Cotton Mather studied small
pox for a while,
instead of sin. Boston
was rife with it.
Not being ill himself, thank
Providence,
but one day asking his slave,
Onesimus,
if he’d ever had the
pox. To which Onesimus replied,
“Yes and No.” Not
insubordinate
or anything of the kind, but
playful, or perhaps
musing, as one saying to
another:
“Consider how a man
can take inside all manner of
disease
and still survive.”
Then, graciously, when Mather
asked again:
My mother bore me in the
southern wild.
She scratched my skin and
I got sick, but lived
to come here, free of
smallpox, as your slave.
This is such a rich poem.
It is hilarious. But maybe I see that because I find satire and irony funny.
And this poem is full of it. It seems every two lines or so, there is a spike
that jabs at the point of life, and poor Cotton Mather is at the tail end of
every joke. However, perhaps the most ironic point about it, and the subject of
the poem, is the slave Onesimus. Biblically, Onesimus was a slave that ran away
from his master, and encountered and became good friends with Paul the Apostle.
Why he becomes worth notice in the Bible is because he becomes “useful” to Paul
and the early Church. Here is the quote that mentions him.
“Therefore, although in Christ I could be
bold and order you to do what you ought to do, yet I prefer
to appeal to you on the basis of love. It is as none other than Paul—an old man
and now also a prisoner of Christ Jesus— that I appeal
to you for my son Onesimus, who became my
son while I was in chains. Formerly he
was useless to you, but now he has become useful both to you and to me.”
Philemon 1:8-10
The ironic thing is that in Greek,
onesimus means useful. So ‘formerly Useful was useless to you, but now Useful
has become useful to you and to me.’ This is all meant to illustrate the fact
that Onesimus to Mather was all that his name implied: Useful. It’s the end
that brings this home, to be freed young only to become a ‘useful’ slave, and
becoming an example to free others.
Love that you found the biblical allusion in the name and I really love that you see the irony. I'm guessing that most of the class will miss it. Promise you'll point it out when we discuss?!
ReplyDeleteYou have done an excellent job with this poem. :D
Thanks! Over the summer my church was having a series "Oddballs of the Bible" and Onesimus was one of those. So when I saw the name, I was surprised, because I recognized where the name came from.
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