Late in 1854, and especially during the first half of 1855, Frederick Douglass spent many weeks at his desk writing his ultimate declaration of independence, My Bondage and My Freedom, his second, more thorough and revealing autobiography. In long form, it was the masterpiece of his writing life, a work that modern scholars have given a prominent place in the literary American renaissance. Bondage and Freedom is not a mere updating of the Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass of 1845; rather, it is an extensive revision of that one great tale Douglass believed he must tell–the story of himself.
A quite different person–a much more mature, politicized writer–crafted Bondage and Freedom, as opposed to the twenty-seven-year-old orator of 1845 who needed to establish his identity through literacy. The 1855 book of 464 pages (four times longer than the Narrative) came from, as Douglass reminded readers in the first three chapter titles, an “Author” already free and ready to use literacy to engage in an epic argument with his country. The British abolitionist Julia Griffiths still resided in Rochester, New York, and served as Douglass’s coeditor of his abolitionist newspaper Frederick Douglass’ Paper right up until her departure back to England in midsummer 1855. Her labors in the printing office in order to free his time to write certainly testify to her support, if not also her editorial hand in helping make the book possible. Douglass published it in August with Miller, Orton and Mulligan of Auburn, New York, at the price of $1.25. The sales were spectacular–five thousand copies in the first two days and fifteen thousand within three months. Douglass helped market the book by serializing parts of it in his paper, and in the next few years he sometimes took one or more of his sons out on the road with him to sell the book for $1 apiece at his public lectures. Only two years after publication, the same printing house issued a new edition with a banner, “Eighteen Thousand,” inscribed on the title page, indicating the number then in print.
Bondage and Freedom achieved what Douglass most wanted: readers and public impact. He could feel buttressed in his belief that words could shape and correct history. But he wrote the book for many reasons. In a prefatory letter to his editor, Douglass claimed, with awkward falseness, that he had always possessed a “repugnance” to writing or speaking about himself, and to the “imputation of seeking personal notoriety for its own sake.” This odd disclaimer was a convention of the literary apologetics of that era, although ironic in a book that ended with a brilliant argument that human dignity depended directly upon public recognition. But what is most interesting about Douglass’s preface is that he turns the disavowal of “vanity and egotism” into a larger purpose. He must write this book, he says, because he is “exceptional” in a world that denies black equality. Douglass portrays himself as the reluctant prophet who must tell his story with a principle at stake for the “whole human family.” Slavery was “at the bar of public opinion” now as never before. The “whole civilized world” had to render “judgment,” especially because of the growing power of proslavery forces. Moreover, Douglass argued, he wrote for the same reason he founded his own newspaper. The humanity of his people must be demonstrated before a racist world. Such a claim for the public duty of writing a second autobiography reflects just how much this new literary self-creation was a political act.
Douglass further felt compelled to write Bondage and Freedom because he had so much to say about the transformations, losses, and gains of his life since the summer he boarded a ship for England. He had many tales to tell about his flowering in the British Isles and about the independence he had sought since returning to America. He was now a more reflective and analytical thinker, and the new autobiography demonstrated this in his embrace of reading and “study,” his advocacy of the natural-rights tradition, and his conceptions of violence. Douglass was now truly a black leader, a widely acknowledged proponent of the self-reliance and elevation of blacks and their communities. In 1855, Douglass fully emerged as the black Jeremiah.
Over the years dozens of literary critics and historians have interpreted Douglass’s autobiographies. Perhaps none has done so more incisively than the first, James McCune Smith, Douglass’s good friend, ideological soul mate, and the man he asked to introduce Bondage and Freedom. Smith was born a slave in New York City in 1813 and freed by the Emancipation Act of the State of New York in 1827. His mother was a self-emancipated black woman, and like Douglass’s, his father was presumed white, although Smith seems to have never known his identity. A star student at the African Free School no. 2 in New York, Smith became an intellectual prodigy. He studied Latin and Greek and applied to the medical schools at Columbia College and in Geneva, New York, but was denied admission. With financial help from New York City black friends, Smith journeyed to Glasgow, Scotland, at age nineteen, where between 1832 and 1837 he achieved the B.A., M.A., and M.D. degrees.
Upon his return to New York, Smith opened a medical practice and a pharmacy in lower Manhattan in the year Douglass escaped through the city as a fugitive. In his spare time, Smith launched his remarkable career as an abolitionist, a polymath writer, and an intellectual. He wrote on all manner of subjects, from abolitionist strategies to moral philosophy, from natural sciences to ethnology and chess, from American and world history to literature. After he met Douglass in the late 1840s, they struck up an extraordinary friendship, perhaps as each other’s alter ego. Douglass could learn so much from Smith, who became a kind of older brother for the former field hand and caulker. And Smith too learned much from Douglass’s genius with language and from his force of will. Steeped in the classics and the Romantics, Smith found in the younger former runaway a special kind of hero. The two shared a worldview and abolitionist strategies. Smith too had become an ardent anti-Garrisonian and shared Douglass’s fierce opposition to black emigration schemes emerging from Martin Delany and others. When the Garrisonian National Anti-Slavery Standard tried to trump up a “feud” between them in 1855, Smith wrote in Douglass’s paper that no “gnashing of teeth” among their rivals could sever this “open and avowed friendship between two black men.” Perhaps they also talked about their separate times in Glasgow. They had combined their mutual prestige in trying to persuade the black convention movement to adopt a plan for an industrial school for young blacks and a National Council of leadership in 1853. Lack of funding and the perennial internecine ideological warfare among black leaders doomed most of their educational and institutional endeavors. Nevertheless, Douglass and Smith became frequent collaborators.
In addition to his masterful essays, Smith became an experimental writer, with works often appearing under the pseudonym Communipaw, a name he took intriguingly from a legendary colonial Indian settlement in what became Jersey City, New Jersey, a place where an interracial community of blacks, Indians, and Dutch settlers had resisted the English crown. Smith also penned satires and vignettes under the series title “Heads of the Colored People” in Douglass’s newspaper from 1852 to 1854. These pieces were depictions of working-class black New Yorkers, giving dignity to the bootblack, washerwoman, whitewasher, steward, sexton, schoolmaster, and others. In the term “Heads,” Smith brilliantly parodied reigning racial theories of the time, such as phrenology, which argued that the alleged racial superiority of whites stemmed from larger craniums. Douglass admired Smith’s wit and wordplay and was delighted to publish such forms of literary resistance to the daily racism blacks endured in cities such as New York. But Douglass confessed to a different taste and criticized some of his friend’s experimentation, preferring instead to portray their race as respectable seekers of the middle class rather than poor, noble laborers. Douglass considered some of Smith’s “Heads” essays too close to “faithful pictures of contented degradation.” The editor warned his friend to watch out for “a rap or two over his head with a broom-stick,” or for the washerwoman throwing “a few drops of moderately hot suds upon his neatly attired person.” In a response to Smith’s series in 1853, written after his own recent visit to New York, Douglass maintained that blacks were better observed not in the streets but “at their homes.” He preferred images of indoor respectability to ironic outdoor subversion, stressing black involvement in churches, literary societies, and especially noting the “watches, clocks, gold pens, pencils, and all sorts of jewelry” he saw in black homes. Douglass seemed to keep his shirts more starched than the good doctor, but such disagreements about class and race only enriched, rather than harmed, the relationship between these two intellectuals.
Smith and Douglass constantly sought out each other about writing and shared a mutual respect for a life of the mind for black men. They shared a brotherhood of experiences of racism, outside and inside the antislavery movement. Douglass judged Smith “without rivals” among black leaders for his “talents and learning” and for his “known devotion to the cause of the oppressed people.” Smith’s views of Douglass could wax even more effusive. Back in 1848, when Douglass’s first newspaper, the North Star, appeared, McCune Smith wrote to the social reformer and abolitionist Gerrit Smith with special praise: “I love Frederick Douglass for his whole souled outness, that is the secret of his noble thoughts and far-reaching sympathies. You will be surprised to hear me say that only since his Editorial career has he begun to become a colored man! I have read his paper very carefully and find phrase after phrase develop itself as regularly as in one newly born among us.”
In the introduction to Bondage and Freedom, McCune Smith imposed a great burden on Douglass, declaring the former slave the embodiment of the cause of human equality, leader among the “living exemplars of the practicability of the most radical abolitionism.” When Smith described Douglass’s “sacred thirst for liberty and learning,” Smith was writing about himself as well. The introduction is not only an intellectual’s tribute to another intellectual, but the most formally educated black man of the nineteenth century telling the world what it means that a Frederick Douglass exists at all in slaveholding America.
Smith took special care to show readers that this autobiography was in the end literature. Douglass’s techniques, according to Smith, were manifold, “Memory, logic, wit, sarcasm, invective, pathos, and bold imagery of rare structural beauty,” he argued, “well up as from a copious fountain, yet each in its proper place, and contributing to form a whole, grand in itself, yet complete in the minutest proportions.” Douglass’s ability with language, Smith maintained, was not in fashioning “mere words of eloquence,” but “work-able, do-able words” that might forge a “revolution” in the world. Douglass wrote persuasive prose. In this public use of his personal story as a “Representative American man,” Smith believed Douglass had written an “American book, for Americans in the fullest sense of the idea.” In other words, what could be more American at this juncture in history than a brilliantly rendered, lyrical, and terrible story of a man’s journey through hell from slavery to freedom? Surely Douglass was moved by his friend’s political description of the purpose and power of words doing the work of “revolution.”
Nothing seems to have impressed McCune Smith quite like Douglass’s uncanny personal memory fashioned seamlessly into an abolitionist polemic. As an intellectual and a scientist, Smith was stunned at the extensive probing Douglass gave to his own childhood, of how the autobiography provided a model for just “when positive and persistent memory begins in the human being.” Long before neuroscience, Smith pointed to universal psychological and moral insights as well as to features distinctive to an American slave experience. Smith admired his friend’s “rare alliance between passion and intellect” as a biographer, his “energy of character” and sheer will, whether working to be “king among caulkers” or craving after language as reader and orator. The scientist was deeply intrigued by Douglass’s capacity for recollection. According to Smith, it was Douglass’s “wonderful memory” that made his autobiographical writing so powerful. Smith felt moved not by Douglass’s mere recall of facts, but by the literary act “when the memory of them [facts] went seething through his brain, breeding a fiery indignation at his injured selfhood,” then bursting out in story and characters.
The physician’s introduction is one of the early meditations on the art of memory, with a former slave as the subject. Smith knew Douglass well enough to understand how much his younger comrade’s persona was not entwined in his identity as a writer. Hence Smith acknowledged Douglass’s “descriptive and declamatory powers” and his “logical force.” But above all the author of Bondage and Freedom, as well as of so many great orations, possessed “style.”