African American Poetry: A Digital Anthology

Mary Ashe Lee, "Tawawa" (undated; 1894)

This is the excerpt of a poem as published in The Work of the Afro-American Woman (1894). As of now, we have not been able to track down the original poem in its entirety. The author is speaking of Wilberforce University, an HBCU in Ohio, where her husband taught and later led as University President. -AS


     Where the hoary-headed winter
     Dwells among the leafless branches,
     Filling all the earth with whiteness,
     Freezing all the streams and brooklets,
     And with magic fingers working
     With his frosty threads of lace work
     Wraps the land in sweet enchantment.
                                         * * *
     Thus the site of Wilberforce is,
     Wilberforce, the colored Athens.
     But another name she beareth,
     Which the Indians call Tawawa.
     I will tell you of Tawawa;
     She the pride in all of Piqua,
     Pride of all the Shawnee nation,
     Child of love and admiration.
     In the bosom of the forest,
     Of Ohio's primal forest,
     Stood a wigwam, lone and dreary,
     With its inmates sick and weary;
     Snow-drifts covered all the doorway;
     Still the snow kept falling, falling,
     And the winds were calling, calling
     Round the wigwam of Winona.
     Far had gone the good Owego
     To the lakes in north Ohio,
     Looking for some ven'son for her:
     Scarce was everything that winter.
     Thus Winona, weeping, sighing,
     On her bed of deerskin lying,
     Pressing fondly to her bosom,
     With a mother's love, a blossom,
     Which the Spirit sent to cheer her,
     Sent to coo and nestle near her;
     Cried Winona, in her anguish,
     For she feared the child would languish,
     “Oh, sweet Spirit, hear thy daughter;
     Give us bread, as well as water!”
     Then a vision passed before her,
     And its scenes did quite restore her,
     For she saw the dogwood blossom.
     Now she had her father's wisdom,
     So she knew that these white flowers
     Came to speak of brighter hours,
     Speak of sunshine and of plenty.
     “Ah, my wee, wee pickaninny,
     I will call you the white flower,
     My Tawawa, whitest flower!”

Published in The Work of the Afro-American Woman, 1894
 

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