The Scourged Back.
£50.00 – £60.00
The Scourged Back is the name of a photograph, taken in 1863. It’s of the lacerated back of a Louisiana slave known as Whipped Peter, you can imagine how awful this photograph is. I can’t show it here. This is the story of his escape from his plantation and arrival in Baton Rouge, where he joined the Union army in the Civil War. It was a piece that had to be written.
Description
On Xmas Day in 1862, ‘Whipped Peter’ (his real name was Gordon) received yet another merciless thrashing, after which he almost died, he was hut-ridden for two months afterwards. He realised that another beating would surely be his last. The whipping scene in this piece, along with interspersions of Xmas carols and Christian chorales with poignant titles, is hard to listen to, but we should all try. Peter did escape, at the end of March 1863, and found his way through the Louisiana swamps to a Union army settlement at Baton Rouge, where he signed up. This is his story; exuberant, horribly cruel, music depicting his pain after the beating, and flight away from the hated plantation owners, then exhilaration and a return to African roots, though the whipping experience never leaves him.
Additional information
Score Type | PDF Download, Physical Copy |
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