THE DEBT

This is the debt I pay

Just for one riotous day,

Years of regret and grief,

Sorrow without relief.

Pay it I will to the end—

Until the grave, my friend,

Gives me a true release—

Gives me the clasp of peace.

Slight was the thing I bought,

Small was the debt I thought,

Poor was the loan at best—

God! but the interest!

ON THE DEDICATION OF DOROTHY HALL

TUSKEGEE, ALA., APRIL 22, 1901.

Not to the midnight of the gloomy past,

Do we revert to-day; we look upon

The golden present and the future vast

Whose vistas show us visions of the dawn.

Nor shall the sorrows of departed years

The sweetness of our tranquil souls annoy,

The sunshine of our hopes dispels the tears,

And clears our eyes to see this later joy.

Not ever in the years that God hath given

Have we gone friendless down the thorny way,

Always the clouds of pregnant black were riven

By flashes from His own eternal day.

The women of a race should be its pride;

We glory in the strength our mothers had,

We glory that this strength was not denied

To labor bravely, nobly, and be glad.

God give to these within this temple here,

Clear vision of the dignity of toil,

That virtue in them may its blossoms rear

Unspotted, fragrant, from the lowly soil.

God bless the givers for their noble deed,

Shine on them with the mercy of Thy face,

Who come with open hearts to help and speed

The striving women of a struggling race.