ZAZA — THE FEMALE SLAVE
O, my country, my country! How long I for thee, Far over the mountain, Far over the sea. Where the sweet Joliba, Kisses the shore, Say, shall I wander By thee never more? Where the sweet Joliba kisses the shore, Say, shall I wander by thee never more.
Say, O fond Zurima, Where dost thou stay?
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Say, doth another List to thy sweet lay? Say, doth the orange still Bloom near our cot? Zurima, Zurima, Am I forgot? O, my country, my country, how long I for thee, Far over the mountain, far over the sea.
Under the baobab Oft have I slept, Fanned by sweet breezes That over me swept. Often in dreams Do my weary limbs lay 'Neath the same baobab, Far, far away. O, my country, my country, how I long for thee, Far over the mountain, far over the sea.
O, for the breath Of our own waving palm, Here, as I languish, My spirit so calm— O, for a draught From our own cooling lake, Brought by sweet mother, My spirit to wake. O, my country, my country, how I long for thee, Far over the mountain, far over the sea.
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