“Amazing Grace” is probably the most beloved hymn of the last two
centuries. The soaring spiritual describing profound religious elation is
estimated to be performed 10 million times annually and has appeared on over
11,000 albums.
Recently, President
Obama burst into the
familiar tune during the memorial service for Reverend Clementa Pinckney, a
victim of a heinous church shooting in Charleston, South Carolina.
Ironically, this
stirring song, closely associated with the African-American community, was
written by a former slave trader, John Newton. This unlikely authorship forms
the basis of Amazing Grace, the new Broadway musical
(written by Broadway first-timer Christopher Smith, a former Philadelphia
policeman, and playwright Arthur Giron) which tells Newton’s life story from
his early days as a licentious libertine in the British navy to his religious
conversion and taking up the abolitionist cause. But the real story behind the
somewhat sentimental musical, told in Newton’s autobiography reveals a more
complex and ambiguous history.
Newton was born in
1725 in London to a Puritan mother who died two weeks before his seventh
birthday, and a stern sea-captain father who took him to sea at age 11. After
many voyages and a reckless youth of drinking, Newton was impressed into the
British navy. After attempting to desert, he received eight dozen lashes and
was reduced to the rank of common seaman.
While later serving on
the Pegasus, a slave ship, Newton did not get along with the crew who left him
in West Africa with Amos Clowe, a slave trader. Clowe gave Newton to his wife
Princess Peye, an African royal who treated him vilely as she did her other
slaves. On stage, Newton’s African adventures and enslavement are a bit more
flashy with the ship going down, a thrilling underwater rescue of Newton by his
loyal retainer Thomas, and an implied love affair between Newton and the
Princess.
The stage version has
John’s father leading a rescue party to save his son from the calculating
Princess, but in actuality the enterprise was undertaken by a sea captain asked
by the senior Newton to look for the missing John. (In the show, the elder
Newton is wounded during the battle for his son’s freedom and later has a
tearful deathbed scene with John on board ship.)
During the voyage home, the
ship was caught in a horrendous storm off the coast of Ireland and almost sank.
Newton prayed to God and the cargo miraculously shifted to fill a hole in the
ship’s hull and the vessel drifted to safety. Newton took this as a sign from
the Almighty and marked it as his conversion to Christianity. He did not radically
change his ways at once, his total reformation was more gradual. "I cannot
consider myself to have been a believer in the full sense of the word, until a
considerable time afterwards,” he later wrote. He did
begin reading the Bible at this point and began to view his captives with a
more sympathetic view.
In the musical, John
abjures slavery immediately after his shipboard epiphany and sails to Barbados
to search for and buy the freedom of Thomas. After returning to England, Newton
and his sweetheart Mary Catlett dramatically confront the Prince of Wales and
urge him to abolish the cruel practice. In real life, Newton continued to sell
his fellow human beings, making three voyages as the captain of two different
slave vessels, The Duke of Argyle and the African. He suffered a stroke in 1754
and retired, but continued to invest in the business. In 1764, he was ordained
as an Anglican priest and wrote 280 hymns to accompany his services. He wrote
the words for “Amazing Grace” in 1772 (In 1835, William Walker put the words to
the popular tune “New Britain”)
Amazing Grace”
published in "Olney Hymns" in 1779. (Photo: Photocopy of "Olney
Hymns" on page 53 [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons)
It was not until 1788,
34 years after leaving it that he renounced his former slaving profession by
publishing a blazing pamphlet called “Thoughts Upon the Slave Trade.” The tract
described the horrific conditions on slave ships and Newton apologized for
making a public statement so many years after participating in the trade: “It
will always be a subject of humiliating reflection to me, that I was once an
active instrument in a business at which my heart now shudders.” The pamphlet
was so popular it was reprinted several times and sent to every member of
Parliament. Under the leadership of MP William Wilberforce, the English civil
government outlawed slavery in Great Britain in 1807 and Newton lived to see
it, dying in December of that year. The passage of the Slave Trade Act is
depicted in the 2006 film, also called Amazing Grace,
starring Albert Finney as Newton and Ioan Gruffud as
Wilberforce.
Source: David Sheward
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