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Kentucky Belle
Summer of 'sixty-three, sir, and Conrad was gone away— |
Gone to the county-town, sir, to sell our first load of hay— |
We lived in the log house yonder, poor as ever you've seen; |
Roschen there was a baby, and I was only nineteen. |
Conrad, he took the oxen, but he left Kentucky Belle. |
How much we thought of Kentuck, I couldn't begin to tell— |
Came from the Blue-Grass country; my father gave her to me |
When I rode north with Conrad, away from the Tennessee. |
Conrad lived in Ohio—a German he is, you know— |
The house stood in broad cornfields, stretching on, row after row. |
The old folks made me welcome; they were kind as kind could be; |
But I kept longing, longing, for the hills of the Tennessee. |
Oh, for a sight of water, the shadowed slope of a hill! |
Clouds that hang on the summit, a wind that never is still! |
But the level land went stretching away to meet the sky— |
Never a rise, from north to south, to rest the weary eye! |
From east to west, no river to shine out under the moon, |
Nothing to make a shadow in the yellow afternoon: |
Only the breathless sunshine, as I looked out, all forlorn; |
Only the rustle, rustle, as I walked among the corn. |
When I fell sick with pining, we didn't wait any more, |
But moved away from the cornlands, out to this river shore— |
The Tuscarawas it's called, sir—off there's a hill, you see— |
And now I've grown to like it next best to the Tennessee. |
I was at work that morning. Some one came riding like mad |
Over the bridge and up the road—Farmer Rouf's little lad. |
Bareback he rode; he had no hat; he hardly stopped to say, |
"Morgan's men are coming, Frau; they're galloping on this way. |
"I'm sent to warn the neighbors. He isn't a mile behind; |
He sweeps up all the horses—every horse that he can find. |
Morgan, Morgan the raider, and Morgan's terrible men, |
With bowie knives and pistols, are galloping up the glen!" |
The lad rode down the valley, and I stood still at the door; |
The baby laughed and prattled, playing with spools on the floor; |
Kentuck was out in the pasture; Conrad, my man, was gone. |
Nearer, nearer, Morgan's men were galloping, galloping on! |
Sudden I picked up baby, and ran to the pasture bar. |
"Kentuck!" I called—"Kentucky!" She knew me ever so far! |
I led her down the gully that turns off there to the right, |
And tied her to the bushes; her head was just out of sight. |
As I ran back to the log house, at once there came a sound— |
The ring of hoofs, galloping hoofs, trembling over the ground— |
Coming into the turnpike out from the White Woman Glen— |
Morgan, Morgan the raider, and Morgan's terrible men. |
As near they drew and nearer, my heart beat fast in alarm; |
But still I stood in the doorway with baby on my arm. |
They came, they passed; with spur and whip in haste they sped along— |
Morgan, Morgan the raider, and his band, six hundred strong. |