University of Virginia Library

Ajax at the Centennial.

1897.

Ajax went over to Nashville,
To attend the great centennial;
And a white man asked him rashly
About the race in general.
“Ajax, tell me the whole sequel;
Your father was my father's slave,
And now you stand as my equal,
On this educational wave.”

208

And Ajax paused for a moment,
Slightly hanging down his head;
And then from the depth of conscience,
These are the words that he said:
“You know it was sixteen-nineteen,
When my first African brother,
Sailed over here in a canteen,
And called America his mother.
He climbed up degradation's hill,
Two hundred and fifty years;
And over the Israelitic rills,
He waded through heartaches and tears.
In his efforts to leave degradation,
He was cramped, doomed in a cell;
Dishearten'd, discontent'd, discourag'd,
By a prejudice born in hell.
But through God's work, who guides man's life,
The world's second Moses came;
And through the sea of civil strife,
Brought freedom instead of shame.
From there we started out in life,
To make a mark as a race;
But someone's ever causing strife,
Bringing on us a disgrace.

209

You take the thousand oppressions,
That are hurled into our face;
And change them to progression,
Then we will be a race.
My sir, it is a well-known fact,
That the Negroes' aim is high,
And if they'll stop holding him back,
He'll reach them unless he dies.
He's in the national government,
He's been a military man;
And in these United States,
He's been surveyor of lands.
He's widely known in medicine,
He's faced millions as teacher;
Thundered his eloquence at the bar,
He can't be excelled as preacher.
And in hundreds of newspapers,
He tones up ideas and thoughts;
In connection with his people,
To show what they have wrought.
As for a Southern laboring man,
His equal cannot be found;
And to find a regular Negro tramp,
You must search the country 'round.

210

In scholarship he's stood the test,
In the institute's at home;
And 'cross the sea—without a jest,
His eloquence is known.
He's writing poetry books and prose,
To scatter over the land;
To show the depth from which he 'rose,
The height where now he stands.
A hundred thousand students now,
Behind the study desk;
Have fix'd a frown upon their brow,
They will not be oppressed.
I think I see the coming time,
When this curs'd lynching land;
Will see the Negro's worth sublime,
And claim him as a man.
And my dear sir, fifty years hence,
When your grandchildren stand;
Ajax grandchildren's recompense,
Will show an equal man.
A hundred years from now my friend,
Could you and I peep back;
We cannot tell your children then,
From those of poor Ajax.