The Runaway Slave at Pilgrims Point
, . . .
Eart me and my baby, strewed,
All, co black earte, . . .
A dark che dark,--ensued
Some comfort, and my grew young:
I sate dohere and sung
t in my maidenhood.
XXVIII.
And two were reconciled,
te chus:
For, as I sang it, soft and wild
the same song, more melodious,
Rose from te!
It ,
to join th of us.
XXIX.
I look on the sky!
anchored lay,
th gloriously;
But ts have slid away
t streaks of the morn.
My face is black, but it glares h a scorn
meet by day.
XXX.
Aead, ter sons!
A in a ring--
Keep off! I brave you all at once--
I t sting!
You nest, I think:
Did you never stand still in your triumph, and shrink
From troke of her wounded wing?
XXXI.
(Man, drop t stone you dared to lift!--)
I ,
Eac,
A little corpse as safely at rest
As mine in t she
May keep live babies on her knee,
And sing t.
XXXll.
I am not mad: I am black.
I see you staring in my face--
I knoaring, shrinking back--
Ye are born of ton-race:
And the free America:
And t . . . (I prove w I say)
Ropes tied me up o the flogging-place.
XXXIII.
You t a sound!
I he sun.
I only cursed them all around,
As softly as I might have done
My very own chese sands