  This dangerous enterprise Briarton had embarked upon had marked his ancestral home as a target for union soldiers looking to put down the rebellion.  It all became clear to him.  This rebellion had been years in the making.  Many southerners who had descended from the landed aristocracy of England had never really embraced the American Revolution and Independence from Great Britain.  Though they had kept their wealth they had lost their titles as American citizens but they coveted their lost legacy of divine right.  Although the poor  whites had begun to rally around the cause of the rebels it was not their war at all, they were merely peasants in the eyes of the landed gentry of the south.  In Europe they would have been nothing but serfs, crude, uneducated and living in squalor.  Their lots had not really ever changed in America, they were still mindless, powerless thralls no different than slaves save for the color of their skin that bought them an empty power to say only, “I am white like them, I am better than you!”  They only had real power over freedmen who did not have the protection of their masters to stay the anger and wrath of the poor white men.  These white vigil antes would not dare harm the property of wealthy white men, damaging property they could not afford to pay for but they were used a pawns by the wealthy to instill fear and inflict pain upon the slaves so that they would accept their forced labor and socioeconomic disenfranchisement.  Using the slaves as laboratory rats the theory of operant conditioning was practised and refined, it was largely successful in keeping them docile but it lacked the ability to purge their humanity from hoping for freedom from the oppression of slavery and racism. 

This was the war of rich white men who wished to reaffirm that they were descended from the landed aristocracy of Europe and the inheritors of the princely laws which included the divine right to own men and exact absolute judgment and control over their lives.  The poor white men who they used as pawns, giving them a false sense of propriety and power by virtue of their race comprised the massive army of innocent lives they were willing to sacrifice in order to manifest their lust for power.  These poor white men, denied any real power or wealth, nonetheless found a way to express their own lust for power by inflicting insufferable evils upon black men, women and children.  They coveted, imitated and affected what they imagined to be the philosophy and airs of entitlement that the wealthy classes had themselves affected.  It was a bonfire of the vanities!  The opportunity had eluded the framers of the American Constitution many summers ago in 1776 in Philadelphia to address the issue of slavery and kill forever the old regime founded upon the principles of Divine Right.  Had the brotherhood of citizenship and egalitarian equality been extended to the slaves and freedmen at that time this bitter pouring of blood, might have been avoided.  But the hugest deception had been perpetrated against the poor men who had been tricked into thinking they were superior to others merely based upon pigmentation.  For this deception and foolishness they would pay with their lives.  The rich planters were nothing more than cowards; they used the weaknesses of poor, desperate men to fight their battles and they used the helplessness and vulnerability of slaves to do their work for them without compensation.  This disparity and deception would never be acknowledged by the wealthy planters, themselves entangled in their own lies.  It was not in their interest  to risk the wrath of poor white men who had been so bitterly deceived as automatons in a process from which they would reap no benefit.   Then as now the princely laws of Divine Right could not apply to them, they would never be its beneficiaries’. 


Ojibwe struggled now to gather his humanity in the face of such focused hatred against his race.  He could not comprehend how anyone would kill another man in order to enslave other men, families, generations upon generations; it was a magnanimous sin before all humanity.  He understood that these were men of their times acting as they saw fit, as they had been taught to act.  But he knew also, being human, that there was only so much space that this kind of blindness could occupy, there had to be some place within the hearts of these men that sympathized with the plight of slaves.  He swore not to let the anger and hatred that had become the proud hallmark of some men’s honor cause him to hate all white men.  In fact, he did not hate any of them, really… he only hated their ignorance. 

Whenever something is being oppressed but yearns for freedom it’s desire to be free is ahead of its time.  The time it takes in order for it to be freed cannot be measured in hours or days or years because it represents time lost to life itself!  A second spent in captivity can never be regained.  The brilliance that hatred suffers to die or to be suppressed cannot ever regain the time it has been withheld. Liffe is a candle that is always burning itself out of existence, its flame growing less and less brilliant as it dwindles to naught.  Count then the billions of slaves whose potential to bring brilliance to the world was utterly lost and you shall see an indelibly wrought stain upon the fabric of the American flag.  So potent is this legacy that still it dims the brilliance of the stars upon that flag to a dull yellow and grey and some it has utterly burnt out.  But America may one day regain its former brilliance when it finally lives up to its promise to humanity…



                                                           TO BE  CONTINUED…


Saturday, December 15, 2012

BLAST FROM THE PAST




Kareem always started his Saturday morning with a big 6-egg omelette but this morning he realized he had used the last of the eggs, this meant a quick trip to the store… He was in a hurry so he put on some workboots, jeans, a loose t-shirt and he made sure that the hot blue bikini briefs he chose to wear could be seen hugging his perfect melon butt.  Kareem was no exhibitionist but he enjoyed walking in front of a big, thick muscular brotha, (especially if he was with his girl), and letting him get just a quick glimpse of his robust butt-cheeks as his jeans fell off his handsome butt.  He would look back often licking his lips while gazing at the brothas crotch just to let him know what they might get into if he was up for the challenge…


This morning he saw a huge dude walking a block ahead of him as soon as he got out of the door.  Pacing himself he prepared to catch up but did not want to break a sweat.  That dude had the freakiest biceps he had ever seen, they reminded him of this married kat he used to date a few years ago.  His mind quickly drifted back to that very time, the brothas name was Jasper.  He and Jasper got tight and then Jasper told him he had to be honest about his girlfriend who he was about to marry.  It was a tough few months until he actually followed through with the marriage not because he really wanted to but because there was a child involved.  Jasper mentioned that his girl had got pregnant and they wanted to get married before the child was born so it would not look like an afterthought, even though it was.  Well that was years ago Kareem thought, I’d better get my best game on for this brotha in front of me.


Kareem followed the same protocol he always did, walking ahead of the brotha without even looking, allowing his jeans to gently slide off the deep plateau of his butt just enough to revel the upper melon lobes of his ass and the deep valley between them.  Next on the list he looked back staring at the brothas crotch to find he had developed an unconcealed excitement and was wearing it unabashed almost as a dare to Kareem as he looked back to check and see how he had done.  So entranced on the brothas bulge he never bothered to look at his face… suddenly he heard the man say in a low sexy and oddly familiar voice, “Kareem Baby Cum Ova Here and Give Your Man Jasper Some Luv!”


Kareem had no rehearsed reaction to this response.  Before he had time to even think about it he found himself bound tight in Jaspers iron gripped embrace.  Jaspers arms seemed to not only bind Kareem’s 5 ft. 6in. self but lift him up as well to Jaspers full 6ft. 8in. height.  Jasper lifted him from behind and he could feel the brick between them pressing urgently and decisively against his buttocks.  Jasper pushed  right into the deep vertical depression of Kareem’s buttocks.  Jasper turned Kareem around as easily as if he were a toy so he faced him and then hugged him and lifted him up again, this time to give him a deep hot kiss.  The fact that they were now at the entrance to a very busy open air market made no difference to either of them because it was clear they were deeply in love.  Who knows how long they went on embracing one another…. It had been a long time and they had both thought about each other every day between their last meeting even if were only a fleeting nuance of regret.  The first words that came out of Kareem’s mouth were, “But what about your wife and children?” 


Jasper took Kareem over to a bench off to the side of the park in which the market was set up and told him the entire story… His wife had been pregnant but by another man.  This did not come out until after she had miscarried and an autopsy of the child revealed he was not the genetic father.  His wife Gieayda had been in an affair at least up until the wedding, her lover actually warned him that the baby was not his but he loved her so much he refused to believe it and he was only willing to sacrifice Kareem because of the baby.  “I loved you both man” Jasper admitted, “But I had to do the right thing and be a good father.  I didn’t want to believe Gieayda cheated but then I cheated with you too so who was I to judge.  So when the baby died and I found out I was not even the father I divorced Gieayda and decide that I was going to try to get over you man…   I walk down a different street every day hoping I will see you, I had no way of knowing where you had moved.  As they sat down talking and catching up two beautiful sistuhs came up on them and politely complemented each of them in turn. “My girl and I just wanted to let y’all know that we think y’all are two very handsome men and we would like to get acquainted.  I am Trinal and this is Cachea, we would like to know how you handsome, sexy brothas are doing today?” 


Without the slightest hesitation or disrespect Jasper stepped to the plate instantly first placing his arm securely around Kareem then answering, “Ladies, you are so lovely today my boyfriend and I both thank you for what we know to be honest complements however we are in love and therefore not available except as friends and somehow I don’t think that is what you two had in mind at all.  We thank you but we have not seen one another in a long time and have some catching up to do now.  Good Day Lovely Ladies!”  As he finished bidding the ladies good day he gave Kareem one of the longest, deepest hottest kisses he had ever given him, needless to say the ladies moved on with more than a couple of things whispered between them but they could not help but to smile at what was a clear and unfettered show of affection between the men.  Those eavesdropping in the crowded marketplace did everything to conceal laughter at the turn of events for those two very lovely but redirected ladies.  Everyone had respect for the gentlemen for handling themselves with such tact and confidence.  It was almost 5:00 PM before they actually left the park bench that evening, Kareem never did get to make breakfast but when they moved on to his small apartment about 3 blocks from the market they made a lot more than just dinner…


FIN

Written by D. Vollin

Administrator: For The Brothas Virtual, Intellectual, Cultural Salon

Follow it at:  www.forthebrothas.blogspot.com