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19th century African-American Georgia Douglas Johnson Uncategorized United States women poets

“Smothered Fires” by Georgia Douglas Johnson (1880 – 1966)


“…Sometimes a baleful light would rise
   From out the dusky bed,…”


"Smothered Fires"
A woman with a burning flame
   Deep covered through the years
With ashes.  Ah! she hid it deep,
   And smothered it with tears.
Sometimes a baleful light would rise
   From out the dusky bed,
And then the woman hushed it quick
   To slumber on, as dead.
At last the weary war was done
   The tapers were alight,
And with a sigh of victory
   She breathed a soft—good-night!
Source: The Heart of a Woman and Other Poems (The Cornhill Company, 1918)

By TDarris

Thinker. Reader. Writer--- of, and about, a plethora of things.

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