Wednesday, 6 July 2022

"The Glorious Fourth": A Poem on Independence Day by Hannah Griffits, 1785

Hannah Griffits was a Quaker poet who lived in the late colonial and early national period of American history. She witnessed a lot of changes: her life spanned 90 years (1727-1817).

Hannah decided to be a poet when just a child. At age 10, she promised God that she would not write poetry about "trifling themes." She kept her promise. 

Griffits came from a prominent Pennsylvania family. She supported colonial resistance to British rule. In addition, she was also a proto-feminist who wrote poems celebrating the efforts of the Daughters of Liberty to boycott British goods in response to the attempts of Parliament to tax colonial imports.  

But she was also a devout Quaker. She abhorred violence and advocated a peaceful settlement of the conflict. Once hostilities commenced she denounced the behavior of both sides and the suffering and divisions they created. The war divided Griffits' relatives into Patriots and Loyalists, a common outcome in many families.

She was appalled by the carnage of the first major battle after the Patriots had declared independence, the Battle of Long Island.  [Image: "The Battle of Long Island" by Alonzo Chappell, 19th century recreation.]




She was particularly harsh in condemning Thomas Paine (one of my heroes), calling him "a Snake beneath the grass" whose extreme rhetoric drowned out that of moderates. The British came in for a drubbing as well. They exhibited evidence of a "deep degeneracy of nature." 

In the wake of the war, she wrote a poem expressing disillusion with the costs and results of independence. It is short and simple, but immensely powerful in my opinion. It sums up, I think, the feelings many of us have today about the current situation of the United States. It deserves wide dissemination at this perilous time. 


"The glorious fourth --  again appears,

A day of days -- and year of years,

The sum of sad disasters,

Where all the mighty gains we see,

With all their boasted liberty,

Is only change of masters." (1785)


The literary establishments of the day in Britain and America were hostile to women authors. Griffits never tried to publish her poetry. A few did get published but not through her own efforts. Many others survived in commonplace books kept by relatives and friends. 


Further Reading: 

Hannah Griffitts - Wikipedia

Hannah Griffitts | History of American Women (womenhistoryblog.com) by Maggie Maclean



2 comments:

  1. Very interesting person. Yes, the more I read about the American war for independence the more I realize how both sides were vicious. And I see more clearly why so many wished to remain loyal to the crown or just stay
    Neutral.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Very interesting person. Yes, the more I read about the American war for independence the more I realize how both sides were vicious. And I see more clearly why so many wished to remain loyal to the crown or just stay
    Neutral.

    ReplyDelete