Analysis Of The Runaway Slave At Pilgrim's Point By Robert Browning

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Part of me is uncomfortable with Browning claiming the persona of a black slave woman. As a white woman, especially a white English woman, she could not possibly understand the experience of life as a slave, regardless of how educated she was on the subject of slavery. Nonetheless, one does not need to have been a slave in order to understand that slavery is unjust, and the compassion and empathy that Browning had for the slaves in the United States is made obvious by her ability to pen such a poignant slave story. The comparison of the speaker, a runaway escaping racial subjugation, to the pilgrims, runaways escaping religious persecution, highlights the hypocrisy of holding people in bonds in “the free America” (222), especially since slave masters cause “sin and woe” (14) in their names. …show more content…

Browning can no more understand what it is like to be black than I can. She could freely shed the persona of a black woman the moment she finished writing “The Runaway Slave at Pilgrim’s Point,” whereas a slave could not shed the oppression they faced and the stigma surrounding dark skin, which she compares to “prison bars” (39). However, Browning’s whiteness is exactly what empowers her work as an outspoken and publicly active abolitionist. By using a first-person narrative, Browning is forcing the reader to understand the number and intensities of the atrocities that slaves were facing, such as the hard labor, beating, and rape that the speaker faces, as well as the possible murder of both the speaker and her lover, although the speaker is ambitious about whether or not she and her lover actually

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