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Wednesday, June 8, 2016

Jim Limber the Adopted Mulatto Son of Jefferson Davis Visits His Adoptive Parents After the War by Shane McCrae

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June 8, 2016
 

Jim Limber the Adopted Mulatto Son of Jefferson Davis Visits His Adoptive Parents After the War

 
Shane McCrae
illustration

About This Poem

 

“One morning, as she drove her carriage home from running errands, Varina Davis saw a mixed-race child being beaten by a black woman, presumably his mother. She took the child, a seven year-old named Jim Limber, from the woman, and brought him home to live with herself and her husband, Jefferson Davis, president of the Confederate States of America. Limber was, in turn, taken from the Davises a little over a year later, when the the Union Army captured them in Irwinville, Georgia, and he never saw them again.”
—Shane McCrae

 

Shane McCrae is the author of The Animal Too Big to Kill (Persea Books, 2015). He teaches at Oberlin College and lives in Oberlin, Ohio.

Poetry by McCrae

 

The Animal Too Big to Kill

(Persea Books, 2015)

"Reapers" by Jean Toomer

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"Go Down, Death" by James Weldon Johnson

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"Lighthead’s Guide to the Galaxy" by Terrance Hayes

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Poem-a-Day

 

Launched during National Poetry Month in 2006, Poem-a-Day features new and previously unpublished poems by contemporary poets on weekdays and classic poems on weekends.

 
 

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