
The Project Gutenberg E-text of Clotelle: A Tale of the Southern States, by William Wells Brown
CLOTELLE:A TALE OF THE SOUTHERN STATES
CONTENTS
In the bustling towns of the ante‑bellum South, a complex social world unfolds where race, status, and desire intersect. Through the eyes of Agnes, a striking mulatto laundress, the narrative reveals how a small class of enslaved women navigates the precarious balance between servitude and the fleeting privileges of “hiring their time.” Her determination to raise her daughters, Isabella and Marion, as refined ladies—clad in silks and pearls—offers a vivid portrait of ambition, beauty, and the limited avenues available to those born into bondage.
When the educated young Henry Linwood returns from Harvard, his encounter with the luminous Isabella at a lively negro ball sparks a charged connection that both families watch with keen interest. Their budding fascination hints at the delicate tensions between affection and the entrenched hierarchies of a society built on oppression, setting the stage for personal choices that could reverberate far beyond the ballroom’s glittering lights.
Language
en
Duration
~4 hours (232K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2000-03-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

d. 1884
Born into slavery and self-emancipated as a young man, this pioneering American writer turned lived experience into powerful books, lectures, and reform work. He is often remembered as the first African American to publish a novel, and as an early Black playwright and historian as well.
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by William Wells Brown

by William Wells Brown

by William Wells Brown

by William Wells Brown

by William Wells Brown

by William Wells Brown

by William Wells Brown

by William Wells Brown