Dec 19, 2009
Robinet's story ably dramatizes the atrocities of plantation life and the South's continuing hatred of its freed slaves. The plantation master and overseer are despicable. Night riders lynch hard-working farmers simply because they are ex-slaves. Ne'erdo-wells in carriages malign President Lincoln's policies.
Through the events surrounding Pascal, readers see that neither war nor law change social attitudes. The legislation first gave and then took away the ex-slaves' land grants. Similarly, Pascal's story has no happy ending. As Robinet points out in her Author's Note, out of...
©2000-2009
Enotes.com Inc.
All Rights Reserved