excerpt from 'His Eye Is On the Sparrow' pp. 122 (99 words)

excerpt from 'His Eye Is On the Sparrow' pp. 122 (99 words)

part of

His Eye Is On the Sparrow

original language

urn:iso:std:iso:639:ed-3:eng

in pages

122

type

text excerpt

encoded value

However, I remained fairly indifferent toward that great war. My life was full and interesting. I imagine that the attitude of most Philadelphia Negroes toward World War I might have been summed up by the Boardola Brothers, two boys who played music on wash-boards. A song they sang went: "I don't think I want to go. The white folks makes the law Let white folks fight the war." They were wildly applauded when they appeared at the Standard Theatre. But one night the Army came right out on the stage and took them away. They, too, had been drafted.

appears in search results as

excerpt from 'His Eye Is On the Sparrow' pp. 122 (99 words)

1428235664139:

reported in source

1428235664139

documented in
Page data computed in 339 ms with 1,769,120 bytes allocated and 35 SPARQL queries executed.