Abolitionist, educator, and writer Charlotte Forten Grimké was born into a wealthy abolitionist family in Philadelphia. She attended Higginson Grammar School in Salem, Massachusetts, as the only African American student in a class of 200. She later studied literature and teaching at the Salem Normal School. After graduating, she taught at Epes Grammar School in Salem and was the first African American to teach white students in Massachusetts. With a recommendation from a friend, the poet John Greenleaf Whittier, she then taught freed slaves on St. Helena Island in South Carolina from 1862 to 1864 as part of the Civil War’s Port Royal Experiment. She settled in Washington, DC, where she became a clerk for the U.S. Treasury. She married the Reverend Francis James Grimké, a former slave, in 1878. Grimké published poems and essays in leading African American periodicals and organized a women’s missionary group in support of her husband’s ministry. Influenced by Shakespeare, Milton, and Wordsworth, her poetry is notable for the nuance of its sound and emotion.
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Charles Sumner
Only the casket left, the jewel gone
Whose noble presence filled these stately rooms,
And made this spot a shrine where pilgrims came—
Stranger and friend—to bend in reverence
Before the great, pure soul that knew no guile;
To listen to the wise and gracious...