paroles de chanson Foreward, 1619 - Sho Baraka feat. Adan Beane & C. Lacy
The
devil
goes
to
and
fro
Like
a
lion
seeking
someone
to
devour
Resist
him
Don't
close
the
book,
I
got
more
to
write
You
can
change
the
story,
that
is
my
advice
I
read
in
color,
they
see
black
and
white
You
just
saw
the
cover,
but
there's
more
to
life
Don't
close
the
book,
I
got
more
to
write
You
can
change
the
story,
that
is
my
advice
I
read
in
color,
they
see
black
and
white
You
just
saw
the
cover,
but
there's
more
to
life
Yeah,
hello
Quick
introduction
before
I
narrate
I'm
from
the
west,
between
Cornel
and
Kanye
I
grew
up
between
section
eight
and
cloud
nine
During
my
youth
I
lost
my
sense
of
being
colorblind
In
between
white
supremacy
and
black
nihilism
AME
churches,
corner
stores
and
the
prison
systems
Hoteps
and
preachers
on
the
block,
they
was
dropping
wisdom
I
would
pick
it
up
and
just
give
it
a
little
rhythm
They
said
my
lineage
had
a
couple
of
kings
A
couple
queens,
a
couple
thieves,
a
couple
fiends
Despite
the
struggle,
I
would
teach
that
we
are
equal
I
fall
short
like
a
midget
but
I'm
down
for
the
people
The
people,
argue
I
died
with
integration
Their
false
liberation
is
really
assimilation
The
youth
view
my
history
with
some
suspicion
They
wanna
progress
past
religion
and
tradition
I
say
Don't
close
the
book,
I
got
more
to
write
You
can
change
the
story,
that
is
my
advice
I
read
in
color,
they
see
black
and
white
You
just
saw
the
cover,
but
there's
more
to
life
Don't
close
the
book,
I
got
more
to
write
You
can
change
the
story,
that
is
my
advice
I
read
in
color,
they
see
black
and
white
You
just
saw
the
cover,
but
there's
more
to
life
Hello
average,
let
me
introduce
you
to
awesome
That
Harlem
renaissance
age
had
some
excellent
artists
That
miseducation,
that
midnight
marauding
That
life
before
Eve
ate
that
fruit
in
the
garden
They
say
'You
might
be
on
the
wrong
side
of
history'
Well,
that
depends
on
who's
writing
Who's
reciting,
who's
typing
and
who
likes
it
If
we
want
peace
somebody
has
to
do
the
fighting
We
exit
Egypt,
happy
to
speak
resistance
Then
turn
around,
and
ask
pharaoh
for
his
assistance
Huh,
what
is
logic
to
the
ignorant?
What's
forgiveness
to
people
who
think
they're
sinless?
We
are
those,
fully
exposed,
Adam
and
Eve
hiding
our
weakness
Folks
who
wanna
be
close
but
the
devil
stands
between
us
Who
knows
the
dirty
souls
with
an
urgent
need
to
be
cleaned
up
They
oppose
my
solution,
everybody
hates
Jesus
Don't
close
the
book,
I
got
more
to
write
You
can
change
the
story,
that
is
my
advice
I
read
in
color,
they
see
black
and
white
You
just
saw
the
cover,
but
there's
more
to
life
Don't
close
the
book,
I
got
more
to
write
You
can
change
the
story,
that
is
my
advice
I
read
in
color,
they
see
black
and
white
You
just
saw
the
cover,
but
there's
more
to
life
Yeah,
what's
protest
to
the
law?
Should
I
pray
or
should
I
riot?
Do
I
want
peace,
or
do
I
want
power
so
I
can
try
it?
Who's
gonna
give
the
truth
when
these
church
moms
retire?
When
censorship
gets
you
fired
and
nobody
gets
inspired
I
don't
care
what
you
look
like,
black,
white
or
magenta
I
don't
care
where
you
come
from,
Africa
or
placenta
We
all
desperate
and
broken,
given
the
same
dilemma
Do
I
serve
God,
or
do
I
make
off
in
my
agenda?
I
remember
thinking
I
was
Daniel
with
the
lions
I'm
like
Israel
in
hiding
when
it's
time
to
fight
Goliath
I've
been
broken,
I've
seen
death
working
I've
fought
doubt,
I've
been
knocked
out,
I
know
what
hurt
is
I
run
from
the
truth,
but
I
know
where
the
church
is
I
failed
doing
my
job
but
yet
I
know
my
purpose
Praise
Jesus
I
was
blind
but
now
I
see
But
my
problem
is
I
think
I
see
too
many
things
Let
us
chiropractic
crack
open
the
spine
of
this
book
Turn
a
few
pages
and
take
a
deep
look
This
is
not
the
Catcher
in
the
Rye
This
is
the
African
who
caught
the
slave
catcher's
eye
Yet
an
invisible
man
who
has
the
whole
world
watching
Shall
we
meet
the
protagonist?
For
I
am
the
colored
cog
in
the
capitalist
wheel
With
baby
faced
bronze
skin
and
melanin
appeal
snatched
from
the
craterless
civilization
My
name
is
Louis
Portier
Arrived
on
these
shores
but
I've
got
more
to
say
From
Bali
to
Barbados
to
Beaufort,
South
Carolina
Sierra
Leone
to
Sapelo,
with
Sugar
cane
on
my
fingertips
and
shackles
on
my
feet
There
are
limitations
to
a
man
so
pity
me
until
I
sunk
my
tooth
into
Juneteenth
Freedom
tastes
like
grandma's
sweet
potato
pie
But
it
goes
from
master's
plantation
to
mass
incarceration
As
the
Jim
Crow
flies,
all
of
this
happened,
more
or
less
This
is
Up
From
Slavery,
meets
Porgy
and
Bess
August
Wilson,
and
Kenya
Barris
James
Brown
and
James
Burr
Kehinde
Wiley,
and
Kara
Walker
George
Carrothers,
Clinton
and
Washington
Carver,
the
great
migration
and
reconstruction
From
black
wall
streets,
to
Harlem
Artilliers
This
is
black
survival
and
success,
put
on
full
display
Whether
it's
the
Little
Rock,
or
the
Charleston
Nine
Trying
to
integrate,
or
praying
to
stay
alive
Thinking
that
if
my
work
was
good
somehow
y'all
would
recognize
my
personhood
But
nah,
instead
I
had
to
hustle
this
chocolate
charm
This
black
brilliance,
this
ebony
ingenuity
I
know
what
this
nation
has
done,
can
do,
and
is
doing
to
me
Also
what
it
could
be
and
therefore
still,
I
rise
From
1619
and
beyond
here
I
stand
From
being
three-fifths
of
a
compromised
plan
Using
the
breath
in
my
black
lungs
Shouting
words
from
a
place
of
black
love
'I
am
a
man'
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