The scene of the opera is laid on a plantation somewhere in the State
of Arkansas, northeast of the town of Texarkana and three or four
miles from the Red River. The plantation is surrounded by a dense
forest.
There were several Negro families living on the plantation and other
families back in the woods.
In order that the reader may better comprehend the story, I will give
a few details regarding the Negroes of this plantation from the year
1866 to the year 1884.
The year 1866 finds them in dense ignorance, with no-one to guide
them, as the white folks had moved away shortly after the Negroes were set free and had left the plantation in charge of a trustworthy Negro servant named Ned.
All of the Negroes, but Ned and his wife Monisha, were superstitious,
and believed in conjuring. Monisha, being a woman, was at times more
impressed by what the more expert conjurers would say.
Ned and Monisha had no children, and they had often prayed that their
cabin home might one day be brightened by a child that would be a
companion for Monisha when Ned was away from home. They had dreams,
too, of educating the child so that when it grew up it could teach
the people around them to aspire to something better and higher than
superstition and conjuring.
The prayers of Ned and Monisha were answered in a remarkable manner.
One morning in the middle of September 1866, Monisha found a baby
under a tree that grew in front of her cabin. It proved to be a
light-brown-skinned girl about two days old. Monisha took the the
baby into the cabin, and Ned and she adopted it as their own.
They wanted the child, while growing up, to love them as it would
love its real parents, so they decided to keep it in ignorance of the
manner in which it came to them until old enough to understand. They
realized, too, that if the neighbors knew the facts, they would
someday tell the child; so to deceive them, Ned hitched up his mules
and, with Monisha and the child, drove to a family of old friends who
lived twenty miles away and whom they had not seen for three years.
They told their friends that the child was just a week old.
Ned gave these people six bushels of corn and forty pounds of meat to
allow Monisha and the child to stay with them for eight weeks, which
Ned thought would benefit the health of Monisha. The friends
willingly consented to have her stay with the for that length of
time.
Ned went back alone to the plantation and told his neighbors that
Monisha, while visiting some old friends, had become the mother of a
girl baby.
The neighbors were, of course, greatly surprised, but were compelled
to believe that Ned's story was true.
At the end of the eight weeks, Ned took Monisha and the child home
and received the congratulations of his neighbors and friends and was
delighted to find that his scheme had worked so well.
Monisha, at first, gave the child her own name; but when the child
was three years old, she was so fond of playing under the tree where
she was found that Monisha gave her the name of Tree-Monisha.
When Treemonisha was seven years old Monisha arranged with a white
family that she would do their washing and ironing and Ned would chop
their wood if the lady of the house would give Treemonisha an
education, the schoolhouse being too far away for the child to
attend. The lady consented and as a result Treemonisha was the only
educated person in the neighborhood, the other children being still
in ignorance on account of their inability to travel so far to
school.
Zodzetrick, Luddud, and Simon, three very old men, earned their
living by going about the neighborhood practicing conjuring, selling
little luck-bags, and rabbits' feet, and confirming the people in
their superstition.