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The Confessions of Nat Turner, the Leader of the Late Insurrections in Southampton, VA
As Fully and Voluntarily Made to Thomas R. Gray
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Narrado por:
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Leighton Harris
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De:
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Thomas B. Gray
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The Confessions of Nat Turner stands as one of the most haunting and complex documents in American history—a text born from a moment of unimaginable suffering, spiritual fervor, and the crushing brutality of slavery. Recorded by Thomas R. Gray in 1831 while Nat Turner awaited execution, this narrative offers the only surviving first-person account from the leader of the Southampton uprising. It is less a political tract than a window into the anguished faith, visionary conviction, and unbearable conditions that shaped one of the most tragic figures of the American past.
The Southampton insurrection shook the nation to its core. In a world built on the bondage of Black men, women, and children, Turner’s revolt erupted as an earthquake—terrifying to enslavers, devastating to the enslaved, and destined to leave deep scars on the soul of the country. In the immediate aftermath, rumors, myths, and distortions spread rapidly. Nearly all who participated in the uprising were killed or executed before any coherent testimony could be gathered. Only Nat Turner remained—a man shaped by scripture, visions, and the crushing weight of oppression—captured alone in a small cave near his home, exhausted and prepared to face death.
Gray’s account does not absolve nor condemn; instead, it records Turner’s own attempt to give voice to the forces—spiritual, emotional, and historical—that drove him toward a path with no return. For modern listeners, this confession is neither simple justification nor mere historical record. It is a lament, a reckoning, and a testament to the extreme pressures that slavery exerted upon human beings until something within them broke beyond the limits of endurance.
Public Domain (P)2021 Rolled Scroll Publishing