Title : Plantation Echoes: A Collection of Original Negro Dialect Poems
Author : Elliott Blaine Henderson
Author of introduction, etc. : E. G. Burkham
Release date : December 22, 2021 [eBook #66997]
Language : English
Credits : Charlene Taylor and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
Transcriber’s Note: Henderson’s writing captures African American dialect of his time, but the poems contain slang words and racial stereotypes that the modern reader is likely to find offensive.
A COLLECTION
of
ORIGINAL
NEGRO DIALECT POEMS
By
Elliott Blaine Henderson
Columbus, Ohio
PRESS OF F. J. HEER
1904
Entered According to Act of Congress
in the year 1904
BY E. B. HENDERSON
In the office of the Librarian of Congress
at Washington.
THIS BOOK IS RESPECTFULLY
DEDICATED TO
MESSERS.
HOWARD BURBA
L. WALTER HARRISON
PROF. L. M. LAYTON
T. J. McCORMICK
OSMAN C. HOOPER
Literary Editor of the Columbus Dispatch,
Columbus, Ohio.
The music of the American negro, the fresh and spontaneous expression of a good and care-free heart, has long been one of the most pleasing features of American life. It is human nature in its first vocal garb—original and unique, often humorous and always true to the sentiment of the singer. If there ever was an illustration of the close relationship between language and thought, it is this.
What is true of the melodies of the negro as developed in the simple existence on the plantation is also true of that other form of singing, verse-making. Among the negroes there have sprung up a number of exponents of the wisdom, wit and humor of the race. They have caught the spirit of others—the humble philosophers of their kind—and they have employed the dialect to reproduce the thought in all its quaintness and originality. One of the most notable of these exponents or interpreters is an Ohio negro, Paul Lawrence Dunbar, who has taken high rank among the poets of the day. Another is Elliott Blaine Henderson, also a son of Ohio, whose first volume of verse is herewith presented.
In much that Mr. Henderson here presents, there is the rush of expression and the jingle of words that are so characteristic of the negro. There is also humor and there is sentiment, and always that other quality which makes verse in these days readable—good cheer.
He who correctly interprets the spirit of his race serves a good cause, and it is believed that Mr. Henderson will be found to have succeeded in his undertaking to make his people better and more widely understood.
E. G. Burkham
,
Editor of the Columbus Dispatch, Columbus, Ohio
.
When the Moon Hangs Low | 9 |
Seems Dey’s No Place | 10 |
Good Bye, Honey, Good Bye | 12 |
Whut We Gwine To Do | 14 |
Kaze I kno’ I Kain’t Stop | 16 |
Dahky Whut Yo’ Doin? | 18 |
When De Fiah Am Kindlin’ Hot | 20 |
Lammentation | 22 |
When De Summah’s Dun Cum | 23 |
The Coon’s Serenade | 24 |
Blissful Anticipations | 25 |
Pawson Johnson At Dinner | 27 |
Go ’Way, Mah Honey | 28 |
Brer Possum Declines | 30 |
I Hain’t Foolin’ Honey | 31 |
Sleep— | 33 |
A Profuse Encomium | 34 |
Peepin’ Th’ew De Husk | 35 |
Axin’ Coon Cum Obeah | 38 |
Hustle— | 38 |
Go Sleep | 40 |
Kase De Sun Am Sinkin’ | 41 |
Soft Falls The Night | 43 |
Git On Board, Chillun | 44 |
Uncle Ned An’ De Mockin’ Bird | 46 |
Po’ Li’l’ Rastus | 48 |
Sambo’s Rain Philosophy | 50 |
Jes’ Keep Er Lookin’ Up | 51 |
Wished I’d Rode Mah Hoss | 53 |
Eggs! Eggs!! Eggs!!! | 54 [8] |
It Am De Possum Time | 55 |
Stick To Your Race | 57 |
Memorial Day | 58 |
Trussy’s Visit | 60 |
Is Yo’ Lonesum, Honey? | 64 |
Larn To He’p Yo’se’f | 64 |
Courtin’ O’ De Phone | 66 |
Lonesum Valley Christmas Tree | 68 |
Yes, Wees Got Er Flag | 72 |
Hi, Mistah Dahky | 75 |
Dey’s Er Col’ Wave Breshin’ Nigh | 77 |
Force Of Words | 79 |
I Tol’ Yo’ So | 80 |
The Passing Of Night | 82 |
A Tale O’ Woe | 83 |
Lullaby | 84 |
The Exstacy of Uncle Joe | 85 |
Keep Er Goin’ | 87 |
Climin’ Up De Hill | 88 |
Sistah Ruffle | 90 |
The Gallant Blacks of San Juan Hill | 93 |