Happy 140th birthday, Paul Laurence Dunbar!

In Summer
by Paul Laurence Dunbar

Oh, summer has clothed the earth
In a cloak from the loom of the sun!
And a mantle, too, of the skies’ soft blue,
And a belt where the rivers run.

And now for the kiss of the wind,
And the touch of the air’s soft hands,
With the rest from strife and the heat of life,
With the freedom of lakes and lands.

I envy the farmer’s boy
Who sings as he follows the plow;
While the shining green of the young blades lean
To the breezes that cool his brow.

He sings to the dewy morn,
No thought of another’s ear;
But the song he sings is a chant for kings
And the whole wide world to hear.

He sings of the joys of life,
Of the pleasures of work and rest,
From an o’erfull heart, without aim or art;
‘T is a song of the merriest.

O ye who toil in the town,
And ye who moil in the mart,
Hear the artless song, and your faith made strong
Shall renew your joy of heart.

Oh, poor were the worth of the world
If never a song were heard,—
If the sting of grief had no relief,
And never a heart were stirred.

So, long as the streams run down,
And as long as the robins trill,
Let us taunt old Care with a merry air,
And sing in the face of ill.

Click here to read a biography of Dunbar.

KONY 2012

From the CBC (Canadian Broadcasting Company), a video interview with Charles Okwir, who escaped from Joseph Kony’s Lord’s Resistance Army.

From NPR’s On the Media, “What To Make of Kony 2012,” an interview with New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof.

From NPR’s On the Media, “The Kony that Ugandans Know,” an interview with Musa Okwonga, a writer and musician of Ugandan descent who wrote about the Kony 2012 phenomena for the British newspaper The Independent.

From New York Public Radio’s The Brian Lehrer Show, “Kony 2012’s Ripple Effect,” an interview with Millton Allimadi, publisher of Black Star News, and Rosebell Kagumire, Ugandan journalist and editor at ch16.org.