He wanted to hide where he could be swallowed into darkness, into a place of great sadness.
When he traveled previously—when it was winter, so there was little farmwork, and he was hired out to repair mills—Nat Turner always carried his Bible, the one his father had given him. Who knew when God would give him a word for the people? He had preached all over the area, like a Methodist circuit rider, even as far away as Norfolk. But this time he left the book behind.
He pulled his hat snug on his head so no one would notice the curls in his hair. Head down, he walked quickly, like a man who had business to attend to. But not so quickly he would attract attention.
He was fair enough that, at a distance, passersby might think he was a white man. He would have even more chance of not being discovered if he traveled by night.
As Nat Turner walked, he heard Sister Easter—a captive on Nathaniel Francis’s farm. He heard her voice singing to him.
In the word of God
I got a hiding place.
He needed a hiding place. Nat Turner was desperate for a place where he could hide from his troubles, from his thoughts.
In the word of God
I got a hiding place.
Throw me overboard
I got a hiding place.
The Great Dismal Swamp would be his place of escape—his Hebron, his city of refuge. It would swallow him and he would hide forever.
Chapter 25
Cross Keys
February 1831
Nat Turner shook the reins and clicked his tongue at the red mare. As they rode past, he forced himself to look at Giles Reese’s farm, at the place where Cherry was held captive.
There was an old oak tree not far from Giles Reese’s farm, only noticeable in the winter. In the spring, the leaves from the other trees camouflaged it. But in the winter it stood alone. Its girth was more than six men around and its roots must have reached to the center of the earth.
Nat Turner looked at the tree and wondered at all it had seen—the native people, the white man’s coming, skirmishes for the land, and the enslavement of God’s people. Before he had noticed only the oak’s bark, its shedding of leaves—the physical suffering. But now he saw underneath, he saw the flesh, the heartbreak.
He saw spirits that panted, barely alive.
He thought then of Hark, of Mother Easter, of his mother and the others. The worst chains weren’t on their bodies—those chains could only make them bleed or finally kill them. The most horrible chains were on their hearts and minds, chains they passed to their children.
He felt their doubt, saw their doubt of God’s love. He saw the hurt. He felt it twisting their insides and his own. Each feeling was his teacher.
In the wagon behind Nat Turner, Sallie Francis Moore Travis chattered nervously. She was on her way to the Whiteheads to sit among the other white women as they celebrated Valentine’s Day. She felt rejected and unwelcome, he knew, but she went anyway. She had been convinced by the others that her clothes and shoes made her a woman. His wife, Cherry, had no fine clothes or shoes. There was no one to braid her hair; she had no ornaments or jewels, but she outshone them all.
But still, Sallie was like the others. The children of scullery maids and porters, the offspring of peasants and serfs, had come to America and reinvented themselves as lords and ladies. They threw lavish parties, bought petticoats and shirts with stiff collars. They built houses and purchased slaves they could not afford: Now they were masters and mistresses. They forced their servants to bow and curtsy to them, to honor them with “yes, ma’am” and “no, sir.” Reading and writing were fashionable, but slave ownership not only offered status, it also reassured them. Every insult they or their parents had received, they returned tenfold. They lorded it over those they forced to serve them.
He knew Sallie in the way a captive, the way a pet knows the people with whom it lives. Because those things were considered inferior, the owner’s guard was down, and Nat Turner—like the other slaves—had seen it all.
Sallie was a lonely woman. Her brothers and mother treated her as though she were retarded and infirm. In return, to protect herself from their criticism, she sacrificed those who loved her most to the god of her family.
She had once been close friends with Jacob Williams’s wife; the two of them visited each other regularly. But when her family was around and Mrs. Williams was not, Sallie offered them parts of her friend. “She is not the best housekeeper.” She would giggle. “If you ask me, she drinks too much.”
So when Sallie’s family saw Mrs. Williams again, they talked down to her and turned their heads away from her. She wasn’t good enough for their Sallie—their Sallie was an incompetent idiot, but she belonged to them, and Mrs. Williams wasn’t good enough for their Sallie. Soon enough, Mrs. Williams stopped trying.
Sallie wept. She took no responsibility for the death of her friendship; it was just another case of others not loving her enough. She seemed not to understand why things had gone awry.
Now Sallie offered her husband. Her brothers and her mother picked at his bones.
She sat an arm’s length from Nat Turner, but Sallie was a world away. She did not see him or the other captives. She did not understand. She could not see the suffering and the despair—she was color-blind.
Nat Turner could not afford the luxury of turning away. He was one of them. He was a captive. They were one.
The captives wondered if there would be anyone to lift up a shield for them. They wondered if God would send someone to lift their heads. Where was God?
Chapter 26
The Great Dismal Swamp
1821
He would never return to Southampton County. Nat Turner walked past great trees—oaks, Virginia pines, cypresses, walnuts, and magnolias—past roads he had never seen before. He could not bear to live in Cross Keys without Cherry and Riddick. The Great Dismal Swamp was days away.
Nat Turner was a hopeless man.
He had never had a complete family. Except for his mother, his African family was lost to him. His American ancestors were never known to him—he was never invited to meet his grandfather, never included in family outings. There were secrets and things given to his white brothers that would never be given to him.
His dreams of education—his labor had paid for a wasted education for his brother John Clarke—of a career, of a farm had been stolen away. To comfort himself, he had buried himself in the leaves and the pages of the Bible. He could not serve in an Ethiopian cathedral or monastery, but he had been promised a place, by his father, in the little country church.
Then that dream had been stolen.
But he had wanted peace, and he had set about making compromises with life. If he could not be a trustee or sit in the church, then he would be a circuit preacher, preaching throughout the countryside to the rejected and despised. He would be like the patriarch Jacob and satisfy himself with the speckled, spotted, and brown sheep. Maybe one day he would travel far enough to Philadelphia to meet Bishop Allen.
He had told himself, before Cherry was stolen, that he would be satisfied with the gift of her love and the gift of his small family. Maybe this was all there was, maybe slavery was God’s will for him; some men had cruel fates. Nat Turner would bear up under his. The love of his wife, Cherry, and of his son was God’s gift to him and made his existence bearable. Perhaps his dreams were only dreams and God planned no more for him than bondage—with his family as his consolation.
Nat Turner loved his Father. It was not lavish gifts that God said He wanted as proof of His children’s love. What God wanted was unyielding obedience. So Nathan Turner had been a most obedient son.
He had obeyed his mother, and to honor God, he had obeyed the earthly masters put over him. He had obeyed the earthly laws—he did not steal, he did not curse, he did not drink. Nathan Turner had obeyed not only the letter but also the heart of God’s law—he had loved God with all his heart, soul, and mind. He had loved his neighbors and his
brothers—those of all nations and tongues—as he loved himself. He had even given the most difficult obedience: He had loved his enemies. As a son of peace, he had learned to turn the other cheek.
He was God’s obedient servant, even if it cost him his dignity. He had obeyed God in laying down his own will and allowing himself to love Cherry. He had laid down his own desires—to own a farm, to be a scientist, to be a bishop, to be treated as an equal. To be a man. He compromised his own desires all for the Father he loved.
In return, God made a promise: Eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither have entered into the heart of man, the things which God hath prepared for them that love Him.
Nathan Turner had obeyed by love and faith even when it did not seem reasonable to other men. In return for his love and obedience, God had made him a promise.
Then shall thy light break forth as the morning, and thine health shall spring forth speedily: and thy righteousness shall go before thee; the glory of the LORD shall be thy reward. Then shalt thou call, and the Lord shall answer; thou shalt cry, and He shall say, Here I am.
If thou take away from the midst of thee the yoke, the putting forth of the finger, and speaking vanity; And if thou draw out thy soul to the hungry, and satisfy the afflicted soul; then shall thy light rise in obscurity, and thy darkness be as the noon day: And the LORD shall guide thee continually, and satisfy thy soul in drought, and make fat thy bones: and thou shalt be like a watered garden, and like a spring of water, whose waters fail not.
And they that shall be of thee shall build the old waste places: thou shalt raise up the foundations of many generations; and thou shalt be called, The repairer of the breach, The restorer of paths to dwell in.
Now Cherry and Riddick were gone.
Where was God now? Instead of the promises, Nat Turner had received only sadness and more humiliation. What he got in return for his love and obedience was the pain of watching his heavenly Father chase after those who did not love Him. What he got in return for his obedience was God giving His favor to those who disobeyed Him, to ones who called themselves master. Nat Turner could see with his own eyes that God favored the sons who mocked Him.
No matter how hard he prayed and studied, no matter how temperate he was, no matter how he turned the other cheek and forgave others, God did not love him enough to spare him or to spare his family.
He was alone in the world.
Maybe he had not heard God at all. Maybe all along he had been deceiving himself. Maybe the One he had loved most in the world had never loved him.
Abandoned. Betrayed. God had vanished into thin air.
God had been his comfort: There was no big house, no wealth that he could look to for reassurance. All that he had was God, and Nat Turner had given his life to Him. God had been the only Father he could whisper to, the only Father to wrap an arm around his shoulders. God’s spirit and His Word had raised him. But now he was alone.
Nat Turner kept from the road and walked among the trees. The shoes were good protection, though he missed the feel of grass beneath his feet.
Maybe he had not heard God at all.
Maybe all along he had been deceiving himself. Doubt. God did not love him—denied by even his heavenly Father. The only Father he had been able to trust, the only Father he could openly claim, had turned His back on him.
Nat Turner had stood up for God and for righteousness because he loved Him. He had spoken the words that God had put in his mouth, and for them he had been beaten and ridiculed. He had stood up for God, but God had not stood up for him.
He was disconsolate. He was forsaken while those who did not love God, who mocked God and disobeyed His Words, prospered. Nat Turner continued walking, head down.
Righteous art thou, O LORD, when I plead with thee: yet let me talk with thee of thy judgments: Wherefore doth the way of the wicked prosper? Wherefore are all they happy that deal very treacherously?
Nat Turner paid little attention to the sky or the birds singing around him. Instead, he thought of those he had known all his life, the men and women of Cross Keys—the Francises, the Whiteheads, the Turners. He thought of the ones he had overheard plotting against him in his father’s church.
Thou hast planted them, yea, they have taken root: they grow, yea, they bring forth fruit: thou art near in their mouth, and far from their reins.
He thought of the farms they had and the houses they’d built. He thought of the Whiteheads’ foolish son, a false prophet, in the pulpit. He thought of the power in Elizabeth Turner’s hands—soft hands that had never suffered. She had everything.
The wicked men and women had families and land and no one sold them away, hanged them, or bound them in chains. A wicked man stood in God’s pulpit and God did nothing. The wicked ones had murdered their brothers and sisters, sold them into slavery, and even murdered the land with their dreams of cotton’s wealth. Those who called themselves masters had committed adultery, raping slaves, and sold their own children away, and still the Lord said nothing.
Nat Turner thought of his mother, Nancie, of Hark, of Easter, of Will, of Berry Newsom, of the Artis brothers, and of all the others who had suffered. It did not seem fair that the ones who believed had nothing to show for their love and their labor. It did not seem just that those who made only a show of God were benefiting while the ones who turned their cheeks suffered. When would God send someone to vindicate them?
All over America, and throughout the world, the false prophets spread hatred. A precious gift of adoration, words of love smeared by power-lust, greed, and bigotry that oozed out of teachers’ mouths, dripped from pages as messages of hate. They blamed their wickedness on God. The stink of their lies spread like smoke from a wildfire.
God had turned His back on His darker children. The lighter ones said the proof was in their hands—they owned and controlled everything, including other men. The darker children of the world suffered, crying out, stretching their hands toward heaven.
The wicked ones, the plunderers, beat and murdered and stole and raped in His Name! Where was God? How long would He be silent?
How could anything change without God’s intervention? If God didn’t move, then faith was for nothing.
But thou, O LORD, knowest me: thou hast seen me, and tried mine heart toward thee: pull them out like sheep for the slaughter, and prepare them for the day of slaughter. How long shall the land mourn, and the herbs of every field wither, for the wickedness of them that dwell therein?
Then Nat Turner stopped himself. He looked briefly at the sky. God did not hear him. God did not know him. God did not love him; He preferred to prosper the wicked. He preferred to be the God of only white men.
If God turned His back, then Nat Turner would turn his.
He was finished with compromise. He would not pray anymore. He did not want to hear from God. He would find his own way to survive. He would make a life of his own and sail away.
The roads were mostly deserted. No one stopped him.
It took Nat Turner three days to reach the Great Dismal.
I got a hiding place.
Throw me overboard.
I got a hiding place.
He stepped into the forest, and darkness swallowed him.
Chapter 27
It was like the forest he had known all his life. Why would anyone be afraid to set foot there? They were all woodsmen and knew how to wield an axe. Perhaps the stories of the Great Dismal were lies, like all the other lies he had been told.
But as he walked farther in, the trees began to thicken so that there was less light. Tangled, he tripped over roots and had to stop until his eyes adjusted to the darkness.
As he moved even farther in, the trunks of the trees were wider, the leaves denser. The grass and the weeds from the ground seemed to mesh with the tree branches and leaves, almost like a net.
Deeper still, the vines, leaves, and boughs became a wall, and Nat Turner had to hack his way through. The softness of the light that did filter thro
ugh changed the color of things—so that the trees, the leaves, and the grass darkened in hue. The ground beneath his feet softened, turning to wet sponge, and sucked at his shoes.
The trees engulfed him and gave him refuge. He was more than twenty-one and now, at last, his first taste of freedom. No landmarks. Alone with his thoughts, he walked among the trees, a primordial cathedral.
He smelled green plants, he smelled musk, and then suddenly sweetness. He heard sounds he recognized—the screech of an owl, the scampering of a squirrel up a tree. But he also heard animal calls that he had never heard before—far away—and then just over his head. He heard rustling on the ground beside him and thought he heard wings flapping. Nat Turner gripped his axe tightly.
The trees engulfed him. Nat Turner looked around for a bent tree or a branch that would orient him, but this was not the forest he knew. There was no way to know left from right, and for all he knew, he was walking in circles. He moved forward, only stopping from time to time so that his eyes could adjust.
He had to hack his way through now, to fight for every inch, had to fight to untangle his feet. The leaves rubbed his face and his hands. He wanted to stop to examine them, to wipe off the moisture and whatever else clung to him. But Nat Turner knew he must keep moving and he knew why white men were afraid.
The Great Dismal Swamp was a dark, wild place, an untamed place, maybe as it was in the Garden of Eden. There was little difference between day and night. He saw plants and shapes he did not recognize. The Dismal was magnificent and menacing.
The swamp seemed to breathe, the air felt as though it was expanding and contracting around him. It was alive, beautiful, but it was dangerous. The trees whispered to one another, and the animals had no fear of man. It was lush and exotic. And he was certain that serpents watched, crawling near each footstep that landed.
The Resurrection of Nat Turner, Part 2: The Testimonial Page 12