Henry C. Knight, Letters from the South and West, 77

Item

Title

Henry C. Knight, Letters from the South and West, 77

Includes music itself or text of song

no

Identity of singers; solo/group

enslaved
group

Voice/instrument

voice
voice

Space/room

plantation

activity

Juicing apples to make cider

Timbre

---

Ornamentation / improvisation

---

genre

--

Geographical location

"a fine plantation on the banks of the Rappahannock." Virginia

Notable adjectives

"ponderous" "merry" "lustily"

Excerpt

Instead of having a cheap apple-mill for cider, they scoop out a long trough,and into this empty the apples; and then may you see long rows of slaves, of both sexes, arranged up and down the sides, with ponderous pounders, and their shining black arms liked up and down in order, as they quash the pomace; and, as they drink what juice they please, they get merry, and sing lustily to the strokes of their tall weighty wooden pestles.

Context

Knight is describing Virginia plantation life in a letter

Bias of author

Knight was an Episcopal clergyman from MA

Item sets