Pagans and angels and Christians, oh my. Wheatley lays the religion on heavy in her poetry, especially in "On Being Brought from Africa to America." Although she's far away from home, the speaker has found a spiritual home in her new religion and faith. Her conversion to Christianity parallels her transition from Africa to America, and while it becomes a source for her belief that all people are equal spiritually, she urges Christians to truly follow their Christian principles. Not only that, but the use of Christian imagery allows the speaker to discuss racial inequality in her aim to defuse assumptions about race differences.
Questions About Religion
- How does Wheatley use the idea of redemption as a catalyst for change in race relations? In other words, how does her Christian faith become an argument for the equality of blacks and whites?
- How does Wheatley intertwine race and religion in her poem? What effect does that mixture have?
- How does Wheatley use images of blackness or darkness to double as a reference for spiritual change on a personal level, and social change in race relations?
Chew on This
Like life, Wheatley's poem is not a destination; it's a journey—filled with angels, pagans, Cain, and a "sable race," which she uses to express her conversion to Christianity.
All aboard the angelic train! Through several mentions of Christian themes, Wheatley uses the Christian promise of salvation as an argument for equality in life.