Lift Evâry Voice and Sing
Lift evâry voice and sing
Till earth and heaven ring.
Ring with the harmonies of Liberty;
Let our rejoicing rise
High as the listâning skies,
Let it resound loud as the rolling sea.
Sing a song full of the faith that the dark past has taught us,
Sing a song full of the hope that the present has brought us.
Facing the rising sun of our new day begun,
Let us march on till victory is won.
Stony the road we trod,
Bitter the chastâning rod.
Felt in the days when hope unborn had died;
Yet with a steady beat,
Have not our weary feet
Come to the place for which our fathers sighed?
We have come over a way that with tears has been watered,
We have come, treading our path through the blood of the slaughtered,
Out from the gloomy past,
Till now we stand at last
Where the white gleam of our bright star is cast.
God of our weary years,
God of our silent tears,
Thou who has brought us thus far on the way;
Thou who has by Thy might
Led us into the light.
Keep us forever in the path, we pray.
Lest our feet stray from the places, our God, where we met Thee,
Lest our hearts, drunk with the wine of the world, we forget Thee,
Shadowed beneath Thy hand,
May we forever stand.
True to our God
True to our native land.
O brothers mine, to-day we stand
Where half a century sweeps our ken,
Since God, through Lincolnâs ready hand,
Struck off our bonds and made us men.
Just fifty yearsâ âa winterâs dayâ â
As runs the history of a race;
Yet, as we look back oâer the way,
How distant seems our starting place!
Look farther back! Three centuries!
To where a naked, shivering score,
Snatched from their haunts across the seas,
Stood, wild-eyed, on Virginiaâs shore.
This land is ours by right of birth,
This land is ours by right of toil;
We helped to turn its virgin earth,
Our sweat is in its fruitful soil.
Where once the tangled forest stoodâ â
Where flourished once rank weed and thornâ â
Behold the path-traced, peaceful wood,
The cotton white, the yellow corn.
To gain these fruits that have been earned,
To hold these fields that have been won,
Our arms have strained, our backs have burned,
Bent bare beneath a ruthless sun.
That Banner which is now the type
Of victory on field and floodâ â
Remember, its first crimson stripe
Was dyed by Attucksâ willing blood.
And never yet has come the cryâ â
When that fair flag has been assailedâ â
For men to do, for men to die,
That we have faltered or have failed.
Weâve helped to bear it, rent and torn,
Through many a hot-breathâd battle breeze
Held in our hands, it has been borne
And planted far across the seas.
And never yetâ âO haughty Land,
Let us, at least, for this be praisedâ â
Has one black, treason-guided hand
Ever against that flag been raised.
Then should we speak but servile words,
Or shall we hang our heads in shame?
Stand back of new-come foreign hordes,
And fear our heritage to claim?
No! stand erect and without fear,
And for our foes let this sufficeâ â
Weâve bought a rightful sonship here,
And we have more than paid the price.
And yet, my brothers, well I know
The tethered feet, the pinioned wings,
The spirit bowed beneath the blow,
The heart grown faint from wounds and stings;
The staggering force of brutish might,
That strikes and leaves us stunned and dazed;
The long, vain waiting through the night
To hear some voice for justice raised.
Full well I know the hour when hope
Sinks dead, and âround us everywhere
Hangs stifling darkness, and we grope
With hands uplifted in despair.
Courage! Look out, beyond, and see
The far horizonâs beckoning span!
Faith in your God-known destiny!
We are a part of some great plan.
Because the tongues of Garrison
And Phillips now are cold in death,
Think you their work can be undone?
Or quenched the fires lit by their breath?
Think you that John Brownâs spirit stops?
That Lovejoy was but idly slain?
Or do you think those precious drops
From Lincolnâs heart were shed in vain?
That for which millions prayed and sighed,
That for which tens of thousands fought,
For which so many freely died,
God cannot let it come to naught.
To America
How would you have us, as we are?
Or sinking âneath the load we bear?
Our eyes fixed forward on a star?
Or gazing empty at despair?
Rising or falling? Men or things?
With dragging pace or footsteps fleet?
Strong, willing sinews in your wings?
Or tightening chains about your feet?
O Black and Unknown Bards
O black and unknown bards of long ago,
How came your lips to touch the sacred fire?
How, in your darkness, did you come to know
The power and beauty of the minstrelâs lyre?
Who first from midst his bonds lifted his eyes?
Who first from out the still watch, lone and long,
Feeling the ancient faith of prophets rise
Within his dark-kept soul, burst into song?
Heart of what slave poured out such melody
As âSteal away to Jesusâ? On its strains
His spirit must have nightly floated free,
Though still about his hands he felt his chains.
Who heard great âJordan rollâ? Whose starward eye
Saw chariot âswing lowâ? And who was he
That breathed that comforting, melodic sigh,
âNobody knows de trouble I seeâ?
What merely living clod, what captive thing,
Could up toward God through all its darkness grope,
And find within its deadened heart to sing
These songs of sorrow, love and faith, and hope?
How did it catch that subtle undertone,
That note in music heard not with the ears?
How sound the elusive reed so seldom blown,
Which stirs the soul or melts the heart to tears.
Not that great German master in his dream
Of harmonies that thundered amongst the stars
At the creation, ever heard a theme
Nobler than âGo down, Moses.â Mark its bars
How like a mighty trumpet-call they stir
The blood. Such are the notes that men have sung
Going to valorous deeds; such tones there were
That helped make history when Time was young.
There is a wide, wide wonder in it all,
That from degraded rest and servile toil
The fiery spirit of the seer should call
These simple children of the sun and soil.
O black slave singers, gone, forgot, unfamed,
Youâ âyou alone, of all the long, long line
Of those whoâve sung untaught, unknown, unnamed,
Have stretched out upward, seeking the divine.
You sang not deeds of heroes or of kings;
No chant of bloody war, no exulting paean
Of arms-won triumphs; but your humble strings
You touched in chord with music empyrean.
You sang far better than you knew; the songs
That for your listenersâ hungry hearts sufficed
Still liveâ âbut more than this to you belongs:
You sang a race from wood and stone to Christ.
O Southland!
O Southland! O Southland!
Have you not heard the call,
The trumpet blown, the word made known
To the nations, one and all?
The watchword, the hope-word,
Salvationâs present plan?
A gospel new, for allâ âfor you:
Man shall be saved by man.
O Southland! O Southland!
Do you not hear to-day
The mighty beat of onward feet,
And know you not their way?
âTis forward, âtis upward,
On to the fair white arch
Of Freedomâs dome, and there is room
For each man who would march.
O Southland, fair Southland!
Then why do you still cling
To an idle age and a musty page,
To a dead and useless thing?
âTis springtime! âTis work-time!
The world is young again!
And Godâs above, and God is love,
And men are only men.
O Southland! my Southland!
O birthland! do not shirk
The toilsome task, nor respite ask,
But gird you for the work.
Remember, remember
That weakness stalks in pride;
That he is strong who helps along
The faint one at his side.
To Horace Bumstead
Have you been sore discouraged in the fight,
And even sometimes weighted by the thought
That those with whom and those for whom you fought
Lagged far behind, or dared but faintly smite?
And that the opposing forces in their might
Of blind inertia rendered as for naught
All that throughout the long years had been wrought,
And powerless each blow for Truth and Right?
If so, take new and greater courage then,
And think no more withouten help you stand;
For sure as God on His eternal throne
Sits, mindful of the sinful deeds of men,
âThe awful Sword of Justice in His handâ â
You shall not, no, you shall not, fight alone.
Under a burning tropic sun,
With comrades around him lying,
A trooper of the sable Tenth
Lay wounded, bleeding, dying.
First in the charge up the fort-crowned hill,
His companyâs guidon bearing,
He had rushed where the leaden hail fell fast,
Not death nor danger fearing.
He fell in the front where the fight grew fierce,
Still faithful in lifeâs last labor;
Black though his skin, yet his heart as true
As the steel of his blood-stained saber.
And while the battle around him rolled,
Like the roar of a sullen breaker,
He closed his eyes on the bloody scene,
And presented arms to his Maker.
There he lay, without honor or rank,
But, still, in a grim-like beauty;
Despised of men for his humble race,
Yet true, in death, to his duty.
The Black Mammy
O whitened head entwined in turban gay,
O kind black face, O crude, but tender hand,
O foster-mother in whose arms there lay
The race whose sons are masters of the land!
It was thine arms that sheltered in their fold,
It was thine eyes that followed through the length
Of infant days these sons. In times of old
It was thy breast that nourished them to strength.
So often hast thou to thy bosom pressed
The golden head, the face and brow of snow;
So often has it âgainst thy broad, dark breast
Lain, set off like a quickened cameo.
Thou simple soul, as cuddling down that babe
With thy sweet croon, so plaintive and so wild,
Came neâer the thought to thee, swift like a stab,
That it some day might crush thine own black child?
Father, Father Abraham,
To-day look on us from above;
On us, the offspring of thy faith,
The children of thy Christ-like love.
For that which we have humbly wrought,
Give us to-day thy kindly smile;
Wherein weâve failed or fallen short,
Bear with us, Father, yet awhile.
Father, Father Abraham,
To-day we lift our hearts to thee,
Filled with the thought of what great price
Was paid, that we might ransomed be.
To-day we consecrate ourselves
Anew in hand and heart and brain,
To send this judgment down the years:
The ransom was not paid in vain.
Brothers
See! There he stands; not brave, but with an air
Of sullen stupor. Mark him well! Is he
Not more like brute than man? Look in his eye!
No light is there; none, save the glint that shines
In the now glaring, and now shifting orbs
Of some wild animal caught in the hunterâs trap.
How came this beast in human shape and form?
Speak, man!â âWe call you man because you wear
His shapeâ âHow are you thus? Are you not from
That docile, child-like, tender-hearted race
Which we have known three centuries? Not from
That more than faithful race which through three wars
Fed our dear wives and nursed our helpless babes
Without a single breach of trust? Speak out!
I am, and am not.
Then who, why are you?
I am a thing not new, I am as old
As human nature. I am that which lurks,
Ready to spring whenever a bar is loosed;
The ancient trait which fights incessantly
Against restraint, balks at the upward climb;
The weight forever seeking to obey
The law of downward pull;â âand I am more:
The bitter fruit am I of planted seed;
The resultant, the inevitable end
Of evil forces and the powers of wrong.
Lessons in degradation, taught and learned,
The memories of cruel sights and deeds,
The pent-up bitterness, the unspent hate
Filtered through fifteen generations have
Sprung up and found in me sporadic life.
In me the muttered curse of dying men,
On me the stain of conquered women, and
Consuming me the fearful fires of lust,
Lit long ago, by other hands than mine.
In me the down-crushed spirit, the hurled-back prayers
Of wretches now long deadâ âtheir dire bequestsâ â
In me the echo of the stifled cry
Of children for their bartered mothersâ breasts.
I claim no race, no race claims me; I am
No more than human dregs; degenerate;
The monstrous offspring of the monster, Sin;
I amâ âjust what I am.â ââ ⌠The race that fed
Your wives and nursed your babes would do the same
To-day, but Iâ â
Enough, the brute must die!
Quick! Chain him to that oak! It will resist
The fire much longer than this slender pine.
Now bring the fuel! Pile it âround him! Wait!
Pile not so fast or high! or we shall lose
The agony and terror in his face.
And now the torch! Good fuel that! the flames
Already leap head-high. Ha! hear that shriek!
And thereâs another! Wilder than the first.
Fetch water! Water! Pour a little on
The fire, lest it should burn too fast. Hold so!
Now let it slowly blaze again. See there!
He squirms! He groans! His eyes bulge wildly out,
Searching around in vain appeal for help!
Another shriek, the last! Watch how the flesh
Grows crisp and hangs till, turned to ash, it sifts
Down through the coils of chain that hold erect
The ghastly frame against the bark-scorched tree.
Stop! to each man no more than one manâs share.
You take that bone, and you this tooth; the chainâ â
Let us divide its links; this skull, of course,
In fair division, to the leader comes.
And now his fiendish crime has been avenged;
Let us back to our wives and children.â âSay,
What did he mean by those last muttered words,
âBrothers in spirit, brothers in deed are weâ?
Fragment
The hand of Fate cannot be stayed,
The course of Fate cannot be steered,
By all the gods that man has made,
Nor all the devils he has feared,
Not by the prayers that might be prayed
In all the temples he has reared.
See! In your very midst there dwell
Ten thousand thousand blacks, a wedge
Forged in the furnaces of hell,
And sharpened to a cruel edge
By wrong and by injustice fell,
And driven by hatred as a sledge.
A wedge so slender at the startâ â
Just twenty slaves in shackles boundâ â
And yet, which split the land apart
With shrieks of war and battle sound,
Which pierced the nationâs very heart,
And still lies cankering in the wound.
Not all the glory of your pride,
Preserved in story and in song,
Can from the judging future hide,
Through all the coming ages long,
That though you bravely fought and died,
You fought and died for what was wrong.
âTis fixedâ âfor them that violate
The eternal laws, naught shall avail
Till they their error expiate;
Nor shall their unborn children fail
To pay the full required weight
Into Godâs great, unerring scale.
Think not repentance can redeem,
That sin his wages can withdraw;
No, think as well to change the scheme
Of worlds that move in reverent awe;
Forgiveness is an idle dream,
God is not love, no, God is law.
The White Witch
O brothers mine, take care! Take care!
The great white witch rides out to-night.
Trust not your prowess nor your strength,
Your only safety lies in flight;
For in her glance there is a snare,
And in her smile there is a blight.
The great white witch you have not seen?
Then, younger brothers mine, forsooth,
Like nursery children you have looked
For ancient hag and snaggle-tooth;
But no, not so; the witch appears
In all the glowing charms of youth.
Her lips are like carnations, red,
Her face like new-born lilies, fair,
Her eyes like ocean waters, blue,
She moves with subtle grace and air,
And all about her head there floats
The golden glory of her hair.
But though she always thus appears
In form of youth and mood of mirth,
Unnumbered centuries are hers,
The infant planets saw her birth;
The child of throbbing Life is she,
Twin sister to the greedy earth.
And back behind those smiling lips,
And down within those laughing eyes,
And underneath the soft caress
Of hand and voice and purring sighs,
The shadow of the panther lurks,
The spirit of the vampire lies.
For I have seen the great white witch,
And she has led me to her lair,
And I have kissed her red, red lips
And cruel face so white and fair;
Around me she has twined her arms,
And bound me with her yellow hair.
I felt those red lips burn and sear
My body like a living coal;
Obeyed the power of those eyes
As the needle trembles to the pole;
And did not care although I felt
The strength go ebbing from my soul.
Oh! she has seen your strong young limbs,
And heard your laughter loud and gay,
And in your voices she has caught
The echo of a far-off day,
When man was closer to the earth;
And she has marked you for her prey.
She feels the old Antaean strength
In you, the great dynamic beat
Of primal passions, and she sees
In you the last besieged retreat
Of love relentless, lusty, fierce,
Love pain-ecstatic, cruel-sweet.
O, brothers mine, take care! Take care!
The great white witch rides out to-night.
O, younger brothers mine, beware!
Look not upon her beauty bright;
For in her glance there is a snare,
And in her smile there is a blight.
Mother Night
Eternities before the first-born day,
Or ere the first sun fledged his wings of flame,
Calm Night, the everlasting and the same,
A brooding mother over chaos lay.
And whirling suns shall blaze and then decay,
Shall run their fiery courses and then claim
The haven of the darkness whence they came;
Back to Nirvanic peace shall grope their way.
So when my feeble sun of life burns out,
And sounded is the hour for my long sleep,
I shall, full weary of the feverish light,
Welcome the darkness without fear or doubt,
And heavy-lidded, I shall softly creep
Into the quiet bosom of the Night.
The Young Warrior
Mother, shed no mournful tears,
But gird me on my sword;
And give no utterance to thy fears,
But bless me with thy word.
The lines are drawn! The fight is on!
A cause is to be won!
Mother, look not so white and wan;
Give Godspeed to thy son.
Now let thine eyes my way pursue
Whereâer my footsteps fare;
And when they lead beyond thy view,
Send after me a prayer.
But pray not to defend from harm,
Nor danger to dispel;
Pray, rather, that with steadfast arm
I fight the battle well.
Pray, mother of mine, that I always keep
My heart and purpose strong,
My sword unsullied and ready to leap
Unsheathed against the wrong.
The Glory of the Day Was in Her Face
The glory of the day was in her face,
The beauty of the night was in her eyes.
And over all her loveliness, the grace
Of Morning blushing in the early skies.
And in her voice, the calling of the dove;
Like music of a sweet, melodious part.
And in her smile, the breaking light of love;
And all the gentle virtues in her heart.
And now the glorious day, the beauteous night,
The birds that signal to their mates at dawn,
To my dull ears, to my tear-blinded sight
Are one with all the dead, since she is gone.
Enough of love! Let break its every hold!
Ended my youthful folly! for I know
That, like the dazzling, glister-shedding snow,
Celia, thou art beautiful, but cold.
I do not find in thee that warmth which glows,
Which, all these dreary days, my heart has sought,
That warmth without which love is lifeless, naught
More than a painted fruit, a waxen rose.
Such love as thine, scarce can it bear loveâs name,
Deaf to the pleading notes of his sweet lyre,
A frank, impulsive heart I wish to claim,
A heart that blindly follows its desire.
I wish to embrace a woman full of flame,
I want to kiss a woman made of fire.
If the unfortunate fate engulfing me,
The ending of my history of grief,
The closing of my span of years so brief,
Mother, should wake a single pang in thee,
Weep not. No saddening thought to me devote;
I calmly go to a death that is glory-filled,
My lyre before it is forever stilled
Breathes out to thee its last and dying note.
A note scarce more than a burden-easing sigh,
Tender and sacred, innocent, sincereâ â
Spontaneous and instinctive as the cry
I gave at birthâ âAnd now the hour is hereâ â
O God, thy mantle of mercy oâer my sins!
Mother, farewell! The pilgrimage begins.
From the Spanish
Twenty years go by on noiseless feet,
He returns, and once again they meet,
She exclaims, âGood heavens! and is that he?â
He mutters, âMy God! and that is she!â
From the German of Uhland
Three students once tarried over the Rhine,
And into Frau Wirthinâs turned to dine.
âSay, hostess, have you good beer and wine?
And where is that pretty daughter of thine?â
âMy beer and wine is fresh and clear.
My daughter lies on her funeral bier.â
They softly tipped into the room;
She lay there in the silent gloom.
The first the white cloth gently raised,
And tearfully upon her gazed.
âIf thou wert alive, O, lovely maid,
My heart at thy feet would to-day be laid!â
The second covered her face again,
And turned away with grief and pain.
âAh, thou upon thy snow-white bier!
And I have loved thee so many a year.â
The third drew back again the veil,
And kissed the lips so cold and pale.
âIâve loved thee always, I love thee to-day,
And will love thee, yes, forever and aye!â
Before a Painting
I knew not who had wrought with skill so fine
What I beheld; nor by what laws of art
He had created life and love and heart
On canvas, from mere color, curve and line.
Silent I stood and made no move or sign;
Not with the crowd, but reverently apart;
Nor felt the power my rooted limbs to start,
But mutely gazed upon that face divine.
And over me the sense of beauty fell,
As music over a raptured listener to
The deep-voiced organ breathing out a hymn;
Or as on one who kneels, his beads to tell,
There falls the aureate glory filtered through
The windows in some old cathedral dim.
I Hear the Stars Still Singing
I hear the stars still singing
To the beautiful, silent night,
As they speed with noiseless winging
Their ever westward flight.
I hear the waves still falling
On the stretch of lonely shore,
But the sound of a sweet voice calling
I shall hear, alas! no more.
Girl of Fifteen
Girl of fifteen,
I see you each morning from my window
As you pass on your way to school.
I do more than see, I watch you.
I furtively draw the curtain aside.
And my heart leaps through my eyes
And follows you down the street;
Leaving me behind, half-hid
And wholly ashamed.
What holds me back,
Half-hid behind the curtains and wholly ashamed,
But my forty years beyond your fifteen?
Girl of fifteen, as you pass
There passes, too, a lightning flash of time
In which you lift those forty summers off my head,
And take those forty winters out of my heart.
The Suicide
For fifty years,
Cruel, insatiable Old World,
You have punched me over the heart
Till you made me cough blood.
The few paltry things I gathered
You snatched out of my hands.
You have knocked the cup from my thirsty lips.
You have laughed at my hunger of body and soul.
You look at me now and think,
âHe is still strong,
There ought to be twenty more years of good punching there.
At the end of that time he will be old and broken,
Not able to strike back,
But cringing and crying for leave
To live a little longer.â
Those twenty, pitiful, extra years
Would please you more than the fifty past,
Would they not, Old World?
Well, I hold them up before your greedy eyes,
And snatch them away as I laugh in your face,
Ha! Ha!
Bangâ â!
Down by the Carib Sea
I
Sunrise in the Tropics
Sol, Sol, mighty lord of the tropic zone,
Here I wait with the trembling stars
To see thee once more take thy throne.
There the patient palm tree watching
Waits to say, âGood mornâ to thee,
And a throb of expectation
Pulses through the earth and me.
Now, oâer nature falls a hush,
Look! the East is all a-blush;
And a growing crimson crest
Dims the late stars in the west;
Now, a flood of golden light
Sweeps across the silver night,
Swift the pale moon fades away
Before the light-girt King of Day,
See! the miracle is done!
Once more behold! The Sun!
II
Los Cigarillos
This is the land of the dark-eyed gente,
Of the dolce far niente,
Where we dream away
Both the night and day,
At night-time in sleep our dreams we invoke,
Our dreams come by day through the redolent smoke,
As it lazily curls,
And slowly unfurls
From our lips,
And the tips
Of our fragrant cigarillos.
For life in the tropics is only a joke,
So we pass it in dreams, and we pass it in smoke,
Smokeâ âsmokeâ âsmoke.
Tropical constitutions
Call for occasional revolutions;
But after thatâs through,
Why thereâs nothing to do
But smokeâ âsmoke;
For life in the tropics is only a joke,
So we pass it in dreams, and we pass it in smoke,
Smokeâ âsmokeâ âsmoke.
III
Teestay
Of tropic sensations, the worst
Is, sin duda, the tropical thirst.
When it starts in your throat and constantly grows,
Till you feel that it reaches down to your toes,
When your mouth tastes like fur
And your tongue turns to dust,
Thereâs but one thing to do,
And do it you must,
Drink teestay.
Teestay, a drink with a history,
A delicious, delectable mystery,
âCinco centavos el vaso, seĂąor,â
If you take one, you will surely want more.
Teestay, teestay,
The national drink on a feast day;
How it coolingly tickles,
As downward it trickles,
Teestay, teestay.
And you wish, as you take it down at a quaff,
That your neck was constructed Ă la giraffe.
Teestay, teestay.
IV
The Lottery Girl
âLottery, lottery,
Take a chance at the lottery?
Take a ticket,
Or, better, take two;
Who knows what the future
May hold for you?
Lottery, lottery,
Take a chance at the lottery?â
Oh, limpid-eyed girl,
I would take every chance,
If only the prize
Were a love-flashing glance
From your fathomless eyes.
âLottery, lottery,
Try your luck at the lottery?
Consider the size
Of the capital prize,
And take tickets
For the lottery.
Tickets, seĂąor? Tickets, seĂąor?
Take a chance at the lottery?â
Oh, crimson-lipped girl,
With the magical smile,
I would count that the gamble
Were well worth the while,
Not a chance would I miss,
If only the prize
Were a honey-bee kiss
Gathered in sips
From those full-ripened lips,
And a love-flashing glance
From your eyes.
V
The Dancing Girl
Do you know what it is to dance?
Perhaps, you do know, in a fashion;
But by dancing I mean,
Not whatâs generally seen,
But dancing of fire and passion,
Of fire and delirious passion.
With a dusky-haired seĂąorita,
Her dark, misty eyes near your own,
And her scarlet-red mouth,
Like a rose of the south,
The reddest that ever was grown,
So close that you catch
Her quick-panting breath
As across your own face it is blown,
With a sigh, and a moan.
Ah! that is dancing,
As here by the Carib itâs known.
Now, whirling and twirling
Like furies we go;
Now, soft and caressing
And sinuously slow;
With an undulating motion,
Like waves on a breeze-kissed ocean:â â
And the scarlet-red mouth
Is nearer your own,
And the dark, misty eyes
Still softer have grown.
Ah! that is dancing, that is loving,
As here by the Carib theyâre known.
VI
Sunset in the Tropics
A silver flash from the sinking sun,
Then a shot of crimson across the sky
That, bursting, lets a thousand colors fly
And riot among the clouds; they run,
Deepening in purple, flaming in gold,
Changing, and opening fold after fold,
Then fading through all of the tints of the rose into gray,
Till, taking quick fright at the coming night,
They rush out down the west,
In hurried quest
Of the fleeing day.
Now above where the tardiest color flares a moment yet,
One point of light, now two, now three are set
To form the starry stairsâ â
And, in her fire-fly crown,
Queen Night, on velvet slippered feet, comes softly down.
And the Greatest of These Is War
Around the council-board of Hell, with Satan at their head,
The Three Great Scourges of humanity sat.
Gaunt Famine, with hollow cheek and voice, arose and spokeâ â
âO, Prince, I have stalked the earth,
And my victims by ten thousands I have slain,
I have smitten old and young.
Mouths of the helpless old moaning for bread, I have filled with dust;
And I have laughed to see a crying babe tug at the shriveling breast
Of its mother, dead and cold.
I have heard the cries and prayers of men go up to a tearless sky,
And fall back upon an earth of ashes;
But, heedless, I have gone on with my work.
âTis thus, O, Prince, that I have scourged mankind.â
And Satan nodded his head.
Pale Pestilence, with stenchful breath, then spoke and saidâ â
âGreat Prince, my brother, Famine, attacks the poor.
He is most terrible against the helpless and the old.
But I have made a charnel-house of the mightiest cities of men.
When I strike, neither their stores of gold or of grain avail.
With a breath I lay low their strongest, and wither up their fairest.
I come upon them without warning, lancing invisible death.
From me they flee with eyes and mouths distended;
I poison the air for which they gasp, and I strike them down fleeing.
âTis thus, great Prince, that I have scourged mankind.â
And Satan nodded his head.
Then the red monster, War, rose up and spokeâ â
His blood-shot eyes glared âround him, and his thundering voice
Echoed through the murky vaults of Hell.â â
âO, mighty Prince, my brothers, Famine and Pestilence,
Have slain their thousands and ten thousandsâ âtrue;
But the greater their victories have been,
The more have they wakened in Manâs breast
The God-like attributes of sympathy, of brotherhood and love
And made of him a searcher after wisdom.
But I arouse in Man the demon and the brute,
I plant black hatred in his heart and red revenge.
From the summit of fifty thousand years of upward climb
I haul him down to the level of the start, back to the wolf.
I give him claws.
I set his teeth into his brotherâs throat.
I make him drunk with his brotherâs blood.
And I laugh ho! ho! while he destroys himself.
O, mighty Prince, not only do I slay,
But I draw Man hellward.â
And Satan smiled, stretched out his hand, and saidâ â
âO War, of all the scourges of humanity, I crown you chief.â
And Hell rang with the acclamation of the Fiends.
A Mid-Day Dreamer
I love to sit alone, and dream,
And dream, and dream;
In fancyâs boat to softly glide
Along some stream
Where fairy palaces of gold
And crystal bright
Stand all along the glistening shore:
A wondrous sight.
My craft is built of ivory,
With silver oars,
The sails are spun of golden threads,
And priceless stores
Of precious gems adorn its prow,
And âround its mast
An hundred silken cords are set
To hold it fast.
My galley-slaves are sprightly elves
Who, as they row,
And as their shining oars they swing
Them to and fro,
Keep time to music wafted on
The scented air,
Made by the mermaids as they comb
Their golden hair.
And I the while lie idly back,
And dream, and dream,
And let them row me where they will
Adown the stream.
The Temptress
Old Devil, when you come with horns and tail,
With diabolic grin and crafty leer;
I say, such bogey-man devices wholly fail
To waken in my heart a single fear.
But when you wear a form I know so well,
A form so human, yet so near divine;
âTis then I fall beneath the magic of your spell,
âTis then I know the vantage is not mine.
Ah! when you take your horns from off your head,
And soft and fragrant hair is in their place;
I must admit I fear the tangled path I tread
When that dear head is laid against my face.
And at what time you change your baleful eyes
For stars that melt into the gloom of night,
All of my courage, my dear fellow, quickly flies;
I know my chance is slim to win the fight.
And when, instead of charging down to wreck
Me on a red-hot pitchfork in your hand,
You throw a pair of slender arms about my neck,
I dare not trust the ground on which I stand.
Wheneâer in place of using patent wile,
Or trying to frighten me with horrid grin,
You tempt me with two crimson lips curved in a smile;
Old Devil, I must really own, you win.
Ghosts of the Old Year
The snow has ceased its fluttering flight,
The wind sunk to a whisper light,
An ominous stillness fills the night,
A pauseâ âa hush.
At last, a sound that breaks the spell,
Loud, clanging mouthings of a bell,
That through the silence peal and swell,
And roll, and rush.
What does this brazen tongue declare,
That falling on the midnight air
Brings to my heart a sense of care
Akin to fright?
âTis telling that the year is dead,
The New Year come, the Old Year fled,
Another leaf before me spread
On which to write.
It tells the deeds that were not done,
It tells of races never run,
Of victories that were not won,
Barriers unleaped.
It tells of many a squandered day,
Of slighted gems and treasured clay,
Of precious stores not laid away,
Of fields unreaped.
And so the years go swiftly by,
Each, coming, brings ambitions high,
And each, departing, leaves a sigh
Linked to the past.
Large resolutions, little deeds;
Thus, filled with aims unreached, life speeds
Until the blotted record reads,
âFailure!â at last.
The Ghost of Deacon Brown
In a backwoods town
Lived Deacon Brown,
And he was a miser old;
He would trust no bank,
So he dug, and sank
In the ground a box of gold,
Down deep in the ground a box of gold.
He hid his gold,
As has been told,
He remembered that he did it;
But sad to say,
On the very next day,
He forgot just where he hid it:
To find his gold he tried and tried
Till he grew faint and sick, and died.
Then on each dark and gloomy night
A form in phosphorescent white,
A genuine hair-raising sight,
Would wander through the town.
And as it slowly roamed around,
With a spade it dug each foot of ground;
So the folks about
Said there was no doubt
âTwas the ghost of Deacon Brown.
Around the church
This Ghost would search,
And whenever it would see
The passers-by
Take wings and fly
It would laugh in ghostly glee,
Hee, hee!â âit would laugh in ghostly glee.
And so the town
Went quickly down,
For they said that it was haunted;
And doors and gates,
So the story states,
Bore a notice, âTenants wanted.â
And the town is now for let,
But the ghost is digging yet.
âLazyâ
Some men enjoy the constant strife
Of days with work and worry rife,
But that is not my dream of life:
I think such men are crazy.
For me, a life with worries few,
A job of nothing much to do,
Just pelf enough to see me through:
I fear that I am lazy.
On winter mornings cold and drear,
When six oâclock alarms I hear,
âTis then I love to shift my ear,
And hug my downy pillows.
When in the shade itâs ninety-three,
No job in town looks good to me,
Iâd rather loaf down by the sea,
And watch the foaming billows.
Some people think the worldâs a school,
Where labor is the only rule;
But Iâll not make myself a mule,
And donât you ever doubt it.
I know that work may have its use,
But still I feel thatâs no excuse
For turning it into abuse;
What do you think about it?
Let others fume and sweat and boil,
And scratch and dig for golden spoil,
And live the life of work and toil,
Their lives to labor giving.
But what is gold when life is sped,
And life is short, as has been said,
And we are such a long time dead,
Iâll spend my life in living.
Omar
Old Omar, jolly sceptic, it may be
That, after all, you found the magic key
To life and all its mystery, and I
Must own you have almost persuaded me.
Deep in the Quiet Wood
Are you bowed down in heart?
Do you but hear the clashing discords and the din of life?
Then come away, come to the peaceful wood,
Here bathe your soul in silence. Listen! Now,
From out the palpitating solitude
Do you not catch, yet faint, elusive strains?
They are above, around, within you, everywhere.
Silently listen! Clear, and still more clear, they come.
They bubble up in rippling notes, and swell in singing tones.
Now let your soul run the whole gamut of the wondrous scale
Until, responsive to the tonic chord,
It touches the diapason of Godâs grand cathedral organ,
Filling earth for you with heavenly peace
And holy harmonies.
Voluptas
To chase a never-reached mirage
Across the hot, white sand,
And choke and die, while gazing on
Its green and watered strand.
The Word of an Engineer
âSheâs built of steel
From deck to keel,
And bolted strong and tight;
In scorn sheâll sail
The fiercest gale,
And pierce the darkest night.
âThe builderâs art
Has proved each part
Throughout her breadth and length;
Deep in the hulk,
Of her mighty bulk,
Ten thousand Titansâ strength.â
The tempest howls,
The Ice Wolf prowls,
The winds they shift and veer,
But calm I sleep,
And faith I keep
In the word of an engineer.
Along the trail
Of the slender rail
The train, like a nightmare, flies
And dashes on
Through the black-mouthed yawn
Where the cavernous tunnel lies.
Over the ridge,
Across the bridge,
Swung twixt the sky and hell,
On an iron thread
Spun from the head
Of the man in a draughtsmanâs cell.
And so we ride
Over land and tide,
Without a thought of fearâ â
Man never had
The faith in God
That he has in an engineer!
Life
Out of the infinite sea of eternity
To climb, and for an instant stand
Upon an island speck of time.
From the impassible peace of the darkness
To wake, and blink at the garish light
Through one short hour of fretfulness.
Sleep
O Sleep, thou kindest minister to man,
Silent distiller of the balm of rest,
How wonderful thy power, when naught else can,
To soothe the torn and sorrow-laden breast!
When bleeding hearts no comforter can find,
When burdened souls droop under weight of woe,
When thought is torture to the troubled mind,
When grief-relieving tears refuse to flow;
âTis then thou comest on soft-beating wings,
And sweet oblivionâs peace from them is shed;
But ah, the old pain that the waking brings!
That lives again so soon as thou art fled!
Man, why should thought of death cause thee to weep;
Since death be but an endless, dreamless sleep?
Prayer at Sunrise
O mighty, powerful, dark-dispelling sun,
Now thou art risen, and thy day begun.
How shrink the shrouding mists before thy face,
As up thou springâst to thy diurnal race!
How darkness chases darkness to the west,
As shades of light on light rise radiant from thy crest!
For thee, great source of strength, emblem of might,
In hours of darkest gloom there is no night.
Thou shinest on though clouds hide thee from sight,
And through each break thou sendest down thy light.
O greater Maker of this Thy great sun,
Give me the strength this one dayâs race to run,
Fill me with light, fill me with sun-like strength,
Fill me with joy to rob the day its length.
Light from within, light that will outward shine,
Strength to make strong some weaker heart than mine,
Joy to make glad each soul that feels its touch;
Great Father of the sun, I ask this much.
The Gift to Sing
Sometimes the mist overhangs my path,
And blackening clouds about me cling;
But, oh, I have a magic way
To turn the gloom to cheerful dayâ â
I softly sing.
And if the way grows darker still,
Shadowed by Sorrowâs somber wing,
With glad defiance in my throat,
I pierce the darkness with a note,
And sing, and sing.
I brood not over the broken past,
Nor dread whatever time may bring;
No nights are dark, no days are long,
While in my heart there swells a song,
And I can sing.
Morning, Noon and Night
When morning shows her first faint flush,
I think of the tender blush
That crept so gently to your cheek
When first my love I dared to speak;
How, in your glance, a dawning ray
Gave promise of loveâs perfect day.
When, in the ardent breath of noon,
The roses with passion swoon;
There steals upon me from the air
The scent that lurked within your hair;
I touch your hand, I clasp your formâ â
Again your lips are close and warm.
When comes the night with beauteous skies,
I think of your tear-dimmed eyes,
Their mute entreaty that I stay,
Although your lips sent me away;
And then falls memoryâs bitter blight,
And darkâ âso dark becomes the night.
Her Eyes Twin Pools
Her eyes, twin pools of mystic light,
The blend of star-sheen and black night;
Oâer which, to sound their glamouring haze,
A man might bend, and vainly gaze.
Her eyes, twin pools so dark and deep,
In which lifeâs ancient mysteries sleep;
Wherein, to seek the quested goal,
A man might plunge, and lose his soul.
The Awakening
I dreamed that I was a rose
That grew beside a lonely way,
Close by a path none ever chose,
And there I lingered day by day.
Beneath the sunshine and the showâr
I grew and waited there apart,
Gathering perfume hour by hour,
And storing it within my heart,
Yet, never knew,
Just why I waited there and grew.
I dreamed that you were a bee
That one day gaily flew along,
You came across the hedge to me,
And sang a soft, love-burdened song.
You brushed my petals with a kiss,
I woke to gladness with a start,
And yielded up to you in bliss
The treasured fragrance of my heart;
And then I knew
That I had waited there for you.
Beauty That Is Never Old
When buffeted and beaten by lifeâs storms,
When by the bitter cares of life oppressed,
I want no surer haven than your arms,
I want no sweeter heaven than your breast.
When over my lifeâs way there falls the blight
Of sunless days, and nights of starless skies;
Enough for me, the calm and steadfast light
That softly shines within your loving eyes.
The world, for me, and all the world can hold
Is circled by your arms; for me there lies,
Within the lights and shadows of your eyes,
The only beauty that is never old.
Venus in a Garden
âTwas at early morning,
The dawn was blushing in her purple bed,
When in a sweet, embowered garden
She, the fairest of the goddesses,
The lovely Venus,
Roamed amongst the roses white and red.
She sought for flowers
To make a garland
For her golden head.
Snow-white roses, blood-red roses,
In that sweet garden close,
Offered incense to the goddess:
Both the white and the crimson rose.
White roses, red roses, blossoming:
But the fair Venus knew
The crimson roses had gained their hue
From the hearts that for love had bled;
And the goddess made a garland
Gathered from the roses red.
Vashti
I sometimes take you in my dreams to a far-off land I used to know,
Back in the ages long ago; a land of palms and languid streams.
A land, by night, of jeweled skies, by day, of shores that glistened bright,
Within whose arms, outstretched and white, a sapphire sea lay crescent-wise.
Where twilight fell like silver floss, where rose the golden moon half-hid
Behind a shadowy pyramid; a land beneath the Southern Cross.
And there the days dreamed in their flight, each one a poem chanted through,
Which at its close was merged into the muted music of the night.
And you were a princess in those days. And Iâ âI was your serving lad.
But who ever served with heart so glad, or lived so for a word of praise?
And if that word you chanced to speak, how all my senses swayed and reeled,
Till low beside your feet I kneeled, with happiness oâerwrought and weak.
If, when your golden cup I bore, you deigned to lower your eyes to mine,
Eyes cold, yet fervid, like the wine, I knew not how to wish for more.
I trembled at the thought to dare to gaze upon, to scrutinize
The deep-sea mystery of your eyes, the sun-lit splendor of your hair.
To let my timid glances rest upon you long enough to note
How fair and slender was your throat, how white the promise of your breast.
But though I did not dare to chance a lingering look, an open gaze
Upon your beautyâs blinding rays, I ventured many a stolen glance.
I fancy, too, (but could not state what trick of mind the fancy caused)
At times your eyes upon me paused, and marked my figure lithe and straight.
Once when my eyes met yours it seemed that in your cheek, despite your pride,
A flush arose and swiftly died; or was it something that I dreamed?
Within your radiance like the star of morning, there I stood and served,
Close by, unheeded, unobserved. You were so near, and, yet, so far.
Ah! just to stretch my hand and touch the musky sandals on your feet!â â
My breaking heart! of rapture sweet it never could have held so much.
Oh, beauty-haunted memory! Your face so proud, your eyes so calm,
Your body like a slim young palm, and sinuous as a willow tree.
Caught up beneath your slender arms, and girdled âround your supple waist,
A robe of curious silk that graced, but only scarce concealed your charms.
A golden band about your head, a crimson jewel at your throat
Which, when the sunlight on it smote, turned to a living heart and bled.
But, oh, that mystic bleeding stone, that work of Natureâs magic art,
Which mimicked so a wounded heart, could never bleed as did my own!
Now after ages long and sad, in this stern land we meet anew;
No more a princess proud are you, and Iâ âI am no serving lad.
And yet, dividing us, I meet a wider gulf than that which stood
Between a princess of the blood and him who served low at her feet.
The Reward
No greater earthly boon than this I crave,
That those who some day gather âround my grave,
In place of tears, may whisper of me then,
âHe sang a song that reached the hearts of men.â
Sence You Went Away
Seems lak to me de stars donât shine so bright,
Seems lak to me de sun done loss his light,
Seems lak to me derâs nothinâ goinâ right,
Sence you went away.
Seems lak to me de sky ainât half so blue,
Seems lak to me dat evâything wants you,
Seems lak to me I donât know what to do,
Sence you went away.
Seems lak to me dat evâything is wrong,
Seems lak to me de dayâs jes twice as long,
Seems lak to me de birdâs forgot his song,
Sence you went away.
Seems lak to me I jes canât heâp but sigh,
Seems lak to me ma thâoat keeps gittinâ dry,
Seems lak to me a tear stays in ma eye,
Sence you went away.
Ma Ladyâs Lips Am Like de Honey
(Negro Love Song)
Breeze a-sighinâ and a-blowinâ,
Southern summer night.
Stars a-gleaminâ and a-glowinâ,
Moon jes shininâ right.
Strollinâ, like all lovers do,
Down de lane wid Lindy Lou;
Honey on her lips to waste;
âSpeck Iâm gwine to steal a taste.
Oh, ma ladyâs lips am like de honey,
Ma ladyâs lips am like de rose;
Anâ Iâm jes like de little bee a-buzzinâ
âRound de flower whaâ de nectah grows.
Ma ladyâs lips dey smile so temptinâ,
Ma ladyâs teeth so white dey shine,
Oh, ma ladyâs lips so tantalizinâ,
Ma ladyâs lips so close to mine.
Bird a-whistlinâ and a-swayinâ
In de live-oak tree;
Seems to me he keeps a-sayinâ,
âKiss dat gal foâ me.â
Look heah, Mister Mockinâ Bird,
Gwine to take you at yoâ word;
If I meets ma Waterloo,
Gwine to blame it all on you.
Oh, ma ladyâs lips am like de honey,
Ma ladyâs lips am like de rose;
Anâ Iâm jes like de little bee a-buzzinâ
âRound de flower whaâ de nectah grows.
Ma ladyâs lips dey smile so temptinâ,
Ma ladyâs teeth so white dey shine,
Oh, ma ladyâs lips so tantalizinâ,
Ma ladyâs lips so close to mine.
Honey in de rose, I spose, is
Put der foâ de bee;
Honey on her lips, I knows, is
Put der jes foâ me.
Seen a sparkle in her eye,
Heard her heave a little sigh;
Felt her kinder squeeze ma hanâ,
âNuff to make me understanâ.
Look heah, Tunk!â âNow, ainât dis awful! Tâought I sont you off to school.
Donât you know dat you is growinâ up to be a regâlah fool?
Whahâs dem books dat Iâs done bought you? Look heah, boy, you tell me quick,
Whahâs dat Webster blue-back spellah anâ dat branâ new ârifmatic?
Wâile Iâm tâinkinâ you is lahninâ in de school, why bless ma soul!
You off in de woods a-playinâ. Canât you do like you is tole?
Boy, I tell you, itâs jes scanâlous dâway dat you is goinâ on.
Anâ you sholy goân be sorry, jes as true as you is boân.
Heah Iâm tryinâ hard to raise you as a credit to dis race,
Anâ you tryinâ heap much harder fuâ to come up in disgrace.
Dese de days wâen men donât git up to de top by hooks anâ crooks;
Tell you now, deyâs got to git der standinâ on a pile oâ books.
Wâen you sees a darkey goinâ to de fielâ as soon as light,
Followinâ a mule across it fâom de mawninâ tel de night,
Wukinâ all his life fuâ vittles, hoeinâ âtween de cottân rows,
Wâen he knocks off ole anâ tiahâd, owninâ nutân but his cloâes,
You kin put it down to ignunce, aftah all whatâs done anâ said,
You kin bet dat dat same darkey ainât got nutân in his head.
Ainât you seed dem wâite men setân in der awfice? Donât you know
Dey goes der âbout nine each mawnin? Bless yoâ soul, deyâs out by foâ.
Dey jes does a little writinâ; does dat by some easy means;
Gals jes set anâ play piannah on dem printinâ press muchines.
Chile, dem men knows how to figgah, how to use dat little pen,
Anâ dey knows dat blue-back spellah fâom beginninâ to de enâ.
Datâs de âfect of education; datâs de tâing whatâs gwine to rule;
Git dem books, you lazy rascal! Git back to yoâ place in school!
Nobodyâs Lookinâ but de Owl and de Moon
(A Negro Serenade)
De river is a-glisteninâ in de moonlight,
De owl is setân high up in de tree;
De little stars am twinklinâ wid a sofâ light,
De night seems only jes fuâ you anâ me.
Thoo de trees de breezes am a-sighinâ,
Breathinâ out a sort oâ loverâs croon,
Derâs nobody lookinâ or a-spyinâ,
Nobody but de owl anâ de moon.
Nobodyâs lookinâ but de owl anâ de moon,
Anâ de night is balmy; fuâ de month is June;
Come den, Honey, wonât you? Come to meet me soon,
Wile nobodyâs lookinâ but de owl anâ de moon.
I feel so kinder lonely all de daytime,
It seems I raly donât know what to do;
I jes keep sort a-longinâ fuâ de night-time,
âCause den I know dat I can be wid you.
Anâ de thought jes sets my brain a-swayinâ,
Anâ my heart a-beatinâ to a tune;
Come, de owl wonât tell wâat weâs a-sayinâ,
Anâ cose you know we kin trusâ de moon.
Youâs Sweet to Yoâ Mammy Jes de Same
(Lullaby)
Shet yoâ eyes, ma little pickaninny, go to sleep
Mammyâs watchinâ by you all de wâile;
Daddy is a-wukinâ down in de cottân fielâ,
Wukinâ fuâ his little honey child.
Anâ yoâ mammyâs heart is jes a-brimminâ full oâ lub
Fuâ you fâom yoâ head down to yoâ feet;
Oh, no mattah wâat some othah folks may tâink oâ you,
To yoâ mammyâs heart youâs mighty sweet.
Youâs sweet to yoâ mammy jes de same;
Datâs why she calls you Honey fuâ yoâ name.
Yoâ face is black, datâs true,
Anâ yoâ hair is woolly, too,
But, youâs sweet to yoâ mammy jes de same.
Up der in de big house wâere dey lib so rich anâ granâ
Deyâs got chillen dat dey lubs, I sâpose;
Chillen dat is purty, oh, but dey canât lub dem moâ
Dan yoâ mammy lubs you, heaben knows!
Dey may tâink youâs homely, anâ yoâ cloâes dey may be poâ,
But yoâ shininâ eyes, dey holâs a light
Dat, my Honey, wâen you opens dem so big anâ rounâ,
Makes you lubly in yoâ mammyâs sight.
A Plantation Bacchanal
Wâen ole Mister Sun gits tiahâd a-hanginâ
High up in de sky;
Wâen der ainât no thunder and lightâninâ a-banginâ,
Anâ de crapâs done all laid by;
Wâen yoâ bones ainât achinâ wid de rheumatics,
Den yoâ ride de mule to town,
Git a great big jug oâ de ole corn juice,
Anâ wâen you drink her downâ â
Jes lay away ole Trouble,
Anâ dry up all yoâ tears;
Yoâ pleasure shoâ to double
Anâ you bound to lose yoâ keers.
Jes lay away ole Sorrer
High upon de shelf;
And never mind to-morrer,
âTwill take care of itself.
Wâen ole Mister Age begins a-stealinâ
Thoo yoâ back anâ knees,
Wâen yoâ bones anâ jints lose der limber feelinâ,
Anâ am stiffâninâ by degrees;
Now derâs jes one way to feel young and spry,
Wâen you heah dem banjos sounâ
Git a great big swig oâ de ole corn juice,
Anâ wâen you drink her downâ â
Jes lay away ole Trouble,
Anâ dry up all yoâ tears;
Yoâ pleasure shoâ to double
Anâ you bound to lose yoâ keers.
Jes lay away ole Sorrer
High upon de shelf;
And never mind to-morrer,
âTwill take care of itself.
July in Georgy
Iâm back down in ole Georgy wâere de sun is shininâ hot,
Wâere de cawn it is a-tasslinâ, gittinâ ready fuâ de pot;
Wâere de cottân is a-openinâ anâ a-wâiteninâ in de sun,
Anâ de ripeninâ oâ de sugah-cane is mighty nigh begun.
Anâ de locusâ is a-singinâ fâom eveh bush anâ tree,
Anâ you kin heah de humminâ oâ de noisy bumblebee;
Anâ de mule he stanâs a-dreaminâ anâ a-dreaminâ in de lot,
Anâ de sun it is a-shininâ mighty hot, hot, hot.
But evehbody is a-restinâ, fuâ de craps is all laid by,
Anâ time fuâ de camp-meetinâ is a-drawinâ purty nigh;
Anâ weâs put away de ploughshare, anâ weâs done hung up de spade,
Anâ weâs eatinâ watermelon, anâ a-layinâ in de shade.
A Banjo Song
Wâen de banjos wuz a-ringinâ,
Anâ de darkies wuz a-singinâ,
Oh, wuzen dem de good times sho!
All de ole folks would be chattinâ,
Anâ de pickaninnies pattinâ,
As dey heahâd de feet a-shufflinâ âcross de floâ.
Anâ how weâd dance, anâ how weâd sing!
Dance tel de day done break.
Anâ how dem banjos dey would ring,
Anâ de cabin floâ would shake!
Come along, come along,
Come along, come along,
Donât you heah dem banjos a-ringinâ?
Gib a song, gib a song,
Gib a song, gib a song,
Git yoâ feet fixed up fuâ a-winginâ.
Wâile de banjos dey go plunka, plunka, plunk,
Weâll dance tel de ole floâ shake;
Wâile de feet keep a-goinâ chooka, chooka, chook,
Weâll dance tel de day done break.
Answer to Prayer
Der ainât no use in sayinâ de Lawd wonât answer prah;
If you knows how to ax Him, I knows Heâs bound to heah.
De trouble is, some people donât ax de proper way,
Den wâen dey gitâs no answer dey doubts de use to pray.
You got to use egzacâly de âspressions anâ de words
To show dat âtween yoâ faith anâ works, you âpends on works two-thirds.
Now, one time I rememberâ âjes how long I wonât sayâ â
I thought Iâd like a turkey to eat on Chrisâmus day.
Fuâ weeks I dreamed âbout turkeys, a-struttinâ in der pride;
But seed no way to get oneâ âwidout de Lawd pervide.
Anâ so I went to prayinâ, I prayâd wid all my might;
âLawd, senâ to me a turkey.â I prayâd bofe day anâ night.
âLawd, senâ to me a turkey, a big one if you please.â
I âclar to heaben I prayâd so much I mosâ wore out ma knees.
I prayâd dat prah so often, I prayâd dat prah so long,
Yet didnât git no turkey, I knowâd âtwas sumpân wrong.
So on de night âfore Chrisâmus wâen I got down to pray,
âLawd, senâ me to a turkey,â I had de sense to say.
âLawd, senâ me to a turkey.â I know dat prah was right,
Anâ it was sholy answerâd; I got de bird dat night.
Dat Gal oâ Mine
Skin as black anâ jes as sofâ as a velvet dress,
Teeth as white as ivoryâ âwell dey is I guess.
Eyes datâs jes as big anâ bright as de eveninâ star;
Anâ dat holâ some sort oâ light lublier by far.
Hair donât hang âway down her back; plaited up in rows;
Wid de two enâs datâs behinâ tied wid ribben bows.
Hanâs dat raly wuzân made fuâ hard work, Iâm shoâ;
Got a little bit oâ foot; weahs a numbah foâ.
You jes oughtah see dat gal Sundayâs wâen she goes
To de Baptisâ meetinâ house, dressed in her besâ cloâes.
Wâen she puts her wâite dress on anâ othah things so fine;
Now, Suâ, donât you know Iâm proud oâ dat gal oâ mine.
The Seasons
Wâen de leaves begin to fall,
Anâ de frosâ is on de ground,
Anâ de âsimmons is a-ripeninâ on de tree;
Wâen I heah de dinner call,
Anâ de chillen gadder âround,
âTis den de âpossum is de meat fuâ me.
Wâen de wintertime am pasâ
Anâ de spring is come at lasâ,
Wâen de good ole summer sun begins to shine;
Oh! my thoughts den tek a turn,
Anâ my heart begins to yearn
Foâ dat watermelon growinâ on de vine.
Now, de yeah will sholy bring
âRound a season fuâ us all,
Evây one kin pick his season fâom de resâ;
But de melon in de spring,
Anâ de âpossum in de fall,
Mek it hard to tell which time oâ year am besâ.
âPossum Song
(A Warning)
âSimmons ripeninâ in de fall,
You better run,
Brudder âPossum, run!
Mockinâ bird commence to call,
You better run, Brudder âPossum, git out de way!
You better run, Brudder âPossum, git out de way!
Run some whar anâ hide!
Ole moon am sinkinâ
Down behinâ de tree.
Ole Eph am thinkinâ
Anâ chuckelinâ wid glee.
Ole Tige am blinkinâ
Anâ frisky as kin be,
Yoâ chances, Brudder âPossum,
Look mighty slim to me.
Run, run, run, I tell you,
Run, Brudder âPossum, run!
Run, run, run, I tell you,
Ole Ephâs got a gun.
Pickaninnies grinninâ
Waitinâ fuâ to see de fun.
You better run, Brudder âPossum, git out de way!
Run, Brudder âPossum, run!
Brudder âPossum take a tip;
You better run,
Brudder âPossum, run!
âTainât no use in actinâ flip,
You better run, Brudder âPossum, git out de way!
You better run, Brudder âPossum, git out de way!
Run some whar anâ hide.
Deyâs gwine to hounâ you
All along de line,
Wâen dey done founâ you,
Den whatâs de use in sighinâ?
Wid taters rounâ you.
You sholy would tase fineâ â
So listen, Brudder âPossum,
You better be a-flyinâ.
Run, run, run, I tell you,
Run, Brudder âPossum, run!
Run, run, run, I tell you,
Ole Ephâs got a gun.
Pickaninnies grinninâ
Waitinâ fuâ to see de fun.
You better run, Brudder âPossum, git out de way!
Run, Brudder âPossum, run!
Brer Rabbit, Youâs de Cutesâ of âEm All
Once der was a meetinâ in de wilderness,
All de critters of creation dey was dar;
Brer Rabbit, Brer âPossum, Brer Wolf, Brer Fox,
King Lion, Mister Terrapin, Mister Bâar.
De question fuâ discussion was, âWho is de biggesâ man?â
Dey âpinted ole Jedge Owl to decide;
He polished up his spectacles anâ put âem on his nose,
Anâ to the question slowly he replied:
âBrer Wolf am mighty cunninâ,
Brer Fox am mighty sly,
Brer Terrapin anâ âPossumâ âkinder small;
Brer Lionâs mighty vicious,
Brer Bâar heâs sorter âspicious,
Brer Rabbit, youâs de cutesâ of âem all.â
Dis caused a great confusion âmongst de animals,
Evây critter claimed dat he had won de prize;
Dey âsputed anâ dey argâed, dey growled anâ dey roared,
Den putty soon de dusâ begin to rise.
Brer Rabbit he jesâ stood aside anâ urged âem on to fight.
Brer Lion he mosâ tore Brer Bâar in two;
Wâen dey was all so tiahd dat dey couldnât catch der bref
Brer Rabbit he jesâ grabbed de prize anâ flew.
Brer Wolf am mighty cunninâ,
Brer Fox am mighty sly,
Brer Terrapin anâ Possumâ âkinder small;
Brer Lionâs mighty vicious,
Brer Bâar heâs sorter âspicious,
Brer Rabbit, youâs de cutesâ of âem all.
An Explanation
Look heah! âSplain to me de reason
Why you said to Squire Lee,
Der wuz twelve ole chicken thieves
In dis heah town, includinâ me.
Ef he tole you dat, my brudder,
He said sumpân dat warnât true;
Wâat I said wuz dis, dat der wuz
Twelve, widout includinâ you.
Oh!â ââ âŚâ!â â
De Little Pickaninnyâs Gone to Sleep
Cuddle down, ma honey, in yoâ bed,
Go to sleep anâ resâ yoâ little head,
Been a-kind oâ ailinâ all de day?
Didnât have no sperit fuâ to play?
Never minâ; to-morrer, wâen you wek,
Daddyâs gwine to ride you on his bek,
âRounâ anâ rounâ de cabin floâ so fasââ â
Der! Heâs closed his little eyes at lasâ.
De little pickaninnyâs gone to sleep,
Cuddled in his trundle bed so tiny,
De little pickaninnyâs gone to sleep,
Closed his little eyes so bright anâ shiny.
Hush! anâ wâen you walk across de floâ
Step across it very sofâ anâ slow.
De shadders all arounâ begin to creep,
De little pickaninnyâs gone to sleep.
Mandy, wâatâs de matter wid dat chile?
Keeps a-sighinâ evây little wâile;
Seems to me I heayhd him sorter groan,
Lord! his little hanâs am colâ as stone!
Wâatâs dat far-off light datâs in his eyes?
Datâs a light deyâs borrowâd fâom de skies;
Folâ his little hanâs across his breasâ,
Let de little pickaninny resâ.
The Rivals
Look heah! Is I evah tole you âbout de curious way I won
Anna Liza? Say, I nevah? Well heahâs how de thing wuz done.
Lize, you know, wuz mighty purtyâ âdatâs been forty yeahs agoâ â
âN âcos to look at her dis minit, you mightân spose dat it wuz so.
She wuz jes de greatesâ âtraction in de county, ân bless de lamâ!
Eveh darkey wuz a-coâtin, but it lay âtwix me anâ Sam.
You know Sam. We both wuz wukinâ on de ole John Tompkinâs place.
âN evehbody wuz a-watchinâ tâsee whoâs gwine to win de race.
Hee! hee! hee! Now you musâ raley âscuse me fuâ dis snickering,
But I jes canât heâp fâom laffinâ eveh time I tells dis thing.
Ez I wuz a-sayinâ, me anâ Sam wuked daily side by side,
He a-studyinâ, me a-studyinâ, how to win Lize fuâ a bride.
Well, de race was kinder equal, Lize wuz sorter on de fence;
Sam he had de mostes dollars, anâ I had de mostes sense.
Things dey run along âbout eben tel der come Big Meetinâ day;
Sam den thought, to win Miss Liza, he had founâ de shoest way.
Anâ you talk about big meetinâs! None been like it âfore nor sence;
Der wuz sich a crowd oâ people dat we had to put up tents.
Der wuz preachers fâom de Easâ, anâ âder wuz preachers fâom de Wesâ;
Folks had kilt mosâ eveh chicken, anâ wuz fatteninâ up de resâ.
Gals had all got new wâite dresses, anâ bought ribbens fuâ der hair,
Fixinâ fuâ de openinâ Sunday, prayinâ dat de dayâd be fair.
Dat de Reverenâ Jasper Jones of Mount Moriah, it wuz âlowâd,
Wuz to preach de openinâ sermon; so you know der wuz a crowd.
Fuâ dat man wuz sho a preacher; had a voice jes like a bull;
So der ainât no use in sayinâ dat de meetinâ house wuz full.
Folks wuz der fâom Big Pine Hollow, some come âway fâom Muddy Creek,
Some come jes to stay fuâ Sunday, but de crowd stayâd thoo de week.
Some come ridinâ in top-buggies wid de wâeels all painted red,
Pulled by mules dat run like rabbits, each one tryinâ to git ahead.
Othah poârer folks come drivinâ mules dat leaned up âginst de shafâ,
Hitched to broke-down, creaky wagons dat looked like deyâd drap in half.
But de biggesâ crowd come walkinâ, wid der new shoes on der backs;
âScuse wuz dat dey couldnât weah em âcause de heels wuz full oâ tacks.
Fact is, itâs a job for Job, a-trudginâ in de sun anâ heat,
Down a long anâ dusty clay road wid yoâ shoes packed full oâ feet.
âCose dey stopt anâ put dem shoes on wâen dey got mosâ to de doâ;
Den dey had to grin anâ bear it; dat tuk good religion sho.
But I mosâ forgot ma storyâ âwell at lasâ dat Sunday came
And it seemed dat evehbody, blinâ anâ deef, anâ halt anâ lame,
Wuz out in de grove a-waitinâ fuâ de meetinâ to begin;
Ef dat crowd had got converted âtwould a been de end oâ sin.
Lize wuz der in all her glory, purty ez a big sunflowah,
I kin âmember how she looked jes same ez âtwuz dis veây houah.
But to make ma story shorter, wâile we wuz a-waitinâ der,
Down de road we spied a cloud oâ dusâ dat filled up all de air.
Anâ ez we kepâ on a-lookinâ, out fâom âmongst dat veây cloud,
Sam, on Marse Johnâs big mule, Caesar, rode right slam up in de crowd.
You jes oughtah seed dat darkey, âclar I like tah loss ma bref;
Fuâ to use a common âspression, he wuz âbout nigh dressed to def.
He had slipped to town dat Satâday, didnât let nobody know,
Anâ had carâyd all his cash anâ lef it in de dry goods stoâ.
He had on a branâ new suit oâ stoâ-bought cloâes, a high plug hat;
He looked âzactly like a genâman, tainât no use dânyinâ dat.
Wâen he got down off dat mule anâ bowed to Liza I could see
How she looked at him so âdmirinâ, anâ jes kinder glanced at me.
Den I knowâd to win dat gal, I sho would need some othah means
âSides a-hanginâ âround big meetinâ in a suit oâ homespun jeans.
Wâen dey blowâd de hoân fuâ preachinâ, anâ de crowd all went inside,
I jes felt ez doh Iâd like tah go off in de woods anâ hide.
So I stayâd outside de meetinâ, setân underneatâ de trees,
Seemed to me I sot der ages, wid ma elbows on ma knees.
Wâen dey sung dat hymn, âNobody knows de trouble dat I see,â
Seemâd to me dat dey wuz singinâ eveh word oâ it fuâ me.
Jes how long I might haâ sot der, actinâ like a cussed fool,
I donât know, but it jes happenâd dat I lookâd anâ saw Samâs mule.
Anâ de thought come slowly tricklinâ thoo ma brain right der anâ den,
Dat, perhaps, wid some persuasion, I could make dat mule ma frenâ.
Anâ I jes kepâ on a-thinkinâ, anâ I kepâ a-lookinâ ârounâ,
Tel I spied two great big sanâ spurs right close by me on de grounâ.
Well, I took dem spurs anâ put em underneatâ oâ Caesarâs saddle,
So deyâd press down in his backbone soon ez Sam had got a-straddle.
âTwuz a pretty ticklish job, anâ jes ez soon ez it wuz done,
I went back wâere I wuz setân fuâ to wait anâ see de fun.
Purty soon heah come de people, jes a-swaâminâ out de doâ,
Talkinâ âbout de âpowâful sermonââ âânevah heahâd de likes befoâ.â
How de âmonahs fell convictedâ jes de same ez lumps oâ lead,
How dat some wuz still a-layinâ same es if deyâd been struck dead.
Anâ to rectly heah come Liza, Sam a-strollinâ by her side,
Anâ it seemâd to me dat darkyâs smile wuz âbout twelve inches wide.
Look to me like he had swelled up to âbout twice his natchul size,
Anâ I heahâd him say, âIâd like to be yoâ âscort to-night, Miss Lize.â
Den he made a bow jes like heâs gwine to make a speech in school,
Anâ walkâd jes ez proud ez Marse John over to untie his mule,
Wâen Samâs foot fust touched de stirrup he knowâd der wuz sumpân wrong;
âCuz de mule begin to tremble anâ to sorter side along.
Wen Sam raised his weight to mount him, Caesar bristled up his ear,
Wâen Sam sot down in de saddle, den dat mule cummenced to rear.
Anâ he reared anâ pitched anâ caperâd, only ez a mule kin pitch,
Tel he flung Sam clean fâom off him, landed him squarâ in a ditch.
Wen dat darky riz, well raly, I felt kinder bad fuâ him;
He had bust dem cheap stoâ britches fâom de center to de rim.
All de plug hat dat wuz lefâ him wuz de brim arounâ his neck,
Smearâd wid mud fâom top to bottom, well, he wuz a sight, I âspeck.
Wuz de folks a-laffinâ? Well, suâ, I jes sholy thought deyâd busâ;
Wuz Sam laffinâ? âTwuz de fusâ time dat I evah heahâd him cuss.
Wâile Sam slinkâd off thoo de backwoods I walkâd slowly home wid Lize,
Wâen I axed her jes one question der wuz sumpân in her eyes
Made me know der wuz no need oâ any answer beinâ said,
Anâ I felt jes like de whole world wuz a-spinninâ ârounâ ma head.
So I said, âLize, wâen we marry, musâ I weah some stoâ-bought cloâes?â
She says, âJeans is good enough fuâ any poâ folks, heaben knows!â
The Creation
(A Negro Sermon)
And God stepped out on space,
And He looked around and said,
âIâm lonelyâ â
Iâll make me a world.â
And far as the eye of God could see
Darkness covered everything,
Blacker than a hundred midnights
Down in a cypress swamp.
Then God smiled,
And the light broke,
And the darkness rolled up on one side,
And the light stood shining on the other,
And God said, âThatâs good!â
Then God reached out and took the light in His hands,
And God rolled the light around in His hands
Until He made the sun;
And He set that sun a-blazing in the heavens.
And the light that was left from making the sun
God gathered it up in a shining ball
And flung it against the darkness,
Spangling the night with the moon and stars.
Then down between
The darkness and the light
He hurled the world;
And God said, âThatâs good!â
Then God himself stepped downâ â
And the sun was on His right hand,
And the moon was on His left;
The stars were clustered about His head,
And the earth was under His feet.
And God walked, and where He trod
His footsteps hollowed the valleys out
And bulged the mountains up.
Then He stopped and looked and saw
That the earth was hot and barren.
So God stepped over to the edge of the world
And He spat out the seven seas;
He batted His eyes, and the lightnings flashed;
He clapped His hands, and the thunders rolled;
And the waters above the earth came down,
The cooling waters came down.
Then the green grass sprouted,
And the little red flowers blossomed,
The pine tree pointed his finger to the sky,
And the oak spread out his arms,
The lakes cuddled down in the hollows of the ground,
And the rivers ran down to the sea;
And God smiled again,
And the rainbow appeared,
And curled itself around His shoulder.
Then God raised His arm and He waved His hand
Over the sea and over the land,
And He said, âBring forth! Bring forth!â
And quicker than God could drop His hand,
Fishes and fowls
And beasts and birds
Swam the rivers and the seas,
Roamed the forests and the woods,
And split the air with their wings.
And God said, âThatâs good!â
Then God walked around,
And God looked around
On all that He had made.
He looked at His sun,
And He looked at His moon,
And He looked at His little stars;
He looked on His world
With all its living things,
And God said, âIâm lonely still.â
Then God sat down
On the side of a hill where He could think;
By a deep, wide river He sat down;
With His head in His hands,
God thought and thought,
Till He thought, âIâll make me a man!â
Up from the bed of the river
God scooped the clay;
And by the bank of the river
He kneeled Him down;
And there the great God Almighty
Who lit the sun and fixed it in the sky,
Who flung the stars to the most far corner of the night,
Who rounded the earth in the middle of His hand;
This Great God,
Like a mammy bending over her baby,
Kneeled down in the dust
Toiling over a lump of clay
Till He shaped it in His own image;
Then into it He blew the breath of life,
And man became a living soul.
Amen. Amen.