The Mistress of the Manse by J. G. (Josiah Gilbert) Holland
page 90 of 119 (75%)
page 90 of 119 (75%)
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When, from her father's stately hall,
She came, her Northern home to find, With him who held her heart in thrall. In the dark pictures which he drew Of instituted shame and wrong, She saw no figures that she knew, But a confused and hateful throng Of forms that in his fancy grew. Her father's rule, benign and mild, Was all of slavery she had known; To her, an Afric was a child-- A charge in other ages thrown On Christian honor, from the wild Of savagery in which the Fates Had given him birth and dwelling-place-- And so, descending through estates Of gentle vassalage, his race Had come to those of later dates. Black hands her baby form had dressed; Black hands her blacker hair had curled; And she had found a dusky breast The sweetest breast in all the world When she was thirsty or at rest. Her playmates, in her native bowers, Were Darkest children of the sun, |
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