THE SLAVE’S SONG.

Air—Dearest Maie.

Now, freemen, listen to my song, a story I’ll relate,

It happened in the valley of the old Carolina State:

They marched me to the cotton field, at early break of day,

And worked me there till late sunset, without a cent of pay.

Chorus. They worked me all the day,

Without a bit of pay,

And believed me when I told them

That I would not run away.

Massa gave me a holiday, and said he’d give me more,

I thanked him very kindly, and shoved my boat from shore;

I drifted down the river, my heart was light and free,

I had my eye on the bright north star, and thought of liberty.

They worked me all the day,

Without a bit of pay,

So I took my flight in the middle of the night,

When the sun was gone away.

I jumped out of my good old boat and shoved it from the shore,

And travelled faster that night than I had ever done before;

I came up to a farmer’s house, just at the break of day,

And saw a white man standing there, said he, “You are run away.”

They worked me all the day,

Without a bit of pay,

So I took my flight in the middle of the night,

When the sun was gone away.

I told him I had left the whip, and baying of the hound,

To find a place where man was man, if such there could be found,

That I heard in Canada, all mankind were free,

And that I was going there in search of liberty.

They worked me all the day,

Without a bit of pay,

So I took my flight in the middle of the night,

When the sun was gone away.