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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Legend of Goat Island, by Peter A. Porter
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: A Legend of Goat Island
-
-Author: Peter A. Porter
-
-Illustrator: C. Breckinridge Porter
-
-Release Date: September 7, 2016 [EBook #53002]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A LEGEND OF GOAT ISLAND ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Edwards, Jana Palkova and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Illustration
-
- "He wore his Sacred Order's gown,
- A long loose robe of reddish brown."
-
-
-
-
- A LEGEND
-
- OF
-
- GOAT ISLAND
-
- Ascribed to FATHER LOUIS HENNEPIN, who visited
- Niagara in 1678
-
- BY
-
- PETER A. PORTER
-
- Sketches by C. BRECKINRIDGE PORTER
-
- THE GAZETTE PRESS, NIAGARA FALLS, N. Y.
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT
- BY
- PETER A. PORTER
- 1900
-
-
-
-
-A LEGEND OF GOAT ISLAND
-
-
-
-
- It is told in Indian story,
- Dim tradition of the race,
- How, to God's eternal glory,
- And through His all-saving grace,
- Many a warrior's heart was stirred
- To belief in His ever-living Word,
- And the Faith that saves us all,
- By a Priest, whose holy mission
- Overcame their superstition
- About the Island, which divides
- Niagara's tumultuous tides,
- At the brink of the mighty Fall.
-
- Here is the story, as 'tis told
- In one of the chronicles of old.
-
-
- 'Twas many a year ago, when o'er
- The land on Ni-a-gára's shore
- The Neuter tribe held sway.
- On its western bank, above, but near,
- Where rapids begin, in wild career
- Toward the Fall, and down as low
- As a bark canoe could safely go,
- One of their villages lay.
- In that village by the river,
- Late one eve, when bow and quiver
- Had been laid aside,
- And the warriors were sitting
- In the silence, deemed befitting
- To an Indian's pride,
- A stranger in their midst appeared,
- Whose hoary locks and silvery beard
- Were to their vision strange and weird.
- He was a man of giant size,
- Which found him favor in their eyes,
- As, at his priestly garb amazed,
- In silent wonderment they gazed.
-
- He wore his Sacred Order's gown,
- A long loose robe of reddish brown,
- Across his shoulders, lightly flung,
- The cape and cowl backward hung,
- Around his waist a rope was twined,
- A girdle and a scourge combined;
- While from it, hanging loose and free,
- Suspended hung the rosary.
- He was the first of stranger race
- They e'er had met with, face to face,
- Though they knew that such-frocked men
- Had visited their brethren.
- When they saw him, brave and squaw
- Viewed him with a reverend awe.
-
- A wanderer, all alone he came,
- He bore no weapons, gave no name.
- He said his errand was to teach
- The glories of the Life to be,
- When, after death, men's spirits reach
- The confines of Eternity,
- And, as he spake in Indian speech,
- They listened most attentively.
- For he had dwelt for many a day
- Mid Indian tribes, far, far away,
- And thus had learnt the Indian tongue
- From those whom he had dwelt among.
- So, sullenly, they let him share
-
- Their fire's warmth and frugal fare,
- And then they suffered him to tell
- His mission in the way he chose,
- Though little cared they what befell
- Their souls, so they but feasted well,
- And were victorious o'er their foes.
-
- Later on, as they were sitting
- In the fire's cheerful light,
- Shadows round them weirdly flitting,
- As the moon rose into sight,
- The stranger asked, in tones of wonder,
- Whence that sound of endless thunder,
- That dull, reverberating sound
- That seemed to shake the very ground?
-
- For answer, came the Chief's command,
- "Be patient, you shall understand."
- And, knowing Indian nature well,
- He waited till they chose to tell.
-
- Later yet, when chill and hoary
- Lay the frost upon the ground,
- And the moon in all her glory
- Bathed in light the scene around,
- The Chieftain rose, around him drew
-
- The bison skin of tawny hue,
- And signed to the priest to follow.
- He led him through a dense dark wood
- Where many a lofty pine tree stood,
- Then through a winding hollow;
- Whence, as they suddenly emerged,
- The rushing rapids 'neath them surged
- O'er many a rocky ledge.
- Taking, down stream, their silent way
- Toward the rising cloud of spray,
- They reached the Cataract's edge;
- And, from a jutting shelf of stone,
- Saw Ni-a-gára, then unknown,
- Save to the red man's Race alone.
- Earth's grandest sight, conceived to be
- The emblem of God's majesty.
-
- Ne'er has the scene which 'neath them lay
- Been chronicled aright,
- For no one, in a fitting way,
- By pen, nor pencil, _can_ portray
- The grandeur of that sight.
-
- The Priest, as by the view amazed,
- Long at the Falls and Rapids gazed,
- But not a word he spoke,
- Then crossed himself, as if in awe,
- And 'twas a holy sight he saw.
- At last he turned him to his guide,
- Who stood, like statue, by his side
- And thus the silence broke:
-
- "For two years past I've often longed
- This wondrous sight to see,
- And memory has oft been thronged
- With stories told to me
- By one, upon whose brow I traced
- God's holy Cross, a chief
- In whose narration I have placed
- An absolute belief.
- The glories, which I now behold,
- In words, somewhat like these, he told:
- 'Towards the Sun's ascending beam,
- Whoe'er his journey takes,
- Will reach a broad and rapid stream
- Which joins two mighty lakes.
- Midway in this river's course
- A wondrous fall is found
- Where, with an overwhelming force
- The waters, rushing in their might,
- Plunge downward o'er a fearful height
- With a stupefying sound.
- Right at the precipice so steep,
- Where the river takes this awful leap,
- Is placed an Island, small in size,
- But like an earthly paradise,
- For lovelier spot is nowhere found
- Than this, our Indian burial ground;
- Where none, unless with honor crowned,
- Can ever be interred.
- None but brave men e'er can reach
- It's wooded shore and rocky beach,
- Whereon the sound of human speech
- Is scarcely ever heard.
- For on this Isle deep-buried lie
- The bones of many a Brave,
- And Indian chiefs invariably
- Ask this spot for their grave.
- Thus it has been, in days of yore,
- And it is my earnest prayer,
- That, when this mortal life is o'er,
- And my soul is on the other shore,
- My bones may be buried there.
- That Ni-a-gáh-ra's mighty roar
- So solemn, grand and deep,
- May be my dirge forevermore
- As 'twixt its Falls I sleep.'
- "Since he told me I've often prayed
- That hither I might be led,
- And to my vision be displayed,
- In its scenic majesty arrayed,
- The fairest spot God ever made,
- This Island of the dead."
-
- The Chief assented, "All you heard
- Was true to the minutest word;
- But one more fact I must unfold
- Ere all the Island's tale is told,
- Note its wondrous situation,
- 'Tis our Spirit's dread abode;
- 'Tis a spot that, since Creation,
- Coward's foot has never trod.
- None but warriors can reach it,
- Others, should they dare to try,
- So our old traditions teach it,
- As they touch its soil, they die."
-
- "All that is false," the Priest replied,
- "Whoever taught you that has lied;
- Strong words, I know, but justified,
- For God alone, who gave us breath,
- Has power over life and death."
-
- The Chief declared, "His faith is best
- Who dares to put it to the test.
- I judge men's faith in but one way,
- 'Tis what they do, not what they say.
- If you believe that you'll survive,
- I'll take you there tonight,
- And, if you tread its shore alive,
- Will own that you are right;
- Then, I'll believe in what you preach,
- And worship Him of whom you teach."
-
- The Priest responded, "Now 'tis clear,
- Why I have been directed here.
- Your sacred Island is to be
- My means of proving conclusively
- To Indian Tribes forevermore
- The power of Him whom I adore.
- An early proof is all I crave,
- For never yet did Indian brave,
- Who'd traveled far to deal the blow
- Of death to his relentless foe
- With greater joy await the hour
- That placed his victim in his power
- Than I impatiently await
- The moment yonder Isle I reach,
- And thereby clearly demonstrate
- The holy precepts that I teach.
- So come, tho' here I fain would stay
- My beads to tell and prayers to say,
- I'll worship God on the Island's shore
- After the test you name is o'er."
-
- A look of wonder and surprise
- Shone in the Indian Chieftain's eyes,
- His sole reply, "So let it be,
- Your death shall pay the penalty."
-
- In perfect silence back they went,
- Each on the coming voyage intent.
- When the village they had reached,
- To where his bark canoe lay beached
- The Chieftain turned aside.
- (The bison skin, he flung therein),
- Quickly he launched it, in he leapt,
- And, waiting till the Priest had stept
- Into his place, he bade him kneel,
- So the bark might ride on even keel,
- Then pushed it out on the tide.
- Swiftly it darted from the land,
- Propelled by strong and fearless hand,
- Over the dangerous current flies,
- As the Chief the paddle rapidly plies,
- Until, the wildest portion crossed,
- The frail canoe is no longer tossed
- By curling waves, but floats, awhile,
- On the quiet stream above the Isle,
- Towards whose beach it slowly glides
- For weal or woe, as its voyage betides.
-
- The Priest stood up, above his head
- The holy Cross he raised,
- And the words of the "Misereri" said
- As heavenwards he gazed.
-
- The bark meanwhile,
- Has reached the Isle,
- A moment more,
- And the test is o'er.
-
- The Priest stepped boldly on the sod,
- To prove the power of his God,
- And, kneeling on the shore,
- Poured forth a psalm of praise to Him
- Whom Cherubim and Seraphim
- Continually adore.
-
- Then, rising, he addressed the Chief
- Who, sitting in the bark canoe,
- Felt more of wonder than of grief
- At seeing that his old belief
- Was wholly false, for now he knew
- That all the Priest had said was true.
-
- "I tread this Isle alive, and show
- Your Spirit's boasted power
- To be but falsehood; will you now
- Fulfill your solemn Chieftain's vow,
- And own that God, by whom I'm sent
- To teach you, is omnipotent,
- In this auspicious hour?"
-
- As by the issue stupefied,
- The Chieftain doubtingly replied,
- "I little thought you now would be
- Alive to claim my fealty;
- But further proof you yet must give
- Before I can fully agree,
- Although you tread the Isle, and live,
- You have proved conclusively
- That the Spirit I've adored so long
- Is powerless, and my worship wrong.
- Perhaps that Spirit, seeing you cared
- So little for death, your life has spared
- Thus far, but if you long remain
- On the Isle, you surely shall be slain.
- So, if you heed my advice, return."
- Haughtily spake the Priest, "I spurn
- Your advice, so artfully given.
- Daring your Spirit, I have shown
- The power of death belongs alone
- To Him, who on the great white Throne,
- Dwelleth forever in Heaven.
- Now, ponder well before you speak,
- Then tell what further proof you seek."
-
- Answered the Chief, "I leave you here,
- With none to aid you, naught to cheer,
- And when tomorrow's sun
- Is high in the heavens, I'll come again.
- If, then, I find you have not been slain
- By my Spirit's might,
- For your act tonight,
- Your victory will be won."
-
- The Priest replied, "I'll give anew
- This proof, that all my words are true;
- But, do not come till another day
- In its rapid flight has passed away.
- When, next, the rays of the setting sun
- Illumine the Falls, as the day is done,
- Go to the spot where tonight we stood,
- Close to the edge of the headlong flood,
- At that hour, and at this edge
- Of that same Fall, on the rocky ledge
- Of the Island's shore, I'll take my stand
- That you, and all your warrior band,
- May see that I live; and then to show
- That faith in your Spirit you disavow,
- Kneel down, and there, beside the Fall,
- In the name of God, I will bless you all.
- Then, at this hour, tomorrow night,
- In yonder moon's effulgent light,
- Bring your bark to this spot once more,
- And take me back to the other shore.
- Now go, and leave me, despite your fear,
- Alone with my Maker, who led me here."
-
- The Chief, where the quiet waters lay,
- Up stream, pursued his homeward way,
- To wait the close of another day.
- The Priest, beneath those lofty trees,
- In adoration fell on his knees.
-
- All night long, on that wonderful sod,
- Where never before had white man trod,
- He wandered, ceaselessly praising God
- For the mercies to him granted.
- Oft, in worship he bowed his head,
- His beads he told, his prayers he said.
- And, 'mid those graves of unknown dead,
- O'er whom no burial rites were read,
- The "Nunc Dimittis" he chanted.
- All next day, in the forest's shade,
- In solitude, he watched and prayed.
-
- And that evening, at the hour
- When, in lands where Christians dwell,
- From each old cathedral tower
- Rings aloud the Vesper bell,
- The aged Priest his way did wend
- Toward the setting sun,
- To where, at the Island's western end
- The greater waves of rapids descend,
- And the swifter currents run.
- Adown the slope he made his way
- 'Mid bushes wet with driven spray,
- Until he reached the rocky ledge,
- Close to the Cataract's eastern edge.
- While he stood there, in the blaze
- Of the setting sun's departing rays,
- The spray-cloud hovered low,
- And, as it settled above his head,
- Across it, in gorgeous colors spread,
- Appeared the sign of the promise made
- By God to man, as the Flood He stayed,
- The evanescent Bow.
-
- When the sun in splendor sank
- Behind the fir trees tall,
- Gazing toward the farther bank,
- With a joy no pen can e'er describe,
- He saw the Chief and warrior tribe
- At the other end of the Fall.
-
- The Chief, who saw him as he moved
- From out the forest's shade,
- And realized that again he'd proved
- The truth of all he said,
- Knelt, so the Priest might comprehend
- That faith in his Spirit was at an end.
- The warriors knelt beside their Chief,
- Thus emphasizing their belief.
-
- The Priest was there by God's own will,
- A holy mission to fulfill.
- His human voice, in that grand roar,
- Could not have reached the other shore,
- No matter how he had striven,
- Yet he spake the Word,
- Though it was not heard,
- And he raised his hands,
- As our God commands,
- And lifted his eyes to Heaven;
- Thus, in the way the Church decrees
- To suppliants, tho' afar, on their knees,
- Was the Benediction given.
-
- The Priest was with emotion thrilled,
- His mind with sacred thoughts instilled,
- And, in imaginative mood,
- Again in a holy Church he stood,
- (It was three long years since he
- Had stept within a Sacristy).
-
- A wondrous Church it was, indeed,
- By Nature's changeless laws decreed,
- Tho' man reared not the structure fair,
- All churchly attributes were there.
-
- The gorge was the glorified Nave,
- Whose floor was the emerald wave.
- The mighty Fall
- Was the Reredos tall,
- The Altar, the pure white foam,
- The azure sky,
- So clear and high,
- Was simply the vaulted Dome.
- The column of spray,
- On its upward way,
- Was the smoke of Incense burned;
- The Cataract's roar,
- Now less, now more,
- As it rose and fell,
- Like an organ's swell
- Into sacred music turned.
- While, like a Baldachin, o'erhead
- The spray-cloud, in its glory, spread
- Its crest, by the setting sun illumed,
- The form of a holy Cross assumed.
-
- The vision gone, the Priest once more
- Stood, simply on the Island's shore.
- Slowly he climbed the bank again,
- And into the forest passed,
- His body weak with cold and pain
- From his long and sleepless fast.
- Little he cared for the food and rest
- His mortal being craved,
- He only thought, how, at his behest,
- The Chief and warriors had confessed
- Belief in God, and had been blest,
- And their souls might thus be saved.
-
- Again, amongst the trees he knelt,
- Expressive of the joy he felt.
- In worship, loud, his voice he raised,
- His tones through the forest rang,
- As the ever-living God he praised,
- And the "Jubilate" sang.
-
- The twilight passed, but the aged Priest
- From his adorations had not ceased;
- The darkness came, but his only thought
- Was praise of Him whose word he taught;
- The moon arose, and found him there,
- Still in the attitude of prayer.
- But when in the Heavens, high and clear
- She stood, and midnight's hour was near,
- He rose and went to the rocky beach,
- Where alone the Island one may reach.
-
- Soon the Chief, in his birchen bark,
- Came swiftly over the waters dark,
- And reaching the Island's shore
- Cried, "As God's follower, receive
- An erring man. I now believe
- In Him, forevermore."
-
- As the Priest to meet him came
- He said, "Baptize me, in His name."
- The Priest bent down to the river's bed
- And dipped his hand in the wave,
- Then bade him kneel, and on his head
- Poured the water, and joyously said,
- "Your soul I hereby save.
- First convert of the Neuter race,
- Upon your forehead, thus, I trace
- The Cross's holy sign;
- And thereby, as you now believe
- In God's omnipotence, receive
- You into His Church divine.
- And, in the Faith you have confessed,
- I bless you, and you shall be blest."
-
- But meanwhile many a bark canoe,
- Bearing those Neuter warriors true
- Was rapidly coming down the tide,
- Along the path, where the waves divide.
-
- As the Isle these warriors reached,
- Their frail canoes they safely beached,
- Then stepped to the Chieftain's side;
- Beneath that grand primeval wood
- In awe-felt silence, there they stood.
- It was a noble sight, and good,
- For the Priest, in his holy pride.
-
- For of the bravest of the land
- Was that converted warrior band,
- All firm in their new Belief;
- And, on this wondrous Island's sod,
- Before that holy man of God,
- Knelt their baptizéd Chief.
-
-
-Illustration
-
- "... The Island, which divides
- Niagara's tumultuous tides,
- At the brink of the mighty Fall."
-
-
-Illustration
-
- "And, from a jutting shelf of stone,
- Saw Ni-a-gáh-ra, then unknown,
- Save to the red man's Race alone."
-
-
-Illustration
-
- "The Priest stood up, above his head
- The holy Cross he raised."
-
-
-Illustration
-
- "Thus, in the way the Church decrees
- To suppliants, tho' afar, on their knees,
- Was the Benediction given."
-
-
-Illustration
-
- "While, like a Baldachin, o'erhead
- The spray-cloud, in its glory, spread."
-
-
-Illustration
-
- "... On this wondrous Island's sod
- Before that holy man of God,
- Knelt their baptizéd Chief."
-
-
-
-
- Of this "Legend" 100 copies were printed for private
- distribution only. This copy is No. ..............., and is
- presented to
-
- ...........................................................
-
- with the compliments of
-
- ...........................................................
-
- coupled with the suggestion that it is not intended for general
- publicity.
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's Notes:
-
-Punctuation errors repaired.
-
-Page 7 gound replaced with ground
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's A Legend of Goat Island, by Peter A. Porter
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A LEGEND OF GOAT ISLAND ***
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- <head>
- <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=iso-8859-1" />
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- The Project Gutenberg eBook of A Legend of Goat Island, by Peter A. Porter.
- </title>
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-<body>
-
-
-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Legend of Goat Island, by Peter A. Porter
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: A Legend of Goat Island
-
-Author: Peter A. Porter
-
-Illustrator: C. Breckinridge Porter
-
-Release Date: September 7, 2016 [EBook #53002]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A LEGEND OF GOAT ISLAND ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Edwards, Jana Palkova and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-<div class="narrow">
-<div class="figcenter" >
-<img src="images/frontis.jpg" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-
-<p class="center space-below">
-"He wore his Sacred Order's gown,<br />
-A long loose robe of reddish brown."<br />
-</p></div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<h1>A LEGEND<br />
-
-OF<br />
-
-GOAT ISLAND</h1>
-
-
-<p class="center">
-Ascribed to FATHER LOUIS HENNEPIN, who visited<br />
-Niagara in 1678<br />
-<br />
-BY<br />
-<br />
-PETER A. PORTER<br />
-<br />
-Sketches by C. BRECKINRIDGE PORTER<br />
-<br />
-THE GAZETTE PRESS, NIAGARA FALLS, N. Y.<br />
-</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><small>COPYRIGHT BY PETER A. PORTER 1900</small></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<h2>A LEGEND OF GOAT ISLAND</h2>
-
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-
-<p class="cap">It is told in Indian story,<br />
-Dim tradition of the race,<br />
-How, to God's eternal glory,<br />
-And through His all-saving grace,<br />
-Many a warrior's heart was stirred<br />
-To belief in His ever-living Word,<br />
-And the Faith that saves us all,<br />
-By a Priest, whose holy mission<br />
-Overcame their superstition<br />
-About the Island, which divides<br />
-Niagara's tumultuous tides,<br />
-At the brink of the mighty Fall.<br /></p>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">Here is the story, as 'tis told<br />
-In one of the chronicles of old.<br /></div>
-<br />
-<div class="stanza">'Twas many a year ago, when o'er<br />
-The land on Ni-a-g&aacute;h-ra's shore<br />
-The Neuter tribe held sway.<br />
-On its western bank, above, but near,<br />
-Where rapids begin, in wild career<br />
-Toward the Fall, and down as low<br />
-As a bark canoe could safely go,<br />
-One of their villages lay.<br />
-In that village by the river,<br />
-Late one eve, when bow and quiver<br />
-Had been laid aside,<br />
-And the warriors were sitting<br />
-In the silence, deemed befitting<br />
-To an Indian's pride,<br />
-A stranger in their midst appeared,<br />
-Whose hoary locks and silvery beard<br />
-Were to their vision strange and weird.<br />
-He was a man of giant size,<br />
-Which found him favor in their eyes,<br />
-As, at his priestly garb amazed,<br />
-In silent wonderment they gazed.<br /></div>
-<br />
-<div class="stanza">He wore his Sacred Order's gown,<br />
-A long loose robe of reddish brown,<br />
-Across his shoulders, lightly flung,<br />
-The cape and cowl backward hung,<br />
-Around his waist a rope was twined,<br />
-A girdle and a scourge combined;<br />
-While from it, hanging loose and free,<br />
-Suspended hung the rosary.<br />
-He was the first of stranger race<br />
-They e'er had met with, face to face,<br />
-Though they knew that such-frocked men<br />
-Had visited their brethren.<br />
-When they saw him, brave and squaw<br />
-Viewed him with a reverend awe.<br /></div>
-
-<div class="stanza">A wanderer, all alone he came,<br />
-He bore no weapons, gave no name.<br />
-He said his errand was to teach<br />
-The glories of the Life to be,<br />
-When, after death, men's spirits reach<br />
-The confines of Eternity,<br />
-And, as he spake in Indian speech,<br />
-They listened most attentively.<br />
-For he had dwelt for many a day<br />
-Mid Indian tribes, far, far away,<br />
-And thus had learnt the Indian tongue<br />
-From those whom he had dwelt among.<br />
-So, sullenly, they let him share<br /></div>
-
-
-<div class="stanza">Their fire's warmth and frugal fare,<br />
-And then they suffered him to tell<br />
-His mission in the way he chose,<br />
-Though little cared they what befell<br />
-Their souls, so they but feasted well,<br />
-And were victorious o'er their foes.<br /></div>
-
-<div class="stanza">Later on, as they were sitting<br />
-In the fire's cheerful light,<br />
-Shadows round them weirdly flitting,<br />
-As the moon rose into sight,<br />
-The stranger asked, in tones of wonder,<br />
-Whence that sound of endless thunder,<br />
-That dull, reverberating sound<br />
-That seemed to shake the very ground?<br /></div>
-
-<div class="stanza">For answer, came the Chief's command,<br />
-"Be patient, you shall understand."<br />
-And, knowing Indian nature well,<br />
-He waited till they chose to tell.<br /></div>
-
-<div class="stanza">Later yet, when chill and hoary<br />
-Lay the frost upon the ground,<br />
-And the moon in all her glory<br />
-Bathed in light the scene around,<br />
-The Chieftain rose, around him drew<br /></div>
-
-
-<div class="stanza">The bison skin of tawny hue,<br />
-And signed to the priest to follow.<br />
-He led him through a dense dark wood<br />
-Where many a lofty pine tree stood,<br />
-Then through a winding hollow;<br />
-Whence, as they suddenly emerged,<br />
-The rushing rapids 'neath them surged<br />
-O'er many a rocky ledge.<br />
-Taking, down stream, their silent way<br />
-Toward the rising cloud of spray,<br />
-They reached the Cataract's edge;<br />
-And, from a jutting shelf of stone,<br />
-Saw Ni-a-g&aacute;h-ra, then unknown,<br />
-Save to the red man's Race alone.<br />
-Earth's grandest sight, conceived to be<br />
-The emblem of God's majesty.<br /></div>
-
-<div class="stanza">Ne'er has the scene which 'neath them lay<br />
-Been chronicled aright,<br />
-For no one, in a fitting way,<br />
-By pen, nor pencil, <i>can</i> portray<br />
-The grandeur of that sight.<br /></div>
-
-<div class="stanza">The Priest, as by the view amazed,<br />
-Long at the Falls and Rapids gazed,<br />
-But not a word he spoke,<br />
-Then crossed himself, as if in awe,<br />
-And 'twas a holy sight he saw.<br />
-At last he turned him to his guide,<br />
-Who stood, like statue, by his side<br />
-And thus the silence broke:<br /></div>
-
-<div class="stanza">"For two years past I've often longed<br />
-This wondrous sight to see,<br />
-And memory has oft been thronged<br />
-With stories told to me<br />
-By one, upon whose brow I traced<br />
-God's holy Cross, a chief<br />
-In whose narration I have placed<br />
-An absolute belief.<br />
-The glories, which I now behold,<br />
-In words, somewhat like these, he told:<br /></div>
-
-<div class="stanza"><span class="poem i4">'Towards the Sun's ascending beam,<br />
-Whoe'er his journey takes,<br />
-Will reach a broad and rapid stream<br />
-Which joins two mighty lakes.<br />
-Midway in this river's course<br />
-A wondrous fall is found<br />
-Where, with an overwhelming force<br />
-The waters, rushing in their might,<br />
-Plunge downward o'er a fearful height<br />
-With a stupefying sound.<br /></span></div>
-
-
-<div class="stanza"><span class="poem i4">
-Right at the precipice so steep,<br />
-Where the river takes this awful leap,<br />
-Is placed an Island, small in size,<br />
-But like an earthly paradise,<br />
-For lovelier spot is nowhere found<br />
-Than this, our Indian burial ground;<br />
-Where none, unless with honor crowned,<br />
-Can ever be interred.<br />
-None but brave men e'er can reach<br />
-It's wooded shore and rocky beach,<br />
-Whereon the sound of human speech<br />
-Is scarcely ever heard.<br />
-For on this Isle deep-buried lie<br />
-The bones of many a Brave,<br />
-And Indian chiefs invariably<br />
-Ask this spot for their grave.<br />
-Thus it has been, in days of yore,<br />
-And it is my earnest prayer,<br />
-That, when this mortal life is o'er,<br />
-And my soul is on the other shore,<br />
-My bones may be buried there.<br />
-That Ni-a-g&aacute;h-ra's mighty roar<br />
-So solemn, grand and deep,<br />
-May be my dirge forevermore<br />
-As 'twixt its Falls I sleep.'<br /></span>
-"Since he told me I've often prayed<br /></div>
-
-
-<div class="stanza">
-That hither I might be led,<br />
-And to my vision be displayed,<br />
-In its scenic majesty arrayed,<br />
-The fairest spot God ever made,<br />
-This Island of the dead."<br /></div>
-
-<div class="stanza">The Chief assented, "All you heard<br />
-Was true to the minutest word;<br />
-But one more fact I must unfold<br />
-Ere all the Island's tale is told,<br />
-Note its wondrous situation,<br />
-'Tis our Spirit's dread abode;<br />
-'Tis a spot that, since Creation,<br />
-Coward's foot has never trod.<br />
-None but warriors can reach it,<br />
-Others, should they dare to try,<br />
-So our old traditions teach it,<br />
-As they touch its soil, they die."<br /></div>
-
-<div class="stanza">"All that is false," the Priest replied,<br />
-"Whoever taught you that has lied;<br />
-Strong words, I know, but justified,<br />
-For God alone, who gave us breath,<br />
-Has power over life and death."<br /></div>
-
-<div class="stanza">The Chief declared, "His faith is best<br />
-Who dares to put it to the test.<br />
-I judge men's faith in but one way,<br />
-'Tis what they do, not what they say.<br />
-If you believe that you'll survive,<br />
-I'll take you there tonight,<br />
-And, if you tread its shore alive,<br />
-Will own that you are right;<br />
-Then, I'll believe in what you preach,<br />
-And worship Him of whom you teach."<br /></div>
-
-<div class="stanza">The Priest responded, "Now 'tis clear,<br />
-Why I have been directed here.<br />
-Your sacred Island is to be<br />
-My means of proving conclusively<br />
-To Indian Tribes forevermore<br />
-The power of Him whom I adore.<br />
-An early proof is all I crave,<br />
-For never yet did Indian brave,<br />
-Who'd traveled far to deal the blow<br />
-Of death to his relentless foe<br />
-With greater joy await the hour<br />
-That placed his victim in his power<br />
-Than I impatiently await<br />
-The moment yonder Isle I reach,<br />
-And thereby clearly demonstrate<br />
-The holy precepts that I teach.<br />
-So come, tho' here I fain would stay<br />
-My beads to tell and prayers to say,<br />
-I'll worship God on the Island's shore<br />
-After the test you name is o'er."<br /></div>
-
-<div class="stanza">A look of wonder and surprise<br />
-Shone in the Indian Chieftain's eyes,<br />
-His sole reply, "So let it be,<br />
-Your death shall pay the penalty."<br /></div>
-
-<div class="stanza">In perfect silence back they went,<br />
-Each on the coming voyage intent.<br />
-When the village they had reached,<br />
-To where his bark canoe lay beached<br />
-The Chieftain turned aside.<br />
-(The bison skin, he flung therein),<br />
-Quickly he launched it, in he leapt,<br />
-And, waiting till the Priest had stept<br />
-Into his place, he bade him kneel,<br />
-So the bark might ride on even keel,<br />
-Then pushed it out on the tide.<br />
-Swiftly it darted from the land,<br />
-Propelled by strong and fearless hand,<br />
-Over the dangerous current flies,<br />
-As the Chief the paddle rapidly plies,<br />
-Until, the wildest portion crossed,<br />
-The frail canoe is no longer tossed<br /></div>
-
-
-<div class="stanza">
-By curling waves, but floats, awhile,<br />
-On the quiet stream above the Isle,<br />
-Towards whose beach it slowly glides<br />
-For weal or woe, as its voyage betides.<br /></div>
-
-<div class="stanza">The Priest stood up, above his head<br />
-The holy Cross he raised,<br />
-And the words of the "Misereri" said<br />
-As heavenwards he gazed.<br /></div>
-
-<div class="stanza">The bark meanwhile,<br />
-<span class="poem i6">Has reached the Isle,<br /></span>
-A moment more,<br />
-<span class="poem i6">And the test is o'er.<br /></span></div>
-
-<div class="stanza">The Priest stepped boldly on the sod,<br />
-To prove the power of his God,<br />
-And, kneeling on the shore,<br />
-Poured forth a psalm of praise to Him<br />
-Whom Cherubim and Seraphim<br />
-Continually adore.<br /></div>
-
-<div class="stanza">Then, rising, he addressed the Chief<br />
-Who, sitting in the bark canoe,<br />
-Felt more of wonder than of grief<br />
-At seeing that his old belief<br />
-Was wholly false, for now he knew<br />
-That all the Priest had said was true.<br /></div>
-
-
-<div class="stanza">"I tread this Isle alive, and show<br />
-Your Spirit's boasted power<br />
-To be but falsehood; will you now<br />
-Fulfill your solemn Chieftain's vow,<br />
-And own that God, by whom I'm sent<br />
-To teach you, is omnipotent,<br />
-In this auspicious hour?"<br /></div>
-
-<div class="stanza">As by the issue stupefied,<br />
-The Chieftain doubtingly replied,<br />
-"I little thought you now would be<br />
-Alive to claim my fealty;<br />
-But further proof you yet must give<br />
-Before I can fully agree,<br />
-Although you tread the Isle, and live,<br />
-You have proved conclusively<br />
-That the Spirit I've adored so long<br />
-Is powerless, and my worship wrong.<br />
-Perhaps that Spirit, seeing you cared<br />
-So little for death, your life has spared<br />
-Thus far, but if you long remain<br />
-On the Isle, you surely shall be slain.<br />
-So, if you heed my advice, return."<br />
-Haughtily spake the Priest, "I spurn<br />
-Your advice, so artfully given.<br />
-Daring your Spirit, I have shown<br /></div>
-
-
-<div class="stanza">
-The power of death belongs alone<br />
-To Him, who on the great white Throne,<br />
-Dwelleth forever in Heaven.<br />
-Now, ponder well before you speak,<br />
-Then tell what further proof you seek."<br /></div>
-
-<div class="stanza">Answered the Chief, "I leave you here,<br />
-With none to aid you, naught to cheer,<br />
-And when tomorrow's sun<br />
-Is high in the heavens, I'll come again.<br />
-If, then, I find you have not been slain<br />
-By my Spirit's might,<br />
-For your act tonight,<br />
-Your victory will be won."<br /></div>
-
-<div class="stanza">The Priest replied, "I'll give anew<br />
-This proof, that all my words are true;<br />
-But, do not come till another day<br />
-In its rapid flight has passed away.<br />
-When, next, the rays of the setting sun<br />
-Illumine the Falls, as the day is done,<br />
-Go to the spot where tonight we stood,<br />
-Close to the edge of the headlong flood,<br />
-At that hour, and at this edge<br />
-Of that same Fall, on the rocky ledge<br />
-Of the Island's shore, I'll take my stand<br />
-That you, and all your warrior band,<br /></div>
-
-
-<div class="stanza">
-May see that I live; and then to show<br />
-That faith in your Spirit you disavow,<br />
-Kneel down, and there, beside the Fall,<br />
-In the name of God, I will bless you all.<br />
-Then, at this hour, tomorrow night,<br />
-In yonder moon's effulgent light,<br />
-Bring your bark to this spot once more,<br />
-And take me back to the other shore.<br />
-Now go, and leave me, despite your fear,<br />
-Alone with my Maker, who led me here."<br /></div>
-
-<div class="stanza">The Chief, where the quiet waters lay,<br />
-Up stream, pursued his homeward way,<br />
-To wait the close of another day.<br />
-The Priest, beneath those lofty trees,<br />
-In adoration fell on his knees.<br /></div>
-
-<div class="stanza">All night long, on that wonderful sod,<br />
-Where never before had white man trod,<br />
-He wandered, ceaselessly praising God<br />
-For the mercies to him granted.<br />
-Oft, in worship he bowed his head,<br />
-His beads he told, his prayers he said.<br />
-And, 'mid those graves of unknown dead,<br />
-O'er whom no burial rites were read,<br />
-The "Nunc Dimittis" he chanted.<br /></div>
-
-
-<div class="stanza">
-All next day, in the forest's shade,<br />
-In solitude, he watched and prayed.<br /></div>
-
-<div class="stanza">And that evening, at the hour<br />
-When, in lands where Christians dwell,<br />
-From each old cathedral tower<br />
-Rings aloud the Vesper bell,<br />
-The aged Priest his way did wend<br />
-Toward the setting sun,<br />
-To where, at the Island's western end<br />
-The greater waves of rapids descend,<br />
-And the swifter currents run.<br />
-Adown the slope he made his way<br />
-'Mid bushes wet with driven spray,<br />
-Until he reached the rocky ledge,<br />
-Close to the Cataract's eastern edge.<br />
-While he stood there, in the blaze<br />
-Of the setting sun's departing rays,<br />
-The spray-cloud hovered low,<br />
-And, as it settled above his head,<br />
-Across it, in gorgeous colors spread,<br />
-Appeared the sign of the promise made<br />
-By God to man, as the Flood He stayed,<br />
-The evanescent Bow.<br /></div>
-
-<div class="stanza">When the sun in splendor sank<br />
-Behind the fir trees tall,<br />
-Gazing toward the farther bank,<br />
-With a joy no pen can e'er describe,<br />
-He saw the Chief and warrior tribe<br />
-At the other end of the Fall.<br /></div>
-
-<div class="stanza">The Chief, who saw him as he moved<br />
-From out the forest's shade,<br />
-And realized that again he'd proved<br />
-The truth of all he said,<br />
-Knelt, so the Priest might comprehend<br />
-That faith in his Spirit was at an end.<br />
-The warriors knelt beside their Chief,<br />
-Thus emphasizing their belief.<br /></div>
-
-<div class="stanza">The Priest was there by God's own will,<br />
-A holy mission to fulfill.<br />
-His human voice, in that grand roar,<br />
-Could not have reached the other shore,<br />
-No matter how he had striven,<br />
-Yet he spake the Word,<br />
-Though it was not heard,<br />
-And he raised his hands,<br />
-As our God commands,<br />
-And lifted his eyes to Heaven;<br />
-Thus, in the way the Church decrees<br />
-To suppliants, tho' afar, on their knees,<br />
-Was the Benediction given.<br /></div>
-
-
-<div class="stanza">The Priest was with emotion thrilled,<br />
-His mind with sacred thoughts instilled,<br />
-And, in imaginative mood,<br />
-Again in a holy Church he stood,<br />
-(It was three long years since he<br />
-Had stept within a Sacristy).<br /></div>
-
-<div class="stanza">A wondrous Church it was, indeed,<br />
-By Nature's changeless laws decreed,<br />
-Tho' man reared not the structure fair,<br />
-All churchly attributes were there.<br /></div>
-
-<div class="stanza">The gorge was the glorified Nave,<br />
-Whose floor was the emerald wave.<br />
-The mighty Fall<br />
-Was the Reredos tall,<br />
-The Altar, the pure white foam,<br />
-The azure sky,<br />
-So clear and high,<br />
-Was simply the vaulted Dome.<br />
-The column of spray,<br />
-On its upward way,<br />
-Was the smoke of Incense burned;<br />
-The Cataract's roar,<br />
-Now less, now more,<br />
-As it rose and fell,<br /></div>
-
-
-<div class="stanza">Like an organ's swell<br />
-Into sacred music turned.<br />
-While, like a Baldachin, o'erhead<br />
-The spray-cloud, in its glory, spread<br />
-Its crest, by the setting sun illumed,<br />
-The form of a holy Cross assumed.<br /></div>
-
-<div class="stanza">The vision gone, the Priest once more<br />
-Stood, simply on the Island's shore.<br />
-Slowly he climbed the bank again,<br />
-And into the forest passed,<br />
-His body weak with cold and pain<br />
-From his long and sleepless fast.<br />
-Little he cared for the food and rest<br />
-His mortal being craved,<br />
-He only thought, how, at his behest,<br />
-The Chief and warriors had confessed<br />
-Belief in God, and had been blest,<br />
-And their souls might thus be saved.<br /></div>
-
-<div class="stanza">Again, amongst the trees he knelt,<br />
-Expressive of the joy he felt.<br />
-In worship, loud, his voice he raised,<br />
-His tones through the forest rang,<br />
-As the ever-living God he praised,<br />
-And the "Jubilate" sang.<br /></div>
-
-
-<div class="stanza">The twilight passed, but the aged Priest<br />
-From his adorations had not ceased;<br />
-The darkness came, but his only thought<br />
-Was praise of Him whose word he taught;<br />
-The moon arose, and found him there,<br />
-Still in the attitude of prayer.<br />
-But when in the Heavens, high and clear<br />
-She stood, and midnight's hour was near,<br />
-He rose and went to the rocky beach,<br />
-Where alone the Island one may reach.<br /></div>
-
-<div class="stanza">Soon the Chief, in his birchen bark,<br />
-Came swiftly over the waters dark,<br />
-And reaching the Island's shore<br />
-Cried, "As God's follower, receive<br />
-An erring man. I now believe<br />
-In Him, forevermore."<br /></div>
-
-<div class="stanza">As the Priest to meet him came<br />
-He said, "Baptize me, in His name."<br />
-The Priest bent down to the river's bed<br />
-And dipped his hand in the wave,<br />
-Then bade him kneel, and on his head<br />
-Poured the water, and joyously said,<br />
-"Your soul I hereby save.<br />
-First convert of the Neuter race,<br />
-Upon your forehead, thus, I trace<br /></div>
-
-
-<div class="stanza">
-The Cross's holy sign;<br />
-And thereby, as you now believe<br />
-In God's omnipotence, receive<br />
-You into His Church divine.<br />
-And, in the Faith you have confessed,<br />
-I bless you, and you shall be blest."<br /></div>
-
-<div class="stanza">But meanwhile many a bark canoe,<br />
-Bearing those Neuter warriors true<br />
-Was rapidly coming down the tide,<br />
-Along the path, where the waves divide.<br /></div>
-
-<div class="stanza">As the Isle these warriors reached,<br />
-Their frail canoes they safely beached,<br />
-Then stepped to the Chieftain's side;<br />
-Beneath that grand primeval wood<br />
-In awe-felt silence, there they stood.<br />
-It was a noble sight, and good,<br />
-For the Priest, in his holy pride.<br /></div>
-
-<div class="stanza">For of the bravest of the land<br />
-Was that converted warrior band,<br />
-All firm in their new Belief;<br />
-And, on this wondrous Island's sod,<br />
-Before that holy man of God,<br />
-Knelt their baptizéd Chief.<br /></div></div>
-
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" >
-<img src="images/i001.jpg" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-
-<p class="center">
-"... The Island, which divides
-Niagara's tumultuous tides,
-At the brink of the mighty Fall."
-</p></div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" >
-<img src="images/i002.jpg" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-
-<p class="center">
-"And, from a jutting shelf of stone,
-Saw Ni-a-gáh-ra, then unknown,
-Save to the red man's Race alone."
-</p></div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" >
-<img src="images/i003.jpg" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-
-<p class="center">
-"The Priest stood up, above his head
-The holy Cross he raised."
-</p></div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" >
-<img src="images/i004.jpg" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-
-<p class="center">
-"Thus, in the way the Church decrees
-To suppliants, tho' afar, on their knees,
-Was the Benediction given."
-</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i005.jpg" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-
-<p class="center">
-"While, like a Baldachin, o'erhead
-The spray-cloud, in its glory, spread."
-</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" >
-<img src="images/i006.jpg" alt="" />
-<div class="caption">
-
-<p class="center">"... On this wondrous Island's sod
-Before that holy man of God,
-Knelt their baptiz&eacute;d Chief."
-</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="center space-above">Of this "Legend" 100 copies were printed for private distribution<br />
-only. This copy is No. ..............., and is presented to</p>
-
-<p class="center">..........................................................</p>
-
-<p class="center">with the compliments of</p>
-
-<p class="center">..........................................................</p>
-
-<p class="center">coupled with the suggestion that it is not intended<br />
-for general publicity.</p>
-
-<div class="transnote"><p class="center" >Transcriber's Notes:</p>
-
-<p>Punctuation errors repaired.</p>
-
- <p>Page 7 gound replaced with ground</p></div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's A Legend of Goat Island, by Peter A. Porter
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