Understanding
The Black Man’s Burden, Lulu Baxter Guy
The Black Man’s Burden
Lulu Baxter Guy –– 1903
Take off the black man’s burden,
This boon we humbly crave.
Have we not served ye long enough?
Been long enough your slave?
Cut loose the bands that bind us,
Bid us like men be strong.
Think of the brave deeds we have done;
Look not for all the wrong.
Take off the black man’s burden,
‘Tis this that we demand;
Think not of all the crimes you’ve heard
But that march up San Juan.
Oh, South, can’t you remember
When you fought to hold our lives?
How loyal was the black man
To your daughters and your wives?
Take off the black man’s burden,
Ye men of power and might.
Wait not one for another
But dare to do the right.
The blood, the smoke, the ashes,
Of martyred men that’s slain;
Comes wafted to you from the south
But for another’s gain.
Take off the black man’s burden,
His mind can then expand.
He’ll prove your equal in the race,
Stand every whit a man.
We’ll wait till the burden’s lifted,
And to those who crush us down,
Will come the words of God to Cain,
“Thy brother’s blood crieth from the ground.”