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Authors: Zora Neale Hurston

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H
arris, Hattie and one-eyed Fred Tate went on with their plans for the complete overthrow of Rev. Pearson thru the public chastisement of Sister Berry, but things began to happen in other directions.

While she held a caucus one afternoon with supporters, Hambo sat at Zeke's house and sent one of Zeke's children to find John.

“John, youse in boilin' water and tuh you—look lak 'tain't no help fuh it. Dat damn 'oman you got b'lieves in all kinds uh roots and conjure. She been feedin' you outa her body fuh years. Go home now whilst she's off syndicatin' wid her gang—and rip open de mattress on yo' bed, de pillow ticks, de bolsters, dig 'round de door-steps in front de gate and look and see ain't some uh yo' draws and shirt-tails got pieces cut offa 'em. Hurry now, and come back and let us know whut you find out. G'wan! Don't stop tuh race yo' lip wid mine, and don't try tuh tell me whut you think. Jes' you g'wan do lak Ah tell yuh.”

John Pearson went and returned with a miscellany of weird objects in bottles, in red flannel, and in toadskin.

“Lawd, Hambo, here's uh piece uh de tail uh—uh shirt Ah had 'fo' Lucy died. Umph! Umph! Umph!”

“Ha! Ah wuz spectin' dat!”

“Whut kin Ah do 'bout it, Hambo?”

“Give it here. Less take it tuh uh hoodoo doctor and turn it back on her, but whut you got tuh do is tuh beat de blood outa her. When you draw her wine dat breaks de spell—don't keer whut it is.”

“Don't you fret 'bout dat. Ah 'bominates sich doings. She gointer git her wine drawed dis day, de Lawd bein' may helper. Ahm goin' on home and be settin' dere when she come.”

Hattie saw the hole at the gate and the larger one at the front steps before she entered the yard. Inside, the upturned rugs, the ripped-up beds, all had fearful messages for her. Who had done this thing? Had her husband hired a two-headed doctor to checkmate her? How long had he been suspecting her? Where was he now?

“Hattie,” John called from the dining-room. She would have bolted, but she saw he made ready to stop her. She stood trembling in the hallway like a bird before a reptile.

“Whut you jumpin' on me fuh?” she cried out as he flung himself upon her.

“You too smart uh woman tuh ast dat, and when Ah git th'ew wid you, you better turn on de fan, and make me some tracks Ah ain't seen befo' do Ahm gointer kill yuh. Hoodooin' me! Stand up dere, 'oman, Ah ain't hit you yet.”

And when the neighbors pulled him from her weakening body he dropped into a chair and wept hard. Wept as he had not wept since his daughter's serious illness, emptying out his feelings.

Hattie fled the house, not even waiting to bathe her wounds nor change her clothes. When John's racking sobs had ceased, the stillness after the tumult soothed him. He bathed and slept fourteen hours. In the morning he wrote to each of his children a shy letter. On the third day Hattie struck. He was sued for divorce.

“Ahm sho glad,” he told Zeke and Hambo, “she made me
jes' ez happy by quittin' ez Lucy did when she married me.”

“Yeah, but if she prove adultery on you in de cotehouse, you sho goin' tuh lose yo' church,” Hambo warned. “You got tuh fight it.”

T
ime is long by the courthouse clock.

John Pearson sat restlessly in his seat. Sitting alone except for Zeke's oldest son. Zeke had to work that day and his sister-in-law excused herself on the grounds that she “never had been to any courthouse and she didn't want no bother with it. Courthouses were bad luck to colored people—best not to be 'round there.” Many of the people John had approached for witnesses had said the same thing. “Sho, sho,” they wanted him to win, but “you know dese white folks—de laws and de cotehouses and de jail houses all b'longed tuh white folks and po' colored folks—course, Ah never done nothin' tuh be 'rested 'bout, but—Ah'll be prayin' fuh yuh, Elder. You bound tuh come out more'n conquer.”

So John sat heavily in his seat and thought about that other time nearly thirty years before when he had sat handcuffed in Cy Perkins' office in Alabama. No fiery little Lucy here, thrusting her frailty between him and trouble. No sun of love to rise upon a gray world of hate and indifference. Look how they huddled and joked on the other side of the room. Hattie, the destroyer, was surrounded by cheer. Sullen looks his way. Oh yes, she had witnesses!

Mule-faced, slew-foot Emma Hales was there—rolling her cock-eye triumphantly at him. Why should she smite out at his
head? He remembered the potato pones, the baked chicken with corn-bread dressing, the marble cake, the potato pies that he had eaten in her house many times. He had eaten but never tarried. Never said a word out of the way to her in all his life. He wondered, but Emma knew. She remembered too well how often he had eaten her dinners and hurried away to the arms of the gray-eyed Ethel.

Deacon Harris now outwardly friendly, but he had been told weeks before of Harris's activity against him. Harris should not be hostile, he had taken no woman who loved Harris, for none had wanted him. His incompetence was one of the behind-hand jokes of the congregation. He was blind to human motives but Harris hated him with all the fury of the incompetent for the full-blooded loins.

The toadies were there. Armed with hammers. Ever eager to break the feet of fallen idols. Contemptuous that even the feet of idols should fall among them. No fury so hot as that of a sycophant as he stands above a god that has toppled from a shrine. Faces of gods must not be seen of him. He has worshipped beneath the feet so long that if a god but lowers his face among them, they obscene it with spit. “Ha!” they cried, “what kind of a divinity is this that levels his face with mine? Gods show feet—not faces. Feet that crush—feet that crumble—feet that have no eyes for men's suffering nor ears for agony, lest indeed it be a sweet offering at God's feet. If gods have no power for cruelty, why then worship them? Gods tolerate sunshine, but bestir themselves that men may have storms. From the desolation of our fireplaces, let us declare the glory. If he rides upon the silver-harnessed donkey, let us cry ‘hosanna'. If he weeps in compassion, let us lynch him. The sky-rasping mountain-peak fills us with awe, but if it tumbles into the valley it is but boulders. It should be burst asunder. Too long it has tricked us into worship and filled our souls with envy. Crush! Crush! Crush! Lord, thou hast granted thy servant the boon of pounding upon a peak.”

So the toadies were there. Vindictively setting the jaw-muscles. Taking folks for fools! But, yes they would testify.
Their injury was great. Let his silk-lined broadcloth look to itself. They meant to rip it from his back today. Think of it, folks! We rip up broadcloth and step on Stetsons. Costly walking-sticks can be made into wood for the cook stove.

Hattie was a goddess for the moment. She sat between the Cherubim on the altar of destruction. She chewed her gum and gloated. Those who held themselves above me, shall be abased. Him who pastored over a thousand shall rule over none. Even as I. His name shall be a hissing, and Hattie's shall be the hand that struck the harp. Selah. Let the world hiss with Hattie. If he but looked with longing! But no, only hurt and scorn was in his eyes. Hurt that so many of his old cronies surrounded her and scorn of herself. Let him ache! If she could but ache him more!

Court was set. The waves of pang that palpitated in the room did not reach up to the judge's bench. No. His honor took his seat as a walrus would among a bed of clams. He sat like a brooding thought with his eyes outside the room. It was just another day with the clerk and the stenographer.

“Hattie Pearson, pwop wah blah!”

John saw the smirking anticipation on the faces of the lawyers, the Court attendants, the white spectators, and felt as if he had fallen down a foul latrine.

“Now, how was it, Hattie?” The look around the room at the other whites, as if to say, “Now listen close. You're going to hear something rich. These niggers!”

“So you wanta quit yo' husband, do you, Hattie? How come? Wasn't he all right? Is
that
him? Why he looks like he oughta be okeh. Had too many women, eh? Didn't see you enough, is that it? Ha! ha! couldn't you get yo'self another man on the side? What you worrying about a divorce for? Why didn't you g'wan leave him and get yourself somebody else? You got divorce in yo' heels, ain't you? You must have the next one already picked out. Ha! ha! Bet he ain't worth the sixty dollars.”

So it went on with each of the witnesses in turn. John laughed grimly to himself at the squirming of prospective
witnesses who would have fled but found it too late. One by one he saw four of his erstwhile intimates take the stand against him.

Finally the Clerk cast about for defense witnesses, “Say, Reverend, where's
yo'
witnesses?”

“Ain't got none.”

“Why? Couldn't you find anybody to witness for you?”

“Yes suh, but who kin tell de truth and swear dat he know uh man ain't done nothin' lak dat?”

The Court laughed, but sobered with a certain respect.

“You want to enter a plea of denial?”

“Naw suh. Ahm goin' tuh say Ah did it all.”

“You don't care, then, if Hattie has her freedom?”

“Naw suh, Ah sho don't. Matters uh difference tuh me whut she do, uh where she go.”

The fun was over in the Court. Whisperings. Formalities. Papers. It was all over. He saw former friends slinking off to avoid his eye. Hattie was outside, flourishing her papers with over-relish. Loud talking and waving them as if they were a certificate of her virtue.

Hambo's short sturdy legs overtook John as he went down the marble steps, and Hambo's big hand smacked his shoulders.

“Well, you, ole mullet-headed tumble-bug, you!”

John eyed him wearily, “How come didn't but four uh y'all testify aginst me? Ah thought Ah had five friends.”

“You———!” Hambo went into a fit of most obscene swearing, “why didn't you call me fuh uh witness? Didn't Ah tell yuh to?”

“Yeah, but—”

“Take yo' but out my face. Ah wanted tuh git up dere and talk some chat so bad 'til de seat wuz burning me. Ah wanted tuh tell 'bout de mens Ah've knowed Hattie tuh have. She could make up uh 'scursion train all by herself. Ah wanted tuh tell de judge 'bout all dat conjure and all dem roots she been workin' on you. Feedin' you outa her body—.”

“And dat's how come Ah didn't have 'em tuh call yuh. Ah
didn't want de white folks tuh hear 'bout nothin' lak dat. Dey knows too much 'bout us as it is, but dey some things dey ain't tuh know. Dey's some strings on our harp fuh us tuh play on and sing all tuh ourselves. Dey thinks wese all ignorant as it is, and dey thinks wese all alike, and dat dey knows us inside and out, but you know better. Dey wouldn't make no great 'miration if you had uh tole 'em Hattie had all dem mens. Dey spectin' dat. Dey wouldn't zarn 'tween uh woman lak Hattie and one lak Lucy, uh yo' wife befo' she died. Dey thinks all colored folks is de same dat way. De only difference dey makes is 'tween uh nigger dat works hard and don't sass 'em, and one dat don't. De hard worker is uh good nigger. De loafer is bad. Otherwise wese all de same. Dass how come Ah got up and said, ‘Yeah, Ah done it,' 'cause dey b'lieved it anyhow, but dey b'lieved de same thing 'bout all de rest.”

It was late afternoon when John stumbled out of the courthouse with his freedom that had been granted to Hattie.

“You tellin' de truth, John,” Hambo agreed at last, “but don't you come puttin' me in wid dem other crabs. Don't you come talkin' tuh
me
lak dat! Ah knock yuh so dead dat yuh can't eben fall. Dey'll have tuh push yuh over. Pick up dem damn big foots uh your'n and come on up tuh mah house. Ah got barbecued spare-ribs and death puddin' ready cooked.”

On the way over there was a great deal of surface chatter out of Hambo. John kept silent except when he had to answer. At Hambo's gate he paused. “Ain't it funny, Hambo, you know all uhbout me. Us been friends fuh twenty years. Don't it look funny, dat all mah ole pleasures done got tuh be new sins? Maybe iss 'cause Ahm gittin' ole. Havin' women didn't useter be no sin. Jus' got sinful since Ah got ole.”

“'Tain't de sin so much, John. You know our people is jus' lak uh passle uh crabs in uh basket. De minute dey see one climbin' up too high, de rest of 'em reach up and grab 'em and pull 'im back. Dey ain't gonna let nobody git nowhere if dey kin he'p it.”

S
econd Sunday in the month came rolling around. Pastoral day. Covenant meeting. Communion service. But before all this must come Conference meeting on the Saturday night before, and John knew and everybody knew what the important business of the meeting would be. Zion Hope, after seventeen years, was going to vote on a pastor. Was John Pearson to be given a vote of confidence? Not if Hattie's faction prevailed. Would Felton Cozy receive the call? Not if Hambo and the John Pearson faction was still alive.

Everybody was there. John opened the meeting as usual, then stepped down and turned the chair over to Deacon Hoffman. “I know we all come here tuhnight tuh discuss some things. Ah'd ruther not tuh preside. Deacon Hoffman.”

Hoffman took the chair. “Y'all know whut we come here for. Less get thru wid de most urgent business and den we kin take up new business.”

He fumbled with the pile of hymnals on the table and waited. There was an uneasy shuffling of feet all over the room, but nobody arose to put a motion. Finally Hattie got up about the middle of the center aisle.

“Brother Cherman.”

“Sister Pearson.”

“Ah wants tuh lay charges 'ginst mah husband.”

Hambo was on his feet.

“Brother Cherman! Brother Cherman!”

“Sister Pearson got de flo', Brer Hambo.”

“She ain't got no business wid it. She's entirely out uh order.”

“She ain't. She says she got charges tuh make uhginst her husband. Dat's whut uh Conference meetin' is for in uh Baptis' Church—tuh hear charges and tuh rectify, ain't it?”

“Yeah,” Hambo answered, “but dis woman ain't got no husband in dis church, Brother Cherman. We ain't got no right listenin' tuh nothin' she got tuh say. G'wan back where you come from, Hattie, and try to improve up from uh turpentine still.”

“Dat's right, too,” shouted Sister Watson, “been divorced two weeks tuh mah knowin'.”

“Better set down, Sister Pearson, 'til we kin git dis straight,” Hoffman said, reluctantly.

“Iss straight already,” Andrew Berry shouted, “when uh woman done gone tuh de cotehouse and divorcted uh man she done got her satisfaction. She ain't got no mo' tuh say. Let de mess drop. Ah ain't goin' tuh hear it.”

“And another thing,” Hambo put in. “Elder Pearson, you oughta git up and tell whut you found in yo' bed. Course he beat uh, and 'tain't uh man under de sound uh mah voice but whut wouldn't uh done de same. G'wan tell it, Rev'und.”

“Naw, no use tuh sturry up de stink. Let it rest. Y'all g'wan do whut yuh want tuh.”

There was a long, uncomfortable silence.

“G'wan talk, Harris, you and de rest dat's so anxious tuh ground-mole de pastor, but be sho and tell where
you
wuz yo'self when you seen him do all of dis y'all talkin' 'bout. Be sho and tell dat too. Humph! Youse jes' ez deep in de mud ez he is in de mire.”

Another long silence. Finally Hoffman said, “De hour is growin' late. Less table dis discussion and open up de house fuh new business.”

Soon the meeting was over. John, Hambo and Berry walked home together.

“If Harris and dem had uh called dat meetin' de nex' day after cote, it would a been uh smuttie rub, nelly eve'ybody would have been uhginst yuh, but two weeks is too long fuh colored tuh hold onto dey feeling. Most of 'em don't keer one way uh 'nother by now.”

“Still plenty of 'em is 'ginst me,” John spoke at last. “It made mah flesh crawl—Ah felt it so when Ah wuz in dere.”

“But dey ain't got no guts. Dey wants tuh do dey work under cover. Dey got tuh fight war if dey wants tuh win dis battle, and dey needs cannon-guns. You can't fight war wid uh brick.”

John said nothing. His words had been very few since his divorce. He was going about learning old truths for himself as all men must, and the knowledge he got burnt his insides like acid. All his years as pastor at Zion Hope he had felt borne up on a silken coverlet of friendship, but the trial had shown him that he reclined upon a board, thinly disguised. Hambo had tried vainly to bring him around. A few others had done their share. A few he recognized among the congregation as foes, avowedly; a few friends in the same degree. The rest he saw would fall in line and toady if he triumphed, and execrate him if he failed. He felt inside as if he had been taking calomel. The world had suddenly turned cold. It was not new and shiny and full of laughter. Mouldy, maggoty, full of suck-holes—one had to watch out for one's feet. Lucy must have had good eyes. She had seen so much and told him so much it had wearied him, but she hadn't seen all this. Maybe she had, and spared him. She would. Always spreading carpets for his feet and breaking off the points of thorns. But and oh, her likes were no more on this earth! People whom he had never injured snatched at his shoddy bits of carpet and sharpened the thorns for his flesh.

Nobody pushed him uphill, but everybody was willing to lend a hand to the downward shove. Oh for the wings, for the
wings of a dove! That he might see no more what men's faces held!

Sunday afternoon, the sunlight filtered thru the colored glass on the packed and hushed church. Women all in white. Three huge bouquets of red hibiscus below him and behind the covered Communion table. As he stood looking down into the open Bible and upon the snow-white table, his feelings ran riot over his body. “He that soppeth in the dish with me.” He knew he could not preach that Last Supper. Not today. Not for many days to come. He turned the pages while he swallowed the lump in his throat and raised:

Beloved, Beloved, now are we the sons of God

And it doth not yet appear what we shall be

But we know, but we know

When He shall appear, when He shall appear

We shall be like Him

We shall see Him as He is.

The audience sang with him. They always sang with him well because group singers follow the leader.

Then he began in a clear, calm voice.

“Brothers and Sisters: De song we jus' sung, and seein' so many uh y'all out here tuh day, it reaches me in uh most particular manner. It wakes up uh whole family uh thoughts, and Ahm gointer speak tuh yuh outa de fullness uh mah heart. Ah want yuh tuh pray wid me whilst Ah break de bread uh life fuh de nourishment uh yo' souls.

“Our theme this morning is the wounds of Jesus. When the father shall ast, ‘What are these wounds in thine hand?' He shall answer, ‘Those are they with which I was wounded in the house of my friends.' Zach. 13:6.

“We read in the 53rd Chapter of Isaiah where He was wounded for our transgressions and bruised for our iniquities, and the apostle Peter affirms that His blood was spilt from before the foundation of the world.

“I have seen gamblers wounded. I have seen desperadoes
wounded; thieves and robbers and every other kind of characters, law-breakers and each one had a reason for his wounds. Some of them was unthoughtful, and some for being overbearing, and some by the doctor's knife, but all wounds disfigure a person.

“Jesus was not unthoughtful. He was not overbearing. He was never a bully. He was never sick. He was never a criminal before the law and yet He was wounded. Now, a man usually gets wounded in the midst of his enemies, but this man was wounded, says the text, in the house of His friends. It is not your enemies that harm you all the time. Watch that close friend. Every believer in Christ is considered His friend, and every sin we commit is a wound to Jesus. The blues we play in our homes is a club to beat up Jesus, and these social card parties.

Jesus have always loved us from the foundation of the world

When God

Stood out on the apex of His power

Before the hammers of creation

Fell upon the anvils of Time and hammered out the ribs of the earth

Before He made any ropes

By the breath of fire

And set the boundaries of the ocean by the gravity of His
power

When God said, ha!

Let us make man

And the elders upon the altar cried, ha!

If you make man, ha!

He will sin

God my master, ha!

Father!! Ha-aa!

I am the teeth of time

That comprehended de dust of de earth

And weighed de hills in scales

That painted de rainbow dat marks de end of de parting storm

Measured de seas in de holler of my hand

That held de elements in a unbroken chain of controllment.

Make man, ha!

If he sin I will redeem him

I'll break de chasm of hell

Where de fire's never quenched

I'll go into de grave

Where de worm never dies, Ah!

So God A 'mighty, Ha!

Got His stuff together

He dipped some water out of de mighty deep

He got Him a handful of dirt

From de foundation sills of de earth

He seized a thimble full of breath

From de drums of de wind, ha!

God, my master!

Now I'm ready to make man

Aa-aah!

Who shall I make him after? Ha!

Worlds within worlds begin to wheel and roll

De Sun, Ah!

Gethered up de fiery skirts of her garments

And wheeled around de throne, Ah!

Saying, Ah, make man after me, ha!

God gazed upon the sun

And sent her back to her blood-red socket

And shook His head, ha!

De Moon, ha!

Grabbed up de reins of de tides.

And dragged a thousand seas behind her

As she walked around de throne

Ah-h, please make man after me

But God said “NO!”

De stars bust out from their diamond sockets

And circled de glitterin' throne cryin'

A-aah! Make man after me

God said, “NO!”

I'll make man in my own image, ha!

I'll put him in de garden

And Jesus said, ha!

And if he sin,

I'll go his bond before yo' mighty throne

Ah, He was yo' friend

He made us all, ha!

Delegates to de judgment convention

Ah!

Faith hasn't got no eyes, but she' long-legged

But take de spy-glass of Faith

And look into dat upper room

When you are alone to yourself

When yo' heart is burnt with fire, ha!

When de blood is lopin' thru yo' veins

Like de iron monasters (monsters) on de rail

Look into dat upper chamber, ha!

We notice at de supper table

As He gazed upon His friends, ha!

His eyes flowin' wid tears, ha! He said

“My soul is exceedingly sorrowful unto death, ha!

For this night, ha!

One of you shall betray me, ha!

It were not a Roman officer, ha!

It were not a centurion

But one of you

Who I have chosen my bosom friend

That sops in the dish with me shall betray me.”

I want to draw a parable.

I see Jesus

Leaving heben with all of His grandeur

Dis-robin' Hisself of His matchless honor

Yielding up de scepter of revolvin' worlds

Clothing Hisself in de garment of humanity

Coming into de world to rescue His friends.

Two thousand years have went by on their rusty ankles

But with the eye of faith, I can see Him

Look down from His high towers of elevation

I can hear Him when He walks about the golden streets

I can hear 'em ring under His footsteps

Sol me-e-e, Sol do

Sol me-e-e, Sol do

I can see Him step out upon the rim bones of nothing

Crying I am de way

De truth and de light

Ah!

God A 'mighty!

I see Him grab de throttle

Of de well ordered train of mercy

I see kingdoms crush and crumble

Whilst de archangels held de winds in de corner chambers

I see Him arrive on dis earth

And walk de streets thirty and three years

Oh-h-hhh!

I see Him walking beside de sea of Galilee wid His disciples

This declaration gendered on His lips

“Let us go on to the other side”

God A'mighty!

Dey entered de boat

Wid their oarus (oars) stuck in de back

Sails unfurled to de evenin' breeze

And de ship was now sailin'

As she reached de center of de lake

Jesus was sleep on a pillow in de rear of de boat

And de dynamic powers of nature became disturbed

And de mad winds broke de heads of de Western drums

And fell down on de lake of Galilee

And buried themselves behind de gallopin' waves

And de white-caps marbilized themselves like an army

And walked out like soldiers goin' to battle

And de zig-zag lightning

Licked out her fiery tongue

And de flying clouds

Threw their wings in the channels of the deep

And bedded de waters like a road-plow

And faced de current of de chargin' billows

And de terrific bolts of thunder—they bust in de clouds

And de ship begin to reel and rock

God A'mighty!

And one of de disciples called Jesus

“Master!! Carest Thou not that we perish?”

And He arose

And de storm was in its pitch

And de lightnin' played on His raiments as He stood on the
prow of the boat

And placed His foot upon the neck of the storm

And spoke to the howlin' winds

And de sea fell at His feet like a marble floor

And de thunders went back in their vault

Then He set down on de rim of de ship

And took de hooks of His power

And lifted de billows in His lap

And rocked de winds to sleep on His arm

And said, “Peace, be still.”

And de Bible says there was a calm.

I can see Him wid de eye of faith.

When He went from Pilate's house

Wid the crown of seventy-two wounds upon His head

I can see Him as He mounted Calvary and hung upon de cross
for our sins.

I can see-eee-ee

De mountains fall to their rocky knees when He cried

“My God, my God! Why hast Thou forsaken me?”

The mountains fell to their rocky knees and trembled like a
beast

From the stroke of the master's axe

One angel took the flinches of God's eternal power

And bled the veins of the earth

One angel that stood at the gate with a flaming sword

Was so well pleased with his power

Until he pierced the moon with his sword

And she ran down in blood

And de sun

Batted her fiery eyes and put on her judgment robe

And laid down in de cradle of eternity

And rocked herself into sleep and slumber

He died until the great belt in the wheel of time

And de geological strata fell aloose

And a thousand angels rushed to de canopy of heben

With flamin' swords in their hands

And placed their feet upon blue ether's bosom, and looked
back at de dazzlin' throne

And de arc angels had veiled their faces

And de throne was draped in mournin'

And de orchestra had struck silence for the space of half an
hour

Angels had lifted their harps to de weepin' willows

And God had looked off to-wards immensity

And blazin' worlds fell off His teeth

And about that time Jesus groaned on de cross, and

Dropped His head in the locks of His shoulder and said, “It
is finished, it is finished.”

And then de chambers of hell exploded

And de damnable spirits

Come up from de Sodomistic world and rushed into de smoky
camps of eternal night,

And cried, “Woe! Woe! Woe!”

And then de Centurion cried out,

“Surely this is the Son of God.”

And about dat time

De angel of Justice unsheathed his flamin' sword and ripped
de veil of de temple

And de High Priest vacated his office

And then de sacrificial energy penetrated de mighty strata

And quickened de bones of de prophets

And they arose from their graves and walked about in de
streets of Jerusalem

I heard de whistle of de damnation train

Dat pulled out from Garden of Eden loaded wid cargo goin'
to hell

Ran at break-neck speed all de way thru de law

All de way thru de prophetic age

All de way thru de reign of kings and judges—

Plowed her way thru de Jurdan

And on her way to Calvary, when she blew for de switch

Jesus stood out on her track like a rough-backed mountain

And she threw her cow-catcher in His side and His blood
ditched de train

He died for our sins.

Wounded in the house of His friends.

That's where I got off de damnation train

And dat's where you must get off, ha!

For in dat mor-ornin', ha!

When we shall all be delegates, ha!

To dat Judgment Convention

When de two trains of Time shall meet on de trestle

And wreck de burning axles of de unformed ether

And de mountains shall skip like lambs

When Jesus shall place one foot on de neck of de sea, ha!

One foot on dry land, ah

When His chariot wheels shall be running hub-deep in fire

He shall take His friends thru the open bosom of an
unclouded sky

And place in their hands de “hosanna” fan

And they shall stand 'round and 'round his beatific throne

And praise His name forever, Amen.

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