Wednesday, December 30, 2020

Mark Twain'ish Brown?

 “The Good Lord Bird” The book, by James McBride, 2013

This book is an entertaining and funny read on John Brown’s anti-slavery actions from 1856 to 1859.  McBride gives the Mark Twainish treatment to this tragic and bloody affair.  It is one of the few recent ‘popular’ descriptions of Brown, which is why it needs to be looked at carefully.  It forms the basis for the somewhat worse streaming series of the same name. The picture it mostly paints of Brown (which the series dwells on more – see prior review of Episode 1 on this Blog) is that he was a religious nut, a disorganized leader and an insane fool, but also a courageous fool.  He was ultimately right about slavery and how to end it - no small point that.

The African-American slaves in Kansas that Brown runs into, as portrayed by McBride, seem to be mostly scared and ignorant, though street-smart - which might be true or might not be.  Certainly a slaveholder would be entertained.  Many of the pro-slave border ‘ruffians’ from Missouri are also ignorant thugs, so there is balance. The African-Americans are fictional creations, including Bob and especially young Onion/Henrietta, who Brown thinks is a girl but is really a boy, Henry.  In the book and series Brown’s kidnapping of Henry involves the death of Henry’s father, an event that never happened.  But it sets the stage for portraying Brown as a careless blood-letter. 

KILLINGS at POTTAWATOMIE and BATTLE of BLACK JACK

The bloody Pottawatomie Creek attacks carried out by Brown’s Rifles in the book lacks the real context of the burning, sacking and destruction of the Free State stronghold of Lawrence, Kansas on May 21,1856 by pro-slavers.  In the book it is blamed on a more trivial but bloody cane attack on Charles Sumner in the U.S. Congress by a pro-slave state legislator that came on May 22, the next day.  The attacks occurred on May 24-25 a few days later as revenge, when Brown’s abolitionist group killed 5 pro-slave settlers who participated in the Lawrence raid.  The book tells the story more truthfully than the series.  The book shows the actual sword killings were done by Brown’s sons and fellow Free Staters, not Brown, outside the cabins.

The Battle of Black Jack on June 2 followed after Deputy Pate captured 2 of Brown’s sons as a consequence of the Pottawatomie killings.  Brown’s 30 Rifles were the only force that fought Pate, not the humorous and failed contribution of a contingent of organized soldiers under Sam Shore as in the series. Unlike the series, in the book Brown’s tactics were more on the guerilla side, not just a straight-ahead charge across a ravine into gunfire. Not quite an idiot.  The book does not show Brown praying right before the battle, as does the series. The TV version shows Pate’s silly men surrendering almost immediately because they were so scared of Brown - though in reality the fight lasted 5 hours with Brown using some clever tactics. This some consider the first battle of the Civil War – not Harper’s Ferry or Fort Sumter. Black Jack is now a U.S. historical park - though at the time Pate was a deputized Federal Marshall working for the official pro-slavery government of Kansas, not a 'Red Shirt.'  Yeah… confusing but not really.  The Federals were supposed to keep the two sides apart. 

This covers the first 7 chapters of the book and they relate to the 1st episode of the series.  As can be seen, the book differs in small but important ways from the series.  Brown in the book comes off as a lovable old coot, but also crazed and bloodthirsty - though certainly not as bad as the more-watched series, at least Episode 1.

Brown's cabin in Osowatomie - now preserved

BATTLE of OSOWATOMIE

In the series, this battle is ignored, showing just one scene of Brown's men escaping down a river.  In the book Brown is defeated defending the Free-State town of Osowatomie, Kansas, while his son Frederick is killed.  Unlike the book, Frederick actually understood who the man that killed him was, a pro-slave Reverend.  He did not die as a soft-hearted half-wit praying over a dead bird as the book pretends.  The real battle took place August 30 of the same year, long after Black Jack.  5 abolitionists were killed and their town burned by a party of 250-400 pro-slavery border thugs using cannons. After this defeat, the book has Brown deciding to leave his men.  Osowatomie escalated the battle in ‘bleeding Kansas’ as the second battle of the Civil War. 

INTERLUDE

After the battle McBride spends time on Onion’s travails and joys working in a whore-house in Pikesville, Missouri after being grabbed by a pro-slaver.  There is more Twainish humor at the expense of everyone, especially as Onion is one ugly high yaller ‘girl.’ At the same time Bob is forced to work at a sawmill in this crude slaver town.  One pretty brown prostitute has no problems with slavery and hates the rude black slaves in the slave pen who are later accused of planning an insurrection. 9 slaves, led by a woman named Sibonia, are hanged – something that never happened in Missouri.  Not sure how ‘funny’ this event is! But hey, Onion didn’t mind, as his tips increased due to the land-office business the hangings brought in.  He’s somewhat of a dumb-ass at this point.  Later, Free-Staters attack Pikesville and Brown recaptures Onion.  This is more fabrication, though Brown actually did attack two households of slavers in Missouri to free their people, something he did regularly around Kansas.  The book doesn't show any of that.

HARPER’S FERRY

In the lead-up to the attack on Harper’s Ferry, the book treats Frederick Douglass as a pampered blowhard, perhaps attempting to adjust the picture of Douglass in most liberal movies as a revered sober hero.  He’s a lecher, a drunk and a bigamist. However Harriet Tubman, who we meet in Canada, is not made fun of.  In the series – but not the book - Douglass pillories Brown for being a white man who thinks he knows what slaves and freemen want.  Why don't film-makers expose some of the present pampered and sell-out misleaders of that old ‘black’ community, black and white.  Instead the identity sarcasm is reserved for John Brown. 

As the book gets closer to its tragic denouement, the humor and ‘romp’ subside.  Onion is involved in the preparation, but he’s half-useless and knows it.  Onion considers Brown crazy for the Harper’s Ferry plan, but it is not that crazy in concept.  It could have worked, especially basing a guerilla struggle in the Appalachian Mountains, which extended deep into the slave South.  Prior investigation among the local slaves and freedman was not done, reflecting Brown’s ‘one man army’ approach, not a collective approach.  Guerrilla attacks on smaller federal arms’ caches or plantations to collect guns and supporters would have been a better method to start. 

Kennedy Farm, where Harper's Ferry raid was organized.

McBride shows how small mistakes – the location of the base house at the Kennedy Farm, the choice of a blowhard to visit Harper’s Ferry first – helped speed up the timing.  This significantly weakened the attack on the arsenal.  Ultimately Douglass refuses to show up, Tubman is sick and the urban freedmen from Philly run the other way.  This is mostly due to Brown’s changing of the date because of imminent discovery by the local sheriff and his deputies. Timing is everything, especially this kind of thing. 

Before the raid, Onion leaves with Brown’s daughters and a female in-law, heading towards Philadelphia in a wagon, but turns back with a missing password.  This mistake leads to death and confusion. Brown easily takes the Federal Arsenal but waits for the arrival of the freedmen or a rising of the slaves, which never comes.  Instead of leaving with what he has and getting into the mountains, he waits far too long.  Starting his raid at 9 P.M. the night before, he is still there at 4 P.M. the next afternoon when a disorganized militia starts shooting and by 7 P.M. or so makes a final charge with the help of seasoned troops.  The rest is history - all that is left is the hanging after this, the third battle of the Civil War.  

At the end, Onion finally realizes Brown is no fool. 

The Fundamental UnSeriousness of the Middle Class      

The falsity of most of the tone is the issue. You can't call this story a 'tragi-comedy.'  It is perhaps a trick so that people read it, but then what do they walk away with?  Remember, the NYT called it a ‘romp.’ Onion is obviously a funny character telling things from an ex-slave's point of view, but he’s a plot device.  He nearly always thinks Brown is mad and insane, and this reflects the conventional reader and bourgeois political opinion.  However to its credit the book continually shows how ‘talking’ and acting are two different things.  Those who talk but don’t act are found wanting by Brown and the reader.  This is crucial and might remind us of a famous saying of Marx's. 

I’m waiting for a witty comedy by McBride about Che Guevara.  Maybe he can make Guevara’s failed guerilla expedition in Bolivia somewhat laughable, featuring a clownish side-kick who thinks he’s nuts. Or how about the union fools who struck Hormel in the 1980s and lost?  Hey, even those desperate BLM protesters? Ha ha! Twain never wrote a comedy about the Civil War for instance, because he couldn’t.  Huckleberry Finn had the background of slavery, but Twain never portrayed real people or events.  Roberto Beignini in Life is Beautiful attempted to make a WWII concentration and death camp into a summer holiday for his son.  That didn’t quite work either.  In contrast, Trump, Biden and the capitalist political system are open farces.  These are the real targets for a modern Mark Twain.     

Other prior blog reviews on this subject, use blog search box, upper left:  “The Good Lord Bird”(TV) “Fire on the Mountain” (Bisson); “No Fascist USA!” “The Free State of Jones” “The Souls of Black Folk” (Dubois);Struggle & Progress” or type in the phrase “Civil War.”

And I bought it at May Day Books!

Red Frog

December 30, 2020

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