Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Negro’s Complaint. by William Cowper
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The Negro’s Complaint.

    By William Cowper



    Forced from home and all its pleasures,
    Afric’s coast I left forlorn;
    To increase a stranger’s treasures,
    O’er the raging billows borne.
    Men from England bought and sold me,
    Paid my price in paltry gold;
    But, though slave they have enroll’d me,
    Minds are never to be sold.


    Still in thought as free as ever,
    What are England’s rights, I ask,
    Me from my delights to sever,
    Me to torture, me to task?
    Fleecy locks and black complexion
    Cannot forfeit nature’s claim;
    Skins may differ, but affection
    Dwells in white and black the same.


    Why did all-creating Nature
    Make the plant for which we toil?
    Sighs must fan it, tears must water,
    Sweat of ours must dress the soil.
    Think, ye masters iron-hearted,
    Lolling at your jovial boards,
    Think how many backs have smarted
    For the sweets your cane affords.


    Is there, as ye sometimes tells us,
    Is there One who reigns on high?
    Has he bid you buy and sell us,
    Speaking from his throne, the sky?
    Ask him, if your knotted scourges,
    Matches, blood-extorting screws,
    Are the means that duty urges
    Agents of his will to use?


    Hark! he answers—wild tornadoes,
    Strewing yonder sea with wrecks;
    Wasting towns, plantations, meadows,
    Are the voice with which he speaks.
    He, foreseeing what vexations
    Afric’s sons should undergo,
    Fix’d their tyrants’ habitations
    Where his whirlwinds answer—no.


    By our blood in Afric wasted,
    Ere our necks received the chain;
    By the miseries that we tasted,
    Crossing in your barks the main;
    By our sufferings, since ye brought us
    To the man-degrading mart,
    All sustain’d by patience, taught us
    Only by a broken heart;


    Deem our nation brutes no longer,
    Till some reason ye shall find
    Worthier of regard, and stronger
    Than the colour of our kind.
    Slaves of gold, whose sordid dealings
    Tarnish all your boasted powers,
    Prove that you have human feelings,
    Ere you proudly question ours!



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