Authors: Frank X. Walker
Dem don't know what it like to stand in the dark
night afta night wrapped in dat buffalo robe he sent
look up at the stars an wonda which ones
is lookin down on him an believe if something bad
happen to him out there dat I would feel it too
When he come home, I don't need him to say he love me
I don't need him to bring me gifts, I just wants him
to hold me close, make like he glad to see me
bend down t'my ear an whisper my name.
York's slave wife
I don't think York knowed
I could see hur too.
Da furst time was in da corna a his eye
while he look far off but stare at
da plate right in front a him.
He didn't say nothin' bout hur
but da way his lips turnt up at da ends
said plenny.
I ain't one t'sass. His growl help me
to know a slave woman's place
so I sits up all night wit both my hands
an ears open, waitin' t'catch hur name
on his lips.
Afta dat, no matta how much he talk
a grizzlies, buffalos, big fish,
mountains, or ochians
she become all I can see
all I wants t'know
It gets so crowded in our lil' place
I swears I can almost smell hur.
An by den I knows one a us will have t'go.
York's slave wife
First, I gets some fresh well wada
an puts it on t'boil
stirs up a tea brewed from
apricot vine, rattlesnake weed
an plenny a honey.
Den I sets him down 'tween my knees
an wit a wooden tooth comb
left t'me by my mamma's mamma
commences t'scratchin at his scalp
'til his shouldas look covad wit snow.
Den I fills up my wash tub wit
boilin' wada doctored wit peppermint root
an sets to scrubbin' him slow enough
fo' the heat t'open his doors.
When his body is clean I starts back t'work
on his head
bustin up a mean suds and usin'
my fingas to walk up an down his scalp
'til he let loose a low moan
an his eyes start t'roll 'round in his head.
Afta I rinses an twists alla forest out
I starts back in wit warm sunflower seed oil
only dis time ev'ry finga make its own lil' circle
while both m'hands make bigga ones
an they follows each otha from da stiff tree limbs
in da back a his neck, cross his crown
t'his soft spot while my thumbs dig in
slow an deep where da headaches come on.
I pours da extra oil inta my hans an rub
his neck an shouldas, down t'his ribs
an arms den like a turtle dance
I moves back up again.
I works slow an hard an afta a while
when I gets alla way t'his man sack
he open his eyes an be glad its me.
York's slave wife
A woman who has a good marriage is said to sleep in a good bed.
âAfrican Proverb
After a tin a apricot vine tea
us use the buffalo skin
as the earth
an pile a bunch a quilts
into something like
a handmade sky
an makes us a real
lodge a sweat
If it based on how much
calling on God
come forth
in the dark
what married people do together
on bended knees
once dem work past dey anger
can be holy too.
It do more harm than good
to be enslaved an agree to love forever
when there be folks over us
with even more power than death
to do   us part.
Being another man's property
alls I can promise is
when we in the same quarters
no one will hold you closer
or with more tenderness than me.
If ever I have to choose between
another day a service an death
I will always choose livin'.
Even if Massa sell me down
the Mississippi tomorrow
or pair me up with another woman
to breed
I will only think on what we had
an chase away thoughts
a what we had not.
I aims to see you ev'ry Sunday an Christmas
but if ever I'm away more than two whole
seasons without sending back word,
untie the ribbons from that broom we jump
mourn for me but a little
then set your mind to figuring
on how you gone stay warm
when winter come.
York's slave wife
Somewhere out dere
he learnt t'touch me
like I'm a woman
an not just some woman.
Me.
In our marriage bed
he seem as intrested
in pleasing me as he be
in spillin' hisself.
I knew he come back
changed
when new words
fall out his mouf like
love an freedom
an manhood.
An dere come a look
in his eye
like he own all three
free an clear
an don't need no papers
t'prove it.
But it scare me
'cause I seent dat look
in many a black eye
b'fo white hammas
nailed it shut
o' left it frozen open
an swingin'
t'teach da rest
what anything dat smell
like courage cost.
I have no doubt
he give his life t'stay
wit me
so I don't tell 'im dat Massa
takin' me back
down south.
I just kiss him soft t'sleep
an stare at him long enough
t'call up his face
when I gets old an thankful
he still be breathing
somewhere
when winta come.
Ol' York
Slow by slow we all try on the white man's Jesus
needing something after throwing away Oludumare
an alla gods us come here wit', believing they left us first
but it clear to me dat a faith dat ask a man an his woman
to bow down an serve anotha man an his chil'ren
just 'cause he white, work betta fo' Massa than him slaves.
The old ones say that in Ile-Ife, in the beginning
us danced our faith. We didn't sit like rows a corn
to listen to a white man say how good the next life be.
'Legba, the trickster be ev'rywhere in this place
blocking alla roads, forcing us to call on the Orisas
in ones 'n twos or hide them up under angels 'n saints.
1 president's dream
plus 2 captains
almost 3 dozen men
one 15 year old Indian wife
her baby
a slave
plus
one 55 foot keelboat
2 pirogues
176 pounds of gun powder
420 pounds of sheet lead for bullets
not enough whiskey
minus gifts a 12 dozen pocket mirrors
4,600 sewing needles
10 pounds a sewing thread
130 plugs a tobacco
for 'bout 15 miles per day
for 3 years
an over 8,000 miles
equal 2 heros
double pay for all
320 acres a land for the men
1600 acres for the captains
an
nothin' for York.
William Clark
Give (a slave) a bad master and he aspires to a good
master; give him a good master, and he wishes to
become his own master.
âFrederick Douglass
I love my servants as much or more
than my friend Lewis
loved his fine Newfoundland, Seaman.
They have become so much a part of this family
it would grieve me mightily to lose any
or to have to sell them off.
I have had to give the lash to almost all my people
since my return,
as they had developed a most sour attitude
which had begun to affect their work.
Any interruption of work
or challenging of my authority
costs me time and money.
I have never cut off a limb or finger,
starved near to death, cuffed women in irons,
or beat any of my negroes stupid like other men.
I provide for their food, clothing, shelter, and medical care.
I treat them like my own children
until they are buried in the grave.
Others think me cruel for not granting manumission
to my boy, York, but what rational business man
would cut a hole in his own purse?
William Clark
I fear you will think I have become a severe master.
âWilliam Clark
I don't know why he thought
he had earned his freedom.
I don't know why he thought
he was more than just a slave.
I don't know why he won't just quit
that woman of his.
I don't know why God made them as easy
to train as mules but twice as ungrateful.
I don't know why he insists
on making me prove who's boss.
If freedom mean never again
hearing one a Ol' York's stories,
never fussing with his Rose,
or getting to hold my wife an family
If it mean never laughing or hunting
with my brothers Juba an Scippio
or teasing Daphny an Nancy
than it not be something
I would barter for.
None a us be free
lessen alla us gets to come an go
as we please.
I never run 'cause alla my family
still belong to Capt. Clark.
Rose
I wish I could feel bad for dat boy, York,
but I can't. He had some hurt comin'.
I feel bad for his wife though,
no tellin' what she gone have t' do
t' survive down south.
Blisterin' sun an' cotton fields
ain't no place fo' a woman.
She was a lil' foolish fo' choosin' him,
but a good wife is what she was, too good
fo' his heavy hands an pigheaded ways.
After she gone, maybe he'll 'preciate
what he had. He did his share a knockin'
an' now he gettin' his on both ends.
Dat fool really only love the forest,
an up 'til he come back here still a slave,
was a pretty good wife to Massa Clark,
but don't tell Ol' York I said dat.
If dat boy fell off a cliff
his daddy say “look at my boy fly,”
an' get mad if you say diffrent.
Jonathan and Edmund Clark
I don't like him nor does any other person in this
country.
âEdmund Clark
The great expedition to the Pacific
secured our brother's career in politics
but made a monster of his boy York.
He and Lewis returned as national heroes
and York was so full of himself you'd have thought
he led the trek.
He strutted around here stirring up Negroes
and looking good, decent pillars of our society
right in the eye.
He threw everything away he'd been taught
and walked and talked as if seeing the ocean
had made him a white man.
Brother trounced him severely
and even had him thrown in the caleboos for his
impudence and drunkenness in St. Louis.
Somewhere out there he forgot his duties as a slave.
He took advantage of our brother's weakness
for him and set a terrible example for the others.
We'd as soon see him sold south to New Orleans
or run north rather than have him around to poison
all our good Negroes.
When I says good-bye to my wife
a voice tell me to squeeze
an hold her tight 'cause I ain't
never gone see or hold her again.
Don't know how I knowed
but since Ol' York took me into the woods