foes shall feel,?But love and light.
Firm on Jehovah's laws,?Strong in their righteous cause,?They march to save.?And vain the tyrant's mail,?Against their battle-hail,?Till cease the woe and wail?Of tortured slave!
COLONIZATION SONG.?TO THE FREE COLORED PEOPLE.
AIR--Spider and the fly.
Will you, will you be colonized??Will you, will you be colonized?
'Tis a land that with honey?And milk doth abound,?Where the lash is not heard,?And the scourge is not found.?Chorus, Will you, &c.
If you stay in this land?Where the white man has rule,?You will starve by his hand,?In both body and soul.?Chorus.
For a nuisance you are,?In this land of your birth,?Held down by his hand,?And crushed to the earth.?Chorus.
My religion is pure,?And came from above,?But I cannot consent?The black negro to love.?Chorus.
It is true there is judgment?That hangs o'er the land,?But 't will all turn aside,?When you follow the plan.?Chorus.
You're ignorant I know,?In this land of your birth,?And religion though pure,?Cannot move the curse.?Chorus.
But only consent,?Though extorted by force,?What a blessing you'll prove,?On the African coast.?Chorus.
I AM AN ABOLITIONIST.
AIR--Auld Lang Syne.
I am an Abolitionist!?I glory in the name:?Though now by Slavery's minions hiss'd?And covered o'er with shame,?It is a spell of light and power--?The watchword of the free:--?Who spurns it in the trial-hour,?A craven soul is he!
I am an Abolitionist!?Then urge me not to pause;?For joyfully do I enlist?In FREEDOM'S sacred cause:?A nobler strife the world ne'er saw,?Th' enslaved to disenthral;?I am a soldier for the war,?Whatever may befall!
I am an Abolitionist!?Oppression's deadly foe;?In God's great strength will I resist,?And lay the monster low;?In God's great name do I demand,?To all be freedom given,?That peace and joy may fill the land,?And songs go up to heaven!
I am an Abolitionist!?No threats shall awe my soul,?No perils cause me to desist,?No bribes my acts control;?A freeman will I live and die,?In sunshine and in shade,?And raise my voice for liberty,?Of nought on earth afraid.
THE BEREAVED MOTHER.
Air--Kathleen O'More.
O, deep was the anguish of the slave mother's heart,?When called from her darling for ever to part;?So grieved that lone mother, that heart broken mother,?In sorrow and woe.
The lash of the master her deep sorrows mock,?While the child of her bosom is sold on the block;?Yet loud shrieked that mother, poor heart broken mother,?In sorrow and woe.
The babe in return, for its fond mother cries,?While the sound of their wailings, together arise;?They shriek for each other, the child and the mother,?In sorrow and woe.
The harsh auctioneer, to sympathy cold,?Tears the babe from its mother and sells it for gold;?While the infant and mother, loud shriek for each other,?In sorrow and woe.
At last came the parting of mother and child,?Her brain reeled with madness, that mother was wild;?Then the lash could not smother the shrieks of that mother?Of sorrow and woe.
The child was borne off to a far distant clime,?While the mother was left in anguish to pine;?But reason departed, and she sank broken hearted,?In sorrow and woe.
That poor mourning mother, of reason bereft,?Soon ended her sorrows and sank cold in death;?Thus died that slave mother, poor heart broken mother,?In sorrow and woe.
O, list ye kind mothers to the cries of the slave;?The parents and children implore you to save;?Go! rescue the mothers, the sisters and brothers,?From sorrow and woe.
THE CHASE.
AIR--Sweet Afton.
Quick, fly to the covert, thou hunted of men!?For the bloodhounds are baying o'er mountain and glen;?The riders are mounted, the loose rein is given,?And curses of wrath are ascending to heaven.?O, speed to thy footsteps! for ruin and death,?Like the hurricane's rage, gather thick round thy path;?And the deep muttered curses grow loud and more loud,?As horse after horse swells the thundering crowd.
Speed, speed, to thy footsteps! thy track has been found;?Now, sport_ for the _rider_, and _blood_ for the _hound!?Through brake and through forest the man-prey is driven;?O, help for the hopeless, thou merciful Heaven!?On! on to the mountain! they're baffled again,?And hope for the woe-stricken still may remain;?The fast-flagging steeds are all white with their foam,?The bloodhounds have turned from the chase to their home.
Joy! joy to the wronged one! the haven he gains,?Escaped from his thraldom, and freed from his chains!?The heaven-stamped image--the God-given soul--?No more shall the spoiler at pleasure control.?O, shame to Columbia, that on her bright plains,?Man pines in his fetters, and curses his chains!?Shame! shame! that her star-spangled banner should wave?Where the lash is made red in the blood of the slave.
Sons of old Pilgrim Fathers! and are ye thus dumb??Shall tyranny triumph, and freedom succumb??While mothers are torn from their children apart,?And agony sunders the cords of the heart??Shall the sons of those sires that once spurned the chain,?Turn bloodhounds to hunt and make captive again??O, shame to your honor, and shame to your pride,?And shame on your memory ever abide!
Will not your old sires start up from the ground,?At the crack of the whip, and bay of the hound,?And shaking
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