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Jupiter Hammon, the pioneering American poet, stands as a beacon of literary achievement and social progress. As one of the first African-American writers to be published, Hammon's eloquent verses transcend the constraints of his time, offering profound reflections on faith, freedom, and the enduring struggle for equality in a young nation grappling with its conscience.
"As we depend upon our masters, for what we eat and drink and wear, and for all our comfortable things in this world, we cannot be happy, unless we please them."
"It is very wicked for you not to take care of your masters goods, but how much worse is it to pilfer and steal from them, whenever you think you shall not be found out."
Care,
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