Skip to content
Linespedia

Lula Johnson's Song

Topics: classic

Written in Quinn Chapel, A. M. E. Church, Ninth and Walnut Streets, Louisville, Ky., Wednesday evening, October 16th, 1907, while Miss Lula E. Johnson was singing "Ave Maria."     I have heard the mock-bird singing when the orchards were in bloom,     And the sweetness of his music made the peacock don his plume;     Ay! I've heard cock-robin-redbreast chirping on a sunny day,     And the skylark soaring skywards, merrily sing his festal lay;     And the brown thrush and the bluebird thrill their little treble notes;     All the woodland songsters pouring songs of gladness from their throats -     But not one has touched so deeply, and not one has last so long     As the ever ringing cadence of sweet Lula Johnson's song!     When the breeze has ceased to whisper and the night is soft and still,     Save the awe-provoking shrilling of the ghastly whippoorwill,     As the moonbeams pour down brightly on the woodland, hill and dale,     I oft listen at my window to the queenly nightingale;     But no song of merry woodland, neither hill, nor dale, nor dell,     Has ever smote my bosom, nor has made my spirit swell,     Like the soul-inspiring music that so softly glides along     Oh! so softly and so gently in sweet Lula Johnson's song!     Oh! my soul has caught the music, as it softly floats along -     Ah! the soul-entrancing music of sweet Lula Johnson's song!     If my feet shall ever falter, it shall cheer me on my way;     Ay, sustain and give me comfort, - make my feeble spirit gay.     All we need to have, my brothers, in our war of peace 'gainst strife,     Is the cadence of sweet music sprinkled in to sweeten life;     It will sweeten all our bitters, which now seem so very long,     If we have it soft and gentle, as sweet Lula Johnson's song.     In the lonely hours of midnight, when fair Luna 'gins to pale,     I have heard her songs a-ringing, floating softly on the gale.     And I hope when dawns the morning, when I draw my fleeting breath,     When my friends are gathered 'round me, and my eyes are closed in death -     Ere you throw the sods upon me, on my never-heaving breast,     While my body's lying silent and my soul is seeking rest -     Then I'll wing straight home to glory, for the journey won't be long,     On the spirit-wafting music of sweet Lula Johnson's song!

AI analysis available. Enable JavaScript to interact.

About this line

"Written in Quinn Chapel, A. M. E. Church, Ninth and Walnut Streets, Louisville, Ky., Wednesday evening, October 16th, 1907, while Miss Lula E. Johnson was singing "Ave Maria."..."

Exploring the themes of classic, Edward Smyth Jones delivers a powerful performance in "Lula Johnson's Song"... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

Classified Tags

Related lines

"I am a pilgrim far from home,         A wanderer like Mars,     And thought my wanderings ne'er should come,         So fixed behind the bars!"

"On seeing her December 25th, 1904, after two years' travel.     Take, fair maid, these simple lines         From my pen;     Think of strollings"

"There is nothing so sweet as our life in our dreams,         When we soar far on fancy's swift wing;     For a thing in our dreams is all that i"

"A blossom pink, a blossom blue,         Make all there is in love so true.     'Tis fit, methinks, my heart to move,         To give it thee, s"

"Here morning in the ploughman's songs is met     Ere yet one footstep shows in all the sky,     And twilight in the east, a doubt as yet,     S"

"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

Continue Reading

"I am a pilgrim far from home,         A wanderer l..."

Weekly Poetic Insight

Join our literary Sanctuary

Get the most inspiring lines, poetic analysis, and secret shayaris delivered to your inbox every Sunday.