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[Index to poems in the collection by James Weldon Johnson]
The Word of an Engineer
- "SHE'S built of steel
- From deck to keel,
- And bolted strong and tight;
- In scorn she'll sail
- The fiercest gale,
- And pierce the darkest night.
- "The builder's art
- Has proved each part
- Throughout her breadth and length;
- Deep in the hulk,
- Of her mighty bulk,
- Ten thousand Titans' strength."
- 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 draughtsman's cell.
- And so we ride
- Over land and tide,
- Without a thought of fear--
- Man never had
The faith in God
That he has in an engineer!
- James Weldon Johnson
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 snaggled 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.
- James Weldon Johnson

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.
- James Weldon Johnson
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
- Where'er 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.
- James Weldon Johnson
Fifty Years
1863 - 1913
- O BROTHERS mine, to-day we stand
- Where half a century sweeps our ken,
- Since God, through Lincoln's ready hand,
- Struck off our bonds and made us men.
- Just fifty years--a winter's day--
- As runs the history of a race;
- Yet, as we look back o'er 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 Virginia's shore.
- Far, far the way that we have trod,
- From heathen kraals and jungle dens,
- To freedmen, freemen, sons of God,
- Americans and Citizens.
- A part of His unknown design,
- We've lived within a mighty age;
- And we have helped to write a line
- On history's most wondrous page.
- A few black bondmen strewn along
- The borders of our eastern coast,
- Now grown a race, ten million strong,
- An upward, onward marching host.
- Then let us here erect a stone,
- To mark the place, to mark the time;
- A witness to God's mercies shown,
- A pledge to hold this day sublime.
- And let that stone an altar be,
- Whereon thanksgivings we may lay,
- Where we, in deep humility,
- For faith and strength renewed may pray.
- With open hearts ask from above
- New zeal, new courage and new pow'rs,
- That we may grow more worthy of
- This country and this land of ours.
- For never let the thought arise
- That we are here on sufferance bare;
- Outcasts, asylumed 'neath these skies,
- And aliens without part or share.
- 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 stood,--
- Where flourished once rank weed and thorn,--
- 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 flood--
- Remember, its first crimson stripe
- Was dyed by Attucks' willing blood.
- And never yet has come the cry--
- When that fair flag has been assailed--
- For men to do, for men to die,
- That have we faltered or have failed.
- We've helped to bear it, rent and torn,
- Through many a hot-breath'd battle breeze;
- Held in our hands, it has been borne
- And planted far across the seas.
- And never yet--O haughty Land,
- Let us, at least, for this be praised--
- 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 suffice--
- We've 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 'round us everywhere
- Hangs stifling darkness, and we grope
- With hands uplifted in despair.
- Courage! Look out, beyond, and see
- The far horizon's 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 Brown's spirit stops?
- That Lovejoy was but idly slain?
- Or do you think those precious drops
- From Lincoln's 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.
- James Weldon Johnson

To America
- HOW would you have us, as we are?
- Or sinking 'neath 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?
- James Weldon Johnson
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,
- Salvation's present plan?
- A gospel new, for all--for 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?
- 'Tis forward, 'tis upward,
- On to the fair white arch
- Of Freedom's 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?
- 'Tis springtime! 'Tis work-time!
- The world is young again!
- And God's 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.
- James Weldon Johnson
Father, Father Abraham
On the Anniversary of Lincoln's Birth
- 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 we've 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.
- James Weldon Johnson
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.
- James Weldon Johnson
Sonnet
From the Spanish of Placido
- 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 love's 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.
- James Weldon Johnson
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.
- James Weldon Johnson
The Dancing Girl
from Down by the Carib Sea
- DO YOU know what it is to dance?
- Perhaps, you do know, in a fashion;
- But by dancing I mean,
- Not what's generally seen,
- But dancing of fire and passion,
- Of fire and delirious passion.
- With a dusky-haired senorita,
- 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 it's 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:--
- 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 they're known.
- James Weldon Johnson
Sunset in the Tropics
from Down by the Carib Sea
- 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 stairs,--
- And, in her fire-fly crown,
- Queen Night, on velvet slippered feet, comes softly down.
- James Weldon Johnson
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 pause--a 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?
- 'Tis 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,
- "Failure!" at last.
- James Weldon Johnson

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 day--
- I softly sing.
- And if the way grows darker still,
- Shadowed by Sorrow's 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.
- James Weldon Johnson
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 love's 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 form--
- 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 memory's bitter blight,
- And dark--so dark becomes the night.
- James Weldon Johnson
Lift Every Voice and Sing
- LIFT every voice and sing
- Till earth and heaven ring,
- Ring with the harmonies of Liberty;
- Let our rejoicing rise
- High as the listening 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 chastening rod,
- Felt in the days when hope unborn had died;
- Yet with a steady beat
- Have not our weary feet
- Come to a 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 hast brought us thus far on the way;
- Thou who hast by Thy might
- Led us into 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.
- James Weldon Johnson

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 minstrel's 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 "Steal Away to Jesus"? On its strains
- His spirit must have nightly floated free,
- Though still about his hands he felt his chains.
- Who heard great "Jordan roll"? Whose starward eye
- Saw chariot "Swing low"? And who was he
- That breathed that comforting, melodic sigh,
- "Nobody Knows de Trouble I See"?
- 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 of 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 "Go Down, Moses." 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,
- You--you alone, of all the long, long line
- Of those who've 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 listeners' hungry hearts sufficed
- Still live--but more than this to you belongs;
- You sang a race from wood and stone to Christ.
- James Weldon Johnson
[Index to poems in the collection by James Weldon Johnson]
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