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W’en I Gits Home

Paul Laurence Dunbar

It’s moughty tiahsome layin’ ‘roun’
Dis sorrer-laden earfly groun’,
An’ oftentimes I thinks, thinks I,
‘T would be a sweet t’ing des to die,
    An’ go ‘long home.

Home whaih de frien’s I loved ‘ll say,
“We’ve waited fu’ you many a day,
Come hyeah an’ res’ yo’se’f, an’ know
You’s done wid sorrer an’ wid woe,
    Now you’s at home.”

W’en I gits home some blessid day,
I ‘lows to th’ow my caihs erway,
An’ up an’ down de shinin’ street,
Go singin’ sof’ an’ low an’ sweet,
    W’en I gits home.

I wish de day was neah at han’,
I’s tiahed of dis grievin’ lan’,
I’s tiahed of de lonely yeahs,
I want to des dry up my teahs,
    An’ go ‘long home.

Oh, Mastah, won’t you sen’ de call?
My frien’s is daih, my hope, my all.
I ’s waitin’ whaih de road is rough,
I want to hyeah you say, “Enough,
    Ol’ man, come home!”
Online text © 1998-2008 Poetry X. All rights reserved.
From The Complete Poems of Paul Laurence Dunbar | Dodd, Mead And Company, 1922
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