
Monthly Archives: October 2023
Busy Friday

Even though I am working from home today, I have a lot of work to do. I have to prepare for my lecture for class next week and make up the their midterm exam. Creating a midterm might not sound like a hard task, but it’s will be posted online for them to do over the next week, and the system we use is not exactly intuitive. It might take me most of the day to figure it out and get it done correctly. Also, I am going out to dinner with a friend tonight, which will be a nice relaxing time to decompress after the stress of this week.
Good Morning

Today’s goals: Coffee and kindness. Maybe two coffees, and then kindness.”
– Nanea Hoffman
Nanea Hoffman (@NaneaHoffman) describes herself as the Founder/Principle of Sweatpants & Coffee and creator of the mental health mascot, the Anxiety Blob. Writer, dreamer, coffee lover, blanket fort dweller.
Pic of the Day

Even though it’s October and temperatures are supposed to be cooling down (they will next week), it feels like we are finally having the summer that wasn’t this year.
Getting Back to Normal

It seems that things at work are finally settling back down. I looked at my calendar this morning, and other than a very short meeting today, nothing else is on my schedule. Other than my usual Tuesday and Thursday class, I don’t have a class scheduled for another professor for the rest of the month. In fact, other than some regular weekly meetings, my calendar is pretty empty. Next week I have some doctor appointments, my schedule is open. It’s nice to take it easy in the morning and not be rushed to get ready and get to the office early to have enough time to get everything done.
Compensation

Compensation
By James Edwin Campbell
O, rich young lord, thou ridest by
With looks of high disdain;
It chafes me not thy title high,
Thy blood of oldest strain.
The lady riding at thy side
Is but in name thy promised bride.
Ride on, young lord, ride on!
Her father wills and she obeys,
The custom of her class;
’Tis Land not Love the trothing sways—
For Land he sells his lass.
Her fair white hand, young lord, is thine,
Her soul, proud fool, her soul is mine,
Ride on, young lord, ride on!
No title high my father bore;
The tenant of thy farm,
He left me what I value more:
Clean heart, clear brain, strong arm
And love for bird and beast and bee
And song of lark and hymn of sea,
Ride on, young lord, ride on!
The boundless sky to me belongs,
The paltry acres thine;
The painted beauty sings thy songs,
The lavrock lilts me mine;
The hot-housed orchid blooms for thee,
The gorse and heather bloom for me,
Ride on, young lord, ride on!
About the Poem
Campbell was among the first African-American poets to write in the African-American vernacular dialect. “Compensation” is one of his poems in which he did not use the African-American vernacular dialect. His first book, Driftings and Gleanings, a volume of poetry and essays in standard American English, was published in 1887.
In “Compensation,” Campbell uses the image of a young lord riding around observing his serfs. It is an analogy for the sharecropping system developed in the South after the American Civil War. After the Civil War, former slaves sought jobs, and planters sought laborers. The absence of cash or an independent credit system led to the creation of sharecropping, a system where the landlord/planter allows a tenant to use the land in exchange for a share of the crop. This encouraged tenants to work to produce the biggest harvest that they could and ensured they would remain tied to the land and unlikely to leave for other opportunities.
Serfdom was the status of many peasants under feudalism, specifically relating to manorialism and similar systems. It was a condition of debt bondage and indentured servitude with similarities to and differences from slavery, just as sharecropping was. It developed during the Late Antiquity and Early Middle Ages in Europe and lasted in some countries until the mid-19th century. Unlike slaves but similar to sharecroppers, serfs could not be bought, sold, or traded individually though they could, depending on the area, be sold together with land.
“Compensation” is a contrast between the “young lord” who believes he is above it all and intimidates all those who live on his land. In the poem, land is the most important thing to the young lord, it is how he keeps his aristocratic lifestyle. In the South, the planters had lost all of their free labor and were at risk of losing their status at the top of Southern society. The young lord is said to “ridest by/ With looks of high disdain.” He shows his power over people with his haughtiness.
Campbell though points out how even though bonded by sharecropping, the black tenant farmers were still better off than when they were slaves, though in actuality that is debatable. They weren’t owned, but their debts were, and sharecropping became a form of debt bondage. Cambell’s speaker in the poem says that while he was not left land by his father like the young lord, he did have a “clean heart, clear brain, strong arm.”
I think the picture above is a nice complement to the poem. It reminds me of the folktale, “The Emperor’s New Clothes.” The story is about a vain emperor who gets exposed before his subjects. His vanity causes the emperor to be a naked fool to his subjects. In the poem, the young lord is also vain and believes he is above all others, but his “subjects” have something he does not have, a “clean heart, clear brain, strong arm.”
About the Poet
James Edwin Campbell was born on September 28, 1867, in Pomeroy, Ohio. He graduated from Pomeroy Academy in 1884. While still in school, he began to write poetry and stories in dialect.
A poet, essayist, and educator, Campbell published two books in his lifetime: Driftings and Gleanings (State Tribune, 1887), a compilation of poems and essays; and Echoes from the Cabin and Elsewhere (Donohue & Henneberry, 1895), a full collection of poetry.
Campbell taught for two years at Buck Ridge, near Gallipoli, Ohio, and became involved in Republican politics in his state. He then ventured into journalism, writing for the West Virginia-based newspaper, Pioneer. He left the paper to return to education. Campbell led Langston School in Point Pleasant, West Virginia, and, from 1892–94, became the first president of West Virginia Colored Institute (now, West Virginia State College). In the mid-1890s, Campbell moved to Chicago and wrote for the Chicago Times-Herald, while publishing poems in other periodicals.
Campbell died on January 26, 1896, of typhoid pneumonia while visiting his parents for Christmas. He published his last poem, “Homesick,” on December 7, 1895, in the Chicago Conservator. It was reprinted in an Ohio newspaper.
A Day Off

It’s Monday again, However, on this Monday, I have the day off because I worked on Saturday. I got up and fed Isabella, now I’m going back to bed. Of course this means that when I wake up again, Isabella will try to trick me into feeding her again. It never works, but she always tries anyway.
Have a wonderful day, everyone!











