W’en
daddy face to face did lay,
With thet grim monster, death,
He
called me to him an’ did say
With his almost las’ breath: –
“Now
Zeke, I’m goin’ to leave ye soon –
Sho, Sho, now don’t begin –
An'
promise me ter keep in tune
Yer daddy’s violin.
“I
kennot take it over there,
Tho’ oft I wish I might,
So
I must leave it in yer care,
Now promise, Zeke, to-night.
“It’s
cheered my heart fer many years,
It’s kep’ me frum despair;
It’s
kep’ away the doubts an’ fears
Uv a life full uv care.
“An’
Zeke, w’en storms uv life rip things,
Jes’ take the violin,
An’
draw the bow across the strings,
An’ let yer heart jine in.
“But,
w’en I’m gone – there, there my boy, –
Jes’ lay it on my breast,
An’
leave it there in silent joy
Tell I am laid to rest.
“Then
take it, use it, make it sing!
T’will keep ye out of sin!”
Then
he fell back, an’ every string
Snapped on that violin.
But
years hev passed since daddy died,
How quickly they hev sped!
An’
oftentimes w’en sore an’ tried
I hev
been comforted,
As
daddy said I would; an’, too,
I hev been kep’ frum sin,
By
stayin’ in the long nights through
To play his violin.
July
11, ‘91
Pub.
in Boston
Leader,
Sept.
1, ‘91
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