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Tag: Jacksonville FL

  • James Weldon Johnson’s “My City”

    Image: James Weldon Johnson - Portrait by Laura Wheeler Waring https://npg.si.edu/object/npg_NPG.67.40
    Image: James Weldon Johnson – Portrait by Laura Wheeler Waring

    James Weldon Johnson’s “My City”

    Jacksonville, Florida, native James Weldon Johnson composed his tribute to his adopted New York City in a surprising Petrarchan sonnet.  He reveals the features of city life that he came to love and appreciate and that he will sorely miss after he dies.

    Introduction with Text of “My City”

    James Weldon Johnson’s “My City” is a Petrarchan or Italian sonnet, with the traditional rime scheme:  in the octave ABBACDDC and in the sestet DEDEGG.  The poem features unexpected claims that diverge radically from what readers have come to anticipate in a poem offering a personal, heartfelt tribute.

    Although Johnson was born in Jacksonville, Florida, he lived a portion of his life in New York City, and as this poem attests, he came to love his adopted city.
    He appreciated even the aspects of city life that many find challenging, for example, the crowd of people throning the streets day and night.

    He even appreciated the opportunity to experience the slums that the Manhattan borough had to offer.  That his speaker is accounting for what he will miss most by dying, he is offering a unique type of tribute to the city the he came to love and appreciate.

    My City

    When I come down to sleep death’s endless night,
    The threshold of the unknown dark to cross,
    What to me then will be the keenest loss,
    When this bright world blurs on my fading sight?
    Will it be that no more I shall see the trees
    Or smell the flowers or hear the singing birds
    Or watch the flashing streams or patient herds?
    No, I am sure it will be none of these.

    But, ah! Manhattan’s sights and sounds, her smells,
    Her crowds, her throbbing force, the thrill that comes
    From being of her a part, her subtle spells,
    Her shining towers, her avenues, her slums—
    O God! the stark, unutterable pity,
    To be dead, and never again behold my city!

    Commentary on “My City”

    Poet James Weldon Johnson was a native of Jacksonville, Florida, but this poem offers a tribute to his adopted city, New York City.

    Octave:  What Will Be His Greatest Loss?

    When I come down to sleep death’s endless night,
    The threshold of the unknown dark to cross,
    What to me then will be the keenest loss,
    When this bright world blurs on my fading sight?
    Will it be that no more I shall see the trees
    Or smell the flowers or hear the singing birds
    Or watch the flashing streams or patient herds?
    No, I am sure it will be none of these.

    To begin his tribute to New York City, the speaker poses two questions in the octave:  the first question seeks the answer to what he will consider his greatest loss as he experiences death; the second question merely offers a suggestion as to what his great loss might entail.

    The speaker asks his first question, posing it poetically: he seeks to ascertain and express what he will feel his greatest loss to be after he has died, leaving “this bright world” but a fading memory in his mind’s eye.

    He places on display his abiding love for this world by calling it “this bright world.”  By thus labeling the world “bright,” the speaker makes clear that he has a high regard for God’s creation, which he will regret leaving.  

    He then dramatically and richly portrays death, labeling that state metaphorically “sleep” and giving it the property of “endless night.” He further labels the crossing over from life to death as as “threshold of the unknown dark.” 

    With the second question, he asks if he might mourn the fact that he no longer has the ability to “see trees,” nor does he possess the capability of “smell[ing] the flowers.” 

    He continues musing on the possibilities of his greatest losses and avers that the inability to listen to birds singing would also cause him great pain, which might be his greatest loss.

    The speaker then adds two further possibilities: “watch[ing] the flashing streams” or unhurriedly observing the “patient herds.” The reader will take note that all of these many possible losses stem from the things of nature, ordinarily observed in a bucolic setting.

    Recalling that the title of the poem is “My City,” the reader will not be shocked that the speaker then answers his own question asserting that he is quite certain he will not consider any of these losses his greatest.

    Although leaving them will be painful, because he does enjoy all of those natural gifts from God, he know that none of them cause him as much sorrow as some other loss, yet to be named. 

    Sestet:  Losing the Sights, Sound, Smells of His City


    But, ah! Manhattan’s sights and sounds, her smells,
    Her crowds, her throbbing force, the thrill that comes
    From being of her a part, her subtle spells,
    Her shining towers, her avenues, her slums—
    O God! the stark, unutterable pity,
    To be dead, and never again behold my city!

    In the sestet, the speaker pronounces with an emphatic, fervent anguish that it is “Manhattan” that he will most long for, after death has taken him from this world. 

    The speaker then enumerates the features that entice him and engender in him his deep love for his city: he remains spellbound and holds deep affection the sights, sounds, and smells of “Manhattan,” which is the most densely populated borough of New York City.

    Thus, he adores all those crowds of people streaming through the streets of that borough. In addition to all of these Manhattan things, the speaker will also experience the forfeiture of continuing to experience the “shining towers,” the avenues and even the slums.

    Although some of the items in this catalogue are not especially beautiful nor are they particularly inspiring, specifically to those engrossed in a rustic setting, this speaker possesses an abiding love for those things. He is, therefore, dreading the fact that death will dispossess him of the continued pleasure they have so long afforded him.

    In the speaker’s final outcry, as he verbalizes his mourning, his readers/listeners will understand the melancholy dramatized in his voice. He cries out to his Beloved Lord that it will be such a damnable shame that after he shuffles off the mortal coil, he will never again be able to see his beloved city.

  • James Weldon Johnson’s “Sence You Went Away”

    Image:  James Weldon Johnson – Drawing – Winold Reiss

    James Weldon Johnson’s “Sence You Went Away

    In addition to poetry, James Weldon Johnson also composed many songs that have become popular.  His bluesy poem/song “Sence You Went Away” features a southern dialect and captures the melancholy that surrounds the individual who has lost a loved one.

    Introduction and Text “Sence You Went Away”

    James Weldon Johnson’s “Sence You Went Away” creates a speaker/singer who bemoans the loss of a loved one. The poem/song consists of four stanzas, each with the rime scheme AAAB, wherein the final line constitutes the refrain in which the speaker reveals the reason for his melancholy. 

    The repetition of “seems lak to me” and “sence you went away” emphasizes the pain and sorrow the speaker is experiencing.  The refrain becomes a chant-like repetition as he progresses through his report of all that is making him sad.  And he is addressing his expressions of sorrow to the individual, who is now absent from his life.

    As a poem this works quite well, and as a song it works even more nicely.  The poem/song’s use of dialect gives it an authenticity that increases the communication of pain and sorrow.  The speaker/singer incorporates and inflicts his sorrow on the world around him, while at the same time making it clear that these transformations are happening within himself.

    Sence You Went Away

    Seems lak to me de stars don’t shine so bright,   
    Seems lak to me de sun done loss his light,   
    Seems lak to me der’s nothin’ goin’ right, 
          Sence you went away. 

    Seems lak to me de sky ain’t half so blue,  
    Seems lak to me dat eve’ything wants you,   
    Seems lak to me I don’t know what to do, 
          Sence you went away. 

    Seems lak to me dat eve’ything is wrong,  
    Seems lak to me de day’s jes twice ez long,   
    Seems lak to me de bird’s forgot his song, 
          Sence you went away. 

    Seems lak to me I jes can’t he’p but sigh,   
    Seems lak to me ma th’oat keeps gittin’ dry,   
    Seems lak to me a tear stays in ma eye, 
          Sence you went away.

    Commentary on “Sence You Went Away”

    James Weldon Johnson, an accomplished poet, also composed many songs that have become quite popular. His bluesy “Sence You Went Away” features a southern dialect.  Johnson was a Southerner, having been born in 1871 and raised in Jacksonville, Florida, only relocating to New York in 1901.

    First Stanza:  Expressing Sorrow

    Seems lak to me de stars don’t shine so bright,   
    Seems lak to me de sun done loss his light,   
    Seems lak to me der’s nothin’ goin’ right, 
          Sence you went away. 

    The speaker is addressing an individual, who is likely a former lover or very good friend.  The speaker expresses his sorrow by reporting that both the sun and stars do not seem to be shedding light now because of the absence of the addressee.  The reader/listener learns nothing about the person who has gone away, only that the speaker’s life has been adversely affected by the loved one’s absence. 

    Not only do the speaker’s eyes seem no longer to perceive light, but he also feels that nothing in his life is proceeding correctly.  He makes it clear that he is not asserting that the world itself has changed; he is merely revealing how things “seem” to him as he repeats throughout the poem, “seems lak to me,” that is, “seems like to me.”

    Second Stanza:   Absence of Sun

    Seems lak to me de sky ain’t half so blue,  
    Seems lak to me dat eve’ything wants you,   
    Seems lak to me I don’t know what to do, 
          Sence you went away. 

    The absence of sun and starlight affect the shade of the blue sky, which is now presenting itself as only “half” its normal shade.  Everything reminds him that he is missing his belovèd. It even appears that everything he sees and does yearns to have this individual back in its purview.

    The speaker’s intense exaggeration emphasizes his desire for the return of his missing loved one.  Everywhere he looks he sees merely an absence that causes him pain and suffering.  He even confesses that he feels unable to decide what he should be doing, if anything at all.

    Third Stanza:  Nothing Is Right

    Seems lak to me dat eve’ything is wrong,  
    Seems lak to me de day’s jes twice ez long,   
    Seems lak to me de bird’s forgot his song, 
          Sence you went away. 

    Again, the speaker/singer asserts that nothing seems right for him anymore; thus, he feels that “ev’ything is wrong.” And he reveals that time seems to lag because of his sorrow.  Pain and suffering cause the human mind and heart to feel time as an oppressor, and that kind of oppression makes minutes seem like hours and days like weeks.

    Nature in the form of singing birds is lost on him, and he thus suggests that those birds have even forgotten to sings. His melancholy grays out all of his senses, especially seeing and hearing. Life has lost its luster, light has escaped him, and even pleasant sounds are no longer detectable.  And still again, he repeats the reason for his feeling that everything is so wrong in his life.

    Fourth Stanza:  Fog of Sorrow

    Seems lak to me I jes can’t he’p but sigh,   
    Seems lak to me ma th’oat keeps gittin’ dry,   
    Seems lak to me a tear stays in ma eye, 
          Sence you went away.

    Finally, the speaker reveals his own behavior has been influenced by the sad fact that the addressee has gone away.  He cannot seem to stop sighing, and his throat dries up.  He also continue to weep, as he endures the pain of loss. 

    His physical functions are out of kilter: what needs to be wet is dry, and what needs to be dry is wet.  The speaker’s world has transformed into a melancholy fog of sorrow and disorientation—all because his belovèd has gone away. 

    Kris Delmhorst’s Musical Version of Johnson’s Lyric

    There are extant several different musical versions of James Weldon Johnson’s lyric “Sence You Went Away.”  I suggest that Kris Delmhorst’s rendition fits perfectly with the sentiment and atmosphere of that lyric.  While the other versions are entertaining and well-done, Delmhorst’s version and her singing remain the best in accomplishing the task of capturing the exact feeling of Johnson’s lyric.

    Kris Delmhorst singing her version of Johnson’s “Sense You Went Away”