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O, fair, false wife, South! lo, thy lord, the North,

Loveth thee still, though thou hast gone astray.

In truth's great court, vain has thy trial been,

For no divorce could there be granted thee.

The child you bore was bitter curse and shame,

And not the child of thy husband, the North.

It has led thee to miry paths, and raised

The gall of despair to thy famished lips;

It were better that such a child should die.

I.

The first year of the war had passed away

When Richard Wain, the planter, sprang to arms.

The day for his departure had been set;

To-morrow it would be, and as the night

Fell on the misty hills, and on the vales,

He sat alone in his accustomed room;

Thinking, he drowsed; his chin couched on his breast;

A dim light wrought at shadows on the walls.

Slowly the sash was raised behind him there.

Perhaps he slept; he did not heed the noise,

And Karagwe sprang in, and faced his foe.

He held a long knife up and brandished it,

And said, "As surely as you call or move,

Tour life will not be worth a blade of grass;

But if you do not call, and sign the words,

That I have written on a paper here,

No harm will come, and I shall go away."

He drew the paper forth; the planter read:

I promise if the deed is ever found

Of Dalton Earl's estate, I in no way

Shall lay a claim to it to make it mine.

I here surrender all my right to it.

"Why, this I shall not sign, of course," he said.

"You might have asked me to give back your Ruth,

And I would not have minded; but your game

Lies deeper than a check upon the queen."

"Sign!" cried the negro; and at Ruth's name,

A sudden madness leaped along his nerves,

Like flame among the dry prairie grass.

"Sign! for unless you sign this writing now,

You shall not live; now promise me to sign!"

He caught the planter fiercely by the throat,

Starting his quailing eyes, "Now will you sign or not?

You have ten seconds more to make your choice."

"Give me the paper then, and I will sign."

The name was written, and the negro went;

But not an hour had passed, before the hounds

Of Richard Wain and Dalton Earl were slipped,

And scenting on his track through stream and field.

II.

The slave first ran toward the hollow tree;

There left the paper signed by Richard Wain,

Disturbing not the deed; but took the Book,

And up the tireless road, tied on and on,

Until he gained the borders of a marsh.

The night was dark, but darker still the clouds

That loomed along the rim where day had gone.

The wind blew cold, and hastened quickly past,

Escaping, like a slave, the hound-like clouds

Whose thunder-barkings sounded in its ears.

And Karagwe had only reached the marsh,

When on his track he heard the savage dogs.

He knew the paths and windings many miles,

And even in the darkness found his way,

And gained a covert island, where a hut,

Built by some poor and friendless fugitive,

Afforded shelter and secure abode.

He tarried here until along the hills

The red-lipped whisper of the morning ran.

Then, when he would have ventured from the door,

A large black hound arose, and licked his hand.

The dog was Dalton Earl's; he started back.

The dream of freedom nourished many years

Seemed withering, and for the moment lost.

For long the slave had thought of liberty,

And worshipped her, as in that elder time

A tyrant's subjects worshipped, praying her

That she would not delay, but hasten forth,

And bridge the hated gulf 'twixt rich and poor,

By freeing all the mass from ignorance,

By lifting up the worthy of the earth,

And making knowledge paramount to wealth.

III.

O strange, that in our age, and in a land

Where liberty was laid the corner-stone,

A slave, perforce, should be obliged to dream,

And dote on freedom, like the poor oppressed

Who lived and hoped two thousand years ago!

And slavery to this slave was like a fruit-

A bitter and a hateful fruit to taste-

The fruit of error and of ignorance,

Made rank with superstition and with crime.

Yet though the fruit was bitter to the core,

Many there were who died for love of it.

O, many they who listen through long nights

To hear a footstep that will never come.

There is not a flower along the border blown,

From Lookout Mountain to the Chesapeake,

But has in it the blood of North and South.

IV.

Karagwe went back, and on a paper wrote,-

"Your dog has harmed me not, and why should you,

That I have never wronged, plot harm to me?

You made me slave, you sold away my bride,

And now you set your hounds upon my track,

Because I seek the freedom that is mine.

Though you have wronged me, still I do you good,

For in an oak, the largest of the grove,

Upon the cotton-field of Richard Wain,

Hid in a hollow near the second limb,

Is the lost deed that holds your house and lands."

The paper fastened round the hound's strong neck,

The negro bade him go, and forth he went;

And Earl read what the slave had written down,

And that day found the deed hid in the tree,

And that day ceased pursuing any more.

For two long weeks the negro in the swamps

Wandered toward the North, living at times

On berries and on fruit. Above him leaned

The tall trees, bower-like 'neath their wrestling arms;

Beneath, the murky waters, black as death,

Stirred only to the plunge of venomed things.

The long, seared grasses clung to every bough

Whose trailing robe hung near the sluggish lymph.

And here and there, among the savage moss,

Blossomed alone some snowy gold-spired flower,

Like God's own church found in a heathen land.

The birds o'erhead, that, plumaged like the morn,

Caroled their sweetness, sang the holy psalms.

V.

But now across his path the negro found

A belt of water falling with the tide.

Two heavy logs he lashed, and launched them out,

Then, with a pole for help in case of need,

Sprang on the float, and drifted down the stream.

Thus for two days he drifted, eating naught

Except the berries growing near the shore.

Then on a cool, bright morning, when the wind

And tide agreed, he saw again the sea.

Far off a buoy was tossing on the waves,

Much like the red heart of the joyful deep-

Much like a heart upon a sea of life;

And ships were in the offing, sailing on

Like the vague ships that with our hopes and fears

Put from their harbors to return no more.

VI.

The raft went oceanward. The negro raised

Upon the pole the coat that he had worn,

Hoping for succor from the distant ships;

And not in vain; for ere the sun had set,

Half starved, he clambered up a vessel's side,

And found himself with friends, and on his way

To freedom, 'neath the steadfast northern star.

VII.

Two years of war, two years of many tears,

And Richard Wain, a captain of renown,

In ranks led on by error, fought and fell.

Within the breast of Coralline, Stanley Thane

Possessed acknowledged empire; all her love

Was poured out on him, and her heart

Stood like an emptied vase. Then from the North

Came rumors of his daring, and the war

Gloomed like a night about her,-he its star.