- I Ain't Got Time to Tarry
"I Ain't Got Time to Tarry", also known as "The Land of Freedom", is an American song written by
blackface minstrel composerDan Emmett . It premiered in a minstrel show performance byBryant's Minstrels in late November 1858. The song was published inNew York City in 1859.The
lyrics tell of a black man in theNorthern United States who is homesick for the South. He decides to return to the South, as illustrated in the chorus::For I'se gwine home to Dinah,:Yes, I am gwine home.:Den I ain't got time to tarry, I ain't got time to dwell,:I'm bound to de land of freedom, oh, niggars! fare you well. ["Bryant's Power of Music", New York, 1859. Quoted in Nathan 354.]
The pining ex-slave scenario was a common idiom of blackface minstrelsy during the 1850s. Emmett would repeat it in other songs, including "
Johnny Roach " and "Dixie". [Emmett's authorship of "Dixie" is contested; see "Dixie" (song).]Emmett's later "
I'm Going Home to Dixie " reuses the tune to "I Ain't Got Time to Tarry".Notes
References
*Nathan, Hans (1962). "Dan Emmett and the Rise of Early Negro Minstrelsy". Norman: University of Oklahoma Press.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.