Band of Angels
- NOT RATED
- Year:
- 1957
- 125 min
- 235 Views
Put your hands up.
Get down.
Where were you running off to?
to Cincinnati, master.
He was scared to go by himself
and he done made me go with him.
You lying scamp.
A flogging, Mr. Starr,
will take the running out of them.
No flogging.
They're new here
or they wouldn't run away.
Take them up to the old cemetery
and have them pull the weeds.
Get up.
Move.
Long as I have been in Starrwood,
he's never whipped a slave.
Never sold one, neither.
They sure got funny ideas
up here in Kentucky.
Manty, darling.
Father, why isn't she buried
over yonder with our other folks?
Well, Manty, I told you...
...I wanted your mother near the house,
where she'd be closer to me, to you.
- Oh, Shad?
- Yeah, Master Aaron?
Manty, you go along with Shad.
Tell old Sukie to bake us
a nice, big berry pie for supper.
Doesn't that sound good?
Now, now, sweetheart,
what are little girls made of?
- Sugar and spice, I guess.
- And everything nice.
You run along now.
I catched you giving my berries away.
And you put her up to them tricks.
You no good, Shaddie.
That baby girl has got to eat big
to grow big like me.
She's growing up.
Blooming out pretty all over.
Before you know it, someday
she gonna be owning Starrwood.
Her? Own Starrwood?
Yes, her.
And that's enough from you.
- But she couldn't.
- Shut your mouth.
No, I want to hear about it. Shad?
- If Master Aaron finds out...
- Master Aaron? Him?
Them muckety-mucks ain't nothing.
Pull off their fancy clothes
and they ain't nothing different.
And Manty, what's she?
She ain't nothing.
Ain't no better than nothing.
You get up and get yourself
up out of my kitchen.
before I hit you upside your...
"No better than nothing"?
What did he mean?
He just crazy, that's all.
- I'll ask Father.
- Manty? Manty.
That man from Danville took Shaddie.
- You sold him, you sold him away.
- I had to.
Certain things have to be done.
Nobody can change them.
Now listen, honey,
here's some good news.
You've sort of outgrown Starrwood...
...and Miss Tottenham...
I mean, your governess...
...you've learned most everything
she could teach you.
Well, you're going away to school.
First you send Shad away and now me.
I won't leave you.
I won't leave Starrwood.
I don't want you to leave me, Manty.
But this is just a little place
in a great big world.
Someday you'll come back to it,
Miss Amantha Starr.
A great lady with a head full of learning.
It won't be too far away.
I'll see you often.
Try to get some sleep now, honey.
Sweet little Manty,
what are little girls made of?
I don't know, Father. I don't know.
Dear Sukie:
You know I wouldwrite to you more often...
...but Father comes to Cincinnati
so frequently.
"And each time,
I have sent my love to you.
I am now a graduate student
at the conservatory...
...not as homesick as I used to be,
because I have some fine friends.
Especially the Reverend Seth Parton,
he's a young Divinity student...
at the conservatory.
He is so splendid and strong
and earnest..."
That child's sick.
No, I'd say she's just busting with health.
"As you know, Father
will be in Cincinnati this weekend...
...and I am taking Seth to meet him
at a tea which Miss Idell...
...my French teacher, is giving for me
and some of the girls from my dormitory.
She's quite fascinating,
and Father seems to think so too. "
- Doesn't she play divinely?
- If you like arias of unbridled passion.
I'm sorry, Mr. Parton, perhaps a sonata
would have been more fitting.
Possibly so, Miss Idell.
Some expresses a baser instinct.
Please forgive my ignorance.
There is the unsolid happiness of virtue...
...and good works
and the sanctified happiness of marriage.
Aside from these conditions,
man's only true joy is self-denial.
until I met Seth.
You should have heard his last sermon,
"Plowing Under the Wicked."
Well, today, Amantha,
I am troubled by a graver subject...
...more than anything you heard
in that sermon.
Slavery, Mr. Starr.
I declare to you, sir, my burning belief
in the natural equality of all humans.
I'm not prepared for debate, sir.
that my slaves are treated kindly.
That's it, sir. That's just it.
Kindness can be the mask for evil.
The kindness of deluded persons
ensnared in the works of wickedness.
For indulgence rivets the shackle,
kindness seduces the... The...
I'm listening, Mr. Parton.
That is all, sir.
Truth gives pain sometimes.
That doesn't mean I lack regard
for the one who might be hurt.
You don't hurt anybody, Seth.
You know how preachers
give tarnation in the sermon...
...and then shake hands
when church is out.
My hand, sir.
It's been pleasant.
Good afternoon, all.
Good day, sir.
Come along, girls.
But Seth has to go and work
on his new sermon.
I'm sure nobody would go to sleep
when you preach, young man.
Good day. Amantha.
Isn't he wonderful, Father?
If you say so,
Miss Sugar-and-Spice.
Big, aren't you?
Strong as a bull, I imagine.
My strength is of the spirit, Miss Idell.
Maybe so, Seth.
But if your muscles ever get
to wrestling with your spirit...
...Ill buy a ticket to the contest.
Good day.
I'll tell Sukie how well you look.
She's asking about you all the time.
You tell her I'll write her
another letter next week.
I'll tell her, honey.
Now, don't you worry, I'll see you soon.
I have to come up here again
next month on business.
Thank you so much for the nice party.
- Goodbye, Manty, dear.
- Bye, Father.
Goodbye, dear.
Only graduates are allowed
to wear their hair up.
Six years of this. How did she ever...?
Miss Amantha, are you ever
gonna leave the conservatory?
Amantha.
Does that answer your question?
I'll probably be married and have quite
a family before you all graduate.
Young ladies.
My dear Amantha, I've just
been entrusted with a great crusade.
- It'll take me all over two counties.
- What is it?
Well, I volunteered to speak in
the presidential campaign of Mr. Lincoln.
- I've been chosen.
- Seth, what an honor.
Tonight I make my
opening address at Clinton County.
to every village and crossroads.
Oh, I'm so proud of you.
0h, I must be off or I'll miss my train.
- Good luck, Seth.
- Oh, my apologies.
I'm on my way to strike a blow
against slavery.
Splendid.
Letter for you, Amantha.
Mail's arrived. Mildred, Jenny.
What is it?
It's my father.
He's terribly ill.
- I'm gonna have to leave.
- I'm sorry, Amantha.
Floodings are making river travel difficult.
Some of the packet boats
haven't left for three days.
- You'll tell Seth?
- As soon as possible.
My baby. Oh, my baby.
My baby.
That's Amantha Starr.
Thanks, sheriff. Too bad.
They waited.
They thought you never was coming.
Father?
No.
No. That's the wrong place.
He should be over there,
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