Constab Ballads
CONSTAB
BALLADS
CLAUDE
McKAY
CONSTAB BALLADS
BY THE SAME AUTHOR
To be had in Jamaica from Aston Gardner & Co., Harbour Street Kingston (price 1s. 6d. net, postage 2d.); and in London from the Jamaica Agency, Gamage Building, Holborn, E.C. (price 2s. net, postage 2d.).
CONSTAB BALLADS
BY
CLAUDE McKAY
London:
WATTS & CO.,
17 JOHNSON’S COURT, FLEET STREET, E.C.
1912
To
LIEUT.-COL. A. E. KERSHAW,
INSPECTOR-GENERAL OF CONSTABULARY,
AND TO
INSPECTOR W. E. CLARK,
UNDER WHOM THE AUTHOR HAD
THE HONOUR OF SERVING,
THIS VOLUME IS
RESPECTFULLY AND GRATEFULLY DEDICATED.
PREFACE
Let me confess it at once. I had not in me the stuff that goes to the making of a good constable; for I am so constituted that imagination outruns discretion, and it is my misfortune to have a most improper sympathy with wrong-doers. I therefore never “made cases,” but turning, like Nelson, a blind eye to what it was my manifest duty to see, tried to make peace, which seemed to me better.
Moreover, I am, by temperament, unadaptive; by which I mean that it is not in me to conform cheerfully to uncongenial uses. We Blacks are all somewhat impatient of discipline, and to the natural impatience of my race there was added, in my particular case, a peculiar sensitiveness which made certain forms of discipline irksome, and a fierce hatred of injustice. Not that I ever openly rebelled; but the rebellion was in my heart, and it was fomented by the inevitable rubs of daily life––trifles to most of my comrades, but to me calamities and tragedies. To relieve my feelings, I wrote poems, and into them I poured my heart in its various moods. This volume consists of a selection from these poems.
The life was, as it happened, unsuited to me, and I to it; but I do not regret my experiences. If I had enemies whom I hated, I also had close friends whom I loved.
One word in conclusion. As constituted by the authorities the Force is admirable, and it only remains for the men themselves, and especially the sub-officers, to make it what it should be, a harmonious band of brothers.
C. McK.
Page | ||
---|---|---|
DE ROUTE MARCH | 11 | |
FLAT-FOOT DRILL | 13 | |
BENNIE’S DEPARTURE | 15 | |
CONSOLATION | 23 | |
FIRE PRACTICE | 26 | |
SECOND-CLASS CONSTABLE ALSTON | 28 | |
LAST WORDS OF THE DYING RECRUIT | 30 | |
BOUND FE DUTY | 33 | |
BUMMING | 34 | |
DE DOG-DRIVER’S FRIEN’ | 37 | |
TO INSPECTOR W. E. CLARK | 39 | |
PAPINE CORNER | 40 | |
DISILLUSIONED | 43 | |
COTCH DONKEY | 46 | |
ME WHOPPIN’ BIG-TREE BOY | 48 | |
A RECRUIT ON THE CORPY | 50 | |
PAY-DAY | 52 | |
THE APPLE-WOMAN’S COMPLAINT | 57 | |
KNUTSFORD PARK RACES | 59 | |
THE HEART OF A CONSTAB | 62 | |
FE ME SAL | 64 | |
THE BOBBY TO THE SNEERING LADY | 66 | |
THE MALINGERER | 69 | |
A LABOURER’S LIFE GIVE ME | 71 | |
FREE! | 73 | |
COMRADES FOUR | 74 | |
TO W. G. G. | 76 | |
SUKEE RIVER | 78 | |
GLOSSARY | 81 |
This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published before January 1, 1930.
The longest-living author of this work died in 1948, so this work is in the public domain in countries and areas where the copyright term is the author's life plus 76 years or less. This work may be in the public domain in countries and areas with longer native copyright terms that apply the rule of the shorter term to foreign works.
Public domainPublic domainfalsefalse