Monday, December 2, 2013

Lady Freedom and Langston Hughes



December 2, 1863

Today is the 150th Anniversary of the crowning of the Capitol Dome with Freedom.  She is a colossal bronze figure (designed by Thomas Crawford) standing 19½-feet tall, weighing approximately 15,000 pounds and standing 288 feet above Washington, D.C.  Freedom holds a sheathed sword in her right hand, while a laurel wreath and the shield of the United States are held in her left hand. 

1855 Phrygian Cap Design
 
Ironically in 1855, Secretary of War Jefferson Davis (later to become POTCSA) was in charge of the Capitol construction project and Crawford's original design was adorned with a Phrygian Cap...an ancient Roman symbol for an emancipated slave!  This seemed to be a direct insult to slaveholders and Davis erupted with anger (so much hypocrisy/ irony here) against this Northern assault to the "Southern Way of Life":

 “Its (Phrygian Cap) history renders it inappropriate to a people
who were born free and would not be enslaved”.


The original design was changed and the final version of Freedom wearing a military helmet with stars, an eagle's head and crest of feathers was placed atop the dome as the Civil War raged!

She gracefully stands on a cast-iron globe inscribed with the words:

E PLURIBUS UNUM
 
 
 
The freedom that seemed so close in 1863 and so far away in 1963...is still a freedom worth striving for...for many.
 
 
 
This poem (1965) about a "telescope of dreams" by Langston Hughes is a powerful metaphor to remind us that freedom is not merely the casting off of chains...it is also killing jellyfish...
 
 
Long View: Negro
 
Emancipation: 1865
 
Sighted through the
 
Telescope of dreams
 
Looms larger,
 
So much larger,
 
 
So it seems,
 
 
Than truth can be.
 
 
But turn the telescope around,
 
Look through the larger end-
 
And wonder why
 
 
What was so large
 
 
Becomes so small
 
Again.
 
 
 
 

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