SAPPHIRA AND THE SLAVE GIRL by Willa Cather (1940)
Sapphira and the Slave Girl is set in Appalachian Virginia in the 1850s and is inspired by stories Willa Cather heard about her great-grandmother.
Sapphira Dodderidge Colbert is the matriarch not only of her own household, but of the backwoods community of Back Creek in Frederick County, Va.
Yet she feels threatened by Nancy, a timid and powerless young slave woman. The main theme of the novel is the terrible consequences that flow from that.
In Sapphira’s world, an aristocrat such as herself is entitled to deference and obedience, which she in fact receives, not just from black slaves but lower-class whites. By the same standard, she is obligated to maintain a standard of conduct that manifests her superiority to common people.
She is gracious, benevolent and forgiving to everyone, black or white, provided they know and accept their place in society.
She suffers from a crippling, painful and fatal disease called then called dropsy and now called edema—an accumulation of water in the legs due to congestive heart failure. Formerly a great horsewoman, she now can barely even walk. Yet she makes few concessions to weakness. She maintains her routine and exercises authority from her wheelchair.
Her husband, Henry Colbert, is not an aristocrat. His marriage to Sapphira is based on mutual respect, not passion.
He spends most days and many nights at the flour mill that provides his family with their income. Sapphira tells him that a real Southern aristocrat would assign a slave or hire someone to do the dirty work. That’s why a real Southern aristocrat would go broke, Henry replies.
Part of his routine is to have 19-year-old Nancy bring him a cup of coffee at the mill a couple of hours before he goes up to the house for breakfast with his wife. Nancy feels affection for Henry and wants to please him. He is like the father she never had.
She takes to plucking a wildflower and bringing it with the coffee. Henry likes this and comes to feel fatherly affection for Nancy. Sapphira notices this and doesn’t like it
The reason for Sapphira’s feeling is not clear to me. Nancy is chaste and naive. Henry is a completely faithful husband. As Cather writes, he is committed to observing the terms of his marriage contract, as he would any other contract.
Does Sapphira suspect an erotic relationship? a potential erotic relationship? the appearance of an erotic relationship? Or was it that she thinks Nancy and Henry have forgotten their “place”?
In any case, she sets out to break up the relationship. She has a different slave bring Henry his coffee. Henry objects. She proposes to sell Nancy. Henry objects again.
Then she does something truly evil. She invites Henry’s brother, Martin Colbert, for a long visit.
Martin Colbert, unlike his brother, is the model of a Virginia gentleman. He is handsome, well-mannered, charming and a good horseman. He always pays his gambling debts and, most importantly, never backs down from a fight.
But in his heart, Martin is as cruel and arrogant as Simon Legree. He inwardly vows vengeance on Old Sampson, the Colberts’ trusted black foreman, for looking him in the eye without subservience. He regards black women, and also lower-class white women, as his lawful prey.