The Conjure Woman by Charles W. Chesnutt (7 ebook reader .TXT) đ
Description
The Conjure Woman is a collection of fantastical stories narrated by Julius, a former slave, about life on the nearby plantations prior to the Civil War. Each involves an element of magic, be it a vine that dooms those who eat from it or a man transformed into a tree to avoid being separated from his wife. Juliusâs audience, a married couple who have just moved to the South to cultivate grapes, listen on with mixed sympathy and disbelief. They disagree on whether Julius is telling the truth and whether there is some deeper significance to the tales. At turns humorous and unsettling, these stories provide a surprising lens into the realities of slavery.
The text is notable for spelling out Juliusâs spoken accent. Although Julius has some stereotypical features of a simple-minded old slave, he is often regarded as a more clever and complicated figure. He seems to tell his tales not only to entertain his listeners, but to trick them to his advantage.
Many of these stories first appeared in national magazines, where they received popular acclaim, before being assembled as their own volume in 1899. Charles W. Chesnuttâs race was not mentioned by the publisher, nor could many guess his African heritage based on his appearance. However, Chesnutt embraced his African-American identity and was a prominent activist for black rights. The Conjure Woman, his first book, is considered an important early work of African-American fiction.
This edition includes four additional Julius tales that appeared in magazines but were not collected during Chesnuttâs lifetime.
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- Author: Charles W. Chesnutt
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âDe young folks waânât âlowed ter see one ernudder veây often, but Mars Tom had a batteau down on de ribber en he useter paddle ober sometimes ter meet Miss âLiza whuther er no.
âOne ebâninâ Mars Tom went down ter de ribber en ontied his batteau en wuz startinâ ter cross wâen he heared somebody holler. He looked rounâ en he see hit wuz aâ ole nigger âoman had fell in de ribber. She had sunk once, en wuz gwine down agâin, wâen Mars Tom cotch âer en pullâtâ er out, en gin er a drink er sumpân he had in a flasâ, en den tied his boat en heâped âer up de bank ter de top, whar she could git âlong by herseâf.
âNow, dis yer âoman wâat Mars Tom pullât outân de ribber des happenâ ter be ole Aunâ Peggy, de free-nigger cunjuh âoman wâat libbed down by de Wimâlâton Road. She had beân digginâ roots fer her cunjâinâ, en had got too close ter de ribber, en had fell in whar de water wuz deep en strong, en had come monstâus close ter beinâ drownded. Aunâ Peggy knowed all âbout Mars Tom en his uncle ole Mars Donalâ en his junesey Miss âLiza, en she made up her minâ dat she wuz gwine ter do sumpân fer young Mars Tom de fusâ chanst she got. She wuz wondârinâ wot kinder goopher she could wuk fer Mars Tom, wâen who should come ter see her one day but ole Mars Donalâ hisseâf.
âNow, wây Mars Donalâ come ter go ter see ole Aunâ Peggy wuz dis erway. Mars Donalâ had beân gittinâ richer en richer, en closeter en closeter, âtel heâd got so heâd mosâ skin a flea fer his hide en taller. But he waânât satâsfied, en he kepâ on projickinâ wid one thing en figârinâ on ernudder, fer ter see how he could git moâ en moâ. He wuz aâready wukkinâ his niggers ez haâd ez dey could stanâ, but he got his âcount-book out one day en âmenceâ ter cackilate wâat it cosâ âim ter feed his niggers, en it âpeared ter be a monstâus sum. En he âlowed ter hisseâf dat ef he could feed his niggers fer âbout half er wâat it had bâen costinâ âim, heâd save a heap er money evây yeah.
âCoâse evâybody knowed, en Mars Donalâ knowed, dat a fielâ-hanâ had ter hab so much bacon en so much meal and so much merlasses a week ter make âim fittinâ ter do his wuk. But Mars Donalâ âlowed dey mought be some way ter fool de niggers, er sumpân; so he tuk a silber dollar en went down ter see ole Aunâ Peggy.
âAunâ Peggy laid de silber dollar on de mantelpiece en heared wâat he had to say, en den she âlowed sheâd wuk her roots, en heâd hafter come back nexâ day en fetch her ernudder silber dollar, en sheâd tell âim wâat he shâd do.
âMars Donalâ staâted out, en beinâ ez Aunâ Peggyâs back wuz tuânt, he âlowed heâd take dat silber dollar âlong wid âim, beinâ ez she hadnâ tole âim nuffin, enâ heâd gin it ter her nexâ day. But wâen he pickâ up de silber dollar, it wuz so hot it buânt âis hanâ, he laid it down rale quick enâ went off rubbinâ his hanâ enâ cussinâ kinder sofâ ter hisseâf.
âDe nexâ day he went back, en Aunâ Peggy gun âim a goopher mixtry in a bottle.
âââYou take dis yer mixtry,â sez she, âen put it on yoâ niggers rashuns de nexâ time you gibs âem out, en den stidder âlowinâ yoâ hanâs a pounâ er bacon en a peck er meal en a quaât er merlasses, you gin âem half a pounâ er bacon en half a peck er meal en a pint er merlasses, en dey wonâ know de diffeânce. Facâ, dis yer goopher mixtryâll make de half look des lak de whole, enâ atter de niggers has once eat some er dat conjuâd meat en meal en merlasses itâs gwine ter take dey apâtites erway so deyâll be des ez well satâsfied ez ef dey had a side a bacon en a bairl er flour.â
âWâen Mars Donalâ staâted erway Aunâ Peggy sez, sez she:
âââYou done fergot dat yuther dollar, ainâ you, Mars Donalâ?â
âââOh, yes, Peggy,â sezee, âbut heah it is.â En Mars Donalâ retchâ down in his pocket en pullât out a hanâful er golâ en silber, en picked out a lead dollar en handed it ter Aunâ Peggy. Aunâ Peggy seed de dollar wuz bad, but she tuk it en didnâ let on. But ez Mars Donalâ wuz turninâ ter go âway, Aunâ Peggy sprinkleâ sumpân on dat lead dollar, en sez she:
âââO Mars Donalâ kin I get you ter change a twenty-dollar golâ piece fer me?â
âââYas, I reckon,â sezee.
âAunâ Peggy handed him de lead dollar, en he looked at it en bit it en sounded it on de table, en it âpeared ter be a branâ-noo golâ piece; so he tukân pullât out his puâse an gun Aunâ Peggy thâee five-dollar golâ pieces en five good silber dollars, en den he tuk his goopher mixtry en went âlong home wid it.
âWâen Mars Donalâ had gone, Aunâ Peggy sont a mawkinâ-bird fer ter tell young Mars Tom ter came en see her.
âMars Tom wuz gwine âlong de road one ebâninâ wâen he heared a mawkinâ-bird singinâ right close ter âim, enâ de mawkinâ-bird seemâ ter be a-sayinâ:
âââGo see ole Aunâ Peggy,
She wants ter see you bad,
Sheâll show you how ter git back
De lanâ yoâ daddy had.â
âMars Tom wuz studyinâ âbout sumpân eâse, en he didnâ pay no âtention ter wâat de mawkinâ-bird say. So pretty soon he heahs de mawkinâ-bird agâin:
âââGo en see Aunâ Peggy,
She wants ter see you bad,
Sheâs gwine ter heâp you git back
The golâ yoâ daddy had.â
âBut Mars Tom had sumpân eâse
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