Etched in Clay

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Etched in Clay Page 2

by Andrea Cheng


  she’s a house slave

  and not picking cotton

  under the burning sun

  from dawn to dusk.

  But no,

  Eliza wants to stay in that shack

  with her Dave.

  Hey, girl,

  didn’t anyone ever teach you

  to be grateful for what you have?

  You’ve got food to fill you up,

  a dry roof over your head.

  What else do you want?

  I’ve seen Dave’s eyes on you

  every time you pass.

  Isn’t that enough

  to make you smile?

  My Eliza

  DAVE, 1822

  My Eliza—

  sometimes

  like a cat

  she sneaks into the shack

  late at night.

  She rubs my back,

  so tired

  from bending over the wheel.

  She kneads my tight muscle,

  making it soft

  like fresh-dug clay.

  We breathe deep,

  and for a while,

  alone in our shack

  away from the turning house

  and the Big House,

  we feel safe.

  That Man Is Mine

  ELIZA, 1824

  Master Drake thinks

  working in the Big House

  is better than picking cotton

  in the fields.

  What does he know?

  I wash and press

  mountains of clothes.

  I scrub the floors

  and scour the pots.

  I cut up baskets of onions

  till tears run down

  my face.

  And the Mistress

  always watching,

  never leaving me alone.

  Then out the window

  I see Dave

  carrying a great big jug,

  the muscles in his arms

  rippling,

  and I think—

  That man is mine.

  I Beg You

  DAVE, 1825

  I heard it said

  Master Drake has some intention

  of selling Eliza.

  Could be a rumor,

  you know how people talk.

  But I heard him say Alabama

  and Eliza’s name.

  I run down to the turning house.

  Master Drake is mixing slip,

  the watery clay

  that glues the handles

  onto our jars.

  “Please, Master,” I say,

  “I beg you with all my heart.

  Let Eliza stay,

  or send me with her.”

  “Can’t you see I’m busy, Dave?”

  “Yes, Master, but I beg you—”

  “Go on back now.

  It’s getting late.

  What would a potter slave

  like you

  do in Alabama anyway,

  where there are

  no pottery works?”

  At night I listen

  to the crickets and frogs.

  What’s that rustling?

  Could someone be packing up

  to go?

  I’m afraid to sleep

  for fear come morning

  Eliza will be gone.

  Departure

  ELIZA, 1825

  The minister said,

  “Till death or distance

  do you part.”

  Could it be he knew?

  Master Drake says,

  “Come on, Eliza.

  Walk with the wagon now.”

  I ask if I can say

  good-bye to Dave,

  but Master Drake just laughs.

  “No need, Eliza.

  They’ll find you another man

  real quick.”

  He winks—

  and I cry.

  Brilliant Glazes

  DR. ABNER LANDRUM, 1825

  Elegant porcelain

  I failed to make.

  But my glazes

  for stoneware pottery

  are the finest

  in all the land.

  No need

  for expensive salt

  or poisonous lead.

  My glazes are made

  from wood ash,

  sand,

  a little clay;

  grind them fine,

  add water,

  mix.

  And when the fire’s roaring hot

  my glazes melt smooth as glass,

  brilliant

  in the Carolina sun.

  Loading the Furnace

  DR. ABNER LANDRUM, 1826

  Little John, you crawl inside

  and start loading up

  the furnace.

  Be careful, boy.

  No pot or jar is to touch another one,

  you hear?

  Tom and Jack,

  Dan and Dave,

  you boys split these logs,

  make slabs long and narrow

  to fuel the fire.

  Dave, did you dip that big bowl

  in glaze for me like I said?

  Then keep splitting those logs,

  because we’re firing hot

  tomorrow.

  Firing Time

  DR. ABNER LANDRUM, 1826

  Early in the morning,

  we stoke the fire

  slow at first,

  letting the sides

  of the furnace heat up.

  Soon the neighboring folks

  come out to watch,

  children running all around

  and underfoot.

  “Come on now, boys,” I say.

  “Take the fire up quick.

  Stuff those slabs in

  as fast as you can.”

  The furnace is roaring

  louder than thunder,

  a ball of fire

  turning my glazes

  blue

  and green

  and yellow

  bright as gold.

  Finally the orange flame

  leaps out of the chimney.

  “You’ve done it, boys!” I shout.

  The children cheer,

  their mothers smile,

  and the smoke lingers

  in the air

  for hours.

  What’s Gotten into That Boy?

  DR. ABNER LANDRUM, 1826

  Dave is the only one

  not smiling.

  I don’t know

  what’s gotten into that boy.

  “Dave, take that frown

  off your face,” I say.

  “Yes, Master.”

  “Do you have a problem today?”

  “No, Master.”

  “Then you smile, hear?”

  “Yes, Master.”

  Almost a year’s gone by.

  Could he still be missing

  that bony girl,

  the one Harvey sold

  to those folks

  heading for Alabama?

  That’s My Jar

  DAVE, 1826

  It takes three days

  for the furnace to cool.

  Even before the sun comes up

  on the last day,

  I smell the ash.

  Little John and me,

  we climb the hill

  to the furnace.

  Doctor Landrum and Master Drake

&n
bsp; are already there.

  Doctor Landrum’s voice is clear.

  “Morning, boys,” he says.

  “You ready?”

  I unbrick the door.

  Little John hands me the jars

  one by one,

  warm and shining

  in the rising sun.

  Doctor Landrum says,

  “See that green?

  Have you ever seen a color

  shimmer like that?”

  He holds my jar,

  the big one with the lip

  and glaze dripping

  down the sides.

  “Now, that’s a jar,”

  he says,

  forgetting it was me

  who dug the clay,

  and centered the mound,

  and pushed my weight

  against the wheel,

  forgetting it was me

  who rolled the clay

  for the handles

  thick and solid.

  See the thumbprints

  on the sides?

  Those are from my hands.

  We line up the jars and jugs

  by the road

  for all of South Carolina

  to come and see our wares.

  Whoever buys the big one

  will never know

  I made that jar.

  The Scriptures

  SARAH DRAKE, 1826

  Every morning

  I read the words

  of the Scriptures.

  It is up to each and every sinner

  to search the Scriptures

  for himself

  until he finds salvation

  in the words of the Lord.

  How, may I ask,

  are slaves to search

  unless they know their letters?

  My dear husband,

  take this little spelling book

  and leave it with Dave

  in the hope

  that it will help him

  find a way

  to learn his letters

  and someday

  read the message

  of our Lord.

  Our Conscience

  HARVEY DRAKE, 1826

  No doubt,

  my dear wife,

  we are bound

  by our conscience

  and our beliefs.

  Dave learns fast.

  In a matter of months

  I’m sure he will master

  the basics of reading

  with this spelling book.

  Just be forewarned—

  while allowing our slaves

  to read is our duty,

  teaching them to write

  is punishable

  by South Carolina law.

  Writing is a dangerous tool.

  A slave who writes

  might forge a pass to freedom

  or conspire with others

  to organize a revolt.

  Indeed, writing

  is a weapon.

  The Blue Back Speller

  DAVE, 1827

  A small book it is

  but big of heart,

  for with Mr. Webster’s

  blue book

  I am learning to read.

  I stare at the pages,

  struggling to make sense

  of the letters,

  until one day

  they jump off the page!

  One-syllable words:

  pig,

  man,

  dog,

  horse.

  Two-syllable words:

  Mas-ter,

  pot-ter,

  Edge-field.

  I should blow out

  the candle,

  save the wax,

  but I’ve turned

  to the long words

  that I love best:

  mag-nan-i-mous,

  sa-gac-i-ty,

  se-ver-i-ty.

  Here is one

  I had never heard:

  con-cat-e-na-tion.

  What does it mean?

  “Chains,” Doctor Landrum said,

  “a linking together.”

  Like the chains of bondage,

  the shackles around the legs

  of us slaves.

  Mr. Webster,

  it seems to me

  we know each other.

  Tell the World

  DAVE, APRIL 18, 1827

  Master Drake sees me

  take paper scraps

  to practice my letters.

  He clears his throat.

  “A slave who can read

  is one thing,

  but a slave who can write

  is a menace,

  causing trouble for himself

  and others,” he says.

  I’m alone in the shed

  making bricks all day

  until my back

  is about to break.

  Put clay in the mold,

  scrape off the excess,

  let it set,

  turn it out.

  Four bricks at a time,

  hundreds by noon,

  each one the same

  as the rest.

  How is writing letters

  and words

  a menace?

  This stick here

  is sharp and straight,

  just right for carving words

  in wet clay.

  I’ll put the date—

  April 18—

  on the backs

  of these bricks

  to tell the world

  that on this day

  a man started practicing

  his letters.

  The Edgefield Hive

  DR. ABNER LANDRUM, 1828

  What’s a town

  without a newspaper?

  The Edgefield Hive,

  now that’s a name

  for sure,

  a journal swarming

  with ideas.

  My dear nephews,

  Harvey and Reuben,

  the pottery manufactory is yours

  while I use my paper

  to tell our citizens

  of the sciences and arts.

  I’ll need someone to help me

  haul the paper

  and clean the press.

  Would be better

  if he could read.

  Why of course—

  Dave,

  the potter slave.

  Real Paper, Real Ink

  DAVE, 1830

  Carry the newsprint,

  oil the levers

  of the printing press,

  clean the handles

  covered with ink.

  After The Hive is printed,

  I put the letters,

  one by one,

  back into their places,

  to be pulled out again

  for tomorrow’s words.

  So many words

  five and six syllables long:

  corporosity,

  compressibility,

  incivility.

  By the time my work

  is done,

  the light outside

  is fading.

  But now it’s my turn

  to copy words

  onto real paper with real ink,

  over and over,

  until my hand is too tired

  to hold the pen

  and my eyes start closing

  as I write.
>
  Late at night

  in my shack,

  I toss and turn on my cot.

  The air is so still

  it’s hard to breathe.

  I miss the potter’s wheel

  and the coolness of clay

  on my skin.

  I miss Eliza’s warm hands

  rubbing my back.

  I sit up

  and write a letter

  in my head:

  My dearest Eliza,

  Please know

  your husband is missing you

  each and every day

  and with these words

  he is sending you

  his love.

  Education

  ENSLAVED CHILD, 1830

  Uncle Dave,

  you going to teach us some more

  today?

  We got our sticks.

  We’re ready.

  He takes my stick,

  and in the dirt he writes:

  dog,

  cat,

  pig,

  cow.

  We’re tired of those baby words!

  “Keep your voice down,”

  Uncle Dave warns.

  “You know this learning

  can get us in trouble

  if we’re not careful.”

  Okay, Uncle Dave.

  We’ll talk quiet.

  But can you give us

  a word

  with lots of letters?

  Ed-u-ca-tion, he writes.

  What’s that?

  “It’s what you’re doing

  right now—learning,”

  Uncle Dave says.

  “It’s reading and writing

  and thinking.”

  After everyone’s gone home,

  Uncle Dave reads me a story

  from Mr. Webster’s spelling book

  about good boys

  who want to learn.

  One day

  I’m going to read that story

  by myself.

  A New Husband

  LYDIA, 1830

  I feel Dave watching me

  when I walk past.

  He’s a smart man,

  I know that,

  with all those big words

 

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