Songs and Ballads of the Southern People 1861-1865 Quotes

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Songs and Ballads of the Southern People 1861-1865 Songs and Ballads of the Southern People 1861-1865 by Frank Moore
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Songs and Ballads of the Southern People 1861-1865 Quotes Showing 1-1 of 1
“Farewell, we must part; we have turned from the land
Of our cold-hearted brother, with tyrannous hand,
Who assumed all our rights as a favor to grant,
And whose smile ever covered the sting of a taunt;

Who breathed on the fame he was bound to defend—
Still the craftiest foe, ’neath the guise of a friend;
Who believed that our bosoms would bleed at a touch,
Yet could never believe he could goad them too much;

Whose conscience affects to be seared with our sin,
Yet is plastic to take all its benefits in;
The mote in our eye so enormous has grown,
That he never perceives there’s a beam in his own.”
Frank Moore, Songs And Ballads Of The Southern People, 1861-1865