Freedom's Noble Cause Poem by Marcus Mosiah Garvey

Freedom's Noble Cause

Rating: 5.0


1. Behold the day, a cent'ry old,
When fathers' cares were lifted off:
No more, as chattels to be sold,
On block on farm, on ship or wharf.


2. The sins of other men had made
The world a living hell those days:
But even as all sin do fade,
The curse is gone, true freedom says.


3. Profound regret we manifest
That slavery brought us here:
But God has done for us the best,
And kept us in His kindly care.


4. And now we rise as children new,
To fight the battles fresh and keen:
Our people, then, were sad and few,
But now the millions can be seen.


5. Good Buxton fought for us the fight
With Knibbs, Wilberforce, Clarkson, too:
They saw the awful, dreary night
That shadowed us, of darkest hue.


6. The hearts of England, called they out,
Good Christian men, as they did prove:
No stone unturned was left about,
To ease us from the hellish grove.


7. A century of histories
Has brought us salving, trusting laws;
And so we bless their memories,
And sing for freedom's noble cause.

COMMENTS OF THE POEM
Edward Kofi Louis 12 February 2015

Nice piece of work. Thanks for sharing this poem with us. E.K.L.

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