Harriet Tubman’s biography is stunning |
“Freedom” Though the word to me personally Mainly has meant getting my own way I have felt it as the substance of life itself And in bitterness have thought the words “Wage Slave.” But I have been neither a slave nor a soldier And when I read the biography of Harriet Tubman I can’t understand how one human being, Battered since childhood, Could do so much. It wasn’t just that she escaped but that she returned, Again and again to help others, That she led Union steamships down the river Freeing hundreds from plantations In South Carolina, June 2, 1863, Navigating around mines, Not even expecting a military pension For her many years of service. It wasn’t just that she did this, but that in 1869, (Post-Civil War, in New York of all places) They broke her arm trying to shove her to The baggage car of the train. As an old lady she sold simple snacks, Soda and pies, Fell for schemes, and could have been Any poor person struggling. Yet she still had energy, sick, at 90, To fight for women’s suffrage Because her personal freedoms were not just what she felt When she heard the word “Freedom” So she passed in 1913, and even in the age of the internet Google searches remind us there were (and are?) People who could do things like that. |