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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..d7b82bc --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,4 @@ +*.txt text eol=lf +*.htm text eol=lf +*.html text eol=lf +*.md text eol=lf diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6312041 --- /dev/null +++ b/LICENSE.txt @@ -0,0 +1,11 @@ +This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements, +metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be +in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES. + +Procedures for determining public domain status are described in +the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org. + +No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in +jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize +this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright +status under the laws that apply to them. diff --git a/README.md b/README.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..856238d --- /dev/null +++ b/README.md @@ -0,0 +1,2 @@ +Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for +eBook #53002 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/53002) diff --git a/old/53002-8.txt b/old/53002-8.txt deleted file mode 100644 index 632b61a..0000000 --- a/old/53002-8.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,1035 +0,0 @@ -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. 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Thus, we do not -necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper -edition. - -Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search -facility: www.gutenberg.org - -This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm, -including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary -Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to -subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks. - diff --git a/old/53002-8.zip b/old/53002-8.zip Binary files differdeleted file mode 100644 index dd16973..0000000 --- a/old/53002-8.zip +++ /dev/null diff --git a/old/53002-h.zip b/old/53002-h.zip Binary files differdeleted file mode 100644 index 3e68370..0000000 --- a/old/53002-h.zip +++ /dev/null diff --git a/old/53002-h/53002-h.htm b/old/53002-h/53002-h.htm deleted file mode 100644 index 2ea27b7..0000000 --- a/old/53002-h/53002-h.htm +++ /dev/null @@ -1,1196 +0,0 @@ -<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" - "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd"> -<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en"> - <head> - <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=iso-8859-1" /> - <meta http-equiv="Content-Style-Type" content="text/css" /> - <title> - The Project Gutenberg eBook of A Legend of Goat Island, by Peter A. Porter. - </title> - -<link rel="coverpage" href="images/cover.jpg" /> - - <style type="text/css"> - -body { - margin-left: 10%; - margin-right: 10%; -} - - h1, h2 { - text-align: center; - clear: both; -} - -p { - margin-top: .51em; - text-align: justify; - margin-bottom: .49em; -} -.space-below {margin-bottom: 2em;} -.space-above {margin-top: 2em;} - -p.cap:first-letter { float: left; clear: left; - margin: 0 0.1em 0 0; - padding:0; - line-height: 1.2em; font-size: 250%; } - - hr.chap {width: 65%; margin-left: 17.5%; margin-right: 17.5%;} - -.center {text-align: center;} -img {border: none; max-width: 100%} -.caption {font-weight: bold;} - -.figcenter { - margin-top: 3em; - text-align: center; -} - -.poem { - text-align:left; - margin-left:25%; - width:90%; - position: relative; - } - -.poem .stanza { - margin-top: 1em; - } - -.poem .i4 {display:block; margin-left: 3em;} -.poem .i6 {display:block; margin-left: 4em;} -.narrow {max-width: 40em;} - - -.transnote {background-color: #E6E6FA; - color: black; - font-size:smaller; - padding:0.5em; - margin-bottom:5em; - font-family:sans-serif, serif; } - - </style> - </head> -<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-gáh-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-gáh-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-gáh-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 baptizéd 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. 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