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Sketches of Southern life

Chapter 6: Church Building.
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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.

Church Building.

Uncle Jacob often told us,
Since freedom blessed our race
We ought all to come together
And build a meeting place.
So we pinched, and scraped, and spared,
A little here and there:
Though our wages was but scanty,
The church did get a share.
And, when the house was finished,
Uncle Jacob came to pray;
He was looking mighty feeble,
And his head was awful gray.
But his voice rang like a trumpet;
His eyes looked bright and young;
And it seemed a mighty power
Was resting on his tongue.
And he gave us all his blessing—
’Twas parting words he said,
For soon we got the message
The dear old man was dead.
But I believe he’s in the kingdom,
For when we shook his hand
He said, “Children, you must meet me
Right in the promised land;
“For when I’m done a moiling
And toiling here below,
Through the gate into the city
Straightway I hope to go.”