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Sketches of Southern life

Chapter 15: SAVE THE BOYS.
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About This Book

A collection of poems and sketches gives voice to Black Southern people before, during, and after slavery, using first-person narrators and colloquial speech to depict forced separation, faith, wartime upheaval, emancipation, and the challenges of Reconstruction. It balances sorrowful reminiscence with moments of communal jubilation, religious consolation, satire, and political commentary, particularly about voting and corruption. Through intimate scenes of family, labor, and local gossip the pieces emphasize resilience, moral conviction, and the complex adjustments to freedom. The tone shifts between plaintive, celebratory, and didactic to convey varied communal perspectives.

SAVE THE BOYS.

Like Dives in the deeps of Hell
I cannot break this fearful spell,
Nor quench the fires I’ve madly nursed,
Nor cool this dreadful raging thirst.
Take back your pledge—ye come too late!
Ye cannot save me from my fate,
Nor bring me back departed joys;
But ye can try to save the boys.
Ye bid me break my fiery chain,
Arise and be a man again,
When every street with snares is spread,
And nets of sin where’er I tread.
No; I must reap as I did sow.
The seeds of sin bring crops of woe;
But with my latest breath I’ll crave
That ye will try the boys to save.
These bloodshot eyes were once so bright;
This sin-crushed heart was glad and light;
But by the wine-cup’s ruddy glow
I traced a path to shame and woe.
A captive to my galling chain,
I’ve tried to rise, but tried in vain—
The cup allures and then destroys.
Oh! from its thraldom save the boys.
Take from your streets those traps of hell
Into whose gilded snares I fell.
Oh! freemen, from these foul decoys
Arise, and vote to save the boys.
Oh ye who license men to trade
In draughts that charm and then degrade,
Before ye hear the cry, Too late,
Oh, save the boys from my sad fate.