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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Works of Whittier, Volume I (of VII), by
+John Greenleaf Whittier
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere 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
+
+
+Title: The Works of Whittier, Volume I (of VII)
+ Narrative And Legendary Poems
+
+Author: John Greenleaf Whittier
+
+Release Date: December 2005 [EBook #9567]
+Posting Date: July 9, 2009
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE WORKS OF WHITTIER ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE WORKS OF JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER
+
+
+By John Greenleaf Whittier
+
+
+
+
+
+VOLUME I. NARRATIVE AND LEGENDARY POEMS
+
+
+
+
+PUBLISHERS' ADVERTISEMENT
+
+The Standard Library Edition of Mr. Whittier's writings comprises his
+poetical and prose works as re-arranged and thoroughly revised by
+himself or with his cooperation. Mr. Whittier has supplied such
+additional information regarding the subject and occasion of certain
+poems as may be stated in brief head-notes, and this edition has been
+much enriched by the poet's personal comment. So far as practicable the
+dates of publication of the various articles have been given, and since
+these were originally published soon after composition, the dates of
+their first appearance have been taken as determining the time at which
+they were written. At the request of the Publishers, Mr. Whittier has
+allowed his early poems, discarded from previous collections, to be
+placed, in the general order of their appearance, in an appendix to the
+final volume of poems. By this means the present edition is made so
+complete and retrospective that students of the poet's career will
+always find the most abundant material for their purpose. The Publishers
+congratulate themselves and the public that the careful attention which
+Mr. Whittier has been able to give to this revision of his works has
+resulted in so comprehensive and well-adjusted a collection.
+
+The portraits prefixed to the several volumes have been chosen with a
+view to illustrating successive periods in the poet's life. The
+original sources and dates are indicated in each case.
+
+
+ CONTENTS:
+
+ THE VAUDOIS TEACHER
+ THE FEMALE MARTYR
+ EXTRACT FROM "A NEW ENGLAND LEGEND"
+ THE DEMON OF THE STUDY
+ THE FOUNTAIN
+ PENTUCKET
+ THE NORSEMEN
+ FUNERAL TREE OF THE SOKOKIS
+ ST JOHN
+ THE CYPRESS-TREE OF CEYLON
+ THE EXILES
+ THE KNIGHT OF ST JOHN
+ CASSANDRA SOUTHWICK
+ THE NEW WIFE AND THE OLD
+
+ THE BRIDAL OF PENNACOOK
+ I. THE MERRIMAC
+ II. THE BASHABA
+ III. THE DAUGHTER
+ IV. THE WEDDING
+ V. THE NEW HOME
+ VI. AT PENNACOOK
+ VII. THE DEPARTURE
+ VIII. SONG OF INDIAN WOMEN
+
+ BARCLAY OF URY
+ THE ANGELS OF BUENA VISTA
+ THE LEGEND OF ST MARK
+ KATHLEEN
+ THE WELL OF LOCH MAREE
+ THE CHAPEL OF THE HERMITS
+ TAULER
+ THE HERMIT OF THE THEBAID
+ THE GARRISON OF CAPE ANN
+ THE GIFT OF TRITEMIUS
+ SKIPPER IRESON'S RIDE
+ THE SYCAMORES
+ THE PIPES AT LUCKNOW
+ TELLING THE BEES
+ THE SWAN SONG OF PARSON AVERY
+ THE DOUBLE-HEADED SNAKE OF NEWBURY
+
+ MABEL MARTIN: A HARVEST IDYL
+ PROEM
+ I. THE RIVER VALLEY
+ II. THE HUSKING
+ III. THE WITCH'S DAUGHTER
+ IV. THE CHAMPION
+ V. IN THE SHADOW
+ VI. THE BETROTHAL
+
+ THE PROPHECY OF SAMUEL SEWALL
+ THE RED RIVER VOYAGEUR
+ THE PREACHER
+ THE TRUCE OF PISCATAQUA
+ MY PLAYMATE
+ COBBLER KEEZAR'S VISION
+ AMY WENTWORTH
+ THE COUNTESS
+
+ AMONG THE HILLS
+ PRELUDE
+ AMONG THE HILLS
+
+ THE DOLE OF JARL THORKELL
+ THE TWO RABBINS
+ NOREMBEGA
+ MIRIAM
+ MAUD MULLER
+ MARY GARVIN
+ THE RANGER
+ NAUHAUGHT, THE DEACON
+ THE SISTERS
+ MARGUERITE
+ THE ROBIN
+
+ THE PENNSYLVANIA PILGRIM
+ INTRODUCTORY NOTE
+ PRELUDE
+ THE PENNSYLVANIA PILGRIM
+
+ KING VOLMER AND ELSIE
+ THE THREE BELLS
+ JOHN UNDERHILL
+ CONDUCTOR BRADLEY
+ THE WITCH OF WENHAM
+ KING SOLOMON AND THE ANTS
+ IN THE "OLD SOUTH"
+ THE HENCHMAN
+ THE DEAD FEAST OF THE KOL-FOLK
+ THE KHAN'S DEVIL
+ THE KING'S MISSIVE
+ VALUATION
+ RABBI ISHMAEL
+ THE ROCK-TOMB OF BRADORE
+
+ THE BAY OF SEVEN ISLANDS
+ To H P S
+ THE BAY OF SEVEN ISLANDS
+
+ THE WISHING BRIDGE
+ HOW THE WOMEN WENT FROM DOVER
+ ST GREGORY'S GUEST
+ CONTENTS
+ BIRCHBROOK MILL
+ THE TWO ELIZABETHS
+ REQUITAL
+ THE HOMESTEAD
+ HOW THE ROBIN CAME
+ BANISHED FROM MASSACHUSETTS
+ THE BROWN DWARF OF RUGEN
+
+
+NOTE.--The portrait prefixed to this volume was etched by
+S. A. Schoff, in 1888, after a painting by Bass Otis, a pupil of
+Gilbert Stuart, made in the winter of 1836-1837.
+
+
+
+
+PROEM
+
+ I LOVE the old melodious lays
+ Which softly melt the ages through,
+ The songs of Spenser's golden days,
+ Arcadian Sidney's silvery phrase,
+ Sprinkling our noon of time with freshest morning dew.
+
+ Yet, vainly in my quiet hours
+ To breathe their marvellous notes I try;
+ I feel them, as the leaves and flowers
+ In silence feel the dewy showers,
+ And drink with glad, still lips the blessing of the sky.
+
+ The rigor of a frozen clime,
+ The harshness of an untaught ear,
+ The jarring words of one whose rhyme
+ Beat often Labor's hurried time,
+ Or Duty's rugged march through storm and strife, are here.
+
+ Of mystic beauty, dreamy grace,
+ No rounded art the lack supplies;
+ Unskilled the subtle lines to trace,
+ Or softer shades of Nature's face,
+ I view her common forms with unanointed eyes.
+
+ Nor mine the seer-like power to show
+ The secrets of the heart and mind;
+ To drop the plummet-line below
+ Our common world of joy and woe,
+ A more intense despair or brighter hope to find.
+
+ Yet here at least an earnest sense
+ Of human right and weal is shown;
+ A hate of tyranny intense,
+ And hearty in its vehemence,
+ As if my brother's pain and sorrow were my own.
+
+ O Freedom! if to me belong
+ Nor mighty Milton's gift divine,
+ Nor Marvell's wit and graceful song,
+ Still with a love as deep and strong
+ As theirs, I lay, like them, my best gifts on thy shrine.
+
+ AMESBURY, 11th mo., 1847.
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+The edition of my poems published in 1857 contained the following note
+by way of preface:--
+
+"In these volumes, for the first time, a complete collection of my
+poetical writings has been made. While it is satisfactory to know that
+these scattered children of my brain have found a home, I cannot but
+regret that I have been unable, by reason of illness, to give that
+attention to their revision and arrangement, which respect for the
+opinions of others and my own afterthought and experience demand.
+
+"That there are pieces in this collection which I would 'willingly let
+die,' I am free to confess. But it is now too late to disown them, and I
+must submit to the inevitable penalty of poetical as well as other sins.
+There are others, intimately connected with the author's life and times,
+which owe their tenacity of vitality to the circumstances under which
+they were written, and the events by which they were suggested.
+
+"The long poem of Mogg Megone was in a great measure composed in early
+life; and it is scarcely necessary to say that its subject is not such
+as the writer would have chosen at any subsequent period."
+
+After a lapse of thirty years since the above was written, I have been
+requested by my publishers to make some preparation for a new and
+revised edition of my poems. I cannot flatter myself that I have added
+much to the interest of the work beyond the correction of my own errors
+and those of the press, with the addition of a few heretofore
+unpublished pieces, and occasional notes of explanation which seemed
+necessary. I have made an attempt to classify the poems under a few
+general heads, and have transferred the long poem of Mogg Megone to the
+Appendix, with other specimens of my earlier writings. I have endeavored
+to affix the dates of composition or publication as far as possible.
+
+In looking over these poems I have not been unmindful of occasional
+prosaic lines and verbal infelicities, but at this late day I have
+neither strength nor patience to undertake their correction.
+
+Perhaps a word of explanation may be needed in regard to a class of
+poems written between the years 1832 and 1865. Of their defects from an
+artistic point of view it is not necessary to speak. They were the
+earnest and often vehement expression of the writer's thought and
+feeling at critical periods in the great conflict between Freedom and
+Slavery. They were written with no expectation that they would survive
+the occasions which called them forth: they were protests, alarm
+signals, trumpet-calls to action, words wrung from the writer's heart,
+forged at white heat, and of course lacking the finish and careful
+word-selection which reflection and patient brooding over them might
+have given. Such as they are, they belong to the history of the
+Anti-Slavery movement, and may serve as way-marks of its progress. If
+their language at times seems severe and harsh, the monstrous wrong of
+Slavery which provoked it must be its excuse, if any is needed. In
+attacking it, we did not measure our words. "It is," said Garrison,
+"a waste of politeness to be courteous to the devil." But in truth the
+contest was, in a great measure, an impersonal one,--hatred of slavery
+and not of slave-masters.
+
+ "No common wrong provoked our zeal,
+ The silken gauntlet which is thrown
+ In such a quarrel rings like steel."
+
+Even Thomas Jefferson, in his terrible denunciation of Slavery in the
+Notes on Virginia, says "It is impossible to be temperate and pursue the
+subject of Slavery." After the great contest was over, no class of the
+American people were more ready, with kind words and deprecation of
+harsh retaliation, to welcome back the revolted States than the
+Abolitionists; and none have since more heartily rejoiced at the fast
+increasing prosperity of the South.
+
+Grateful for the measure of favor which has been accorded to my
+writings, I leave this edition with the public. It contains all that I
+care to re-publish, and some things which, had the matter of choice been
+left solely to myself, I should have omitted.
+ J. G. W.
+
+
+
+
+
+NARRATIVE AND LEGENDARY POEMS
+
+
+
+
+THE VAUDOIS TEACHER.
+
+This poem was suggested by the account given of the manner which the
+Waldenses disseminated their principles among the Catholic gentry. They
+gained access to the house through their occupation as peddlers of
+silks, jewels, and trinkets. "Having disposed of some of their goods,"
+it is said by a writer who quotes the inquisitor Rainerus Sacco, "they
+cautiously intimated that they had commodities far more valuable than
+these, inestimable jewels, which they would show if they could be
+protected from the clergy. They would then give their purchasers a Bible
+or Testament; and thereby many were deluded into heresy." The poem,
+under the title Le Colporteur Vaudois, was translated into French by
+Professor G. de Felice, of Montauban, and further naturalized by
+Professor Alexandre Rodolphe Vinet, who quoted it in his lectures on
+French literature, afterwards published. It became familiar in this form
+to the Waldenses, who adopted it as a household poem. An American
+clergyman, J. C. Fletcher, frequently heard it when he was a student,
+about the year 1850, in the theological seminary at Geneva, Switzerland,
+but the authorship of the poem was unknown to those who used it.
+Twenty-five years later, Mr. Fletcher, learning the name of the author,
+wrote to the moderator of the Waldensian synod at La Tour, giving the
+information. At the banquet which closed the meeting of the synod, the
+moderator announced the fact, and was instructed in the name of the
+Waldensian church to write to me a letter of thanks. My letter, written
+in reply, was translated into Italian and printed throughout Italy.
+
+ "O LADY fair, these silks of mine
+ are beautiful and rare,--
+ The richest web of the Indian loom, which beauty's
+ queen might wear;
+ And my pearls are pure as thy own fair neck, with whose
+ radiant light they vie;
+ I have brought them with me a weary way,--will my
+ gentle lady buy?"
+
+ The lady smiled on the worn old man through the
+ dark and clustering curls
+ Which veiled her brow, as she bent to view his
+ silks and glittering pearls;
+ And she placed their price in the old man's hand
+ and lightly turned away,
+ But she paused at the wanderer's earnest call,--
+ "My gentle lady, stay!
+
+ "O lady fair, I have yet a gem which a purer
+ lustre flings,
+ Than the diamond flash of the jewelled crown on
+ the lofty brow of kings;
+ A wonderful pearl of exceeding price, whose virtue
+ shall not decay,
+ Whose light shall be as a spell to thee and a
+ blessing on thy way!"
+
+ The lady glanced at the mirroring steel where her
+ form of grace was seen,
+ Where her eye shone clear, and her dark locks
+ waved their clasping pearls between;
+ "Bring forth thy pearl of exceeding worth, thou
+ traveller gray and old,
+ And name the price of thy precious gem, and my
+ page shall count thy gold."
+
+ The cloud went off from the pilgrim's brow, as a
+ small and meagre book,
+ Unchased with gold or gem of cost, from his
+ folding robe he took!
+ "Here, lady fair, is the pearl of price, may it prove
+ as such to thee
+ Nay, keep thy gold--I ask it not, for the word of
+ God is free!"
+
+ The hoary traveller went his way, but the gift he
+ left behind
+ Hath had its pure and perfect work on that high-
+ born maiden's mind,
+ And she hath turned from the pride of sin to the
+ lowliness of truth,
+ And given her human heart to God in its beautiful
+ hour of youth
+
+ And she hath left the gray old halls, where an evil
+ faith had power,
+ The courtly knights of her father's train, and the
+ maidens of her bower;
+ And she hath gone to the Vaudois vales by lordly
+ feet untrod,
+ Where the poor and needy of earth are rich in the
+ perfect love of God!
+ 1830.
+
+
+
+
+THE FEMALE MARTYR.
+
+Mary G-----, aged eighteen, a "Sister of Charity," died in one of our
+Atlantic cities, during the prevalence of the Indian cholera, while
+in voluntary attendance upon the sick.
+
+
+ "BRING out your dead!" The midnight street
+ Heard and gave back the hoarse, low call;
+ Harsh fell the tread of hasty feet,
+ Glanced through the dark the coarse white sheet,
+ Her coffin and her pall.
+ "What--only one!" the brutal hack-man said,
+ As, with an oath, he spurned away the dead.
+
+ How sunk the inmost hearts of all,
+ As rolled that dead-cart slowly by,
+ With creaking wheel and harsh hoof-fall!
+ The dying turned him to the wall,
+ To hear it and to die!
+ Onward it rolled; while oft its driver stayed,
+ And hoarsely clamored, "Ho! bring out your dead."
+
+ It paused beside the burial-place;
+ "Toss in your load!" and it was done.
+ With quick hand and averted face,
+ Hastily to the grave's embrace
+ They cast them, one by one,
+ Stranger and friend, the evil and the just,
+ Together trodden in the churchyard dust.
+
+ And thou, young martyr! thou wast there;
+ No white-robed sisters round thee trod,
+ Nor holy hymn, nor funeral prayer
+ Rose through the damp and noisome air,
+ Giving thee to thy God;
+ Nor flower, nor cross, nor hallowed taper gave
+ Grace to the dead, and beauty to the grave!
+
+ Yet, gentle sufferer! there shall be,
+ In every heart of kindly feeling,
+ A rite as holy paid to thee
+ As if beneath the convent-tree
+ Thy sisterhood were kneeling,
+ At vesper hours, like sorrowing angels, keeping
+ Their tearful watch around thy place of sleeping.
+
+ For thou wast one in whom the light
+ Of Heaven's own love was kindled well;
+ Enduring with a martyr's might,
+ Through weary day and wakeful night,
+ Far more than words may tell
+ Gentle, and meek, and lowly, and unknown,
+ Thy mercies measured by thy God alone!
+
+ Where manly hearts were failing, where
+ The throngful street grew foul with death,
+ O high-souled martyr! thou wast there,
+ Inhaling, from the loathsome air,
+ Poison with every breath.
+ Yet shrinking not from offices of dread
+ For the wrung dying, and the unconscious dead.
+
+ And, where the sickly taper shed
+ Its light through vapors, damp, confined,
+ Hushed as a seraph's fell thy tread,
+ A new Electra by the bed
+ Of suffering human-kind!
+ Pointing the spirit, in its dark dismay,
+ To that pure hope which fadeth not away.
+
+ Innocent teacher of the high
+ And holy mysteries of Heaven!
+ How turned to thee each glazing eye,
+ In mute and awful sympathy,
+ As thy low prayers were given;
+ And the o'er-hovering Spoiler wore, the while,
+ An angel's features, a deliverer's smile!
+
+ A blessed task! and worthy one
+ Who, turning from the world, as thou,
+ Before life's pathway had begun
+ To leave its spring-time flower and sun,
+ Had sealed her early vow;
+ Giving to God her beauty and her youth,
+ Her pure affections and her guileless truth.
+
+ Earth may not claim thee. Nothing here
+ Could be for thee a meet reward;
+ Thine is a treasure far more dear
+ Eye hath not seen it, nor the ear
+ Of living mortal heard
+ The joys prepared, the promised bliss above,
+ The holy presence of Eternal Love!
+
+ Sleep on in peace. The earth has not
+ A nobler name than thine shall be.
+ The deeds by martial manhood wrought,
+ The lofty energies of thought,
+ The fire of poesy,
+ These have but frail and fading honors; thine
+ Shall Time unto Eternity consign.
+
+ Yea, and when thrones shall crumble down,
+ And human pride and grandeur fall,
+ The herald's line of long renown,
+ The mitre and the kingly crown,--
+ Perishing glories all!
+ The pure devotion of thy generous heart
+ Shall live in Heaven, of which it was a part.
+ 1833.
+
+
+
+
+EXTRACT FROM "A NEW ENGLAND LEGEND."
+
+(Originally a part of the author's Moll Pitcher.)
+
+
+ How has New England's romance fled,
+ Even as a vision of the morning!
+ Its rites foredone, its guardians dead,
+ Its priestesses, bereft of dread,
+ Waking the veriest urchin's scorning!
+ Gone like the Indian wizard's yell
+ And fire-dance round the magic rock,
+ Forgotten like the Druid's spell
+ At moonrise by his holy oak!
+ No more along the shadowy glen
+ Glide the dim ghosts of murdered men;
+ No more the unquiet churchyard dead
+ Glimpse upward from their turfy bed,
+ Startling the traveller, late and lone;
+ As, on some night of starless weather,
+ They silently commune together,
+ Each sitting on his own head-stone
+ The roofless house, decayed, deserted,
+ Its living tenants all departed,
+ No longer rings with midnight revel
+ Of witch, or ghost, or goblin evil;
+ No pale blue flame sends out its flashes
+ Through creviced roof and shattered sashes!
+ The witch-grass round the hazel spring
+ May sharply to the night-air sing,
+ But there no more shall withered hags
+ Refresh at ease their broomstick nags,
+ Or taste those hazel-shadowed waters
+ As beverage meet for Satan's daughters;
+ No more their mimic tones be heard,
+ The mew of cat, the chirp of bird,
+ Shrill blending with the hoarser laughter
+ Of the fell demon following after!
+ The cautious goodman nails no more
+ A horseshoe on his outer door,
+ Lest some unseemly hag should fit
+ To his own mouth her bridle-bit;
+ The goodwife's churn no more refuses
+ Its wonted culinary uses
+ Until, with heated needle burned,
+ The witch has to her place returned!
+ Our witches are no longer old
+ And wrinkled beldames, Satan-sold,
+ But young and gay and laughing creatures,
+ With the heart's sunshine on their features;
+ Their sorcery--the light which dances
+ Where the raised lid unveils its glances;
+ Or that low-breathed and gentle tone,
+ The music of Love's twilight hours,
+ Soft, dream-like, as a fairy's moan
+ Above her nightly closing flowers,
+ Sweeter than that which sighed of yore
+ Along the charmed Ausonian shore!
+ Even she, our own weird heroine,
+ Sole Pythoness of ancient Lynn,'
+ Sleeps calmly where the living laid her;
+ And the wide realm of sorcery,
+ Left by its latest mistress free,
+ Hath found no gray and skilled invader.
+ So--perished Albion's "glammarye,"
+ With him in Melrose Abbey sleeping,
+ His charmed torch beside his knee,
+ That even the dead himself might see
+ The magic scroll within his keeping.
+ And now our modern Yankee sees
+ Nor omens, spells, nor mysteries;
+ And naught above, below, around,
+ Of life or death, of sight or sound,
+ Whate'er its nature, form, or look,
+ Excites his terror or surprise,
+ All seeming to his knowing eyes
+ Familiar as his "catechise,"
+ Or "Webster's Spelling-Book."
+
+ 1833.
+
+
+
+
+THE DEMON OF THE STUDY.
+
+ THE Brownie sits in the Scotchman's room,
+ And eats his meat and drinks his ale,
+ And beats the maid with her unused broom,
+ And the lazy lout with his idle flail;
+ But he sweeps the floor and threshes the corn,
+ And hies him away ere the break of dawn.
+
+ The shade of Denmark fled from the sun,
+ And the Cocklane ghost from the barn-loft cheer,
+ The fiend of Faust was a faithful one,
+ Agrippa's demon wrought in fear,
+ And the devil of Martin Luther sat
+ By the stout monk's side in social chat.
+
+ The Old Man of the Sea, on the neck of him
+ Who seven times crossed the deep,
+ Twined closely each lean and withered limb,
+ Like the nightmare in one's sleep.
+ But he drank of the wine, and Sindbad cast
+ The evil weight from his back at last.
+
+ But the demon that cometh day by day
+ To my quiet room and fireside nook,
+ Where the casement light falls dim and gray
+ On faded painting and ancient book,
+ Is a sorrier one than any whose names
+ Are chronicled well by good King James.
+
+ No bearer of burdens like Caliban,
+ No runner of errands like Ariel,
+ He comes in the shape of a fat old man,
+ Without rap of knuckle or pull of bell;
+ And whence he comes, or whither he goes,
+ I know as I do of the wind which blows.
+
+ A stout old man with a greasy hat
+ Slouched heavily down to his dark, red nose,
+ And two gray eyes enveloped in fat,
+ Looking through glasses with iron bows.
+ Read ye, and heed ye, and ye who can,
+ Guard well your doors from that old man!
+
+ He comes with a careless "How d' ye do?"
+ And seats himself in my elbow-chair;
+ And my morning paper and pamphlet new
+ Fall forthwith under his special care,
+ And he wipes his glasses and clears his throat,
+ And, button by button, unfolds his coat.
+
+ And then he reads from paper and book,
+ In a low and husky asthmatic tone,
+ With the stolid sameness of posture and look
+ Of one who reads to himself alone;
+ And hour after hour on my senses come
+ That husky wheeze and that dolorous hum.
+
+ The price of stocks, the auction sales,
+ The poet's song and the lover's glee,
+ The horrible murders, the seaboard gales,
+ The marriage list, and the jeu d'esprit,
+ All reach my ear in the self-same tone,--
+ I shudder at each, but the fiend reads on!
+
+ Oh, sweet as the lapse of water at noon
+ O'er the mossy roots of some forest tree,
+ The sigh of the wind in the woods of June,
+ Or sound of flutes o'er a moonlight sea,
+ Or the low soft music, perchance, which seems
+ To float through the slumbering singer's dreams,
+
+ So sweet, so dear is the silvery tone,
+ Of her in whose features I sometimes look,
+ As I sit at eve by her side alone,
+ And we read by turns, from the self-same book,
+ Some tale perhaps of the olden time,
+ Some lover's romance or quaint old rhyme.
+
+ Then when the story is one of woe,--
+ Some prisoner's plaint through his dungeon-bar,
+ Her blue eye glistens with tears, and low
+ Her voice sinks down like a moan afar;
+ And I seem to hear that prisoner's wail,
+ And his face looks on me worn and pale.
+
+ And when she reads some merrier song,
+ Her voice is glad as an April bird's,
+ And when the tale is of war and wrong,
+ A trumpet's summons is in her words,
+ And the rush of the hosts I seem to hear,
+ And see the tossing of plume and spear!
+
+ Oh, pity me then, when, day by day,
+ The stout fiend darkens my parlor door;
+ And reads me perchance the self-same lay
+ Which melted in music, the night before,
+ From lips as the lips of Hylas sweet,
+ And moved like twin roses which zephyrs meet!
+
+ I cross my floor with a nervous tread,
+ I whistle and laugh and sing and shout,
+ I flourish my cane above his head,
+ And stir up the fire to roast him out;
+ I topple the chairs, and drum on the pane,
+ And press my hands on my ears, in vain!
+
+ I've studied Glanville and James the wise,
+ And wizard black-letter tomes which treat
+ Of demons of every name and size
+ Which a Christian man is presumed to meet,
+ But never a hint and never a line
+ Can I find of a reading fiend like mine.
+
+ I've crossed the Psalter with Brady and Tate,
+ And laid the Primer above them all,
+ I've nailed a horseshoe over the grate,
+ And hung a wig to my parlor wall
+ Once worn by a learned Judge, they say,
+ At Salem court in the witchcraft day!
+
+ "Conjuro te, sceleratissime,
+ Abire ad tuum locum!"--still
+ Like a visible nightmare he sits by me,--
+ The exorcism has lost its skill;
+ And I hear again in my haunted room
+ The husky wheeze and the dolorous hum!
+
+ Ah! commend me to Mary Magdalen
+ With her sevenfold plagues, to the wandering Jew,
+ To the terrors which haunted Orestes when
+ The furies his midnight curtains drew,
+ But charm him off, ye who charm him can,
+ That reading demon, that fat old man!
+
+ 1835.
+
+
+
+
+THE FOUNTAIN.
+
+On the declivity of a hill in Salisbury, Essex County, is a fountain of
+clear water, gushing from the very roots of a venerable oak. It is about
+two miles from the junction of the Powow River with the Merrimac.
+
+ TRAVELLER! on thy journey toiling
+ By the swift Powow,
+ With the summer sunshine falling
+ On thy heated brow,
+ Listen, while all else is still,
+ To the brooklet from the hill.
+
+ Wild and sweet the flowers are blowing
+ By that streamlet's side,
+ And a greener verdure showing
+ Where its waters glide,
+ Down the hill-slope murmuring on,
+ Over root and mossy stone.
+
+ Where yon oak his broad arms flingeth
+ O'er the sloping hill,
+ Beautiful and freshly springeth
+ That soft-flowing rill,
+ Through its dark roots wreathed and bare,
+ Gushing up to sun and air.
+
+ Brighter waters sparkled never
+ In that magic well,
+ Of whose gift of life forever
+ Ancient legends tell,
+ In the lonely desert wasted,
+ And by mortal lip untasted.
+
+ Waters which the proud Castilian
+ Sought with longing eyes,
+ Underneath the bright pavilion
+ Of the Indian skies,
+ Where his forest pathway lay
+ Through the blooms of Florida.
+
+ Years ago a lonely stranger,
+ With the dusky brow
+ Of the outcast forest-ranger,
+ Crossed the swift Powow,
+ And betook him to the rill
+ And the oak upon the hill.
+
+ O'er his face of moody sadness
+ For an instant shone
+ Something like a gleam of gladness,
+ As he stooped him down
+ To the fountain's grassy side,
+ And his eager thirst supplied.
+
+ With the oak its shadow throwing
+ O'er his mossy seat,
+ And the cool, sweet waters flowing
+ Softly at his feet,
+ Closely by the fountain's rim
+ That lone Indian seated him.
+
+ Autumn's earliest frost had given
+ To the woods below
+ Hues of beauty, such as heaven
+ Lendeth to its bow;
+ And the soft breeze from the west
+ Scarcely broke their dreamy rest.
+
+ Far behind was Ocean striving
+ With his chains of sand;
+ Southward, sunny glimpses giving,
+ 'Twixt the swells of land,
+ Of its calm and silvery track,
+ Rolled the tranquil Merrimac.
+
+ Over village, wood, and meadow
+ Gazed that stranger man,
+ Sadly, till the twilight shadow
+ Over all things ran,
+ Save where spire and westward pane
+ Flashed the sunset back again.
+
+ Gazing thus upon the dwelling
+ Of his warrior sires,
+ Where no lingering trace was telling
+ Of their wigwam fires,
+ Who the gloomy thoughts might know
+ Of that wandering child of woe?
+
+ Naked lay, in sunshine glowing,
+ Hills that once had stood
+ Down their sides the shadows throwing
+ Of a mighty wood,
+ Where the deer his covert kept,
+ And the eagle's pinion swept!
+
+ Where the birch canoe had glided
+ Down the swift Powow,
+ Dark and gloomy bridges strided
+ Those clear waters now;
+ And where once the beaver swam,
+ Jarred the wheel and frowned the dam.
+
+ For the wood-bird's merry singing,
+ And the hunter's cheer,
+ Iron clang and hammer's ringing
+ Smote upon his ear;
+ And the thick and sullen smoke
+ From the blackened forges broke.
+
+ Could it be his fathers ever
+ Loved to linger here?
+ These bare hills, this conquered river,--
+ Could they hold them dear,
+ With their native loveliness
+ Tamed and tortured into this?
+
+ Sadly, as the shades of even
+ Gathered o'er the hill,
+ While the western half of heaven
+ Blushed with sunset still,
+ From the fountain's mossy seat
+ Turned the Indian's weary feet.
+
+ Year on year hath flown forever,
+ But he came no more
+ To the hillside on the river
+ Where he came before.
+ But the villager can tell
+ Of that strange man's visit well.
+
+ And the merry children, laden
+ With their fruits or flowers,
+ Roving boy and laughing maiden,
+ In their school-day hours,
+ Love the simple tale to tell
+ Of the Indian and his well.
+
+ 1837
+
+
+
+
+PENTUCKET.
+
+The village of Haverhill, on the Merrimac, called by the Indians
+Pentucket, was for nearly seventeen years a frontier town, and during
+thirty years endured all the horrors of savage warfare. In the year
+1708, a combined body of French and Indians, under the command of De
+Chaillons, and Hertel de Rouville, the famous and bloody sacker of
+Deerfield, made an attack upon the village, which at that time contained
+only thirty houses. Sixteen of the villagers were massacred, and a still
+larger number made prisoners. About thirty of the enemy also fell, among
+them Hertel de Rouville. The minister of the place, Benjamin Rolfe, was
+killed by a shot through his own door. In a paper entitled The Border
+War of 1708, published in my collection of Recreations and Miscellanies,
+I have given a prose narrative of the surprise of Haverhill.
+
+
+ How sweetly on the wood-girt town
+ The mellow light of sunset shone!
+ Each small, bright lake, whose waters still
+ Mirror the forest and the hill,
+ Reflected from its waveless breast
+ The beauty of a cloudless west,
+ Glorious as if a glimpse were given
+ Within the western gates of heaven,
+ Left, by the spirit of the star
+ Of sunset's holy hour, ajar!
+
+ Beside the river's tranquil flood
+ The dark and low-walled dwellings stood,
+ Where many a rood of open land
+ Stretched up and down on either hand,
+ With corn-leaves waving freshly green
+ The thick and blackened stumps between.
+ Behind, unbroken, deep and dread,
+ The wild, untravelled forest spread,
+ Back to those mountains, white and cold,
+ Of which the Indian trapper told,
+ Upon whose summits never yet
+ Was mortal foot in safety set.
+
+ Quiet and calm without a fear,
+ Of danger darkly lurking near,
+ The weary laborer left his plough,
+ The milkmaid carolled by her cow;
+ From cottage door and household hearth
+ Rose songs of praise, or tones of mirth.
+
+ At length the murmur died away,
+ And silence on that village lay.
+ --So slept Pompeii, tower and hall,
+ Ere the quick earthquake swallowed all,
+ Undreaming of the fiery fate
+ Which made its dwellings desolate.
+
+ Hours passed away. By moonlight sped
+ The Merrimac along his bed.
+ Bathed in the pallid lustre, stood
+ Dark cottage-wall and rock and wood,
+ Silent, beneath that tranquil beam,
+ As the hushed grouping of a dream.
+ Yet on the still air crept a sound,
+ No bark of fox, nor rabbit's bound,
+ Nor stir of wings, nor waters flowing,
+ Nor leaves in midnight breezes blowing.
+
+ Was that the tread of many feet,
+ Which downward from the hillside beat?
+ What forms were those which darkly stood
+ Just on the margin of the wood?--
+ Charred tree-stumps in the moonlight dim,
+ Or paling rude, or leafless limb?
+ No,--through the trees fierce eyeballs glowed,
+ Dark human forms in moonshine showed,
+ Wild from their native wilderness,
+ With painted limbs and battle-dress.
+
+ A yell the dead might wake to hear
+ Swelled on the night air, far and clear;
+ Then smote the Indian tomahawk
+ On crashing door and shattering lock;
+
+ Then rang the rifle-shot, and then
+ The shrill death-scream of stricken men,--
+ Sank the red axe in woman's brain,
+ And childhood's cry arose in vain.
+ Bursting through roof and window came,
+ Red, fast, and fierce, the kindled flame,
+ And blended fire and moonlight glared
+ On still dead men and scalp-knives bared.
+
+ The morning sun looked brightly through
+ The river willows, wet with dew.
+ No sound of combat filled the air,
+ No shout was heard, nor gunshot there;
+ Yet still the thick and sullen smoke
+ From smouldering ruins slowly broke;
+ And on the greensward many a stain,
+ And, here and there, the mangled slain,
+ Told how that midnight bolt had sped
+ Pentucket, on thy fated head.
+
+ Even now the villager can tell
+ Where Rolfe beside his hearthstone fell,
+ Still show the door of wasting oak,
+ Through which the fatal death-shot broke,
+ And point the curious stranger where
+ De Rouville's corse lay grim and bare;
+ Whose hideous head, in death still feared,
+ Bore not a trace of hair or beard;
+ And still, within the churchyard ground,
+ Heaves darkly up the ancient mound,
+ Whose grass-grown surface overlies
+ The victims of that sacrifice.
+ 1838.
+
+
+
+
+THE NORSEMEN.
+
+In the early part of the present century, a fragment of a statue, rudely
+chiselled from dark gray stone, was found in the town of Bradford, on
+the Merrimac. Its origin must be left entirely to conjecture. The fact
+that the ancient Northmen visited the north-east coast of North America
+and probably New England, some centuries before the discovery of the
+western world by Columbus, is very generally admitted.
+
+ GIFT from the cold and silent Past!
+ A relic to the present cast,
+ Left on the ever-changing strand
+ Of shifting and unstable sand,
+ Which wastes beneath the steady chime
+ And beating of the waves of Time!
+ Who from its bed of primal rock
+ First wrenched thy dark, unshapely block?
+ Whose hand, of curious skill untaught,
+ Thy rude and savage outline wrought?
+
+ The waters of my native stream
+ Are glancing in the sun's warm beam;
+ From sail-urged keel and flashing oar
+ The circles widen to its shore;
+ And cultured field and peopled town
+ Slope to its willowed margin down.
+ Yet, while this morning breeze is bringing
+ The home-life sound of school-bells ringing,
+ And rolling wheel, and rapid jar
+ Of the fire-winged and steedless car,
+ And voices from the wayside near
+ Come quick and blended on my ear,--
+ A spell is in this old gray stone,
+ My thoughts are with the Past alone!
+
+ A change!--The steepled town no more
+ Stretches along the sail-thronged shore;
+ Like palace-domes in sunset's cloud,
+ Fade sun-gilt spire and mansion proud
+ Spectrally rising where they stood,
+ I see the old, primeval wood;
+ Dark, shadow-like, on either hand
+ I see its solemn waste expand;
+ It climbs the green and cultured hill,
+ It arches o'er the valley's rill,
+ And leans from cliff and crag to throw
+ Its wild arms o'er the stream below.
+ Unchanged, alone, the same bright river
+ Flows on, as it will flow forever
+ I listen, and I hear the low
+ Soft ripple where its waters go;
+ I hear behind the panther's cry,
+ The wild-bird's scream goes thrilling by,
+ And shyly on the river's brink
+ The deer is stooping down to drink.
+
+ But hark!--from wood and rock flung back,
+ What sound comes up the Merrimac?
+ What sea-worn barks are those which throw
+ The light spray from each rushing prow?
+ Have they not in the North Sea's blast
+ Bowed to the waves the straining mast?
+ Their frozen sails the low, pale sun
+ Of Thule's night has shone upon;
+ Flapped by the sea-wind's gusty sweep
+ Round icy drift, and headland steep.
+ Wild Jutland's wives and Lochlin's daughters
+ Have watched them fading o'er the waters,
+ Lessening through driving mist and spray,
+ Like white-winged sea-birds on their way!
+
+ Onward they glide,--and now I view
+ Their iron-armed and stalwart crew;
+ Joy glistens in each wild blue eye,
+ Turned to green earth and summer sky.
+ Each broad, seamed breast has cast aside
+ Its cumbering vest of shaggy hide;
+ Bared to the sun and soft warm air,
+ Streams back the Norsemen's yellow hair.
+ I see the gleam of axe and spear,
+ The sound of smitten shields I hear,
+ Keeping a harsh and fitting time
+ To Saga's chant, and Runic rhyme;
+ Such lays as Zetland's Scald has sung,
+ His gray and naked isles among;
+ Or muttered low at midnight hour
+ Round Odin's mossy stone of power.
+ The wolf beneath the Arctic moon
+ Has answered to that startling rune;
+ The Gael has heard its stormy swell,
+ The light Frank knows its summons well;
+ Iona's sable-stoled Culdee
+ Has heard it sounding o'er the sea,
+ And swept, with hoary beard and hair,
+ His altar's foot in trembling prayer.
+
+ 'T is past,--the 'wildering vision dies
+ In darkness on my dreaming eyes
+ The forest vanishes in air,
+ Hill-slope and vale lie starkly bare;
+ I hear the common tread of men,
+ And hum of work-day life again;
+
+ The mystic relic seems alone
+ A broken mass of common stone;
+ And if it be the chiselled limb
+ Of Berserker or idol grim,
+ A fragment of Valhalla's Thor,
+ The stormy Viking's god of War,
+ Or Praga of the Runic lay,
+ Or love-awakening Siona,
+ I know not,--for no graven line,
+ Nor Druid mark, nor Runic sign,
+ Is left me here, by which to trace
+ Its name, or origin, or place.
+ Yet, for this vision of the Past,
+ This glance upon its darkness cast,
+ My spirit bows in gratitude
+ Before the Giver of all good,
+ Who fashioned so the human mind,
+ That, from the waste of Time behind,
+ A simple stone, or mound of earth,
+ Can summon the departed forth;
+ Quicken the Past to life again,
+ The Present lose in what hath been,
+ And in their primal freshness show
+ The buried forms of long ago.
+ As if a portion of that Thought
+ By which the Eternal will is wrought,
+ Whose impulse fills anew with breath
+ The frozen solitude of Death,
+ To mortal mind were sometimes lent,
+ To mortal musings sometimes sent,
+ To whisper-even when it seems
+ But Memory's fantasy of dreams--
+ Through the mind's waste of woe and sin,
+ Of an immortal origin!
+
+ 1841.
+
+
+
+
+FUNERAL TREE OF THE SOKOKIS.
+
+Polan, chief of the Sokokis Indians of the country between Agamenticus
+and Casco Bay, was killed at Windham on Sebago Lake in the spring of
+1756. After the whites had retired, the surviving Indians "swayed" or
+bent down a young tree until its roots were upturned, placed the body of
+their chief beneath it, then released the tree, which, in springing back
+to its old position, covered the grave. The Sokokis were early converts
+to the Catholic faith. Most of them, prior to the year 1756, had removed
+to the French settlements on the St. Francois.
+
+ AROUND Sebago's lonely lake
+ There lingers not a breeze to break
+ The mirror which its waters make.
+
+ The solemn pines along its shore,
+ The firs which hang its gray rocks o'er,
+ Are painted on its glassy floor.
+
+ The sun looks o'er, with hazy eye,
+ The snowy mountain-tops which lie
+ Piled coldly up against the sky.
+
+ Dazzling and white! save where the bleak,
+ Wild winds have bared some splintering peak,
+ Or snow-slide left its dusky streak.
+
+ Yet green are Saco's banks below,
+ And belts of spruce and cedar show,
+ Dark fringing round those cones of snow.
+
+ The earth hath felt the breath of spring,
+ Though yet on her deliverer's wing
+ The lingering frosts of winter cling.
+
+ Fresh grasses fringe the meadow-brooks,
+ And mildly from its sunny nooks
+ The blue eye of the violet looks.
+
+ And odors from the springing grass,
+ The sweet birch and the sassafras,
+ Upon the scarce-felt breezes pass.
+
+ Her tokens of renewing care
+ Hath Nature scattered everywhere,
+ In bud and flower, and warmer air.
+
+ But in their hour of bitterness,
+ What reek the broken Sokokis,
+ Beside their slaughtered chief, of this?
+
+ The turf's red stain is yet undried,
+ Scarce have the death-shot echoes died
+ Along Sebago's wooded side;
+
+ And silent now the hunters stand,
+ Grouped darkly, where a swell of land
+ Slopes upward from the lake's white sand.
+
+ Fire and the axe have swept it bare,
+ Save one lone beech, unclosing there
+ Its light leaves in the vernal air.
+
+ With grave, cold looks, all sternly mute,
+ They break the damp turf at its foot,
+ And bare its coiled and twisted root.
+
+ They heave the stubborn trunk aside,
+ The firm roots from the earth divide,--
+ The rent beneath yawns dark and wide.
+
+ And there the fallen chief is laid,
+ In tasselled garb of skins arrayed,
+ And girded with his wampum-braid.
+
+ The silver cross he loved is pressed
+ Beneath the heavy arms, which rest
+ Upon his scarred and naked breast.
+
+ 'T is done: the roots are backward sent,
+ The beechen-tree stands up unbent,
+ The Indian's fitting monument!
+
+ When of that sleeper's broken race
+ Their green and pleasant dwelling-place,
+ Which knew them once, retains no trace;
+
+ Oh, long may sunset's light be shed
+ As now upon that beech's head,
+ A green memorial of the dead!
+
+ There shall his fitting requiem be,
+ In northern winds, that, cold and free,
+ Howl nightly in that funeral tree.
+
+ To their wild wail the waves which break
+ Forever round that lonely lake
+ A solemn undertone shall make!
+
+ And who shall deem the spot unblest,
+ Where Nature's younger children rest,
+ Lulled on their sorrowing mother's breast?
+
+ Deem ye that mother loveth less
+ These bronzed forms of the wilderness
+ She foldeth in her long caress?
+
+ As sweet o'er them her wild-flowers blow,
+ As if with fairer hair and brow
+ The blue-eyed Saxon slept below.
+
+ What though the places of their rest
+ No priestly knee hath ever pressed,--
+ No funeral rite nor prayer hath blessed?
+
+ What though the bigot's ban be there,
+ And thoughts of wailing and despair,
+ And cursing in the place of prayer.
+
+ Yet Heaven hath angels watching round
+ The Indian's lowliest forest-mound,--
+ And they have made it holy ground.
+
+ There ceases man's frail judgment; all
+ His powerless bolts of cursing fall
+ Unheeded on that grassy pall.
+
+ O peeled and hunted and reviled,
+ Sleep on, dark tenant of the wild!
+ Great Nature owns her simple child!
+
+ And Nature's God, to whom alone
+ The secret of the heart is known,--
+ The hidden language traced thereon;
+
+ Who from its many cumberings
+ Of form and creed, and outward things,
+ To light the naked spirit brings;
+
+ Not with our partial eye shall scan,
+ Not with our pride and scorn shall ban,
+ The spirit of our brother man!
+ 1841.
+
+
+
+
+ST. JOHN.
+
+The fierce rivalry between Charles de La Tour, a Protestant, and
+D'Aulnay Charnasy, a Catholic, for the possession of Acadia, forms one
+of the most romantic passages in the history of the New World. La Tour
+received aid in several instances from the Puritan colony of
+Massachusetts. During one of his voyages for the purpose of obtaining
+arms and provisions for his establishment at St. John, his castle was
+attacked by D'Aulnay, and successfully defended by its high-spirited
+mistress. A second attack however followed in the fourth month, 1647,
+when D'Aulnay was successful, and the garrison was put to the sword.
+Lady La Tour languished a few days in the hands of her enemy, and then
+died of grief.
+
+ "To the winds give our banner!
+ Bear homeward again!"
+ Cried the Lord of Acadia,
+ Cried Charles of Estienne;
+ From the prow of his shallop
+ He gazed, as the sun,
+ From its bed in the ocean,
+ Streamed up the St. John.
+
+ O'er the blue western waters
+ That shallop had passed,
+ Where the mists of Penobscot
+ Clung damp on her mast.
+ St. Saviour had looked
+ On the heretic sail,
+ As the songs of the Huguenot
+ Rose on the gale.
+
+ The pale, ghostly fathers
+ Remembered her well,
+ And had cursed her while passing,
+ With taper and bell;
+ But the men of Monhegan,
+ Of Papists abhorred,
+ Had welcomed and feasted
+ The heretic Lord.
+
+ They had loaded his shallop
+ With dun-fish and ball,
+ With stores for his larder,
+ And steel for his wall.
+ Pemaquid, from her bastions
+ And turrets of stone,
+ Had welcomed his coming
+ With banner and gun.
+
+ And the prayers of the elders
+ Had followed his way,
+ As homeward he glided,
+ Down Pentecost Bay.
+ Oh, well sped La Tour
+ For, in peril and pain,
+ His lady kept watch,
+ For his coming again.
+
+ O'er the Isle of the Pheasant
+ The morning sun shone,
+ On the plane-trees which shaded
+ The shores of St. John.
+ "Now, why from yon battlements
+ Speaks not my love!
+ Why waves there no banner
+ My fortress above?"
+
+ Dark and wild, from his deck
+ St. Estienne gazed about,
+ On fire-wasted dwellings,
+ And silent redoubt;
+ From the low, shattered walls
+ Which the flame had o'errun,
+ There floated no banner,
+ There thundered no gun!
+
+ But beneath the low arch
+ Of its doorway there stood
+ A pale priest of Rome,
+ In his cloak and his hood.
+ With the bound of a lion,
+ La Tour sprang to land,
+ On the throat of the Papist
+ He fastened his hand.
+
+ "Speak, son of the Woman
+ Of scarlet and sin!
+ What wolf has been prowling
+ My castle within?"
+ From the grasp of the soldier
+ The Jesuit broke,
+ Half in scorn, half in sorrow,
+ He smiled as he spoke:
+
+ "No wolf, Lord of Estienne,
+ Has ravaged thy hall,
+ But thy red-handed rival,
+ With fire, steel, and ball!
+ On an errand of mercy
+ I hitherward came,
+ While the walls of thy castle
+ Yet spouted with flame.
+
+ "Pentagoet's dark vessels
+ Were moored in the bay,
+ Grim sea-lions, roaring
+ Aloud for their prey."
+ "But what of my lady?"
+ Cried Charles of Estienne.
+ "On the shot-crumbled turret
+ Thy lady was seen:
+
+ "Half-veiled in the smoke-cloud,
+ Her hand grasped thy pennon,
+ While her dark tresses swayed
+ In the hot breath of cannon!
+ But woe to the heretic,
+ Evermore woe!
+ When the son of the church
+ And the cross is his foe!
+
+ "In the track of the shell,
+ In the path of the ball,
+ Pentagoet swept over
+ The breach of the wall!
+ Steel to steel, gun to gun,
+ One moment,--and then
+ Alone stood the victor,
+ Alone with his men!
+
+ "Of its sturdy defenders,
+ Thy lady alone
+ Saw the cross-blazoned banner
+ Float over St. John."
+ "Let the dastard look to it!"
+ Cried fiery Estienne,
+ "Were D'Aulnay King Louis,
+ I'd free her again!"
+
+ "Alas for thy lady!
+ No service from thee
+ Is needed by her
+ Whom the Lord hath set free;
+ Nine days, in stern silence,
+ Her thraldom she bore,
+ But the tenth morning came,
+ And Death opened her door!"
+
+ As if suddenly smitten
+ La Tour staggered back;
+ His hand grasped his sword-hilt,
+ His forehead grew black.
+ He sprang on the deck
+ Of his shallop again.
+ "We cruise now for vengeance!
+ Give way!" cried Estienne.
+
+ "Massachusetts shall hear
+ Of the Huguenot's wrong,
+ And from island and creekside
+ Her fishers shall throng!
+ Pentagoet shall rue
+ What his Papists have done,
+ When his palisades echo
+ The Puritan's gun!"
+
+ Oh, the loveliest of heavens
+ Hung tenderly o'er him,
+ There were waves in the sunshine,
+ And green isles before him:
+ But a pale hand was beckoning
+ The Huguenot on;
+ And in blackness and ashes
+ Behind was St. John!
+
+ 1841
+
+
+
+
+THE CYPRESS-TREE OF CEYLON.
+
+Ibn Batuta, the celebrated Mussulman traveller of the fourteenth
+century, speaks of a cypress-tree in Ceylon, universally held sacred by
+the natives, the leaves of which were said to fall only at certain
+intervals, and he who had the happiness to find and eat one of them was
+restored, at once, to youth and vigor. The traveller saw several
+venerable Jogees, or saints, sitting silent and motionless under the
+tree, patiently awaiting the falling of a leaf.
+
+ THEY sat in silent watchfulness
+ The sacred cypress-tree about,
+ And, from beneath old wrinkled brows,
+ Their failing eyes looked out.
+
+ Gray Age and Sickness waiting there
+ Through weary night and lingering day,--
+ Grim as the idols at their side,
+ And motionless as they.
+
+ Unheeded in the boughs above
+ The song of Ceylon's birds was sweet;
+ Unseen of them the island flowers
+ Bloomed brightly at their feet.
+
+ O'er them the tropic night-storm swept,
+ The thunder crashed on rock and hill;
+ The cloud-fire on their eyeballs blazed,
+ Yet there they waited still!
+
+ What was the world without to them?
+ The Moslem's sunset-call, the dance
+ Of Ceylon's maids, the passing gleam
+ Of battle-flag and lance?
+
+ They waited for that falling leaf
+ Of which the wandering Jogees sing:
+ Which lends once more to wintry age
+ The greenness of its spring.
+
+ Oh, if these poor and blinded ones
+ In trustful patience wait to feel
+ O'er torpid pulse and failing limb
+ A youthful freshness steal;
+
+ Shall we, who sit beneath that Tree
+ Whose healing leaves of life are shed,
+ In answer to the breath of prayer,
+ Upon the waiting head;
+
+ Not to restore our failing forms,
+ And build the spirit's broken shrine,
+ But on the fainting soul to shed
+ A light and life divine--
+
+ Shall we grow weary in our watch,
+ And murmur at the long delay?
+ Impatient of our Father's time
+ And His appointed way?
+
+ Or shall the stir of outward things
+ Allure and claim the Christian's eye,
+ When on the heathen watcher's ear
+ Their powerless murmurs die?
+
+ Alas! a deeper test of faith
+ Than prison cell or martyr's stake,
+ The self-abasing watchfulness
+ Of silent prayer may make.
+
+ We gird us bravely to rebuke
+ Our erring brother in the wrong,--
+ And in the ear of Pride and Power
+ Our warning voice is strong.
+
+ Easier to smite with Peter's sword
+ Than "watch one hour" in humbling prayer.
+ Life's "great things," like the Syrian lord,
+ Our hearts can do and dare.
+
+ But oh! we shrink from Jordan's side,
+ From waters which alone can save;
+
+ And murmur for Abana's banks
+ And Pharpar's brighter wave.
+
+ O Thou, who in the garden's shade
+ Didst wake Thy weary ones again,
+ Who slumbered at that fearful hour
+ Forgetful of Thy pain;
+
+ Bend o'er us now, as over them,
+ And set our sleep-bound spirits free,
+ Nor leave us slumbering in the watch
+ Our souls should keep with Thee!
+
+ 1841
+
+
+
+
+THE EXILES.
+
+The incidents upon which the following ballad has its foundation
+about the year 1660. Thomas Macy was one of the first, if not the first
+white settler of Nantucket. The career of Macy is briefly but carefully
+outlined in James S. Pike's The New Puritan.
+
+ THE goodman sat beside his door
+ One sultry afternoon,
+ With his young wife singing at his side
+ An old and goodly tune.
+
+ A glimmer of heat was in the air,--
+ The dark green woods were still;
+ And the skirts of a heavy thunder-cloud
+ Hung over the western hill.
+
+ Black, thick, and vast arose that cloud
+ Above the wilderness,
+
+ As some dark world from upper air
+ Were stooping over this.
+
+ At times the solemn thunder pealed,
+ And all was still again,
+ Save a low murmur in the air
+ Of coming wind and rain.
+
+ Just as the first big rain-drop fell,
+ A weary stranger came,
+ And stood before the farmer's door,
+ With travel soiled and lame.
+
+ Sad seemed he, yet sustaining hope
+ Was in his quiet glance,
+ And peace, like autumn's moonlight, clothed
+ His tranquil countenance,--
+
+ A look, like that his Master wore
+ In Pilate's council-hall:
+ It told of wrongs, but of a love
+ Meekly forgiving all.
+
+ "Friend! wilt thou give me shelter here?"
+ The stranger meekly said;
+ And, leaning on his oaken staff,
+ The goodman's features read.
+
+ "My life is hunted,--evil men
+ Are following in my track;
+ The traces of the torturer's whip
+ Are on my aged back;
+
+ "And much, I fear, 't will peril thee
+ Within thy doors to take
+ A hunted seeker of the Truth,
+ Oppressed for conscience' sake."
+
+ Oh, kindly spoke the goodman's wife,
+ "Come in, old man!" quoth she,
+ "We will not leave thee to the storm,
+ Whoever thou mayst be."
+
+ Then came the aged wanderer in,
+ And silent sat him down;
+ While all within grew dark as night
+ Beneath the storm-cloud's frown.
+
+ But while the sudden lightning's blaze
+ Filled every cottage nook,
+ And with the jarring thunder-roll
+ The loosened casements shook,
+
+ A heavy tramp of horses' feet
+ Came sounding up the lane,
+ And half a score of horse, or more,
+ Came plunging through the rain.
+
+ "Now, Goodman Macy, ope thy door,--
+ We would not be house-breakers;
+ A rueful deed thou'st done this day,
+ In harboring banished Quakers."
+
+ Out looked the cautious goodman then,
+ With much of fear and awe,
+ For there, with broad wig drenched with rain
+ The parish priest he saw.
+
+ Open thy door, thou wicked man,
+ And let thy pastor in,
+ And give God thanks, if forty stripes
+ Repay thy deadly sin."
+
+ "What seek ye?" quoth the goodman;
+ "The stranger is my guest;
+ He is worn with toil and grievous wrong,--
+ Pray let the old man rest."
+
+ "Now, out upon thee, canting knave!"
+ And strong hands shook the door.
+ "Believe me, Macy," quoth the priest,
+ "Thou 'lt rue thy conduct sore."
+
+ Then kindled Macy's eye of fire
+ "No priest who walks the earth,
+ Shall pluck away the stranger-guest
+ Made welcome to my hearth."
+
+ Down from his cottage wall he caught
+ The matchlock, hotly tried
+ At Preston-pans and Marston-moor,
+ By fiery Ireton's side;
+
+ Where Puritan, and Cavalier,
+ With shout and psalm contended;
+ And Rupert's oath, and Cromwell's prayer,
+ With battle-thunder blended.
+
+ Up rose the ancient stranger then
+ "My spirit is not free
+ To bring the wrath and violence
+ Of evil men on thee;
+
+ "And for thyself, I pray forbear,
+ Bethink thee of thy Lord,
+ Who healed again the smitten ear,
+ And sheathed His follower's sword.
+
+ "I go, as to the slaughter led.
+ Friends of the poor, farewell!"
+ Beneath his hand the oaken door
+ Back on its hinges fell.
+
+ "Come forth, old graybeard, yea and nay,"
+ The reckless scoffers cried,
+ As to a horseman's saddle-bow
+ The old man's arms were tied.
+
+ And of his bondage hard and long
+ In Boston's crowded jail,
+ Where suffering woman's prayer was heard,
+ With sickening childhood's wail,
+
+ It suits not with our tale to tell;
+ Those scenes have passed away;
+ Let the dim shadows of the past
+ Brood o'er that evil day.
+
+ "Ho, sheriff!" quoth the ardent priest,
+ "Take Goodman Macy too;
+ The sin of this day's heresy
+ His back or purse shall rue."
+
+ "Now, goodwife, haste thee!" Macy cried.
+ She caught his manly arm;
+ Behind, the parson urged pursuit,
+ With outcry and alarm.
+
+ Ho! speed the Macys, neck or naught,--
+ The river-course was near;
+ The plashing on its pebbled shore
+ Was music to their ear.
+
+ A gray rock, tasselled o'er with birch,
+ Above the waters hung,
+ And at its base, with every wave,
+ A small light wherry swung.
+
+ A leap--they gain the boat--and there
+ The goodman wields his oar;
+ "Ill luck betide them all," he cried,
+ "The laggards on the shore."
+
+ Down through the crashing underwood,
+ The burly sheriff came:--
+ "Stand, Goodman Macy, yield thyself;
+ Yield in the King's own name."
+
+ "Now out upon thy hangman's face!"
+ Bold Macy answered then,--
+ "Whip women, on the village green,
+ But meddle not with men."
+
+ The priest came panting to the shore,
+ His grave cocked hat was gone;
+ Behind him, like some owl's nest, hung
+ His wig upon a thorn.
+
+ "Come back,--come back!" the parson cried,
+ "The church's curse beware."
+ "Curse, an' thou wilt," said Macy, "but
+ Thy blessing prithee spare."
+
+ "Vile scoffer!" cried the baffled priest,
+ "Thou 'lt yet the gallows see."
+ "Who's born to be hanged will not be drowned,"
+ Quoth Macy, merrily;
+
+ "And so, sir sheriff and priest, good-by!"
+ He bent him to his oar,
+ And the small boat glided quietly
+ From the twain upon the shore.
+
+ Now in the west, the heavy clouds
+ Scattered and fell asunder,
+ While feebler came the rush of rain,
+ And fainter growled the thunder.
+
+ And through the broken clouds, the sun
+ Looked out serene and warm,
+ Painting its holy symbol-light
+ Upon the passing storm.
+
+ Oh, beautiful! that rainbow span,
+ O'er dim Crane-neck was bended;
+ One bright foot touched the eastern hills,
+ And one with ocean blended.
+
+ By green Pentucket's southern'slope
+ The small boat glided fast;
+ The watchers of the Block-house saw
+ The strangers as they passed.
+
+ That night a stalwart garrison
+ Sat shaking in their shoes,
+ To hear the dip of Indian oars,
+ The glide of birch canoes.
+
+ The fisher-wives of Salisbury--
+ The men were all away--
+ Looked out to see the stranger oar
+ Upon their waters play.
+
+ Deer-Island's rocks and fir-trees threw
+ Their sunset-shadows o'er them,
+ And Newbury's spire and weathercock
+ Peered o'er the pines before them.
+
+ Around the Black Rocks, on their left,
+ The marsh lay broad and green;
+ And on their right, with dwarf shrubs crowned,
+ Plum Island's hills were seen.
+
+ With skilful hand and wary eye
+ The harbor-bar was crossed;
+ A plaything of the restless wave,
+ The boat on ocean tossed.
+
+ The glory of the sunset heaven
+ On land and water lay;
+ On the steep hills of Agawam,
+ On cape, and bluff, and bay.
+
+ They passed the gray rocks of Cape Ann,
+ And Gloucester's harbor-bar;
+ The watch-fire of the garrison
+ Shone like a setting star.
+
+ How brightly broke the morning
+ On Massachusetts Bay!
+ Blue wave, and bright green island,
+ Rejoicing in the day.
+
+ On passed the bark in safety
+ Round isle and headland steep;
+ No tempest broke above them,
+ No fog-cloud veiled the deep.
+
+ Far round the bleak and stormy Cape
+ The venturous Macy passed,
+ And on Nantucket's naked isle
+ Drew up his boat at last.
+
+ And how, in log-built cabin,
+ They braved the rough sea-weather;
+ And there, in peace and quietness,
+ Went down life's vale together;
+
+ How others drew around them,
+ And how their fishing sped,
+ Until to every wind of heaven
+ Nantucket's sails were spread;
+
+ How pale Want alternated
+ With Plenty's golden smile;
+ Behold, is it not written
+ In the annals of the isle?
+
+ And yet that isle remaineth
+ A refuge of the free,
+ As when true-hearted Macy
+ Beheld it from the sea.
+
+ Free as the winds that winnow
+ Her shrubless hills of sand,
+ Free as the waves that batter
+ Along her yielding land.
+
+ Than hers, at duty's summons,
+ No loftier spirit stirs,
+ Nor falls o'er human suffering
+ A readier tear then hers.
+
+ God bless the sea-beat island!
+ And grant forevermore,
+ That charity and freedom dwell
+ As now upon her shore!
+
+ 1841.
+
+
+
+
+THE KNIGHT OF ST. JOHN.
+
+ ERE down yon blue Carpathian hills
+ The sun shall sink again,
+ Farewell to life and all its ills,
+ Farewell to cell and chain!
+
+ These prison shades are dark and cold,
+ But, darker far than they,
+ The shadow of a sorrow old
+ Is on my heart alway.
+
+ For since the day when Warkworth wood
+ Closed o'er my steed, and I,
+ An alien from my name and blood,
+ A weed cast out to die,--
+
+ When, looking back in sunset light,
+ I saw her turret gleam,
+ And from its casement, far and white,
+ Her sign of farewell stream,
+
+ Like one who, from some desert shore,
+ Doth home's green isles descry,
+ And, vainly longing, gazes o'er
+ The waste of wave and sky;
+
+ So from the desert of my fate
+ I gaze across the past;
+ Forever on life's dial-plate
+ The shade is backward cast!
+
+ I've wandered wide from shore to shore,
+ I've knelt at many a shrine;
+ And bowed me to the rocky floor
+ Where Bethlehem's tapers shine;
+
+ And by the Holy Sepulchre
+ I've pledged my knightly sword
+ To Christ, His blessed Church, and her,
+ The Mother of our Lord.
+
+ Oh, vain the vow, and vain the strife!
+ How vain do all things seem!
+ My soul is in the past, and life
+ To-day is but a dream.
+
+ In vain the penance strange and long,
+ And hard for flesh to bear;
+ The prayer, the fasting, and the thong,
+ And sackcloth shirt of hair.
+
+ The eyes of memory will not sleep,
+ Its ears are open still;
+ And vigils with the past they keep
+ Against my feeble will.
+
+ And still the loves and joys of old
+ Do evermore uprise;
+ I see the flow of locks of gold,
+ The shine of loving eyes!
+
+ Ah me! upon another's breast
+ Those golden locks recline;
+ I see upon another rest
+ The glance that once was mine.
+
+ "O faithless priest! O perjured knight!"
+ I hear the Master cry;
+ "Shut out the vision from thy sight,
+ Let Earth and Nature die.
+
+ "The Church of God is now thy spouse,
+ And thou the bridegroom art;
+ Then let the burden of thy vows
+ Crush down thy human heart!"
+
+ In vain! This heart its grief must know,
+ Till life itself hath ceased,
+ And falls beneath the self-same blow
+ The lover and the priest!
+
+ O pitying Mother! souls of light,
+ And saints and martyrs old!
+ Pray for a weak and sinful knight,
+ A suffering man uphold.
+
+ Then let the Paynim work his will,
+ And death unbind my chain,
+ Ere down yon blue Carpathian hill
+ The sun shall fall again.
+
+ 1843
+
+
+
+
+CASSANDRA SOUTHWICK.
+
+In 1658 two young persons, son and daughter of Lawrence Smithwick of
+Salem, who had himself been imprisoned and deprived of nearly all his
+property for having entertained Quakers at his house, were fined for
+non-attendance at church. They being unable to pay the fine, the General
+Court issued an order empowering "the Treasurer of the County to sell
+the said persons to any of the English nation of Virginia or Barbadoes,
+to answer said fines." An attempt was made to carry this order into
+execution, but no shipmaster was found willing to convey them to the
+West Indies.
+
+ To the God of all sure mercies let my blessing rise
+ to-day,
+ From the scoffer and the cruel He hath plucked
+ the spoil away;
+ Yea, He who cooled the furnace around the faithful
+ three,
+ And tamed the Chaldean lions, hath set His hand-
+ maid free!
+ Last night I saw the sunset melt through my prison
+ bars,
+ Last night across my damp earth-floor fell the pale
+ gleam of stars;
+ In the coldness and the darkness all through the
+ long night-time,
+ My grated casement whitened with autumn's early
+ rime.
+ Alone, in that dark sorrow, hour after hour crept
+ by;
+ Star after star looked palely in and sank adown
+ the sky;
+ No sound amid night's stillness, save that which
+ seemed to be
+ The dull and heavy beating of the pulses of the sea;
+
+ All night I sat unsleeping, for I knew that on the
+ morrow
+ The ruler and the cruel priest would mock me in
+ my sorrow,
+ Dragged to their place of market, and bargained
+ for and sold,
+ Like a lamb before the shambles, like a heifer
+ from the fold!
+
+ Oh, the weakness of the flesh was there, the
+ shrinking and the shame;
+ And the low voice of the Tempter like whispers to
+ me came:
+ "Why sit'st thou thus forlornly," the wicked
+ murmur said,
+ "Damp walls thy bower of beauty, cold earth thy
+ maiden bed?
+
+ "Where be the smiling faces, and voices soft and
+ sweet,
+ Seen in thy father's dwelling, heard in the pleasant
+ street?
+ Where be the youths whose glances, the summer
+ Sabbath through,
+ Turned tenderly and timidly unto thy father's pew?
+
+
+ "Why sit'st thou here, Cassandra?-Bethink
+ thee with what mirth
+ Thy happy schoolmates gather around the warm
+ bright hearth;
+ How the crimson shadows tremble on foreheads
+ white and fair,
+ On eyes of merry girlhood, half hid in golden hair.
+
+ "Not for thee the hearth-fire brightens, not for
+ thee kind words are spoken,
+ Not for thee the nuts of Wenham woods by laughing
+ boys are broken;
+ No first-fruits of the orchard within thy lap are
+ laid,
+ For thee no flowers of autumn the youthful hunters
+ braid.
+
+ "O weak, deluded maiden!--by crazy fancies
+ led,
+ With wild and raving railers an evil path to tread;
+ To leave a wholesome worship, and teaching pure
+ and sound,
+ And mate with maniac women, loose-haired and
+ sackcloth bound,--
+
+ "Mad scoffers of the priesthood; who mock at
+ things divine,
+ Who rail against the pulpit, and holy bread and
+ wine;
+ Sore from their cart-tail scourgings, and from the
+ pillory lame,
+ Rejoicing in their wretchedness, and glorying in
+ their shame.
+
+ "And what a fate awaits thee!--a sadly toiling
+ slave,
+ Dragging the slowly lengthening chain of bondage
+ to the grave!
+ Think of thy woman's nature, subdued in hopeless
+ thrall,
+ The easy prey of any, the scoff and scorn of all!"
+
+ Oh, ever as the Tempter spoke, and feeble Nature's
+ fears
+ Wrung drop by drop the scalding flow of unavailing
+ tears,
+ I wrestled down the evil thoughts, and strove in
+ silent prayer,
+ To feel, O Helper of the weak! that Thou indeed
+ wert there!
+
+ I thought of Paul and Silas, within Philippi's cell,
+ And how from Peter's sleeping limbs the prison
+ shackles fell,
+ Till I seemed to hear the trailing of an angel's
+ robe of white,
+ And to feel a blessed presence invisible to sight.
+
+ Bless the Lord for all his mercies!--for the peace
+ and love I felt,
+ Like dew of Hermon's holy hill, upon my spirit
+ melt;
+ When "Get behind me, Satan!" was the language
+ of my heart,
+ And I felt the Evil Tempter with all his doubts
+ depart.
+
+ Slow broke the gray cold morning; again the sunshine
+ fell,
+ Flecked with the shade of bar and grate within
+ my lonely cell;
+ The hoar-frost melted on the wall, and upward
+ from the street
+ Came careless laugh and idle word, and tread of
+ passing feet.
+
+ At length the heavy bolts fell back, my door was
+ open cast,
+ And slowly at the sheriff's side, up the long street
+ I passed;
+ I heard the murmur round me, and felt, but dared
+ not see,
+ How, from every door and window, the people
+ gazed on me.
+
+ And doubt and fear fell on me, shame burned upon
+ my cheek,
+ Swam earth and sky around me, my trembling
+ limbs grew weak:
+ "O Lord! support thy handmaid; and from her
+ soul cast out
+ The fear of man, which brings a snare, the weakness
+ and the doubt."
+
+ Then the dreary shadows scattered, like a cloud in
+ morning's breeze,
+ And a low deep voice within me seemed whispering
+ words like these:
+ "Though thy earth be as the iron, and thy heaven
+ a brazen wall,
+ Trust still His loving-kindness whose power is over
+ all."
+
+ We paused at length, where at my feet the sunlit
+ waters broke
+ On glaring reach of shining beach, and shingly
+ wall of rock;
+ The merchant-ships lay idly there, in hard clear
+ lines on high,
+ Tracing with rope and slender spar their network
+ on the sky.
+
+ And there were ancient citizens, cloak-wrapped
+ and grave and cold,
+ And grim and stout sea-captains with faces bronzed
+ and old,
+ And on his horse, with Rawson, his cruel clerk at
+ hand,
+ Sat dark and haughty Endicott, the ruler of the
+ land.
+
+ And poisoning with his evil words the ruler's ready
+ ear,
+ The priest leaned o'er his saddle, with laugh and
+ scoff and jeer;
+ It stirred my soul, and from my lips the seal of
+ silence broke,
+ As if through woman's weakness a warning spirit
+ spoke.
+
+ I cried, "The Lord rebuke thee, thou smiter of the
+ meek,
+ Thou robber of the righteous, thou trampler of
+ the weak!
+ Go light the dark, cold hearth-stones,--go turn
+ the prison lock
+ Of the poor hearts thou hast hunted, thou wolf
+ amid the flock!"
+
+ Dark lowered the brows of Endicott, and with a
+ deeper red
+ O'er Rawson's wine-empurpled cheek the flush of
+ anger spread;
+ "Good people," quoth the white-lipped priest,
+ "heed not her words so wild,
+ Her Master speaks within her,--the Devil owns
+ his child!"
+
+ But gray heads shook, and young brows knit, the
+ while the sheriff read
+ That law the wicked rulers against the poor have
+ made,
+ Who to their house of Rimmon and idol priesthood
+ bring
+ No bended knee of worship, nor gainful offering.
+
+ Then to the stout sea-captains the sheriff, turning,
+ said,--
+ "Which of ye, worthy seamen, will take this
+ Quaker maid?
+ In the Isle of fair Barbadoes, or on Virginia's
+ shore,
+ You may hold her at a higher price than Indian
+ girl or Moor."
+
+ Grim and silent stood the captains; and when
+ again he cried,
+ "Speak out, my worthy seamen!"--no voice, no
+ sign replied;
+ But I felt a hard hand press my own, and kind
+ words met my ear,--
+ "God bless thee, and preserve thee, my gentle girl
+ and dear!"
+
+ A weight seemed lifted from my heart, a pitying
+ friend was nigh,--
+ I felt it in his hard, rough hand, and saw it in his
+ eye;
+ And when again the sheriff spoke, that voice, so
+ kind to me,
+ Growled back its stormy answer like the roaring
+ of the sea,--
+
+ "Pile my ship with bars of silver, pack with coins
+ of Spanish gold,
+ From keel-piece up to deck-plank, the roomage of
+ her hold,
+ By the living God who made me!--I would sooner
+ in your bay
+ Sink ship and crew and cargo, than bear this child
+ away!"
+
+ "Well answered, worthy captain, shame on their
+ cruel laws!"
+ Ran through the crowd in murmurs loud the people's
+ just applause.
+ "Like the herdsman of Tekoa, in Israel of old,
+ Shall we see the poor and righteous again for
+ silver sold?"
+
+ I looked on haughty Endicott; with weapon half-
+ way drawn,
+ Swept round the throng his lion glare of bitter hate
+ and scorn;
+ Fiercely he drew his bridle-rein, and turned in
+ silence back,
+ And sneering priest and baffled clerk rode
+ murmuring in his track.
+
+ Hard after them the sheriff looked, in bitterness of
+ soul;
+ Thrice smote his staff upon the ground, and
+ crushed his parchment roll.
+ "Good friends," he said, "since both have fled,
+ the ruler and the priest,
+ Judge ye, if from their further work I be not well
+ released."
+
+ Loud was the cheer which, full and clear, swept
+ round the silent bay,
+ As, with kind words and kinder looks, he bade me
+ go my way;
+ For He who turns the courses of the streamlet of
+ the glen,
+ And the river of great waters, had turned the
+ hearts of men.
+
+ Oh, at that hour the very earth seemed changed
+ beneath my eye,
+ A holier wonder round me rose the blue walls of
+ the sky,
+ A lovelier light on rock and hill and stream and
+ woodland lay,
+ And softer lapsed on sunnier sands the waters of
+ the bay.
+
+ Thanksgiving to the Lord of life! to Him all
+ praises be,
+ Who from the hands of evil men hath set his hand-
+ maid free;
+ All praise to Him before whose power the mighty
+ are afraid,
+ Who takes the crafty in the snare which for the
+ poor is laid!
+
+ Sing, O my soul, rejoicingly, on evening's twilight
+ calm
+ Uplift the loud thanksgiving, pour forth the grateful
+ psalm;
+ Let all dear hearts with me rejoice, as did the
+ saints of old,
+ When of the Lord's good angel the rescued Peter
+ told.
+
+ And weep and howl, ye evil priests and mighty
+ men of wrong,
+ The Lord shall smite the proud, and lay His hand
+ upon the strong.
+ Woe to the wicked rulers in His avenging hour!
+ Woe to the wolves who seek the flocks to raven
+ and devour!
+
+ But let the humble ones arise, the poor in heart
+ be glad,
+ And let the mourning ones again with robes of
+ praise be clad.
+ For He who cooled the furnace, and smoothed the
+ stormy wave,
+ And tamed the Chaldean lions, is mighty still to
+ save!
+
+ 1843.
+
+
+
+
+THE NEW WIFE AND THE OLD.
+
+The following ballad is founded upon one of the marvellous legends
+connected with the famous General ----, of Hampton, New Hampshire,
+who was regarded by his neighbors as a Yankee Faust, in league with
+the adversary. I give the story, as I heard it when a child, from a
+venerable family visitant.
+
+
+ DARK the halls, and cold the feast,
+ Gone the bridemaids, gone the priest.
+ All is over, all is done,
+ Twain of yesterday are one!
+ Blooming girl and manhood gray,
+ Autumn in the arms of May!
+
+ Hushed within and hushed without,
+ Dancing feet and wrestlers' shout;
+ Dies the bonfire on the hill;
+ All is dark and all is still,
+ Save the starlight, save the breeze
+ Moaning through the graveyard trees,
+ And the great sea-waves below,
+ Pulse of the midnight beating slow.
+
+ From the brief dream of a bride
+ She hath wakened, at his side.
+ With half-uttered shriek and start,--
+ Feels she not his beating heart?
+ And the pressure of his arm,
+ And his breathing near and warm?
+
+ Lightly from the bridal bed
+ Springs that fair dishevelled head,
+ And a feeling, new, intense,
+ Half of shame, half innocence,
+ Maiden fear and wonder speaks
+ Through her lips and changing cheeks.
+
+ From the oaken mantel glowing,
+ Faintest light the lamp is throwing
+ On the mirror's antique mould,
+ High-backed chair, and wainscot old,
+ And, through faded curtains stealing,
+ His dark sleeping face revealing.
+
+ Listless lies the strong man there,
+ Silver-streaked his careless hair;
+ Lips of love have left no trace
+ On that hard and haughty face;
+ And that forehead's knitted thought
+ Love's soft hand hath not unwrought.
+
+ "Yet," she sighs, "he loves me well,
+ More than these calm lips will tell.
+ Stooping to my lowly state,
+ He hath made me rich and great,
+ And I bless him, though he be
+ Hard and stern to all save me!"
+
+ While she speaketh, falls the light
+ O'er her fingers small and white;
+ Gold and gem, and costly ring
+ Back the timid lustre fling,--
+ Love's selectest gifts, and rare,
+ His proud hand had fastened there.
+
+ Gratefully she marks the glow
+ From those tapering lines of snow;
+ Fondly o'er the sleeper bending
+ His black hair with golden blending,
+ In her soft and light caress,
+ Cheek and lip together press.
+
+ Ha!--that start of horror! why
+ That wild stare and wilder cry,
+ Full of terror, full of pain?
+ Is there madness in her brain?
+ Hark! that gasping, hoarse and low,
+ "Spare me,--spare me,--let me go!"
+
+ God have mercy!--icy cold
+ Spectral hands her own enfold,
+ Drawing silently from them
+ Love's fair gifts of gold and gem.
+ "Waken! save me!" still as death
+ At her side he slumbereth.
+
+ Ring and bracelet all are gone,
+ And that ice-cold hand withdrawn;
+ But she hears a murmur low,
+ Full of sweetness, full of woe,
+ Half a sigh and half a moan
+ "Fear not! give the dead her own!"
+
+ Ah!--the dead wife's voice she knows!
+ That cold hand whose pressure froze,
+ Once in warmest life had borne
+ Gem and band her own hath worn.
+ "Wake thee! wake thee!" Lo, his eyes
+ Open with a dull surprise.
+
+ In his arms the strong man folds her,
+ Closer to his breast he holds her;
+ Trembling limbs his own are meeting,
+ And he feels her heart's quick beating
+ "Nay, my dearest, why this fear?"
+ "Hush!" she saith, "the dead is here!"
+
+ "Nay, a dream,--an idle dream."
+ But before the lamp's pale gleam
+ Tremblingly her hand she raises.
+ There no more the diamond blazes,
+ Clasp of pearl, or ring of gold,--
+ "Ah!" she sighs, "her hand was cold!"
+
+ Broken words of cheer he saith,
+ But his dark lip quivereth,
+ And as o'er the past he thinketh,
+ From his young wife's arms he shrinketh;
+ Can those soft arms round him lie,
+ Underneath his dead wife's eye?
+
+ She her fair young head can rest
+ Soothed and childlike on his breast,
+ And in trustful innocence
+ Draw new strength and courage thence;
+ He, the proud man, feels within
+ But the cowardice of sin!
+
+ She can murmur in her thought
+ Simple prayers her mother taught,
+ And His blessed angels call,
+ Whose great love is over all;
+ He, alone, in prayerless pride,
+ Meets the dark Past at her side!
+
+ One, who living shrank with dread
+ From his look, or word, or tread,
+ Unto whom her early grave
+ Was as freedom to the slave,
+ Moves him at this midnight hour,
+ With the dead's unconscious power!
+
+ Ah, the dead, the unforgot!
+ From their solemn homes of thought,
+ Where the cypress shadows blend
+ Darkly over foe and friend,
+ Or in love or sad rebuke,
+ Back upon the living look.
+
+ And the tenderest ones and weakest,
+ Who their wrongs have borne the meekest,
+ Lifting from those dark, still places,
+ Sweet and sad-remembered faces,
+ O'er the guilty hearts behind
+ An unwitting triumph find.
+
+ 1843
+
+
+
+
+THE BRIDAL OF PENNACOOK.
+
+Winnepurkit, otherwise called George, Sachem of Saugus, married a
+daughter of Passaconaway, the great Pennacook chieftain, in 1662. The
+wedding took place at Pennacook (now Concord, N. H.), and the ceremonies
+closed with a great feast. According to the usages of the chiefs,
+Passaconaway ordered a select number of his men to accompany the
+newly-married couple to the dwelling of the husband, where in turn there
+was another great feast. Some time after, the wife of Winnepurkit
+expressing a desire to visit her father's house was permitted to go,
+accompanied by a brave escort of her husband's chief men. But when she
+wished to return, her father sent a messenger to Saugus, informing her
+husband, and asking him to come and take her away. He returned for
+answer that he had escorted his wife to her father's house in a style
+that became a chief, and that now if she wished to return, her father
+must send her back, in the same way. This Passaconaway refused to do,
+and it is said that here terminated the connection of his daughter with
+the Saugus chief.--Vide MORTON'S New Canaan.
+
+
+ WE had been wandering for many days
+ Through the rough northern country. We had seen
+ The sunset, with its bars of purple cloud,
+ Like a new heaven, shine upward from the lake
+ Of Winnepiseogee; and had felt
+ The sunrise breezes, midst the leafy isles
+ Which stoop their summer beauty to the lips
+ Of the bright waters. We had checked our steeds,
+ Silent with wonder, where the mountain wall
+ Is piled to heaven; and, through the narrow rift
+ Of the vast rocks, against whose rugged feet
+ Beats the mad torrent with perpetual roar,
+ Where noonday is as twilight, and the wind
+ Comes burdened with the everlasting moan
+ Of forests and of far-off waterfalls,
+ We had looked upward where the summer sky,
+ Tasselled with clouds light-woven by the sun,
+ Sprung its blue arch above the abutting crags
+ O'er-roofing the vast portal of the land
+ Beyond the wall of mountains. We had passed
+ The high source of the Saco; and bewildered
+ In the dwarf spruce-belts of the Crystal Hills,
+ Had heard above us, like a voice in the cloud,
+ The horn of Fabyan sounding; and atop
+ Of old Agioochook had seen the mountains'
+ Piled to the northward, shagged with wood, and thick
+ As meadow mole-hills,--the far sea of Casco,
+ A white gleam on the horizon of the east;
+ Fair lakes, embosomed in the woods and hills;
+ Moosehillock's mountain range, and Kearsarge
+ Lifting his granite forehead to the sun!
+
+ And we had rested underneath the oaks
+ Shadowing the bank, whose grassy spires are shaken
+ By the perpetual beating of the falls
+ Of the wild Ammonoosuc. We had tracked
+ The winding Pemigewasset, overhung
+ By beechen shadows, whitening down its rocks,
+ Or lazily gliding through its intervals,
+ From waving rye-fields sending up the gleam
+ Of sunlit waters. We had seen the moon
+ Rising behind Umbagog's eastern pines,
+ Like a great Indian camp-fire; and its beams
+ At midnight spanning with a bridge of silver
+ The Merrimac by Uncanoonuc's falls.
+
+ There were five souls of us whom travel's chance
+ Had thrown together in these wild north hills
+ A city lawyer, for a month escaping
+ From his dull office, where the weary eye
+ Saw only hot brick walls and close thronged streets;
+ Briefless as yet, but with an eye to see
+ Life's sunniest side, and with a heart to take
+ Its chances all as godsends; and his brother,
+ Pale from long pulpit studies, yet retaining
+ The warmth and freshness of a genial heart,
+ Whose mirror of the beautiful and true,
+ In Man and Nature, was as yet undimmed
+ By dust of theologic strife, or breath
+ Of sect, or cobwebs of scholastic lore;
+ Like a clear crystal calm of water, taking
+ The hue and image of o'erleaning flowers,
+ Sweet human faces, white clouds of the noon,
+ Slant starlight glimpses through the dewy leaves,
+ And tenderest moonrise. 'T was, in truth, a study,
+ To mark his spirit, alternating between
+ A decent and professional gravity
+ And an irreverent mirthfulness, which often
+ Laughed in the face of his divinity,
+ Plucked off the sacred ephod, quite unshrined
+ The oracle, and for the pattern priest
+ Left us the man. A shrewd, sagacious merchant,
+ To whom the soiled sheet found in Crawford's inn,
+ Giving the latest news of city stocks
+ And sales of cotton, had a deeper meaning
+ Than the great presence of the awful mountains
+ Glorified by the sunset; and his daughter,
+ A delicate flower on whom had blown too long
+ Those evil winds, which, sweeping from the ice
+ And winnowing the fogs of Labrador,
+ Shed their cold blight round Massachusetts Bay,
+ With the same breath which stirs Spring's opening leaves
+ And lifts her half-formed flower-bell on its stem,
+ Poisoning our seaside atmosphere.
+
+ It chanced that as we turned upon our homeward way,
+ A drear northeastern storm came howling up
+ The valley of the Saco; and that girl
+ Who had stood with us upon Mount Washington,
+ Her brown locks ruffled by the wind which whirled
+ In gusts around its sharp, cold pinnacle,
+ Who had joined our gay trout-fishing in the streams
+ Which lave that giant's feet; whose laugh was heard
+ Like a bird's carol on the sunrise breeze
+ Which swelled our sail amidst the lake's green islands,
+ Shrank from its harsh, chill breath, and visibly drooped
+ Like a flower in the frost. So, in that quiet inn
+ Which looks from Conway on the mountains piled
+ Heavily against the horizon of the north,
+ Like summer thunder-clouds, we made our home
+ And while the mist hung over dripping hills,
+ And the cold wind-driven rain-drops all day long
+ Beat their sad music upon roof and pane,
+ We strove to cheer our gentle invalid.
+
+ The lawyer in the pauses of the storm
+ Went angling down the Saco, and, returning,
+ Recounted his adventures and mishaps;
+ Gave us the history of his scaly clients,
+ Mingling with ludicrous yet apt citations
+ Of barbarous law Latin, passages
+ From Izaak Walton's Angler, sweet and fresh
+ As the flower-skirted streams of Staffordshire,
+ Where, under aged trees, the southwest wind
+ Of soft June mornings fanned the thin, white hair
+ Of the sage fisher. And, if truth be told,
+ Our youthful candidate forsook his sermons,
+ His commentaries, articles and creeds,
+ For the fair page of human loveliness,
+ The missal of young hearts, whose sacred text
+ Is music, its illumining, sweet smiles.
+ He sang the songs she loved; and in his low,
+ Deep, earnest voice, recited many a page
+ Of poetry, the holiest, tenderest lines
+ Of the sad bard of Olney, the sweet songs,
+ Simple and beautiful as Truth and Nature,
+ Of him whose whitened locks on Rydal Mount
+ Are lifted yet by morning breezes blowing
+ From the green hills, immortal in his lays.
+ And for myself, obedient to her wish,
+ I searched our landlord's proffered library,--
+ A well-thumbed Bunyan, with its nice wood pictures
+ Of scaly fiends and angels not unlike them;
+ Watts' unmelodious psalms; Astrology's
+ Last home, a musty pile of almanacs,
+ And an old chronicle of border wars
+ And Indian history. And, as I read
+ A story of the marriage of the Chief
+ Of Saugus to the dusky Weetamoo,
+ Daughter of Passaconaway, who dwelt
+ In the old time upon the Merrimac,
+ Our fair one, in the playful exercise
+ Of her prerogative,--the right divine
+ Of youth and beauty,--bade us versify
+ The legend, and with ready pencil sketched
+ Its plan and outlines, laughingly assigning
+ To each his part, and barring our excuses
+ With absolute will. So, like the cavaliers
+ Whose voices still are heard in the Romance
+ Of silver-tongued Boccaccio, on the banks
+ Of Arno, with soft tales of love beguiling
+ The ear of languid beauty, plague-exiled
+ From stately Florence, we rehearsed our rhymes
+ To their fair auditor, and shared by turns
+ Her kind approval and her playful censure.
+
+ It may be that these fragments owe alone
+ To the fair setting of their circumstances,--
+ The associations of time, scene, and audience,--
+ Their place amid the pictures which fill up
+ The chambers of my memory. Yet I trust
+ That some, who sigh, while wandering in thought,
+ Pilgrims of Romance o'er the olden world,
+ That our broad land,--our sea-like lakes and mountains
+ Piled to the clouds, our rivers overhung
+ By forests which have known no other change
+ For ages than the budding and the fall
+ Of leaves, our valleys lovelier than those
+ Which the old poets sang of,--should but figure
+ On the apocryphal chart of speculation
+ As pastures, wood-lots, mill-sites, with the privileges,
+ Rights, and appurtenances, which make up
+ A Yankee Paradise, unsung, unknown,
+ To beautiful tradition; even their names,
+ Whose melody yet lingers like the last
+ Vibration of the red man's requiem,
+ Exchanged for syllables significant,
+ Of cotton-mill and rail-car, will look kindly
+ Upon this effort to call up the ghost
+ Of our dim Past, and listen with pleased ear
+ To the responses of the questioned Shade.
+
+
+
+
+I. THE MERRIMAC.
+
+ O child of that white-crested mountain whose
+ springs
+ Gush forth in the shade of the cliff-eagle's
+ wings,
+ Down whose slopes to the lowlands thy wild waters
+ shine,
+ Leaping gray walls of rock, flashing through the
+ dwarf pine;
+ From that cloud-curtained cradle so cold and so
+ lone,
+ From the arms of that wintry-locked mother of
+ stone,
+ By hills hung with forests, through vales wide and
+ free,
+ Thy mountain-born brightness glanced down to the
+ sea.
+
+ No bridge arched thy waters save that where the
+ trees
+ Stretched their long arms above thee and kissed in
+ the breeze:
+ No sound save the lapse of the waves on thy
+ shores,
+ The plunging of otters, the light dip of oars.
+
+ Green-tufted, oak-shaded, by Amoskeag's fall
+ Thy twin Uncanoonucs rose stately and tall,
+ Thy Nashua meadows lay green and unshorn,
+ And the hills of Pentucket were tasselled with
+ corn.
+ But thy Pennacook valley was fairer than these,
+ And greener its grasses and taller its trees,
+ Ere the sound of an axe in the forest had rung,
+ Or the mower his scythe in the meadows had
+ swung.
+
+ In their sheltered repose looking out from the
+ wood
+ The bark-builded wigwams of Pennacook stood;
+ There glided the corn-dance, the council-fire shone,
+ And against the red war-post the hatchet was
+ thrown.
+
+ There the old smoked in silence their pipes, and
+ the young
+ To the pike and the white-perch their baited lines
+ flung;
+ There the boy shaped his arrows, and there the
+ shy maid
+ Wove her many-hued baskets and bright wampum
+ braid.
+
+ O Stream of the Mountains! if answer of thine
+ Could rise from thy waters to question of mine,
+ Methinks through the din of thy thronged banks
+ a moan
+ Of sorrow would swell for the days which have
+ gone.
+
+ Not for thee the dull jar of the loom and the wheel,
+ The gliding of shuttles, the ringing of steel;
+ But that old voice of waters, of bird and of breeze,
+ The dip of the wild-fowl, the rustling of trees.
+
+
+
+
+II. THE BASHABA.
+
+ Lift we the twilight curtains of the Past,
+ And, turning from familiar sight and sound,
+ Sadly and full of reverence let us cast
+ A glance upon Tradition's shadowy ground,
+ Led by the few pale lights which, glimmering round
+ That dim, strange land of Eld, seem dying fast;
+ And that which history gives not to the eye,
+ The faded coloring of Time's tapestry,
+ Let Fancy, with her dream-dipped brush, supply.
+
+ Roof of bark and walls of pine,
+ Through whose chinks the sunbeams shine,
+ Tracing many a golden line
+ On the ample floor within;
+ Where, upon that earth-floor stark,
+ Lay the gaudy mats of bark,
+ With the bear's hide, rough and dark,
+ And the red-deer's skin.
+
+ Window-tracery, small and slight,
+ Woven of the willow white,
+ Lent a dimly checkered light;
+ And the night-stars glimmered down,
+ Where the lodge-fire's heavy smoke,
+ Slowly through an opening broke,
+ In the low roof, ribbed with oak,
+ Sheathed with hemlock brown.
+
+ Gloomed behind the changeless shade
+ By the solemn pine-wood made;
+ Through the rugged palisade,
+ In the open foreground planted,
+ Glimpses came of rowers rowing,
+ Stir of leaves and wild-flowers blowing,
+ Steel-like gleams of water flowing,
+ In the sunlight slanted.
+
+ Here the mighty Bashaba
+ Held his long-unquestioned sway,
+ From the White Hills, far away,
+ To the great sea's sounding shore;
+ Chief of chiefs, his regal word
+ All the river Sachems heard,
+ At his call the war-dance stirred,
+ Or was still once more.
+
+ There his spoils of chase and war,
+ Jaw of wolf and black bear's paw,
+ Panther's skin and eagle's claw,
+ Lay beside his axe and bow;
+ And, adown the roof-pole hung,
+ Loosely on a snake-skin strung,
+ In the smoke his scalp-locks swung
+ Grimly to and fro.
+
+ Nightly down the river going,
+ Swifter was the hunter's rowing,
+ When he saw that lodge-fire, glowing
+ O'er the waters still and red;
+ And the squaw's dark eye burned brighter,
+ And she drew her blanket tighter,
+ As, with quicker step and lighter,
+ From that door she fled.
+
+ For that chief had magic skill,
+ And a Panisee's dark will,
+ Over powers of good and ill,
+ Powers which bless and powers which ban;
+ Wizard lord of Pennacook,
+ Chiefs upon their war-path shook,
+ When they met the steady look
+ Of that wise dark man.
+
+ Tales of him the gray squaw told,
+ When the winter night-wind cold
+ Pierced her blanket's thickest fold,
+ And her fire burned low and small,
+ Till the very child abed,
+ Drew its bear-skin over bead,
+ Shrinking from the pale lights shed
+ On the trembling wall.
+
+ All the subtle spirits hiding
+ Under earth or wave, abiding
+ In the caverned rock, or riding
+ Misty clouds or morning breeze;
+ Every dark intelligence,
+ Secret soul, and influence
+ Of all things which outward sense
+ Feels, or bears, or sees,--
+
+ These the wizard's skill confessed,
+ At his bidding banned or blessed,
+ Stormful woke or lulled to rest
+ Wind and cloud, and fire and flood;
+ Burned for him the drifted snow,
+ Bade through ice fresh lilies blow,
+ And the leaves of summer grow
+ Over winter's wood!
+
+ Not untrue that tale of old!
+ Now, as then, the wise and bold
+ All the powers of Nature hold
+ Subject to their kingly will;
+ From the wondering crowds ashore,
+ Treading life's wild waters o'er,
+ As upon a marble floor,
+ Moves the strong man still.
+
+ Still, to such, life's elements
+ With their sterner laws dispense,
+ And the chain of consequence
+ Broken in their pathway lies;
+ Time and change their vassals making,
+ Flowers from icy pillows waking,
+ Tresses of the sunrise shaking
+ Over midnight skies.
+ Still, to th' earnest soul, the sun
+ Rests on towered Gibeon,
+ And the moon of Ajalon
+ Lights the battle-grounds of life;
+ To his aid the strong reverses
+ Hidden powers and giant forces,
+ And the high stars, in their courses,
+ Mingle in his strife!
+
+
+
+
+III. THE DAUGHTER.
+
+ The soot-black brows of men, the yell
+ Of women thronging round the bed,
+ The tinkling charm of ring and shell,
+ The Powah whispering o'er the dead!
+
+ All these the Sachem's home had known,
+ When, on her journey long and wild
+ To the dim World of Souls, alone,
+ In her young beauty passed the mother of his child.
+
+ Three bow-shots from the Sachem's dwelling
+ They laid her in the walnut shade,
+ Where a green hillock gently swelling
+ Her fitting mound of burial made.
+ There trailed the vine in summer hours,
+ The tree-perched squirrel dropped his shell,--
+ On velvet moss and pale-hued flowers,
+ Woven with leaf and spray, the softened sunshine fell!
+
+ The Indian's heart is hard and cold,
+ It closes darkly o'er its care,
+ And formed in Nature's sternest mould,
+ Is slow to feel, and strong to bear.
+ The war-paint on the Sachem's face,
+ Unwet with tears, shone fierce and red,
+ And still, in battle or in chase,
+ Dry leaf and snow-rime crisped beneath his
+ foremost tread.
+
+ Yet when her name was heard no more,
+ And when the robe her mother gave,
+ And small, light moccasin she wore,
+ Had slowly wasted on her grave,
+ Unmarked of him the dark maids sped
+ Their sunset dance and moonlit play;
+ No other shared his lonely bed,
+ No other fair young head upon his bosom lay.
+
+ A lone, stern man. Yet, as sometimes
+ The tempest-smitten tree receives
+ From one small root the sap which climbs
+ Its topmost spray and crowning leaves,
+ So from his child the Sachem drew
+ A life of Love and Hope, and felt
+ His cold and rugged nature through
+ The softness and the warmth of her young
+ being melt.
+
+ A laugh which in the woodland rang
+ Bemocking April's gladdest bird,--
+ A light and graceful form which sprang
+ To meet him when his step was heard,--
+ Eyes by his lodge-fire flashing dark,
+ Small fingers stringing bead and shell
+ Or weaving mats of bright-hued bark,--
+ With these the household-god (3) had graced
+ his wigwam well.
+
+ Child of the forest! strong and free,
+ Slight-robed, with loosely flowing hair,
+ She swam the lake or climbed the tree,
+ Or struck the flying bird in air.
+ O'er the heaped drifts of winter's moon
+ Her snow-shoes tracked the hunter's way;
+ And dazzling in the summer noon
+ The blade of her light oar threw off its shower
+ of spray!
+
+ Unknown to her the rigid rule,
+ The dull restraint, the chiding frown,
+ The weary torture of the school,
+ The taming of wild nature down.
+ Her only lore, the legends told
+ Around the hunter's fire at night;
+ Stars rose and set, and seasons rolled,
+ Flowers bloomed and snow-flakes fell, unquestioned
+ in her sight.
+
+ Unknown to her the subtle skill
+ With which the artist-eye can trace
+ In rock and tree and lake and hill
+ The outlines of divinest grace;
+ Unknown the fine soul's keen unrest,
+ Which sees, admires, yet yearns alway;
+ Too closely on her mother's breast
+ To note her smiles of love the child of Nature lay!
+
+ It is enough for such to be
+ Of common, natural things a part,
+ To feel, with bird and stream and tree,
+ The pulses of the same great heart;
+ But we, from Nature long exiled,
+ In our cold homes of Art and Thought
+ Grieve like the stranger-tended child,
+ Which seeks its mother's arms, and sees but feels
+ them not.
+
+ The garden rose may richly bloom
+ In cultured soil and genial air,
+ To cloud the light of Fashion's room
+ Or droop in Beauty's midnight hair;
+ In lonelier grace, to sun and dew
+ The sweetbrier on the hillside shows
+ Its single leaf and fainter hue,
+ Untrained and wildly free, yet still a sister rose!
+
+ Thus o'er the heart of Weetamoo
+ Their mingling shades of joy and ill
+ The instincts of her nature threw;
+ The savage was a woman still.
+ Midst outlines dim of maiden schemes,
+ Heart-colored prophecies of life,
+ Rose on the ground of her young dreams
+ The light of a new home, the lover and the wife.
+
+
+
+
+IV. THE WEDDING.
+
+ Cool and dark fell the autumn night,
+ But the Bashaba's wigwam glowed with light,
+ For down from its roof, by green withes hung,
+ Flaring and smoking the pine-knots swung.
+
+ And along the river great wood-fires
+ Shot into the night their long, red spires,
+ Showing behind the tall, dark wood,
+ Flashing before on the sweeping flood.
+
+ In the changeful wind, with shimmer and shade,
+ Now high, now low, that firelight played,
+ On tree-leaves wet with evening dews,
+ On gliding water and still canoes.
+
+ The trapper that night on Turee's brook,
+ And the weary fisher on Contoocook,
+ Saw over the marshes, and through the pine,
+ And down on the river, the dance-lights shine.
+ For the Saugus Sachem had come to woo
+ The Bashaba's daughter Weetamoo,
+ And laid at her father's feet that night
+ His softest furs and wampum white.
+
+ From the Crystal Hills to the far southeast
+ The river Sagamores came to the feast;
+ And chiefs whose homes the sea-winds shook
+ Sat down on the mats of Pennacook.
+
+ They came from Sunapee's shore of rock,
+ From the snowy sources of Snooganock,
+ And from rough Coos whose thick woods shake
+ Their pine-cones in Umbagog Lake.
+
+ From Ammonoosuc's mountain pass,
+ Wild as his home, came Chepewass;
+ And the Keenomps of the bills which throw
+ Their shade on the Smile of Manito.
+
+ With pipes of peace and bows unstrung,
+ Glowing with paint came old and young,
+ In wampum and furs and feathers arrayed,
+ To the dance and feast the Bashaba made.
+
+ Bird of the air and beast of the field,
+ All which the woods and the waters yield,
+ On dishes of birch and hemlock piled,
+ Garnished and graced that banquet wild.
+
+ Steaks of the brown bear fat and large
+ From the rocky slopes of the Kearsarge;
+ Delicate trout from Babboosuck brook,
+ And salmon speared in the Contoocook;
+
+ Squirrels which fed where nuts fell thick
+ in the gravelly bed of the Otternic;
+ And small wild-hens in reed-snares caught
+ from the banks of Sondagardee brought;
+
+ Pike and perch from the Suncook taken,
+ Nuts from the trees of the Black Hills shaken,
+ Cranberries picked in the Squamscot bog,
+ And grapes from the vines of Piscataquog:
+
+ And, drawn from that great stone vase which stands
+ In the river scooped by a spirit's hands,(4)
+ Garnished with spoons of shell and horn,
+ Stood the birchen dishes of smoking corn.
+
+ Thus bird of the air and beast of the field,
+ All which the woods and the waters yield,
+ Furnished in that olden day
+ The bridal feast of the Bashaba.
+
+ And merrily when that feast was done
+ On the fire-lit green the dance begun,
+ With squaws' shrill stave, and deeper hum
+ Of old men beating the Indian drum.
+
+ Painted and plumed, with scalp-locks flowing,
+ And red arms tossing and black eyes glowing,
+ Now in the light and now in the shade
+ Around the fires the dancers played.
+
+ The step was quicker, the song more shrill,
+ And the beat of the small drums louder still
+ Whenever within the circle drew
+ The Saugus Sachem and Weetamoo.
+
+ The moons of forty winters had shed
+ Their snow upon that chieftain's head,
+ And toil and care and battle's chance
+ Had seamed his hard, dark countenance.
+
+ A fawn beside the bison grim,--
+ Why turns the bride's fond eye on him,
+ In whose cold look is naught beside
+ The triumph of a sullen pride?
+
+ Ask why the graceful grape entwines
+ The rough oak with her arm of vines;
+ And why the gray rock's rugged cheek
+ The soft lips of the mosses seek.
+
+ Why, with wise instinct, Nature seems
+ To harmonize her wide extremes,
+ Linking the stronger with the weak,
+ The haughty with the soft and meek!
+
+
+
+
+V. THE NEW HOME.
+
+ A wild and broken landscape, spiked with firs,
+ Roughening the bleak horizon's northern edge;
+ Steep, cavernous hillsides, where black hemlock
+ spurs
+ And sharp, gray splinters of the wind-swept
+ ledge
+ Pierced the thin-glazed ice, or bristling rose,
+ Where the cold rim of the sky sunk down upon
+ the snows.
+
+ And eastward cold, wide marshes stretched away,
+ Dull, dreary flats without a bush or tree,
+ O'er-crossed by icy creeks, where twice a day
+ Gurgled the waters of the moon-struck sea;
+ And faint with distance came the stifled roar,
+ The melancholy lapse of waves on that low shore.
+
+ No cheerful village with its mingling smokes,
+ No laugh of children wrestling in the snow,
+ No camp-fire blazing through the hillside oaks,
+ No fishers kneeling on the ice below;
+ Yet midst all desolate things of sound and view,
+ Through the long winter moons smiled dark-eyed
+ Weetamoo.
+
+ Her heart had found a home; and freshly all
+ Its beautiful affections overgrew
+ Their rugged prop. As o'er some granite wall
+ Soft vine-leaves open to the moistening dew
+ And warm bright sun, the love of that young wife
+ Found on a hard cold breast the dew and warmth
+ of life.
+
+ The steep, bleak hills, the melancholy shore,
+ The long, dead level of the marsh between,
+ A coloring of unreal beauty wore
+ Through the soft golden mist of young love seen.
+ For o'er those hills and from that dreary plain,
+ Nightly she welcomed home her hunter chief again.
+
+ No warmth of heart, no passionate burst of feeling,
+ Repaid her welcoming smile and parting kiss,
+ No fond and playful dalliance half concealing,
+ Under the guise of mirth, its tenderness;
+
+ But, in their stead, the warrior's settled pride,
+ And vanity's pleased smile with homage satisfied.
+
+ Enough for Weetamoo, that she alone
+ Sat on his mat and slumbered at his side;
+ That he whose fame to her young ear had flown
+ Now looked upon her proudly as his bride;
+ That he whose name the Mohawk trembling heard
+ Vouchsafed to her at times a kindly look or word.
+
+ For she had learned the maxims of her race,
+ Which teach the woman to become a slave,
+ And feel herself the pardonless disgrace
+ Of love's fond weakness in the wise and brave,--
+ The scandal and the shame which they incur,
+ Who give to woman all which man requires of her.
+
+ So passed the winter moons. The sun at last
+ Broke link by link the frost chain of the rills,
+ And the warm breathings of the southwest passed
+ Over the hoar rime of the Saugus hills;
+ The gray and desolate marsh grew green once more,
+ And the birch-tree's tremulous shade fell round the
+ Sachem's door.
+
+ Then from far Pennacook swift runners came,
+ With gift and greeting for the Saugus chief;
+ Beseeching him in the great Sachem's name,
+ That, with the coming of the flower and leaf,
+ The song of birds, the warm breeze and the rain,
+ Young Weetamoo might greet her lonely sire again.
+
+ And Winnepurkit called his chiefs together,
+ And a grave council in his wigwam met,
+ Solemn and brief in words, considering whether
+ The rigid rules of forest etiquette
+ Permitted Weetamoo once more to look
+ Upon her father's face and green-banked
+ Pennacook.
+
+ With interludes of pipe-smoke and strong water,
+ The forest sages pondered, and at length,
+ Concluded in a body to escort her
+ Up to her father's home of pride and strength,
+ Impressing thus on Pennacook a sense
+ Of Winnepurkit's power and regal consequence.
+
+ So through old woods which Aukeetamit's(5) hand,
+ A soft and many-shaded greenness lent,
+ Over high breezy hills, and meadow land
+ Yellow with flowers, the wild procession went,
+ Till, rolling down its wooded banks between,
+ A broad, clear, mountain stream, the Merrimac
+ was seen.
+
+ The hunter leaning on his bow undrawn,
+ The fisher lounging on the pebbled shores,
+ Squaws in the clearing dropping the seed-corn,
+ Young children peering through the wigwam doors,
+ Saw with delight, surrounded by her train
+ Of painted Saugus braves, their Weetamoo again.
+
+
+
+
+VI. AT PENNACOOK.
+
+ The hills are dearest which our childish feet
+ Have climbed the earliest; and the streams most sweet
+ Are ever those at which our young lips drank,
+ Stooped to their waters o'er the grassy bank.
+
+ Midst the cold dreary sea-watch, Home's hearth-light
+ Shines round the helmsman plunging through the night;
+ And still, with inward eye, the traveller sees
+ In close, dark, stranger streets his native trees.
+
+ The home-sick dreamer's brow is nightly fanned
+ By breezes whispering of his native land,
+ And on the stranger's dim and dying eye
+ The soft, sweet pictures of his childhood lie.
+
+ Joy then for Weetamoo, to sit once more
+ A child upon her father's wigwam floor!
+ Once more with her old fondness to beguile
+ From his cold eye the strange light of a smile.
+
+ The long, bright days of summer swiftly passed,
+ The dry leaves whirled in autumn's rising blast,
+ And evening cloud and whitening sunrise rime
+ Told of the coming of the winter-time.
+
+ But vainly looked, the while, young Weetamoo,
+ Down the dark river for her chief's canoe;
+ No dusky messenger from Saugus brought
+ The grateful tidings which the young wife sought.
+
+ At length a runner from her father sent,
+ To Winnepurkit's sea-cooled wigwam went
+ "Eagle of Saugus,--in the woods the dove
+ Mourns for the shelter of thy wings of love."
+
+ But the dark chief of Saugus turned aside
+ In the grim anger of hard-hearted pride;
+ "I bore her as became a chieftain's daughter,
+ Up to her home beside the gliding water.
+
+ If now no more a mat for her is found
+ Of all which line her father's wigwam round,
+ Let Pennacook call out his warrior train,
+ And send her back with wampum gifts again."
+
+ The baffled runner turned upon his track,
+ Bearing the words of Winnepurkit back.
+ "Dog of the Marsh," cried Pennacook, "no more
+ Shall child of mine sit on his wigwam floor.
+
+ "Go, let him seek some meaner squaw to spread
+ The stolen bear-skin of his beggar's bed;
+ Son of a fish-hawk! let him dig his clams
+ For some vile daughter of the Agawams,
+
+ "Or coward Nipmucks! may his scalp dry black
+ In Mohawk smoke, before I send her back."
+ He shook his clenched hand towards the ocean wave,
+ While hoarse assent his listening council gave.
+
+ Alas poor bride! can thy grim sire impart
+ His iron hardness to thy woman's heart?
+ Or cold self-torturing pride like his atone
+ For love denied and life's warm beauty flown?
+
+ On Autumn's gray and mournful grave the snow
+ Hung its white wreaths; with stifled voice and low
+ The river crept, by one vast bridge o'er-crossed,
+ Built by the boar-locked artisan of Frost.
+
+ And many a moon in beauty newly born
+ Pierced the red sunset with her silver horn,
+ Or, from the east, across her azure field
+ Rolled the wide brightness of her full-orbed shield.
+
+ Yet Winnepurkit came not,--on the mat
+ Of the scorned wife her dusky rival sat;
+ And he, the while, in Western woods afar,
+ Urged the long chase, or trod the path of war.
+
+ Dry up thy tears, young daughter of a chief!
+ Waste not on him the sacredness of grief;
+ Be the fierce spirit of thy sire thine own,
+ His lips of scorning, and his heart of stone.
+
+ What heeds the warrior of a hundred fights,
+ The storm-worn watcher through long hunting nights,
+ Cold, crafty, proud of woman's weak distress,
+ Her home-bound grief and pining loneliness?
+
+
+
+
+VII. THE DEPARTURE.
+
+ The wild March rains had fallen fast and long
+ The snowy mountains of the North among,
+ Making each vale a watercourse, each hill
+ Bright with the cascade of some new-made rill.
+
+ Gnawed by the sunbeams, softened by the rain,
+ Heaved underneath by the swollen current's strain,
+ The ice-bridge yielded, and the Merrimac
+ Bore the huge ruin crashing down its track.
+
+ On that strong turbid water, a small boat
+ Guided by one weak hand was seen to float;
+ Evil the fate which loosed it from the shore,
+ Too early voyager with too frail an oar!
+
+ Down the vexed centre of that rushing tide,
+ The thick huge ice-blocks threatening either side,
+ The foam-white rocks of Amoskeag in view,
+ With arrowy swiftness sped that light canoe.
+
+ The trapper, moistening his moose's meat
+ On the wet bank by Uncanoonuc's feet,
+ Saw the swift boat flash down the troubled stream;
+ Slept he, or waked he? was it truth or dream?
+
+ The straining eye bent fearfully before,
+ The small hand clenching on the useless oar,
+ The bead-wrought blanket trailing o'er the water--
+ He knew them all--woe for the Sachem's daughter!
+
+ Sick and aweary of her lonely life,
+ Heedless of peril, the still faithful wife
+ Had left her mother's grave, her father's door,
+ To seek the wigwam of her chief once more.
+
+ Down the white rapids like a sear leaf whirled,
+ On the sharp rocks and piled-up ices hurled,
+ Empty and broken, circled the canoe
+ In the vexed pool below--but where was Weetamoo.
+
+
+
+
+VIII. SONG OF INDIAN WOMEN.
+
+ The Dark eye has left us,
+ The Spring-bird has flown;
+ On the pathway of spirits
+ She wanders alone.
+ The song of the wood-dove has died on our shore
+ Mat wonck kunna-monee!(6) We hear it no more!
+
+ O dark water Spirit
+ We cast on thy wave
+ These furs which may never
+ Hang over her grave;
+ Bear down to the lost one the robes that she wore
+ Mat wonck kunna-monee! We see her no more!
+
+ Of the strange land she walks in
+ No Powah has told:
+ It may burn with the sunshine,
+ Or freeze with the cold.
+ Let us give to our lost one the robes that she wore:
+ Mat wonck kunna-monee! We see her no more!
+
+ The path she is treading
+ Shall soon be our own;
+ Each gliding in shadow
+ Unseen and alone!
+ In vain shall we call on the souls gone before:
+ Mat wonck kunna-monee! They hear us no more!
+
+ O mighty Sowanna!(7)
+ Thy gateways unfold,
+ From thy wigwam of sunset
+ Lift curtains of gold!
+
+ Take home the poor Spirit whose journey is o'er
+ Mat wonck kunna-monee! We see her no more!
+
+ So sang the Children of the Leaves beside
+ The broad, dark river's coldly flowing tide;
+ Now low, now harsh, with sob-like pause and swell,
+ On the high wind their voices rose and fell.
+ Nature's wild music,--sounds of wind-swept trees,
+ The scream of birds, the wailing of the breeze,
+ The roar of waters, steady, deep, and strong,--
+ Mingled and murmured in that farewell song.
+
+ 1844.
+
+
+
+
+BARCLAY OF URY.
+
+Among the earliest converts to the doctrines of Friends in Scotland was
+Barclay of Ury, an old and distinguished soldier, who had fought under
+Gustavus Adolphus, in Germany. As a Quaker, he became the object of
+persecution and abuse at the hands of the magistrates and the populace.
+None bore the indignities of the mob with greater patience and nobleness
+of soul than this once proud gentleman and soldier. One of his friends,
+on an occasion of uncommon rudeness, lamented that he should be treated
+so harshly in his old age who had been so honored before. "I find more
+satisfaction," said Barclay, "as well as honor, in being thus insulted
+for my religious principles, than when, a few years ago, it was usual
+for the magistrates, as I passed the city of Aberdeen, to meet me on the
+road and conduct me to public entertainment in their hall, and then
+escort me out again, to gain my favor."
+
+ Up the streets of Aberdeen,
+ By the kirk and college green,
+ Rode the Laird of Ury;
+ Close behind him, close beside,
+ Foul of mouth and evil-eyed,
+ Pressed the mob in fury.
+
+ Flouted him the drunken churl,
+ Jeered at him the serving-girl,
+ Prompt to please her master;
+ And the begging carlin, late
+ Fed and clothed at Ury's gate,
+ Cursed him as he passed her.
+
+ Yet, with calm and stately mien,
+ Up the streets of Aberdeen
+ Came he slowly riding;
+ And, to all he saw and heard,
+ Answering not with bitter word,
+ Turning not for chiding.
+
+ Came a troop with broadswords swinging,
+ Bits and bridles sharply ringing,
+ Loose and free and froward;
+ Quoth the foremost, "Ride him down!
+ Push him! prick him! through the town
+ Drive the Quaker coward!"
+
+ But from out the thickening crowd
+ Cried a sudden voice and loud
+ "Barclay! Ho! a Barclay!"
+ And the old man at his side
+ Saw a comrade, battle tried,
+ Scarred and sunburned darkly;
+
+ Who with ready weapon bare,
+ Fronting to the troopers there,
+ Cried aloud: "God save us,
+ Call ye coward him who stood
+ Ankle deep in Lutzen's blood,
+ With the brave Gustavus?"
+
+ "Nay, I do not need thy sword,
+ Comrade mine," said Ury's lord;
+ "Put it up, I pray thee
+ Passive to His holy will,
+ Trust I in my Master still,
+ Even though He slay me.
+
+ "Pledges of thy love and faith,
+ Proved on many a field of death,
+ Not by me are needed."
+ Marvelled much that henchman bold,
+ That his laird, so stout of old,
+ Now so meekly pleaded.
+
+ "Woe's the day!" he sadly said,
+ With a slowly shaking head,
+ And a look of pity;
+ "Ury's honest lord reviled,
+ Mock of knave and sport of child,
+ In his own good city.
+
+ "Speak the word, and, master mine,
+ As we charged on Tilly's(8) line,
+ And his Walloon lancers,
+ Smiting through their midst we'll teach
+ Civil look and decent speech
+ To these boyish prancers!"
+
+ "Marvel not, mine ancient friend,
+ Like beginning, like the end:"
+ Quoth the Laird of Ury;
+ "Is the sinful servant more
+ Than his gracious Lord who bore
+ Bonds and stripes in Jewry?
+
+ "Give me joy that in His name
+ I can bear, with patient frame,
+ All these vain ones offer;
+ While for them He suffereth long,
+ Shall I answer wrong with wrong,
+ Scoffing with the scoffer?
+
+ "Happier I, with loss of all,
+ Hunted, outlawed, held in thrall,
+ With few friends to greet me,
+ Than when reeve and squire were seen,
+ Riding out from Aberdeen,
+ With bared heads to meet me.
+
+ "When each goodwife, o'er and o'er,
+ Blessed me as I passed her door;
+ And the snooded daughter,
+ Through her casement glancing down,
+ Smiled on him who bore renown
+ From red fields of slaughter.
+
+ "Hard to feel the stranger's scoff,
+ Hard the old friend's falling off,
+ Hard to learn forgiving;
+ But the Lord His own rewards,
+ And His love with theirs accords,
+ Warm and fresh and living.
+
+ "Through this dark and stormy night
+ Faith beholds a feeble light
+ Up the blackness streaking;
+ Knowing God's own time is best,
+ In a patient hope I rest
+ For the full day-breaking!"
+
+ So the Laird of Ury said,
+ Turning slow his horse's head
+ Towards the Tolbooth prison,
+ Where, through iron gates, he heard
+ Poor disciples of the Word
+ Preach of Christ arisen!
+
+ Not in vain, Confessor old,
+ Unto us the tale is told
+ Of thy day of trial;
+ Every age on him who strays
+ From its broad and beaten ways
+ Pours its seven-fold vial.
+
+ Happy he whose inward ear
+ Angel comfortings can hear,
+ O'er the rabble's laughter;
+ And while Hatred's fagots burn,
+ Glimpses through the smoke discern
+ Of the good hereafter.
+
+ Knowing this, that never yet
+ Share of Truth was vainly set
+ In the world's wide fallow;
+ After hands shall sow the seed,
+ After hands from hill and mead
+ Reap the harvests yellow.
+
+ Thus, with somewhat of the Seer,
+ Must the moral pioneer
+ From the Future borrow;
+ Clothe the waste with dreams of grain,
+ And, on midnight's sky of rain,
+ Paint the golden morrow!
+
+
+
+
+THE ANGELS OF BUENA VISTA.
+
+A letter-writer from Mexico during the Mexican war, when detailing some
+of the incidents at the terrible fight of Buena Vista, mentioned that
+Mexican women were seen hovering near the field of death, for the
+purpose of giving aid and succor to the wounded. One poor woman was
+found surrounded by the maimed and suffering of both armies, ministering
+to the wants of Americans as well as Mexicans, with impartial
+tenderness.
+
+ SPEAK and tell us, our Ximena, looking northward
+ far away,
+ O'er the camp of the invaders, o'er the Mexican
+ array,
+ Who is losing? who is winning? are they far or
+ come they near?
+ Look abroad, and tell us, sister, whither rolls the
+ storm we hear.
+ Down the hills of Angostura still the storm of
+ battle rolls;
+ Blood is flowing, men are dying; God have mercy
+ on their souls!
+ "Who is losing? who is winning?" Over hill
+ and over plain,
+ I see but smoke of cannon clouding through the
+ mountain rain.
+
+ Holy Mother! keep our brothers! Look, Ximena,
+ look once more.
+ "Still I see the fearful whirlwind rolling darkly
+ as before,
+ Bearing on, in strange confusion, friend and foeman,
+ foot and horse,
+ Like some wild and troubled torrent sweeping
+ down its mountain course."
+
+ Look forth once more, Ximena! "Ah! the smoke
+ has rolled away;
+ And I see the Northern rifles gleaming down the
+ ranks of gray.
+ Hark! that sudden blast of bugles! there the troop
+ of Minon wheels;
+ There the Northern horses thunder, with the cannon
+ at their heels.
+
+ "Jesu, pity I how it thickens I now retreat and
+ now advance!
+ Bight against the blazing cannon shivers Puebla's
+ charging lance!
+ Down they go, the brave young riders; horse and
+ foot together fall;
+ Like a ploughshare in the fallow, through them
+ ploughs the Northern ball."
+
+ Nearer came the storm and nearer, rolling fast and
+ frightful on!
+ Speak, Ximena, speak and tell us, who has lost,
+ and who has won?
+ Alas! alas! I know not; friend and foe together
+ fall,
+ O'er the dying rush the living: pray, my sisters,
+ for them all!
+
+ "Lo! the wind the smoke is lifting. Blessed
+ Mother, save my brain!
+ I can see the wounded crawling slowly out from
+ heaps of slain.
+ Now they stagger, blind and bleeding; now they
+ fall, and strive to rise;
+ Hasten, sisters, haste and save them, lest they die
+ before our eyes!
+
+ "O my hearts love! O my dear one! lay thy
+ poor head on my knee;
+ Dost thou know the lips that kiss thee? Canst
+ thou hear me? canst thou see?
+ O my husband, brave and gentle! O my Bernal,
+ look once more
+ On the blessed cross before thee! Mercy!
+ all is o'er!"
+
+ Dry thy tears, my poor Ximena; lay thy dear one
+ down to rest;
+ Let his hands be meekly folded, lay the cross upon
+ his breast;
+ Let his dirge be sung hereafter, and his funeral
+ masses said;
+ To-day, thou poor bereaved one, the living ask thy
+ aid.
+
+ Close beside her, faintly moaning, fair and young,
+ a soldier lay,
+ Torn with shot and pierced with lances, bleeding
+ slow his life away;
+ But, as tenderly before him the lorn Ximena knelt,
+ She saw the Northern eagle shining on his pistol-
+ belt.
+
+ With a stifled cry of horror straight she turned
+ away her head;
+ With a sad and bitter feeling looked she back upon
+ her dead;
+ But she heard the youth's low moaning, and his
+ struggling breath of pain,
+ And she raised the cooling water to his parching
+ lips again.
+
+ Whispered low the dying soldier, pressed her hand
+ and faintly smiled;
+ Was that pitying face his mother's? did she watch
+ beside her child?
+ All his stranger words with meaning her woman's
+ heart supplied;
+ With her kiss upon his forehead, "Mother!"
+ murmured he, and died!
+
+ "A bitter curse upon them, poor boy, who led thee
+ forth,
+ From some gentle, sad-eyed mother, weeping, lonely,
+ in the North!"
+ Spake the mournful Mexic woman, as she laid him
+ with her dead,
+ And turned to soothe the living, and bind the
+ wounds which bled.
+
+ "Look forth once more, Ximena!" Like a cloud
+ before the wind
+ Rolls the battle down the mountains, leaving blood
+ and death behind;
+ Ah! they plead in vain for mercy; in the dust the
+ wounded strive;
+ "Hide your faces, holy angels! O thou Christ of
+ God, forgive!"
+
+ Sink, O Night, among thy mountains! let the cool,
+ gray shadows fall;
+ Dying brothers, fighting demons, drop thy curtain
+ over all!
+ Through the thickening winter twilight, wide apart
+ the battle rolled,
+ In its sheath the sabre rested, and the cannon's
+ lips grew cold.
+
+ But the noble Mexic women still their holy task
+ pursued,
+ Through that long, dark night of sorrow, worn and
+ faint and lacking food.
+ Over weak and suffering brothers, with a tender
+ care they hung,
+ And the dying foeman blessed them in a strange
+ and Northern tongue.
+
+ Not wholly lost, O Father! is this evil world of
+ ours;
+ Upward, through its blood and ashes, spring afresh
+ the Eden flowers;
+ From its smoking hell of battle, Love and Pity
+ send their prayer,
+ And still thy white-winged angels hover dimly in
+ our air!
+
+ 1847.
+
+
+
+
+THE LEGEND OF ST. MARK.
+
+"This legend (to which my attention was called by my friend Charles
+Sumner), is the subject of a celebrated picture by Tintoretto, of which
+Mr. Rogers possesses the original sketch. The slave lies on the ground,
+amid a crowd of spectators, who look on, animated by all the various
+emotions of sympathy, rage, terror; a woman, in front, with a child in
+her arms, has always been admired for the lifelike vivacity of her
+attitude and expression. The executioner holds up the broken implements;
+St. Mark, with a headlong movement, seems to rush down from heaven in
+haste to save his worshipper. The dramatic grouping in this picture is
+wonderful; the coloring, in its gorgeous depth and harmony, is, in Mr.
+Rogers's sketch, finer than in the picture."--MRS. JAMESON'S Sacred and
+Legendary Art, I. 154.
+
+ THE day is closing dark and cold,
+ With roaring blast and sleety showers;
+ And through the dusk the lilacs wear
+ The bloom of snow, instead of flowers.
+
+ I turn me from the gloom without,
+ To ponder o'er a tale of old;
+ A legend of the age of Faith,
+ By dreaming monk or abbess told.
+
+ On Tintoretto's canvas lives
+ That fancy of a loving heart,
+ In graceful lines and shapes of power,
+ And hues immortal as his art.
+
+ In Provence (so the story runs)
+ There lived a lord, to whom, as slave,
+ A peasant-boy of tender years
+ The chance of trade or conquest gave.
+
+ Forth-looking from the castle tower,
+ Beyond the hills with almonds dark,
+ The straining eye could scarce discern
+ The chapel of the good St. Mark.
+
+ And there, when bitter word or fare
+ The service of the youth repaid,
+ By stealth, before that holy shrine,
+ For grace to bear his wrong, he prayed.
+
+ The steed stamped at the castle gate,
+ The boar-hunt sounded on the hill;
+ Why stayed the Baron from the chase,
+ With looks so stern, and words so ill?
+
+ "Go, bind yon slave! and let him learn,
+ By scath of fire and strain of cord,
+ How ill they speed who give dead saints
+ The homage due their living lord!"
+
+ They bound him on the fearful rack,
+ When, through the dungeon's vaulted dark,
+ He saw the light of shining robes,
+ And knew the face of good St. Mark.
+
+ Then sank the iron rack apart,
+ The cords released their cruel clasp,
+ The pincers, with their teeth of fire,
+ Fell broken from the torturer's grasp.
+
+ And lo! before the Youth and Saint,
+ Barred door and wall of stone gave way;
+ And up from bondage and the night
+ They passed to freedom and the day!
+
+ O dreaming monk! thy tale is true;
+ O painter! true thy pencil's art;
+ in tones of hope and prophecy,
+ Ye whisper to my listening heart!
+
+ Unheard no burdened heart's appeal
+ Moans up to God's inclining ear;
+ Unheeded by his tender eye,
+ Falls to the earth no sufferer's tear.
+
+ For still the Lord alone is God
+ The pomp and power of tyrant man
+ Are scattered at his lightest breath,
+ Like chaff before the winnower's fan.
+
+ Not always shall the slave uplift
+ His heavy hands to Heaven in vain.
+ God's angel, like the good St. Mark,
+ Comes shining down to break his chain!
+
+ O weary ones! ye may not see
+ Your helpers in their downward flight;
+ Nor hear the sound of silver wings
+ Slow beating through the hush of night!
+
+ But not the less gray Dothan shone,
+ With sunbright watchers bending low,
+ That Fear's dim eye beheld alone
+ The spear-heads of the Syrian foe.
+
+ There are, who, like the Seer of old,
+ Can see the helpers God has sent,
+ And how life's rugged mountain-side
+ Is white with many an angel tent!
+
+ They hear the heralds whom our Lord
+ Sends down his pathway to prepare;
+ And light, from others hidden, shines
+ On their high place of faith and prayer.
+
+ Let such, for earth's despairing ones,
+ Hopeless, yet longing to be free,
+ Breathe once again the Prophet's prayer
+ "Lord, ope their eyes, that they may see!"
+
+ 1849.
+
+
+
+
+KATHLEEN.
+
+This ballad was originally published in my prose work, Leaves from
+Margaret Smith's Journal, as the song of a wandering Milesian
+schoolmaster. In the seventeenth century, slavery in the New World was
+by no means confined to the natives of Africa. Political offenders and
+criminals were transported by the British government to the plantations
+of Barbadoes and Virginia, where they were sold like cattle in the
+market. Kidnapping of free and innocent white persons was practised to a
+considerable extent in the seaports of the United Kingdom.
+
+ O NORAH, lay your basket down,
+ And rest your weary hand,
+ And come and hear me sing a song
+ Of our old Ireland.
+
+ There was a lord of Galaway,
+ A mighty lord was he;
+ And he did wed a second wife,
+ A maid of low degree.
+
+ But he was old, and she was young,
+ And so, in evil spite,
+ She baked the black bread for his kin,
+ And fed her own with white.
+
+ She whipped the maids and starved the kern,
+ And drove away the poor;
+ "Ah, woe is me!" the old lord said,
+ "I rue my bargain sore!"
+
+ This lord he had a daughter fair,
+ Beloved of old and young,
+ And nightly round the shealing-fires
+ Of her the gleeman sung.
+
+ "As sweet and good is young Kathleen
+ As Eve before her fall;"
+ So sang the harper at the fair,
+ So harped he in the hall.
+
+ "Oh, come to me, my daughter dear!
+ Come sit upon my knee,
+ For looking in your face, Kathleen,
+ Your mother's own I see!"
+
+ He smoothed and smoothed her hair away,
+ He kissed her forehead fair;
+ "It is my darling Mary's brow,
+ It is my darling's hair!"
+
+ Oh, then spake up the angry dame,
+ "Get up, get up," quoth she,
+ "I'll sell ye over Ireland,
+ I'll sell ye o'er the sea!"
+
+ She clipped her glossy hair away,
+ That none her rank might know;
+ She took away her gown of silk,
+ And gave her one of tow,
+
+ And sent her down to Limerick town
+ And to a seaman sold
+ This daughter of an Irish lord
+ For ten good pounds in gold.
+
+ The lord he smote upon his breast,
+ And tore his beard so gray;
+ But he was old, and she was young,
+ And so she had her way.
+
+ Sure that same night the Banshee howled
+ To fright the evil dame,
+ And fairy folks, who loved Kathleen,
+ With funeral torches came.
+
+ She watched them glancing through the trees,
+ And glimmering down the hill;
+ They crept before the dead-vault door,
+ And there they all stood still!
+
+ "Get up, old man! the wake-lights shine!"
+ "Ye murthering witch," quoth he,
+ "So I'm rid of your tongue, I little care
+ If they shine for you or me."
+
+ "Oh, whoso brings my daughter back,
+ My gold and land shall have!"
+ Oh, then spake up his handsome page,
+ "No gold nor land I crave!
+
+ "But give to me your daughter dear,
+ Give sweet Kathleen to me,
+ Be she on sea or be she on land,
+ I'll bring her back to thee."
+
+ "My daughter is a lady born,
+ And you of low degree,
+ But she shall be your bride the day
+ You bring her back to me."
+
+ He sailed east, he sailed west,
+ And far and long sailed he,
+ Until he came to Boston town,
+ Across the great salt sea.
+
+ "Oh, have ye seen the young Kathleen,
+ The flower of Ireland?
+ Ye'll know her by her eyes so blue,
+ And by her snow-white hand!"
+
+ Out spake an ancient man, "I know
+ The maiden whom ye mean;
+ I bought her of a Limerick man,
+ And she is called Kathleen.
+
+ "No skill hath she in household work,
+ Her hands are soft and white,
+ Yet well by loving looks and ways
+ She doth her cost requite."
+
+ So up they walked through Boston town,
+ And met a maiden fair,
+ A little basket on her arm
+ So snowy-white and bare.
+
+ "Come hither, child, and say hast thou
+ This young man ever seen?"
+ They wept within each other's arms,
+ The page and young Kathleen.
+
+ "Oh give to me this darling child,
+ And take my purse of gold."
+ "Nay, not by me," her master said,
+ "Shall sweet Kathleen be sold.
+
+ "We loved her in the place of one
+ The Lord hath early ta'en;
+ But, since her heart's in Ireland,
+ We give her back again!"
+
+ Oh, for that same the saints in heaven
+ For his poor soul shall pray,
+ And Mary Mother wash with tears
+ His heresies away.
+
+ Sure now they dwell in Ireland;
+ As you go up Claremore
+ Ye'll see their castle looking down
+ The pleasant Galway shore.
+
+ And the old lord's wife is dead and gone,
+ And a happy man is he,
+ For he sits beside his own Kathleen,
+ With her darling on his knee.
+
+ 1849.
+
+
+
+
+THE WELL OF LOCH MAREE
+
+Pennant, in his Voyage to the Hebrides, describes the holy well of Loch
+Maree, the waters of which were supposed to effect a miraculous cure of
+melancholy, trouble, and insanity.
+
+ CALM on the breast of Loch Maree
+ A little isle reposes;
+ A shadow woven of the oak
+ And willow o'er it closes.
+
+ Within, a Druid's mound is seen,
+ Set round with stony warders;
+ A fountain, gushing through the turf,
+ Flows o'er its grassy borders.
+
+ And whoso bathes therein his brow,
+ With care or madness burning,
+ Feels once again his healthful thought
+ And sense of peace returning.
+
+ O restless heart and fevered brain,
+ Unquiet and unstable,
+ That holy well of Loch Maree
+ Is more than idle fable!
+
+ Life's changes vex, its discords stun,
+ Its glaring sunshine blindeth,
+ And blest is he who on his way
+ That fount of healing findeth!
+
+ The shadows of a humbled will
+ And contrite heart are o'er it;
+ Go read its legend, "TRUST IN GOD,"
+ On Faith's white stones before it.
+
+ 1850.
+
+
+
+
+THE CHAPEL OF THE HERMITS.
+
+The incident upon which this poem is based is related in a note to
+Bernardin Henri Saint Pierre's Etudes de la Nature. "We arrived at the
+habitation of the Hermits a little before they sat down to their table,
+and while they were still at church. J. J. Rousseau proposed to me to
+offer up our devotions. The hermits were reciting the Litanies of
+Providence, which are remarkably beautiful. After we had addressed our
+prayers to God, and the hermits were proceeding to the refectory,
+Rousseau said to me, with his heart overflowing, 'At this moment I
+experience what is said in the gospel: Where two or three are gathered
+together in my name, there am I in the midst of them. There is here a
+feeling of peace and happiness which penetrates the soul.' I said, 'If
+Finelon had lived, you would have been a Catholic.' He exclaimed, with
+tears in his eyes, 'Oh, if Finelon were alive, I would struggle to get
+into his service, even as a lackey!'" In my sketch of Saint Pierre, it
+will be seen that I have somewhat antedated the period of his old age.
+At that time he was not probably more than fifty. In describing him, I
+have by no means exaggerated his own history of his mental condition at
+the period of the story. In the fragmentary Sequel to his Studies of
+Nature, he thus speaks of himself: "The ingratitude of those of whom I
+had deserved kindness, unexpected family misfortunes, the total loss of
+my small patrimony through enterprises solely undertaken for the benefit
+of my country, the debts under which I lay oppressed, the blasting of
+all my hopes,--these combined calamities made dreadful inroads upon my
+health and reason. . . . I found it impossible to continue in a room
+where there was company, especially if the doors were shut. I could not
+even cross an alley in a public garden, if several persons had got
+together in it. When alone, my malady subsided. I felt myself likewise
+at ease in places where I saw children only. At the sight of any one
+walking up to the place where I was, I felt my whole frame agitated, and
+retired. I often said to myself, 'My sole study has been to merit well
+of mankind; why do I fear them?'"
+
+He attributes his improved health of mind and body to the counsels of
+his friend, J. J. Rousseau. "I renounced," says he, "my books. I threw
+my eyes upon the works of nature, which spake to all my senses a
+language which neither time nor nations have it in their power to alter.
+Thenceforth my histories and my journals were the herbage of the fields
+and meadows. My thoughts did not go forth painfully after them, as in
+the case of human systems; but their thoughts, under a thousand engaging
+forms, quietly sought me. In these I studied, without effort, the laws
+of that Universal Wisdom which had surrounded me from the cradle, but on
+which heretofore I had bestowed little attention."
+
+Speaking of Rousseau, he says: "I derived inexpressible satisfaction
+from his society. What I prized still more than his genius was his
+probity. He was one of the few literary characters, tried in the furnace
+of affliction, to whom you could, with perfect security, confide your
+most secret thoughts. . . . Even when he deviated, and became the victim
+of himself or of others, he could forget his own misery in devotion to
+the welfare of mankind. He was uniformly the advocate of the miserable.
+There might be inscribed on his tomb these affecting words from that
+Book of which he carried always about him some select passages, during
+the last years of his life: 'His sins, which are many, are forgiven, for
+he loved much.'"
+
+ "I DO believe, and yet, in grief,
+ I pray for help to unbelief;
+ For needful strength aside to lay
+ The daily cumberings of my way.
+
+ "I 'm sick at heart of craft and cant,
+ Sick of the crazed enthusiast's rant,
+ Profession's smooth hypocrisies,
+ And creeds of iron, and lives of ease.
+
+ "I ponder o'er the sacred word,
+ I read the record of our Lord;
+ And, weak and troubled, envy them
+ Who touched His seamless garment's hem;
+
+ "Who saw the tears of love He wept
+ Above the grave where Lazarus slept;
+ And heard, amidst the shadows dim
+ Of Olivet, His evening hymn.
+
+ "How blessed the swineherd's low estate,
+ The beggar crouching at the gate,
+ The leper loathly and abhorred,
+ Whose eyes of flesh beheld the Lord!
+
+ "O sacred soil His sandals pressed!
+ Sweet fountains of His noonday rest!
+ O light and air of Palestine,
+ Impregnate with His life divine!
+
+ "Oh, bear me thither! Let me look
+ On Siloa's pool, and Kedron's brook;
+ Kneel at Gethsemane, and by
+ Gennesaret walk, before I die!
+
+ "Methinks this cold and northern night
+ Would melt before that Orient light;
+ And, wet by Hermon's dew and rain,
+ My childhood's faith revive again!"
+
+ So spake my friend, one autumn day,
+ Where the still river slid away
+ Beneath us, and above the brown
+ Red curtains of the woods shut down.
+
+ Then said I,--for I could not brook
+ The mute appealing of his look,--
+ "I, too, am weak, and faith is small,
+ And blindness happeneth unto all.
+
+ "Yet, sometimes glimpses on my sight,
+ Through present wrong, the eternal right;
+ And, step by step, since time began,
+ I see the steady gain of man;
+
+ "That all of good the past hath had
+ Remains to make our own time glad,
+ Our common daily life divine,
+ And every land a Palestine.
+
+ "Thou weariest of thy present state;
+ What gain to thee time's holiest date?
+ The doubter now perchance had been
+ As High Priest or as Pilate then!
+
+ "What thought Chorazin's scribes? What faith
+ In Him had Nain and Nazareth?
+ Of the few followers whom He led
+ One sold Him,--all forsook and fled.
+
+ "O friend! we need nor rock nor sand,
+ Nor storied stream of Morning-Land;
+ The heavens are glassed in Merrimac,--
+ What more could Jordan render back?
+
+ "We lack but open eye and ear
+ To find the Orient's marvels here;
+ The still small voice in autumn's hush,
+ Yon maple wood the burning bush.
+
+ "For still the new transcends the old,
+ In signs and tokens manifold;
+ Slaves rise up men; the olive waves,
+ With roots deep set in battle graves!
+
+ "Through the harsh noises of our day
+ A low, sweet prelude finds its way;
+ Through clouds of doubt, and creeds of fear,
+ A light is breaking, calm and clear.
+
+ "That song of Love, now low and far,
+ Erelong shall swell from star to star!
+ That light, the breaking day, which tips
+ The golden-spired Apocalypse!"
+
+ Then, when my good friend shook his head,
+ And, sighing, sadly smiled, I said:
+ "Thou mind'st me of a story told
+ In rare Bernardin's leaves of gold."
+
+ And while the slanted sunbeams wove
+ The shadows of the frost-stained grove,
+ And, picturing all, the river ran
+ O'er cloud and wood, I thus began:--
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+ In Mount Valerien's chestnut wood
+ The Chapel of the Hermits stood;
+ And thither, at the close of day,
+ Came two old pilgrims, worn and gray.
+
+ One, whose impetuous youth defied
+ The storms of Baikal's wintry side,
+ And mused and dreamed where tropic day
+ Flamed o'er his lost Virginia's bay.
+
+ His simple tale of love and woe
+ All hearts had melted, high or low;--
+ A blissful pain, a sweet distress,
+ Immortal in its tenderness.
+
+ Yet, while above his charmed page
+ Beat quick the young heart of his age,
+ He walked amidst the crowd unknown,
+ A sorrowing old man, strange and lone.
+
+ A homeless, troubled age,--the gray
+ Pale setting of a weary day;
+ Too dull his ear for voice of praise,
+ Too sadly worn his brow for bays.
+
+ Pride, lust of power and glory, slept;
+ Yet still his heart its young dream kept,
+ And, wandering like the deluge-dove,
+ Still sought the resting-place of love.
+
+ And, mateless, childless, envied more
+ The peasant's welcome from his door
+ By smiling eyes at eventide,
+ Than kingly gifts or lettered pride.
+
+ Until, in place of wife and child,
+ All-pitying Nature on him smiled,
+ And gave to him the golden keys
+ To all her inmost sanctities.
+
+ Mild Druid of her wood-paths dim!
+ She laid her great heart bare to him,
+ Its loves and sweet accords;--he saw
+ The beauty of her perfect law.
+
+ The language of her signs lie knew,
+ What notes her cloudy clarion blew;
+ The rhythm of autumn's forest dyes,
+ The hymn of sunset's painted skies.
+
+ And thus he seemed to hear the song
+ Which swept, of old, the stars along;
+ And to his eyes the earth once more
+ Its fresh and primal beauty wore.
+
+ Who sought with him, from summer air,
+ And field and wood, a balm for care;
+ And bathed in light of sunset skies
+ His tortured nerves and weary eyes?
+
+ His fame on all the winds had flown;
+ His words had shaken crypt and throne;
+ Like fire, on camp and court and cell
+ They dropped, and kindled as they fell.
+
+ Beneath the pomps of state, below
+ The mitred juggler's masque and show,
+ A prophecy, a vague hope, ran
+ His burning thought from man to man.
+
+ For peace or rest too well he saw
+ The fraud of priests, the wrong of law,
+ And felt how hard, between the two,
+ Their breath of pain the millions drew.
+
+ A prophet-utterance, strong and wild,
+ The weakness of an unweaned child,
+ A sun-bright hope for human-kind,
+ And self-despair, in him combined.
+
+ He loathed the false, yet lived not true
+ To half the glorious truths he knew;
+ The doubt, the discord, and the sin,
+ He mourned without, he felt within.
+
+ Untrod by him the path he showed,
+ Sweet pictures on his easel glowed
+ Of simple faith, and loves of home,
+ And virtue's golden days to come.
+
+ But weakness, shame, and folly made
+ The foil to all his pen portrayed;
+ Still, where his dreamy splendors shone,
+ The shadow of himself was thrown.
+
+ Lord, what is man, whose thought, at times,
+ Up to Thy sevenfold brightness climbs,
+ While still his grosser instinct clings
+ To earth, like other creeping things!
+
+ So rich in words, in acts so mean;
+ So high, so low; chance-swung between
+ The foulness of the penal pit
+ And Truth's clear sky, millennium-lit!
+
+ Vain, pride of star-lent genius!--vain,
+ Quick fancy and creative brain,
+ Unblest by prayerful sacrifice,
+ Absurdly great, or weakly wise!
+
+ Midst yearnings for a truer life,
+ Without were fears, within was strife;
+ And still his wayward act denied
+ The perfect good for which he sighed.
+
+ The love he sent forth void returned;
+ The fame that crowned him scorched and burned,
+ Burning, yet cold and drear and lone,--
+ A fire-mount in a frozen zone!
+
+ Like that the gray-haired sea-king passed,(9)
+ Seen southward from his sleety mast,
+ About whose brows of changeless frost
+ A wreath of flame the wild winds tossed.
+
+ Far round the mournful beauty played
+ Of lambent light and purple shade,
+ Lost on the fixed and dumb despair
+ Of frozen earth and sea and air!
+
+ A man apart, unknown, unloved
+ By those whose wrongs his soul had moved,
+ He bore the ban of Church and State,
+ The good man's fear, the bigot's hate!
+
+ Forth from the city's noise and throng,
+ Its pomp and shame, its sin and wrong,
+ The twain that summer day had strayed
+ To Mount Valerien's chestnut shade.
+
+ To them the green fields and the wood
+ Lent something of their quietude,
+ And golden-tinted sunset seemed
+ Prophetical of all they dreamed.
+
+ The hermits from their simple cares
+ The bell was calling home to prayers,
+ And, listening to its sound, the twain
+ Seemed lapped in childhood's trust again.
+
+ Wide open stood the chapel door;
+ A sweet old music, swelling o'er
+ Low prayerful murmurs, issued thence,--
+ The Litanies of Providence!
+
+ Then Rousseau spake: "Where two or three
+ In His name meet, He there will be!"
+ And then, in silence, on their knees
+ They sank beneath the chestnut-trees.
+
+ As to the blind returning light,
+ As daybreak to the Arctic night,
+ Old faith revived; the doubts of years
+ Dissolved in reverential tears.
+
+ That gush of feeling overpast,
+ "Ah me!" Bernardin sighed at last,
+ I would thy bitterest foes could see
+ Thy heart as it is seen of me!
+
+ "No church of God hast thou denied;
+ Thou hast but spurned in scorn aside
+ A bare and hollow counterfeit,
+ Profaning the pure name of it!
+
+ "With dry dead moss and marish weeds
+ His fire the western herdsman feeds,
+ And greener from the ashen plain
+ The sweet spring grasses rise again.
+
+ "Nor thunder-peal nor mighty wind
+ Disturb the solid sky behind;
+ And through the cloud the red bolt rends
+ The calm, still smile of Heaven descends.
+
+ "Thus through the world, like bolt and blast,
+ And scourging fire, thy words have passed.
+ Clouds break,--the steadfast heavens remain;
+ Weeds burn,--the ashes feed the grain!
+
+ "But whoso strives with wrong may find
+ Its touch pollute, its darkness blind;
+ And learn, as latent fraud is shown
+ In others' faith, to doubt his own.
+
+ "With dream and falsehood, simple trust
+ And pious hope we tread in dust;
+ Lost the calm faith in goodness,--lost
+ The baptism of the Pentecost!
+
+ "Alas!--the blows for error meant
+ Too oft on truth itself are spent,
+ As through the false and vile and base
+ Looks forth her sad, rebuking face.
+
+ "Not ours the Theban's charmed life;
+ We come not scathless from the strife!
+ The Python's coil about us clings,
+ The trampled Hydra bites and stings!
+
+ "Meanwhile, the sport of seeming chance,
+ The plastic shapes of circumstance,
+ What might have been we fondly guess,
+ If earlier born, or tempted less.
+
+ "And thou, in these wild, troubled days,
+ Misjudged alike in blame and praise,
+ Unsought and undeserved the same
+ The skeptic's praise, the bigot's blame;--
+
+ "I cannot doubt, if thou hadst been
+ Among the highly favored men
+ Who walked on earth with Fenelon,
+ He would have owned thee as his son;
+
+ "And, bright with wings of cherubim
+ Visibly waving over him,
+ Seen through his life, the Church had seemed
+ All that its old confessors dreamed."
+
+ "I would have been," Jean Jaques replied,
+ "The humblest servant at his side,
+ Obscure, unknown, content to see
+ How beautiful man's life may be!
+
+ "Oh, more than thrice-blest relic, more
+ Than solemn rite or sacred lore,
+ The holy life of one who trod
+ The foot-marks of the Christ of God!
+
+ "Amidst a blinded world he saw
+ The oneness of the Dual law;
+ That Heaven's sweet peace on Earth began,
+ And God was loved through love of man.
+
+ "He lived the Truth which reconciled
+ The strong man Reason, Faith the child;
+ In him belief and act were one,
+ The homilies of duty done!"
+
+ So speaking, through the twilight gray
+ The two old pilgrims went their way.
+ What seeds of life that day were sown,
+ The heavenly watchers knew alone.
+
+ Time passed, and Autumn came to fold
+ Green Summer in her brown and gold;
+ Time passed, and Winter's tears of snow
+ Dropped on the grave-mound of Rousseau.
+
+ "The tree remaineth where it fell,
+ The pained on earth is pained in hell!"
+ So priestcraft from its altars cursed
+ The mournful doubts its falsehood nursed.
+
+ Ah! well of old the Psalmist prayed,
+ "Thy hand, not man's, on me be laid!"
+ Earth frowns below, Heaven weeps above,
+ And man is hate, but God is love!
+
+ No Hermits now the wanderer sees,
+ Nor chapel with its chestnut-trees;
+ A morning dream, a tale that's told,
+ The wave of change o'er all has rolled.
+
+ Yet lives the lesson of that day;
+ And from its twilight cool and gray
+ Comes up a low, sad whisper, "Make
+ The truth thine own, for truth's own sake.
+
+ "Why wait to see in thy brief span
+ Its perfect flower and fruit in man?
+ No saintly touch can save; no balm
+ Of healing hath the martyr's palm.
+
+ "Midst soulless forms, and false pretence
+ Of spiritual pride and pampered sense,
+ A voice saith, 'What is that to thee?
+ Be true thyself, and follow Me!
+
+ "In days when throne and altar heard
+ The wanton's wish, the bigot's word,
+ And pomp of state and ritual show
+ Scarce hid the loathsome death below,--
+
+ "Midst fawning priests and courtiers foul,
+ The losel swarm of crown and cowl,
+ White-robed walked Francois Fenelon,
+ Stainless as Uriel in the sun!
+
+ "Yet in his time the stake blazed red,
+ The poor were eaten up like bread
+ Men knew him not; his garment's hem
+ No healing virtue had for them.
+
+ "Alas! no present saint we find;
+ The white cymar gleams far behind,
+ Revealed in outline vague, sublime,
+ Through telescopic mists of time!
+
+ "Trust not in man with passing breath,
+ But in the Lord, old Scripture saith;
+ The truth which saves thou mayst not blend
+ With false professor, faithless friend.
+
+ "Search thine own heart. What paineth thee
+ In others in thyself may be;
+ All dust is frail, all flesh is weak;
+ Be thou the true man thou dost seek!
+
+ "Where now with pain thou treadest, trod
+ The whitest of the saints of God!
+ To show thee where their feet were set,
+ the light which led them shineth yet.
+
+ "The footprints of the life divine,
+ Which marked their path, remain in thine;
+ And that great Life, transfused in theirs,
+ Awaits thy faith, thy love, thy prayers!"
+
+ A lesson which I well may heed,
+ A word of fitness to my need;
+ So from that twilight cool and gray
+ Still saith a voice, or seems to say.
+
+ We rose, and slowly homeward turned,
+ While down the west the sunset burned;
+ And, in its light, hill, wood, and tide,
+ And human forms seemed glorified.
+
+ The village homes transfigured stood,
+ And purple bluffs, whose belting wood
+ Across the waters leaned to hold
+ The yellow leaves like lamps of hold.
+
+ Then spake my friend: "Thy words are true;
+ Forever old, forever new,
+ These home-seen splendors are the same
+ Which over Eden's sunsets came.
+
+ "To these bowed heavens let wood and hill
+ Lift voiceless praise and anthem still;
+ Fall, warm with blessing, over them,
+ Light of the New Jerusalem!
+
+ "Flow on, sweet river, like the stream
+ Of John's Apocalyptic dream
+ This mapled ridge shall Horeb be,
+ Yon green-banked lake our Galilee!
+
+ "Henceforth my heart shall sigh no more
+ For olden time and holier shore;
+ God's love and blessing, then and there,
+ Are now and here and everywhere."
+
+ 1851.
+
+
+
+
+TAULER.
+
+ TAULER, the preacher, walked, one autumn day,
+ Without the walls of Strasburg, by the Rhine,
+ Pondering the solemn Miracle of Life;
+ As one who, wandering in a starless night,
+ Feels momently the jar of unseen waves,
+ And hears the thunder of an unknown sea,
+ Breaking along an unimagined shore.
+
+ And as he walked he prayed. Even the same
+ Old prayer with which, for half a score of years,
+ Morning, and noon, and evening, lip and heart
+ Had groaned: "Have pity upon me, Lord!
+ Thou seest, while teaching others, I am blind.
+ Send me a man who can direct my steps!"
+
+ Then, as he mused, he heard along his path
+ A sound as of an old man's staff among
+ The dry, dead linden-leaves; and, looking up,
+ He saw a stranger, weak, and poor, and old.
+
+ "Peace be unto thee, father!" Tauler said,
+ "God give thee a good day!" The old man raised
+ Slowly his calm blue eyes. "I thank thee, son;
+ But all my days are good, and none are ill."
+
+ Wondering thereat, the preacher spake again,
+ "God give thee happy life." The old man smiled,
+ "I never am unhappy."
+
+ Tauler laid
+ His hand upon the stranger's coarse gray sleeve
+ "Tell me, O father, what thy strange words mean.
+ Surely man's days are evil, and his life
+ Sad as the grave it leads to." "Nay, my son,
+ Our times are in God's hands, and all our days
+ Are as our needs; for shadow as for sun,
+ For cold as heat, for want as wealth, alike
+ Our thanks are due, since that is best which is;
+ And that which is not, sharing not His life,
+ Is evil only as devoid of good.
+ And for the happiness of which I spake,
+ I find it in submission to his will,
+ And calm trust in the holy Trinity
+ Of Knowledge, Goodness, and Almighty Power."
+
+ Silently wondering, for a little space,
+ Stood the great preacher; then he spake as one
+ Who, suddenly grappling with a haunting thought
+ Which long has followed, whispering through the dark
+ Strange terrors, drags it, shrieking, into light
+ "What if God's will consign thee hence to Hell?"
+
+ "Then," said the stranger, cheerily, "be it so.
+ What Hell may be I know not; this I know,--
+ I cannot lose the presence of the Lord.
+ One arm, Humility, takes hold upon
+ His dear Humanity; the other, Love,
+ Clasps his Divinity. So where I go
+ He goes; and better fire-walled Hell with Him
+ Than golden-gated Paradise without."
+
+ Tears sprang in Tauler's eyes. A sudden light,
+ Like the first ray which fell on chaos, clove
+ Apart the shadow wherein he had walked
+ Darkly at noon. And, as the strange old man
+ Went his slow way, until his silver hair
+ Set like the white moon where the hills of vine
+ Slope to the Rhine, he bowed his head and said
+ "My prayer is answered. God hath sent the man
+ Long sought, to teach me, by his simple trust,
+ Wisdom the weary schoolmen never knew."
+
+ So, entering with a changed and cheerful step
+ The city gates, he saw, far down the street,
+ A mighty shadow break the light of noon,
+ Which tracing backward till its airy lines
+ Hardened to stony plinths, he raised his eyes
+ O'er broad facade and lofty pediment,
+ O'er architrave and frieze and sainted niche,
+ Up the stone lace-work chiselled by the wise
+ Erwin of Steinbach, dizzily up to where
+ In the noon-brightness the great Minster's tower,
+ Jewelled with sunbeams on its mural crown,
+ Rose like a visible prayer. "Behold!" he said,
+ "The stranger's faith made plain before mine eyes.
+ As yonder tower outstretches to the earth
+ The dark triangle of its shade alone
+ When the clear day is shining on its top,
+ So, darkness in the pathway of Man's life
+ Is but the shadow of God's providence,
+ By the great Sun of Wisdom cast thereon;
+ And what is dark below is light in Heaven."
+
+ 1853.
+
+
+
+
+THE HERMIT OF THE THEBAID.
+
+ O STRONG, upwelling prayers of faith,
+ From inmost founts of life ye start,--
+ The spirit's pulse, the vital breath
+ Of soul and heart!
+
+ From pastoral toil, from traffic's din,
+ Alone, in crowds, at home, abroad,
+ Unheard of man, ye enter in
+ The ear of God.
+
+ Ye brook no forced and measured tasks,
+ Nor weary rote, nor formal chains;
+ The simple heart, that freely asks
+ In love, obtains.
+
+ For man the living temple is
+ The mercy-seat and cherubim,
+ And all the holy mysteries,
+ He bears with him.
+
+ And most avails the prayer of love,
+ Which, wordless, shapes itself in needs,
+ And wearies Heaven for naught above
+ Our common needs.
+
+ Which brings to God's all-perfect will
+ That trust of His undoubting child
+ Whereby all seeming good and ill
+ Are reconciled.
+
+ And, seeking not for special signs
+ Of favor, is content to fall
+ Within the providence which shines
+ And rains on all.
+
+ Alone, the Thebaid hermit leaned
+ At noontime o'er the sacred word.
+ Was it an angel or a fiend
+ Whose voice be heard?
+
+ It broke the desert's hush of awe,
+ A human utterance, sweet and mild;
+ And, looking up, the hermit saw
+ A little child.
+
+ A child, with wonder-widened eyes,
+ O'erawed and troubled by the sight
+ Of hot, red sands, and brazen skies,
+ And anchorite.
+
+ "'What dost thou here, poor man? No shade
+ Of cool, green palms, nor grass, nor well,
+ Nor corn, nor vines." The hermit said
+ "With God I dwell.
+
+ "Alone with Him in this great calm,
+ I live not by the outward sense;
+ My Nile his love, my sheltering palm
+ His providence."
+
+ The child gazed round him. "Does God live
+ Here only?--where the desert's rim
+ Is green with corn, at morn and eve,
+ We pray to Him.
+
+ "My brother tills beside the Nile
+ His little field; beneath the leaves
+ My sisters sit and spin, the while
+ My mother weaves.
+
+ "And when the millet's ripe heads fall,
+ And all the bean-field hangs in pod,
+ My mother smiles, and, says that all
+ Are gifts from God."
+
+ Adown the hermit's wasted cheeks
+ Glistened the flow of human tears;
+ "Dear Lord!" he said, "Thy angel speaks,
+ Thy servant hears."
+
+ Within his arms the child he took,
+ And thought of home and life with men;
+ And all his pilgrim feet forsook
+ Returned again.
+
+ The palmy shadows cool and long,
+ The eyes that smiled through lavish locks,
+ Home's cradle-hymn and harvest-song,
+ And bleat of flocks.
+
+ "O child!" he said, "thou teachest me
+ There is no place where God is not;
+ That love will make, where'er it be,
+ A holy spot."
+
+ He rose from off the desert sand,
+ And, leaning on his staff of thorn,
+ Went with the young child hand in hand,
+ Like night with morn.
+
+ They crossed the desert's burning line,
+ And heard the palm-tree's rustling fan,
+ The Nile-bird's cry, the low of kine,
+ And voice of man.
+
+ Unquestioning, his childish guide
+ He followed, as the small hand led
+ To where a woman, gentle-eyed,
+ Her distaff fed.
+
+ She rose, she clasped her truant boy,
+ She thanked the stranger with her eyes;
+ The hermit gazed in doubt and joy
+ And dumb surprise.
+
+ And to!--with sudden warmth and light
+ A tender memory thrilled his frame;
+ New-born, the world-lost anchorite
+ A man became.
+
+ "O sister of El Zara's race,
+ Behold me!--had we not one mother?"
+ She gazed into the stranger's face
+ "Thou art my brother!"
+
+ "And when to share our evening meal,
+ She calls the stranger at the door,
+ She says God fills the hands that deal
+ Food to the poor."
+
+ "O kin of blood! Thy life of use
+ And patient trust is more than mine;
+ And wiser than the gray recluse
+ This child of thine.
+
+ "For, taught of him whom God hath sent,
+ That toil is praise, and love is prayer,
+ I come, life's cares and pains content
+ With thee to share."
+
+ Even as his foot the threshold crossed,
+ The hermit's better life began;
+ Its holiest saint the Thebaid lost,
+ And found a man!
+
+ 1854.
+
+
+
+
+MAUD MULLER.
+
+The recollection of some descendants of a Hessian deserter in the
+Revolutionary war bearing the name of Muller doubtless suggested the
+somewhat infelicitous title of a New England idyl. The poem had no real
+foundation in fact, though a hint of it may have been found in recalling
+an incident, trivial in itself, of a journey on the picturesque Maine
+seaboard with my sister some years before it was written. We had stopped
+to rest our tired horse under the shade of an apple-tree, and refresh
+him with water from a little brook which rippled through the stone wall
+across the road. A very beautiful young girl in scantest summer attire
+was at work in the hay-field, and as we talked with her we noticed that
+she strove to hide her bare feet by raking hay over them, blushing as
+she did so, through the tan of her cheek and neck.
+
+ MAUD MULLER on a summer's day,
+ Raked the meadow sweet with hay.
+
+ Beneath her torn hat glowed the wealth
+ Of simple beauty and rustic-health.
+
+ Singing, she wrought, and her merry glee
+ The mock-bird echoed from his tree.
+
+ But when she glanced to the far-off town,
+ White from its hill-slope looking down,
+
+ The sweet song died, and a vague unrest
+ And a nameless longing filled her breast,--
+
+ A wish, that she hardly dared to own,
+ For something better than she had known.
+
+ The Judge rode slowly down the lane,
+ Smoothing his horse's chestnut mane.
+
+ He drew his bridle in the shade
+ Of the apple-trees, to greet the maid,
+
+ And asked a draught from the spring that flowed
+ Through the meadow across the road.
+
+ She stooped where the cool spring bubbled up,
+ And filled for him her small tin cup,
+
+ And blushed as she gave it, looking down
+ On her feet so bare, and her tattered gown.
+
+ "Thanks!" said the Judge; "a sweeter draught
+ From a fairer hand was never quaffed."
+
+ He spoke of the grass and flowers and trees,
+ Of the singing birds and the humming bees;
+
+ Then talked of the haying, and wondered whether
+ The cloud in the west would bring foul weather.
+
+ And Maud forgot her brier-torn gown,
+ And her graceful ankles bare and brown;
+
+ And listened, while a pleased surprise
+ Looked from her long-lashed hazel eyes.
+
+ At last, like one who for delay
+ Seeks a vain excuse, he rode away.
+
+ Maud Muller looked and sighed: "Ah me!
+ That I the Judge's bride might be!
+
+ "He would dress me up in silks so fine,
+ And praise and toast me at his wine.
+
+ "My father should wear a broadcloth coat;
+ My brother should sail a painted boat.
+
+ "I'd dress my mother so grand and gay,
+ And the baby should have a new toy each day.
+
+ "And I 'd feed the hungry and clothe the poor,
+ And all should bless me who left our door."
+
+ The Judge looked back as he climbed the hill,
+ And saw Maud Muller standing still.
+
+ A form more fair, a face more sweet,
+ Ne'er hath it been my lot to meet.
+
+ "And her modest answer and graceful air
+ Show her wise and good as she is fair.
+
+ "Would she were mine, and I to-day,
+ Like her, a harvester of hay;
+
+ "No doubtful balance of rights and wrongs,
+ Nor weary lawyers with endless tongues,
+
+ "But low of cattle and song of birds,
+ And health and quiet and loving words."
+
+ But he thought of his sisters, proud and cold,
+ And his mother, vain of her rank and gold.
+
+ So, closing his heart, the Judge rode on,
+ And Maud was left in the field alone.
+
+ But the lawyers smiled that afternoon,
+ When he hummed in court an old love-tune;
+
+ And the young girl mused beside the well
+ Till the rain on the unraked clover fell.
+
+ He wedded a wife of richest dower,
+ Who lived for fashion, as he for power.
+
+ Yet oft, in his marble hearth's bright glow,
+ He watched a picture come and go;
+
+ And sweet Maud Muller's hazel eyes
+ Looked out in their innocent surprise.
+
+ Oft, when the wine in his glass was red,
+ He longed for the wayside well instead;
+
+ And closed his eyes on his garnished rooms
+ To dream of meadows and clover-blooms.
+
+ And the proud man sighed, with a secret pain,
+ "Ah, that I were free again!
+
+ "Free as when I rode that day,
+ Where the barefoot maiden raked her hay."
+
+ She wedded a man unlearned and poor,
+ And many children played round her door.
+
+ But care and sorrow, and childbirth pain,
+ Left their traces on heart and brain.
+
+ And oft, when the summer sun shone hot
+ On the new-mown hay in the meadow lot,
+
+ And she heard the little spring brook fall
+ Over the roadside, through the wall,
+
+ In the shade of the apple-tree again
+ She saw a rider draw his rein.
+
+ And, gazing down with timid grace,
+ She felt his pleased eyes read her face.
+
+ Sometimes her narrow kitchen walls
+ Stretched away into stately halls;
+
+ The weary wheel to a spinnet turned,
+ The tallow candle an astral burned,
+
+ And for him who sat by the chimney lug,
+ Dozing and grumbling o'er pipe and mug,
+
+ A manly form at her side she saw,
+ And joy was duty and love was law.
+
+ Then she took up her burden of life again,
+ Saying only, "It might have been."
+
+ Alas for maiden, alas for Judge,
+ For rich repiner and household drudge!
+
+ God pity them both! and pity us all,
+ Who vainly the dreams of youth recall.
+
+ For of all sad words of tongue or pen,
+ The saddest are these: "It might have been!"
+
+ Ah, well! for us all some sweet hope lies
+ Deeply buried from human eyes;
+
+ And, in the hereafter, angels may
+ Roll the stone from its grave away!
+
+ 1854.
+
+
+
+
+MARY GARVIN.
+
+ FROM the heart of Waumbek Methna, from the
+ lake that never fails,
+ Falls the Saco in the green lap of Conway's
+ intervales;
+ There, in wild and virgin freshness, its waters
+ foam and flow,
+ As when Darby Field first saw them, two hundred
+ years ago.
+
+ But, vexed in all its seaward course with bridges,
+ dams, and mills,
+ How changed is Saco's stream, how lost its freedom
+ of the hills,
+ Since travelled Jocelyn, factor Vines, and stately
+ Champernoon
+ Heard on its banks the gray wolf's howl, the trumpet
+ of the loon!
+
+ With smoking axle hot with speed, with steeds of
+ fire and steam,
+ Wide-waked To-day leaves Yesterday behind him
+ like a dream.
+ Still, from the hurrying train of Life, fly backward
+ far and fast
+ The milestones of the fathers, the landmarks of
+ the past.
+
+ But human hearts remain unchanged: the sorrow
+ and the sin,
+ The loves and hopes and fears of old, are to our
+ own akin;
+
+ And if, in tales our fathers told, the songs our
+ mothers sung,
+ Tradition wears a snowy beard, Romance is always
+ young.
+
+ O sharp-lined man of traffic, on Saco's banks today!
+ O mill-girl watching late and long the shuttle's
+ restless play!
+ Let, for the once, a listening ear the working hand
+ beguile,
+ And lend my old Provincial tale, as suits, a tear or
+ smile!
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+ The evening gun had sounded from gray Fort
+ Mary's walls;
+ Through the forest, like a wild beast, roared and
+ plunged the Saco's' falls.
+
+ And westward on the sea-wind, that damp and
+ gusty grew,
+ Over cedars darkening inland the smokes of Spurwink
+ blew.
+
+ On the hearth of Farmer Garvin, blazed the crackling
+ walnut log;
+ Right and left sat dame and goodman, and between
+ them lay the dog,
+
+ Head on paws, and tail slow wagging, and beside
+ him on her mat,
+ Sitting drowsy in the firelight, winked and purred
+ the mottled cat.
+
+ "Twenty years!" said Goodman Garvin, speaking
+ sadly, under breath,
+ And his gray head slowly shaking, as one who
+ speaks of death.
+
+ The goodwife dropped her needles: "It is twenty
+ years to-day,
+ Since the Indians fell on Saco, and stole our child
+ away."
+
+ Then they sank into the silence, for each knew
+ the other's thought,
+ Of a great and common sorrow, and words were,
+ needed not.
+
+ "Who knocks?" cried Goodman Garvin. The
+ door was open thrown;
+ On two strangers, man and maiden, cloaked and
+ furred, the fire-light shone.
+
+ One with courteous gesture lifted the bear-skin
+ from his head;
+ "Lives here Elkanah Garvin?" "I am he," the
+ goodman said.
+
+ "Sit ye down, and dry and warm ye, for the night
+ is chill with rain."
+ And the goodwife drew the settle, and stirred the
+ fire amain.
+
+ The maid unclasped her cloak-hood, the firelight
+ glistened fair
+ In her large, moist eyes, and over soft folds of
+ dark brown hair.
+
+ Dame Garvin looked upon her: "It is Mary's self
+ I see!"
+ "Dear heart!" she cried, "now tell me, has my
+ child come back to me?"
+
+ "My name indeed is Mary," said the stranger sobbing
+ wild;
+ "Will you be to me a mother? I am Mary Garvin's child!"
+
+ "She sleeps by wooded Simcoe, but on her dying
+ day
+ She bade my father take me to her kinsfolk far
+ away.
+
+ "And when the priest besought her to do me no
+ such wrong,
+ She said, 'May God forgive me! I have closed
+ my heart too long.'
+
+ "'When I hid me from my father, and shut out
+ my mother's call,
+ I sinned against those dear ones, and the Father
+ of us all.
+
+ "'Christ's love rebukes no home-love, breaks no
+ tie of kin apart;
+ Better heresy in doctrine, than heresy of heart.
+
+ "'Tell me not the Church must censure: she who
+ wept the Cross beside
+ Never made her own flesh strangers, nor the claims
+ of blood denied;
+
+ "'And if she who wronged her parents, with her
+ child atones to them,
+ Earthly daughter, Heavenly Mother! thou at least
+ wilt not condemn!'
+
+ "So, upon her death-bed lying, my blessed mother
+ spake;
+ As we come to do her bidding, So receive us for her
+ sake."
+
+ "God be praised!" said Goodwife Garvin, "He taketh,
+ and He gives;
+ He woundeth, but He healeth; in her child our
+ daughter lives!"
+
+ "Amen!" the old man answered, as he brushed a
+ tear away,
+ And, kneeling by his hearthstone, said, with reverence,
+ "Let us pray."
+
+ All its Oriental symbols, and its Hebrew pararphrase,
+ Warm with earnest life and feeling, rose his prayer
+ of love and praise.
+
+ But he started at beholding, as he rose from off
+ his knee,
+ The stranger cross his forehead with the sign of
+ Papistrie.
+
+ "What is this?" cried Farmer Garvin. "Is an English
+ Christian's home
+ A chapel or a mass-house, that you make the sign
+ of Rome?"
+
+ Then the young girl knelt beside him, kissed his
+ trembling hand, and cried:
+ Oh, forbear to chide my father; in that faith my
+ mother died!
+
+ "On her wooden cross at Simcoe the dews and
+ sunshine fall,
+ As they fall on Spurwink's graveyard; and the
+ dear God watches all!"
+
+ The old man stroked the fair head that rested on
+ his knee;
+ "Your words, dear child," he answered, "are God's
+ rebuke to me.
+
+ "Creed and rite perchance may differ, yet our
+ faith and hope be one.
+ Let me be your father's father, let him be to me
+ a son."
+
+ When the horn, on Sabbath morning, through the
+ still and frosty air,
+ From Spurwink, Pool, and Black Point, called to
+ sermon and to prayer,
+
+ To the goodly house of worship, where, in order
+ due and fit,
+ As by public vote directed, classed and ranked the
+ people sit;
+
+ Mistress first and goodwife after, clerkly squire
+ before the clown,
+ "From the brave coat, lace-embroidered, to the gray
+ frock, shading down;"
+
+ From the pulpit read the preacher, "Goodman
+ Garvin and his wife
+ Fain would thank the Lord, whose kindness has
+ followed them through life,
+
+ "For the great and crowning mercy, that their
+ daughter, from the wild,
+ Where she rests (they hope in God's peace), has
+ sent to them her child;
+
+ "And the prayers of all God's people they ask,
+ that they may prove
+ Not unworthy, through their weakness, of such
+ special proof of love."
+
+ As the preacher prayed, uprising, the aged couple
+ stood,
+ And the fair Canadian also, in her modest maiden-
+ hood.
+
+ Thought the elders, grave and doubting, "She is
+ Papist born and bred;"
+ Thought the young men, "'T is an angel in Mary
+ Garvin's stead!"
+
+
+
+
+THE RANGER.
+
+Originally published as Martha Mason; a Song of the Old
+French War.
+
+ ROBERT RAWLIN!--Frosts were falling
+ When the ranger's horn was calling
+ Through the woods to Canada.
+
+ Gone the winter's sleet and snowing,
+ Gone the spring-time's bud and blowing,
+ Gone the summer's harvest mowing,
+ And again the fields are gray.
+ Yet away, he's away!
+ Faint and fainter hope is growing
+ In the hearts that mourn his stay.
+
+ Where the lion, crouching high on
+ Abraham's rock with teeth of iron,
+ Glares o'er wood and wave away,
+ Faintly thence, as pines far sighing,
+ Or as thunder spent and dying,
+ Come the challenge and replying,
+ Come the sounds of flight and fray.
+ Well-a-day! Hope and pray!
+ Some are living, some are lying
+ In their red graves far away.
+
+ Straggling rangers, worn with dangers,
+ Homeward faring, weary strangers
+ Pass the farm-gate on their way;
+ Tidings of the dead and living,
+ Forest march and ambush, giving,
+ Till the maidens leave their weaving,
+ And the lads forget their play.
+ "Still away, still away!"
+ Sighs a sad one, sick with grieving,
+ "Why does Robert still delay!"
+
+ Nowhere fairer, sweeter, rarer,
+ Does the golden-locked fruit bearer
+ Through his painted woodlands stray,
+ Than where hillside oaks and beeches
+ Overlook the long, blue reaches,
+ Silver coves and pebbled beaches,
+ And green isles of Casco Bay;
+ Nowhere day, for delay,
+ With a tenderer look beseeches,
+ "Let me with my charmed earth stay."
+
+ On the grain-lands of the mainlands
+ Stands the serried corn like train-bands,
+ Plume and pennon rustling gay;
+ Out at sea, the islands wooded,
+ Silver birches, golden-hooded,
+ Set with maples, crimson-blooded,
+ White sea-foam and sand-hills gray,
+ Stretch away, far away.
+ Dim and dreamy, over-brooded
+ By the hazy autumn day.
+
+ Gayly chattering to the clattering
+ Of the brown nuts downward pattering,
+ Leap the squirrels, red and gray.
+ On the grass-land, on the fallow,
+ Drop the apples, red and yellow;
+ Drop the russet pears and mellow,
+ Drop the red leaves all the day.
+ And away, swift away,
+ Sun and cloud, o'er hill and hollow
+ Chasing, weave their web of play.
+
+ "Martha Mason, Martha Mason,
+ Prithee tell us of the reason
+ Why you mope at home to-day
+ Surely smiling is not sinning;
+ Leave, your quilling, leave your spinning;
+ What is all your store of linen,
+ If your heart is never gay?
+ Come away, come away!
+ Never yet did sad beginning
+ Make the task of life a play."
+
+ Overbending, till she's blending
+ With the flaxen skein she's tending
+ Pale brown tresses smoothed away
+ From her face of patient sorrow,
+ Sits she, seeking but to borrow,
+ From the trembling hope of morrow,
+ Solace for the weary day.
+ "Go your way, laugh and play;
+ Unto Him who heeds the sparrow
+ And the lily, let me pray."
+
+ "With our rally, rings the valley,--
+ Join us!" cried the blue-eyed Nelly;
+ "Join us!" cried the laughing May,
+ "To the beach we all are going,
+ And, to save the task of rowing,
+ West by north the wind is blowing,
+ Blowing briskly down the bay
+ Come away, come away!
+ Time and tide are swiftly flowing,
+ Let us take them while we may!
+
+ "Never tell us that you'll fail us,
+ Where the purple beach-plum mellows
+ On the bluffs so wild and gray.
+ Hasten, for the oars are falling;
+ Hark, our merry mates are calling;
+ Time it is that we were all in,
+ Singing tideward down the bay!"
+ "Nay, nay, let me stay;
+ Sore and sad for Robert Rawlin
+ Is my heart," she said, "to-day."
+
+ "Vain your calling for Rob Rawlin
+ Some red squaw his moose-meat's broiling,
+ Or some French lass, singing gay;
+ Just forget as he's forgetting;
+ What avails a life of fretting?
+ If some stars must needs be setting,
+ Others rise as good as they."
+ "Cease, I pray; go your way!"
+ Martha cries, her eyelids wetting;
+ "Foul and false the words you say!"
+
+ "Martha Mason, hear to reason!--
+ Prithee, put a kinder face on!"
+ "Cease to vex me," did she say;
+ "Better at his side be lying,
+ With the mournful pine-trees sighing,
+ And the wild birds o'er us crying,
+ Than to doubt like mine a prey;
+ While away, far away,
+ Turns my heart, forever trying
+ Some new hope for each new day.
+
+ "When the shadows veil the meadows,
+ And the sunset's golden ladders
+ Sink from twilight's walls of gray,--
+ From the window of my dreaming,
+ I can see his sickle gleaming,
+ Cheery-voiced, can hear him teaming
+ Down the locust-shaded way;
+ But away, swift away,
+ Fades the fond, delusive seeming,
+ And I kneel again to pray.
+
+ "When the growing dawn is showing,
+ And the barn-yard cock is crowing,
+ And the horned moon pales away
+ From a dream of him awaking,
+ Every sound my heart is making
+ Seems a footstep of his taking;
+ Then I hush the thought, and say,
+ 'Nay, nay, he's away!'
+ Ah! my heart, my heart is breaking
+ For the dear one far away."
+
+ Look up, Martha! worn and swarthy,
+ Glows a face of manhood worthy
+ "Robert!" "Martha!" all they say.
+ O'er went wheel and reel together,
+ Little cared the owner whither;
+ Heart of lead is heart of feather,
+ Noon of night is noon of day!
+ Come away, come away!
+ When such lovers meet each other,
+ Why should prying idlers stay?
+
+ Quench the timber's fallen embers,
+ Quench the recd leaves in December's
+ Hoary rime and chilly spray.
+
+ But the hearth shall kindle clearer,
+ Household welcomes sound sincerer,
+ Heart to loving heart draw nearer,
+ When the bridal bells shall say:
+ "Hope and pray, trust alway;
+ Life is sweeter, love is dearer,
+ For the trial and delay!"
+
+ 1856.
+
+
+
+
+THE GARRISON OF CAPE ANN.
+
+ FROM the hills of home forth looking, far beneath
+ the tent-like span
+ Of the sky, I see the white gleam of the headland
+ of Cape Ann.
+ Well I know its coves and beaches to the ebb-tide
+ glimmering down,
+ And the white-walled hamlet children of its ancient
+ fishing town.
+
+ Long has passed the summer morning, and its
+ memory waxes old,
+ When along yon breezy headlands with a pleasant
+ friend I strolled.
+ Ah! the autumn sun is shining, and the ocean
+ wind blows cool,
+ And the golden-rod and aster bloom around thy
+ grave, Rantoul!
+
+ With the memory of that morning by the summer
+ sea I blend
+ A wild and wondrous story, by the younger Mather
+ penned,
+ In that quaint Magnalia Christi, with all strange
+ and marvellous things,
+ Heaped up huge and undigested, like the chaos
+ Ovid sings.
+
+ Dear to me these far, faint glimpses of the dual
+ life of old,
+ Inward, grand with awe and reverence; outward,
+ mean and coarse and cold;
+ Gleams of mystic beauty playing over dull and
+ vulgar clay,
+ Golden-threaded fancies weaving in a web of
+ hodden gray.
+
+ The great eventful Present hides the Past; but
+ through the din
+ Of its loud life hints and echoes from the life
+ behind steal in;
+ And the lore of homeland fireside, and the legendary
+ rhyme,
+ Make the task of duty lighter which the true man
+ owes his time.
+
+ So, with something of the feeling which the Covenanter
+ knew,
+ When with pious chisel wandering Scotland's
+ moorland graveyards through,
+ From the graves of old traditions I part the black-
+ berry-vines,
+ Wipe the moss from off the headstones, and retouch
+ the faded lines.
+
+ Where the sea-waves back and forward, hoarse
+ with rolling pebbles, ran,
+ The garrison-house stood watching on the gray
+ rocks of Cape Ann;
+ On its windy site uplifting gabled roof and palisade,
+ And rough walls of unhewn timber with the moonlight
+ overlaid.
+
+ On his slow round walked the sentry, south and
+ eastward looking forth
+ O'er a rude and broken coast-line, white with
+ breakers stretching north,--
+ Wood and rock and gleaming sand-drift, jagged
+ capes, with bush and tree,
+ Leaning inland from the smiting of the wild and
+ gusty sea.
+
+ Before the deep-mouthed chimney, dimly lit by
+ dying brands,
+ Twenty soldiers sat and waited, with their muskets
+ in their hands;
+ On the rough-hewn oaken table the venison haunch
+ was shared,
+ And the pewter tankard circled slowly round from
+ beard to beard.
+
+ Long they sat and talked together,--talked of
+ wizards Satan-sold;
+ Of all ghostly sights and noises,--signs and wonders
+ manifold;
+ Of the spectre-ship of Salem, with the dead men
+ in her shrouds,
+ Sailing sheer above the water, in the loom of morning
+ clouds;
+
+ Of the marvellous valley hidden in the depths of
+ Gloucester woods,
+ Full of plants that love the summer,--blooms of
+ warmer latitudes;
+ Where the Arctic birch is braided by the tropic's
+ flowery vines,
+ And the white magnolia-blossoms star the twilight
+ of the pines!
+
+ But their voices sank yet lower, sank to husky
+ tones of fear,
+ As they spake of present tokens of the powers of
+ evil near;
+ Of a spectral host, defying stroke of steel and aim
+ of gun;
+ Never yet was ball to slay them in the mould of
+ mortals run.
+
+ Thrice, with plumes and flowing scalp-locks, from
+ the midnight wood they came,--
+ Thrice around the block-house marching, met, unharmed,
+ its volleyed flame;
+ Then, with mocking laugh and gesture, sunk in
+ earth or lost in air,
+ All the ghostly wonder vanished, and the moonlit
+ sands lay bare.
+
+ Midnight came; from out the forest moved a
+ dusky mass that soon
+ Grew to warriors, plumed and painted, grimly
+ marching in the moon.
+ "Ghosts or witches," said the captain, "thus I foil
+ the Evil One!"
+ And he rammed a silver button, from his doublet,
+ down his gun.
+
+ Once again the spectral horror moved the guarded
+ wall about;
+ Once again the levelled muskets through the palisades
+ flashed out,
+ With that deadly aim the squirrel on his tree-top
+ might not shun,
+ Nor the beach-bird seaward flying with his slant
+ wing to the sun.
+
+ Like the idle rain of summer sped the harmless
+ shower of lead.
+ With a laugh of fierce derision, once again the
+ phantoms fled;
+ Once again, without a shadow on the sands the
+ moonlight lay,
+ And the white smoke curling through it drifted
+ slowly down the bay!
+
+ "God preserve us!" said the captain; "never
+ mortal foes were there;
+ They have vanished with their leader, Prince and
+ Power of the air!
+ Lay aside your useless weapons; skill and prowess
+ naught avail;
+ They who do the Devil's service wear their master's
+ coat of mail!"
+
+ So the night grew near to cock-crow, when again
+ a warning call
+ Roused the score of weary soldiers watching round
+ the dusky hall
+ And they looked to flint and priming, and they
+ longed for break of day;
+ But the captain closed his Bible: "Let us cease
+ from man, and pray!"
+
+ To the men who went before us, all the unseen
+ powers seemed near,
+ And their steadfast strength of courage struck its
+ roots in holy fear.
+ Every hand forsook the musket, every head was
+ bowed and bare,
+ Every stout knee pressed the flag-stones, as the
+ captain led in prayer.
+
+ Ceased thereat the mystic marching of the spectres
+ round the wall,
+ But a sound abhorred, unearthly, smote the ears
+ and hearts of all,--
+ Howls of rage and shrieks of anguish! Never
+ after mortal man
+ Saw the ghostly leaguers marching round the
+ block-house of Cape Ann.
+
+ So to us who walk in summer through the cool and
+ sea-blown town,
+ From the childhood of its people comes the solemn
+ legend down.
+ Not in vain the ancient fiction, in whose moral
+ lives the youth
+ And the fitness and the freshness of an undecaying
+ truth.
+
+ Soon or late to all our dwellings come the spectres
+ of the mind,
+ Doubts and fears and dread forebodings, in the
+ darkness undefined;
+ Round us throng the grim projections of the heart
+ and of the brain,
+ And our pride of strength is weakness, and the
+ cunning hand is vain.
+
+ In the dark we cry like children; and no answer
+ from on high
+ Breaks the crystal spheres of silence, and no white
+ wings downward fly;
+ But the heavenly help we pray for comes to faith,
+ and not to sight,
+ And our prayers themselves drive backward all the
+ spirits of the night!
+
+ 1857.
+
+
+
+
+THE GIFT OF TRITEMIUS.
+
+ TRITEMIUS of Herbipolis, one day,
+ While kneeling at the altar's foot to pray,
+ Alone with God, as was his pious choice,
+ Heard from without a miserable voice,
+ A sound which seemed of all sad things to tell,
+ As of a lost soul crying out of hell.
+
+ Thereat the Abbot paused; the chain whereby
+ His thoughts went upward broken by that cry;
+ And, looking from the casement, saw below
+ A wretched woman, with gray hair a-flow,
+ And withered hands held up to him, who cried
+ For alms as one who might not be denied.
+
+ She cried, "For the dear love of Him who gave
+ His life for ours, my child from bondage save,--
+ My beautiful, brave first-born, chained with slaves
+ In the Moor's galley, where the sun-smit waves
+ Lap the white walls of Tunis!"--"What I can
+ I give," Tritemius said, "my prayers."--"O man
+ Of God!" she cried, for grief had made her bold,
+ "Mock me not thus; I ask not prayers, but gold.
+ Words will not serve me, alms alone suffice;
+ Even while I speak perchance my first-born dies."
+
+ "Woman!" Tritemius answered, "from our door
+ None go unfed, hence are we always poor;
+ A single soldo is our only store.
+ Thou hast our prayers;--what can we give thee
+ more?"
+
+ "Give me," she said, "the silver candlesticks
+ On either side of the great crucifix.
+ God well may spare them on His errands sped,
+ Or He can give you golden ones instead."
+
+ Then spake Tritemius, "Even as thy word,
+ Woman, so be it! Our most gracious Lord,
+ Who loveth mercy more than sacrifice,
+ Pardon me if a human soul I prize
+ Above the gifts upon his altar piled!
+ Take what thou askest, and redeem thy child."
+
+ But his hand trembled as the holy alms
+ He placed within the beggar's eager palms;
+ And as she vanished down the linden shade,
+ He bowed his head and for forgiveness prayed.
+ So the day passed, and when the twilight came
+ He woke to find the chapel all aflame,
+ And, dumb with grateful wonder, to behold
+ Upon the altar candlesticks of gold!
+
+ 1857.
+
+
+
+
+SKIPPER IRESON'S RIDE.
+
+In the valuable and carefully prepared History of Marblehead, published
+in 1879 by Samuel Roads, Jr., it is stated that the crew of Captain
+Ireson, rather than himself, were responsible for the abandonment of the
+disabled vessel. To screen themselves they charged their captain with
+the crime. In view of this the writer of the ballad addressed the
+following letter to the historian:--
+
+OAK KNOLL, DANVERS, 5 mo. 18, 1880.
+MY DEAR FRIEND: I heartily thank thee for a copy of thy History of
+Marblehead. I have read it with great interest and think good use has
+been made of the abundant material. No town in Essex County has a record
+more honorable than Marblehead; no one has done more to develop the
+industrial interests of our New England seaboard, and certainly none
+have given such evidence of self-sacrificing patriotism. I am glad the
+story of it has been at last told, and told so well. I have now no doubt
+that thy version of Skipper Ireson's ride is the correct one. My verse
+was founded solely on a fragment of rhyme which I heard from one of my
+early schoolmates, a native of Marblehead. I supposed the story to which
+it referred dated back at least a century. I knew nothing of the
+participators, and the narrative of the ballad was pure fancy. I am glad
+for the sake of truth and justice that the real facts are given in thy
+book. I certainly would not knowingly do injustice to any one, dead or
+living.
+
+I am very truly thy friend,
+JOHN G. WHITTIER.
+
+
+ OF all the rides since, the birth of time,
+ Told in story or sung in rhyme,--
+ On Apuleius's Golden Ass,
+ Or one-eyed Calendar's horse of brass;
+ Witch astride of a human back,
+ Islam's prophet on Al-Borak,--
+ The strangest ride that ever was sped
+ Was Ireson's, out from Marblehead!
+ Old Floyd Ireson, for his hard heart,
+ Tarred and feathered and carried in a cart
+ By the women of Marblehead!
+ Body of turkey, head of owl,
+ Wings a-droop like a rained-on fowl,
+ Feathered and ruffled in every part,
+ Skipper Ireson stood in the cart.
+ Scores of women, old and young,
+ Strong of muscle, and glib of tongue,
+ Pushed and pulled up the rocky lane,
+ Shouting and singing the shrill refrain
+ "Here's Flud Oirson, fur his horrd horrt,
+ Torr'd an' futherr'd an' corr'd in a corrt
+ By the women o' Morble'ead!"
+
+ Wrinkled scolds with hands on hips,
+ Girls in bloom of cheek and lips,
+ Wild-eyed, free-limbed, such as chase
+ Bacchus round some antique vase,
+ Brief of skirt, with ankles bare,
+ Loose of kerchief and loose of hair,
+ With conch-shells blowing and fish-horns' twang,
+ Over and over the Manads sang
+ "Here's Flud Oirson, fur his horrd horrt,
+ Torr'd an' futherr'd an dorr'd in a corrt
+ By the women o' Morble'ead!"
+
+ Small pity for him!--He sailed away
+ From a leaking ship, in Chaleur Bay,--
+ Sailed away from a sinking wreck,
+ With his own town's-people on her deck!
+ "Lay by! lay by!" they called to him.
+ Back he answered, "Sink or swim!
+ Brag of your catch of fish again!"
+ And off he sailed through the fog and rain!
+ Old Floyd Ireson, for his hard heart,
+ Tarred and feathered and carried in a cart
+ By the women of Marblehead!
+
+ Fathoms deep in dark Chaleur
+ That wreck shall lie forevermore.
+ Mother and sister, wife and maid,
+ Looked from the rocks of Marblehead
+ Over the moaning and rainy sea,--
+ Looked for the coming that might not be!
+ What did the winds and the sea-birds say
+ Of the cruel captain who sailed away?--
+ Old Floyd Ireson, for his hard heart,
+ Tarred and feathered and carried in a cart
+ By the women of Marblehead!
+
+ Through the street, on either side,
+ Up flew windows, doors swung wide;
+ Sharp-tongued spinsters, old wives gray,
+ Treble lent the fish-horn's bray.
+ Sea-worn grandsires, cripple-bound,
+ Hulks of old sailors run aground,
+ Shook head, and fist, and hat, and cane,
+ And cracked with curses the hoarse refrain
+ "Here's Flud Oirson, fur his horrd horrt,
+ Torr'd an' futherr'd an' corr'd in a corrt
+ By the women o''Morble'ead!"
+
+ Sweetly along the Salem road
+ Bloom of orchard and lilac showed.
+ Little the wicked skipper knew
+ Of the fields so green and the sky so blue.
+ Riding there in his sorry trim,
+ Like to Indian idol glum and grim,
+ Scarcely he seemed the sound to hear
+ Of voices shouting, far and near
+ "Here's Flud Oirson, fur his horrd horrt,
+ Torr'd an' futherr'd an' corr'd in a corrt
+ By the women o' Morble'ead!"
+
+ "Hear me, neighbors!" at last he cried,--
+ "What to me is this noisy ride?
+ What is the shame that clothes the skin
+ To the nameless horror that lives within?
+ Waking or sleeping, I see a wreck,
+ And hear a cry from a reeling deck!
+ Hate me and curse me,--I only dread
+ The hand of God and the face of the dead!"
+ Said old Floyd Ireson, for his hard heart,
+ Tarred and feathered and carried in a cart
+ By the women of Marblehead!
+
+ Then the wife of the skipper lost at sea
+ Said, "God has touched him! why should we?"
+ Said an old wife mourning her only son,
+ "Cut the rogue's tether and let him run!"
+ So with soft relentings and rude excuse,
+ Half scorn, half pity, they cut him loose,
+ And gave him a cloak to hide him in,
+ And left him alone with his shame and sin.
+ Poor Floyd Ireson, for his hard heart,
+ Tarred and feathered and carried in a cart
+ By the women of Marblehead!
+
+ 1857.
+
+
+
+
+THE SYCAMORES.
+
+Hugh Tallant was the first Irish resident of Haverhill, Mass. He planted
+the button-wood trees on the bank of the river below the village in the
+early part of the seventeenth century. Unfortunately this noble avenue
+is now nearly destroyed.
+
+ IN the outskirts of the village,
+ On the river's winding shores,
+ Stand the Occidental plane-trees,
+ Stand the ancient sycamores.
+
+ One long century hath been numbered,
+ And another half-way told,
+ Since the rustic Irish gleeman
+ Broke for them the virgin mould.
+
+ Deftly set to Celtic music,
+ At his violin's sound they grew,
+ Through the moonlit eves of summer,
+ Making Amphion's fable true.
+
+ Rise again, then poor Hugh Tallant
+ Pass in jerkin green along,
+ With thy eyes brimful of laughter,
+ And thy mouth as full of song.
+
+ Pioneer of Erin's outcasts,
+ With his fiddle and his pack;
+ Little dreamed the village Saxons
+ Of the myriads at his back.
+
+ How he wrought with spade and fiddle,
+ Delved by day and sang by night,
+ With a hand that never wearied,
+ And a heart forever light,--
+
+ Still the gay tradition mingles
+ With a record grave and drear,
+ Like the rollic air of Cluny,
+ With the solemn march of Mear.
+
+ When the box-tree, white with blossoms,
+ Made the sweet May woodlands glad,
+ And the Aronia by the river
+ Lighted up the swarming shad,
+
+ And the bulging nets swept shoreward,
+ With their silver-sided haul,
+ Midst the shouts of dripping fishers,
+ He was merriest of them all.
+
+ When, among the jovial huskers,
+ Love stole in at Labor's side,
+ With the lusty airs of England,
+ Soft his Celtic measures vied.
+
+ Songs of love and wailing lyke--wake,
+ And the merry fair's carouse;
+ Of the wild Red Fox of Erin
+ And the Woman of Three Cows,
+
+ By the blazing hearths of winter,
+ Pleasant seemed his simple tales,
+ Midst the grimmer Yorkshire legends
+ And the mountain myths of Wales.
+
+ How the souls in Purgatory
+ Scrambled up from fate forlorn,
+ On St. Eleven's sackcloth ladder,
+ Slyly hitched to Satan's horn.
+
+ Of the fiddler who at Tara
+ Played all night to ghosts of kings;
+ Of the brown dwarfs, and the fairies
+ Dancing in their moorland rings.
+
+ Jolliest of our birds of singing,
+ Best he loved the Bob-o-link.
+ "Hush!" he 'd say, "the tipsy fairies
+ Hear the little folks in drink!"
+
+ Merry-faced, with spade and fiddle,
+ Singing through the ancient town,
+ Only this, of poor Hugh Tallant,
+ Hath Tradition handed down.
+
+ Not a stone his grave discloses;
+ But if yet his spirit walks,
+ 'T is beneath the trees he planted,
+ And when Bob-o-Lincoln talks;
+
+ Green memorials of the gleeman I
+ Linking still the river-shores,
+ With their shadows cast by sunset,
+ Stand Hugh Tallant's sycamores!
+
+ When the Father of his Country
+ Through the north-land riding came,
+ And the roofs were starred with banners,
+ And the steeples rang acclaim,--
+
+ When each war-scarred Continental,
+ Leaving smithy, mill, and farm,
+ Waved his rusted sword in welcome,
+ And shot off his old king's arm,--
+
+ Slowly passed that August Presence
+ Down the thronged and shouting street;
+ Village girls as white as angels,
+ Scattering flowers around his feet.
+
+ Midway, where the plane-tree's shadow
+ Deepest fell, his rein he drew
+ On his stately head, uncovered,
+ Cool and soft the west-wind blew.
+
+ And he stood up in his stirrups,
+ Looking up and looking down
+ On the hills of Gold and Silver
+ Rimming round the little town,--
+
+ On the river, full of sunshine,
+ To the lap of greenest vales
+ Winding down from wooded headlands,
+ Willow-skirted, white with sails.
+
+ And he said, the landscape sweeping
+ Slowly with his ungloved hand,
+ "I have seen no prospect fairer
+ In this goodly Eastern land."
+
+ Then the bugles of his escort
+ Stirred to life the cavalcade
+ And that head, so bare and stately,
+ Vanished down the depths of shade.
+
+ Ever since, in town and farm-house,
+ Life has had its ebb and flow;
+ Thrice hath passed the human harvest
+ To its garner green and low.
+
+ But the trees the gleeman planted,
+ Through the changes, changeless stand;
+ As the marble calm of Tadmor
+ Mocks the desert's shifting sand.
+
+ Still the level moon at rising
+ Silvers o'er each stately shaft;
+ Still beneath them, half in shadow,
+ Singing, glides the pleasure craft;
+
+ Still beneath them, arm-enfolded,
+ Love and Youth together stray;
+ While, as heart to heart beats faster,
+ More and more their feet delay.
+
+ Where the ancient cobbler, Keezar,
+ On the open hillside wrought,
+ Singing, as he drew his stitches,
+ Songs his German masters taught,
+
+ Singing, with his gray hair floating
+ Round his rosy ample face,--
+ Now a thousand Saxon craftsmen
+ Stitch and hammer in his place.
+
+ All the pastoral lanes so grassy
+ Now are Traffic's dusty streets;
+ From the village, grown a city,
+ Fast the rural grace retreats.
+
+ But, still green, and tall, and stately,
+ On the river's winding shores,
+ Stand the Occidental plane-trees,
+ Stand, Hugh Taliant's sycamores.
+
+ 1857.
+
+
+
+
+THE PIPES AT LUCKNOW.
+
+An incident of the Sepoy mutiny.
+
+ PIPES of the misty moorlands,
+ Voice of the glens and hills;
+ The droning of the torrents,
+ The treble of the rills!
+ Not the braes of broom and heather,
+ Nor the mountains dark with rain,
+ Nor maiden bower, nor border tower,
+ Have heard your sweetest strain!
+
+ Dear to the Lowland reaper,
+ And plaided mountaineer,--
+ To the cottage and the castle
+ The Scottish pipes are dear;--
+ Sweet sounds the ancient pibroch
+ O'er mountain, loch, and glade;
+ But the sweetest of all music
+ The pipes at Lucknow played.
+
+ Day by day the Indian tiger
+ Louder yelled, and nearer crept;
+ Round and round the jungle-serpent
+ Near and nearer circles swept.
+ "Pray for rescue, wives and mothers,--
+ Pray to-day!" the soldier said;
+ "To-morrow, death's between us
+ And the wrong and shame we dread."
+
+ Oh, they listened, looked, and waited,
+ Till their hope became despair;
+ And the sobs of low bewailing
+ Filled the pauses of their prayer.
+ Then up spake a Scottish maiden,
+ With her ear unto the ground
+ "Dinna ye hear it?--dinna ye hear it?
+ The pipes o' Havelock sound!"
+
+ Hushed the wounded man his groaning;
+ Hushed the wife her little ones;
+ Alone they heard the drum-roll
+ And the roar of Sepoy guns.
+ But to sounds of home and childhood
+ The Highland ear was true;--
+ As her mother's cradle-crooning
+ The mountain pipes she knew.
+
+ Like the march of soundless music
+ Through the vision of the seer,
+ More of feeling than of hearing,
+ Of the heart than of the ear,
+ She knew the droning pibroch,
+ She knew the Campbell's call
+ "Hark! hear ye no' MacGregor's,
+ The grandest o' them all!"
+
+ Oh, they listened, dumb and breathless,
+ And they caught the sound at last;
+ Faint and far beyond the Goomtee
+ Rose and fell the piper's blast
+ Then a burst of wild thanksgiving
+ Mingled woman's voice and man's;
+ "God be praised!--the march of Havelock!
+ The piping of the clans!"
+
+ Louder, nearer, fierce as vengeance,
+ Sharp and shrill as swords at strife,
+ Came the wild MacGregor's clan-call,
+ Stinging all the air to life.
+ But when the far-off dust-cloud
+ To plaided legions grew,
+ Full tenderly and blithesomely
+ The pipes of rescue blew!
+
+ Round the silver domes of Lucknow,
+ Moslem mosque and Pagan shrine,
+ Breathed the air to Britons dearest,
+ The air of Auld Lang Syne.
+ O'er the cruel roll of war-drums
+ Rose that sweet and homelike strain;
+ And the tartan clove the turban,
+ As the Goomtee cleaves the plain.
+
+ Dear to the corn-land reaper
+ And plaided mountaineer,--
+ To the cottage and the castle
+ The piper's song is dear.
+ Sweet sounds the Gaelic pibroch
+ O'er mountain, glen, and glade;
+ But the sweetest of all music
+ The Pipes at Lucknow played!
+
+ 1858.
+
+
+
+
+TELLING THE BEES.
+
+A remarkable custom, brought from the Old Country, formerly prevailed
+in the rural districts of New England. On the death of a member of the
+family, the bees were at once informed of the event, and their hives
+dressed in mourning. This ceremonial was supposed to be necessary to
+prevent the swarms from leaving their hives and seeking a new home.
+
+ HERE is the place; right over the hill
+ Runs the path I took;
+ You can see the gap in the old wall still,
+ And the stepping-stones in the shallow brook.
+
+ There is the house, with the gate red-barred,
+ And the poplars tall;
+ And the barn's brown length, and the cattle-yard,
+ And the white horns tossing above the wall.
+
+ There are the beehives ranged in the sun;
+ And down by the brink
+ Of the brook are her poor flowers, weed-o'errun,
+ Pansy and daffodil, rose and pink.
+
+ A year has gone, as the tortoise goes,
+ Heavy and slow;
+ And the same rose blooms, and the same sun glows,
+ And the same brook sings of a year ago.
+
+ There's the same sweet clover-smell in the breeze;
+ And the June sun warm
+ Tangles his wings of fire in the trees,
+ Setting, as then, over Fernside farm.
+
+ I mind me how with a lover's care
+ From my Sunday coat
+ I brushed off the burrs, and smoothed my hair,
+ And cooled at the brookside my brow and
+ throat.
+
+ Since we parted, a month had passed,--
+ To love, a year;
+ Down through the beeches I looked at last
+ On the little red gate and the well-sweep near.
+
+ I can see it all now,--the slantwise rain
+ Of light through the leaves,
+ The sundown's blaze on her window-pane,
+ The bloom of her roses under the eaves.
+
+ Just the same as a month before,--
+ The house and the trees,
+ The barn's brown gable, the vine by the door,--
+ Nothing changed but the hives of bees.
+
+ Before them, under the garden wall,
+ Forward and back,
+ Went drearily singing the chore-girl small,
+ Draping each hive with a shred of black.
+
+ Trembling, I listened: the summer sun
+ Had the chill of snow;
+ For I knew she was telling the bees of one
+ Gone on the journey we all must go.
+
+ Then I said to myself, "My Mary weeps
+ For the dead to-day;
+ Haply her blind old grandsire sleeps
+ The fret and the pain of his age away."
+
+ But her dog whined low; on the doorway sill,
+ With his cane to his chin,
+ The old man sat; and the chore-girl still
+ Sung to the bees stealing out and in.
+
+ And the song she was singing ever since
+ In my ear sounds on:--
+ "Stay at home, pretty bees, fly not hence!
+ Mistress Mary is dead and gone!"
+
+ 1858.
+
+
+
+
+THE SWAN SONG OF PARSON AVERY.
+
+In Young's Chronicles of Massachusetts Bay front 1623 to 1636 may be
+found Anthony Thacher's Narrative of his Shipwreck. Thacher was Avery's
+companion and survived to tell the tale. Mather's Magnalia, III. 2,
+gives further Particulars of Parson Avery's End, and suggests the title
+of the poem.
+
+ WHEN the reaper's task was ended, and the
+ summer wearing late,
+ Parson Avery sailed from Newbury, with his wife
+ and children eight,
+ Dropping down the river-harbor in the shallop
+ "Watch and Wait."
+
+ Pleasantly lay the clearings in the mellow summer-
+ morn,
+ With the newly planted orchards dropping their
+ fruits first-born,
+ And the home-roofs like brown islands amid a sea
+ of corn.
+
+ Broad meadows reached out 'seaward the tided
+ creeks between,
+ And hills rolled wave-like inland, with oaks and
+ walnuts green;--
+ A fairer home, a--goodlier land, his eyes had never
+ seen.
+
+ Yet away sailed Parson Avery, away where duty led,
+ And the voice of God seemed calling, to break the
+ living bread
+ To the souls of fishers starving on the rocks of
+ Marblehead.
+
+ All day they sailed: at nightfall the pleasant land-
+ breeze died,
+ The blackening sky, at midnight, its starry lights
+ denied,
+ And far and low the thunder of tempest prophesied.
+
+ Blotted out were all the coast-lines, gone were rock,
+ and wood, and sand;
+ Grimly anxious stood the skipper with the rudder
+ in his hand,
+ And questioned of the darkness what was sea and
+ what was land.
+
+ And the preacher heard his dear ones, nestled
+ round him, weeping sore,
+ "Never heed, my little children! Christ is walking
+ on before;
+ To the pleasant land of heaven, where the sea shall
+ be no more."
+
+ All at once the great cloud parted, like a curtain
+ drawn aside,
+ To let down the torch of lightning on the terror
+ far and wide;
+ And the thunder and the whirlwind together smote
+ the tide.
+
+ There was wailing in the shallop, woman's wail
+ and man's despair,
+ A crash of breaking timbers on the rocks so sharp
+ and bare,
+ And, through it all, the murmur of Father Avery's
+ prayer.
+
+ From his struggle in the darkness with the wild
+ waves and the blast,
+ On a rock, where every billow broke above him as
+ it passed,
+ Alone, of all his household, the man of God was
+ cast.
+
+ There a comrade heard him praying, in the pause
+ of wave and wind
+ "All my own have gone before me, and I linger
+ just behind;
+ Not for life I ask, but only for the rest Thy
+ ransomed find!
+
+ "In this night of death I challenge the promise of
+ Thy word!--
+ Let me see the great salvation of which mine ears
+ have heard!--
+ Let me pass from hence forgiven, through the
+ grace of Christ, our Lord!
+
+ "In the baptism of these waters wash white my
+ every sin,
+ And let me follow up to Thee my household and
+ my kin!
+ Open the sea-gate of Thy heaven, and let me enter
+ in!"
+
+ When the Christian sings his death-song, all the
+ listening heavens draw near,
+ And the angels, leaning over the walls of crystal,
+ hear
+ How the notes so faint and broken swell to music
+ in God's ear.
+
+ The ear of God was open to His servant's last
+ request;
+ As the strong wave swept him downward the sweet
+ hymn upward pressed,
+ And the soul of Father Avery went, singing, to its
+ rest.
+
+ There was wailing on the mainland, from the rocks
+ of Marblehead;
+ In the stricken church of Newbury the notes of
+ prayer were read;
+ And long, by board and hearthstone, the living
+ mourned the dead.
+
+ And still the fishers outbound, or scudding from
+ the squall,
+ With grave and reverent faces, the ancient tale
+ recall,
+ When they see the white waves breaking on the
+ Rock of Avery's Fall!
+
+ 1808.
+
+
+
+
+THE DOUBLE-HEADED SNAKE OF NEWBURY.
+
+"Concerning ye Amphisbaena, as soon as I received your commands, I made
+diligent inquiry: . . . he assures me yt it had really two heads, one
+at each end; two mouths, two stings or tongues."--REV. CHRISTOPHER
+TOPPAN to COTTON MATHER.
+
+ FAR away in the twilight time
+ Of every people, in every clime,
+ Dragons and griffins and monsters dire,
+ Born of water, and air, and fire,
+ Or nursed, like the Python, in the mud
+ And ooze of the old Deucalion flood,
+ Crawl and wriggle and foam with rage,
+ Through dusk tradition and ballad age.
+ So from the childhood of Newbury town
+ And its time of fable the tale comes down
+ Of a terror which haunted bush and brake,
+ The Amphisbaena, the Double Snake!
+
+ Thou who makest the tale thy mirth,
+ Consider that strip of Christian earth
+ On the desolate shore of a sailless sea,
+ Full of terror and mystery,
+ Half redeemed from the evil hold
+ Of the wood so dreary, and dark, and old,
+ Which drank with its lips of leaves the dew
+ When Time was young, and the world was new,
+ And wove its shadows with sun and moon,
+ Ere the stones of Cheops were squared and hewn.
+ Think of the sea's dread monotone,
+ Of the mournful wail from the pine-wood blown,
+ Of the strange, vast splendors that lit the North,
+ Of the troubled throes of the quaking earth,
+ And the dismal tales the Indian told,
+ Till the settler's heart at his hearth grew cold,
+ And he shrank from the tawny wizard boasts,
+ And the hovering shadows seemed full of ghosts,
+ And above, below, and on every side,
+ The fear of his creed seemed verified;--
+ And think, if his lot were now thine own,
+ To grope with terrors nor named nor known,
+ How laxer muscle and weaker nerve
+ And a feebler faith thy need might serve;
+ And own to thyself the wonder more
+ That the snake had two heads, and not a score!
+
+ Whether he lurked in the Oldtown fen
+ Or the gray earth-flax of the Devil's Den,
+ Or swam in the wooded Artichoke,
+ Or coiled by the Northman's Written Rock,
+ Nothing on record is left to show;
+ Only the fact that he lived, we know,
+ And left the cast of a double head
+ In the scaly mask which he yearly shed.
+ For he carried a head where his tail should be,
+ And the two, of course, could never agree,
+ But wriggled about with main and might,
+ Now to the left and now to the right;
+ Pulling and twisting this way and that,
+ Neither knew what the other was at.
+
+ A snake with two beads, lurking so near!
+ Judge of the wonder, guess at the fear!
+ Think what ancient gossips might say,
+ Shaking their heads in their dreary way,
+ Between the meetings on Sabbath-day!
+ How urchins, searching at day's decline
+ The Common Pasture for sheep or kine,
+ The terrible double-ganger heard
+ In leafy rustle or whir of bird!
+ Think what a zest it gave to the sport,
+ In berry-time, of the younger sort,
+ As over pastures blackberry-twined,
+ Reuben and Dorothy lagged behind,
+ And closer and closer, for fear of harm,
+ The maiden clung to her lover's arm;
+ And how the spark, who was forced to stay,
+ By his sweetheart's fears, till the break of day,
+ Thanked the snake for the fond delay.
+
+ Far and wide the tale was told,
+ Like a snowball growing while it rolled.
+ The nurse hushed with it the baby's cry;
+ And it served, in the worthy minister's eye,
+ To paint the primitive serpent by.
+ Cotton Mather came galloping down
+ All the way to Newbury town,
+ With his eyes agog and his ears set wide,
+ And his marvellous inkhorn at his side;
+ Stirring the while in the shallow pool
+ Of his brains for the lore he learned at school,
+ To garnish the story, with here a streak
+ Of Latin, and there another of Greek
+ And the tales he heard and the notes he took,
+ Behold! are they not in his Wonder-Book?
+
+ Stories, like dragons, are hard to kill.
+ If the snake does not, the tale runs still
+ In Byfield Meadows, on Pipestave Hill.
+ And still, whenever husband and wife
+ Publish the shame of their daily strife,
+ And, with mad cross-purpose, tug and strain
+ At either end of the marriage-chain,
+ The gossips say, with a knowing shake
+ Of their gray heads, "Look at the Double Snake
+ One in body and two in will,
+ The Amphisbaena is living still!"
+
+ 1859.
+
+
+
+
+MABEL MARTIN.
+
+A HARVEST IDYL.
+
+Susanna Martin, an aged woman of Amesbury, Mass., was tried and executed
+for the alleged crime of witchcraft. Her home was in what is now known
+as Pleasant Valley on the Merrimac, a little above the old Ferry way,
+where, tradition says, an attempt was made to assassinate Sir Edmund
+Andros on his way to Falmouth (afterward Portland) and Pemaquid, which
+was frustrated by a warning timely given. Goody Martin was the only
+woman hanged on the north side of the Merrimac during the dreadful
+delusion. The aged wife of Judge Bradbury who lived on the other side of
+the Powow River was imprisoned and would have been put to death but for
+the collapse of the hideous persecution.
+
+The substance of the poem which follows was published under the name of
+The Witch's Daughter, in The National Era in 1857. In 1875 my publishers
+desired to issue it with illustrations, and I then enlarged it and
+otherwise altered it to its present form. The principal addition was in
+the verses which constitute Part I.
+
+
+
+
+PROEM.
+
+ I CALL the old time back: I bring my lay
+ in tender memory of the summer day
+ When, where our native river lapsed away,
+
+ We dreamed it over, while the thrushes made
+ Songs of their own, and the great pine-trees laid
+ On warm noonlights the masses of their shade.
+
+ And she was with us, living o'er again
+ Her life in ours, despite of years and pain,--
+ The Autumn's brightness after latter rain.
+
+ Beautiful in her holy peace as one
+ Who stands, at evening, when the work is done,
+ Glorified in the setting of the sun!
+
+ Her memory makes our common landscape seem
+ Fairer than any of which painters dream;
+ Lights the brown hills and sings in every stream;
+
+ For she whose speech was always truth's pure gold
+ Heard, not unpleased, its simple legends told,
+ And loved with us the beautiful and old.
+
+
+
+
+I. THE RIVER VALLEY.
+
+ Across the level tableland,
+ A grassy, rarely trodden way,
+ With thinnest skirt of birchen spray
+
+ And stunted growth of cedar, leads
+ To where you see the dull plain fall
+ Sheer off, steep-slanted, ploughed by all
+
+ The seasons' rainfalls. On its brink
+ The over-leaning harebells swing,
+ With roots half bare the pine-trees cling;
+
+ And, through the shadow looking west,
+ You see the wavering river flow
+ Along a vale, that far below
+
+ Holds to the sun, the sheltering hills
+ And glimmering water-line between,
+ Broad fields of corn and meadows green,
+
+ And fruit-bent orchards grouped around
+ The low brown roofs and painted eaves,
+ And chimney-tops half hid in leaves.
+
+ No warmer valley hides behind
+ Yon wind-scourged sand-dunes, cold and bleak;
+ No fairer river comes to seek
+
+ The wave-sung welcome of the sea,
+ Or mark the northmost border line
+ Of sun-loved growths of nut and vine.
+
+ Here, ground-fast in their native fields,
+ Untempted by the city's gain,
+ The quiet farmer folk remain
+
+ Who bear the pleasant name of Friends,
+ And keep their fathers' gentle ways
+ And simple speech of Bible days;
+
+ In whose neat homesteads woman holds
+ With modest ease her equal place,
+ And wears upon her tranquil face
+
+ The look of one who, merging not
+ Her self-hood in another's will,
+ Is love's and duty's handmaid still.
+
+ Pass with me down the path that winds
+ Through birches to the open land,
+ Where, close upon the river strand
+
+ You mark a cellar, vine o'errun,
+ Above whose wall of loosened stones
+ The sumach lifts its reddening cones,
+
+ And the black nightshade's berries shine,
+ And broad, unsightly burdocks fold
+ The household ruin, century-old.
+
+ Here, in the dim colonial time
+ Of sterner lives and gloomier faith,
+ A woman lived, tradition saith,
+
+ Who wrought her neighbors foul annoy,
+ And witched and plagued the country-side,
+ Till at the hangman's hand she died.
+
+ Sit with me while the westering day
+ Falls slantwise down the quiet vale,
+ And, haply ere yon loitering sail,
+
+ That rounds the upper headland, falls
+ Below Deer Island's pines, or sees
+ Behind it Hawkswood's belt of trees
+
+ Rise black against the sinking sun,
+ My idyl of its days of old,
+ The valley's legend, shall be told.
+
+
+
+
+II. THE HUSKING.
+
+ It was the pleasant harvest-time,
+ When cellar-bins are closely stowed,
+ And garrets bend beneath their load,
+
+ And the old swallow-haunted barns,--
+ Brown-gabled, long, and full of seams
+ Through which the rooted sunlight streams,
+
+ And winds blow freshly in, to shake
+ The red plumes of the roosted cocks,
+ And the loose hay-mow's scented locks,
+
+ Are filled with summer's ripened stores,
+ Its odorous grass and barley sheaves,
+ From their low scaffolds to their eaves.
+
+ On Esek Harden's oaken floor,
+ With many an autumn threshing worn,
+ Lay the heaped ears of unhusked corn.
+
+ And thither came young men and maids,
+ Beneath a moon that, large and low,
+ Lit that sweet eve of long ago.
+
+ They took their places; some by chance,
+ And others by a merry voice
+ Or sweet smile guided to their choice.
+
+ How pleasantly the rising moon,
+ Between the shadow of the mows,
+ Looked on them through the great elm-boughs!
+
+ On sturdy boyhood, sun-embrowned,
+ On girlhood with its solid curves
+ Of healthful strength and painless nerves!
+
+ And jests went round, and laughs that made
+ The house-dog answer with his howl,
+ And kept astir the barn-yard fowl;
+
+ And quaint old songs their fathers sung
+ In Derby dales and Yorkshire moors,
+ Ere Norman William trod their shores;
+
+ And tales, whose merry license shook
+ The fat sides of the Saxon thane,
+ Forgetful of the hovering Dane,--
+
+ Rude plays to Celt and Cimbri known,
+ The charms and riddles that beguiled
+ On Oxus' banks the young world's child,--
+
+ That primal picture-speech wherein
+ Have youth and maid the story told,
+ So new in each, so dateless old,
+
+ Recalling pastoral Ruth in her
+ Who waited, blushing and demure,
+ The red-ear's kiss of forfeiture.
+
+ But still the sweetest voice was mute
+ That river-valley ever heard
+ From lips of maid or throat of bird;
+
+ For Mabel Martin sat apart,
+ And let the hay-mow's shadow fall
+ Upon the loveliest face of all.
+
+ She sat apart, as one forbid,
+ Who knew that none would condescend
+ To own the Witch-wife's child a friend.
+
+ The seasons scarce had gone their round,
+ Since curious thousands thronged to see
+ Her mother at the gallows-tree;
+
+ And mocked the prison-palsied limbs
+ That faltered on the fatal stairs,
+ And wan lip trembling with its prayers!
+
+ Few questioned of the sorrowing child,
+ Or, when they saw the mother die;
+ Dreamed of the daughter's agony.
+
+ They went up to their homes that day,
+ As men and Christians justified
+ God willed it, and the wretch had died!
+
+ Dear God and Father of us all,
+ Forgive our faith in cruel lies,--
+ Forgive the blindness that denies!
+
+ Forgive thy creature when he takes,
+ For the all-perfect love Thou art,
+ Some grim creation of his heart.
+
+ Cast down our idols, overturn
+ Our bloody altars; let us see
+ Thyself in Thy humanity!
+
+ Young Mabel from her mother's grave
+ Crept to her desolate hearth-stone,
+ And wrestled with her fate alone;
+
+ With love, and anger, and despair,
+ The phantoms of disordered sense,
+ The awful doubts of Providence!
+
+ Oh, dreary broke the winter days,
+ And dreary fell the winter nights
+ When, one by one, the neighboring lights
+
+ Went out, and human sounds grew still,
+ And all the phantom-peopled dark
+ Closed round her hearth-fire's dying spark.
+
+ And summer days were sad and long,
+ And sad the uncompanioned eyes,
+ And sadder sunset-tinted leaves,
+
+ And Indian Summer's airs of balm;
+ She scarcely felt the soft caress,
+ The beauty died of loneliness!
+
+ The school-boys jeered her as they passed,
+ And, when she sought the house of prayer,
+ Her mother's curse pursued her there.
+
+ And still o'er many a neighboring door
+ She saw the horseshoe's curved charm,
+ To guard against her mother's harm!
+
+ That mother, poor and sick and lame,
+ Who daily, by the old arm-chair,
+ Folded her withered hands in prayer;--
+
+ Who turned, in Salem's dreary jail,
+ Her worn old Bible o'er and o'er,
+ When her dim eyes could read no more!
+
+ Sore tried and pained, the poor girl kept
+ Her faith, and trusted that her way,
+ So dark, would somewhere meet the day.
+
+ And still her weary wheel went round
+ Day after day, with no relief
+ Small leisure have the poor for grief.
+
+
+
+
+III. THE CHAMPION.
+
+ So in the shadow Mabel sits;
+ Untouched by mirth she sees and hears,
+ Her smile is sadder than her tears.
+
+ But cruel eyes have found her out,
+ And cruel lips repeat her name,
+ And taunt her with her mother's shame.
+
+ She answered not with railing words,
+ But drew her apron o'er her face,
+ And, sobbing, glided from the place.
+
+ And only pausing at the door,
+ Her sad eyes met the troubled gaze
+ Of one who, in her better days,
+
+ Had been her warm and steady friend,
+ Ere yet her mother's doom had made
+ Even Esek Harden half afraid.
+
+ He felt that mute appeal of tears,
+ And, starting, with an angry frown,
+ Hushed all the wicked murmurs down.
+
+ "Good neighbors mine," he sternly said,
+ "This passes harmless mirth or jest;
+ I brook no insult to my guest.
+
+ "She is indeed her mother's child;
+ But God's sweet pity ministers
+ Unto no whiter soul than hers.
+
+ "Let Goody Martin rest in peace;
+ I never knew her harm a fly,
+ And witch or not, God knows--not I.
+
+ "I know who swore her life away;
+ And as God lives, I'd not condemn
+ An Indian dog on word of them."
+
+ The broadest lands in all the town,
+ The skill to guide, the power to awe,
+ Were Harden's; and his word was law.
+
+ None dared withstand him to his face,
+ But one sly maiden spake aside
+ "The little witch is evil-eyed!
+
+ "Her mother only killed a cow,
+ Or witched a churn or dairy-pan;
+ But she, forsooth, must charm a man!"
+
+
+
+
+IV. IN THE SHADOW.
+
+ Poor Mabel, homeward turning, passed
+ The nameless terrors of the wood,
+ And saw, as if a ghost pursued,
+
+ Her shadow gliding in the moon;
+ The soft breath of the west-wind gave
+ A chill as from her mother's grave.
+
+ How dreary seemed the silent house!
+ Wide in the moonbeams' ghastly glare
+ Its windows had a dead man's stare!
+
+ And, like a gaunt and spectral hand,
+ The tremulous shadow of a birch
+ Reached out and touched the door's low porch,
+
+ As if to lift its latch; hard by,
+ A sudden warning call she beard,
+ The night-cry of a boding bird.
+
+ She leaned against the door; her face,
+ So fair, so young, so full of pain,
+ White in the moonlight's silver rain.
+
+ The river, on its pebbled rim,
+ Made music such as childhood knew;
+ The door-yard tree was whispered through
+
+ By voices such as childhood's ear
+ Had heard in moonlights long ago;
+ And through the willow-boughs below.
+
+ She saw the rippled waters shine;
+ Beyond, in waves of shade and light,
+ The hills rolled off into the night.
+
+ She saw and heard, but over all
+ A sense of some transforming spell,
+ The shadow of her sick heart fell.
+
+ And still across the wooded space
+ The harvest lights of Harden shone,
+ And song and jest and laugh went on.
+
+ And he, so gentle, true, and strong,
+ Of men the bravest and the best,
+ Had he, too, scorned her with the rest?
+
+ She strove to drown her sense of wrong,
+ And, in her old and simple way,
+ To teach her bitter heart to pray.
+
+ Poor child! the prayer, begun in faith,
+ Grew to a low, despairing cry
+ Of utter misery: "Let me die!
+
+ "Oh! take me from the scornful eyes,
+ And hide me where the cruel speech
+ And mocking finger may not reach!
+
+ "I dare not breathe my mother's name
+ A daughter's right I dare not crave
+ To weep above her unblest grave!
+
+ "Let me not live until my heart,
+ With few to pity, and with none
+ To love me, hardens into stone.
+
+ "O God! have mercy on Thy child,
+ Whose faith in Thee grows weak and small,
+ And take me ere I lose it all!"
+
+ A shadow on the moonlight fell,
+ And murmuring wind and wave became
+ A voice whose burden was her name.
+
+
+
+
+V. THE BETROTHAL.
+
+ Had then God heard her? Had He sent
+ His angel down? In flesh and blood,
+ Before her Esek Harden stood!
+
+ He laid his hand upon her arm
+ "Dear Mabel, this no more shall be;
+ Who scoffs at you must scoff at me.
+
+ "You know rough Esek Harden well;
+ And if he seems no suitor gay,
+ And if his hair is touched with gray,
+
+ "The maiden grown shall never find
+ His heart less warm than when she smiled,
+ Upon his knees, a little child!"
+
+ Her tears of grief were tears of joy,
+ As, folded in his strong embrace,
+ She looked in Esek Harden's face.
+
+ "O truest friend of all'" she said,
+ "God bless you for your kindly thought,
+ And make me worthy of my lot!"
+
+ He led her forth, and, blent in one,
+ Beside their happy pathway ran
+ The shadows of the maid and man.
+
+ He led her through his dewy fields,
+ To where the swinging lanterns glowed,
+ And through the doors the huskers showed.
+
+ "Good friends and neighbors!" Esek said,
+ "I'm weary of this lonely life;
+ In Mabel see my chosen wife!
+
+ "She greets you kindly, one and all;
+ The past is past, and all offence
+ Falls harmless from her innocence.
+
+ "Henceforth she stands no more alone;
+ You know what Esek Harden is;--
+ He brooks no wrong to him or his.
+
+ "Now let the merriest tales be told,
+ And let the sweetest songs be sung
+ That ever made the old heart young!
+
+ "For now the lost has found a home;
+ And a lone hearth shall brighter burn,
+ As all the household joys return!"
+
+ Oh, pleasantly the harvest-moon,
+ Between the shadow of the mows,
+ Looked on them through the great elm--boughs!
+
+ On Mabel's curls of golden hair,
+ On Esek's shaggy strength it fell;
+ And the wind whispered, "It is well!"
+
+
+
+
+THE PROPHECY OF SAMUEL SEWALL.
+
+The prose version of this prophecy is to be found in Sewall's The New
+Heaven upon the New Earth, 1697, quoted in Joshua Coffin's History of
+Newbury. Judge Sewall's father, Henry Sewall, was one of the pioneers
+of Newbury.
+
+ UP and down the village streets
+ Strange are the forms my fancy meets,
+ For the thoughts and things of to-day are hid,
+ And through the veil of a closed lid
+ The ancient worthies I see again
+ I hear the tap of the elder's cane,
+ And his awful periwig I see,
+ And the silver buckles of shoe and knee.
+ Stately and slow, with thoughtful air,
+ His black cap hiding his whitened hair,
+ Walks the Judge of the great Assize,
+ Samuel Sewall the good and wise.
+ His face with lines of firmness wrought,
+ He wears the look of a man unbought,
+ Who swears to his hurt and changes not;
+ Yet, touched and softened nevertheless
+ With the grace of Christian gentleness,
+ The face that a child would climb to kiss!
+ True and tender and brave and just,
+ That man might honor and woman trust.
+
+ Touching and sad, a tale is told,
+ Like a penitent hymn of the Psalmist old,
+ Of the fast which the good man lifelong kept to
+ With a haunting sorrow that never slept,
+ As the circling year brought round the time
+ Of an error that left the sting of crime,
+ When he sat on the bench of the witchcraft courts,
+ With the laws of Moses and Hale's Reports,
+ And spake, in the name of both, the word
+ That gave the witch's neck to the cord,
+ And piled the oaken planks that pressed
+ The feeble life from the warlock's breast!
+ All the day long, from dawn to dawn,
+ His door was bolted, his curtain drawn;
+ No foot on his silent threshold trod,
+ No eye looked on him save that of God,
+ As he baffled the ghosts of the dead with charms
+ Of penitent tears, and prayers, and psalms,
+ And, with precious proofs from the sacred word
+ Of the boundless pity and love of the Lord,
+ His faith confirmed and his trust renewed
+ That the sin of his ignorance, sorely rued,
+ Might be washed away in the mingled flood
+ Of his human sorrow and Christ's dear blood!
+
+ Green forever the memory be
+ Of the Judge of the old Theocracy,
+ Whom even his errors glorified,
+ Like a far-seen, sunlit mountain-side
+ By the cloudy shadows which o'er it glide I
+ Honor and praise to the Puritan
+ Who the halting step of his age outran,
+ And, seeing the infinite worth of man
+ In the priceless gift the Father gave,
+ In the infinite love that stooped to save,
+ Dared not brand his brother a slave
+ "Who doth such wrong," he was wont to say,
+ In his own quaint, picture-loving way,
+ "Flings up to Heaven a hand-grenade
+ Which God shall cast down upon his head!"
+
+ Widely as heaven and hell, contrast
+ That brave old jurist of the past
+ And the cunning trickster and knave of courts
+ Who the holy features of Truth distorts,
+ Ruling as right the will of the strong,
+ Poverty, crime, and weakness wrong;
+ Wide-eared to power, to the wronged and weak
+ Deaf as Egypt's gods of leek;
+ Scoffing aside at party's nod
+ Order of nature and law of God;
+ For whose dabbled ermine respect were waste,
+ Reverence folly, and awe misplaced;
+ Justice of whom 't were vain to seek
+ As from Koordish robber or Syrian Sheik!
+ Oh, leave the wretch to his bribes and sins;
+ Let him rot in the web of lies he spins!
+ To the saintly soul of the early day,
+ To the Christian judge, let us turn and say
+ "Praise and thanks for an honest man!--
+ Glory to God for the Puritan!"
+
+ I see, far southward, this quiet day,
+ The hills of Newbury rolling away,
+ With the many tints of the season gay,
+ Dreamily blending in autumn mist
+ Crimson, and gold, and amethyst.
+ Long and low, with dwarf trees crowned,
+ Plum Island lies, like a whale aground,
+ A stone's toss over the narrow sound.
+ Inland, as far as the eye can go,
+ The hills curve round like a bended bow;
+ A silver arrow from out them sprung,
+ I see the shine of the Quasycung;
+ And, round and round, over valley and hill,
+ Old roads winding, as old roads will,
+ Here to a ferry, and there to a mill;
+ And glimpses of chimneys and gabled eaves,
+ Through green elm arches and maple leaves,--
+ Old homesteads sacred to all that can
+ Gladden or sadden the heart of man,
+ Over whose thresholds of oak and stone
+ Life and Death have come and gone
+ There pictured tiles in the fireplace show,
+ Great beams sag from the ceiling low,
+ The dresser glitters with polished wares,
+ The long clock ticks on the foot-worn stairs,
+ And the low, broad chimney shows the crack
+ By the earthquake made a century back.
+ Up from their midst springs the village spire
+ With the crest of its cock in the sun afire;
+ Beyond are orchards and planting lands,
+ And great salt marshes and glimmering sands,
+ And, where north and south the coast-lines run,
+ The blink of the sea in breeze and sun!
+
+ I see it all like a chart unrolled,
+ But my thoughts are full of the past and old,
+ I hear the tales of my boyhood told;
+ And the shadows and shapes of early days
+ Flit dimly by in the veiling haze,
+ With measured movement and rhythmic chime
+ Weaving like shuttles my web of rhyme.
+ I think of the old man wise and good
+ Who once on yon misty hillsides stood,
+ (A poet who never measured rhyme,
+ A seer unknown to his dull-eared time,)
+ And, propped on his staff of age, looked down,
+ With his boyhood's love, on his native town,
+ Where, written, as if on its hills and plains,
+ His burden of prophecy yet remains,
+ For the voices of wood, and wave, and wind
+ To read in the ear of the musing mind:--
+
+ "As long as Plum Island, to guard the coast
+ As God appointed, shall keep its post;
+ As long as a salmon shall haunt the deep
+ Of Merrimac River, or sturgeon leap;
+ As long as pickerel swift and slim,
+ Or red-backed perch, in Crane Pond swim;
+ As long as the annual sea-fowl know
+ Their time to come and their time to go;
+ As long as cattle shall roam at will
+ The green, grass meadows by Turkey Hill;
+ As long as sheep shall look from the side
+ Of Oldtown Hill on marishes wide,
+ And Parker River, and salt-sea tide;
+ As long as a wandering pigeon shall search
+ The fields below from his white-oak perch,
+ When the barley-harvest is ripe and shorn,
+ And the dry husks fall from the standing corn;
+ As long as Nature shall not grow old,
+ Nor drop her work from her doting hold,
+ And her care for the Indian corn forget,
+ And the yellow rows in pairs to set;--
+ So long shall Christians here be born,
+ Grow up and ripen as God's sweet corn!--
+ By the beak of bird, by the breath of frost,
+ Shall never a holy ear be lost,
+ But, husked by Death in the Planter's sight,
+ Be sown again in the fields of light!"
+
+ The Island still is purple with plums,
+ Up the river the salmon comes,
+ The sturgeon leaps, and the wild-fowl feeds
+ On hillside berries and marish seeds,--
+ All the beautiful signs remain,
+ From spring-time sowing to autumn rain
+ The good man's vision returns again!
+ And let us hope, as well we can,
+ That the Silent Angel who garners man
+ May find some grain as of old lie found
+ In the human cornfield ripe and sound,
+ And the Lord of the Harvest deign to own
+ The precious seed by the fathers sown!
+
+ 1859.
+
+
+
+
+THE RED RIPER VOYAGEUR.
+
+ OUT and in the river is winding
+ The links of its long, red chain,
+ Through belts of dusky pine-land
+ And gusty leagues of plain.
+
+ Only, at times, a smoke-wreath
+ With the drifting cloud-rack joins,--
+ The smoke of the hunting-lodges
+ Of the wild Assiniboins.
+
+ Drearily blows the north-wind
+ From the land of ice and snow;
+ The eyes that look are weary,
+ And heavy the hands that row.
+
+ And with one foot on the water,
+ And one upon the shore,
+ The Angel of Shadow gives warning
+ That day shall be no more.
+
+ Is it the clang of wild-geese?
+ Is it the Indian's yell,
+ That lends to the voice of the north-wind
+ The tones of a far-off bell?
+
+ The voyageur smiles as he listens
+ To the sound that grows apace;
+ Well he knows the vesper ringing
+ Of the bells of St. Boniface.
+
+ The bells of the Roman Mission,
+ That call from their turrets twain,
+ To the boatman on the river,
+ To the hunter on the plain!
+
+ Even so in our mortal journey
+ The bitter north-winds blow,
+ And thus upon life's Red River
+ Our hearts, as oarsmen, row.
+
+ And when the Angel of Shadow
+ Rests his feet on wave and shore,
+ And our eyes grow dim with watching
+ And our hearts faint at the oar,
+
+ Happy is he who heareth
+ The signal of his release
+ In the bells of the Holy City,
+ The chimes of eternal peace!
+
+ 1859
+
+
+
+
+THE PREACHER.
+
+George Whitefield, the celebrated preacher, died at Newburyport in 1770,
+and was buried under the church which has since borne his name.
+
+ ITS windows flashing to the sky,
+ Beneath a thousand roofs of brown,
+ Far down the vale, my friend and I
+ Beheld the old and quiet town;
+ The ghostly sails that out at sea
+ Flapped their white wings of mystery;
+ The beaches glimmering in the sun,
+ And the low wooded capes that run
+ Into the sea-mist north and south;
+ The sand-bluffs at the river's mouth;
+ The swinging chain-bridge, and, afar,
+ The foam-line of the harbor-bar.
+
+ Over the woods and meadow-lands
+ A crimson-tinted shadow lay,
+ Of clouds through which the setting day
+ Flung a slant glory far away.
+ It glittered on the wet sea-sands,
+ It flamed upon the city's panes,
+ Smote the white sails of ships that wore
+ Outward or in, and glided o'er
+ The steeples with their veering vanes!
+
+ Awhile my friend with rapid search
+ O'erran the landscape. "Yonder spire
+ Over gray roofs, a shaft of fire;
+ What is it, pray?"--"The Whitefield Church!
+ Walled about by its basement stones,
+ There rest the marvellous prophet's bones."
+ Then as our homeward way we walked,
+ Of the great preacher's life we talked;
+ And through the mystery of our theme
+ The outward glory seemed to stream,
+ And Nature's self interpreted
+ The doubtful record of the dead;
+ And every level beam that smote
+ The sails upon the dark afloat
+ A symbol of the light became,
+ Which touched the shadows of our blame,
+ With tongues of Pentecostal flame.
+
+ Over the roofs of the pioneers
+ Gathers the moss of a hundred years;
+ On man and his works has passed the change
+ Which needs must be in a century's range.
+ The land lies open and warm in the sun,
+ Anvils clamor and mill-wheels run,--
+ Flocks on the hillsides, herds on the plain,
+ The wilderness gladdened with fruit and grain!
+ But the living faith of the settlers old
+ A dead profession their children hold;
+ To the lust of office and greed of trade
+ A stepping-stone is the altar made.
+
+ The church, to place and power the door,
+ Rebukes the sin of the world no more,
+ Nor sees its Lord in the homeless poor.
+ Everywhere is the grasping hand,
+ And eager adding of land to land;
+ And earth, which seemed to the fathers meant
+ But as a pilgrim's wayside tent,--
+ A nightly shelter to fold away
+ When the Lord should call at the break of day,--
+ Solid and steadfast seems to be,
+ And Time has forgotten Eternity!
+
+ But fresh and green from the rotting roots
+ Of primal forests the young growth shoots;
+ From the death of the old the new proceeds,
+ And the life of truth from the rot of creeds
+ On the ladder of God, which upward leads,
+ The steps of progress are human needs.
+ For His judgments still are a mighty deep,
+ And the eyes of His providence never sleep
+ When the night is darkest He gives the morn;
+ When the famine is sorest, the wine and corn!
+
+ In the church of the wilderness Edwards wrought,
+ Shaping his creed at the forge of thought;
+ And with Thor's own hammer welded and bent
+ The iron links of his argument,
+ Which strove to grasp in its mighty span
+ The purpose of God and the fate of man
+ Yet faithful still, in his daily round
+ To the weak, and the poor, and sin-sick found,
+ The schoolman's lore and the casuist's art
+ Drew warmth and life from his fervent heart.
+
+ Had he not seen in the solitudes
+ Of his deep and dark Northampton woods
+ A vision of love about him fall?
+ Not the blinding splendor which fell on Saul,
+ But the tenderer glory that rests on them
+ Who walk in the New Jerusalem,
+ Where never the sun nor moon are known,
+ But the Lord and His love are the light alone
+ And watching the sweet, still countenance
+ Of the wife of his bosom rapt in trance,
+ Had he not treasured each broken word
+ Of the mystical wonder seen and heard;
+ And loved the beautiful dreamer more
+ That thus to the desert of earth she bore
+ Clusters of Eshcol from Canaan's shore?
+
+ As the barley-winnower, holding with pain
+ Aloft in waiting his chaff and grain,
+ Joyfully welcomes the far-off breeze
+ Sounding the pine-tree's slender keys,
+ So he who had waited long to hear
+ The sound of the Spirit drawing near,
+ Like that which the son of Iddo heard
+ When the feet of angels the myrtles stirred,
+ Felt the answer of prayer, at last,
+ As over his church the afflatus passed,
+ Breaking its sleep as breezes break
+ To sun-bright ripples a stagnant lake.
+
+ At first a tremor of silent fear,
+ The creep of the flesh at danger near,
+ A vague foreboding and discontent,
+ Over the hearts of the people went.
+ All nature warned in sounds and signs
+ The wind in the tops of the forest pines
+ In the name of the Highest called to prayer,
+ As the muezzin calls from the minaret stair.
+ Through ceiled chambers of secret sin
+ Sudden and strong the light shone in;
+ A guilty sense of his neighbor's needs
+ Startled the man of title-deeds;
+ The trembling hand of the worldling shook
+ The dust of years from the Holy Book;
+ And the psalms of David, forgotten long,
+ Took the place of the scoffer's song.
+
+ The impulse spread like the outward course
+ Of waters moved by a central force;
+ The tide of spiritual life rolled down
+ From inland mountains to seaboard town.
+
+ Prepared and ready the altar stands
+ Waiting the prophet's outstretched hands
+ And prayer availing, to downward call
+ The fiery answer in view of all.
+ Hearts are like wax in the furnace; who
+ Shall mould, and shape, and cast them anew?
+ Lo! by the Merrimac Whitefield stands
+ In the temple that never was made by hands,--
+ Curtains of azure, and crystal wall,
+ And dome of the sunshine over all--
+ A homeless pilgrim, with dubious name
+ Blown about on the winds of fame;
+ Now as an angel of blessing classed,
+ And now as a mad enthusiast.
+ Called in his youth to sound and gauge
+ The moral lapse of his race and age,
+ And, sharp as truth, the contrast draw
+ Of human frailty and perfect law;
+ Possessed by the one dread thought that lent
+ Its goad to his fiery temperament,
+ Up and down the world he went,
+ A John the Baptist crying, Repent!
+
+ No perfect whole can our nature make;
+ Here or there the circle will break;
+ The orb of life as it takes the light
+ On one side leaves the other in night.
+ Never was saint so good and great
+ As to give no chance at St. Peter's gate
+ For the plea of the Devil's advocate.
+ So, incomplete by his being's law,
+ The marvellous preacher had his flaw;
+ With step unequal, and lame with faults,
+ His shade on the path of History halts.
+
+ Wisely and well said the Eastern bard
+ Fear is easy, but love is hard,--
+ Easy to glow with the Santon's rage,
+ And walk on the Meccan pilgrimage;
+ But he is greatest and best who can
+ Worship Allah by loving man.
+ Thus he,--to whom, in the painful stress
+ Of zeal on fire from its own excess,
+ Heaven seemed so vast and earth so small
+ That man was nothing, since God was all,--
+ Forgot, as the best at times have done,
+ That the love of the Lord and of man are one.
+ Little to him whose feet unshod
+ The thorny path of the desert trod,
+ Careless of pain, so it led to God,
+ Seemed the hunger-pang and the poor man's wrong,
+ The weak ones trodden beneath the strong.
+ Should the worm be chooser?--the clay withstand
+ The shaping will of the potter's hand?
+
+ In the Indian fable Arjoon hears
+ The scorn of a god rebuke his fears
+ "Spare thy pity!" Krishna saith;
+ "Not in thy sword is the power of death!
+ All is illusion,--loss but seems;
+ Pleasure and pain are only dreams;
+ Who deems he slayeth doth not kill;
+ Who counts as slain is living still.
+ Strike, nor fear thy blow is crime;
+ Nothing dies but the cheats of time;
+ Slain or slayer, small the odds
+ To each, immortal as Indra's gods!"
+
+ So by Savannah's banks of shade,
+ The stones of his mission the preacher laid
+ On the heart of the negro crushed and rent,
+ And made of his blood the wall's cement;
+ Bade the slave-ship speed from coast to coast,
+ Fanned by the wings of the Holy Ghost;
+ And begged, for the love of Christ, the gold
+ Coined from the hearts in its groaning hold.
+ What could it matter, more or less
+ Of stripes, and hunger, and weariness?
+ Living or dying, bond or free,
+ What was time to eternity?
+
+ Alas for the preacher's cherished schemes!
+ Mission and church are now but dreams;
+ Nor prayer nor fasting availed the plan
+ To honor God through the wrong of man.
+ Of all his labors no trace remains
+ Save the bondman lifting his hands in chains.
+ The woof he wove in the righteous warp
+ Of freedom-loving Oglethorpe,
+ Clothes with curses the goodly land,
+ Changes its greenness and bloom to sand;
+ And a century's lapse reveals once more
+ The slave-ship stealing to Georgia's shore.
+ Father of Light! how blind is he
+ Who sprinkles the altar he rears to Thee
+ With the blood and tears of humanity!
+
+ He erred: shall we count His gifts as naught?
+ Was the work of God in him unwrought?
+ The servant may through his deafness err,
+ And blind may be God's messenger;
+ But the Errand is sure they go upon,--
+ The word is spoken, the deed is done.
+ Was the Hebrew temple less fair and good
+ That Solomon bowed to gods of wood?
+ For his tempted heart and wandering feet,
+ Were the songs of David less pure and sweet?
+ So in light and shadow the preacher went,
+ God's erring and human instrument;
+ And the hearts of the people where he passed
+ Swayed as the reeds sway in the blast,
+ Under the spell of a voice which took
+ In its compass the flow of Siloa's brook,
+ And the mystical chime of the bells of gold
+ On the ephod's hem of the priest of old,--
+ Now the roll of thunder, and now the awe
+ Of the trumpet heard in the Mount of Law.
+
+ A solemn fear on the listening crowd
+ Fell like the shadow of a cloud.
+ The sailor reeling from out the ships
+ Whose masts stood thick in the river-slips
+ Felt the jest and the curse die on his lips.
+ Listened the fisherman rude and hard,
+ The calker rough from the builder's yard;
+ The man of the market left his load,
+ The teamster leaned on his bending goad,
+ The maiden, and youth beside her, felt
+ Their hearts in a closer union melt,
+ And saw the flowers of their love in bloom
+ Down the endless vistas of life to come.
+ Old age sat feebly brushing away
+ From his ears the scanty locks of gray;
+ And careless boyhood, living the free
+ Unconscious life of bird and tree,
+ Suddenly wakened to a sense
+ Of sin and its guilty consequence.
+ It was as if an angel's voice
+ Called the listeners up for their final choice;
+ As if a strong hand rent apart
+ The veils of sense from soul and heart,
+ Showing in light ineffable
+ The joys of heaven and woes of hell
+ All about in the misty air
+ The hills seemed kneeling in silent prayer;
+ The rustle of leaves, the moaning sedge,
+ The water's lap on its gravelled edge,
+ The wailing pines, and, far and faint,
+ The wood-dove's note of sad complaint,--
+ To the solemn voice of the preacher lent
+ An undertone as of low lament;
+ And the note of the sea from its sand coast,
+ On the easterly wind, now heard, now lost,
+ Seemed the murmurous sound of the judgment host.
+
+ Yet wise men doubted, and good men wept,
+ As that storm of passion above them swept,
+ And, comet-like, adding flame to flame,
+ The priests of the new Evangel came,--
+ Davenport, flashing upon the crowd,
+ Charged like summer's electric cloud,
+ Now holding the listener still as death
+ With terrible warnings under breath,
+ Now shouting for joy, as if he viewed
+ The vision of Heaven's beatitude!
+ And Celtic Tennant, his long coat bound
+ Like a monk's with leathern girdle round,
+ Wild with the toss of unshorn hair,
+ And wringing of hands, and, eyes aglare,
+ Groaning under the world's despair!
+ Grave pastors, grieving their flocks to lose,
+ Prophesied to the empty pews
+ That gourds would wither, and mushrooms die,
+ And noisiest fountains run soonest dry,
+ Like the spring that gushed in Newbury Street,
+ Under the tramp of the earthquake's feet,
+ A silver shaft in the air and light,
+ For a single day, then lost in night,
+ Leaving only, its place to tell,
+ Sandy fissure and sulphurous smell.
+ With zeal wing-clipped and white-heat cool,
+ Moved by the spirit in grooves of rule,
+ No longer harried, and cropped, and fleeced,
+ Flogged by sheriff and cursed by priest,
+ But by wiser counsels left at ease
+ To settle quietly on his lees,
+ And, self-concentred, to count as done
+ The work which his fathers well begun,
+ In silent protest of letting alone,
+ The Quaker kept the way of his own,--
+ A non-conductor among the wires,
+ With coat of asbestos proof to fires.
+ And quite unable to mend his pace
+ To catch the falling manna of grace,
+ He hugged the closer his little store
+ Of faith, and silently prayed for more.
+ And vague of creed and barren of rite,
+ But holding, as in his Master's sight,
+ Act and thought to the inner light,
+ The round of his simple duties walked,
+ And strove to live what the others talked.
+
+ And who shall marvel if evil went
+ Step by step with the good intent,
+ And with love and meekness, side by side,
+ Lust of the flesh and spiritual pride?--
+ That passionate longings and fancies vain
+ Set the heart on fire and crazed the brain?
+ That over the holy oracles
+ Folly sported with cap and bells?
+ That goodly women and learned men
+ Marvelling told with tongue and pen
+ How unweaned children chirped like birds
+ Texts of Scripture and solemn words,
+ Like the infant seers of the rocky glens
+ In the Puy de Dome of wild Cevennes
+ Or baby Lamas who pray and preach
+ From Tartir cradles in Buddha's speech?
+
+ In the war which Truth or Freedom wages
+ With impious fraud and the wrong of ages,
+ Hate and malice and self-love mar
+ The notes of triumph with painful jar,
+ And the helping angels turn aside
+ Their sorrowing faces the shame to bide.
+ Never on custom's oiled grooves
+ The world to a higher level moves,
+ But grates and grinds with friction hard
+ On granite boulder and flinty shard.
+ The heart must bleed before it feels,
+ The pool be troubled before it heals;
+ Ever by losses the right must gain,
+ Every good have its birth of pain;
+ The active Virtues blush to find
+ The Vices wearing their badge behind,
+ And Graces and Charities feel the fire
+ Wherein the sins of the age expire;
+ The fiend still rends as of old he rent
+ The tortured body from which he went.
+
+ But Time tests all. In the over-drift
+ And flow of the Nile, with its annual gift,
+ Who cares for the Hadji's relics sunk?
+ Who thinks of the drowned-out Coptic monk?
+ The tide that loosens the temple's stones,
+ And scatters the sacred ibis-bones,
+ Drives away from the valley-land
+ That Arab robber, the wandering sand,
+ Moistens the fields that know no rain,
+ Fringes the desert with belts of grain,
+ And bread to the sower brings again.
+ So the flood of emotion deep and strong
+ Troubled the land as it swept along,
+ But left a result of holier lives,
+ Tenderer-mothers and worthier wives.
+ The husband and father whose children fled
+ And sad wife wept when his drunken tread
+ Frightened peace from his roof-tree's shade,
+ And a rock of offence his hearthstone made,
+ In a strength that was not his own began
+ To rise from the brute's to the plane of man.
+ Old friends embraced, long held apart
+ By evil counsel and pride of heart;
+ And penitence saw through misty tears,
+ In the bow of hope on its cloud of fears,
+ The promise of Heaven's eternal years,--
+ The peace of God for the world's annoy,--
+ Beauty for ashes, and oil of joy
+ Under the church of Federal Street,
+ Under the tread of its Sabbath feet,
+ Walled about by its basement stones,
+ Lie the marvellous preacher's bones.
+ No saintly honors to them are shown,
+ No sign nor miracle have they known;
+ But he who passes the ancient church
+ Stops in the shade of its belfry-porch,
+ And ponders the wonderful life of him
+ Who lies at rest in that charnel dim.
+ Long shall the traveller strain his eye
+ From the railroad car, as it plunges by,
+ And the vanishing town behind him search
+ For the slender spire of the Whitefield Church;
+ And feel for one moment the ghosts of trade,
+ And fashion, and folly, and pleasure laid,
+ By the thought of that life of pure intent,
+ That voice of warning yet eloquent,
+ Of one on the errands of angels sent.
+ And if where he labored the flood of sin
+ Like a tide from the harbor-bar sets in,
+ And over a life of tune and sense
+ The church-spires lift their vain defence,
+ As if to scatter the bolts of God
+ With the points of Calvin's thunder-rod,--
+ Still, as the gem of its civic crown,
+ Precious beyond the world's renown,
+ His memory hallows the ancient town!
+
+ 1859.
+
+
+
+
+THE TRUCE OF PISCATAQUA.
+
+In the winter of 1675-76, the Eastern Indians, who had been making war
+upon the New Hampshire settlements, were so reduced in numbers by
+fighting and famine that they agreed to a peace with Major Waldron at
+Dover, but the peace was broken in the fall of 1676. The famous chief,
+Squando, was the principal negotiator on the part of the savages. He had
+taken up the hatchet to revenge the brutal treatment of his child by
+drunken white sailors, which caused its death.
+
+It not unfrequently happened during the Border wars that young white
+children were adopted by their Indian captors, and so kindly treated
+that they were unwilling to leave the free, wild life of the woods; and
+in some instances they utterly refused to go back with their parents to
+their old homes and civilization.
+
+ RAZE these long blocks of brick and stone,
+ These huge mill-monsters overgrown;
+ Blot out the humbler piles as well,
+ Where, moved like living shuttles, dwell
+ The weaving genii of the bell;
+ Tear from the wild Cocheco's track
+ The dams that hold its torrents back;
+ And let the loud-rejoicing fall
+ Plunge, roaring, down its rocky wall;
+ And let the Indian's paddle play
+ On the unbridged Piscataqua!
+ Wide over hill and valley spread
+ Once more the forest, dusk and dread,
+ With here and there a clearing cut
+ From the walled shadows round it shut;
+ Each with its farm-house builded rude,
+ By English yeoman squared and hewed,
+ And the grim, flankered block-house bound
+ With bristling palisades around.
+ So, haply shall before thine eyes
+ The dusty veil of centuries rise,
+ The old, strange scenery overlay
+ The tamer pictures of to-day,
+ While, like the actors in a play,
+ Pass in their ancient guise along
+ The figures of my border song
+ What time beside Cocheco's flood
+ The white man and the red man stood,
+ With words of peace and brotherhood;
+ When passed the sacred calumet
+ From lip to lip with fire-draught wet,
+ And, puffed in scorn, the peace-pipe's smoke
+ Through the gray beard of Waldron broke,
+ And Squando's voice, in suppliant plea
+ For mercy, struck the haughty key
+ Of one who held, in any fate,
+ His native pride inviolate!
+
+ "Let your ears be opened wide!
+ He who speaks has never lied.
+ Waldron of Piscataqua,
+ Hear what Squando has to say!
+
+ "Squando shuts his eyes and sees,
+ Far off, Saco's hemlock-trees.
+ In his wigwam, still as stone,
+ Sits a woman all alone,
+
+ "Wampum beads and birchen strands
+ Dropping from her careless hands,
+ Listening ever for the fleet
+ Patter of a dead child's feet!
+
+ "When the moon a year ago
+ Told the flowers the time to blow,
+ In that lonely wigwam smiled
+ Menewee, our little child.
+
+ "Ere that moon grew thin and old,
+ He was lying still and cold;
+ Sent before us, weak and small,
+ When the Master did not call!
+
+ "On his little grave I lay;
+ Three times went and came the day,
+ Thrice above me blazed the noon,
+ Thrice upon me wept the moon.
+
+ "In the third night-watch I heard,
+ Far and low, a spirit-bird;
+ Very mournful, very wild,
+ Sang the totem of my child.
+
+ "'Menewee, poor Menewee,
+ Walks a path he cannot see
+ Let the white man's wigwam light
+ With its blaze his steps aright.
+
+ "'All-uncalled, he dares not show
+ Empty hands to Manito
+ Better gifts he cannot bear
+ Than the scalps his slayers wear.'
+
+ "All the while the totem sang,
+ Lightning blazed and thunder rang;
+ And a black cloud, reaching high,
+ Pulled the white moon from the sky.
+
+ "I, the medicine-man, whose ear
+ All that spirits bear can hear,--
+ I, whose eyes are wide to see
+ All the things that are to be,--
+
+ "Well I knew the dreadful signs
+ In the whispers of the pines,
+ In the river roaring loud,
+ In the mutter of the cloud.
+
+ "At the breaking of the day,
+ From the grave I passed away;
+ Flowers bloomed round me, birds sang glad,
+ But my heart was hot and mad.
+
+ "There is rust on Squando's knife,
+ From the warm, red springs of life;
+ On the funeral hemlock-trees
+ Many a scalp the totem sees.
+
+ "Blood for blood! But evermore
+ Squando's heart is sad and sore;
+ And his poor squaw waits at home
+ For the feet that never come!
+
+ "Waldron of Cocheco, hear!
+ Squando speaks, who laughs at fear;
+ Take the captives he has ta'en;
+ Let the land have peace again!"
+
+ As the words died on his tongue,
+ Wide apart his warriors swung;
+ Parted, at the sign he gave,
+ Right and left, like Egypt's wave.
+
+ And, like Israel passing free
+ Through the prophet-charmed sea,
+ Captive mother, wife, and child
+ Through the dusky terror filed.
+
+ One alone, a little maid,
+ Middleway her steps delayed,
+ Glancing, with quick, troubled sight,
+ Round about from red to white.
+
+ Then his hand the Indian laid
+ On the little maiden's head,
+ Lightly from her forehead fair
+ Smoothing back her yellow hair.
+
+ "Gift or favor ask I none;
+ What I have is all my own
+ Never yet the birds have sung,
+ Squando hath a beggar's tongue.'
+
+ "Yet for her who waits at home,
+ For the dead who cannot come,
+ Let the little Gold-hair be
+ In the place of Menewee!
+
+ "Mishanock, my little star!
+ Come to Saco's pines afar;
+ Where the sad one waits at home,
+ Wequashim, my moonlight, come!"
+
+ "What!" quoth Waldron, "leave a child
+ Christian-born to heathens wild?
+ As God lives, from Satan's hand
+ I will pluck her as a brand!"
+
+ "Hear me, white man!" Squando cried;
+ "Let the little one decide.
+ Wequashim, my moonlight, say,
+ Wilt thou go with me, or stay?"
+
+ Slowly, sadly, half afraid,
+ Half regretfully, the maid
+ Owned the ties of blood and race,--
+ Turned from Squando's pleading face.
+
+ Not a word the Indian spoke,
+ But his wampum chain he broke,
+ And the beaded wonder hung
+ On that neck so fair and young.
+
+ Silence-shod, as phantoms seem
+ In the marches of a dream,
+ Single-filed, the grim array
+ Through the pine-trees wound away.
+
+ Doubting, trembling, sore amazed,
+ Through her tears the young child gazed.
+ "God preserve her!" Waldron said;
+ "Satan hath bewitched the maid!"
+
+ Years went and came. At close of day
+ Singing came a child from play,
+ Tossing from her loose-locked head
+ Gold in sunshine, brown in shade.
+
+ Pride was in the mother's look,
+ But her head she gravely shook,
+ And with lips that fondly smiled
+ Feigned to chide her truant child.
+
+ Unabashed, the maid began
+ "Up and down the brook I ran,
+ Where, beneath the bank so steep,
+ Lie the spotted trout asleep.
+
+ "'Chip!' went squirrel on the wall,
+ After me I heard him call,
+ And the cat-bird on the tree
+ Tried his best to mimic me.
+
+ "Where the hemlocks grew so dark
+ That I stopped to look and hark,
+ On a log, with feather-hat,
+ By the path, an Indian sat.
+
+ "Then I cried, and ran away;
+ But he called, and bade me stay;
+ And his voice was good and mild
+ As my mother's to her child.
+
+ "And he took my wampum chain,
+ Looked and looked it o'er again;
+ Gave me berries, and, beside,
+ On my neck a plaything tied."
+
+ Straight the mother stooped to see
+ What the Indian's gift might be.
+ On the braid of wampum hung,
+ Lo! a cross of silver swung.
+
+ Well she knew its graven sign,
+ Squando's bird and totem pine;
+ And, a mirage of the brain,
+ Flowed her childhood back again.
+
+ Flashed the roof the sunshine through,
+ Into space the walls outgrew;
+ On the Indian's wigwam-mat,
+ Blossom-crowned, again she sat.
+
+ Cool she felt the west-wind blow,
+ In her ear the pines sang low,
+ And, like links from out a chain,
+ Dropped the years of care and pain.
+ From the outward toil and din,
+ From the griefs that gnaw within,
+ To the freedom of the woods
+ Called the birds, and winds, and floods.
+
+ Well, O painful minister!
+ Watch thy flock, but blame not her,
+ If her ear grew sharp to hear
+ All their voices whispering near.
+
+ Blame her not, as to her soul
+ All the desert's glamour stole,
+ That a tear for childhood's loss
+ Dropped upon the Indian's cross.
+
+ When, that night, the Book was read,
+ And she bowed her widowed head,
+ And a prayer for each loved name
+ Rose like incense from a flame,
+
+ With a hope the creeds forbid
+ In her pitying bosom hid,
+ To the listening ear of Heaven
+ Lo! the Indian's name was given.
+
+ 1860.
+
+
+
+
+MY PLAYMATE.
+
+ THE pines were dark on Ramoth hill,
+ Their song was soft and low;
+ The blossoms in the sweet May wind
+ Were falling like the snow.
+
+ The blossoms drifted at our feet,
+ The orchard birds sang clear;
+ The sweetest and the saddest day
+ It seemed of all the year.
+
+ For, more to me than birds or flowers,
+ My playmate left her home,
+ And took with her the laughing spring,
+ The music and the bloom.
+
+ She kissed the lips of kith and kin,
+ She laid her hand in mine
+ What more could ask the bashful boy
+ Who fed her father's kine?
+
+ She left us in the bloom of May
+ The constant years told o'er
+ Their seasons with as sweet May morns,
+ But she came back no more.
+
+ I walk, with noiseless feet, the round
+ Of uneventful years;
+ Still o'er and o'er I sow the spring
+ And reap the autumn ears.
+
+ She lives where all the golden year
+ Her summer roses blow;
+ The dusky children of the sun
+ Before her come and go.
+
+ There haply with her jewelled hands
+ She smooths her silken gown,--
+ No more the homespun lap wherein
+ I shook the walnuts down.
+
+ The wild grapes wait us by the brook,
+ The brown nuts on the hill,
+ And still the May-day flowers make sweet
+ The woods of Follymill.
+
+ The lilies blossom in the pond,
+ The bird builds in the tree,
+ The dark pines sing on Ramoth hill
+ The slow song of the sea.
+
+ I wonder if she thinks of them,
+ And how the old time seems,--
+ If ever the pines of Ramoth wood
+ Are sounding in her dreams.
+
+ I see her face, I hear her voice;
+ Does she remember mine?
+ And what to her is now the boy
+ Who fed her father's kine?
+
+ What cares she that the orioles build
+ For other eyes than ours,--
+ That other hands with nuts are filled,
+ And other laps with flowers?
+
+ O playmate in the golden time!
+ Our mossy seat is green,
+ Its fringing violets blossom yet,
+ The old trees o'er it lean.
+
+ The winds so sweet with birch and fern
+ A sweeter memory blow;
+ And there in spring the veeries sing
+ The song of long ago.
+
+ And still the pines of Ramoth wood
+ Are moaning like the sea,--
+
+ The moaning of the sea of change
+ Between myself and thee!
+
+ 1860.
+
+
+
+
+COBBLER KEEZAR'S VISION.
+
+This ballad was written on the occasion of a Horticultural Festival.
+Cobbler Keezar was a noted character among the first settlers in the
+valley of the Merrimac.
+
+ THE beaver cut his timber
+ With patient teeth that day,
+ The minks were fish-wards, and the crows
+ Surveyors of highway,--
+
+ When Keezar sat on the hillside
+ Upon his cobbler's form,
+ With a pan of coals on either hand
+ To keep his waxed-ends warm.
+
+ And there, in the golden weather,
+ He stitched and hammered and sung;
+ In the brook he moistened his leather,
+ In the pewter mug his tongue.
+
+ Well knew the tough old Teuton
+ Who brewed the stoutest ale,
+ And he paid the goodwife's reckoning
+ In the coin of song and tale.
+
+ The songs they still are singing
+ Who dress the hills of vine,
+ The tales that haunt the Brocken
+ And whisper down the Rhine.
+
+ Woodsy and wild and lonesome,
+ The swift stream wound away,
+ Through birches and scarlet maples
+ Flashing in foam and spray,--
+
+ Down on the sharp-horned ledges
+ Plunging in steep cascade,
+ Tossing its white-maned waters
+ Against the hemlock's shade.
+
+ Woodsy and wild and lonesome,
+ East and west and north and south;
+ Only the village of fishers
+ Down at the river's mouth;
+
+ Only here and there a clearing,
+ With its farm-house rude and new,
+ And tree-stumps, swart as Indians,
+ Where the scanty harvest grew.
+
+ No shout of home-bound reapers,
+ No vintage-song he heard,
+ And on the green no dancing feet
+ The merry violin stirred.
+
+ "Why should folk be glum," said Keezar,
+ "When Nature herself is glad,
+ And the painted woods are laughing
+ At the faces so sour and sad?"
+
+ Small heed had the careless cobbler
+ What sorrow of heart was theirs
+ Who travailed in pain with the births of God,
+ And planted a state with prayers,--
+
+ Hunting of witches and warlocks,
+ Smiting the heathen horde,--
+ One hand on the mason's trowel,
+ And one on the soldier's sword.
+
+ But give him his ale and cider,
+ Give him his pipe and song,
+ Little he cared for Church or State,
+ Or the balance of right and wrong.
+
+ "T is work, work, work," he muttered,--
+ "And for rest a snuffle of psalms!"
+ He smote on his leathern apron
+ With his brown and waxen palms.
+
+ "Oh for the purple harvests
+ Of the days when I was young
+ For the merry grape-stained maidens,
+ And the pleasant songs they sung!
+
+ "Oh for the breath of vineyards,
+ Of apples and nuts and wine
+ For an oar to row and a breeze to blow
+ Down the grand old river Rhine!"
+
+ A tear in his blue eye glistened,
+ And dropped on his beard so gray.
+ "Old, old am I," said Keezar,
+ "And the Rhine flows far away!"
+
+ But a cunning man was the cobbler;
+ He could call the birds from the trees,
+ Charm the black snake out of the ledges,
+ And bring back the swarming bees.
+
+ All the virtues of herbs and metals,
+ All the lore of the woods, he knew,
+ And the arts of the Old World mingle
+ With the marvels of the New.
+
+ Well he knew the tricks of magic,
+ And the lapstone on his knee
+ Had the gift of the Mormon's goggles
+ Or the stone of Doctor Dee.(11)
+
+ For the mighty master Agrippa
+ Wrought it with spell and rhyme
+ From a fragment of mystic moonstone
+ In the tower of Nettesheim.
+
+ To a cobbler Minnesinger
+ The marvellous stone gave he,--
+ And he gave it, in turn, to Keezar,
+ Who brought it over the sea.
+
+ He held up that mystic lapstone,
+ He held it up like a lens,
+ And he counted the long years coming
+ Ey twenties and by tens.
+
+ "One hundred years," quoth Keezar,
+ "And fifty have I told
+ Now open the new before me,
+ And shut me out the old!"
+
+ Like a cloud of mist, the blackness
+ Rolled from the magic stone,
+ And a marvellous picture mingled
+ The unknown and the known.
+
+ Still ran the stream to the river,
+ And river and ocean joined;
+ And there were the bluffs and the blue sea-line,
+ And cold north hills behind.
+
+ But--the mighty forest was broken
+ By many a steepled town,
+ By many a white-walled farm-house,
+ And many a garner brown.
+
+ Turning a score of mill-wheels,
+ The stream no more ran free;
+ White sails on the winding river,
+ White sails on the far-off sea.
+
+ Below in the noisy village
+ The flags were floating gay,
+ And shone on a thousand faces
+ The light of a holiday.
+
+ Swiftly the rival ploughmen
+ Turned the brown earth from their shares;
+ Here were the farmer's treasures,
+ There were the craftsman's wares.
+
+ Golden the goodwife's butter,
+ Ruby her currant-wine;
+ Grand were the strutting turkeys,
+ Fat were the beeves and swine.
+
+ Yellow and red were the apples,
+ And the ripe pears russet-brown,
+ And the peaches had stolen blushes
+ From the girls who shook them down.
+
+ And with blooms of hill and wildwood,
+ That shame the toil of art,
+ Mingled the gorgeous blossoms
+ Of the garden's tropic heart.
+
+ "What is it I see?" said Keezar
+ "Am I here, or ant I there?
+ Is it a fete at Bingen?
+ Do I look on Frankfort fair?
+
+ "But where are the clowns and puppets,
+ And imps with horns and tail?
+ And where are the Rhenish flagons?
+ And where is the foaming ale?
+
+ "Strange things, I know, will happen,--
+ Strange things the Lord permits;
+ But that droughty folk should be jolly
+ Puzzles my poor old wits.
+
+ "Here are smiling manly faces,
+ And the maiden's step is gay;
+ Nor sad by thinking, nor mad by drinking,
+ Nor mopes, nor fools, are they.
+
+ "Here's pleasure without regretting,
+ And good without abuse,
+ The holiday and the bridal
+ Of beauty and of use.
+
+ "Here's a priest and there is a Quaker,
+ Do the cat and dog agree?
+ Have they burned the stocks for ovenwood?
+ Have they cut down the gallows-tree?
+
+ "Would the old folk know their children?
+ Would they own the graceless town,
+ With never a ranter to worry
+ And never a witch to drown?"
+
+
+ Loud laughed the cobbler Keezar,
+ Laughed like a school-boy gay;
+ Tossing his arms above him,
+ The lapstone rolled away.
+
+ It rolled down the rugged hillside,
+ It spun like a wheel bewitched,
+ It plunged through the leaning willows,
+ And into the river pitched.
+
+ There, in the deep, dark water,
+ The magic stone lies still,
+ Under the leaning willows
+ In the shadow of the hill.
+
+ But oft the idle fisher
+ Sits on the shadowy bank,
+ And his dreams make marvellous pictures
+ Where the wizard's lapstone sank.
+
+ And still, in the summer twilights,
+ When the river seems to run
+ Out from the inner glory,
+ Warm with the melted sun,
+
+ The weary mill-girl lingers
+ Beside the charmed stream,
+ And the sky and the golden water
+ Shape and color her dream.
+
+ Air wave the sunset gardens,
+ The rosy signals fly;
+ Her homestead beckons from the cloud,
+ And love goes sailing by.
+
+ 1861.
+
+
+
+
+AMY WENTWORTH
+
+TO WILLIAM BRADFORD.
+
+ As they who watch by sick-beds find relief
+ Unwittingly from the great stress of grief
+ And anxious care, in fantasies outwrought
+ From the hearth's embers flickering low, or caught
+ From whispering wind, or tread of passing feet,
+ Or vagrant memory calling up some sweet
+ Snatch of old song or romance, whence or why
+ They scarcely know or ask,--so, thou and I,
+ Nursed in the faith that Truth alone is strong
+ In the endurance which outwearies Wrong,
+ With meek persistence baffling brutal force,
+ And trusting God against the universe,--
+ We, doomed to watch a strife we may not share
+ With other weapons than the patriot's prayer,
+ Yet owning, with full hearts and moistened eyes,
+ The awful beauty of self-sacrifice,
+ And wrung by keenest sympathy for all
+ Who give their loved ones for the living wall
+ 'Twixt law and treason,--in this evil day
+ May haply find, through automatic play
+ Of pen and pencil, solace to our pain,
+ And hearten others with the strength we gain.
+ I know it has been said our times require
+ No play of art, nor dalliance with the lyre,
+ No weak essay with Fancy's chloroform
+ To calm the hot, mad pulses of the storm,
+ But the stern war-blast rather, such as sets
+ The battle's teeth of serried bayonets,
+ And pictures grim as Vernet's. Yet with these
+ Some softer tints may blend, and milder keys
+ Relieve the storm-stunned ear. Let us keep sweet,
+ If so we may, our hearts, even while we eat
+ The bitter harvest of our own device
+ And half a century's moral cowardice.
+ As Nurnberg sang while Wittenberg defied,
+ And Kranach painted by his Luther's side,
+ And through the war-march of the Puritan
+ The silver stream of Marvell's music ran,
+ So let the household melodies be sung,
+ The pleasant pictures on the wall be hung--
+ So let us hold against the hosts of night
+ And slavery all our vantage-ground of light.
+ Let Treason boast its savagery, and shake
+ From its flag-folds its symbol rattlesnake,
+ Nurse its fine arts, lay human skins in tan,
+ And carve its pipe-bowls from the bones of man,
+ And make the tale of Fijian banquets dull
+ By drinking whiskey from a loyal skull,--
+ But let us guard, till this sad war shall cease,
+ (God grant it soon!) the graceful arts of peace
+ No foes are conquered who the victors teach
+ Their vandal manners and barbaric speech.
+
+ And while, with hearts of thankfulness, we bear
+ Of the great common burden our full share,
+ Let none upbraid us that the waves entice
+ Thy sea-dipped pencil, or some quaint device,
+ Rhythmic, and sweet, beguiles my pen away
+ From the sharp strifes and sorrows of to-day.
+ Thus, while the east-wind keen from Labrador
+ Sings it the leafless elms, and from the shore
+ Of the great sea comes the monotonous roar
+ Of the long-breaking surf, and all the sky
+ Is gray with cloud, home-bound and dull, I try
+ To time a simple legend to the sounds
+ Of winds in the woods, and waves on pebbled bounds,--
+ A song for oars to chime with, such as might
+ Be sung by tired sea-painters, who at night
+ Look from their hemlock camps, by quiet cove
+ Or beach, moon-lighted, on the waves they love.
+ (So hast thou looked, when level sunset lay
+ On the calm bosom of some Eastern bay,
+ And all the spray-moist rocks and waves that rolled
+ Up the white sand-slopes flashed with ruddy gold.)
+ Something it has--a flavor of the sea,
+ And the sea's freedom--which reminds of thee.
+ Its faded picture, dimly smiling down
+ From the blurred fresco of the ancient town,
+ I have not touched with warmer tints in vain,
+ If, in this dark, sad year, it steals one thought
+ from pain.
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+
+ Her fingers shame the ivory keys
+ They dance so light along;
+ The bloom upon her parted lips
+ Is sweeter than the song.
+
+ O perfumed suitor, spare thy smiles!
+ Her thoughts are not of thee;
+ She better loves the salted wind,
+ The voices of the sea.
+
+ Her heart is like an outbound ship
+ That at its anchor swings;
+ The murmur of the stranded shell
+ Is in the song she sings.
+
+ She sings, and, smiling, hears her praise,
+ But dreams the while of one
+ Who watches from his sea-blown deck
+ The icebergs in the sun.
+
+ She questions all the winds that blow,
+ And every fog-wreath dim,
+ And bids the sea-birds flying north
+ Bear messages to him.
+
+ She speeds them with the thanks of men
+ He perilled life to save,
+ And grateful prayers like holy oil
+ To smooth for him the wave.
+
+ Brown Viking of the fishing-smack!
+ Fair toast of all the town!--
+ The skipper's jerkin ill beseems
+ The lady's silken gown!
+
+ But ne'er shall Amy Wentworth wear
+ For him the blush of shame
+ Who dares to set his manly gifts
+ Against her ancient name.
+
+ The stream is brightest at its spring,
+ And blood is not like wine;
+ Nor honored less than he who heirs
+ Is he who founds a line.
+
+ Full lightly shall the prize be won,
+ If love be Fortune's spur;
+ And never maiden stoops to him
+ Who lifts himself to her.
+
+ Her home is brave in Jaffrey Street,
+ With stately stairways worn
+ By feet of old Colonial knights
+ And ladies gentle-born.
+
+ Still green about its ample porch
+ The English ivy twines,
+ Trained back to show in English oak
+ The herald's carven signs.
+
+ And on her, from the wainscot old,
+ Ancestral faces frown,--
+ And this has worn the soldier's sword,
+ And that the judge's gown.
+
+ But, strong of will and proud as they,
+ She walks the gallery floor
+ As if she trod her sailor's deck
+ By stormy Labrador.
+
+ The sweetbrier blooms on Kittery-side,
+ And green are Elliot's bowers;
+ Her garden is the pebbled beach,
+ The mosses are her flowers.
+
+ She looks across the harbor-bar
+ To see the white gulls fly;
+ His greeting from the Northern sea
+ Is in their clanging cry.
+
+ She hums a song, and dreams that he,
+ As in its romance old,
+ Shall homeward ride with silken sails
+ And masts of beaten gold!
+
+ Oh, rank is good, and gold is fair,
+ And high and low mate ill;
+ But love has never known a law
+ Beyond its own sweet will!
+
+ 1862.
+
+
+
+
+THE COUNTESS.
+
+TO E. W.
+
+I inscribed this poem to Dr. Elias Weld of Haverhill, Massachusetts,
+to whose kindness I was much indebted in my boyhood. He was the one
+cultivated man in the neighborhood. His small but well-chosen library
+was placed at my disposal. He is the "wise old doctor" of Snow-Bound.
+Count Francois de Vipart with his cousin Joseph Rochemont de Poyen came
+to the United States in the early part of the present century. They took
+up their residence at Rocks Village on the Merrimac, where they both
+married. The wife of Count Vipart was Mary Ingalls, who as my father
+remembered her was a very lovely young girl. Her wedding dress, as
+described by a lady still living, was "pink satin with an overdress of
+white lace, and white satin slippers." She died in less than a year
+after her marriage. Her husband returned to his native country. He lies
+buried in the family tomb of the Viparts at Bordeaux.
+
+ I KNOW not, Time and Space so intervene,
+ Whether, still waiting with a trust serene,
+ Thou bearest up thy fourscore years and ten,
+ Or, called at last, art now Heaven's citizen;
+ But, here or there, a pleasant thought of thee,
+ Like an old friend, all day has been with me.
+ The shy, still boy, for whom thy kindly hand
+ Smoothed his hard pathway to the wonder-land
+ Of thought and fancy, in gray manhood yet
+ Keeps green the memory of his early debt.
+ To-day, when truth and falsehood speak their words
+ Through hot-lipped cannon and the teeth of swords,
+ Listening with quickened heart and ear intent
+ To each sharp clause of that stern argument,
+ I still can hear at times a softer note
+ Of the old pastoral music round me float,
+ While through the hot gleam of our civil strife
+ Looms the green mirage of a simpler life.
+ As, at his alien post, the sentinel
+ Drops the old bucket in the homestead well,
+ And hears old voices in the winds that toss
+ Above his head the live-oak's beard of moss,
+ So, in our trial-time, and under skies
+ Shadowed by swords like Islam's paradise,
+ I wait and watch, and let my fancy stray
+ To milder scenes and youth's Arcadian day;
+ And howsoe'er the pencil dipped in dreams
+ Shades the brown woods or tints the sunset streams,
+ The country doctor in the foreground seems,
+ Whose ancient sulky down the village lanes
+ Dragged, like a war-car, captive ills and pains.
+ I could not paint the scenery of my song,
+ Mindless of one who looked thereon so long;
+ Who, night and day, on duty's lonely round,
+ Made friends o' the woods and rocks, and knew the sound
+ Of each small brook, and what the hillside trees
+ Said to the winds that touched their leafy keys;
+ Who saw so keenly and so well could paint
+ The village-folk, with all their humors quaint,
+ The parson ambling on his wall-eyed roan.
+ Grave and erect, with white hair backward blown;
+ The tough old boatman, half amphibious grown;
+ The muttering witch-wife of the gossip's tale,
+ And the loud straggler levying his blackmail,--
+ Old customs, habits, superstitions, fears,
+ All that lies buried under fifty years.
+ To thee, as is most fit, I bring my lay,
+ And, grateful, own the debt I cannot pay.
+
+ . . . . . . . . . .
+
+ Over the wooded northern ridge,
+ Between its houses brown,
+ To the dark tunnel of the bridge
+ The street comes straggling down.
+
+ You catch a glimpse, through birch and pine,
+ Of gable, roof, and porch,
+ The tavern with its swinging sign,
+ The sharp horn of the church.
+
+ The river's steel-blue crescent curves
+ To meet, in ebb and flow,
+ The single broken wharf that serves
+ For sloop and gundelow.
+
+ With salt sea-scents along its shores
+ The heavy hay-boats crawl,
+ The long antennae of their oars
+ In lazy rise and fall.
+
+ Along the gray abutment's wall
+ The idle shad-net dries;
+ The toll-man in his cobbler's stall
+ Sits smoking with closed eyes.
+
+ You hear the pier's low undertone
+ Of waves that chafe and gnaw;
+ You start,--a skipper's horn is blown
+ To raise the creaking draw.
+
+ At times a blacksmith's anvil sounds
+ With slow and sluggard beat,
+ Or stage-coach on its dusty rounds
+ Fakes up the staring street.
+
+ A place for idle eyes and ears,
+ A cobwebbed nook of dreams;
+ Left by the stream whose waves are years
+ The stranded village seems.
+
+ And there, like other moss and rust,
+ The native dweller clings,
+ And keeps, in uninquiring trust,
+ The old, dull round of things.
+
+ The fisher drops his patient lines,
+ The farmer sows his grain,
+ Content to hear the murmuring pines
+ Instead of railroad-train.
+
+ Go where, along the tangled steep
+ That slopes against the west,
+ The hamlet's buried idlers sleep
+ In still profounder rest.
+
+ Throw back the locust's flowery plume,
+ The birch's pale-green scarf,
+ And break the web of brier and bloom
+ From name and epitaph.
+
+ A simple muster-roll of death,
+ Of pomp and romance shorn,
+ The dry, old names that common breath
+ Has cheapened and outworn.
+
+ Yet pause by one low mound, and part
+ The wild vines o'er it laced,
+ And read the words by rustic art
+ Upon its headstone traced.
+
+ Haply yon white-haired villager
+ Of fourscore years can say
+ What means the noble name of her
+ Who sleeps with common clay.
+
+ An exile from the Gascon land
+ Found refuge here and rest,
+ And loved, of all the village band,
+ Its fairest and its best.
+
+ He knelt with her on Sabbath morns,
+ He worshipped through her eyes,
+ And on the pride that doubts and scorns
+ Stole in her faith's surprise.
+
+ Her simple daily life he saw
+ By homeliest duties tried,
+ In all things by an untaught law
+ Of fitness justified.
+
+ For her his rank aside he laid;
+ He took the hue and tone
+ Of lowly life and toil, and made
+ Her simple ways his own.
+
+ Yet still, in gay and careless ease,
+ To harvest-field or dance
+ He brought the gentle courtesies,
+ The nameless grace of France.
+
+ And she who taught him love not less
+ From him she loved in turn
+ Caught in her sweet unconsciousness
+ What love is quick to learn.
+
+ Each grew to each in pleased accord,
+ Nor knew the gazing town
+ If she looked upward to her lord
+ Or he to her looked down.
+
+ How sweet, when summer's day was o'er,
+ His violin's mirth and wail,
+ The walk on pleasant Newbury's shore,
+ The river's moonlit sail!
+
+ Ah! life is brief, though love be long;
+ The altar and the bier,
+ The burial hymn and bridal song,
+ Were both in one short year!
+
+ Her rest is quiet on the hill,
+ Beneath the locust's bloom
+ Far off her lover sleeps as still
+ Within his scutcheoned tomb.
+
+ The Gascon lord, the village maid,
+ In death still clasp their hands;
+ The love that levels rank and grade
+ Unites their severed lands.
+
+ What matter whose the hillside grave,
+ Or whose the blazoned stone?
+ Forever to her western wave
+ Shall whisper blue Garonne!
+
+ O Love!--so hallowing every soil
+ That gives thy sweet flower room,
+ Wherever, nursed by ease or toil,
+ The human heart takes bloom!--
+
+ Plant of lost Eden, from the sod
+ Of sinful earth unriven,
+ White blossom of the trees of God
+ Dropped down to us from heaven!
+
+ This tangled waste of mound and stone
+ Is holy for thy sale;
+ A sweetness which is all thy own
+ Breathes out from fern and brake.
+
+ And while ancestral pride shall twine
+ The Gascon's tomb with flowers,
+ Fall sweetly here, O song of mine,
+ With summer's bloom and showers!
+
+ And let the lines that severed seem
+ Unite again in thee,
+ As western wave and Gallic stream
+ Are mingled in one sea!
+
+ 1863.
+
+
+
+
+AMONG THE HILLS
+
+This poem, when originally published, was dedicated to Annie Fields,
+wife of the distinguished publisher, James T. Fields, of Boston, in
+grateful acknowledgment of the strength and inspiration I have found in
+her friendship and sympathy. The poem in its first form was entitled The
+Wife: an Idyl of Bearcamp Water, and appeared in The Atlantic Monthly
+for January, 1868. When I published the volume Among the Hills, in
+December of the same year, I expanded the Prelude and filled out also
+the outlines of the story.
+
+
+ PRELUDE.
+
+ ALONG the roadside, like the flowers of gold
+ That tawny Incas for their gardens wrought,
+ Heavy with sunshine droops the golden-rod,
+ And the red pennons of the cardinal-flowers
+ Hang motionless upon their upright staves.
+ The sky is hot and hazy, and the wind,
+ Vying-weary with its long flight from the south,
+ Unfelt; yet, closely scanned, yon maple leaf
+ With faintest motion, as one stirs in dreams,
+ Confesses it. The locust by the wall
+ Stabs the noon-silence with his sharp alarm.
+ A single hay-cart down the dusty road
+ Creaks slowly, with its driver fast asleep
+ On the load's top. Against the neighboring hill,
+ Huddled along the stone wall's shady side,
+ The sheep show white, as if a snowdrift still
+ Defied the dog-star. Through the open door
+ A drowsy smell of flowers-gray heliotrope,
+ And white sweet clover, and shy mignonette--
+ Comes faintly in, and silent chorus lends
+ To the pervading symphony of peace.
+ No time is this for hands long over-worn
+ To task their strength; and (unto Him be praise
+ Who giveth quietness!) the stress and strain
+ Of years that did the work of centuries
+ Have ceased, and we can draw our breath once more
+ Freely and full. So, as yon harvesters
+ Make glad their nooning underneath the elms
+ With tale and riddle and old snatch of song,
+ I lay aside grave themes, and idly turn
+ The leaves of memory's sketch-book, dreaming o'er
+ Old summer pictures of the quiet hills,
+ And human life, as quiet, at their feet.
+
+ And yet not idly all. A farmer's son,
+ Proud of field-lore and harvest craft, and feeling
+ All their fine possibilities, how rich
+ And restful even poverty and toil
+ Become when beauty, harmony, and love
+ Sit at their humble hearth as angels sat
+ At evening in the patriarch's tent, when man
+ Makes labor noble, and his farmer's frock
+ The symbol of a Christian chivalry
+ Tender and just and generous to her
+ Who clothes with grace all duty; still, I know
+ Too well the picture has another side,--
+ How wearily the grind of toil goes on
+ Where love is wanting, how the eye and ear
+ And heart are starved amidst the plenitude
+ Of nature, and how hard and colorless
+ Is life without an atmosphere. I look
+ Across the lapse of half a century,
+ And call to mind old homesteads, where no flower
+ Told that the spring had come, but evil weeds,
+ Nightshade and rough-leaved burdock in the place
+ Of the sweet doorway greeting of the rose
+ And honeysuckle, where the house walls seemed
+ Blistering in sun, without a tree or vine
+ To cast the tremulous shadow of its leaves
+ Across the curtainless windows, from whose panes
+ Fluttered the signal rags of shiftlessness.
+ Within, the cluttered kitchen-floor, unwashed
+ (Broom-clean I think they called it); the best room
+ Stifling with cellar damp, shut from the air
+ In hot midsummer, bookless, pictureless,
+ Save the inevitable sampler hung
+ Over the fireplace, or a mourning piece,
+ A green-haired woman, peony-cheeked, beneath
+ Impossible willows; the wide-throated hearth
+ Bristling with faded pine-boughs half concealing
+ The piled-up rubbish at the chimney's back;
+ And, in sad keeping with all things about them,
+ Shrill, querulous-women, sour and sullen men,
+ Untidy, loveless, old before their time,
+ With scarce a human interest save their own
+ Monotonous round of small economies,
+ Or the poor scandal of the neighborhood;
+ Blind to the beauty everywhere revealed,
+ Treading the May-flowers with regardless feet;
+ For them the song-sparrow and the bobolink
+ Sang not, nor winds made music in the leaves;
+ For them in vain October's holocaust
+ Burned, gold and crimson, over all the hills,
+ The sacramental mystery of the woods.
+ Church-goers, fearful of the unseen Powers,
+ But grumbling over pulpit-tax and pew-rent,
+ Saving, as shrewd economists, their souls
+ And winter pork with the least possible outlay
+ Of salt and sanctity; in daily life
+ Showing as little actual comprehension
+ Of Christian charity and love and duty,
+ As if the Sermon on the Mount had been
+ Outdated like a last year's almanac
+ Rich in broad woodlands and in half-tilled fields,
+ And yet so pinched and bare and comfortless,
+ The veriest straggler limping on his rounds,
+ The sun and air his sole inheritance,
+ Laughed at a poverty that paid its taxes,
+ And hugged his rags in self-complacency!
+
+ Not such should be the homesteads of a land
+ Where whoso wisely wills and acts may dwell
+ As king and lawgiver, in broad-acred state,
+ With beauty, art, taste, culture, books, to make
+ His hour of leisure richer than a life
+ Of fourscore to the barons of old time,
+ Our yeoman should be equal to his home
+ Set in the fair, green valleys, purple walled,
+ A man to match his mountains, not to creep
+ Dwarfed and abased below them. I would fain
+ In this light way (of which I needs must own
+ With the knife-grinder of whom Canning sings,
+ "Story, God bless you! I have none to tell you!")
+ Invite the eye to see and heart to feel
+ The beauty and the joy within their reach,--
+ Home, and home loves, and the beatitudes
+ Of nature free to all. Haply in years
+ That wait to take the places of our own,
+ Heard where some breezy balcony looks down
+ On happy homes, or where the lake in the moon
+ Sleeps dreaming of the mountains, fair as Ruth,
+ In the old Hebrew pastoral, at the feet
+ Of Boaz, even this simple lay of mine
+ May seem the burden of a prophecy,
+ Finding its late fulfilment in a change
+ Slow as the oak's growth, lifting manhood up
+ Through broader culture, finer manners, love,
+ And reverence, to the level of the hills.
+
+ O Golden Age, whose light is of the dawn,
+ And not of sunset, forward, not behind,
+ Flood the new heavens and earth, and with thee bring
+ All the old virtues, whatsoever things
+ Are pure and honest and of good repute,
+ But add thereto whatever bard has sung
+ Or seer has told of when in trance and dream
+ They saw the Happy Isles of prophecy
+ Let Justice hold her scale, and Truth divide
+ Between the right and wrong; but give the heart
+ The freedom of its fair inheritance;
+ Let the poor prisoner, cramped and starved so long,
+ At Nature's table feast his ear and eye
+ With joy and wonder; let all harmonies
+ Of sound, form, color, motion, wait upon
+ The princely guest, whether in soft attire
+ Of leisure clad, or the coarse frock of toil,
+ And, lending life to the dead form of faith,
+ Give human nature reverence for the sake
+ Of One who bore it, making it divine
+ With the ineffable tenderness of God;
+ Let common need, the brotherhood of prayer,
+ The heirship of an unknown destiny,
+ The unsolved mystery round about us, make
+ A man more precious than the gold of Ophir.
+ Sacred, inviolate, unto whom all things
+ Should minister, as outward types and signs
+ Of the eternal beauty which fulfils
+ The one great purpose of creation, Love,
+ The sole necessity of Earth and Heaven!
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+ For weeks the clouds had raked the hills
+ And vexed the vales with raining,
+ And all the woods were sad with mist,
+ And all the brooks complaining.
+
+ At last, a sudden night-storm tore
+ The mountain veils asunder,
+ And swept the valleys clean before
+ The besom of the thunder.
+
+ Through Sandwich notch the west-wind sang
+ Good morrow to the cotter;
+ And once again Chocorua's horn
+ Of shadow pierced the water.
+
+ Above his broad lake Ossipee,
+ Once more the sunshine wearing,
+ Stooped, tracing on that silver shield
+ His grim armorial bearing.
+
+ Clear drawn against the hard blue sky,
+ The peaks had winter's keenness;
+ And, close on autumn's frost, the vales
+ Had more than June's fresh greenness.
+
+ Again the sodden forest floors
+ With golden lights were checkered,
+ Once more rejoicing leaves in wind
+ And sunshine danced and flickered.
+
+ It was as if the summer's late
+ Atoning for it's sadness
+ Had borrowed every season's charm
+ To end its days in gladness.
+
+ Rivers of gold-mist flowing down
+ From far celestial fountains,--
+ The great sun flaming through the rifts
+ Beyond the wall of mountains.
+
+ We paused at last where home-bound cows
+ Brought down the pasture's treasure,
+ And in the barn the rhythmic flails
+ Beat out a harvest measure.
+
+ We heard the night-hawk's sullen plunge,
+ The crow his tree-mates calling
+ The shadows lengthening down the slopes
+ About our feet were falling.
+
+ And through them smote the level sun
+ In broken lines of splendor,
+ Touched the gray rocks and made the green
+ Of the shorn grass more tender.
+
+ The maples bending o'er the gate,
+ Their arch of leaves just tinted
+ With yellow warmth, the golden glow
+ Of coming autumn hinted.
+
+ Keen white between the farm-house showed,
+ And smiled on porch and trellis,
+ The fair democracy of flowers
+ That equals cot and palace.
+
+ And weaving garlands for her dog,
+ 'Twixt chidings and caresses,
+ A human flower of childhood shook
+ The sunshine from her tresses.
+
+ Clear drawn against the hard blue sky,
+ The peaks had winter's keenness;
+ And, close on autumn's frost, the vales
+ Had more than June's fresh greenness.
+
+ Again the sodden forest floors
+ With golden lights were checkered,
+ Once more rejoicing leaves in wind
+ And sunshine danced and flickered.
+
+ It was as if the summer's late
+ Atoning for it's sadness
+ Had borrowed every season's charm
+ To end its days in gladness.
+
+ I call to mind those banded vales
+ Of shadow and of shining,
+ Through which, my hostess at my side,
+ I drove in day's declining.
+
+ We held our sideling way above
+ The river's whitening shallows,
+ By homesteads old, with wide-flung barns
+ Swept through and through by swallows;
+
+ By maple orchards, belts of pine
+ And larches climbing darkly
+ The mountain slopes, and, over all,
+ The great peaks rising starkly.
+
+ You should have seen that long hill-range
+ With gaps of brightness riven,--
+ How through each pass and hollow streamed
+ The purpling lights of heaven,--
+
+ On either hand we saw the signs
+ Of fancy and of shrewdness,
+ Where taste had wound its arms of vines
+ Round thrift's uncomely rudeness.
+
+ The sun-brown farmer in his frock
+ Shook hands, and called to Mary
+ Bare-armed, as Juno might, she came,
+ White-aproned from her dairy.
+
+ Her air, her smile, her motions, told
+ Of womanly completeness;
+ A music as of household songs
+ Was in her voice of sweetness.
+
+ Not fair alone in curve and line,
+ But something more and better,
+ The secret charm eluding art,
+ Its spirit, not its letter;--
+
+ An inborn grace that nothing lacked
+ Of culture or appliance,
+ The warmth of genial courtesy,
+ The calm of self-reliance.
+
+ Before her queenly womanhood
+ How dared our hostess utter
+ The paltry errand of her need
+ To buy her fresh-churned butter?
+
+ She led the way with housewife pride,
+ Her goodly store disclosing,
+ Full tenderly the golden balls
+ With practised hands disposing.
+
+ Then, while along the western hills
+ We watched the changeful glory
+ Of sunset, on our homeward way,
+ I heard her simple story.
+
+ The early crickets sang; the stream
+ Plashed through my friend's narration
+ Her rustic patois of the hills
+ Lost in my free-translation.
+
+ "More wise," she said, "than those who swarm
+ Our hills in middle summer,
+ She came, when June's first roses blow,
+ To greet the early comer.
+
+ "From school and ball and rout she came,
+ The city's fair, pale daughter,
+ To drink the wine of mountain air
+ Beside the Bearcamp Water.
+
+ "Her step grew firmer on the hills
+ That watch our homesteads over;
+ On cheek and lip, from summer fields,
+ She caught the bloom of clover.
+
+ "For health comes sparkling in the streams
+ From cool Chocorua stealing
+ There's iron in our Northern winds;
+ Our pines are trees of healing.
+
+ "She sat beneath the broad-armed elms
+ That skirt the mowing-meadow,
+ And watched the gentle west-wind weave
+ The grass with shine and shadow.
+
+ "Beside her, from the summer heat
+ To share her grateful screening,
+ With forehead bared, the farmer stood,
+ Upon his pitchfork leaning.
+
+ "Framed in its damp, dark locks, his face
+ Had nothing mean or common,--
+ Strong, manly, true, the tenderness
+ And pride beloved of woman.
+
+ "She looked up, glowing with the health
+ The country air had brought her,
+ And, laughing, said: 'You lack a wife,
+ Your mother lacks a daughter.
+
+ "'To mend your frock and bake your bread
+ You do not need a lady
+ Be sure among these brown old homes
+ Is some one waiting ready,--
+
+ "'Some fair, sweet girl with skilful hand
+ And cheerful heart for treasure,
+ Who never played with ivory keys,
+ Or danced the polka's measure.'
+
+ "He bent his black brows to a frown,
+ He set his white teeth tightly.
+ ''T is well,' he said, 'for one like you
+ To choose for me so lightly.
+
+ "You think, because my life is rude
+ I take no note of sweetness
+ I tell you love has naught to do
+ With meetness or unmeetness.
+
+ "'Itself its best excuse, it asks
+ No leave of pride or fashion
+ When silken zone or homespun frock
+ It stirs with throbs of passion.
+
+ "'You think me deaf and blind: you bring
+ Your winning graces hither
+ As free as if from cradle-time
+ We two had played together.
+
+ "'You tempt me with your laughing eyes,
+ Your cheek of sundown's blushes,
+ A motion as of waving grain,
+ A music as of thrushes.
+
+ "'The plaything of your summer sport,
+ The spells you weave around me
+ You cannot at your will undo,
+ Nor leave me as you found me.
+
+ "'You go as lightly as you came,
+ Your life is well without me;
+ What care you that these hills will close
+ Like prison-walls about me?
+
+ "'No mood is mine to seek a wife,
+ Or daughter for my mother
+ Who loves you loses in that love
+ All power to love another!
+
+ "'I dare your pity or your scorn,
+ With pride your own exceeding;
+ I fling my heart into your lap
+ Without a word of pleading.'
+
+ "She looked up in his face of pain
+ So archly, yet so tender
+ 'And if I lend you mine,' she said,
+ 'Will you forgive the lender?
+
+ "'Nor frock nor tan can hide the man;
+ And see you not, my farmer,
+ How weak and fond a woman waits
+ Behind this silken armor?
+
+ "'I love you: on that love alone,
+ And not my worth, presuming,
+ Will you not trust for summer fruit
+ The tree in May-day blooming?'
+
+ "Alone the hangbird overhead,
+ His hair-swung cradle straining,
+ Looked down to see love's miracle,--
+ The giving that is gaining.
+
+ "And so the farmer found a wife,
+ His mother found a daughter
+ There looks no happier home than hers
+ On pleasant Bearcamp Water.
+
+ "Flowers spring to blossom where she walks
+ The careful ways of duty;
+ Our hard, stiff lines of life with her
+ Are flowing curves of beauty.
+
+ "Our homes are cheerier for her sake,
+ Our door-yards brighter blooming,
+ And all about the social air
+ Is sweeter for her coming.
+
+ "Unspoken homilies of peace
+ Her daily life is preaching;
+ The still refreshment of the dew
+ Is her unconscious teaching.
+
+ "And never tenderer hand than hers
+ Unknits the brow of ailing;
+ Her garments to the sick man's ear
+ Have music in their trailing.
+
+ "And when, in pleasant harvest moons,
+ The youthful huskers gather,
+ Or sleigh-drives on the mountain ways
+ Defy the winter weather,--
+
+ "In sugar-camps, when south and warm
+ The winds of March are blowing,
+ And sweetly from its thawing veins
+ The maple's blood is flowing,--
+
+ "In summer, where some lilied pond
+ Its virgin zone is baring,
+ Or where the ruddy autumn fire
+ Lights up the apple-paring,--
+
+ "The coarseness of a ruder time
+ Her finer mirth displaces,
+ A subtler sense of pleasure fills
+ Each rustic sport she graces.
+
+ "Her presence lends its warmth and health
+ To all who come before it.
+ If woman lost us Eden, such
+ As she alone restore it.
+
+ "For larger life and wiser aims
+ The farmer is her debtor;
+ Who holds to his another's heart
+ Must needs be worse or better.
+
+ "Through her his civic service shows
+ A purer-toned ambition;
+ No double consciousness divides
+ The man and politician.
+
+ "In party's doubtful ways he trusts
+ Her instincts to determine;
+ At the loud polls, the thought of her
+ Recalls Christ's Mountain Sermon.
+
+ "He owns her logic of the heart,
+ And wisdom of unreason,
+ Supplying, while he doubts and weighs,
+ The needed word in season.
+
+ "He sees with pride her richer thought,
+ Her fancy's freer ranges;
+ And love thus deepened to respect
+ Is proof against all changes.
+
+ "And if she walks at ease in ways
+ His feet are slow to travel,
+ And if she reads with cultured eyes
+ What his may scarce unravel,
+
+ "Still clearer, for her keener sight
+ Of beauty and of wonder,
+ He learns the meaning of the hills
+ He dwelt from childhood under.
+
+ "And higher, warmed with summer lights,
+ Or winter-crowned and hoary,
+ The ridged horizon lifts for him
+ Its inner veils of glory.
+
+ "He has his own free, bookless lore,
+ The lessons nature taught him,
+ The wisdom which the woods and hills
+ And toiling men have brought him:
+
+ "The steady force of will whereby
+ Her flexile grace seems sweeter;
+ The sturdy counterpoise which makes
+ Her woman's life completer.
+
+ "A latent fire of soul which lacks
+ No breath of love to fan it;
+ And wit, that, like his native brooks,
+ Plays over solid granite.
+
+ "How dwarfed against his manliness
+ She sees the poor pretension,
+ The wants, the aims, the follies, born
+ Of fashion and convention.
+
+ "How life behind its accidents
+ Stands strong and self-sustaining,
+ The human fact transcending all
+ The losing and the gaining.
+
+ "And so in grateful interchange
+ Of teacher and of hearer,
+ Their lives their true distinctness keep
+ While daily drawing nearer.
+
+ "And if the husband or the wife
+ In home's strong light discovers
+ Such slight defaults as failed to meet
+ The blinded eyes of lovers,
+
+ "Why need we care to ask?--who dreams
+ Without their thorns of roses,
+ Or wonders that the truest steel
+ The readiest spark discloses?
+
+ "For still in mutual sufferance lies
+ The secret of true living;
+ Love scarce is love that never knows
+ The sweetness of forgiving.
+
+ "We send the Squire to General Court,
+ He takes his young wife thither;
+ No prouder man election day
+ Rides through the sweet June weather.
+
+ "He sees with eyes of manly trust
+ All hearts to her inclining;
+ Not less for him his household light
+ That others share its shining."
+
+ Thus, while my hostess spake, there grew
+ Before me, warmer tinted
+ And outlined with a tenderer grace,
+ The picture that she hinted.
+
+ The sunset smouldered as we drove
+ Beneath the deep hill-shadows.
+ Below us wreaths of white fog walked
+ Like ghosts the haunted meadows.
+
+ Sounding the summer night, the stars
+ Dropped down their golden plummets;
+ The pale arc of the Northern lights
+ Rose o'er the mountain summits,
+
+ Until, at last, beneath its bridge,
+ We heard the Bearcamp flowing,
+ And saw across the mapled lawn
+ The welcome home lights glowing.
+
+ And, musing on the tale I heard,
+ 'T were well, thought I, if often
+ To rugged farm-life came the gift
+ To harmonize and soften;
+
+ If more and more we found the troth
+ Of fact and fancy plighted,
+ And culture's charm and labor's strength
+ In rural homes united,--
+
+ The simple life, the homely hearth,
+ With beauty's sphere surrounding,
+ And blessing toil where toil abounds
+ With graces more abounding.
+
+ 1868.
+
+
+
+
+THE DOLE OF JARL THORKELL.
+
+ THE land was pale with famine
+ And racked with fever-pain;
+ The frozen fiords were fishless,
+ The earth withheld her grain.
+
+ Men saw the boding Fylgja
+ Before them come and go,
+ And, through their dreams, the Urdarmoon
+ From west to east sailed slow.
+
+ Jarl Thorkell of Thevera
+ At Yule-time made his vow;
+ On Rykdal's holy Doom-stone
+ He slew to Frey his cow.
+
+ To bounteous Frey he slew her;
+ To Skuld, the younger Norn,
+ Who watches over birth and death,
+ He gave her calf unborn.
+
+ And his little gold-haired daughter
+ Took up the sprinkling-rod,
+ And smeared with blood the temple
+ And the wide lips of the god.
+
+ Hoarse below, the winter water
+ Ground its ice-blocks o'er and o'er;
+ Jets of foam, like ghosts of dead waves,
+ Rose and fell along the shore.
+
+ The red torch of the Jokul,
+ Aloft in icy space,
+ Shone down on the bloody Horg-stones
+ And the statue's carven face.
+
+ And closer round and grimmer
+ Beneath its baleful light
+ The Jotun shapes of mountains
+ Came crowding through the night.
+
+ The gray-haired Hersir trembled
+ As a flame by wind is blown;
+ A weird power moved his white lips,
+ And their voice was not his own.
+
+ "The AEsir thirst!" he muttered;
+ "The gods must have more blood
+ Before the tun shall blossom
+ Or fish shall fill the flood.
+
+ "The AEsir thirst and hunger,
+ And hence our blight and ban;
+ The mouths of the strong gods water
+ For the flesh and blood of man!
+
+ "Whom shall we give the strong ones?
+ Not warriors, sword on thigh;
+ But let the nursling infant
+ And bedrid old man die."
+
+ "So be it!" cried the young men,
+ "There needs nor doubt nor parle."
+ But, knitting hard his red brows,
+ In silence stood the Jarl.
+
+ A sound of woman's weeping
+ At the temple door was heard,
+ But the old men bowed their white heads,
+ And answered not a word.
+
+ Then the Dream-wife of Thingvalla,
+ A Vala young and fair,
+ Sang softly, stirring with her breath
+ The veil of her loose hair.
+
+ She sang: "The winds from Alfheim
+ Bring never sound of strife;
+ The gifts for Frey the meetest
+ Are not of death, but life.
+
+ "He loves the grass-green meadows,
+ The grazing kine's sweet breath;
+ He loathes your bloody Horg-stones,
+ Your gifts that smell of death.
+
+ "No wrong by wrong is righted,
+ No pain is cured by pain;
+ The blood that smokes from Doom-rings
+ Falls back in redder rain.
+
+ "The gods are what you make them,
+ As earth shall Asgard prove;
+ And hate will come of hating,
+ And love will come of love.
+
+ "Make dole of skyr and black bread
+ That old and young may live;
+ And look to Frey for favor
+ When first like Frey you give.
+
+ "Even now o'er Njord's sea-meadows
+ The summer dawn begins
+ The tun shall have its harvest,
+ The fiord its glancing fins."
+
+ Then up and swore Jarl Thorkell
+ "By Gimli and by Hel,
+ O Vala of Thingvalla,
+ Thou singest wise and well!
+
+ "Too dear the AEsir's favors
+ Bought with our children's lives;
+ Better die than shame in living
+ Our mothers and our wives.
+
+ "The full shall give his portion
+ To him who hath most need;
+ Of curdled skyr and black bread,
+ Be daily dole decreed."
+
+ He broke from off his neck-chain
+ Three links of beaten gold;
+ And each man, at his bidding,
+ Brought gifts for young and old.
+
+ Then mothers nursed their children,
+ And daughters fed their sires,
+ And Health sat down with Plenty
+ Before the next Yule fires.
+
+ The Horg-stones stand in Rykdal;
+ The Doom-ring still remains;
+ But the snows of a thousand winters
+ Have washed away the stains.
+
+ Christ ruleth now; the Asir
+ Have found their twilight dim;
+ And, wiser than she dreamed, of old
+ The Vala sang of Him
+
+ 1868.
+
+
+
+
+THE TWO RABBINS.
+
+ THE Rabbi Nathan two-score years and ten
+ Walked blameless through the evil world, and then,
+ Just as the almond blossomed in his hair,
+ Met a temptation all too strong to bear,
+ And miserably sinned. So, adding not
+ Falsehood to guilt, he left his seat, and taught
+ No more among the elders, but went out
+ From the great congregation girt about
+ With sackcloth, and with ashes on his head,
+ Making his gray locks grayer. Long he prayed,
+ Smiting his breast; then, as the Book he laid
+ Open before him for the Bath-Col's choice,
+ Pausing to hear that Daughter of a Voice,
+ Behold the royal preacher's words: "A friend
+ Loveth at all times, yea, unto the end;
+ And for the evil day thy brother lives."
+ Marvelling, he said: "It is the Lord who gives
+ Counsel in need. At Ecbatana dwells
+ Rabbi Ben Isaac, who all men excels
+ In righteousness and wisdom, as the trees
+ Of Lebanon the small weeds that the bees
+ Bow with their weight. I will arise, and lay
+ My sins before him."
+
+ And he went his way
+ Barefooted, fasting long, with many prayers;
+ But even as one who, followed unawares,
+ Suddenly in the darkness feels a hand
+ Thrill with its touch his own, and his cheek fanned
+ By odors subtly sweet, and whispers near
+ Of words he loathes, yet cannot choose but hear,
+ So, while the Rabbi journeyed, chanting low
+ The wail of David's penitential woe,
+ Before him still the old temptation came,
+ And mocked him with the motion and the shame
+ Of such desires that, shuddering, he abhorred
+ Himself; and, crying mightily to the Lord
+ To free his soul and cast the demon out,
+ Smote with his staff the blankness round about.
+
+ At length, in the low light of a spent day,
+ The towers of Ecbatana far away
+ Rose on the desert's rim; and Nathan, faint
+ And footsore, pausing where for some dead saint
+ The faith of Islam reared a domed tomb,
+ Saw some one kneeling in the shadow, whom
+ He greeted kindly: "May the Holy One
+ Answer thy prayers, O stranger!" Whereupon
+ The shape stood up with a loud cry, and then,
+ Clasped in each other's arms, the two gray men
+ Wept, praising Him whose gracious providence
+ Made their paths one. But straightway, as the sense
+ Of his transgression smote him, Nathan tore
+ Himself away: "O friend beloved, no more
+ Worthy am I to touch thee, for I came,
+ Foul from my sins, to tell thee all my shame.
+ Haply thy prayers, since naught availeth mine,
+ May purge my soul, and make it white like thine.
+ Pity me, O Ben Isaac, I have sinned!"
+
+ Awestruck Ben Isaac stood. The desert wind
+ Blew his long mantle backward, laying bare
+ The mournful secret of his shirt of hair.
+ "I too, O friend, if not in act," he said,
+ "In thought have verily sinned. Hast thou not read,
+ 'Better the eye should see than that desire
+ Should wander?' Burning with a hidden fire
+ That tears and prayers quench not, I come to thee
+ For pity and for help, as thou to me.
+ Pray for me, O my friend!" But Nathan cried,
+ "Pray thou for me, Ben Isaac!"
+
+ Side by side
+ In the low sunshine by the turban stone
+ They knelt; each made his brother's woe his own,
+ Forgetting, in the agony and stress
+ Of pitying love, his claim of selfishness;
+ Peace, for his friend besought, his own became;
+ His prayers were answered in another's name;
+ And, when at last they rose up to embrace,
+ Each saw God's pardon in his brother's face!
+
+ Long after, when his headstone gathered moss,
+ Traced on the targum-marge of Onkelos
+ In Rabbi Nathan's hand these words were read:
+ "_Hope not the cure of sin till Self is dead;
+ Forget it in love's service, and the debt
+ Thou, canst not pay the angels shall forget;
+ Heaven's gate is shut to him who comes alone;
+ Save thou a soul, and it shall save thy own!_"
+
+ 1868.
+
+
+
+
+NOREMBEGA.
+
+Norembega, or Norimbegue, is the name given by early French fishermen
+and explorers to a fabulous country south of Cape Breton, first
+discovered by Verrazzani in 1524. It was supposed to have a magnificent
+city of the same name on a great river, probably the Penobscot. The site
+of this barbaric city is laid down on a map published at Antwerp in
+1570. In 1604 Champlain sailed in search of the Northern Eldorado,
+twenty-two leagues up the Penobscot from the Isle Haute. He supposed the
+river to be that of Norembega, but wisely came to the conclusion that
+those travellers who told of the great city had never seen it. He saw no
+evidences of anything like civilization, but mentions the finding of a
+cross, very old and mossy, in the woods.
+
+ THE winding way the serpent takes
+ The mystic water took,
+ From where, to count its beaded lakes,
+ The forest sped its brook.
+
+ A narrow space 'twixt shore and shore,
+ For sun or stars to fall,
+ While evermore, behind, before,
+ Closed in the forest wall.
+
+ The dim wood hiding underneath
+ Wan flowers without a name;
+ Life tangled with decay and death,
+ League after league the same.
+
+ Unbroken over swamp and hill
+ The rounding shadow lay,
+ Save where the river cut at will
+ A pathway to the day.
+
+ Beside that track of air and light,
+ Weak as a child unweaned,
+ At shut of day a Christian knight
+ Upon his henchman leaned.
+
+ The embers of the sunset's fires
+ Along the clouds burned down;
+ "I see," he said, "the domes and spires
+ Of Norembega town."
+
+ "Alack! the domes, O master mine,
+ Are golden clouds on high;
+ Yon spire is but the branchless pine
+ That cuts the evening sky."
+
+ "Oh, hush and hark! What sounds are these
+ But chants and holy hymns?"
+ "Thou hear'st the breeze that stirs the trees
+ Though all their leafy limbs."
+
+ "Is it a chapel bell that fills
+ The air with its low tone?"
+ "Thou hear'st the tinkle of the rills,
+ The insect's vesper drone."
+
+ "The Christ be praised!--He sets for me
+ A blessed cross in sight!"
+ "Now, nay, 't is but yon blasted tree
+ With two gaunt arms outright!"
+
+ "Be it wind so sad or tree so stark,
+ It mattereth not, my knave;
+ Methinks to funeral hymns I hark,
+ The cross is for my grave!
+
+ "My life is sped; I shall not see
+ My home-set sails again;
+ The sweetest eyes of Normandie
+ Shall watch for me in vain.
+
+ "Yet onward still to ear and eye
+ The baffling marvel calls;
+ I fain would look before I die
+ On Norembega's walls.
+
+ "So, haply, it shall be thy part
+ At Christian feet to lay
+ The mystery of the desert's heart
+ My dead hand plucked away.
+
+ "Leave me an hour of rest; go thou
+ And look from yonder heights;
+ Perchance the valley even now
+ Is starred with city lights."
+
+ The henchman climbed the nearest hill,
+ He saw nor tower nor town,
+ But, through the drear woods, lone and still,
+ The river rolling down.
+
+ He heard the stealthy feet of things
+ Whose shapes he could not see,
+ A flutter as of evil wings,
+ The fall of a dead tree.
+
+ The pines stood black against the moon,
+ A sword of fire beyond;
+ He heard the wolf howl, and the loon
+ Laugh from his reedy pond.
+
+ He turned him back: "O master dear,
+ We are but men misled;
+ And thou hast sought a city here
+ To find a grave instead."
+
+ "As God shall will! what matters where
+ A true man's cross may stand,
+ So Heaven be o'er it here as there
+ In pleasant Norman land?
+
+ "These woods, perchance, no secret hide
+ Of lordly tower and hall;
+ Yon river in its wanderings wide
+ Has washed no city wall;
+
+ "Yet mirrored in the sullen stream
+ The holy stars are given
+ Is Norembega, then, a dream
+ Whose waking is in Heaven?
+
+ "No builded wonder of these lands
+ My weary eyes shall see;
+ A city never made with hands
+ Alone awaiteth me--
+
+ "'_Urbs Syon mystica_;' I see
+ Its mansions passing fair,
+ '_Condita caelo_;' let me be,
+ Dear Lord, a dweller there!"
+
+ Above the dying exile hung
+ The vision of the bard,
+ As faltered on his failing tongue
+ The song of good Bernard.
+
+ The henchman dug at dawn a grave
+ Beneath the hemlocks brown,
+ And to the desert's keeping gave
+ The lord of fief and town.
+
+ Years after, when the Sieur Champlain
+ Sailed up the unknown stream,
+ And Norembega proved again
+ A shadow and a dream,
+
+ He found the Norman's nameless grave
+ Within the hemlock's shade,
+ And, stretching wide its arms to save,
+ The sign that God had made,
+
+ The cross-boughed tree that marked the spot
+ And made it holy ground
+ He needs the earthly city not
+ Who hath the heavenly found.
+
+ 1869.
+
+
+
+
+MIRIAM.
+
+TO FREDERICK A. P. BARNARD.
+
+ THE years are many since, in youth and hope,
+ Under the Charter Oak, our horoscope
+ We drew thick-studded with all favoring stars.
+ Now, with gray beards, and faces seamed with scars
+ From life's hard battle, meeting once again,
+ We smile, half sadly, over dreams so vain;
+ Knowing, at last, that it is not in man
+ Who walketh to direct his steps, or plan
+ His permanent house of life. Alike we loved
+ The muses' haunts, and all our fancies moved
+ To measures of old song. How since that day
+ Our feet have parted from the path that lay
+ So fair before us! Rich, from lifelong search
+ Of truth, within thy Academic porch
+ Thou sittest now, lord of a realm of fact,
+ Thy servitors the sciences exact;
+ Still listening with thy hand on Nature's keys,
+ To hear the Samian's spheral harmonies
+ And rhythm of law. I called from dream and song,
+ Thank God! so early to a strife so long,
+ That, ere it closed, the black, abundant hair
+ Of boyhood rested silver-sown and spare
+ On manhood's temples, now at sunset-chime
+ Tread with fond feet the path of morning time.
+ And if perchance too late I linger where
+ The flowers have ceased to blow, and trees are bare,
+ Thou, wiser in thy choice, wilt scarcely blame
+ The friend who shields his folly with thy name.
+ AMESBURY, 10th mo., 1870.
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+ One Sabbath day my friend and I
+ After the meeting, quietly
+ Passed from the crowded village lanes,
+ White with dry dust for lack of rains,
+ And climbed the neighboring slope, with feet
+ Slackened and heavy from the heat,
+ Although the day was wellnigh done,
+ And the low angle of the sun
+ Along the naked hillside cast
+ Our shadows as of giants vast.
+ We reached, at length, the topmost swell,
+ Whence, either way, the green turf fell
+ In terraces of nature down
+ To fruit-hung orchards, and the town
+ With white, pretenceless houses, tall
+ Church-steeples, and, o'ershadowing all,
+ Huge mills whose windows had the look
+ Of eager eyes that ill could brook
+ The Sabbath rest. We traced the track
+ Of the sea-seeking river back,
+ Glistening for miles above its mouth,
+ Through the long valley to the south,
+ And, looking eastward, cool to view,
+ Stretched the illimitable blue
+ Of ocean, from its curved coast-line;
+ Sombred and still, the warm sunshine
+ Filled with pale gold-dust all the reach
+ Of slumberous woods from hill to beach,--
+ Slanted on walls of thronged retreats
+ From city toil and dusty streets,
+ On grassy bluff, and dune of sand,
+ And rocky islands miles from land;
+ Touched the far-glancing sails, and showed
+ White lines of foam where long waves flowed
+ Dumb in the distance. In the north,
+ Dim through their misty hair, looked forth
+ The space-dwarfed mountains to the sea,
+ From mystery to mystery!
+
+ So, sitting on that green hill-slope,
+ We talked of human life, its hope
+ And fear, and unsolved doubts, and what
+ It might have been, and yet was not.
+ And, when at last the evening air
+ Grew sweeter for the bells of prayer
+ Ringing in steeples far below,
+ We watched the people churchward go,
+ Each to his place, as if thereon
+ The true shekinah only shone;
+ And my friend queried how it came
+ To pass that they who owned the same
+ Great Master still could not agree
+ To worship Him in company.
+ Then, broadening in his thought, he ran
+ Over the whole vast field of man,--
+ The varying forms of faith and creed
+ That somehow served the holders' need;
+ In which, unquestioned, undenied,
+ Uncounted millions lived and died;
+ The bibles of the ancient folk,
+ Through which the heart of nations spoke;
+ The old moralities which lent
+ To home its sweetness and content,
+ And rendered possible to bear
+ The life of peoples everywhere
+ And asked if we, who boast of light,
+ Claim not a too exclusive right
+ To truths which must for all be meant,
+ Like rain and sunshine freely sent.
+ In bondage to the letter still,
+ We give it power to cramp and kill,--
+ To tax God's fulness with a scheme
+ Narrower than Peter's house-top dream,
+ His wisdom and his love with plans
+ Poor and inadequate as man's.
+ It must be that He witnesses
+ Somehow to all men that He is
+ That something of His saving grace
+ Reaches the lowest of the race,
+ Who, through strange creed and rite, may draw
+ The hints of a diviner law.
+ We walk in clearer light;--but then,
+ Is He not God?--are they not men?
+ Are His responsibilities
+ For us alone and not for these?
+
+ And I made answer: "Truth is one;
+ And, in all lands beneath the sun,
+ Whoso hath eyes to see may see
+ The tokens of its unity.
+ No scroll of creed its fulness wraps,
+ We trace it not by school-boy maps,
+ Free as the sun and air it is
+ Of latitudes and boundaries.
+ In Vedic verse, in dull Koran,
+ Are messages of good to man;
+ The angels to our Aryan sires
+ Talked by the earliest household fires;
+ The prophets of the elder day,
+ The slant-eyed sages of Cathay,
+ Read not the riddle all amiss
+ Of higher life evolved from this.
+
+ "Nor doth it lessen what He taught,
+ Or make the gospel Jesus brought
+ Less precious, that His lips retold
+ Some portion of that truth of old;
+ Denying not the proven seers,
+ The tested wisdom of the years;
+ Confirming with his own impress
+ The common law of righteousness.
+ We search the world for truth; we cull
+ The good, the pure, the beautiful,
+ From graven stone and written scroll,
+ From all old flower-fields of the soul;
+ And, weary seekers of the best,
+ We come back laden from our quest,
+ To find that all the sages said
+ Is in the Book our mothers read,
+ And all our treasure of old thought
+ In His harmonious fulness wrought
+ Who gathers in one sheaf complete
+ The scattered blades of God's sown wheat,
+ The common growth that maketh good
+ His all-embracing Fatherhood.
+
+ "Wherever through the ages rise
+ The altars of self-sacrifice,
+ Where love its arms has opened wide,
+ Or man for man has calmly died,
+ I see the same white wings outspread
+ That hovered o'er the Master's head!
+ Up from undated time they come,
+ The martyr souls of heathendom,
+ And to His cross and passion bring
+ Their fellowship of suffering.
+ I trace His presence in the blind
+ Pathetic gropings of my kind,--
+ In prayers from sin and sorrow wrung,
+ In cradle-hymns of life they sung,
+ Each, in its measure, but a part
+ Of the unmeasured Over-Heart;
+ And with a stronger faith confess
+ The greater that it owns the less.
+ Good cause it is for thankfulness
+ That the world-blessing of His life
+ With the long past is not at strife;
+ That the great marvel of His death
+ To the one order witnesseth,
+ No doubt of changeless goodness wakes,
+ No link of cause and sequence breaks,
+ But, one with nature, rooted is
+ In the eternal verities;
+ Whereby, while differing in degree
+ As finite from infinity,
+ The pain and loss for others borne,
+ Love's crown of suffering meekly worn,
+ The life man giveth for his friend
+ Become vicarious in the end;
+ Their healing place in nature take,
+ And make life sweeter for their sake.
+
+ "So welcome I from every source
+ The tokens of that primal Force,
+ Older than heaven itself, yet new
+ As the young heart it reaches to,
+ Beneath whose steady impulse rolls
+ The tidal wave of human souls;
+ Guide, comforter, and inward word,
+ The eternal spirit of the Lord
+ Nor fear I aught that science brings
+ From searching through material things;
+ Content to let its glasses prove,
+ Not by the letter's oldness move,
+ The myriad worlds on worlds that course
+ The spaces of the universe;
+ Since everywhere the Spirit walks
+ The garden of the heart, and talks
+ With man, as under Eden's trees,
+ In all his varied languages.
+ Why mourn above some hopeless flaw
+ In the stone tables of the law,
+ When scripture every day afresh
+ Is traced on tablets of the flesh?
+ By inward sense, by outward signs,
+ God's presence still the heart divines;
+ Through deepest joy of Him we learn,
+ In sorest grief to Him we turn,
+ And reason stoops its pride to share
+ The child-like instinct of a prayer."
+
+ And then, as is my wont, I told
+ A story of the days of old,
+ Not found in printed books,--in sooth,
+ A fancy, with slight hint of truth,
+ Showing how differing faiths agree
+ In one sweet law of charity.
+ Meanwhile the sky had golden grown,
+ Our faces in its glory shone;
+ But shadows down the valley swept,
+ And gray below the ocean slept,
+ As time and space I wandered o'er
+ To tread the Mogul's marble floor,
+ And see a fairer sunset fall
+ On Jumna's wave and Agra's wall.
+
+ The good Shah Akbar (peace be his alway!)
+ Came forth from the Divan at close of day
+ Bowed with the burden of his many cares,
+ Worn with the hearing of unnumbered prayers,--
+ Wild cries for justice, the importunate
+ Appeals of greed and jealousy and hate,
+ And all the strife of sect and creed and rite,
+ Santon and Gouroo waging holy fight
+ For the wise monarch, claiming not to be
+ Allah's avenger, left his people free,
+ With a faint hope, his Book scarce justified,
+ That all the paths of faith, though severed wide,
+ O'er which the feet of prayerful reverence passed,
+ Met at the gate of Paradise at last.
+
+ He sought an alcove of his cool hareem,
+ Where, far beneath, he heard the Jumna's stream
+ Lapse soft and low along his palace wall,
+ And all about the cool sound of the fall
+ Of fountains, and of water circling free
+ Through marble ducts along the balcony;
+ The voice of women in the distance sweet,
+ And, sweeter still, of one who, at his feet,
+ Soothed his tired ear with songs of a far land
+ Where Tagus shatters on the salt sea-sand
+ The mirror of its cork-grown hills of drouth
+ And vales of vine, at Lisbon's harbor-mouth.
+
+ The date-palms rustled not; the peepul laid
+ Its topmost boughs against the balustrade,
+ Motionless as the mimic leaves and vines
+ That, light and graceful as the shawl-designs
+ Of Delhi or Umritsir, twined in stone;
+ And the tired monarch, who aside had thrown
+ The day's hard burden, sat from care apart,
+ And let the quiet steal into his heart
+ From the still hour. Below him Agra slept,
+ By the long light of sunset overswept
+ The river flowing through a level land,
+ By mango-groves and banks of yellow sand,
+ Skirted with lime and orange, gay kiosks,
+ Fountains at play, tall minarets of mosques,
+ Fair pleasure-gardens, with their flowering trees
+ Relieved against the mournful cypresses;
+ And, air-poised lightly as the blown sea-foam,
+ The marble wonder of some holy dome
+ Hung a white moonrise over the still wood,
+ Glassing its beauty in a stiller flood.
+
+ Silent the monarch gazed, until the night
+ Swift-falling hid the city from his sight;
+ Then to the woman at his feet he said
+ "Tell me, O Miriam, something thou hast read
+ In childhood of the Master of thy faith,
+ Whom Islam also owns. Our Prophet saith
+ 'He was a true apostle, yea, a Word
+ And Spirit sent before me from the Lord.'
+ Thus the Book witnesseth; and well I know
+ By what thou art, O dearest, it is so.
+ As the lute's tone the maker's hand betrays,
+ The sweet disciple speaks her Master's praise."
+
+ Then Miriam, glad of heart, (for in some sort
+ She cherished in the Moslem's liberal court
+ The sweet traditions of a Christian child;
+ And, through her life of sense, the undefiled
+ And chaste ideal of the sinless One
+ Gazed on her with an eye she might not shun,--
+ The sad, reproachful look of pity, born
+ Of love that hath no part in wrath or scorn,)
+ Began, with low voice and moist eyes, to tell
+ Of the all-loving Christ, and what befell
+ When the fierce zealots, thirsting for her blood,
+ Dragged to his feet a shame of womanhood.
+ How, when his searching answer pierced within
+ Each heart, and touched the secret of its sin,
+ And her accusers fled his face before,
+ He bade the poor one go and sin no more.
+ And Akbar said, after a moment's thought,
+ "Wise is the lesson by thy prophet taught;
+ Woe unto him who judges and forgets
+ What hidden evil his own heart besets!
+ Something of this large charity I find
+ In all the sects that sever human kind;
+ I would to Allah that their lives agreed
+ More nearly with the lesson of their creed!
+ Those yellow Lamas who at Meerut pray
+ By wind and water power, and love to say
+ 'He who forgiveth not shall, unforgiven,
+ Fail of the rest of Buddha,' and who even
+ Spare the black gnat that stings them, vex my ears
+ With the poor hates and jealousies and fears
+ Nursed in their human hives. That lean, fierce priest
+ Of thy own people, (be his heart increased
+ By Allah's love!) his black robes smelling yet
+ Of Goa's roasted Jews, have I not met
+ Meek-faced, barefooted, crying in the street
+ The saying of his prophet true and sweet,--
+ 'He who is merciful shall mercy meet!'"
+
+ But, next day, so it chanced, as night began
+ To fall, a murmur through the hareem ran
+ That one, recalling in her dusky face
+ The full-lipped, mild-eyed beauty of a race
+ Known as the blameless Ethiops of Greek song,
+ Plotting to do her royal master wrong,
+ Watching, reproachful of the lingering light,
+ The evening shadows deepen for her flight,
+ Love-guided, to her home in a far land,
+ Now waited death at the great Shah's command.
+ Shapely as that dark princess for whose smile
+ A world was bartered, daughter of the Nile
+ Herself, and veiling in her large, soft eyes
+ The passion and the languor of her skies,
+ The Abyssinian knelt low at the feet
+ Of her stern lord: "O king, if it be meet,
+ And for thy honor's sake," she said, "that I,
+ Who am the humblest of thy slaves, should die,
+ I will not tax thy mercy to forgive.
+ Easier it is to die than to outlive
+ All that life gave me,--him whose wrong of thee
+ Was but the outcome of his love for me,
+ Cherished from childhood, when, beneath the shade
+ Of templed Axum, side by side we played.
+ Stolen from his arms, my lover followed me
+ Through weary seasons over land and sea;
+ And two days since, sitting disconsolate
+ Within the shadow of the hareem gate,
+ Suddenly, as if dropping from the sky,
+ Down from the lattice of the balcony
+ Fell the sweet song by Tigre's cowherds sung
+ In the old music of his native tongue.
+ He knew my voice, for love is quick of ear,
+ Answering in song.
+
+ This night he waited near
+ To fly with me. The fault was mine alone
+ He knew thee not, he did but seek his own;
+ Who, in the very shadow of thy throne,
+ Sharing thy bounty, knowing all thou art,
+ Greatest and best of men, and in her heart
+ Grateful to tears for favor undeserved,
+ Turned ever homeward, nor one moment swerved
+ From her young love. He looked into my eyes,
+ He heard my voice, and could not otherwise
+ Than he hath done; yet, save one wild embrace
+ When first we stood together face to face,
+ And all that fate had done since last we met
+ Seemed but a dream that left us children yet,
+ He hath not wronged thee nor thy royal bed;
+ Spare him, O king! and slay me in his stead!"
+
+ But over Akbar's brows the frown hung black,
+ And, turning to the eunuch at his back,
+ "Take them," he said, "and let the Jumna's waves
+ Hide both my shame and these accursed slaves!"
+ His loathly length the unsexed bondman bowed
+ "On my head be it!"
+
+ Straightway from a cloud
+ Of dainty shawls and veils of woven mist
+ The Christian Miriam rose, and, stooping, kissed
+ The monarch's hand. Loose down her shoulders bare
+ Swept all the rippled darkness of her hair,
+ Veiling the bosom that, with high, quick swell
+ Of fear and pity, through it rose and fell.
+
+ "Alas!" she cried, "hast thou forgotten quite
+ The words of Him we spake of yesternight?
+ Or thy own prophet's, 'Whoso doth endure
+ And pardon, of eternal life is sure'?
+ O great and good! be thy revenge alone
+ Felt in thy mercy to the erring shown;
+ Let thwarted love and youth their pardon plead,
+ Who sinned but in intent, and not in deed!"
+
+ One moment the strong frame of Akbar shook
+ With the great storm of passion. Then his look
+ Softened to her uplifted face, that still
+ Pleaded more strongly than all words, until
+ Its pride and anger seemed like overblown,
+ Spent clouds of thunder left to tell alone
+ Of strife and overcoming. With bowed head,
+ And smiting on his bosom: "God," he said,
+ "Alone is great, and let His holy name
+ Be honored, even to His servant's shame!
+ Well spake thy prophet, Miriam,--he alone
+ Who hath not sinned is meet to cast a stone
+ At such as these, who here their doom await,
+ Held like myself in the strong grasp of fate.
+ They sinned through love, as I through love forgive;
+ Take them beyond my realm, but let them live!"
+
+ And, like a chorus to the words of grace,
+ The ancient Fakir, sitting in his place,
+ Motionless as an idol and as grim,
+ In the pavilion Akbar built for him
+ Under the court-yard trees, (for he was wise,
+ Knew Menu's laws, and through his close-shut eyes
+ Saw things far off, and as an open book
+ Into the thoughts of other men could look,)
+ Began, half chant, half howling, to rehearse
+ The fragment of a holy Vedic verse;
+ And thus it ran: "He who all things forgives
+ Conquers himself and all things else, and lives
+ Above the reach of wrong or hate or fear,
+ Calm as the gods, to whom he is most dear."
+
+ Two leagues from Agra still the traveller sees
+ The tomb of Akbar through its cypress-trees;
+ And, near at hand, the marble walls that hide
+ The Christian Begum sleeping at his side.
+ And o'er her vault of burial (who shall tell
+ If it be chance alone or miracle?)
+ The Mission press with tireless hand unrolls
+ The words of Jesus on its lettered scrolls,--
+ Tells, in all tongues, the tale of mercy o'er,
+ And bids the guilty, "Go and sin no more!"
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+ It now was dew-fall; very still
+ The night lay on the lonely hill,
+ Down which our homeward steps we bent,
+ And, silent, through great silence went,
+ Save that the tireless crickets played
+ Their long, monotonous serenade.
+ A young moon, at its narrowest,
+ Curved sharp against the darkening west;
+ And, momently, the beacon's star,
+ Slow wheeling o'er its rock afar,
+ From out the level darkness shot
+ One instant and again was not.
+ And then my friend spake quietly
+ The thought of both: "Yon crescent see!
+ Like Islam's symbol-moon it gives
+ Hints of the light whereby it lives
+ Somewhat of goodness, something true
+ From sun and spirit shining through
+ All faiths, all worlds, as through the dark
+ Of ocean shines the lighthouse spark,
+ Attests the presence everywhere
+ Of love and providential care.
+ The faith the old Norse heart confessed
+ In one dear name,--the hopefulest
+ And tenderest heard from mortal lips
+ In pangs of birth or death, from ships
+ Ice-bitten in the winter sea,
+ Or lisped beside a mother's knee,--
+ The wiser world hath not outgrown,
+ And the All-Father is our own!"
+
+
+
+
+NAUHAUGHT, THE DEACON.
+
+ NAUHAUGHT, the Indian deacon, who of old
+ Dwelt, poor but blameless, where his narrowing Cape
+ Stretches its shrunk arm out to all the winds
+ And the relentless smiting of the waves,
+ Awoke one morning from a pleasant dream
+ Of a good angel dropping in his hand
+ A fair, broad gold-piece, in the name of God.
+
+ He rose and went forth with the early day
+ Far inland, where the voices of the waves
+ Mellowed and Mingled with the whispering leaves,
+ As, through the tangle of the low, thick woods,
+ He searched his traps. Therein nor beast nor bird
+ He found; though meanwhile in the reedy pools
+ The otter plashed, and underneath the pines
+ The partridge drummed: and as his thoughts went back
+ To the sick wife and little child at home,
+ What marvel that the poor man felt his faith
+ Too weak to bear its burden,--like a rope
+ That, strand by strand uncoiling, breaks above
+ The hand that grasps it. "Even now, O Lord!
+ Send me," he prayed, "the angel of my dream!
+ Nauhaught is very poor; he cannot wait."
+
+ Even as he spake he heard at his bare feet
+ A low, metallic clink, and, looking down,
+ He saw a dainty purse with disks of gold
+ Crowding its silken net. Awhile he held
+ The treasure up before his eyes, alone
+ With his great need, feeling the wondrous coins
+ Slide through his eager fingers, one by one.
+ So then the dream was true. The angel brought
+ One broad piece only; should he take all these?
+ Who would be wiser, in the blind, dumb woods?
+ The loser, doubtless rich, would scarcely miss
+ This dropped crumb from a table always full.
+ Still, while he mused, he seemed to hear the cry
+ Of a starved child; the sick face of his wife
+ Tempted him. Heart and flesh in fierce revolt
+ Urged the wild license of his savage youth
+ Against his later scruples. Bitter toil,
+ Prayer, fasting, dread of blame, and pitiless eyes
+ To watch his halting,--had he lost for these
+ The freedom of the woods;--the hunting-grounds
+ Of happy spirits for a walled-in heaven
+ Of everlasting psalms? One healed the sick
+ Very far off thousands of moons ago
+ Had he not prayed him night and day to come
+ And cure his bed-bound wife? Was there a hell?
+ Were all his fathers' people writhing there--
+ Like the poor shell-fish set to boil alive--
+ Forever, dying never? If he kept
+ This gold, so needed, would the dreadful God
+ Torment him like a Mohawk's captive stuck
+ With slow-consuming splinters? Would the saints
+ And the white angels dance and laugh to see him
+ Burn like a pitch-pine torch? His Christian garb
+ Seemed falling from him; with the fear and shame
+ Of Adam naked at the cool of day,
+ He gazed around. A black snake lay in coil
+ On the hot sand, a crow with sidelong eye
+ Watched from a dead bough. All his Indian lore
+ Of evil blending with a convert's faith
+ In the supernal terrors of the Book,
+ He saw the Tempter in the coiling snake
+ And ominous, black-winged bird; and all the while
+ The low rebuking of the distant waves
+ Stole in upon him like the voice of God
+ Among the trees of Eden. Girding up
+ His soul's loins with a resolute hand, he thrust
+ The base thought from him: "Nauhaught, be a man
+ Starve, if need be; but, while you live, look out
+ From honest eyes on all men, unashamed.
+ God help me! I am deacon of the church,
+ A baptized, praying Indian! Should I do
+ This secret meanness, even the barken knots
+ Of the old trees would turn to eyes to see it,
+ The birds would tell of it, and all the leaves
+ Whisper above me: 'Nauhaught is a thief!'
+ The sun would know it, and the stars that hide
+ Behind his light would watch me, and at night
+ Follow me with their sharp, accusing eyes.
+ Yea, thou, God, seest me!" Then Nauhaught drew
+ Closer his belt of leather, dulling thus
+ The pain of hunger, and walked bravely back
+ To the brown fishing-hamlet by the sea;
+ And, pausing at the inn-door, cheerily asked
+ "Who hath lost aught to-day?"
+ "I," said a voice;
+ "Ten golden pieces, in a silken purse,
+ My daughter's handiwork." He looked, and to
+ One stood before him in a coat of frieze,
+ And the glazed hat of a seafaring man,
+ Shrewd-faced, broad-shouldered, with no trace of wings.
+ Marvelling, he dropped within the stranger's hand
+ The silken web, and turned to go his way.
+ But the man said: "A tithe at least is yours;
+ Take it in God's name as an honest man."
+ And as the deacon's dusky fingers closed
+ Over the golden gift, "Yea, in God's name
+ I take it, with a poor man's thanks," he said.
+ So down the street that, like a river of sand,
+ Ran, white in sunshine, to the summer sea,
+ He sought his home singing and praising God;
+ And when his neighbors in their careless way
+ Spoke of the owner of the silken purse--
+ A Wellfleet skipper, known in every port
+ That the Cape opens in its sandy wall--
+ He answered, with a wise smile, to himself
+ "I saw the angel where they see a man."
+ 1870.
+
+
+
+
+THE SISTERS.
+
+ ANNIE and Rhoda, sisters twain,
+ Woke in the night to the sound of rain,
+
+ The rush of wind, the ramp and roar
+ Of great waves climbing a rocky shore.
+
+ Annie rose up in her bed-gown white,
+ And looked out into the storm and night.
+
+ "Hush, and hearken!" she cried in fear,
+ "Hearest thou nothing, sister dear?"
+
+ "I hear the sea, and the plash of rain,
+ And roar of the northeast hurricane.
+
+ "Get thee back to the bed so warm,
+ No good comes of watching a storm.
+
+ "What is it to thee, I fain would know,
+ That waves are roaring and wild winds blow?
+
+ "No lover of thine's afloat to miss
+ The harbor-lights on a night like this."
+
+ "But I heard a voice cry out my name,
+ Up from the sea on the wind it came.
+
+ "Twice and thrice have I heard it call,
+ And the voice is the voice of Estwick Hall!"
+
+ On her pillow the sister tossed her head.
+ "Hall of the Heron is safe," she said.
+
+ "In the tautest schooner that ever swam
+ He rides at anchor in Anisquam.
+
+ "And, if in peril from swamping sea
+ Or lee shore rocks, would he call on thee?"
+
+ But the girl heard only the wind and tide,
+ And wringing her small white hands she cried,
+
+ "O sister Rhoda, there's something wrong;
+ I hear it again, so loud and long.
+
+ "'Annie! Annie!' I hear it call,
+ And the voice is the voice of Estwick Hall!"
+
+ Up sprang the elder, with eyes aflame,
+ "Thou liest! He never would call thy name!
+
+ "If he did, I would pray the wind and sea
+ To keep him forever from thee and me!"
+
+ Then out of the sea blew a dreadful blast;
+ Like the cry of a dying man it passed.
+
+ The young girl hushed on her lips a groan,
+ But through her tears a strange light shone,--
+
+ The solemn joy of her heart's release
+ To own and cherish its love in peace.
+
+ "Dearest!" she whispered, under breath,
+ "Life was a lie, but true is death.
+
+ "The love I hid from myself away
+ Shall crown me now in the light of day.
+
+ "My ears shall never to wooer list,
+ Never by lover my lips be kissed.
+
+ "Sacred to thee am I henceforth,
+ Thou in heaven and I on earth!"
+
+ She came and stood by her sister's bed
+ "Hall of the Heron is dead!" she said.
+
+ "The wind and the waves their work have done,
+ We shall see him no more beneath the sun.
+
+ "Little will reek that heart of thine,
+ It loved him not with a love like mine.
+
+ "I, for his sake, were he but here,
+ Could hem and 'broider thy bridal gear,
+
+ "Though hands should tremble and eyes be wet,
+ And stitch for stitch in my heart be set.
+
+ "But now my soul with his soul I wed;
+ Thine the living, and mine the dead!"
+
+ 1871.
+
+
+
+
+MARGUERITE.
+
+MASSACHUSETTS BAY, 1760.
+
+Upwards of one thousand of the Acadian peasants forcibly taken from
+their homes on the Gaspereau and Basin of Minas were assigned to the
+several towns of the Massachusetts colony, the children being bound by
+the authorities to service or labor.
+
+ THE robins sang in the orchard, the buds into
+ blossoms grew;
+ Little of human sorrow the buds and the robins
+ knew!
+ Sick, in an alien household, the poor French
+ neutral lay;
+ Into her lonesome garret fell the light of the April
+ day,
+ Through the dusty window, curtained by the spider's
+ warp and woof,
+ On the loose-laid floor of hemlock, on oaken ribs
+ of roof,
+ The bedquilt's faded patchwork, the teacups on the
+ stand,
+ The wheel with flaxen tangle, as it dropped from
+ her sick hand.
+
+ What to her was the song of the robin, or warm
+ morning light,
+ As she lay in the trance of the dying, heedless of
+ sound or sight?
+
+ Done was the work of her bands, she had eaten her
+ bitter bread;
+ The world of the alien people lay behind her dim
+ and dead.
+
+ But her soul went back to its child-time; she saw
+ the sun o'erflow
+ With gold the Basin of Minas, and set over
+ Gaspereau;
+
+ The low, bare flats at ebb-tide, the rush of the sea
+ at flood,
+ Through inlet and creek and river, from dike to
+ upland wood;
+
+ The gulls in the red of morning, the fish-hawk's
+ rise and fall,
+ The drift of the fog in moonshine, over the dark
+ coast-wall.
+
+ She saw the face of her mother, she heard the song
+ she sang;
+ And far off, faintly, slowly, the bell for vespers
+ rang.
+
+ By her bed the hard-faced mistress sat, smoothing
+ the wrinkled sheet,
+ Peering into the face, so helpless, and feeling the
+ ice-cold feet.
+
+ With a vague remorse atoning for her greed and
+ long abuse,
+ By care no longer heeded and pity too late for use.
+
+ Up the stairs of the garret softly the son of the
+ mistress stepped,
+ Leaned over the head-board, covering his face with
+ his hands, and wept.
+
+ Outspake the mother, who watched him sharply,
+ with brow a-frown
+ "What! love you the Papist, the beggar, the
+ charge of the town?"
+
+ Be she Papist or beggar who lies here, I know
+ and God knows
+ I love her, and fain would go with her wherever
+ she goes!
+
+ "O mother! that sweet face came pleading, for
+ love so athirst.
+ You saw but the town-charge; I knew her God's
+ angel at first."
+
+ Shaking her gray head, the mistress hushed down
+ a bitter cry;
+ And awed by the silence and shadow of death
+ drawing nigh,
+
+ She murmured a psalm of the Bible; but closer
+ the young girl pressed,
+ With the last of her life in her fingers, the cross
+ to her breast.
+
+ "My son, come away," cried the mother, her voice
+ cruel grown.
+ "She is joined to her idols, like Ephraim; let her
+ alone!"
+
+ But he knelt with his hand on her forehead, his
+ lips to her ear,
+ And he called back the soul that was passing
+ "Marguerite, do you hear?"
+
+ She paused on the threshold of Heaven; love, pity,
+ surprise,
+ Wistful, tender, lit up for an instant the cloud of
+ her eyes.
+
+ With his heart on his lips he kissed her, but never
+ her cheek grew red,
+ And the words the living long for he spake in the
+ ear of the dead.
+
+ And the robins sang in the orchard, where buds to
+ blossoms grew;
+ Of the folded hands and the still face never the
+ robins knew!
+
+ 1871.
+
+
+
+
+THE ROBIN.
+
+ MY old Welsh neighbor over the way
+ Crept slowly out in the sun of spring,
+ Pushed from her ears the locks of gray,
+ And listened to hear the robin sing.
+
+ Her grandson, playing at marbles, stopped,
+ And, cruel in sport as boys will be,
+ Tossed a stone at the bird, who hopped
+ From bough to bough in the apple-tree.
+
+ "Nay!" said the grandmother; "have you not heard,
+ My poor, bad boy! of the fiery pit,
+ And how, drop by drop, this merciful bird
+ Carries the water that quenches it?
+
+ "He brings cool dew in his little bill,
+ And lets it fall on the souls of sin
+ You can see the mark on his red breast still
+ Of fires that scorch as he drops it in.
+
+ "My poor Bron rhuddyn! my breast-burned bird,
+ Singing so sweetly from limb to limb,
+ Very dear to the heart of Our Lord
+ Is he who pities the lost like Him!"
+
+ "Amen!" I said to the beautiful myth;
+ "Sing, bird of God, in my heart as well:
+ Each good thought is a drop wherewith
+ To cool and lessen the fires of hell.
+
+ "Prayers of love like rain-drops fall,
+ Tears of pity are cooling dew,
+ And dear to the heart of Our Lord are all
+ Who suffer like Him in the good they do!"
+
+ 1871.
+
+
+
+
+THE PENNSYLVANIA PILGRIM.
+
+INTRODUCTORY NOTE.
+
+THE beginning of German emigration to America may be traced to the
+personal influence of William Penn, who in 1677 visited the Continent,
+and made the acquaintance of an intelligent and highly cultivated circle
+of Pietists, or Mystics, who, reviving in the seventeenth century the
+spiritual faith and worship of Tauler and the "Friends of God" in the
+fourteenth, gathered about the pastor Spener, and the young and
+beautiful Eleonora Johanna Von Merlau. In this circle originated the
+Frankfort Land Company, which bought of William Penn, the Governor of
+Pennsylvania, a tract of land near the new city of Philadelphia. The
+company's agent in the New World was a rising young lawyer, Francis
+Daniel Pastorius, son of Judge Pastorius, of Windsheim, who, at the age
+of seventeen, entered the University of Altorf. He studied law at,
+Strasburg, Basle, and Jena, and at Ratisbon, the seat of the Imperial
+Government, obtained a practical knowledge of international polity.
+Successful in all his examinations and disputations, he received the
+degree of Doctor of Law at Nuremberg in 1676. In 1679 he was a
+law-lecturer at Frankfort, where he became deeply interested in the
+teachings of Dr. Spener. In 1680-81 he travelled in France, England,
+Ireland, and Italy with his friend Herr Von Rodeck. "I was," he says,
+"glad to enjoy again the company of my Christian friends, rather than be
+with Von Rodeck feasting and dancing." In 1683, in company with a small
+number of German Friends, he emigrated to America, settling upon the
+Frankfort Company's tract between the Schuylkill and the Delaware
+rivers. The township was divided into four hamlets, namely, Germantown,
+Krisheim, Crefield, and Sommerhausen. Soon after his arrival he united
+himself with the Society of Friends, and became one of its most able and
+devoted members, as well as the recognized head and lawgiver of the
+settlement. He married, two years after his arrival, Anneke (Anna),
+daughter of Dr. Klosterman, of Muhlheim. In the year 1688 he drew up a
+memorial against slaveholding, which was adopted by the Germantown
+Friends and sent up to the Monthly Meeting, and thence to the Yearly
+Meeting at Philadelphia. It is noteworthy as the first protest made by
+a religious body against Negro Slavery. The original document was
+discovered in 1844 by the Philadelphia antiquarian, Nathan Kite, and
+published in The Friend (Vol. XVIII. No. 16). It is a bold and direct
+appeal to the best instincts of the heart. "Have not," he asks, "these
+negroes as much right to fight for their freedom as you have to keep
+them slaves?" Under the wise direction of Pastorius, the German-town
+settlement grew and prospered. The inhabitants planted orchards and
+vineyards, and surrounded themselves with souvenirs of their old home.
+A large number of them were linen-weavers, as well as small farmers.
+The Quakers were the principal sect, but men of all religions were
+tolerated, and lived together in harmony. In 1692 Richard Frame
+published, in what he called verse, a Description of Pennsylvania, in
+which he alludes to the settlement:--
+
+ "The German town of which I spoke before,
+ Which is at least in length one mile or more,
+ Where lives High German people and Low Dutch,
+ Whose trade in weaving linen cloth is much,
+ --There grows the flax, as also you may know
+ That from the same they do divide the tow.
+ Their trade suits well their habitation,
+ We find convenience for their occupation."
+
+Pastorius seems to have been on intimate terms with William Penn, Thomas
+Lloyd, Chief Justice Logan, Thomas Story, and other leading men in the
+Province belonging to his own religious society, as also with Kelpius,
+the learned Mystic of the Wissahickon, with the pastor of the Swedes'
+church, and the leaders of the Mennonites. He wrote a description of
+Pennsylvania, which was published at Frankfort and Leipsic in 1700 and
+1701. His Lives of the Saints, etc., written in German and dedicated to
+Professor Schurmberg, his old teacher, was published in 1690. He left
+behind him many unpublished manuscripts covering a very wide range of
+subjects, most of which are now lost. One huge manuscript folio,
+entitled Hive Beestock, Melliotropheum Alucar, or Rusca Apium, still
+remains, containing one thousand pages with about one hundred lines to a
+page. It is a medley of knowledge and fancy, history, philosophy, and
+poetry, written in seven languages. A large portion of his poetry is
+devoted to the pleasures of gardening, the description of flowers, and
+the care of bees. The following specimen of his punning Latin is
+addressed to an orchard-pilferer:--
+
+ "Quisquis in haec furtim reptas viridaria nostra
+ Tangere fallaci poma caveto mane,
+ Si non obsequeris faxit Deus omne quod opto,
+ Cum malis nostris ut mala cuncta feras."
+
+Professor Oswald Seidensticker, to whose papers in Der Deutsche Pioneer
+and that able periodical the Penn Monthly, of Philadelphia, I am
+indebted for many of the foregoing facts in regard to the German
+pilgrims of the New World, thus closes his notice of Pastorius:--
+"No tombstone, not even a record of burial, indicates where his remains
+have found their last resting-place, and the pardonable desire to
+associate the homage due to this distinguished man with some visible
+memento can not be gratified. There is no reason to suppose that he was
+interred in any other place than the Friends' old burying-ground in
+Germantown, though the fact is not attested by any definite source of
+information. After all, this obliteration of the last trace of his
+earthly existence is but typical of what has overtaken the times which
+he represents; that Germantown which he founded, which saw him live and
+move, is at present but a quaint idyl of the past, almost a myth, barely
+remembered and little cared for by the keener race that has succeeded.
+The Pilgrims of Plymouth have not lacked historian and poet. Justice has
+been done to their faith, courage, and self-sacrifice, and to the mighty
+influence of their endeavors to establish righteousness on the earth.
+The Quaker pilgrims of Pennsylvania, seeking the same object by
+different means, have not been equally fortunate. The power of their
+testimony for truth and holiness, peace and freedom, enforced only by
+what Milton calls "the unresistible might of meekness," has been felt
+through two centuries in the amelioration of penal severities, the
+abolition of slavery, the reform of the erring, the relief of the poor
+and suffering,--felt, in brief, in every step of human progress. But of
+the men themselves, with the single exception of William Penn, scarcely
+anything is known. Contrasted, from the outset, with the stern,
+aggressive Puritans of New England, they have come to be regarded as
+"a feeble folk," with a personality as doubtful as their unrecorded
+graves. They were not soldiers, like Miles Standish; they had no figure
+so picturesque as Vane, no leader so rashly brave and haughty as
+Endicott. No Cotton Mather wrote their Magnalia; they had no awful drama
+of supernaturalism in which Satan and his angels were actors; and the
+only witch mentioned in their simple annals was a poor old Swedish
+woman, who, on complaint of her countrywomen, was tried and acquitted
+of everything but imbecility and folly. Nothing but common-place offices
+of civility came to pass between them and the Indians; indeed, their
+enemies taunted them with the fact that the savages did not regard them
+as Christians, but just such men as themselves. Yet it must be apparent
+to every careful observer of the progress of American civilization that
+its two principal currents had their sources in the entirely opposite
+directions of the Puritan and Quaker colonies. To use the words of a
+late writer: (1) "The historical forces, with which no others may be
+compared in their influence on the people, have been those of the
+Puritan and the Quaker. The strength of the one was in the confession of
+an invisible Presence, a righteous, eternal Will, which would establish
+righteousness on earth; and thence arose the conviction of a direct
+personal responsibility, which could be tempted by no external splendor
+and could be shaken by no internal agitation, and could not be evaded or
+transferred. The strength of the other was the witness in the human
+spirit to an eternal Word, an Inner Voice which spoke to each alone,
+while yet it spoke to every man; a Light which each was to follow, and
+which yet was the light of the world; and all other voices were silent
+before this, and the solitary path whither it led was more sacred than
+the worn ways of cathedral-aisles." It will be sufficiently apparent to
+the reader that, in the poem which follows, I have attempted nothing
+beyond a study of the life and times of the Pennsylvania colonist,--a
+simple picture of a noteworthy man and his locality. The colors of my
+sketch are all very sober, toned down to the quiet and dreamy atmosphere
+through which its subject is visible. Whether, in the glare and tumult
+of the present time, such a picture will find favor may well be
+questioned. I only know that it has beguiled for me some hours of
+weariness, and that, whatever may be its measure of public appreciation,
+it has been to me its own reward.
+ J. G. W.
+AMESBURY, 5th mo., 1872.
+
+
+ HAIL to posterity!
+ Hail, future men of Germanopolis!
+ Let the young generations yet to be
+ Look kindly upon this.
+ Think how your fathers left their native land,--
+ Dear German-land! O sacred hearths and homes!--
+
+ And, where the wild beast roams,
+ In patience planned
+ New forest-homes beyond the mighty sea,
+ There undisturbed and free
+ To live as brothers of one family.
+ What pains and cares befell,
+ What trials and what fears,
+ Remember, and wherein we have done well
+ Follow our footsteps, men of coming years!
+ Where we have failed to do
+ Aright, or wisely live,
+ Be warned by us, the better way pursue,
+ And, knowing we were human, even as you,
+ Pity us and forgive!
+ Farewell, Posterity!
+ Farewell, dear Germany
+ Forevermore farewell!
+
+ (From the Latin of Francis DANIEL PASTORIUS in
+ the Germantown Records. 1688.)
+
+
+ PRELUDE.
+
+ I SING the Pilgrim of a softer clime
+ And milder speech than those brave men's who brought
+ To the ice and iron of our winter time
+ A will as firm, a creed as stern, and wrought
+ With one mailed hand, and with the other fought.
+ Simply, as fits my theme, in homely rhyme
+ I sing the blue-eyed German Spener taught,
+ Through whose veiled, mystic faith the Inward Light,
+ Steady and still, an easy brightness, shone,
+ Transfiguring all things in its radiance white.
+ The garland which his meekness never sought
+ I bring him; over fields of harvest sown
+ With seeds of blessing, now to ripeness grown,
+ I bid the sower pass before the reapers' sight.
+
+ . . . . . . . . . .
+
+ Never in tenderer quiet lapsed the day
+ From Pennsylvania's vales of spring away,
+ Where, forest-walled, the scattered hamlets lay
+
+ Along the wedded rivers. One long bar
+ Of purple cloud, on which the evening star
+ Shone like a jewel on a scimitar,
+
+ Held the sky's golden gateway. Through the deep
+ Hush of the woods a murmur seemed to creep,
+ The Schuylkill whispering in a voice of sleep.
+
+ All else was still. The oxen from their ploughs
+ Rested at last, and from their long day's browse
+ Came the dun files of Krisheim's home-bound cows.
+
+ And the young city, round whose virgin zone
+ The rivers like two mighty arms were thrown,
+ Marked by the smoke of evening fires alone,
+
+ Lay in the distance, lovely even then
+ With its fair women and its stately men
+ Gracing the forest court of William Penn,
+
+ Urban yet sylvan; in its rough-hewn frames
+ Of oak and pine the dryads held their claims,
+ And lent its streets their pleasant woodland names.
+
+ Anna Pastorius down the leafy lane
+ Looked city-ward, then stooped to prune again
+ Her vines and simples, with a sigh of pain.
+
+ For fast the streaks of ruddy sunset paled
+ In the oak clearing, and, as daylight failed,
+ Slow, overhead, the dusky night-birds sailed.
+
+ Again she looked: between green walls of shade,
+ With low-bent head as if with sorrow weighed,
+ Daniel Pastorius slowly came and said,
+
+ "God's peace be with thee, Anna!" Then he stood
+ Silent before her, wrestling with the mood
+ Of one who sees the evil and not good.
+
+ "What is it, my Pastorius?" As she spoke,
+ A slow, faint smile across his features broke,
+ Sadder than tears. "Dear heart," he said, "our folk
+
+ "Are even as others. Yea, our goodliest Friends
+ Are frail; our elders have their selfish ends,
+ And few dare trust the Lord to make amends
+
+ "For duty's loss. So even our feeble word
+ For the dumb slaves the startled meeting heard
+ As if a stone its quiet waters stirred;
+
+ "And, as the clerk ceased reading, there began
+ A ripple of dissent which downward ran
+ In widening circles, as from man to man.
+
+ "Somewhat was said of running before sent,
+ Of tender fear that some their guide outwent,
+ Troublers of Israel. I was scarce intent
+
+ "On hearing, for behind the reverend row
+ Of gallery Friends, in dumb and piteous show,
+ I saw, methought, dark faces full of woe.
+
+ "And, in the spirit, I was taken where
+ They toiled and suffered; I was made aware
+ Of shame and wrath and anguish and despair!
+
+ "And while the meeting smothered our poor plea
+ With cautious phrase, a Voice there seemed to be,
+ As ye have done to these ye do to me!'
+
+ "So it all passed; and the old tithe went on
+ Of anise, mint, and cumin, till the sun
+ Set, leaving still the weightier work undone.
+
+ "Help, for the good man faileth! Who is strong,
+ If these be weak? Who shall rebuke the wrong,
+ If these consent? How long, O Lord! how long!"
+
+ He ceased; and, bound in spirit with the bound,
+ With folded arms, and eyes that sought the ground,
+ Walked musingly his little garden round.
+
+ About him, beaded with the falling dew,
+ Rare plants of power and herbs of healing grew,
+ Such as Van Helmont and Agrippa knew.
+
+ For, by the lore of Gorlitz' gentle sage,
+ With the mild mystics of his dreamy age
+ He read the herbal signs of nature's page,
+
+ As once he heard in sweet Von Merlau's' bowers
+ Fair as herself, in boyhood's happy hours,
+ The pious Spener read his creed in flowers.
+
+ "The dear Lord give us patience!" said his wife,
+ Touching with finger-tip an aloe, rife
+ With leaves sharp-pointed like an Aztec knife
+
+ Or Carib spear, a gift to William Penn
+ From the rare gardens of John Evelyn,
+ Brought from the Spanish Main by merchantmen.
+
+ "See this strange plant its steady purpose hold,
+ And, year by year, its patient leaves unfold,
+ Till the young eyes that watched it first are old.
+
+ "But some time, thou hast told me, there shall come
+ A sudden beauty, brightness, and perfume,
+ The century-moulded bud shall burst in bloom.
+
+ "So may the seed which hath been sown to-day
+ Grow with the years, and, after long delay,
+ Break into bloom, and God's eternal Yea!
+
+ "Answer at last the patient prayers of them
+ Who now, by faith alone, behold its stem
+ Crowned with the flowers of Freedom's diadem.
+
+ "Meanwhile, to feel and suffer, work and wait,
+ Remains for us. The wrong indeed is great,
+ But love and patience conquer soon or late."
+
+ "Well hast thou said, my Anna!" Tenderer
+ Than youth's caress upon the head of her
+ Pastorius laid his hand. "Shall we demur
+
+ "Because the vision tarrieth? In an hour
+ We dream not of, the slow-grown bud may flower,
+ And what was sown in weakness rise in power!"
+
+ Then through the vine-draped door whose legend read,
+ "Procul este profani!" Anna led
+ To where their child upon his little bed
+
+ Looked up and smiled. "Dear heart," she said, "if we
+ Must bearers of a heavy burden be,
+ Our boy, God willing, yet the day shall see
+
+ "When from the gallery to the farthest seat,
+ Slave and slave-owner shall no longer meet,
+ But all sit equal at the Master's feet."
+
+ On the stone hearth the blazing walnut block
+ Set the low walls a-glimmer, showed the cock
+ Rebuking Peter on the Van Wyck clock,
+
+ Shone on old tomes of law and physic, side
+ By side with Fox and Belimen, played at hide
+ And seek with Anna, midst her household pride
+
+ Of flaxen webs, and on the table, bare
+ Of costly cloth or silver cup, but where,
+ Tasting the fat shads of the Delaware,
+
+ The courtly Penn had praised the goodwife's cheer,
+ And quoted Horace o'er her home brewed beer,
+ Till even grave Pastorius smiled to hear.
+
+ In such a home, beside the Schuylkill's wave,
+ He dwelt in peace with God and man, and gave
+ Food to the poor and shelter to the slave.
+
+ For all too soon the New World's scandal shamed
+ The righteous code by Penn and Sidney framed,
+ And men withheld the human rights they claimed.
+
+ And slowly wealth and station sanction lent,
+ And hardened avarice, on its gains intent,
+ Stifled the inward whisper of dissent.
+
+ Yet all the while the burden rested sore
+ On tender hearts. At last Pastorius bore
+ Their warning message to the Church's door
+
+ In God's name; and the leaven of the word
+ Wrought ever after in the souls who heard,
+ And a dead conscience in its grave-clothes stirred
+
+ To troubled life, and urged the vain excuse
+ Of Hebrew custom, patriarchal use,
+ Good in itself if evil in abuse.
+
+ Gravely Pastorius listened, not the less
+ Discerning through the decent fig-leaf dress
+ Of the poor plea its shame of selfishness.
+
+ One Scripture rule, at least, was unforgot;
+ He hid the outcast, and betrayed him not;
+ And, when his prey the human hunter sought,
+
+ He scrupled not, while Anna's wise delay
+ And proffered cheer prolonged the master's stay,
+ To speed the black guest safely on his way.
+
+ Yet, who shall guess his bitter grief who lends
+ His life to some great cause, and finds his friends
+ Shame or betray it for their private ends?
+
+ How felt the Master when his chosen strove
+ In childish folly for their seats above;
+ And that fond mother, blinded by her love,
+
+ Besought him that her sons, beside his throne,
+ Might sit on either hand? Amidst his own
+ A stranger oft, companionless and lone,
+
+ God's priest and prophet stands. The martyr's pain
+ Is not alone from scourge and cell and chain;
+ Sharper the pang when, shouting in his train,
+
+ His weak disciples by their lives deny
+ The loud hosannas of their daily cry,
+ And make their echo of his truth a lie.
+
+ His forest home no hermit's cell he found,
+ Guests, motley-minded, drew his hearth around,
+ And held armed truce upon its neutral ground.
+
+ There Indian chiefs with battle-bows unstrung,
+ Strong, hero-limbed, like those whom Homer sung,
+ Pastorius fancied, when the world was young,
+
+ Came with their tawny women, lithe and tall,
+ Like bronzes in his friend Von Rodeck's hall,
+ Comely, if black, and not unpleasing all.
+
+ There hungry folk in homespun drab and gray
+ Drew round his board on Monthly Meeting day,
+ Genial, half merry in their friendly way.
+
+ Or, haply, pilgrims from the Fatherland,
+ Weak, timid, homesick, slow to understand
+ The New World's promise, sought his helping hand.
+
+ Or painful Kelpius (13) from his hermit den
+ By Wissahickon, maddest of good men,
+ Dreamed o'er the Chiliast dreams of Petersen.
+
+ Deep in the woods, where the small river slid
+ Snake-like in shade, the Helmstadt Mystic hid,
+ Weird as a wizard, over arts forbid,
+
+ Reading the books of Daniel and of John,
+ And Behmen's Morning-Redness, through the Stone
+ Of Wisdom, vouchsafed to his eyes alone,
+
+ Whereby he read what man ne'er read before,
+ And saw the visions man shall see no more,
+ Till the great angel, striding sea and shore,
+
+ Shall bid all flesh await, on land or ships,
+ The warning trump of the Apocalypse,
+ Shattering the heavens before the dread eclipse.
+
+ Or meek-eyed Mennonist his bearded chin
+ Leaned o'er the gate; or Ranter, pure within,
+ Aired his perfection in a world of sin.
+
+ Or, talking of old home scenes, Op der Graaf
+ Teased the low back-log with his shodden staff,
+ Till the red embers broke into a laugh
+
+ And dance of flame, as if they fain would cheer
+ The rugged face, half tender, half austere,
+ Touched with the pathos of a homesick tear!
+
+ Or Sluyter, (14) saintly familist, whose word
+ As law the Brethren of the Manor heard,
+ Announced the speedy terrors of the Lord,
+
+ And turned, like Lot at Sodom, from his race,
+ Above a wrecked world with complacent face
+ Riding secure upon his plank of grace!
+
+ Haply, from Finland's birchen groves exiled,
+ Manly in thought, in simple ways a child,
+ His white hair floating round his visage mild,
+
+ The Swedish pastor sought the Quaker's door,
+ Pleased from his neighbor's lips to hear once more
+ His long-disused and half-forgotten lore.
+
+ For both could baffle Babel's lingual curse,
+ And speak in Bion's Doric, and rehearse
+ Cleanthes' hymn or Virgil's sounding verse.
+
+ And oft Pastorius and the meek old man
+ Argued as Quaker and as Lutheran,
+ Ending in Christian love, as they began.
+
+ With lettered Lloyd on pleasant morns he strayed
+ Where Sommerhausen over vales of shade
+ Looked miles away, by every flower delayed,
+
+ Or song of bird, happy and free with one
+ Who loved, like him, to let his memory run
+ Over old fields of learning, and to sun
+
+ Himself in Plato's wise philosophies,
+ And dream with Philo over mysteries
+ Whereof the dreamer never finds the keys;
+
+ To touch all themes of thought, nor weakly stop
+ For doubt of truth, but let the buckets drop
+ Deep down and bring the hidden waters up (15)
+
+ For there was freedom in that wakening time
+ Of tender souls; to differ was not crime;
+ The varying bells made up the perfect chime.
+
+ On lips unlike was laid the altar's coal,
+ The white, clear light, tradition-colored, stole
+ Through the stained oriel of each human soul.
+
+ Gathered from many sects, the Quaker brought
+ His old beliefs, adjusting to the thought
+ That moved his soul the creed his fathers taught.
+
+ One faith alone, so broad that all mankind
+ Within themselves its secret witness find,
+ The soul's communion with the Eternal Mind,
+
+ The Spirit's law, the Inward Rule and Guide,
+ Scholar and peasant, lord and serf, allied,
+ The polished Penn and Cromwell's Ironside.
+
+ As still in Hemskerck's Quaker Meeting, (16) face
+ By face in Flemish detail, we may trace
+ How loose-mouthed boor and fine ancestral grace
+
+ Sat in close contrast,--the clipt-headed churl,
+ Broad market-dame, and simple serving-girl
+ By skirt of silk and periwig in curl
+
+ For soul touched soul; the spiritual treasure-trove
+ Made all men equal, none could rise above
+ Nor sink below that level of God's love.
+
+ So, with his rustic neighbors sitting down,
+ The homespun frock beside the scholar's gown,
+ Pastorius to the manners of the town
+
+ Added the freedom of the woods, and sought
+ The bookless wisdom by experience taught,
+ And learned to love his new-found home, while not
+
+ Forgetful of the old; the seasons went
+ Their rounds, and somewhat to his spirit lent
+ Of their own calm and measureless content.
+
+ Glad even to tears, he heard the robin sing
+ His song of welcome to the Western spring,
+ And bluebird borrowing from the sky his wing.
+
+ And when the miracle of autumn came,
+ And all the woods with many-colored flame
+ Of splendor, making summer's greenness tame,
+
+ Burned, unconsumed, a voice without a sound
+ Spake to him from each kindled bush around,
+ And made the strange, new landscape holy ground
+
+ And when the bitter north-wind, keen and swift,
+ Swept the white street and piled the dooryard drift,
+ He exercised, as Friends might say, his gift
+
+ Of verse, Dutch, English, Latin, like the hash
+ Of corn and beans in Indian succotash;
+ Dull, doubtless, but with here and there a flash
+
+ Of wit and fine conceit,--the good man's play
+ Of quiet fancies, meet to while away
+ The slow hours measuring off an idle day.
+
+ At evening, while his wife put on her look
+ Of love's endurance, from its niche he took
+ The written pages of his ponderous book.
+
+ And read, in half the languages of man,
+ His "Rusca Apium," which with bees began,
+ And through the gamut of creation ran.
+
+ Or, now and then, the missive of some friend
+ In gray Altorf or storied Nurnberg penned
+ Dropped in upon him like a guest to spend
+
+ The night beneath his roof-tree. Mystical
+ The fair Von Merlau spake as waters fall
+ And voices sound in dreams, and yet withal
+
+ Human and sweet, as if each far, low tone,
+ Over the roses of her gardens blown
+ Brought the warm sense of beauty all her own.
+
+ Wise Spener questioned what his friend could trace
+ Of spiritual influx or of saving grace
+ In the wild natures of the Indian race.
+
+ And learned Schurmberg, fain, at times, to look
+ From Talmud, Koran, Veds, and Pentateuch,
+ Sought out his pupil in his far-off nook,
+
+ To query with him of climatic change,
+ Of bird, beast, reptile, in his forest range,
+ Of flowers and fruits and simples new and strange.
+
+ And thus the Old and New World reached their hands
+ Across the water, and the friendly lands
+ Talked with each other from their severed strands.
+
+ Pastorius answered all: while seed and root
+ Sent from his new home grew to flower and fruit
+ Along the Rhine and at the Spessart's foot;
+
+ And, in return, the flowers his boyhood knew
+ Smiled at his door, the same in form and hue,
+ And on his vines the Rhenish clusters grew.
+
+ No idler he; whoever else might shirk,
+ He set his hand to every honest work,--
+ Farmer and teacher, court and meeting clerk.
+
+ Still on the town seal his device is found,
+ Grapes, flax, and thread-spool on a trefoil ground,
+ With "Vinum, Linum et Textrinum" wound.
+
+ One house sufficed for gospel and for law,
+ Where Paul and Grotius, Scripture text and saw,
+ Assured the good, and held the rest in awe.
+
+ Whatever legal maze he wandered through,
+ He kept the Sermon on the Mount in view,
+ And justice always into mercy grew.
+
+ No whipping-post he needed, stocks, nor jail,
+ Nor ducking-stool; the orchard-thief grew pale
+ At his rebuke, the vixen ceased to rail,
+
+ The usurer's grasp released the forfeit land;
+ The slanderer faltered at the witness-stand,
+ And all men took his counsel for command.
+
+ Was it caressing air, the brooding love
+ Of tenderer skies than German land knew of,
+ Green calm below, blue quietness above,
+
+ Still flow of water, deep repose of wood
+ That, with a sense of loving Fatherhood
+ And childlike trust in the Eternal Good,
+
+ Softened all hearts, and dulled the edge of hate,
+ Hushed strife, and taught impatient zeal to wait
+ The slow assurance of the better state?
+
+ Who knows what goadings in their sterner way
+ O'er jagged ice, relieved by granite gray,
+ Blew round the men of Massachusetts Bay?
+
+ What hate of heresy the east-wind woke?
+ What hints of pitiless power and terror spoke
+ In waves that on their iron coast-line broke?
+
+ Be it as it may: within the Land of Penn
+ The sectary yielded to the citizen,
+ And peaceful dwelt the many-creeded men.
+
+ Peace brooded over all. No trumpet stung
+ The air to madness, and no steeple flung
+ Alarums down from bells at midnight rung.
+
+ The land slept well. The Indian from his face
+ Washed all his war-paint off, and in the place
+ Of battle-marches sped the peaceful chase,
+
+ Or wrought for wages at the white man's side,--
+ Giving to kindness what his native pride
+ And lazy freedom to all else denied.
+
+ And well the curious scholar loved the old
+ Traditions that his swarthy neighbors told
+ By wigwam-fires when nights were growing cold,
+
+ Discerned the fact round which their fancy drew
+ Its dreams, and held their childish faith more true
+ To God and man than half the creeds he knew.
+
+ The desert blossomed round him; wheat-fields rolled
+ Beneath the warm wind waves of green and gold;
+ The planted ear returned its hundred-fold.
+
+ Great clusters ripened in a warmer sun
+ Than that which by the Rhine stream shines upon
+ The purpling hillsides with low vines o'errun.
+
+ About each rustic porch the humming-bird
+ Tried with light bill, that scarce a petal stirred,
+ The Old World flowers to virgin soil transferred;
+
+ And the first-fruits of pear and apple, bending
+ The young boughs down, their gold and russet blending,
+ Made glad his heart, familiar odors lending
+
+ To the fresh fragrance of the birch and pine,
+ Life-everlasting, bay, and eglantine,
+ And all the subtle scents the woods combine.
+
+ Fair First-Day mornings, steeped in summer calm,
+ Warm, tender, restful, sweet with woodland balm,
+ Came to him, like some mother-hallowed psalm
+
+ To the tired grinder at the noisy wheel
+ Of labor, winding off from memory's reel
+ A golden thread of music. With no peal
+
+ Of bells to call them to the house of praise,
+ The scattered settlers through green forest-ways
+ Walked meeting-ward. In reverent amaze
+
+ The Indian trapper saw them, from the dim
+ Shade of the alders on the rivulet's rim,
+ Seek the Great Spirit's house to talk with Him.
+
+ There, through the gathered stillness multiplied
+ And made intense by sympathy, outside
+ The sparrows sang, and the gold-robin cried,
+
+ A-swing upon his elm. A faint perfume
+ Breathed through the open windows of the room
+ From locust-trees, heavy with clustered bloom.
+
+ Thither, perchance, sore-tried confessors came,
+ Whose fervor jail nor pillory could tame,
+ Proud of the cropped ears meant to be their shame,
+
+ Men who had eaten slavery's bitter bread
+ In Indian isles; pale women who had bled
+ Under the hangman's lash, and bravely said
+
+ God's message through their prison's iron bars;
+ And gray old soldier-converts, seamed with scars
+ From every stricken field of England's wars.
+
+ Lowly before the Unseen Presence knelt
+ Each waiting heart, till haply some one felt
+ On his moved lips the seal of silence melt.
+
+ Or, without spoken words, low breathings stole
+ Of a diviner life from soul to soul,
+ Baptizing in one tender thought the whole.
+
+ When shaken hands announced the meeting o'er,
+ The friendly group still lingered at the door,
+ Greeting, inquiring, sharing all the store
+
+ Of weekly tidings. Meanwhile youth and maid
+ Down the green vistas of the woodland strayed,
+ Whispered and smiled and oft their feet delayed.
+
+ Did the boy's whistle answer back the thrushes?
+ Did light girl laughter ripple through the bushes,
+ As brooks make merry over roots and rushes?
+
+ Unvexed the sweet air seemed. Without a wound
+ The ear of silence heard, and every sound
+ Its place in nature's fine accordance found.
+
+ And solemn meeting, summer sky and wood,
+ Old kindly faces, youth and maidenhood
+ Seemed, like God's new creation, very good!
+
+ And, greeting all with quiet smile and word,
+ Pastorius went his way. The unscared bird
+ Sang at his side; scarcely the squirrel stirred
+
+ At his hushed footstep on the mossy sod;
+ And, wheresoe'er the good man looked or trod,
+ He felt the peace of nature and of God.
+
+ His social life wore no ascetic form,
+ He loved all beauty, without fear of harm,
+ And in his veins his Teuton blood ran warm.
+
+ Strict to himself, of other men no spy,
+ He made his own no circuit-judge to try
+ The freer conscience of his neighbors by.
+
+ With love rebuking, by his life alone,
+ Gracious and sweet, the better way was shown,
+ The joy of one, who, seeking not his own,
+
+ And faithful to all scruples, finds at last
+ The thorns and shards of duty overpast,
+ And daily life, beyond his hope's forecast,
+
+ Pleasant and beautiful with sight and sound,
+ And flowers upspringing in its narrow round,
+ And all his days with quiet gladness crowned.
+
+ He sang not; but, if sometimes tempted strong,
+ He hummed what seemed like Altorf's Burschen-song;
+ His good wife smiled, and did not count it wrong.
+
+ For well he loved his boyhood's brother band;
+ His Memory, while he trod the New World's strand,
+ A double-ganger walked the Fatherland
+
+ If, when on frosty Christmas eves the light
+ Shone on his quiet hearth, he missed the sight
+ Of Yule-log, Tree, and Christ-child all in white;
+
+ And closed his eyes, and listened to the sweet
+ Old wait-songs sounding down his native street,
+ And watched again the dancers' mingling feet;
+
+ Yet not the less, when once the vision passed,
+ He held the plain and sober maxims fast
+ Of the dear Friends with whom his lot was cast.
+
+ Still all attuned to nature's melodies,
+ He loved the bird's song in his dooryard trees,
+ And the low hum of home-returning bees;
+
+ The blossomed flax, the tulip-trees in bloom
+ Down the long street, the beauty and perfume
+ Of apple-boughs, the mingling light and gloom
+
+ Of Sommerhausen's woodlands, woven through
+ With sun--threads; and the music the wind drew,
+ Mournful and sweet, from leaves it overblew.
+
+ And evermore, beneath this outward sense,
+ And through the common sequence of events,
+ He felt the guiding hand of Providence
+
+ Reach out of space. A Voice spake in his ear,
+ And to all other voices far and near
+ Died at that whisper, full of meanings clear.
+
+ The Light of Life shone round him; one by one
+ The wandering lights, that all-misleading run,
+ Went out like candles paling in the sun.
+
+ That Light he followed, step by step, where'er
+ It led, as in the vision of the seer
+ The wheels moved as the spirit in the clear
+
+ And terrible crystal moved, with all their eyes
+ Watching the living splendor sink or rise,
+ Its will their will, knowing no otherwise.
+
+ Within himself he found the law of right,
+ He walked by faith and not the letter's sight,
+ And read his Bible by the Inward Light.
+
+ And if sometimes the slaves of form and rule,
+ Frozen in their creeds like fish in winter's pool,
+ Tried the large tolerance of his liberal school,
+
+ His door was free to men of every name,
+ He welcomed all the seeking souls who came,
+ And no man's faith he made a cause of blame.
+
+ But best he loved in leisure hours to see
+ His own dear Friends sit by him knee to knee,
+ In social converse, genial, frank, and free.
+
+ There sometimes silence (it were hard to tell
+ Who owned it first) upon the circle fell,
+ Hushed Anna's busy wheel, and laid its spell
+
+ On the black boy who grimaced by the hearth,
+ To solemnize his shining face of mirth;
+ Only the old clock ticked amidst the dearth
+
+ Of sound; nor eye was raised nor hand was stirred
+ In that soul-sabbath, till at last some word
+ Of tender counsel or low prayer was heard.
+
+ Then guests, who lingered but farewell to say
+ And take love's message, went their homeward way;
+ So passed in peace the guileless Quaker's day.
+
+ His was the Christian's unsung Age of Gold,
+ A truer idyl than the bards have told
+ Of Arno's banks or Arcady of old.
+
+ Where still the Friends their place of burial keep,
+ And century-rooted mosses o'er it creep,
+ The Nurnberg scholar and his helpmeet sleep.
+
+ And Anna's aloe? If it flowered at last
+ In Bartram's garden, did John Woolman cast
+ A glance upon it as he meekly passed?
+
+ And did a secret sympathy possess
+ That tender soul, and for the slave's redress
+ Lend hope, strength, patience? It were vain to
+ guess.
+
+ Nay, were the plant itself but mythical,
+ Set in the fresco of tradition's wall
+ Like Jotham's bramble, mattereth not at all.
+
+ Enough to know that, through the winter's frost
+ And summer's heat, no seed of truth is lost,
+ And every duty pays at last its cost.
+
+ For, ere Pastorius left the sun and air,
+ God sent the answer to his life-long prayer;
+ The child was born beside the Delaware,
+
+ Who, in the power a holy purpose lends,
+ Guided his people unto nobler ends,
+ And left them worthier of the name of Friends.
+
+ And to! the fulness of the time has come,
+ And over all the exile's Western home,
+ From sea to sea the flowers of freedom bloom!
+
+ And joy-bells ring, and silver trumpets blow;
+ But not for thee, Pastorius! Even so
+ The world forgets, but the wise angels know.
+
+
+
+
+KING VOLMER AND ELSIE.
+
+AFTER THE DANISH OF CHRISTIAN WINTER.
+
+ WHERE, over heathen doom-rings and gray stones
+ of the Horg,
+ In its little Christian city stands the church of
+ Vordingborg,
+ In merry mood King Volmer sat, forgetful of his
+ power,
+ As idle as the Goose of Gold that brooded on his
+ tower.
+
+ Out spake the King to Henrik, his young and faithful
+ squire
+ "Dar'st trust thy little Elsie, the maid of thy
+ desire?"
+ "Of all the men in Denmark she loveth only me
+ As true to me is Elsie as thy Lily is to thee."
+
+ Loud laughed the king: "To-morrow shall bring
+ another day, (18)
+ When I myself will test her; she will not say me
+ nay."
+ Thereat the lords and gallants, that round about
+ him stood,
+ Wagged all their heads in concert and smiled as
+ courtiers should.
+
+ The gray lark sings o'er Vordingborg, and on the
+ ancient town
+ From the tall tower of Valdemar the Golden Goose
+ looks down;
+ The yellow grain is waving in the pleasant wind of
+ morn,
+ The wood resounds with cry of hounds and blare
+ of hunter's horn.
+
+ In the garden of her father little Elsie sits and
+ spins,
+ And, singing with the early birds, her daily task,
+ begins.
+ Gay tulips bloom and sweet mint curls around her
+ garden-bower,
+ But she is sweeter than the mint and fairer than
+ the flower.
+
+ About her form her kirtle blue clings lovingly, and,
+ white
+ As snow, her loose sleeves only leave her small,
+ round wrists in sight;
+ Below, the modest petticoat can only half conceal
+ The motion of the lightest foot that ever turned a
+ wheel.
+
+ The cat sits purring at her side, bees hum in
+ sunshine warm;
+ But, look! she starts, she lifts her face, she shades
+ it with her arm.
+ And, hark! a train of horsemen, with sound of
+ dog and horn,
+ Come leaping o'er the ditches, come trampling
+ down the corn!
+
+ Merrily rang the bridle-reins, and scarf and plume
+ streamed gay,
+ As fast beside her father's gate the riders held
+ their way;
+ And one was brave in scarlet cloak, with golden
+ spur on heel,
+ And, as he checked his foaming steed, the maiden
+ checked her wheel.
+
+ "All hail among thy roses, the fairest rose to me!
+ For weary months in secret my heart has longed for
+ thee!"
+ What noble knight was this? What words for
+ modest maiden's ear?
+ She dropped a lowly courtesy of bashfulness and
+ fear.
+
+ She lifted up her spinning-wheel; she fain would
+ seek the door,
+ Trembling in every limb, her cheek with blushes
+ crimsoned o'er.
+ "Nay, fear me not," the rider said, "I offer heart
+ and hand,
+ Bear witness these good Danish knights who round
+ about me stand.
+
+ "I grant you time to think of this, to answer as
+ you may,
+ For to-morrow, little Elsie, shall bring another day."
+ He spake the old phrase slyly as, glancing round
+ his train,
+ He saw his merry followers seek to hide their
+ smiles in vain.
+
+ "The snow of pearls I'll scatter in your curls of
+ golden hair,
+ I'll line with furs the velvet of the kirtle that you
+ wear;
+ All precious gems shall twine your neck; and in
+ a chariot gay
+ You shall ride, my little Elsie, behind four steeds
+ of gray.
+
+ "And harps shall sound, and flutes shall play, and
+ brazen lamps shall glow;
+ On marble floors your feet shall weave the dances
+ to and fro.
+ At frosty eventide for us the blazing hearth shall
+ shine,
+ While, at our ease, we play at draughts, and drink
+ the blood-red wine."
+
+ Then Elsie raised her head and met her wooer face
+ to face;
+ A roguish smile shone in her eye and on her lip
+ found place.
+ Back from her low white forehead the curls of
+ gold she threw,
+ And lifted up her eyes to his, steady and clear and
+ blue.
+
+ "I am a lowly peasant, and you a gallant knight;
+ I will not trust a love that soon may cool and turn
+ to slight.
+ If you would wed me henceforth be a peasant, not
+ a lord;
+ I bid you hang upon the wall your tried and trusty
+ sword."
+
+ "To please you, Elsie, I will lay keen Dynadel
+ away,
+ And in its place will swing the scythe and mow
+ your father's hay."
+ "Nay, but your gallant scarlet cloak my eyes can
+ never bear;
+ A Vadmal coat, so plain and gray, is all that you
+ must wear."
+
+ "Well, Vadmal will I wear for you," the rider
+ gayly spoke,
+ "And on the Lord's high altar I'll lay my scarlet
+ cloak."
+ "But mark," she said, "no stately horse my peasant
+ love must ride,
+ A yoke of steers before the plough is all that he
+ must guide."
+
+ The knight looked down upon his steed: "Well,
+ let him wander free
+ No other man must ride the horse that has been
+ backed by me.
+ Henceforth I'll tread the furrow and to my oxen
+ talk,
+ If only little Elsie beside my plough will walk."
+
+ "You must take from out your cellar cask of wine
+ and flask and can;
+ The homely mead I brew you may serve a peasant.
+ man."
+ "Most willingly, fair Elsie, I'll drink that mead
+ of thine,
+ And leave my minstrel's thirsty throat to drain
+ my generous wine."
+
+ "Now break your shield asunder, and shatter sign
+ and boss,
+ Unmeet for peasant-wedded arms, your knightly
+ knee across.
+ And pull me down your castle from top to basement
+ wall,
+ And let your plough trace furrows in the ruins of
+ your hall!"
+
+ Then smiled he with a lofty pride; right well at
+ last he knew
+ The maiden of the spinning-wheel was to her troth.
+ plight true.
+ "Ah, roguish little Elsie! you act your part full
+ well
+ You know that I must bear my shield and in my
+ castle dwell!
+
+ "The lions ramping on that shield between the
+ hearts aflame
+ Keep watch o'er Denmark's honor, and guard her
+ ancient name.
+
+ "For know that I am Volmer; I dwell in yonder
+ towers,
+ Who ploughs them ploughs up Denmark, this
+ goodly home of ours'.
+
+ "I tempt no more, fair Elsie! your heart I know
+ is true;
+ Would God that all our maidens were good and
+ pure as you!
+ Well have you pleased your monarch, and he shall
+ well repay;
+ God's peace! Farewell! To-morrow will bring
+ another day!"
+
+ He lifted up his bridle hand, he spurred his good
+ steed then,
+ And like a whirl-blast swept away with all his
+ gallant men.
+ The steel hoofs beat the rocky path; again on
+ winds of morn
+ The wood resounds with cry of hounds and blare
+ of hunter's horn.
+
+ "Thou true and ever faithful!" the listening
+ Henrik cried;
+ And, leaping o'er the green hedge, he stood by
+ Elsie's side.
+ None saw the fond embracing, save, shining from
+ afar,
+ The Golden Goose that watched them from the
+ tower of Valdemar.
+
+ O darling girls of Denmark! of all the flowers
+ that throng
+ Her vales of spring the fairest, I sing for you my
+ song.
+ No praise as yours so bravely rewards the singer's
+ skill;
+ Thank God! of maids like Elsie the land has
+ plenty still!
+
+ 1872.
+
+
+
+
+THE THREE BELLS.
+
+ BENEATH the low-hung night cloud
+ That raked her splintering mast
+ The good ship settled slowly,
+ The cruel leak gained fast.
+
+ Over the awful ocean
+ Her signal guns pealed out.
+ Dear God! was that Thy answer
+ From the horror round about?
+
+ A voice came down the wild wind,
+ "Ho! ship ahoy!" its cry
+ "Our stout Three Bells of Glasgow
+ Shall lay till daylight by!"
+
+ Hour after hour crept slowly,
+ Yet on the heaving swells
+ Tossed up and down the ship-lights,
+ The lights of the Three Bells!
+
+ And ship to ship made signals,
+ Man answered back to man,
+ While oft, to cheer and hearten,
+ The Three Bells nearer ran;
+
+ And the captain from her taffrail
+ Sent down his hopeful cry
+ "Take heart! Hold on!" he shouted;
+ "The Three Bells shall lay by!"
+
+ All night across the waters
+ The tossing lights shone clear;
+ All night from reeling taffrail
+ The Three Bells sent her cheer.
+
+ And when the dreary watches
+ Of storm and darkness passed,
+ Just as the wreck lurched under,
+ All souls were saved at last.
+
+ Sail on, Three Bells, forever,
+ In grateful memory sail!
+ Ring on, Three Bells of rescue,
+ Above the wave and gale!
+
+ Type of the Love eternal,
+ Repeat the Master's cry,
+ As tossing through our darkness
+ The lights of God draw nigh!
+
+ 1872.
+
+
+
+
+JOHN UNDERHILL.
+
+ A SCORE of years had come and gone
+ Since the Pilgrims landed on Plymouth stone,
+ When Captain Underhill, bearing scars
+ From Indian ambush and Flemish wars,
+ Left three-hilled Boston and wandered down,
+ East by north, to Cocheco town.
+
+ With Vane the younger, in counsel sweet,
+ He had sat at Anna Hutchinson's feet,
+ And, when the bolt of banishment fell
+ On the head of his saintly oracle,
+ He had shared her ill as her good report,
+ And braved the wrath of the General Court.
+
+ He shook from his feet as he rode away
+ The dust of the Massachusetts Bay.
+ The world might bless and the world might ban,
+ What did it matter the perfect man,
+ To whom the freedom of earth was given,
+ Proof against sin, and sure of heaven?
+
+ He cheered his heart as he rode along
+ With screed of Scripture and holy song,
+ Or thought how he rode with his lances free
+ By the Lower Rhine and the Zuyder-Zee,
+ Till his wood-path grew to a trodden road,
+ And Hilton Point in the distance showed.
+
+ He saw the church with the block-house nigh,
+ The two fair rivers, the flakes thereby,
+ And, tacking to windward, low and crank,
+ The little shallop from Strawberry Bank;
+ And he rose in his stirrups and looked abroad
+ Over land and water, and praised the Lord.
+
+ Goodly and stately and grave to see,
+ Into the clearing's space rode he,
+ With the sun on the hilt of his sword in sheath,
+ And his silver buckles and spurs beneath,
+ And the settlers welcomed him, one and all,
+ From swift Quampeagan to Gonic Fall.
+
+ And he said to the elders: "Lo, I come
+ As the way seemed open to seek a home.
+ Somewhat the Lord hath wrought by my hands
+ In the Narragansett and Netherlands,
+ And if here ye have work for a Christian man,
+ I will tarry, and serve ye as best I can.
+
+ "I boast not of gifts, but fain would own
+ The wonderful favor God hath shown,
+ The special mercy vouchsafed one day
+ On the shore of Narragansett Bay,
+ As I sat, with my pipe, from the camp aside,
+ And mused like Isaac at eventide.
+
+ "A sudden sweetness of peace I found,
+ A garment of gladness wrapped me round;
+ I felt from the law of works released,
+ The strife of the flesh and spirit ceased,
+ My faith to a full assurance grew,
+ And all I had hoped for myself I knew.
+
+ "Now, as God appointeth, I keep my way,
+ I shall not stumble, I shall not stray;
+ He hath taken away my fig-leaf dress,
+ I wear the robe of His righteousness;
+ And the shafts of Satan no more avail
+ Than Pequot arrows on Christian mail."
+
+ "Tarry with us," the settlers cried,
+ "Thou man of God, as our ruler and guide."
+ And Captain Underhill bowed his head.
+ "The will of the Lord be done!" he said.
+ And the morrow beheld him sitting down
+ In the ruler's seat in Cocheco town.
+
+ And he judged therein as a just man should;
+ His words were wise and his rule was good;
+ He coveted not his neighbor's land,
+ From the holding of bribes he shook his hand;
+ And through the camps of the heathen ran
+ A wholesome fear of the valiant man.
+
+ But the heart is deceitful, the good Book saith,
+ And life hath ever a savor of death.
+ Through hymns of triumph the tempter calls,
+ And whoso thinketh he standeth falls.
+ Alas! ere their round the seasons ran,
+ There was grief in the soul of the saintly man.
+
+ The tempter's arrows that rarely fail
+ Had found the joints of his spiritual mail;
+ And men took note of his gloomy air,
+ The shame in his eye, the halt in his prayer,
+ The signs of a battle lost within,
+ The pain of a soul in the coils of sin.
+
+ Then a whisper of scandal linked his name
+ With broken vows and a life of blame;
+ And the people looked askance on him
+ As he walked among them sullen and grim,
+ Ill at ease, and bitter of word,
+ And prompt of quarrel with hand or sword.
+
+ None knew how, with prayer and fasting still,
+ He strove in the bonds of his evil will;
+ But he shook himself like Samson at length,
+ And girded anew his loins of strength,
+ And bade the crier go up and down
+ And call together the wondering town.
+
+ Jeer and murmur and shaking of head
+ Ceased as he rose in his place and said
+ "Men, brethren, and fathers, well ye know
+ How I came among you a year ago,
+ Strong in the faith that my soul was freed
+ From sin of feeling, or thought, or deed.
+
+ "I have sinned, I own it with grief and shame,
+ But not with a lie on my lips I came.
+ In my blindness I verily thought my heart
+ Swept and garnished in every part.
+ He chargeth His angels with folly; He sees
+ The heavens unclean. Was I more than these?
+
+ "I urge no plea. At your feet I lay
+ The trust you gave me, and go my way.
+ Hate me or pity me, as you will,
+ The Lord will have mercy on sinners still;
+ And I, who am chiefest, say to all,
+ Watch and pray, lest ye also fall."
+
+ No voice made answer: a sob so low
+ That only his quickened ear could know
+ Smote his heart with a bitter pain,
+ As into the forest he rode again,
+ And the veil of its oaken leaves shut down
+ On his latest glimpse of Cocheco town.
+
+ Crystal-clear on the man of sin
+ The streams flashed up, and the sky shone in;
+ On his cheek of fever the cool wind blew,
+ The leaves dropped on him their tears of dew,
+ And angels of God, in the pure, sweet guise
+ Of flowers, looked on him with sad surprise.
+
+ Was his ear at fault that brook and breeze
+ Sang in their saddest of minor keys?
+ What was it the mournful wood-thrush said?
+ What whispered the pine-trees overhead?
+ Did he hear the Voice on his lonely way
+ That Adam heard in the cool of day?
+
+ Into the desert alone rode he,
+ Alone with the Infinite Purity;
+ And, bowing his soul to its tender rebuke,
+ As Peter did to the Master's look,
+ He measured his path with prayers of pain
+ For peace with God and nature again.
+
+ And in after years to Cocheco came
+ The bruit of a once familiar name;
+ How among the Dutch of New Netherlands,
+ From wild Danskamer to Haarlem sands,
+ A penitent soldier preached the Word,
+ And smote the heathen with Gideon's sword!
+
+ And the heart of Boston was glad to hear
+ How he harried the foe on the long frontier,
+ And heaped on the land against him barred
+ The coals of his generous watch and ward.
+ Frailest and bravest! the Bay State still
+ Counts with her worthies John Underhill.
+
+ 1873.
+
+
+
+
+CONDUCTOR BRADLEY.
+
+A railway conductor who lost his life in an accident on a Connecticut
+railway, May 9, 1873.
+
+
+ CONDUCTOR BRADLEY, (always may his name
+ Be said with reverence!) as the swift doom came,
+ Smitten to death, a crushed and mangled frame,
+
+ Sank, with the brake he grasped just where he stood
+ To do the utmost that a brave man could,
+ And die, if needful, as a true man should.
+
+ Men stooped above him; women dropped their tears
+ On that poor wreck beyond all hopes or fears,
+ Lost in the strength and glory of his years.
+
+ What heard they? Lo! the ghastly lips of pain,
+ Dead to all thought save duty's, moved again
+ "Put out the signals for the other train!"
+
+ No nobler utterance since the world began
+ From lips of saint or martyr ever ran,
+ Electric, through the sympathies of man.
+
+ Ah me! how poor and noteless seem to this
+ The sick-bed dramas of self-consciousness,
+ Our sensual fears of pain and hopes of bliss!
+
+ Oh, grand, supreme endeavor! Not in vain
+ That last brave act of failing tongue and brain
+ Freighted with life the downward rushing train,
+
+ Following the wrecked one, as wave follows wave,
+ Obeyed the warning which the dead lips gave.
+ Others he saved, himself he could not save.
+
+ Nay, the lost life was saved. He is not dead
+ Who in his record still the earth shall tread
+ With God's clear aureole shining round his head.
+
+ We bow as in the dust, with all our pride
+ Of virtue dwarfed the noble deed beside.
+ God give us grace to live as Bradley died!
+
+ 1873.
+
+
+
+
+THE WITCH OF WENHAM.
+
+The house is still standing in Danvers, Mass., where, it is said, a
+suspected witch was confined overnight in the attic, which was bolted
+fast. In the morning when the constable came to take her to Salem for
+trial she was missing, although the door was still bolted. Her escape
+was doubtless aided by her friends, but at the time it was attributed
+to Satanic interference.
+
+
+ I.
+
+ ALONG Crane River's sunny slopes
+ Blew warm the winds of May,
+ And over Naumkeag's ancient oaks
+ The green outgrew the gray.
+
+ The grass was green on Rial-side,
+ The early birds at will
+ Waked up the violet in its dell,
+ The wind-flower on its hill.
+
+ "Where go you, in your Sunday coat,
+ Son Andrew, tell me, pray."
+ For striped perch in Wenham Lake
+ I go to fish to-day."
+
+ "Unharmed of thee in Wenham Lake
+ The mottled perch shall be
+ A blue-eyed witch sits on the bank
+ And weaves her net for thee.
+
+ "She weaves her golden hair; she sings
+ Her spell-song low and faint;
+ The wickedest witch in Salem jail
+ Is to that girl a saint."
+
+ "Nay, mother, hold thy cruel tongue;
+ God knows," the young man cried,
+ "He never made a whiter soul
+ Than hers by Wenham side.
+
+ "She tends her mother sick and blind,
+ And every want supplies;
+ To her above the blessed Book
+ She lends her soft blue eyes.
+
+ "Her voice is glad with holy songs,
+ Her lips are sweet with prayer;
+ Go where you will, in ten miles round
+ Is none more good and fair."
+
+ "Son Andrew, for the love of God
+ And of thy mother, stay!"
+ She clasped her hands, she wept aloud,
+ But Andrew rode away.
+
+ "O reverend sir, my Andrew's soul
+ The Wenham witch has caught;
+ She holds him with the curled gold
+ Whereof her snare is wrought.
+
+ "She charms him with her great blue eyes,
+ She binds him with her hair;
+ Oh, break the spell with holy words,
+ Unbind him with a prayer!"
+
+ "Take heart," the painful preacher said,
+ "This mischief shall not be;
+ The witch shall perish in her sins
+ And Andrew shall go free.
+
+ "Our poor Ann Putnam testifies
+ She saw her weave a spell,
+ Bare-armed, loose-haired, at full of moon,
+ Around a dried-up well.
+
+ "'Spring up, O well!' she softly sang
+ The Hebrew's old refrain
+ (For Satan uses Bible words),
+ Till water flowed a-main.
+
+ "And many a goodwife heard her speak
+ By Wenham water words
+ That made the buttercups take wings
+ And turn to yellow birds.
+
+ "They say that swarming wild bees seek
+ The hive at her command;
+ And fishes swim to take their food
+ From out her dainty hand.
+
+ "Meek as she sits in meeting-time,
+ The godly minister
+ Notes well the spell that doth compel
+ The young men's eyes to her.
+
+ "The mole upon her dimpled chin
+ Is Satan's seal and sign;
+ Her lips are red with evil bread
+ And stain of unblest wine.
+
+ "For Tituba, my Indian, saith
+ At Quasycung she took
+ The Black Man's godless sacrament
+ And signed his dreadful book.
+
+ "Last night my sore-afflicted child
+ Against the young witch cried.
+ To take her Marshal Herrick rides
+ Even now to Wenham side."
+
+ The marshal in his saddle sat,
+ His daughter at his knee;
+ "I go to fetch that arrant witch,
+ Thy fair playmate," quoth he.
+
+ "Her spectre walks the parsonage,
+ And haunts both hall and stair;
+ They know her by the great blue eyes
+ And floating gold of hair."
+
+ "They lie, they lie, my father dear!
+ No foul old witch is she,
+ But sweet and good and crystal-pure
+ As Wenham waters be."
+
+ "I tell thee, child, the Lord hath set
+ Before us good and ill,
+ And woe to all whose carnal loves
+ Oppose His righteous will.
+
+ "Between Him and the powers of hell
+ Choose thou, my child, to-day
+ No sparing hand, no pitying eye,
+ When God commands to slay!"
+
+ He went his way; the old wives shook
+ With fear as he drew nigh;
+ The children in the dooryards held
+ Their breath as he passed by.
+
+ Too well they knew the gaunt gray horse
+ The grim witch-hunter rode
+ The pale Apocalyptic beast
+ By grisly Death bestrode.
+
+
+ II.
+
+ Oh, fair the face of Wenham Lake
+ Upon the young girl's shone,
+ Her tender mouth, her dreaming eyes,
+ Her yellow hair outblown.
+
+ By happy youth and love attuned
+ To natural harmonies,
+ The singing birds, the whispering wind,
+ She sat beneath the trees.
+
+ Sat shaping for her bridal dress
+ Her mother's wedding gown,
+ When lo! the marshal, writ in hand,
+ From Alford hill rode down.
+
+ His face was hard with cruel fear,
+ He grasped the maiden's hands
+ "Come with me unto Salem town,
+ For so the law commands!"
+
+ "Oh, let me to my mother say
+ Farewell before I go!"
+ He closer tied her little hands
+ Unto his saddle bow.
+
+ "Unhand me," cried she piteously,
+ "For thy sweet daughter's sake."
+ "I'll keep my daughter safe," he said,
+ "From the witch of Wenham Lake."
+
+ "Oh, leave me for my mother's sake,
+ She needs my eyes to see."
+ "Those eyes, young witch, the crows shall peck
+ From off the gallows-tree."
+
+ He bore her to a farm-house old,
+ And up its stairway long,
+ And closed on her the garret-door
+ With iron bolted strong.
+
+ The day died out, the night came down
+ Her evening prayer she said,
+ While, through the dark, strange faces seemed
+ To mock her as she prayed.
+
+ The present horror deepened all
+ The fears her childhood knew;
+ The awe wherewith the air was filled
+ With every breath she drew.
+
+ And could it be, she trembling asked,
+ Some secret thought or sin
+ Had shut good angels from her heart
+ And let the bad ones in?
+
+ Had she in some forgotten dream
+ Let go her hold on Heaven,
+ And sold herself unwittingly
+ To spirits unforgiven?
+
+ Oh, weird and still the dark hours passed;
+ No human sound she heard,
+ But up and down the chimney stack
+ The swallows moaned and stirred.
+
+ And o'er her, with a dread surmise
+ Of evil sight and sound,
+ The blind bats on their leathern wings
+ Went wheeling round and round.
+
+ Low hanging in the midnight sky
+ Looked in a half-faced moon.
+ Was it a dream, or did she hear
+ Her lover's whistled tune?
+
+ She forced the oaken scuttle back;
+ A whisper reached her ear
+ "Slide down the roof to me," it said,
+ "So softly none may hear."
+
+ She slid along the sloping roof
+ Till from its eaves she hung,
+ And felt the loosened shingles yield
+ To which her fingers clung.
+
+ Below, her lover stretched his hands
+ And touched her feet so small;
+ "Drop down to me, dear heart," he said,
+ "My arms shall break the fall."
+
+ He set her on his pillion soft,
+ Her arms about him twined;
+ And, noiseless as if velvet-shod,
+ They left the house behind.
+
+ But when they reached the open way,
+ Full free the rein he cast;
+ Oh, never through the mirk midnight
+ Rode man and maid more fast.
+
+ Along the wild wood-paths they sped,
+ The bridgeless streams they swam;
+ At set of moon they passed the Bass,
+ At sunrise Agawam.
+
+ At high noon on the Merrimac
+ The ancient ferryman
+ Forgot, at times, his idle oars,
+ So fair a freight to scan.
+
+ And when from off his grounded boat
+ He saw them mount and ride,
+ "God keep her from the evil eye,
+ And harm of witch!" he cried.
+
+ The maiden laughed, as youth will laugh
+ At all its fears gone by;
+ "He does not know," she whispered low,
+ "A little witch am I."
+
+ All day he urged his weary horse,
+ And, in the red sundown,
+ Drew rein before a friendly door
+ In distant Berwick town.
+
+ A fellow-feeling for the wronged
+ The Quaker people felt;
+ And safe beside their kindly hearths
+ The hunted maiden dwelt,
+
+ Until from off its breast the land
+ The haunting horror threw,
+ And hatred, born of ghastly dreams,
+ To shame and pity grew.
+
+ Sad were the year's spring morns, and sad
+ Its golden summer day,
+ But blithe and glad its withered fields,
+ And skies of ashen gray;
+
+ For spell and charm had power no more,
+ The spectres ceased to roam,
+ And scattered households knelt again
+ Around the hearths of home.
+
+ And when once more by Beaver Dam
+ The meadow-lark outsang,
+ And once again on all the hills
+ The early violets sprang,
+
+ And all the windy pasture slopes
+ Lay green within the arms
+ Of creeks that bore the salted sea
+ To pleasant inland farms,
+
+ The smith filed off the chains he forged,
+ The jail-bolts backward fell;
+ And youth and hoary age came forth
+ Like souls escaped from hell.
+
+ 1877
+
+
+
+
+KING SOLOMON AND THE ANTS
+
+ OUT from Jerusalem
+ The king rode with his great
+ War chiefs and lords of state,
+ And Sheba's queen with them;
+
+ Comely, but black withal,
+ To whom, perchance, belongs
+ That wondrous Song of songs,
+ Sensuous and mystical,
+
+ Whereto devout souls turn
+ In fond, ecstatic dream,
+ And through its earth-born theme
+ The Love of loves discern.
+
+ Proud in the Syrian sun,
+ In gold and purple sheen,
+ The dusky Ethiop queen
+ Smiled on King Solomon.
+
+ Wisest of men, he knew
+ The languages of all
+ The creatures great or small
+ That trod the earth or flew.
+
+ Across an ant-hill led
+ The king's path, and he heard
+ Its small folk, and their word
+ He thus interpreted:
+
+ "Here comes the king men greet
+ As wise and good and just,
+ To crush us in the dust
+ Under his heedless feet."
+
+ The great king bowed his head,
+ And saw the wide surprise
+ Of the Queen of Sheba's eyes
+ As he told her what they said.
+
+ "O king!" she whispered sweet,
+ "Too happy fate have they
+ Who perish in thy way
+ Beneath thy gracious feet!
+
+ "Thou of the God-lent crown,
+ Shall these vile creatures dare
+ Murmur against thee where
+ The knees of kings kneel down?"
+
+ "Nay," Solomon replied,
+ "The wise and strong should seek
+ The welfare of the weak,"
+ And turned his horse aside.
+
+ His train, with quick alarm,
+ Curved with their leader round
+ The ant-hill's peopled mound,
+ And left it free from harm.
+
+ The jewelled head bent low;
+ "O king!" she said, "henceforth
+ The secret of thy worth
+ And wisdom well I know.
+
+ "Happy must be the State
+ Whose ruler heedeth more
+ The murmurs of the poor
+ Than flatteries of the great."
+
+ 1877.
+
+
+
+
+IN THE "OLD SOUTH."
+
+On the 8th of July, 1677, Margaret Brewster with four other Friends
+went into the South Church in time of meeting, "in sack-cloth, with
+ashes upon her head, barefoot, and her face blackened," and delivered
+"a warning from the great God of Heaven and Earth to the Rulers and
+Magistrates of Boston." For the offence she was sentenced to be "whipped
+at a cart's tail up and down the Town, with twenty lashes."
+
+ SHE came and stood in the Old South Church,
+ A wonder and a sign,
+ With a look the old-time sibyls wore,
+ Half-crazed and half-divine.
+
+ Save the mournful sackcloth about her wound,
+ Unclothed as the primal mother,
+ With limbs that trembled and eyes that blazed
+ With a fire she dare not smother.
+
+ Loose on her shoulders fell her hair,
+ With sprinkled ashes gray;
+ She stood in the broad aisle strange and weird
+ As a soul at the judgment day.
+
+ And the minister paused in his sermon's midst,
+ And the people held their breath,
+ For these were the words the maiden spoke
+ Through lips as the lips of death:
+
+ "Thus saith the Lord, with equal feet
+ All men my courts shall tread,
+ And priest and ruler no more shall eat
+ My people up like bread!
+
+ "Repent! repent! ere the Lord shall speak
+ In thunder and breaking seals
+ Let all souls worship Him in the way
+ His light within reveals."
+
+ She shook the dust from her naked feet,
+ And her sackcloth closer drew,
+ And into the porch of the awe-hushed church
+ She passed like a ghost from view.
+
+ They whipped her away at the tail o' the cart
+ Through half the streets of the town,
+ But the words she uttered that day nor fire
+ Could burn nor water drown.
+
+ And now the aisles of the ancient church
+ By equal feet are trod,
+ And the bell that swings in its belfry rings
+ Freedom to worship God!
+
+ And now whenever a wrong is done
+ It thrills the conscious walls;
+ The stone from the basement cries aloud
+ And the beam from the timber calls.
+
+ There are steeple-houses on every hand,
+ And pulpits that bless and ban,
+ And the Lord will not grudge the single church
+ That is set apart for man.
+
+ For in two commandments are all the law
+ And the prophets under the sun,
+ And the first is last and the last is first,
+ And the twain are verily one.
+
+ So, long as Boston shall Boston be,
+ And her bay-tides rise and fall,
+ Shall freedom stand in the Old South Church
+ And plead for the rights of all!
+
+ 1877.
+
+
+
+
+THE HENCHMAN.
+
+ MY lady walks her morning round,
+ My lady's page her fleet greyhound,
+ My lady's hair the fond winds stir,
+ And all the birds make songs for her.
+
+ Her thrushes sing in Rathburn bowers,
+ And Rathburn side is gay with flowers;
+ But ne'er like hers, in flower or bird,
+ Was beauty seen or music heard.
+
+ The distance of the stars is hers;
+ The least of all her worshippers,
+ The dust beneath her dainty heel,
+ She knows not that I see or feel.
+
+ Oh, proud and calm!--she cannot know
+ Where'er she goes with her I go;
+ Oh, cold and fair!--she cannot guess
+ I kneel to share her hound's caress!
+
+ Gay knights beside her hunt and hawk,
+ I rob their ears of her sweet talk;
+ Her suitors come from east and west,
+ I steal her smiles from every guest.
+
+ Unheard of her, in loving words,
+ I greet her with the song of birds;
+ I reach her with her green-armed bowers,
+ I kiss her with the lips of flowers.
+
+ The hound and I are on her trail,
+ The wind and I uplift her veil;
+ As if the calm, cold moon she were,
+ And I the tide, I follow her.
+
+ As unrebuked as they, I share
+ The license of the sun and air,
+ And in a common homage hide
+ My worship from her scorn and pride.
+
+ World-wide apart, and yet so near,
+ I breathe her charmed atmosphere,
+ Wherein to her my service brings
+ The reverence due to holy things.
+
+ Her maiden pride, her haughty name,
+ My dumb devotion shall not shame;
+ The love that no return doth crave
+ To knightly levels lifts the slave,
+
+ No lance have I, in joust or fight,
+ To splinter in my lady's sight
+ But, at her feet, how blest were I
+ For any need of hers to die!
+
+ 1877.
+
+
+
+
+THE DEAD FEAST OF THE KOL-FOLK.
+
+E. B. Tylor in his Primitive Culture, chapter xii., gives an account of
+the reverence paid the dead by the Kol tribes of Chota Nagpur, Assam.
+"When a Ho or Munda," he says, "has been burned on the funeral pile,
+collected morsels of his bones are carried in procession with a solemn,
+ghostly, sliding step, keeping time to the deep-sounding drum, and when
+the old woman who carries the bones on her bamboo tray lowers it from
+time to time, then girls who carry pitchers and brass vessels mournfully
+reverse them to show that they are empty; thus the remains are taken to
+visit every house in the village, and every dwelling of a friend or
+relative for miles, and the inmates come out to mourn and praise the
+goodness of the departed; the bones are carried to all the dead man's
+favorite haunts, to the fields he cultivated, to the grove he planted,
+to the threshing-floor where he worked, to the village dance-room where
+he made merry. At last they are taken to the grave, and buried in an
+earthen vase upon a store of food, covered with one of those huge stone
+slabs which European visitors wonder at in the districts of the
+aborigines of India." In the Journal of the Asiatic Society, Bengal,
+vol. ix., p. 795, is a Ho dirge.
+
+
+ WE have opened the door,
+ Once, twice, thrice!
+ We have swept the floor,
+ We have boiled the rice.
+ Come hither, come hither!
+ Come from the far lands,
+ Come from the star lands,
+ Come as before!
+ We lived long together,
+ We loved one another;
+ Come back to our life.
+ Come father, come mother,
+ Come sister and brother,
+ Child, husband, and wife,
+ For you we are sighing.
+ Come take your old places,
+ Come look in our faces,
+ The dead on the dying,
+ Come home!
+
+ We have opened the door,
+ Once, twice, thrice!
+ We have kindled the coals,
+ And we boil the rice
+ For the feast of souls.
+ Come hither, come hither!
+ Think not we fear you,
+ Whose hearts are so near you.
+ Come tenderly thought on,
+ Come all unforgotten,
+ Come from the shadow-lands,
+ From the dim meadow-lands
+ Where the pale grasses bend
+ Low to our sighing.
+ Come father, come mother,
+ Come sister and brother,
+ Come husband and friend,
+ The dead to the dying,
+ Come home!
+
+ We have opened the door
+ You entered so oft;
+ For the feast of souls
+ We have kindled the coals,
+ And we boil the rice soft.
+ Come you who are dearest
+ To us who are nearest,
+ Come hither, come hither,
+ From out the wild weather;
+ The storm clouds are flying,
+ The peepul is sighing;
+ Come in from the rain.
+ Come father, come mother,
+ Come sister and brother,
+ Come husband and lover,
+ Beneath our roof-cover.
+ Look on us again,
+ The dead on the dying,
+ Come home!
+
+ We have opened the door!
+ For the feast of souls
+ We have kindled the coals
+ We may kindle no more!
+ Snake, fever, and famine,
+ The curse of the Brahmin,
+ The sun and the dew,
+ They burn us, they bite us,
+ They waste us and smite us;
+ Our days are but few
+ In strange lands far yonder
+ To wonder and wander
+ We hasten to you.
+ List then to our sighing,
+ While yet we are here
+ Nor seeing nor hearing,
+ We wait without fearing,
+ To feel you draw near.
+ O dead, to the dying
+ Come home!
+
+ 1879.
+
+
+
+
+THE KHAN'S DEVIL.
+
+
+ THE Khan came from Bokhara town
+ To Hamza, santon of renown.
+
+ "My head is sick, my hands are weak;
+ Thy help, O holy man, I seek."
+
+ In silence marking for a space
+ The Khan's red eyes and purple face,
+
+ Thick voice, and loose, uncertain tread,
+ "Thou hast a devil!" Hamza said.
+
+ "Allah forbid!" exclaimed the Khan.
+ Rid me of him at once, O man!"
+
+ "Nay," Hamza said, "no spell of mine
+ Can slay that cursed thing of thine.
+
+ "Leave feast and wine, go forth and drink
+ Water of healing on the brink
+
+ "Where clear and cold from mountain snows,
+ The Nahr el Zeben downward flows.
+
+ "Six moons remain, then come to me;
+ May Allah's pity go with thee!"
+
+ Awestruck, from feast and wine the Khan
+ Went forth where Nahr el Zeben ran.
+
+ Roots were his food, the desert dust
+ His bed, the water quenched his thirst;
+
+ And when the sixth moon's scimetar
+ Curved sharp above the evening star,
+
+ He sought again the santon's door,
+ Not weak and trembling as before,
+
+ But strong of limb and clear of brain;
+ "Behold," he said, "the fiend is slain."
+
+ "Nay," Hamza answered, "starved and drowned,
+ The curst one lies in death-like swound.
+
+ "But evil breaks the strongest gyves,
+ And jins like him have charmed lives.
+
+ "One beaker of the juice of grape
+ May call him up in living shape.
+
+ "When the red wine of Badakshan
+ Sparkles for thee, beware, O Khan,
+
+ "With water quench the fire within,
+ And drown each day thy devilkin!"
+
+ Thenceforth the great Khan shunned the cup
+ As Shitan's own, though offered up,
+
+ With laughing eyes and jewelled hands,
+ By Yarkand's maids and Samarcand's.
+
+ And, in the lofty vestibule
+ Of the medress of Kaush Kodul,
+
+ The students of the holy law
+ A golden-lettered tablet saw,
+
+ With these words, by a cunning hand,
+ Graved on it at the Khan's command:
+
+ "In Allah's name, to him who hath
+ A devil, Khan el Hamed saith,
+
+ "Wisely our Prophet cursed the vine
+ The fiend that loves the breath of wine,
+
+ "No prayer can slay, no marabout
+ Nor Meccan dervis can drive out.
+
+ "I, Khan el Hamed, know the charm
+ That robs him of his power to harm.
+
+ "Drown him, O Islam's child! the spell
+ To save thee lies in tank and well!"
+
+ 1879.
+
+
+
+
+THE KING'S MISSIVE.
+
+1661.
+
+This ballad, originally written for The Memorial History of Boston,
+describes, with pardonable poetic license, a memorable incident in the
+annals of the city. The interview between Shattuck and the Governor took
+place, I have since learned, in the residence of the latter, and not
+in the Council Chamber. The publication of the ballad led to some
+discussion as to the historical truthfulness of the picture, but I have
+seen no reason to rub out any of the figures or alter the lines and
+colors.
+
+
+ UNDER the great hill sloping bare
+ To cove and meadow and Common lot,
+ In his council chamber and oaken chair,
+ Sat the worshipful Governor Endicott.
+ A grave, strong man, who knew no peer
+ In the pilgrim land, where he ruled in fear
+ Of God, not man, and for good or ill
+ Held his trust with an iron will.
+
+ He had shorn with his sword the cross from out
+ The flag, and cloven the May-pole down,
+ Harried the heathen round about,
+ And whipped the Quakers from town to town.
+ Earnest and honest, a man at need
+ To burn like a torch for his own harsh creed,
+ He kept with the flaming brand of his zeal
+ The gate of the holy common weal.
+
+ His brow was clouded, his eye was stern,
+ With a look of mingled sorrow and wrath;
+ "Woe's me!" he murmured: "at every turn
+ The pestilent Quakers are in my path!
+ Some we have scourged, and banished some,
+ Some hanged, more doomed, and still they come,
+ Fast as the tide of yon bay sets in,
+ Sowing their heresy's seed of sin.
+
+ "Did we count on this? Did we leave behind
+ The graves of our kin, the comfort and ease
+ Of our English hearths and homes, to find
+ Troublers of Israel such as these?
+ Shall I spare? Shall I pity them? God forbid!
+ I will do as the prophet to Agag did
+ They come to poison the wells of the Word,
+ I will hew them in pieces before the Lord!"
+
+ The door swung open, and Rawson the clerk
+ Entered, and whispered under breath,
+ "There waits below for the hangman's work
+ A fellow banished on pain of death--
+ Shattuck, of Salem, unhealed of the whip,
+ Brought over in Master Goldsmith's ship
+ At anchor here in a Christian port,
+ With freight of the devil and all his sort!"
+
+ Twice and thrice on the chamber floor
+ Striding fiercely from wall to wall,
+ "The Lord do so to me and more,"
+ The Governor cried, "if I hang not all!
+ Bring hither the Quaker." Calm, sedate,
+ With the look of a man at ease with fate,
+ Into that presence grim and dread
+ Came Samuel Shattuck, with hat on head.
+
+ "Off with the knave's hat!" An angry hand
+ Smote down the offence; but the wearer said,
+ With a quiet smile, "By the king's command
+ I bear his message and stand in his stead."
+ In the Governor's hand a missive he laid
+ With the royal arms on its seal displayed,
+ And the proud man spake as he gazed thereat,
+ Uncovering, "Give Mr. Shattuck his hat."
+
+ He turned to the Quaker, bowing low,--
+ "The king commandeth your friends' release;
+ Doubt not he shall be obeyed, although
+ To his subjects' sorrow and sin's increase.
+ What he here enjoineth, John Endicott,
+ His loyal servant, questioneth not.
+ You are free! God grant the spirit you own
+ May take you from us to parts unknown."
+
+ So the door of the jail was open cast,
+ And, like Daniel, out of the lion's den
+ Tender youth and girlhood passed,
+ With age-bowed women and gray-locked men.
+ And the voice of one appointed to die
+ Was lifted in praise and thanks on high,
+ And the little maid from New Netherlands
+ Kissed, in her joy, the doomed man's hands.
+
+ And one, whose call was to minister
+ To the souls in prison, beside him went,
+ An ancient woman, bearing with her
+ The linen shroud for his burial meant.
+ For she, not counting her own life dear,
+ In the strength of a love that cast out fear,
+ Had watched and served where her brethren died,
+ Like those who waited the cross beside.
+
+ One moment they paused on their way to look
+ On the martyr graves by the Common side,
+ And much scourged Wharton of Salem took
+ His burden of prophecy up and cried
+ "Rest, souls of the valiant! Not in vain
+ Have ye borne the Master's cross of pain;
+ Ye have fought the fight, ye are victors crowned,
+ With a fourfold chain ye have Satan bound!"
+
+ The autumn haze lay soft and still
+ On wood and meadow and upland farms;
+ On the brow of Snow Hill the great windmill
+ Slowly and lazily swung its arms;
+ Broad in the sunshine stretched away,
+ With its capes and islands, the turquoise bay;
+ And over water and dusk of pines
+ Blue hills lifted their faint outlines.
+
+ The topaz leaves of the walnut glowed,
+ The sumach added its crimson fleck,
+ And double in air and water showed
+ The tinted maples along the Neck;
+ Through frost flower clusters of pale star-mist,
+ And gentian fringes of amethyst,
+ And royal plumes of golden-rod,
+ The grazing cattle on Centry trod.
+
+ But as they who see not, the Quakers saw
+ The world about them; they only thought
+ With deep thanksgiving and pious awe
+ On the great deliverance God had wrought.
+ Through lane and alley the gazing town
+ Noisily followed them up and down;
+ Some with scoffing and brutal jeer,
+ Some with pity and words of cheer.
+
+ One brave voice rose above the din.
+ Upsall, gray with his length of days,
+ Cried from the door of his Red Lion Inn
+ "Men of Boston, give God the praise
+ No more shall innocent blood call down
+ The bolts of wrath on your guilty town.
+ The freedom of worship, dear to you,
+ Is dear to all, and to all is due.
+
+ "I see the vision of days to come,
+ When your beautiful City of the Bay
+ Shall be Christian liberty's chosen home,
+ And none shall his neighbor's rights gainsay.
+ The varying notes of worship shall blend
+ And as one great prayer to God ascend,
+ And hands of mutual charity raise
+ Walls of salvation and gates of praise."
+
+ So passed the Quakers through Boston town,
+ Whose painful ministers sighed to see
+ The walls of their sheep-fold falling down,
+ And wolves of heresy prowling free.
+ But the years went on, and brought no wrong;
+ With milder counsels the State grew strong,
+ As outward Letter and inward Light
+ Kept the balance of truth aright.
+
+ The Puritan spirit perishing not,
+ To Concord's yeomen the signal sent,
+ And spake in the voice of the cannon-shot
+ That severed the chains of a continent.
+ With its gentler mission of peace and good-will
+ The thought of the Quaker is living still,
+ And the freedom of soul he prophesied
+ Is gospel and law where the martyrs died.
+
+ 1880.
+
+
+
+
+VALUATION.
+
+ THE old Squire said, as he stood by his gate,
+ And his neighbor, the Deacon, went by,
+ "In spite of my bank stock and real estate,
+ You are better off, Deacon, than I.
+
+ "We're both growing old, and the end's drawing near,
+ You have less of this world to resign,
+ But in Heaven's appraisal your assets, I fear,
+ Will reckon up greater than mine.
+
+ "They say I am rich, but I'm feeling so poor,
+ I wish I could swap with you even
+ The pounds I have lived for and laid up in store
+ For the shillings and pence you have given."
+
+ "Well, Squire," said the Deacon, with shrewd
+ common sense,
+ While his eye had a twinkle of fun,
+ "Let your pounds take the way of my shillings
+ and pence,
+ And the thing can be easily done!"
+
+ 1880.
+
+
+
+
+RABBI ISHMAEL.
+
+"Rabbi Ishmael Ben Elisha said, Once, I entered into the Holy of Holies
+(as High Priest) to burn incense, when I saw Aktriel (the Divine Crown)
+Jah, Lord of Hosts, sitting upon a throne, high and lifted up, who said
+unto me, 'Ishmael, my son, bless me.' I answered, 'May it please Thee to
+make Thy compassion prevail over Thine anger; may it be revealed above
+Thy other attributes; mayest Thou deal with Thy children according to
+it, and not according to the strict measure of judgment.' It seemed to
+me that He bowed His head, as though to answer Amen to my blessing."--
+Talmud (Beraehoth, I. f. 6. b.)
+
+
+ THE Rabbi Ishmael, with the woe and sin
+ Of the world heavy upon him, entering in
+ The Holy of Holies, saw an awful Face
+ With terrible splendor filling all the place.
+ "O Ishmael Ben Elisha!" said a voice,
+ "What seekest thou? What blessing is thy choice?"
+ And, knowing that he stood before the Lord,
+ Within the shadow of the cherubim,
+ Wide-winged between the blinding light and him,
+ He bowed himself, and uttered not a word,
+ But in the silence of his soul was prayer
+ "O Thou Eternal! I am one of all,
+ And nothing ask that others may not share.
+ Thou art almighty; we are weak and small,
+ And yet Thy children: let Thy mercy spare!"
+ Trembling, he raised his eyes, and in the place
+ Of the insufferable glory, lo! a face
+ Of more than mortal tenderness, that bent
+ Graciously down in token of assent,
+ And, smiling, vanished! With strange joy elate,
+ The wondering Rabbi sought the temple's gate.
+ Radiant as Moses from the Mount, he stood
+ And cried aloud unto the multitude
+ "O Israel, hear! The Lord our God is good!
+ Mine eyes have seen his glory and his grace;
+ Beyond his judgments shall his love endure;
+ The mercy of the All Merciful is sure!"
+
+ 1881.
+
+
+
+
+THE ROCK-TOMB OF BRADORE.
+
+H. Y. Hind, in Explorations in the Interior of the Labrador Peninsula
+(ii. 166) mentions the finding of a rock tomb near the little fishing
+port of Bradore, with the inscription upon it which is given in the
+poem.
+
+ A DREAR and desolate shore!
+ Where no tree unfolds its leaves,
+ And never the spring wind weaves
+ Green grass for the hunter's tread;
+ A land forsaken and dead,
+ Where the ghostly icebergs go
+ And come with the ebb and flow
+ Of the waters of Bradore!
+
+ A wanderer, from a land
+ By summer breezes fanned,
+ Looked round him, awed, subdued,
+ By the dreadful solitude,
+ Hearing alone the cry
+ Of sea-birds clanging by,
+ The crash and grind of the floe,
+ Wail of wind and wash of tide.
+ "O wretched land!" he cried,
+ "Land of all lands the worst,
+ God forsaken and curst!
+ Thy gates of rock should show
+ The words the Tuscan seer
+ Read in the Realm of Woe
+ Hope entereth not here!"
+
+ Lo! at his feet there stood
+ A block of smooth larch wood,
+ Waif of some wandering wave,
+ Beside a rock-closed cave
+ By Nature fashioned for a grave;
+ Safe from the ravening bear
+ And fierce fowl of the air,
+ Wherein to rest was laid
+ A twenty summers' maid,
+ Whose blood had equal share
+ Of the lands of vine and snow,
+ Half French, half Eskimo.
+ In letters uneffaced,
+ Upon the block were traced
+ The grief and hope of man,
+ And thus the legend ran
+ "We loved her!
+ Words cannot tell how well!
+ We loved her!
+ God loved her!
+ And called her home to peace and rest.
+ We love her."
+
+ The stranger paused and read.
+ "O winter land!" he said,
+ "Thy right to be I own;
+ God leaves thee not alone.
+ And if thy fierce winds blow
+ Over drear wastes of rock and snow,
+ And at thy iron gates
+ The ghostly iceberg waits,
+ Thy homes and hearts are dear.
+ Thy sorrow o'er thy sacred dust
+ Is sanctified by hope and trust;
+ God's love and man's are here.
+ And love where'er it goes
+ Makes its own atmosphere;
+ Its flowers of Paradise
+ Take root in the eternal ice,
+ And bloom through Polar snows!"
+
+ 1881.
+
+
+
+
+THE BAY OF SEVEN ISLANDS.
+
+The volume in which "The Bay of Seven Islands" was published was
+dedicated to the late Edwin Percy Whipple, to whom more than to any
+other person I was indebted for public recognition as one worthy of a
+place in American literature, at a time when it required a great degree
+of courage to urge such a claim for a pro-scribed abolitionist. Although
+younger than I, he had gained the reputation of a brilliant essayist,
+and was regarded as the highest American authority in criticism. His wit
+and wisdom enlivened a small literary circle of young men including
+Thomas Starr King, the eloquent preacher, and Daniel N. Haskell of the
+Daily Transcript, who gathered about our common friend dames T. Fields
+at the Old Corner Bookstore. The poem which gave title to the volume I
+inscribed to my friend and neighbor Harriet Prescott Spofford, whose
+poems have lent a new interest to our beautiful river-valley.
+
+ FROM the green Amesbury hill which bears the name
+ Of that half mythic ancestor of mine
+ Who trod its slopes two hundred years ago,
+ Down the long valley of the Merrimac,
+ Midway between me and the river's mouth,
+ I see thy home, set like an eagle's nest
+ Among Deer Island's immemorial pines,
+ Crowning the crag on which the sunset breaks
+ Its last red arrow. Many a tale and song,
+ Which thou bast told or sung, I call to mind,
+ Softening with silvery mist the woods and hills,
+ The out-thrust headlands and inreaching bays
+ Of our northeastern coast-line, trending where
+ The Gulf, midsummer, feels the chill blockade
+ Of icebergs stranded at its northern gate.
+
+ To thee the echoes of the Island Sound
+ Answer not vainly, nor in vain the moan
+ Of the South Breaker prophesying storm.
+ And thou hast listened, like myself, to men
+ Sea-periled oft where Anticosti lies
+ Like a fell spider in its web of fog,
+ Or where the Grand Bank shallows with the wrecks
+ Of sunken fishers, and to whom strange isles
+ And frost-rimmed bays and trading stations seem
+ Familiar as Great Neck and Kettle Cove,
+ Nubble and Boon, the common names of home.
+ So let me offer thee this lay of mine,
+ Simple and homely, lacking much thy play
+ Of color and of fancy. If its theme
+ And treatment seem to thee befitting youth
+ Rather than age, let this be my excuse
+ It has beguiled some heavy hours and called
+ Some pleasant memories up; and, better still,
+ Occasion lent me for a kindly word
+ To one who is my neighbor and my friend.
+
+ 1883.
+
+ . . . . . . . . . .
+
+
+ The skipper sailed out of the harbor mouth,
+ Leaving the apple-bloom of the South
+ For the ice of the Eastern seas,
+ In his fishing schooner Breeze.
+
+ Handsome and brave and young was he,
+ And the maids of Newbury sighed to see
+ His lessening white sail fall
+ Under the sea's blue wall.
+
+ Through the Northern Gulf and the misty screen
+ Of the isles of Mingan and Madeleine,
+ St. Paul's and Blanc Sablon,
+ The little Breeze sailed on,
+
+ Backward and forward, along the shore
+ Of lorn and desolate Labrador,
+ And found at last her way
+ To the Seven Islands Bay.
+
+ The little hamlet, nestling below
+ Great hills white with lingering snow,
+ With its tin-roofed chapel stood
+ Half hid in the dwarf spruce wood;
+
+ Green-turfed, flower-sown, the last outpost
+ Of summer upon the dreary coast,
+ With its gardens small and spare,
+ Sad in the frosty air.
+
+ Hard by where the skipper's schooner lay,
+ A fisherman's cottage looked away
+ Over isle and bay, and behind
+ On mountains dim-defined.
+
+ And there twin sisters, fair and young,
+ Laughed with their stranger guest, and sung
+ In their native tongue the lays
+ Of the old Provencal days.
+
+ Alike were they, save the faint outline
+ Of a scar on Suzette's forehead fine;
+ And both, it so befell,
+ Loved the heretic stranger well.
+
+ Both were pleasant to look upon,
+ But the heart of the skipper clave to one;
+ Though less by his eye than heart
+ He knew the twain apart.
+
+ Despite of alien race and creed,
+ Well did his wooing of Marguerite speed;
+ And the mother's wrath was vain
+ As the sister's jealous pain.
+
+ The shrill-tongued mistress her house forbade,
+ And solemn warning was sternly said
+ By the black-robed priest, whose word
+ As law the hamlet heard.
+
+ But half by voice and half by signs
+ The skipper said, "A warm sun shines
+ On the green-banked Merrimac;
+ Wait, watch, till I come back.
+
+ "And when you see, from my mast head,
+ The signal fly of a kerchief red,
+ My boat on the shore shall wait;
+ Come, when the night is late."
+
+ Ah! weighed with childhood's haunts and friends,
+ And all that the home sky overbends,
+ Did ever young love fail
+ To turn the trembling scale?
+
+ Under the night, on the wet sea sands,
+ Slowly unclasped their plighted hands
+ One to the cottage hearth,
+ And one to his sailor's berth.
+
+ What was it the parting lovers heard?
+ Nor leaf, nor ripple, nor wing of bird,
+ But a listener's stealthy tread
+ On the rock-moss, crisp and dead.
+
+ He weighed his anchor, and fished once more
+ By the black coast-line of Labrador;
+ And by love and the north wind driven,
+ Sailed back to the Islands Seven.
+
+ In the sunset's glow the sisters twain
+ Saw the Breeze come sailing in again;
+ Said Suzette, "Mother dear,
+ The heretic's sail is here."
+
+ "Go, Marguerite, to your room, and hide;
+ Your door shall be bolted!" the mother cried:
+ While Suzette, ill at ease,
+ Watched the red sign of the Breeze.
+
+ At midnight, down to the waiting skiff
+ She stole in the shadow of the cliff;
+ And out of the Bay's mouth ran
+ The schooner with maid and man.
+
+ And all night long, on a restless bed,
+ Her prayers to the Virgin Marguerite said
+ And thought of her lover's pain
+ Waiting for her in vain.
+
+ Did he pace the sands? Did he pause to hear
+ The sound of her light step drawing near?
+ And, as the slow hours passed,
+ Would he doubt her faith at last?
+
+ But when she saw through the misty pane,
+ The morning break on a sea of rain,
+ Could even her love avail
+ To follow his vanished sail?
+
+ Meantime the Breeze, with favoring wind,
+ Left the rugged Moisic hills behind,
+ And heard from an unseen shore
+ The falls of Manitou roar.
+
+ On the morrow's morn, in the thick, gray weather
+ They sat on the reeling deck together,
+ Lover and counterfeit,
+ Of hapless Marguerite.
+
+ With a lover's hand, from her forehead fair
+ He smoothed away her jet-black hair.
+ What was it his fond eyes met?
+ The scar of the false Suzette!
+
+ Fiercely he shouted: "Bear away
+ East by north for Seven Isles Bay!"
+ The maiden wept and prayed,
+ But the ship her helm obeyed.
+
+ Once more the Bay of the Isles they found
+ They heard the bell of the chapel sound,
+ And the chant of the dying sung
+ In the harsh, wild Indian tongue.
+
+ A feeling of mystery, change, and awe
+ Was in all they heard and all they saw
+ Spell-bound the hamlet lay
+ In the hush of its lonely bay.
+
+ And when they came to the cottage door,
+ The mother rose up from her weeping sore,
+ And with angry gestures met
+ The scared look of Suzette.
+
+ "Here is your daughter," the skipper said;
+ "Give me the one I love instead."
+ But the woman sternly spake;
+ "Go, see if the dead will wake!"
+
+ He looked. Her sweet face still and white
+ And strange in the noonday taper light,
+ She lay on her little bed,
+ With the cross at her feet and head.
+
+ In a passion of grief the strong man bent
+ Down to her face, and, kissing it, went
+ Back to the waiting Breeze,
+ Back to the mournful seas.
+
+ Never again to the Merrimac
+ And Newbury's homes that bark came back.
+ Whether her fate she met
+ On the shores of Carraquette,
+
+ Miscou, or Tracadie, who can say?
+ But even yet at Seven Isles Bay
+ Is told the ghostly tale
+ Of a weird, unspoken sail,
+
+ In the pale, sad light of the Northern day
+ Seen by the blanketed Montagnais,
+ Or squaw, in her small kyack,
+ Crossing the spectre's track.
+
+ On the deck a maiden wrings her hands;
+ Her likeness kneels on the gray coast sands;
+ One in her wild despair,
+ And one in the trance of prayer.
+
+ She flits before no earthly blast,
+ The red sign fluttering from her mast,
+ Over the solemn seas,
+ The ghost of the schooner Breeze!
+
+ 1882.
+
+
+
+
+THE WISHING BRIDGE.
+
+ AMONG the legends sung or said
+ Along our rocky shore,
+ The Wishing Bridge of Marblehead
+ May well be sung once more.
+
+ An hundred years ago (so ran
+ The old-time story) all
+ Good wishes said above its span
+ Would, soon or late, befall.
+
+ If pure and earnest, never failed
+ The prayers of man or maid
+ For him who on the deep sea sailed,
+ For her at home who stayed.
+
+ Once thither came two girls from school,
+ And wished in childish glee
+ And one would be a queen and rule,
+ And one the world would see.
+
+ Time passed; with change of hopes and fears,
+ And in the self-same place,
+ Two women, gray with middle years,
+ Stood, wondering, face to face.
+
+ With wakened memories, as they met,
+ They queried what had been
+ "A poor man's wife am I, and yet,"
+ Said one, "I am a queen.
+
+ "My realm a little homestead is,
+ Where, lacking crown and throne,
+ I rule by loving services
+ And patient toil alone."
+
+ The other said: "The great world lies
+ Beyond me as it lay;
+ O'er love's and duty's boundaries
+ My feet may never stray.
+
+ "I see but common sights of home,
+ Its common sounds I hear,
+ My widowed mother's sick-bed room
+ Sufficeth for my sphere.
+
+ "I read to her some pleasant page
+ Of travel far and wide,
+ And in a dreamy pilgrimage
+ We wander side by side.
+
+ "And when, at last, she falls asleep,
+ My book becomes to me
+ A magic glass: my watch I keep,
+ But all the world I see.
+
+ "A farm-wife queen your place you fill,
+ While fancy's privilege
+ Is mine to walk the earth at will,
+ Thanks to the Wishing Bridge."
+
+ "Nay, leave the legend for the truth,"
+ The other cried, "and say
+ God gives the wishes of our youth,
+ But in His own best way!"
+
+ 1882.
+
+
+
+
+HOW THE WOMEN WENT FROM DOVER.
+
+The following is a copy of the warrant issued by Major Waldron, of
+Dover, in 1662. The Quakers, as was their wont, prophesied against him,
+and saw, as they supposed, the fulfilment of their prophecy when, many
+years after, he was killed by the Indians.
+
+ To the constables of Dover, Hampton, Salisbury, Newbury, Rowley,
+ Ipswich, Wenham, Lynn, Boston, Roxbury, Dedham, and until these
+ vagabond Quakers are carried out of this jurisdiction. You, and
+ every one of you, are required, in the King's Majesty's name, to
+ take these vagabond Quakers, Anne Colman, Mary Tomkins, and Alice
+ Ambrose, and make them fast to the cart's tail, and driving the
+ cart through your several towns, to whip them upon their naked
+ backs not exceeding ten stripes apiece on each of them, in each
+ town; and so to convey them from constable to constable till they
+ are out of this jurisdiction, as you will answer it at your peril;
+ and this shall be your warrant.
+ RICHARD WALDRON.
+ Dated at Dover, December 22, 1662.
+
+This warrant was executed only in Dover and Hampton. At Salisbury the
+constable refused to obey it. He was sustained by the town's people, who
+were under the influence of Major Robert Pike, the leading man in the
+lower valley of the Merrimac, who stood far in advance of his time, as
+an advocate of religious freedom, and an opponent of ecclesiastical
+authority. He had the moral courage to address an able and manly letter
+to the court at Salem, remonstrating against the witchcraft trials.
+
+
+ THE tossing spray of Cocheco's fall
+ Hardened to ice on its rocky wall,
+ As through Dover town in the chill, gray dawn,
+ Three women passed, at the cart-tail drawn!
+
+ Bared to the waist, for the north wind's grip
+ And keener sting of the constable's whip,
+ The blood that followed each hissing blow
+ Froze as it sprinkled the winter snow.
+
+ Priest and ruler, boy and maid
+ Followed the dismal cavalcade;
+ And from door and window, open thrown,
+ Looked and wondered gaffer and crone.
+
+ "God is our witness," the victims cried,
+ We suffer for Him who for all men died;
+ The wrong ye do has been done before,
+ We bear the stripes that the Master bore!
+
+ And thou, O Richard Waldron, for whom
+ We hear the feet of a coming doom,
+ On thy cruel heart and thy hand of wrong
+ Vengeance is sure, though it tarry long.
+
+ "In the light of the Lord, a flame we see
+ Climb and kindle a proud roof-tree;
+ And beneath it an old man lying dead,
+ With stains of blood on his hoary head."
+
+ "Smite, Goodman Hate-Evil!--harder still!"
+ The magistrate cried, "lay on with a will!
+ Drive out of their bodies the Father of Lies,
+ Who through them preaches and prophesies!"
+
+ So into the forest they held their way,
+ By winding river and frost-rimmed bay,
+ Over wind-swept hills that felt the beat
+ Of the winter sea at their icy feet.
+
+ The Indian hunter, searching his traps,
+ Peered stealthily through the forest gaps;
+ And the outlying settler shook his head,--
+ "They're witches going to jail," he said.
+
+ At last a meeting-house came in view;
+ A blast on his horn the constable blew;
+ And the boys of Hampton cried up and down,
+ "The Quakers have come!" to the wondering town.
+
+ From barn and woodpile the goodman came;
+ The goodwife quitted her quilting frame,
+ With her child at her breast; and, hobbling slow,
+ The grandam followed to see the show.
+
+ Once more the torturing whip was swung,
+ Once more keen lashes the bare flesh stung.
+ "Oh, spare! they are bleeding!"' a little maid cried,
+ And covered her face the sight to hide.
+
+ A murmur ran round the crowd: "Good folks,"
+ Quoth the constable, busy counting the strokes,
+ "No pity to wretches like these is due,
+ They have beaten the gospel black and blue!"
+
+ Then a pallid woman, in wild-eyed fear,
+ With her wooden noggin of milk drew near.
+ "Drink, poor hearts!" a rude hand smote
+ Her draught away from a parching throat.
+
+ "Take heed," one whispered, "they'll take your cow
+ For fines, as they took your horse and plough,
+ And the bed from under you." "Even so,"
+ She said; "they are cruel as death, I know."
+
+ Then on they passed, in the waning day,
+ Through Seabrook woods, a weariful way;
+ By great salt meadows and sand-hills bare,
+ And glimpses of blue sea here and there.
+
+ By the meeting-house in Salisbury town,
+ The sufferers stood, in the red sundown,
+ Bare for the lash! O pitying Night,
+ Drop swift thy curtain and hide the sight.
+
+ With shame in his eye and wrath on his lip
+ The Salisbury constable dropped his whip.
+ "This warrant means murder foul and red;
+ Cursed is he who serves it," he said.
+
+ "Show me the order, and meanwhile strike
+ A blow at your peril!" said Justice Pike.
+ Of all the rulers the land possessed,
+ Wisest and boldest was he and best.
+
+ He scoffed at witchcraft; the priest he met
+ As man meets man; his feet he set
+ Beyond his dark age, standing upright,
+ Soul-free, with his face to the morning light.
+
+ He read the warrant: "These convey
+ From our precincts; at every town on the way
+ Give each ten lashes." "God judge the brute!
+ I tread his order under my foot!
+
+ "Cut loose these poor ones and let them go;
+ Come what will of it, all men shall know
+ No warrant is good, though backed by the Crown,
+ For whipping women in Salisbury town!"
+
+ The hearts of the villagers, half released
+ From creed of terror and rule of priest,
+ By a primal instinct owned the right
+ Of human pity in law's despite.
+
+ For ruth and chivalry only slept,
+ His Saxon manhood the yeoman kept;
+ Quicker or slower, the same blood ran
+ In the Cavalier and the Puritan.
+
+ The Quakers sank on their knees in praise
+ And thanks. A last, low sunset blaze
+ Flashed out from under a cloud, and shed
+ A golden glory on each bowed head.
+
+ The tale is one of an evil time,
+ When souls were fettered and thought was crime,
+ And heresy's whisper above its breath
+ Meant shameful scourging and bonds and death!
+
+ What marvel, that hunted and sorely tried,
+ Even woman rebuked and prophesied,
+ And soft words rarely answered back
+ The grim persuasion of whip and rack.
+
+ If her cry from the whipping-post and jail
+ Pierced sharp as the Kenite's driven nail,
+ O woman, at ease in these happier days,
+ Forbear to judge of thy sister's ways!
+
+ How much thy beautiful life may owe
+ To her faith and courage thou canst not know,
+ Nor how from the paths of thy calm retreat
+ She smoothed the thorns with her bleeding feet.
+
+ 1883.
+
+
+
+
+SAINT GREGORY'S GUEST.
+
+ A TALE for Roman guides to tell
+ To careless, sight-worn travellers still,
+ Who pause beside the narrow cell
+ Of Gregory on the Caelian Hill.
+
+ One day before the monk's door came
+ A beggar, stretching empty palms,
+ Fainting and fast-sick, in the name
+ Of the Most Holy asking alms.
+
+ And the monk answered, "All I have
+ In this poor cell of mine I give,
+ The silver cup my mother gave;
+ In Christ's name take thou it, and live."
+
+ Years passed; and, called at last to bear
+ The pastoral crook and keys of Rome,
+ The poor monk, in Saint Peter's chair,
+ Sat the crowned lord of Christendom.
+
+ "Prepare a feast," Saint Gregory cried,
+ "And let twelve beggars sit thereat."
+ The beggars came, and one beside,
+ An unknown stranger, with them sat.
+
+ "I asked thee not," the Pontiff spake,
+ "O stranger; but if need be thine,
+ I bid thee welcome, for the sake
+ Of Him who is thy Lord and mine."
+
+ A grave, calm face the stranger raised,
+ Like His who on Gennesaret trod,
+ Or His on whom the Chaldeans gazed,
+ Whose form was as the Son of God.
+
+ "Know'st thou," he said, "thy gift of old?"
+ And in the hand he lifted up
+ The Pontiff marvelled to behold
+ Once more his mother's silver cup.
+
+ "Thy prayers and alms have risen, and bloom
+ Sweetly among the flowers of heaven.
+ I am The Wonderful, through whom
+ Whate'er thou askest shall be given."
+
+ He spake and vanished. Gregory fell
+ With his twelve guests in mute accord
+ Prone on their faces, knowing well
+ Their eyes of flesh had seen the Lord.
+
+ The old-time legend is not vain;
+ Nor vain thy art, Verona's Paul,
+ Telling it o'er and o'er again
+ On gray Vicenza's frescoed wall.
+
+ Still wheresoever pity shares
+ Its bread with sorrow, want, and sin,
+ And love the beggar's feast prepares,
+ The uninvited Guest comes in.
+
+ Unheard, because our ears are dull,
+ Unseen, because our eyes are dim,
+ He walks our earth, The Wonderful,
+ And all good deeds are done to Him.
+
+ 1883.
+
+
+
+
+BIRCHBROOK MILL.
+
+ A NOTELESS stream, the Birchbrook runs
+ Beneath its leaning trees;
+ That low, soft ripple is its own,
+ That dull roar is the sea's.
+
+ Of human signs it sees alone
+ The distant church spire's tip,
+ And, ghost-like, on a blank of gray,
+ The white sail of a ship.
+
+ No more a toiler at the wheel,
+ It wanders at its will;
+ Nor dam nor pond is left to tell
+ Where once was Birchbrook mill.
+
+ The timbers of that mill have fed
+ Long since a farmer's fires;
+ His doorsteps are the stones that ground
+ The harvest of his sires.
+
+ Man trespassed here; but Nature lost
+ No right of her domain;
+ She waited, and she brought the old
+ Wild beauty back again.
+
+ By day the sunlight through the leaves
+ Falls on its moist, green sod,
+ And wakes the violet bloom of spring
+ And autumn's golden-rod.
+
+ Its birches whisper to the wind,
+ The swallow dips her wings
+ In the cool spray, and on its banks
+ The gray song-sparrow sings.
+
+ But from it, when the dark night falls,
+ The school-girl shrinks with dread;
+ The farmer, home-bound from his fields,
+ Goes by with quickened tread.
+
+ They dare not pause to hear the grind
+ Of shadowy stone on stone;
+ The plashing of a water-wheel
+ Where wheel there now is none.
+
+ Has not a cry of pain been heard
+ Above the clattering mill?
+ The pawing of an unseen horse,
+ Who waits his mistress still?
+
+ Yet never to the listener's eye
+ Has sight confirmed the sound;
+ A wavering birch line marks alone
+ The vacant pasture ground.
+
+ No ghostly arms fling up to heaven
+ The agony of prayer;
+ No spectral steed impatient shakes
+ His white mane on the air.
+
+ The meaning of that common dread
+ No tongue has fitly told;
+ The secret of the dark surmise
+ The brook and birches hold.
+
+ What nameless horror of the past
+ Broods here forevermore?
+ What ghost his unforgiven sin
+ Is grinding o'er and o'er?
+
+ Does, then, immortal memory play
+ The actor's tragic part,
+ Rehearsals of a mortal life
+ And unveiled human heart?
+
+ God's pity spare a guilty soul
+ That drama of its ill,
+ And let the scenic curtain fall
+ On Birchbrook's haunted mill
+
+ 1884.
+
+
+
+
+THE TWO ELIZABETHS.
+
+Read at the unveiling of the bust of Elizabeth Fry at the Friends'
+School, Providence, R. I.
+
+A. D. 1209.
+
+ AMIDST Thuringia's wooded hills she dwelt,
+ A high-born princess, servant of the poor,
+ Sweetening with gracious words the food she dealt
+ To starving throngs at Wartburg's blazoned door.
+
+ A blinded zealot held her soul in chains,
+ Cramped the sweet nature that he could not kill,
+ Scarred her fair body with his penance-pains,
+ And gauged her conscience by his narrow will.
+
+ God gave her gifts of beauty and of grace,
+ With fast and vigil she denied them all;
+ Unquestioning, with sad, pathetic face,
+ She followed meekly at her stern guide's call.
+
+ So drooped and died her home-blown rose of bliss
+ In the chill rigor of a discipline
+ That turned her fond lips from her children's kiss,
+ And made her joy of motherhood a sin.
+
+ To their sad level by compassion led,
+ One with the low and vile herself she made,
+ While thankless misery mocked the hand that fed,
+ And laughed to scorn her piteous masquerade.
+
+ But still, with patience that outwearied hate,
+ She gave her all while yet she had to give;
+ And then her empty hands, importunate,
+ In prayer she lifted that the poor might live.
+
+ Sore pressed by grief, and wrongs more hard to bear,
+ And dwarfed and stifled by a harsh control,
+ She kept life fragrant with good deeds and prayer,
+ And fresh and pure the white flower of her soul.
+
+ Death found her busy at her task: one word
+ Alone she uttered as she paused to die,
+ "Silence!"--then listened even as one who heard
+ With song and wing the angels drawing nigh!
+
+ Now Fra Angelico's roses fill her hands,
+ And, on Murillo's canvas, Want and Pain
+ Kneel at her feet. Her marble image stands
+ Worshipped and crowned in Marburg's holy fane.
+
+ Yea, wheresoe'er her Church its cross uprears,
+ Wide as the world her story still is told;
+ In manhood's reverence, woman's prayers and tears,
+ She lives again whose grave is centuries old.
+
+ And still, despite the weakness or the blame
+ Of blind submission to the blind, she hath
+ A tender place in hearts of every name,
+ And more than Rome owns Saint Elizabeth!
+
+
+ A. D. 1780.
+
+ Slow ages passed: and lo! another came,
+ An English matron, in whose simple faith
+ Nor priestly rule nor ritual had claim,
+ A plain, uncanonized Elizabeth.
+
+ No sackcloth robe, nor ashen-sprinkled hair,
+ Nor wasting fast, nor scourge, nor vigil long,
+ Marred her calm presence. God had made her fair,
+ And she could do His goodly work no wrong.
+
+ Their yoke is easy and their burden light
+ Whose sole confessor is the Christ of God;
+ Her quiet trust and faith transcending sight
+ Smoothed to her feet the difficult paths she trod.
+
+ And there she walked, as duty bade her go,
+ Safe and unsullied as a cloistered nun,
+ Shamed with her plainness Fashion's gaudy show,
+ And overcame the world she did not shun.
+
+ In Earlham's bowers, in Plashet's liberal hall,
+ In the great city's restless crowd and din,
+ Her ear was open to the Master's call,
+ And knew the summons of His voice within.
+
+ Tender as mother, beautiful as wife,
+ Amidst the throngs of prisoned crime she stood
+ In modest raiment faultless as her life,
+ The type of England's worthiest womanhood.
+
+ To melt the hearts that harshness turned to stone
+ The sweet persuasion of her lips sufficed,
+ And guilt, which only hate and fear had known,
+ Saw in her own the pitying love of Christ.
+
+ So wheresoe'er the guiding Spirit went
+ She followed, finding every prison cell
+ It opened for her sacred as a tent
+ Pitched by Gennesaret or by Jacob's well.
+
+ And Pride and Fashion felt her strong appeal,
+ And priest and ruler marvelled as they saw
+ How hand in hand went wisdom with her zeal,
+ And woman's pity kept the bounds of law.
+
+ She rests in God's peace; but her memory stirs
+ The air of earth as with an angel's wings,
+ And warms and moves the hearts of men like hers,
+ The sainted daughter of Hungarian kings.
+
+ United now, the Briton and the Hun,
+ Each, in her own time, faithful unto death,
+ Live sister souls! in name and spirit one,
+ Thuringia's saint and our Elizabeth!
+
+ 1885.
+
+
+
+
+REQUITAL.
+
+ As Islam's Prophet, when his last day drew
+ Nigh to its close, besought all men to say
+ Whom he had wronged, to whom he then should pay
+ A debt forgotten, or for pardon sue,
+ And, through the silence of his weeping friends,
+ A strange voice cried: "Thou owest me a debt,"
+ "Allah be praised!" he answered. "Even yet
+ He gives me power to make to thee amends.
+ O friend! I thank thee for thy timely word."
+ So runs the tale. Its lesson all may heed,
+ For all have sinned in thought, or word, or deed,
+ Or, like the Prophet, through neglect have erred.
+ All need forgiveness, all have debts to pay
+ Ere the night cometh, while it still is day.
+
+ 1885.
+
+
+
+
+THE HOMESTEAD.
+
+ AGAINST the wooded hills it stands,
+ Ghost of a dead home, staring through
+ Its broken lights on wasted lands
+ Where old-time harvests grew.
+
+ Unploughed, unsown, by scythe unshorn,
+ The poor, forsaken farm-fields lie,
+ Once rich and rife with golden corn
+ And pale green breadths of rye.
+
+ Of healthful herb and flower bereft,
+ The garden plot no housewife keeps;
+ Through weeds and tangle only left,
+ The snake, its tenant, creeps.
+
+ A lilac spray, still blossom-clad,
+ Sways slow before the empty rooms;
+ Beside the roofless porch a sad
+ Pathetic red rose blooms.
+
+ His track, in mould and dust of drouth,
+ On floor and hearth the squirrel leaves,
+ And in the fireless chimney's mouth
+ His web the spider weaves.
+
+ The leaning barn, about to fall,
+ Resounds no more on husking eves;
+ No cattle low in yard or stall,
+ No thresher beats his sheaves.
+
+ So sad, so drear! It seems almost
+ Some haunting Presence makes its sign;
+ That down yon shadowy lane some ghost
+ Might drive his spectral kine!
+
+ O home so desolate and lorn!
+ Did all thy memories die with thee?
+ Were any wed, were any born,
+ Beneath this low roof-tree?
+
+ Whose axe the wall of forest broke,
+ And let the waiting sunshine through?
+ What goodwife sent the earliest smoke
+ Up the great chimney flue?
+
+ Did rustic lovers hither come?
+ Did maidens, swaying back and forth
+ In rhythmic grace, at wheel and loom,
+ Make light their toil with mirth?
+
+ Did child feet patter on the stair?
+ Did boyhood frolic in the snow?
+ Did gray age, in her elbow chair,
+ Knit, rocking to and fro?
+
+ The murmuring brook, the sighing breeze,
+ The pine's slow whisper, cannot tell;
+ Low mounds beneath the hemlock-trees
+ Keep the home secrets well.
+
+ Cease, mother-land, to fondly boast
+ Of sons far off who strive and thrive,
+ Forgetful that each swarming host
+ Must leave an emptier hive.
+
+ O wanderers from ancestral soil,
+ Leave noisome mill and chaffering store:
+ Gird up your loins for sturdier toil,
+ And build the home once more!
+
+ Come back to bayberry-scented slopes,
+ And fragrant fern, and ground-nut vine;
+ Breathe airs blown over holt and copse
+ Sweet with black birch and pine.
+
+ What matter if the gains are small
+ That life's essential wants supply?
+ Your homestead's title gives you all
+ That idle wealth can buy.
+
+ All that the many-dollared crave,
+ The brick-walled slaves of 'Change and mart,
+ Lawns, trees, fresh air, and flowers, you have,
+ More dear for lack of art.
+
+ Your own sole masters, freedom-willed,
+ With none to bid you go or stay,
+ Till the old fields your fathers tilled,
+ As manly men as they!
+
+ With skill that spares your toiling hands,
+ And chemic aid that science brings,
+ Reclaim the waste and outworn lands,
+ And reign thereon as kings
+
+ 1886.
+
+
+
+
+HOW THE ROBIN CAME.
+
+AN ALGONQUIN LEGEND.
+
+ HAPPY young friends, sit by me,
+ Under May's blown apple-tree,
+ While these home-birds in and out
+ Through the blossoms flit about.
+ Hear a story, strange and old,
+ By the wild red Indians told,
+ How the robin came to be:
+
+ Once a great chief left his son,--
+ Well-beloved, his only one,--
+ When the boy was well-nigh grown,
+ In the trial-lodge alone.
+ Left for tortures long and slow
+ Youths like him must undergo,
+ Who their pride of manhood test,
+ Lacking water, food, and rest.
+
+ Seven days the fast he kept,
+ Seven nights he never slept.
+ Then the young boy, wrung with pain,
+ Weak from nature's overstrain,
+ Faltering, moaned a low complaint
+ "Spare me, father, for I faint!"
+ But the chieftain, haughty-eyed,
+ Hid his pity in his pride.
+ "You shall be a hunter good,
+ Knowing never lack of food;
+ You shall be a warrior great,
+ Wise as fox and strong as bear;
+ Many scalps your belt shall wear,
+ If with patient heart you wait
+ Bravely till your task is done.
+ Better you should starving die
+ Than that boy and squaw should cry
+ Shame upon your father's son!"
+
+ When next morn the sun's first rays
+ Glistened on the hemlock sprays,
+ Straight that lodge the old chief sought,
+ And boiled sainp and moose meat brought.
+ "Rise and eat, my son!" he said.
+ Lo, he found the poor boy dead!
+
+ As with grief his grave they made,
+ And his bow beside him laid,
+ Pipe, and knife, and wampum-braid,
+ On the lodge-top overhead,
+ Preening smooth its breast of red
+ And the brown coat that it wore,
+ Sat a bird, unknown before.
+ And as if with human tongue,
+ "Mourn me not," it said, or sung;
+ "I, a bird, am still your son,
+ Happier than if hunter fleet,
+ Or a brave, before your feet
+ Laying scalps in battle won.
+ Friend of man, my song shall cheer
+ Lodge and corn-land; hovering near,
+ To each wigwam I shall bring
+ Tidings of the corning spring;
+ Every child my voice shall know
+ In the moon of melting snow,
+ When the maple's red bud swells,
+ And the wind-flower lifts its bells.
+ As their fond companion
+ Men shall henceforth own your son,
+ And my song shall testify
+ That of human kin am I."
+
+ Thus the Indian legend saith
+ How, at first, the robin came
+ With a sweeter life from death,
+ Bird for boy, and still the same.
+ If my young friends doubt that this
+ Is the robin's genesis,
+ Not in vain is still the myth
+ If a truth be found therewith
+ Unto gentleness belong
+ Gifts unknown to pride and wrong;
+ Happier far than hate is praise,--
+ He who sings than he who slays.
+
+
+
+
+BANISHED FROM MASSACHUSETTS.
+
+1660.
+
+On a painting by E. A. Abbey. The General Court of Massachusetts enacted
+Oct. 19, 1658, that "any person or persons of the cursed sect of
+Quakers" should, on conviction of the same, be banished, on pain
+of death, from the jurisdiction of the common-wealth.
+
+
+ OVER the threshold of his pleasant home
+ Set in green clearings passed the exiled Friend,
+ In simple trust, misdoubting not the end.
+ "Dear heart of mine!" he said, "the time has come
+ To trust the Lord for shelter." One long gaze
+ The goodwife turned on each familiar thing,--
+ The lowing kine, the orchard blossoming,
+ The open door that showed the hearth-fire's blaze,--
+ And calmly answered, "Yes, He will provide."
+ Silent and slow they crossed the homestead's bound,
+ Lingering the longest by their child's grave-mound.
+ "Move on, or stay and hang!" the sheriff cried.
+ They left behind them more than home or land,
+ And set sad faces to an alien strand.
+
+ Safer with winds and waves than human wrath,
+ With ravening wolves than those whose zeal for God
+ Was cruelty to man, the exiles trod
+ Drear leagues of forest without guide or path,
+ Or launching frail boats on the uncharted sea,
+ Round storm-vexed capes, whose teeth of granite ground
+ The waves to foam, their perilous way they wound,
+ Enduring all things so their souls were free.
+ Oh, true confessors, shaming them who did
+ Anew the wrong their Pilgrim Fathers bore
+ For you the Mayflower spread her sail once more,
+ Freighted with souls, to all that duty bid
+ Faithful as they who sought an unknown land,
+ O'er wintry seas, from Holland's Hook of Sand!
+
+ So from his lost home to the darkening main,
+ Bodeful of storm, stout Macy held his way,
+ And, when the green shore blended with the gray,
+ His poor wife moaned: "Let us turn back again."
+ "Nay, woman, weak of faith, kneel down," said he,
+ And say thy prayers: the Lord himself will steer;
+ And led by Him, nor man nor devils I fear!
+ So the gray Southwicks, from a rainy sea,
+ Saw, far and faint, the loom of land, and gave
+ With feeble voices thanks for friendly ground
+ Whereon to rest their weary feet, and found
+ A peaceful death-bed and a quiet grave
+ Where, ocean-walled, and wiser than his age,
+ The lord of Shelter scorned the bigot's rage.
+ Aquidneck's isle, Nantucket's lonely shores,
+ And Indian-haunted Narragansett saw
+ The way-worn travellers round their camp-fire draw,
+ Or heard the plashing of their weary oars.
+ And every place whereon they rested grew
+ Happier for pure and gracious womanhood,
+ And men whose names for stainless honor stood,
+ Founders of States and rulers wise and true.
+ The Muse of history yet shall make amends
+ To those who freedom, peace, and justice taught,
+ Beyond their dark age led the van of thought,
+ And left unforfeited the name of Friends.
+ O mother State, how foiled was thy design
+ The gain was theirs, the loss alone was thine.
+
+
+
+
+THE BROWN DWARF OF RUGEN.
+
+The hint of this ballad is found in Arndt's Murchen, Berlin, 1816. The
+ballad appeared first in St. Nicholas, whose young readers were advised,
+while smiling at the absurd superstition, to remember that bad
+companionship and evil habits, desires, and passions are more to be
+dreaded now than the Elves and Trolls who frightened the children of
+past ages.
+
+
+ THE pleasant isle of Rugen looks the Baltic water o'er,
+ To the silver-sanded beaches of the Pomeranian
+ shore;
+
+ And in the town of Rambin a little boy and maid
+ Plucked the meadow-flowers together and in the
+ sea-surf played.
+
+ Alike were they in beauty if not in their degree
+ He was the Amptman's first-born, the miller's
+ child was she.
+
+ Now of old the isle of Rugen was full of Dwarfs
+ and Trolls,
+ The brown-faced little Earth-men, the people without
+ souls;
+
+ And for every man and woman in Rugen's island
+ found
+ Walking in air and sunshine, a Troll was
+ underground.
+
+ It chanced the little maiden, one morning, strolled
+ away
+ Among the haunted Nine Hills, where the elves
+ and goblins play.
+
+ That day, in barley-fields below, the harvesters had
+ known
+ Of evil voices in the air, and heard the small horns
+ blown.
+
+ She came not back; the search for her in field and
+ wood was vain
+ They cried her east, they cried her west, but she
+ came not again.
+
+ "She's down among the Brown Dwarfs," said the
+ dream-wives wise and old,
+ And prayers were made, and masses said, and
+ Rambin's church bell tolled.
+
+ Five years her father mourned her; and then John
+ Deitrich said
+ "I will find my little playmate, be she alive or
+ dead."
+
+ He watched among the Nine Hills, he heard the
+ Brown Dwarfs sing,
+ And saw them dance by moonlight merrily in a
+ ring.
+
+ And when their gay-robed leader tossed up his cap
+ of red,
+ Young Deitrich caught it as it fell, and thrust it
+ on his head.
+
+ The Troll came crouching at his feet and wept for
+ lack of it.
+ "Oh, give me back my magic cap, for your great
+ head unfit!"
+
+ "Nay," Deitrich said; "the Dwarf who throws his
+ charmed cap away,
+ Must serve its finder at his will, and for his folly
+ pay.
+
+ "You stole my pretty Lisbeth, and hid her in the
+ earth;
+ And you shall ope the door of glass and let me
+ lead her forth."
+
+ "She will not come; she's one of us; she's
+ mine!" the Brown Dwarf said;
+ The day is set, the cake is baked, to-morrow we
+ shall wed."
+
+ "The fell fiend fetch thee!" Deitrich cried, "and
+ keep thy foul tongue still.
+ Quick! open, to thy evil world, the glass door of
+ the hill!"
+
+ The Dwarf obeyed; and youth and Troll down, the
+ long stair-way passed,
+ And saw in dim and sunless light a country strange
+ and vast.
+
+ Weird, rich, and wonderful, he saw the elfin
+ under-land,--
+ Its palaces of precious stones, its streets of golden
+ sand.
+
+ He came unto a banquet-hall with tables richly
+ spread,
+ Where a young maiden served to him the red wine
+ and the bread.
+
+ How fair she seemed among the Trolls so ugly and
+ so wild!
+ Yet pale and very sorrowful, like one who never
+ smiled!
+
+ Her low, sweet voice, her gold-brown hair, her tender
+ blue eyes seemed
+ Like something he had seen elsewhere or some.
+ thing he had dreamed.
+
+ He looked; he clasped her in his arms; he knew
+ the long-lost one;
+ "O Lisbeth! See thy playmate--I am the
+ Amptman's son!"
+
+ She leaned her fair head on his breast, and through
+ her sobs she spoke
+ "Oh, take me from this evil place, and from the
+ elfin folk,
+
+ "And let me tread the grass-green fields and smell
+ the flowers again,
+ And feel the soft wind on my cheek and hear the
+ dropping rain!
+
+ "And oh, to hear the singing bird, the rustling of
+ the tree,
+ The lowing cows, the bleat of sheep, the voices of
+ the sea;
+
+ "And oh, upon my father's knee to sit beside the
+ door,
+ And hear the bell of vespers ring in Rambin
+ church once more!"
+
+ He kissed her cheek, he kissed her lips; the Brown
+ Dwarf groaned to see,
+ And tore his tangled hair and ground his long
+ teeth angrily.
+
+ But Deitrich said: "For five long years this tender
+ Christian maid
+ Has served you in your evil world and well must
+ she be paid!
+
+ "Haste!--hither bring me precious gems, the
+ richest in your store;
+ Then when we pass the gate of glass, you'll take
+ your cap once more."
+
+ No choice was left the baffled Troll, and, murmuring,
+ he obeyed,
+ And filled the pockets of the youth and apron of
+ the maid.
+
+ They left the dreadful under-land and passed the
+ gate of glass;
+ They felt the sunshine's warm caress, they trod the
+ soft, green grass.
+
+ And when, beneath, they saw the Dwarf stretch up
+ to them his brown
+ And crooked claw-like fingers, they tossed his red
+ cap down.
+
+ Oh, never shone so bright a sun, was never sky so
+ blue,
+ As hand in hand they homeward walked the pleasant
+ meadows through!
+
+ And never sang the birds so sweet in Rambin's
+ woods before,
+ And never washed the waves so soft along the Baltic
+ shore;
+
+ And when beneath his door-yard trees the father
+ met his child,
+ The bells rung out their merriest peal, the folks
+ with joy ran wild.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Works of Whittier, Volume I (of
+VII), by John Greenleaf Whittier
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Works of Whittier, Volume I (of VII), by John Greenleaf Whittier
+
+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
+will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
+using this eBook.
+
+Title: The Works of Whittier, Volume I (of VII)
+ Narrative And Legendary Poems
+
+Author: John Greenleaf Whittier
+
+Release Date: October 2, 2003 [eBook #9567]
+[Most recently updated: September 26, 2021]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+Produced by: David Widger
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE WORKS OF WHITTIER ***
+
+
+
+
+THE WORKS OF JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER
+
+
+By John Greenleaf Whittier
+
+
+
+
+
+VOLUME I. NARRATIVE AND LEGENDARY POEMS
+
+
+
+
+PUBLISHERS' ADVERTISEMENT
+
+The Standard Library Edition of Mr. Whittier's writings comprises his
+poetical and prose works as re-arranged and thoroughly revised by
+himself or with his cooperation. Mr. Whittier has supplied such
+additional information regarding the subject and occasion of certain
+poems as may be stated in brief head-notes, and this edition has been
+much enriched by the poet's personal comment. So far as practicable the
+dates of publication of the various articles have been given, and since
+these were originally published soon after composition, the dates of
+their first appearance have been taken as determining the time at which
+they were written. At the request of the Publishers, Mr. Whittier has
+allowed his early poems, discarded from previous collections, to be
+placed, in the general order of their appearance, in an appendix to the
+final volume of poems. By this means the present edition is made so
+complete and retrospective that students of the poet's career will
+always find the most abundant material for their purpose. The Publishers
+congratulate themselves and the public that the careful attention which
+Mr. Whittier has been able to give to this revision of his works has
+resulted in so comprehensive and well-adjusted a collection.
+
+The portraits prefixed to the several volumes have been chosen with a
+view to illustrating successive periods in the poet's life. The
+original sources and dates are indicated in each case.
+
+
+ CONTENTS:
+
+ THE VAUDOIS TEACHER
+ THE FEMALE MARTYR
+ EXTRACT FROM "A NEW ENGLAND LEGEND"
+ THE DEMON OF THE STUDY
+ THE FOUNTAIN
+ PENTUCKET
+ THE NORSEMEN
+ FUNERAL TREE OF THE SOKOKIS
+ ST JOHN
+ THE CYPRESS-TREE OF CEYLON
+ THE EXILES
+ THE KNIGHT OF ST JOHN
+ CASSANDRA SOUTHWICK
+ THE NEW WIFE AND THE OLD
+
+ THE BRIDAL OF PENNACOOK
+ I. THE MERRIMAC
+ II. THE BASHABA
+ III. THE DAUGHTER
+ IV. THE WEDDING
+ V. THE NEW HOME
+ VI. AT PENNACOOK
+ VII. THE DEPARTURE
+ VIII. SONG OF INDIAN WOMEN
+
+ BARCLAY OF URY
+ THE ANGELS OF BUENA VISTA
+ THE LEGEND OF ST MARK
+ KATHLEEN
+ THE WELL OF LOCH MAREE
+ THE CHAPEL OF THE HERMITS
+ TAULER
+ THE HERMIT OF THE THEBAID
+ THE GARRISON OF CAPE ANN
+ THE GIFT OF TRITEMIUS
+ SKIPPER IRESON'S RIDE
+ THE SYCAMORES
+ THE PIPES AT LUCKNOW
+ TELLING THE BEES
+ THE SWAN SONG OF PARSON AVERY
+ THE DOUBLE-HEADED SNAKE OF NEWBURY
+
+ MABEL MARTIN: A HARVEST IDYL
+ PROEM
+ I. THE RIVER VALLEY
+ II. THE HUSKING
+ III. THE WITCH'S DAUGHTER
+ IV. THE CHAMPION
+ V. IN THE SHADOW
+ VI. THE BETROTHAL
+
+ THE PROPHECY OF SAMUEL SEWALL
+ THE RED RIVER VOYAGEUR
+ THE PREACHER
+ THE TRUCE OF PISCATAQUA
+ MY PLAYMATE
+ COBBLER KEEZAR'S VISION
+ AMY WENTWORTH
+ THE COUNTESS
+
+ AMONG THE HILLS
+ PRELUDE
+ AMONG THE HILLS
+
+ THE DOLE OF JARL THORKELL
+ THE TWO RABBINS
+ NOREMBEGA
+ MIRIAM
+ MAUD MULLER
+ MARY GARVIN
+ THE RANGER
+ NAUHAUGHT, THE DEACON
+ THE SISTERS
+ MARGUERITE
+ THE ROBIN
+
+ THE PENNSYLVANIA PILGRIM
+ INTRODUCTORY NOTE
+ PRELUDE
+ THE PENNSYLVANIA PILGRIM
+
+ KING VOLMER AND ELSIE
+ THE THREE BELLS
+ JOHN UNDERHILL
+ CONDUCTOR BRADLEY
+ THE WITCH OF WENHAM
+ KING SOLOMON AND THE ANTS
+ IN THE "OLD SOUTH"
+ THE HENCHMAN
+ THE DEAD FEAST OF THE KOL-FOLK
+ THE KHAN'S DEVIL
+ THE KING'S MISSIVE
+ VALUATION
+ RABBI ISHMAEL
+ THE ROCK-TOMB OF BRADORE
+
+ THE BAY OF SEVEN ISLANDS
+ To H P S
+ THE BAY OF SEVEN ISLANDS
+
+ THE WISHING BRIDGE
+ HOW THE WOMEN WENT FROM DOVER
+ ST GREGORY'S GUEST
+ CONTENTS
+ BIRCHBROOK MILL
+ THE TWO ELIZABETHS
+ REQUITAL
+ THE HOMESTEAD
+ HOW THE ROBIN CAME
+ BANISHED FROM MASSACHUSETTS
+ THE BROWN DWARF OF RUGEN
+
+
+NOTE.--The portrait prefixed to this volume was etched by
+S. A. Schoff, in 1888, after a painting by Bass Otis, a pupil of
+Gilbert Stuart, made in the winter of 1836-1837.
+
+
+
+
+PROEM
+
+ I LOVE the old melodious lays
+ Which softly melt the ages through,
+ The songs of Spenser's golden days,
+ Arcadian Sidney's silvery phrase,
+ Sprinkling our noon of time with freshest morning dew.
+
+ Yet, vainly in my quiet hours
+ To breathe their marvellous notes I try;
+ I feel them, as the leaves and flowers
+ In silence feel the dewy showers,
+ And drink with glad, still lips the blessing of the sky.
+
+ The rigor of a frozen clime,
+ The harshness of an untaught ear,
+ The jarring words of one whose rhyme
+ Beat often Labor's hurried time,
+ Or Duty's rugged march through storm and strife, are here.
+
+ Of mystic beauty, dreamy grace,
+ No rounded art the lack supplies;
+ Unskilled the subtle lines to trace,
+ Or softer shades of Nature's face,
+ I view her common forms with unanointed eyes.
+
+ Nor mine the seer-like power to show
+ The secrets of the heart and mind;
+ To drop the plummet-line below
+ Our common world of joy and woe,
+ A more intense despair or brighter hope to find.
+
+ Yet here at least an earnest sense
+ Of human right and weal is shown;
+ A hate of tyranny intense,
+ And hearty in its vehemence,
+ As if my brother's pain and sorrow were my own.
+
+ O Freedom! if to me belong
+ Nor mighty Milton's gift divine,
+ Nor Marvell's wit and graceful song,
+ Still with a love as deep and strong
+ As theirs, I lay, like them, my best gifts on thy shrine.
+
+ AMESBURY, 11th mo., 1847.
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+The edition of my poems published in 1857 contained the following note
+by way of preface:--
+
+"In these volumes, for the first time, a complete collection of my
+poetical writings has been made. While it is satisfactory to know that
+these scattered children of my brain have found a home, I cannot but
+regret that I have been unable, by reason of illness, to give that
+attention to their revision and arrangement, which respect for the
+opinions of others and my own afterthought and experience demand.
+
+"That there are pieces in this collection which I would 'willingly let
+die,' I am free to confess. But it is now too late to disown them, and I
+must submit to the inevitable penalty of poetical as well as other sins.
+There are others, intimately connected with the author's life and times,
+which owe their tenacity of vitality to the circumstances under which
+they were written, and the events by which they were suggested.
+
+"The long poem of Mogg Megone was in a great measure composed in early
+life; and it is scarcely necessary to say that its subject is not such
+as the writer would have chosen at any subsequent period."
+
+After a lapse of thirty years since the above was written, I have been
+requested by my publishers to make some preparation for a new and
+revised edition of my poems. I cannot flatter myself that I have added
+much to the interest of the work beyond the correction of my own errors
+and those of the press, with the addition of a few heretofore
+unpublished pieces, and occasional notes of explanation which seemed
+necessary. I have made an attempt to classify the poems under a few
+general heads, and have transferred the long poem of Mogg Megone to the
+Appendix, with other specimens of my earlier writings. I have endeavored
+to affix the dates of composition or publication as far as possible.
+
+In looking over these poems I have not been unmindful of occasional
+prosaic lines and verbal infelicities, but at this late day I have
+neither strength nor patience to undertake their correction.
+
+Perhaps a word of explanation may be needed in regard to a class of
+poems written between the years 1832 and 1865. Of their defects from an
+artistic point of view it is not necessary to speak. They were the
+earnest and often vehement expression of the writer's thought and
+feeling at critical periods in the great conflict between Freedom and
+Slavery. They were written with no expectation that they would survive
+the occasions which called them forth: they were protests, alarm
+signals, trumpet-calls to action, words wrung from the writer's heart,
+forged at white heat, and of course lacking the finish and careful
+word-selection which reflection and patient brooding over them might
+have given. Such as they are, they belong to the history of the
+Anti-Slavery movement, and may serve as way-marks of its progress. If
+their language at times seems severe and harsh, the monstrous wrong of
+Slavery which provoked it must be its excuse, if any is needed. In
+attacking it, we did not measure our words. "It is," said Garrison,
+"a waste of politeness to be courteous to the devil." But in truth the
+contest was, in a great measure, an impersonal one,--hatred of slavery
+and not of slave-masters.
+
+ "No common wrong provoked our zeal,
+ The silken gauntlet which is thrown
+ In such a quarrel rings like steel."
+
+Even Thomas Jefferson, in his terrible denunciation of Slavery in the
+Notes on Virginia, says "It is impossible to be temperate and pursue the
+subject of Slavery." After the great contest was over, no class of the
+American people were more ready, with kind words and deprecation of
+harsh retaliation, to welcome back the revolted States than the
+Abolitionists; and none have since more heartily rejoiced at the fast
+increasing prosperity of the South.
+
+Grateful for the measure of favor which has been accorded to my
+writings, I leave this edition with the public. It contains all that I
+care to re-publish, and some things which, had the matter of choice been
+left solely to myself, I should have omitted.
+ J. G. W.
+
+
+
+
+
+NARRATIVE AND LEGENDARY POEMS
+
+
+
+
+THE VAUDOIS TEACHER.
+
+This poem was suggested by the account given of the manner which the
+Waldenses disseminated their principles among the Catholic gentry. They
+gained access to the house through their occupation as peddlers of
+silks, jewels, and trinkets. "Having disposed of some of their goods,"
+it is said by a writer who quotes the inquisitor Rainerus Sacco, "they
+cautiously intimated that they had commodities far more valuable than
+these, inestimable jewels, which they would show if they could be
+protected from the clergy. They would then give their purchasers a Bible
+or Testament; and thereby many were deluded into heresy." The poem,
+under the title Le Colporteur Vaudois, was translated into French by
+Professor G. de Felice, of Montauban, and further naturalized by
+Professor Alexandre Rodolphe Vinet, who quoted it in his lectures on
+French literature, afterwards published. It became familiar in this form
+to the Waldenses, who adopted it as a household poem. An American
+clergyman, J. C. Fletcher, frequently heard it when he was a student,
+about the year 1850, in the theological seminary at Geneva, Switzerland,
+but the authorship of the poem was unknown to those who used it.
+Twenty-five years later, Mr. Fletcher, learning the name of the author,
+wrote to the moderator of the Waldensian synod at La Tour, giving the
+information. At the banquet which closed the meeting of the synod, the
+moderator announced the fact, and was instructed in the name of the
+Waldensian church to write to me a letter of thanks. My letter, written
+in reply, was translated into Italian and printed throughout Italy.
+
+ "O LADY fair, these silks of mine
+ are beautiful and rare,--
+ The richest web of the Indian loom, which beauty's
+ queen might wear;
+ And my pearls are pure as thy own fair neck, with whose
+ radiant light they vie;
+ I have brought them with me a weary way,--will my
+ gentle lady buy?"
+
+ The lady smiled on the worn old man through the
+ dark and clustering curls
+ Which veiled her brow, as she bent to view his
+ silks and glittering pearls;
+ And she placed their price in the old man's hand
+ and lightly turned away,
+ But she paused at the wanderer's earnest call,--
+ "My gentle lady, stay!
+
+ "O lady fair, I have yet a gem which a purer
+ lustre flings,
+ Than the diamond flash of the jewelled crown on
+ the lofty brow of kings;
+ A wonderful pearl of exceeding price, whose virtue
+ shall not decay,
+ Whose light shall be as a spell to thee and a
+ blessing on thy way!"
+
+ The lady glanced at the mirroring steel where her
+ form of grace was seen,
+ Where her eye shone clear, and her dark locks
+ waved their clasping pearls between;
+ "Bring forth thy pearl of exceeding worth, thou
+ traveller gray and old,
+ And name the price of thy precious gem, and my
+ page shall count thy gold."
+
+ The cloud went off from the pilgrim's brow, as a
+ small and meagre book,
+ Unchased with gold or gem of cost, from his
+ folding robe he took!
+ "Here, lady fair, is the pearl of price, may it prove
+ as such to thee
+ Nay, keep thy gold--I ask it not, for the word of
+ God is free!"
+
+ The hoary traveller went his way, but the gift he
+ left behind
+ Hath had its pure and perfect work on that high-
+ born maiden's mind,
+ And she hath turned from the pride of sin to the
+ lowliness of truth,
+ And given her human heart to God in its beautiful
+ hour of youth
+
+ And she hath left the gray old halls, where an evil
+ faith had power,
+ The courtly knights of her father's train, and the
+ maidens of her bower;
+ And she hath gone to the Vaudois vales by lordly
+ feet untrod,
+ Where the poor and needy of earth are rich in the
+ perfect love of God!
+ 1830.
+
+
+
+
+THE FEMALE MARTYR.
+
+Mary G-----, aged eighteen, a "Sister of Charity," died in one of our
+Atlantic cities, during the prevalence of the Indian cholera, while
+in voluntary attendance upon the sick.
+
+
+ "BRING out your dead!" The midnight street
+ Heard and gave back the hoarse, low call;
+ Harsh fell the tread of hasty feet,
+ Glanced through the dark the coarse white sheet,
+ Her coffin and her pall.
+ "What--only one!" the brutal hack-man said,
+ As, with an oath, he spurned away the dead.
+
+ How sunk the inmost hearts of all,
+ As rolled that dead-cart slowly by,
+ With creaking wheel and harsh hoof-fall!
+ The dying turned him to the wall,
+ To hear it and to die!
+ Onward it rolled; while oft its driver stayed,
+ And hoarsely clamored, "Ho! bring out your dead."
+
+ It paused beside the burial-place;
+ "Toss in your load!" and it was done.
+ With quick hand and averted face,
+ Hastily to the grave's embrace
+ They cast them, one by one,
+ Stranger and friend, the evil and the just,
+ Together trodden in the churchyard dust.
+
+ And thou, young martyr! thou wast there;
+ No white-robed sisters round thee trod,
+ Nor holy hymn, nor funeral prayer
+ Rose through the damp and noisome air,
+ Giving thee to thy God;
+ Nor flower, nor cross, nor hallowed taper gave
+ Grace to the dead, and beauty to the grave!
+
+ Yet, gentle sufferer! there shall be,
+ In every heart of kindly feeling,
+ A rite as holy paid to thee
+ As if beneath the convent-tree
+ Thy sisterhood were kneeling,
+ At vesper hours, like sorrowing angels, keeping
+ Their tearful watch around thy place of sleeping.
+
+ For thou wast one in whom the light
+ Of Heaven's own love was kindled well;
+ Enduring with a martyr's might,
+ Through weary day and wakeful night,
+ Far more than words may tell
+ Gentle, and meek, and lowly, and unknown,
+ Thy mercies measured by thy God alone!
+
+ Where manly hearts were failing, where
+ The throngful street grew foul with death,
+ O high-souled martyr! thou wast there,
+ Inhaling, from the loathsome air,
+ Poison with every breath.
+ Yet shrinking not from offices of dread
+ For the wrung dying, and the unconscious dead.
+
+ And, where the sickly taper shed
+ Its light through vapors, damp, confined,
+ Hushed as a seraph's fell thy tread,
+ A new Electra by the bed
+ Of suffering human-kind!
+ Pointing the spirit, in its dark dismay,
+ To that pure hope which fadeth not away.
+
+ Innocent teacher of the high
+ And holy mysteries of Heaven!
+ How turned to thee each glazing eye,
+ In mute and awful sympathy,
+ As thy low prayers were given;
+ And the o'er-hovering Spoiler wore, the while,
+ An angel's features, a deliverer's smile!
+
+ A blessed task! and worthy one
+ Who, turning from the world, as thou,
+ Before life's pathway had begun
+ To leave its spring-time flower and sun,
+ Had sealed her early vow;
+ Giving to God her beauty and her youth,
+ Her pure affections and her guileless truth.
+
+ Earth may not claim thee. Nothing here
+ Could be for thee a meet reward;
+ Thine is a treasure far more dear
+ Eye hath not seen it, nor the ear
+ Of living mortal heard
+ The joys prepared, the promised bliss above,
+ The holy presence of Eternal Love!
+
+ Sleep on in peace. The earth has not
+ A nobler name than thine shall be.
+ The deeds by martial manhood wrought,
+ The lofty energies of thought,
+ The fire of poesy,
+ These have but frail and fading honors; thine
+ Shall Time unto Eternity consign.
+
+ Yea, and when thrones shall crumble down,
+ And human pride and grandeur fall,
+ The herald's line of long renown,
+ The mitre and the kingly crown,--
+ Perishing glories all!
+ The pure devotion of thy generous heart
+ Shall live in Heaven, of which it was a part.
+ 1833.
+
+
+
+
+EXTRACT FROM "A NEW ENGLAND LEGEND."
+
+(Originally a part of the author's Moll Pitcher.)
+
+
+ How has New England's romance fled,
+ Even as a vision of the morning!
+ Its rites foredone, its guardians dead,
+ Its priestesses, bereft of dread,
+ Waking the veriest urchin's scorning!
+ Gone like the Indian wizard's yell
+ And fire-dance round the magic rock,
+ Forgotten like the Druid's spell
+ At moonrise by his holy oak!
+ No more along the shadowy glen
+ Glide the dim ghosts of murdered men;
+ No more the unquiet churchyard dead
+ Glimpse upward from their turfy bed,
+ Startling the traveller, late and lone;
+ As, on some night of starless weather,
+ They silently commune together,
+ Each sitting on his own head-stone
+ The roofless house, decayed, deserted,
+ Its living tenants all departed,
+ No longer rings with midnight revel
+ Of witch, or ghost, or goblin evil;
+ No pale blue flame sends out its flashes
+ Through creviced roof and shattered sashes!
+ The witch-grass round the hazel spring
+ May sharply to the night-air sing,
+ But there no more shall withered hags
+ Refresh at ease their broomstick nags,
+ Or taste those hazel-shadowed waters
+ As beverage meet for Satan's daughters;
+ No more their mimic tones be heard,
+ The mew of cat, the chirp of bird,
+ Shrill blending with the hoarser laughter
+ Of the fell demon following after!
+ The cautious goodman nails no more
+ A horseshoe on his outer door,
+ Lest some unseemly hag should fit
+ To his own mouth her bridle-bit;
+ The goodwife's churn no more refuses
+ Its wonted culinary uses
+ Until, with heated needle burned,
+ The witch has to her place returned!
+ Our witches are no longer old
+ And wrinkled beldames, Satan-sold,
+ But young and gay and laughing creatures,
+ With the heart's sunshine on their features;
+ Their sorcery--the light which dances
+ Where the raised lid unveils its glances;
+ Or that low-breathed and gentle tone,
+ The music of Love's twilight hours,
+ Soft, dream-like, as a fairy's moan
+ Above her nightly closing flowers,
+ Sweeter than that which sighed of yore
+ Along the charmed Ausonian shore!
+ Even she, our own weird heroine,
+ Sole Pythoness of ancient Lynn,'
+ Sleeps calmly where the living laid her;
+ And the wide realm of sorcery,
+ Left by its latest mistress free,
+ Hath found no gray and skilled invader.
+ So--perished Albion's "glammarye,"
+ With him in Melrose Abbey sleeping,
+ His charmed torch beside his knee,
+ That even the dead himself might see
+ The magic scroll within his keeping.
+ And now our modern Yankee sees
+ Nor omens, spells, nor mysteries;
+ And naught above, below, around,
+ Of life or death, of sight or sound,
+ Whate'er its nature, form, or look,
+ Excites his terror or surprise,
+ All seeming to his knowing eyes
+ Familiar as his "catechise,"
+ Or "Webster's Spelling-Book."
+
+ 1833.
+
+
+
+
+THE DEMON OF THE STUDY.
+
+ THE Brownie sits in the Scotchman's room,
+ And eats his meat and drinks his ale,
+ And beats the maid with her unused broom,
+ And the lazy lout with his idle flail;
+ But he sweeps the floor and threshes the corn,
+ And hies him away ere the break of dawn.
+
+ The shade of Denmark fled from the sun,
+ And the Cocklane ghost from the barn-loft cheer,
+ The fiend of Faust was a faithful one,
+ Agrippa's demon wrought in fear,
+ And the devil of Martin Luther sat
+ By the stout monk's side in social chat.
+
+ The Old Man of the Sea, on the neck of him
+ Who seven times crossed the deep,
+ Twined closely each lean and withered limb,
+ Like the nightmare in one's sleep.
+ But he drank of the wine, and Sindbad cast
+ The evil weight from his back at last.
+
+ But the demon that cometh day by day
+ To my quiet room and fireside nook,
+ Where the casement light falls dim and gray
+ On faded painting and ancient book,
+ Is a sorrier one than any whose names
+ Are chronicled well by good King James.
+
+ No bearer of burdens like Caliban,
+ No runner of errands like Ariel,
+ He comes in the shape of a fat old man,
+ Without rap of knuckle or pull of bell;
+ And whence he comes, or whither he goes,
+ I know as I do of the wind which blows.
+
+ A stout old man with a greasy hat
+ Slouched heavily down to his dark, red nose,
+ And two gray eyes enveloped in fat,
+ Looking through glasses with iron bows.
+ Read ye, and heed ye, and ye who can,
+ Guard well your doors from that old man!
+
+ He comes with a careless "How d' ye do?"
+ And seats himself in my elbow-chair;
+ And my morning paper and pamphlet new
+ Fall forthwith under his special care,
+ And he wipes his glasses and clears his throat,
+ And, button by button, unfolds his coat.
+
+ And then he reads from paper and book,
+ In a low and husky asthmatic tone,
+ With the stolid sameness of posture and look
+ Of one who reads to himself alone;
+ And hour after hour on my senses come
+ That husky wheeze and that dolorous hum.
+
+ The price of stocks, the auction sales,
+ The poet's song and the lover's glee,
+ The horrible murders, the seaboard gales,
+ The marriage list, and the jeu d'esprit,
+ All reach my ear in the self-same tone,--
+ I shudder at each, but the fiend reads on!
+
+ Oh, sweet as the lapse of water at noon
+ O'er the mossy roots of some forest tree,
+ The sigh of the wind in the woods of June,
+ Or sound of flutes o'er a moonlight sea,
+ Or the low soft music, perchance, which seems
+ To float through the slumbering singer's dreams,
+
+ So sweet, so dear is the silvery tone,
+ Of her in whose features I sometimes look,
+ As I sit at eve by her side alone,
+ And we read by turns, from the self-same book,
+ Some tale perhaps of the olden time,
+ Some lover's romance or quaint old rhyme.
+
+ Then when the story is one of woe,--
+ Some prisoner's plaint through his dungeon-bar,
+ Her blue eye glistens with tears, and low
+ Her voice sinks down like a moan afar;
+ And I seem to hear that prisoner's wail,
+ And his face looks on me worn and pale.
+
+ And when she reads some merrier song,
+ Her voice is glad as an April bird's,
+ And when the tale is of war and wrong,
+ A trumpet's summons is in her words,
+ And the rush of the hosts I seem to hear,
+ And see the tossing of plume and spear!
+
+ Oh, pity me then, when, day by day,
+ The stout fiend darkens my parlor door;
+ And reads me perchance the self-same lay
+ Which melted in music, the night before,
+ From lips as the lips of Hylas sweet,
+ And moved like twin roses which zephyrs meet!
+
+ I cross my floor with a nervous tread,
+ I whistle and laugh and sing and shout,
+ I flourish my cane above his head,
+ And stir up the fire to roast him out;
+ I topple the chairs, and drum on the pane,
+ And press my hands on my ears, in vain!
+
+ I've studied Glanville and James the wise,
+ And wizard black-letter tomes which treat
+ Of demons of every name and size
+ Which a Christian man is presumed to meet,
+ But never a hint and never a line
+ Can I find of a reading fiend like mine.
+
+ I've crossed the Psalter with Brady and Tate,
+ And laid the Primer above them all,
+ I've nailed a horseshoe over the grate,
+ And hung a wig to my parlor wall
+ Once worn by a learned Judge, they say,
+ At Salem court in the witchcraft day!
+
+ "Conjuro te, sceleratissime,
+ Abire ad tuum locum!"--still
+ Like a visible nightmare he sits by me,--
+ The exorcism has lost its skill;
+ And I hear again in my haunted room
+ The husky wheeze and the dolorous hum!
+
+ Ah! commend me to Mary Magdalen
+ With her sevenfold plagues, to the wandering Jew,
+ To the terrors which haunted Orestes when
+ The furies his midnight curtains drew,
+ But charm him off, ye who charm him can,
+ That reading demon, that fat old man!
+
+ 1835.
+
+
+
+
+THE FOUNTAIN.
+
+On the declivity of a hill in Salisbury, Essex County, is a fountain of
+clear water, gushing from the very roots of a venerable oak. It is about
+two miles from the junction of the Powow River with the Merrimac.
+
+ TRAVELLER! on thy journey toiling
+ By the swift Powow,
+ With the summer sunshine falling
+ On thy heated brow,
+ Listen, while all else is still,
+ To the brooklet from the hill.
+
+ Wild and sweet the flowers are blowing
+ By that streamlet's side,
+ And a greener verdure showing
+ Where its waters glide,
+ Down the hill-slope murmuring on,
+ Over root and mossy stone.
+
+ Where yon oak his broad arms flingeth
+ O'er the sloping hill,
+ Beautiful and freshly springeth
+ That soft-flowing rill,
+ Through its dark roots wreathed and bare,
+ Gushing up to sun and air.
+
+ Brighter waters sparkled never
+ In that magic well,
+ Of whose gift of life forever
+ Ancient legends tell,
+ In the lonely desert wasted,
+ And by mortal lip untasted.
+
+ Waters which the proud Castilian
+ Sought with longing eyes,
+ Underneath the bright pavilion
+ Of the Indian skies,
+ Where his forest pathway lay
+ Through the blooms of Florida.
+
+ Years ago a lonely stranger,
+ With the dusky brow
+ Of the outcast forest-ranger,
+ Crossed the swift Powow,
+ And betook him to the rill
+ And the oak upon the hill.
+
+ O'er his face of moody sadness
+ For an instant shone
+ Something like a gleam of gladness,
+ As he stooped him down
+ To the fountain's grassy side,
+ And his eager thirst supplied.
+
+ With the oak its shadow throwing
+ O'er his mossy seat,
+ And the cool, sweet waters flowing
+ Softly at his feet,
+ Closely by the fountain's rim
+ That lone Indian seated him.
+
+ Autumn's earliest frost had given
+ To the woods below
+ Hues of beauty, such as heaven
+ Lendeth to its bow;
+ And the soft breeze from the west
+ Scarcely broke their dreamy rest.
+
+ Far behind was Ocean striving
+ With his chains of sand;
+ Southward, sunny glimpses giving,
+ 'Twixt the swells of land,
+ Of its calm and silvery track,
+ Rolled the tranquil Merrimac.
+
+ Over village, wood, and meadow
+ Gazed that stranger man,
+ Sadly, till the twilight shadow
+ Over all things ran,
+ Save where spire and westward pane
+ Flashed the sunset back again.
+
+ Gazing thus upon the dwelling
+ Of his warrior sires,
+ Where no lingering trace was telling
+ Of their wigwam fires,
+ Who the gloomy thoughts might know
+ Of that wandering child of woe?
+
+ Naked lay, in sunshine glowing,
+ Hills that once had stood
+ Down their sides the shadows throwing
+ Of a mighty wood,
+ Where the deer his covert kept,
+ And the eagle's pinion swept!
+
+ Where the birch canoe had glided
+ Down the swift Powow,
+ Dark and gloomy bridges strided
+ Those clear waters now;
+ And where once the beaver swam,
+ Jarred the wheel and frowned the dam.
+
+ For the wood-bird's merry singing,
+ And the hunter's cheer,
+ Iron clang and hammer's ringing
+ Smote upon his ear;
+ And the thick and sullen smoke
+ From the blackened forges broke.
+
+ Could it be his fathers ever
+ Loved to linger here?
+ These bare hills, this conquered river,--
+ Could they hold them dear,
+ With their native loveliness
+ Tamed and tortured into this?
+
+ Sadly, as the shades of even
+ Gathered o'er the hill,
+ While the western half of heaven
+ Blushed with sunset still,
+ From the fountain's mossy seat
+ Turned the Indian's weary feet.
+
+ Year on year hath flown forever,
+ But he came no more
+ To the hillside on the river
+ Where he came before.
+ But the villager can tell
+ Of that strange man's visit well.
+
+ And the merry children, laden
+ With their fruits or flowers,
+ Roving boy and laughing maiden,
+ In their school-day hours,
+ Love the simple tale to tell
+ Of the Indian and his well.
+
+ 1837
+
+
+
+
+PENTUCKET.
+
+The village of Haverhill, on the Merrimac, called by the Indians
+Pentucket, was for nearly seventeen years a frontier town, and during
+thirty years endured all the horrors of savage warfare. In the year
+1708, a combined body of French and Indians, under the command of De
+Chaillons, and Hertel de Rouville, the famous and bloody sacker of
+Deerfield, made an attack upon the village, which at that time contained
+only thirty houses. Sixteen of the villagers were massacred, and a still
+larger number made prisoners. About thirty of the enemy also fell, among
+them Hertel de Rouville. The minister of the place, Benjamin Rolfe, was
+killed by a shot through his own door. In a paper entitled The Border
+War of 1708, published in my collection of Recreations and Miscellanies,
+I have given a prose narrative of the surprise of Haverhill.
+
+
+ How sweetly on the wood-girt town
+ The mellow light of sunset shone!
+ Each small, bright lake, whose waters still
+ Mirror the forest and the hill,
+ Reflected from its waveless breast
+ The beauty of a cloudless west,
+ Glorious as if a glimpse were given
+ Within the western gates of heaven,
+ Left, by the spirit of the star
+ Of sunset's holy hour, ajar!
+
+ Beside the river's tranquil flood
+ The dark and low-walled dwellings stood,
+ Where many a rood of open land
+ Stretched up and down on either hand,
+ With corn-leaves waving freshly green
+ The thick and blackened stumps between.
+ Behind, unbroken, deep and dread,
+ The wild, untravelled forest spread,
+ Back to those mountains, white and cold,
+ Of which the Indian trapper told,
+ Upon whose summits never yet
+ Was mortal foot in safety set.
+
+ Quiet and calm without a fear,
+ Of danger darkly lurking near,
+ The weary laborer left his plough,
+ The milkmaid carolled by her cow;
+ From cottage door and household hearth
+ Rose songs of praise, or tones of mirth.
+
+ At length the murmur died away,
+ And silence on that village lay.
+ --So slept Pompeii, tower and hall,
+ Ere the quick earthquake swallowed all,
+ Undreaming of the fiery fate
+ Which made its dwellings desolate.
+
+ Hours passed away. By moonlight sped
+ The Merrimac along his bed.
+ Bathed in the pallid lustre, stood
+ Dark cottage-wall and rock and wood,
+ Silent, beneath that tranquil beam,
+ As the hushed grouping of a dream.
+ Yet on the still air crept a sound,
+ No bark of fox, nor rabbit's bound,
+ Nor stir of wings, nor waters flowing,
+ Nor leaves in midnight breezes blowing.
+
+ Was that the tread of many feet,
+ Which downward from the hillside beat?
+ What forms were those which darkly stood
+ Just on the margin of the wood?--
+ Charred tree-stumps in the moonlight dim,
+ Or paling rude, or leafless limb?
+ No,--through the trees fierce eyeballs glowed,
+ Dark human forms in moonshine showed,
+ Wild from their native wilderness,
+ With painted limbs and battle-dress.
+
+ A yell the dead might wake to hear
+ Swelled on the night air, far and clear;
+ Then smote the Indian tomahawk
+ On crashing door and shattering lock;
+
+ Then rang the rifle-shot, and then
+ The shrill death-scream of stricken men,--
+ Sank the red axe in woman's brain,
+ And childhood's cry arose in vain.
+ Bursting through roof and window came,
+ Red, fast, and fierce, the kindled flame,
+ And blended fire and moonlight glared
+ On still dead men and scalp-knives bared.
+
+ The morning sun looked brightly through
+ The river willows, wet with dew.
+ No sound of combat filled the air,
+ No shout was heard, nor gunshot there;
+ Yet still the thick and sullen smoke
+ From smouldering ruins slowly broke;
+ And on the greensward many a stain,
+ And, here and there, the mangled slain,
+ Told how that midnight bolt had sped
+ Pentucket, on thy fated head.
+
+ Even now the villager can tell
+ Where Rolfe beside his hearthstone fell,
+ Still show the door of wasting oak,
+ Through which the fatal death-shot broke,
+ And point the curious stranger where
+ De Rouville's corse lay grim and bare;
+ Whose hideous head, in death still feared,
+ Bore not a trace of hair or beard;
+ And still, within the churchyard ground,
+ Heaves darkly up the ancient mound,
+ Whose grass-grown surface overlies
+ The victims of that sacrifice.
+ 1838.
+
+
+
+
+THE NORSEMEN.
+
+In the early part of the present century, a fragment of a statue, rudely
+chiselled from dark gray stone, was found in the town of Bradford, on
+the Merrimac. Its origin must be left entirely to conjecture. The fact
+that the ancient Northmen visited the north-east coast of North America
+and probably New England, some centuries before the discovery of the
+western world by Columbus, is very generally admitted.
+
+ GIFT from the cold and silent Past!
+ A relic to the present cast,
+ Left on the ever-changing strand
+ Of shifting and unstable sand,
+ Which wastes beneath the steady chime
+ And beating of the waves of Time!
+ Who from its bed of primal rock
+ First wrenched thy dark, unshapely block?
+ Whose hand, of curious skill untaught,
+ Thy rude and savage outline wrought?
+
+ The waters of my native stream
+ Are glancing in the sun's warm beam;
+ From sail-urged keel and flashing oar
+ The circles widen to its shore;
+ And cultured field and peopled town
+ Slope to its willowed margin down.
+ Yet, while this morning breeze is bringing
+ The home-life sound of school-bells ringing,
+ And rolling wheel, and rapid jar
+ Of the fire-winged and steedless car,
+ And voices from the wayside near
+ Come quick and blended on my ear,--
+ A spell is in this old gray stone,
+ My thoughts are with the Past alone!
+
+ A change!--The steepled town no more
+ Stretches along the sail-thronged shore;
+ Like palace-domes in sunset's cloud,
+ Fade sun-gilt spire and mansion proud
+ Spectrally rising where they stood,
+ I see the old, primeval wood;
+ Dark, shadow-like, on either hand
+ I see its solemn waste expand;
+ It climbs the green and cultured hill,
+ It arches o'er the valley's rill,
+ And leans from cliff and crag to throw
+ Its wild arms o'er the stream below.
+ Unchanged, alone, the same bright river
+ Flows on, as it will flow forever
+ I listen, and I hear the low
+ Soft ripple where its waters go;
+ I hear behind the panther's cry,
+ The wild-bird's scream goes thrilling by,
+ And shyly on the river's brink
+ The deer is stooping down to drink.
+
+ But hark!--from wood and rock flung back,
+ What sound comes up the Merrimac?
+ What sea-worn barks are those which throw
+ The light spray from each rushing prow?
+ Have they not in the North Sea's blast
+ Bowed to the waves the straining mast?
+ Their frozen sails the low, pale sun
+ Of Thule's night has shone upon;
+ Flapped by the sea-wind's gusty sweep
+ Round icy drift, and headland steep.
+ Wild Jutland's wives and Lochlin's daughters
+ Have watched them fading o'er the waters,
+ Lessening through driving mist and spray,
+ Like white-winged sea-birds on their way!
+
+ Onward they glide,--and now I view
+ Their iron-armed and stalwart crew;
+ Joy glistens in each wild blue eye,
+ Turned to green earth and summer sky.
+ Each broad, seamed breast has cast aside
+ Its cumbering vest of shaggy hide;
+ Bared to the sun and soft warm air,
+ Streams back the Norsemen's yellow hair.
+ I see the gleam of axe and spear,
+ The sound of smitten shields I hear,
+ Keeping a harsh and fitting time
+ To Saga's chant, and Runic rhyme;
+ Such lays as Zetland's Scald has sung,
+ His gray and naked isles among;
+ Or muttered low at midnight hour
+ Round Odin's mossy stone of power.
+ The wolf beneath the Arctic moon
+ Has answered to that startling rune;
+ The Gael has heard its stormy swell,
+ The light Frank knows its summons well;
+ Iona's sable-stoled Culdee
+ Has heard it sounding o'er the sea,
+ And swept, with hoary beard and hair,
+ His altar's foot in trembling prayer.
+
+ 'T is past,--the 'wildering vision dies
+ In darkness on my dreaming eyes
+ The forest vanishes in air,
+ Hill-slope and vale lie starkly bare;
+ I hear the common tread of men,
+ And hum of work-day life again;
+
+ The mystic relic seems alone
+ A broken mass of common stone;
+ And if it be the chiselled limb
+ Of Berserker or idol grim,
+ A fragment of Valhalla's Thor,
+ The stormy Viking's god of War,
+ Or Praga of the Runic lay,
+ Or love-awakening Siona,
+ I know not,--for no graven line,
+ Nor Druid mark, nor Runic sign,
+ Is left me here, by which to trace
+ Its name, or origin, or place.
+ Yet, for this vision of the Past,
+ This glance upon its darkness cast,
+ My spirit bows in gratitude
+ Before the Giver of all good,
+ Who fashioned so the human mind,
+ That, from the waste of Time behind,
+ A simple stone, or mound of earth,
+ Can summon the departed forth;
+ Quicken the Past to life again,
+ The Present lose in what hath been,
+ And in their primal freshness show
+ The buried forms of long ago.
+ As if a portion of that Thought
+ By which the Eternal will is wrought,
+ Whose impulse fills anew with breath
+ The frozen solitude of Death,
+ To mortal mind were sometimes lent,
+ To mortal musings sometimes sent,
+ To whisper-even when it seems
+ But Memory's fantasy of dreams--
+ Through the mind's waste of woe and sin,
+ Of an immortal origin!
+
+ 1841.
+
+
+
+
+FUNERAL TREE OF THE SOKOKIS.
+
+Polan, chief of the Sokokis Indians of the country between Agamenticus
+and Casco Bay, was killed at Windham on Sebago Lake in the spring of
+1756. After the whites had retired, the surviving Indians "swayed" or
+bent down a young tree until its roots were upturned, placed the body of
+their chief beneath it, then released the tree, which, in springing back
+to its old position, covered the grave. The Sokokis were early converts
+to the Catholic faith. Most of them, prior to the year 1756, had removed
+to the French settlements on the St. Francois.
+
+ AROUND Sebago's lonely lake
+ There lingers not a breeze to break
+ The mirror which its waters make.
+
+ The solemn pines along its shore,
+ The firs which hang its gray rocks o'er,
+ Are painted on its glassy floor.
+
+ The sun looks o'er, with hazy eye,
+ The snowy mountain-tops which lie
+ Piled coldly up against the sky.
+
+ Dazzling and white! save where the bleak,
+ Wild winds have bared some splintering peak,
+ Or snow-slide left its dusky streak.
+
+ Yet green are Saco's banks below,
+ And belts of spruce and cedar show,
+ Dark fringing round those cones of snow.
+
+ The earth hath felt the breath of spring,
+ Though yet on her deliverer's wing
+ The lingering frosts of winter cling.
+
+ Fresh grasses fringe the meadow-brooks,
+ And mildly from its sunny nooks
+ The blue eye of the violet looks.
+
+ And odors from the springing grass,
+ The sweet birch and the sassafras,
+ Upon the scarce-felt breezes pass.
+
+ Her tokens of renewing care
+ Hath Nature scattered everywhere,
+ In bud and flower, and warmer air.
+
+ But in their hour of bitterness,
+ What reek the broken Sokokis,
+ Beside their slaughtered chief, of this?
+
+ The turf's red stain is yet undried,
+ Scarce have the death-shot echoes died
+ Along Sebago's wooded side;
+
+ And silent now the hunters stand,
+ Grouped darkly, where a swell of land
+ Slopes upward from the lake's white sand.
+
+ Fire and the axe have swept it bare,
+ Save one lone beech, unclosing there
+ Its light leaves in the vernal air.
+
+ With grave, cold looks, all sternly mute,
+ They break the damp turf at its foot,
+ And bare its coiled and twisted root.
+
+ They heave the stubborn trunk aside,
+ The firm roots from the earth divide,--
+ The rent beneath yawns dark and wide.
+
+ And there the fallen chief is laid,
+ In tasselled garb of skins arrayed,
+ And girded with his wampum-braid.
+
+ The silver cross he loved is pressed
+ Beneath the heavy arms, which rest
+ Upon his scarred and naked breast.
+
+ 'T is done: the roots are backward sent,
+ The beechen-tree stands up unbent,
+ The Indian's fitting monument!
+
+ When of that sleeper's broken race
+ Their green and pleasant dwelling-place,
+ Which knew them once, retains no trace;
+
+ Oh, long may sunset's light be shed
+ As now upon that beech's head,
+ A green memorial of the dead!
+
+ There shall his fitting requiem be,
+ In northern winds, that, cold and free,
+ Howl nightly in that funeral tree.
+
+ To their wild wail the waves which break
+ Forever round that lonely lake
+ A solemn undertone shall make!
+
+ And who shall deem the spot unblest,
+ Where Nature's younger children rest,
+ Lulled on their sorrowing mother's breast?
+
+ Deem ye that mother loveth less
+ These bronzed forms of the wilderness
+ She foldeth in her long caress?
+
+ As sweet o'er them her wild-flowers blow,
+ As if with fairer hair and brow
+ The blue-eyed Saxon slept below.
+
+ What though the places of their rest
+ No priestly knee hath ever pressed,--
+ No funeral rite nor prayer hath blessed?
+
+ What though the bigot's ban be there,
+ And thoughts of wailing and despair,
+ And cursing in the place of prayer.
+
+ Yet Heaven hath angels watching round
+ The Indian's lowliest forest-mound,--
+ And they have made it holy ground.
+
+ There ceases man's frail judgment; all
+ His powerless bolts of cursing fall
+ Unheeded on that grassy pall.
+
+ O peeled and hunted and reviled,
+ Sleep on, dark tenant of the wild!
+ Great Nature owns her simple child!
+
+ And Nature's God, to whom alone
+ The secret of the heart is known,--
+ The hidden language traced thereon;
+
+ Who from its many cumberings
+ Of form and creed, and outward things,
+ To light the naked spirit brings;
+
+ Not with our partial eye shall scan,
+ Not with our pride and scorn shall ban,
+ The spirit of our brother man!
+ 1841.
+
+
+
+
+ST. JOHN.
+
+The fierce rivalry between Charles de La Tour, a Protestant, and
+D'Aulnay Charnasy, a Catholic, for the possession of Acadia, forms one
+of the most romantic passages in the history of the New World. La Tour
+received aid in several instances from the Puritan colony of
+Massachusetts. During one of his voyages for the purpose of obtaining
+arms and provisions for his establishment at St. John, his castle was
+attacked by D'Aulnay, and successfully defended by its high-spirited
+mistress. A second attack however followed in the fourth month, 1647,
+when D'Aulnay was successful, and the garrison was put to the sword.
+Lady La Tour languished a few days in the hands of her enemy, and then
+died of grief.
+
+ "To the winds give our banner!
+ Bear homeward again!"
+ Cried the Lord of Acadia,
+ Cried Charles of Estienne;
+ From the prow of his shallop
+ He gazed, as the sun,
+ From its bed in the ocean,
+ Streamed up the St. John.
+
+ O'er the blue western waters
+ That shallop had passed,
+ Where the mists of Penobscot
+ Clung damp on her mast.
+ St. Saviour had looked
+ On the heretic sail,
+ As the songs of the Huguenot
+ Rose on the gale.
+
+ The pale, ghostly fathers
+ Remembered her well,
+ And had cursed her while passing,
+ With taper and bell;
+ But the men of Monhegan,
+ Of Papists abhorred,
+ Had welcomed and feasted
+ The heretic Lord.
+
+ They had loaded his shallop
+ With dun-fish and ball,
+ With stores for his larder,
+ And steel for his wall.
+ Pemaquid, from her bastions
+ And turrets of stone,
+ Had welcomed his coming
+ With banner and gun.
+
+ And the prayers of the elders
+ Had followed his way,
+ As homeward he glided,
+ Down Pentecost Bay.
+ Oh, well sped La Tour
+ For, in peril and pain,
+ His lady kept watch,
+ For his coming again.
+
+ O'er the Isle of the Pheasant
+ The morning sun shone,
+ On the plane-trees which shaded
+ The shores of St. John.
+ "Now, why from yon battlements
+ Speaks not my love!
+ Why waves there no banner
+ My fortress above?"
+
+ Dark and wild, from his deck
+ St. Estienne gazed about,
+ On fire-wasted dwellings,
+ And silent redoubt;
+ From the low, shattered walls
+ Which the flame had o'errun,
+ There floated no banner,
+ There thundered no gun!
+
+ But beneath the low arch
+ Of its doorway there stood
+ A pale priest of Rome,
+ In his cloak and his hood.
+ With the bound of a lion,
+ La Tour sprang to land,
+ On the throat of the Papist
+ He fastened his hand.
+
+ "Speak, son of the Woman
+ Of scarlet and sin!
+ What wolf has been prowling
+ My castle within?"
+ From the grasp of the soldier
+ The Jesuit broke,
+ Half in scorn, half in sorrow,
+ He smiled as he spoke:
+
+ "No wolf, Lord of Estienne,
+ Has ravaged thy hall,
+ But thy red-handed rival,
+ With fire, steel, and ball!
+ On an errand of mercy
+ I hitherward came,
+ While the walls of thy castle
+ Yet spouted with flame.
+
+ "Pentagoet's dark vessels
+ Were moored in the bay,
+ Grim sea-lions, roaring
+ Aloud for their prey."
+ "But what of my lady?"
+ Cried Charles of Estienne.
+ "On the shot-crumbled turret
+ Thy lady was seen:
+
+ "Half-veiled in the smoke-cloud,
+ Her hand grasped thy pennon,
+ While her dark tresses swayed
+ In the hot breath of cannon!
+ But woe to the heretic,
+ Evermore woe!
+ When the son of the church
+ And the cross is his foe!
+
+ "In the track of the shell,
+ In the path of the ball,
+ Pentagoet swept over
+ The breach of the wall!
+ Steel to steel, gun to gun,
+ One moment,--and then
+ Alone stood the victor,
+ Alone with his men!
+
+ "Of its sturdy defenders,
+ Thy lady alone
+ Saw the cross-blazoned banner
+ Float over St. John."
+ "Let the dastard look to it!"
+ Cried fiery Estienne,
+ "Were D'Aulnay King Louis,
+ I'd free her again!"
+
+ "Alas for thy lady!
+ No service from thee
+ Is needed by her
+ Whom the Lord hath set free;
+ Nine days, in stern silence,
+ Her thraldom she bore,
+ But the tenth morning came,
+ And Death opened her door!"
+
+ As if suddenly smitten
+ La Tour staggered back;
+ His hand grasped his sword-hilt,
+ His forehead grew black.
+ He sprang on the deck
+ Of his shallop again.
+ "We cruise now for vengeance!
+ Give way!" cried Estienne.
+
+ "Massachusetts shall hear
+ Of the Huguenot's wrong,
+ And from island and creekside
+ Her fishers shall throng!
+ Pentagoet shall rue
+ What his Papists have done,
+ When his palisades echo
+ The Puritan's gun!"
+
+ Oh, the loveliest of heavens
+ Hung tenderly o'er him,
+ There were waves in the sunshine,
+ And green isles before him:
+ But a pale hand was beckoning
+ The Huguenot on;
+ And in blackness and ashes
+ Behind was St. John!
+
+ 1841
+
+
+
+
+THE CYPRESS-TREE OF CEYLON.
+
+Ibn Batuta, the celebrated Mussulman traveller of the fourteenth
+century, speaks of a cypress-tree in Ceylon, universally held sacred by
+the natives, the leaves of which were said to fall only at certain
+intervals, and he who had the happiness to find and eat one of them was
+restored, at once, to youth and vigor. The traveller saw several
+venerable Jogees, or saints, sitting silent and motionless under the
+tree, patiently awaiting the falling of a leaf.
+
+ THEY sat in silent watchfulness
+ The sacred cypress-tree about,
+ And, from beneath old wrinkled brows,
+ Their failing eyes looked out.
+
+ Gray Age and Sickness waiting there
+ Through weary night and lingering day,--
+ Grim as the idols at their side,
+ And motionless as they.
+
+ Unheeded in the boughs above
+ The song of Ceylon's birds was sweet;
+ Unseen of them the island flowers
+ Bloomed brightly at their feet.
+
+ O'er them the tropic night-storm swept,
+ The thunder crashed on rock and hill;
+ The cloud-fire on their eyeballs blazed,
+ Yet there they waited still!
+
+ What was the world without to them?
+ The Moslem's sunset-call, the dance
+ Of Ceylon's maids, the passing gleam
+ Of battle-flag and lance?
+
+ They waited for that falling leaf
+ Of which the wandering Jogees sing:
+ Which lends once more to wintry age
+ The greenness of its spring.
+
+ Oh, if these poor and blinded ones
+ In trustful patience wait to feel
+ O'er torpid pulse and failing limb
+ A youthful freshness steal;
+
+ Shall we, who sit beneath that Tree
+ Whose healing leaves of life are shed,
+ In answer to the breath of prayer,
+ Upon the waiting head;
+
+ Not to restore our failing forms,
+ And build the spirit's broken shrine,
+ But on the fainting soul to shed
+ A light and life divine--
+
+ Shall we grow weary in our watch,
+ And murmur at the long delay?
+ Impatient of our Father's time
+ And His appointed way?
+
+ Or shall the stir of outward things
+ Allure and claim the Christian's eye,
+ When on the heathen watcher's ear
+ Their powerless murmurs die?
+
+ Alas! a deeper test of faith
+ Than prison cell or martyr's stake,
+ The self-abasing watchfulness
+ Of silent prayer may make.
+
+ We gird us bravely to rebuke
+ Our erring brother in the wrong,--
+ And in the ear of Pride and Power
+ Our warning voice is strong.
+
+ Easier to smite with Peter's sword
+ Than "watch one hour" in humbling prayer.
+ Life's "great things," like the Syrian lord,
+ Our hearts can do and dare.
+
+ But oh! we shrink from Jordan's side,
+ From waters which alone can save;
+
+ And murmur for Abana's banks
+ And Pharpar's brighter wave.
+
+ O Thou, who in the garden's shade
+ Didst wake Thy weary ones again,
+ Who slumbered at that fearful hour
+ Forgetful of Thy pain;
+
+ Bend o'er us now, as over them,
+ And set our sleep-bound spirits free,
+ Nor leave us slumbering in the watch
+ Our souls should keep with Thee!
+
+ 1841
+
+
+
+
+THE EXILES.
+
+The incidents upon which the following ballad has its foundation
+about the year 1660. Thomas Macy was one of the first, if not the first
+white settler of Nantucket. The career of Macy is briefly but carefully
+outlined in James S. Pike's The New Puritan.
+
+ THE goodman sat beside his door
+ One sultry afternoon,
+ With his young wife singing at his side
+ An old and goodly tune.
+
+ A glimmer of heat was in the air,--
+ The dark green woods were still;
+ And the skirts of a heavy thunder-cloud
+ Hung over the western hill.
+
+ Black, thick, and vast arose that cloud
+ Above the wilderness,
+
+ As some dark world from upper air
+ Were stooping over this.
+
+ At times the solemn thunder pealed,
+ And all was still again,
+ Save a low murmur in the air
+ Of coming wind and rain.
+
+ Just as the first big rain-drop fell,
+ A weary stranger came,
+ And stood before the farmer's door,
+ With travel soiled and lame.
+
+ Sad seemed he, yet sustaining hope
+ Was in his quiet glance,
+ And peace, like autumn's moonlight, clothed
+ His tranquil countenance,--
+
+ A look, like that his Master wore
+ In Pilate's council-hall:
+ It told of wrongs, but of a love
+ Meekly forgiving all.
+
+ "Friend! wilt thou give me shelter here?"
+ The stranger meekly said;
+ And, leaning on his oaken staff,
+ The goodman's features read.
+
+ "My life is hunted,--evil men
+ Are following in my track;
+ The traces of the torturer's whip
+ Are on my aged back;
+
+ "And much, I fear, 't will peril thee
+ Within thy doors to take
+ A hunted seeker of the Truth,
+ Oppressed for conscience' sake."
+
+ Oh, kindly spoke the goodman's wife,
+ "Come in, old man!" quoth she,
+ "We will not leave thee to the storm,
+ Whoever thou mayst be."
+
+ Then came the aged wanderer in,
+ And silent sat him down;
+ While all within grew dark as night
+ Beneath the storm-cloud's frown.
+
+ But while the sudden lightning's blaze
+ Filled every cottage nook,
+ And with the jarring thunder-roll
+ The loosened casements shook,
+
+ A heavy tramp of horses' feet
+ Came sounding up the lane,
+ And half a score of horse, or more,
+ Came plunging through the rain.
+
+ "Now, Goodman Macy, ope thy door,--
+ We would not be house-breakers;
+ A rueful deed thou'st done this day,
+ In harboring banished Quakers."
+
+ Out looked the cautious goodman then,
+ With much of fear and awe,
+ For there, with broad wig drenched with rain
+ The parish priest he saw.
+
+ Open thy door, thou wicked man,
+ And let thy pastor in,
+ And give God thanks, if forty stripes
+ Repay thy deadly sin."
+
+ "What seek ye?" quoth the goodman;
+ "The stranger is my guest;
+ He is worn with toil and grievous wrong,--
+ Pray let the old man rest."
+
+ "Now, out upon thee, canting knave!"
+ And strong hands shook the door.
+ "Believe me, Macy," quoth the priest,
+ "Thou 'lt rue thy conduct sore."
+
+ Then kindled Macy's eye of fire
+ "No priest who walks the earth,
+ Shall pluck away the stranger-guest
+ Made welcome to my hearth."
+
+ Down from his cottage wall he caught
+ The matchlock, hotly tried
+ At Preston-pans and Marston-moor,
+ By fiery Ireton's side;
+
+ Where Puritan, and Cavalier,
+ With shout and psalm contended;
+ And Rupert's oath, and Cromwell's prayer,
+ With battle-thunder blended.
+
+ Up rose the ancient stranger then
+ "My spirit is not free
+ To bring the wrath and violence
+ Of evil men on thee;
+
+ "And for thyself, I pray forbear,
+ Bethink thee of thy Lord,
+ Who healed again the smitten ear,
+ And sheathed His follower's sword.
+
+ "I go, as to the slaughter led.
+ Friends of the poor, farewell!"
+ Beneath his hand the oaken door
+ Back on its hinges fell.
+
+ "Come forth, old graybeard, yea and nay,"
+ The reckless scoffers cried,
+ As to a horseman's saddle-bow
+ The old man's arms were tied.
+
+ And of his bondage hard and long
+ In Boston's crowded jail,
+ Where suffering woman's prayer was heard,
+ With sickening childhood's wail,
+
+ It suits not with our tale to tell;
+ Those scenes have passed away;
+ Let the dim shadows of the past
+ Brood o'er that evil day.
+
+ "Ho, sheriff!" quoth the ardent priest,
+ "Take Goodman Macy too;
+ The sin of this day's heresy
+ His back or purse shall rue."
+
+ "Now, goodwife, haste thee!" Macy cried.
+ She caught his manly arm;
+ Behind, the parson urged pursuit,
+ With outcry and alarm.
+
+ Ho! speed the Macys, neck or naught,--
+ The river-course was near;
+ The plashing on its pebbled shore
+ Was music to their ear.
+
+ A gray rock, tasselled o'er with birch,
+ Above the waters hung,
+ And at its base, with every wave,
+ A small light wherry swung.
+
+ A leap--they gain the boat--and there
+ The goodman wields his oar;
+ "Ill luck betide them all," he cried,
+ "The laggards on the shore."
+
+ Down through the crashing underwood,
+ The burly sheriff came:--
+ "Stand, Goodman Macy, yield thyself;
+ Yield in the King's own name."
+
+ "Now out upon thy hangman's face!"
+ Bold Macy answered then,--
+ "Whip women, on the village green,
+ But meddle not with men."
+
+ The priest came panting to the shore,
+ His grave cocked hat was gone;
+ Behind him, like some owl's nest, hung
+ His wig upon a thorn.
+
+ "Come back,--come back!" the parson cried,
+ "The church's curse beware."
+ "Curse, an' thou wilt," said Macy, "but
+ Thy blessing prithee spare."
+
+ "Vile scoffer!" cried the baffled priest,
+ "Thou 'lt yet the gallows see."
+ "Who's born to be hanged will not be drowned,"
+ Quoth Macy, merrily;
+
+ "And so, sir sheriff and priest, good-by!"
+ He bent him to his oar,
+ And the small boat glided quietly
+ From the twain upon the shore.
+
+ Now in the west, the heavy clouds
+ Scattered and fell asunder,
+ While feebler came the rush of rain,
+ And fainter growled the thunder.
+
+ And through the broken clouds, the sun
+ Looked out serene and warm,
+ Painting its holy symbol-light
+ Upon the passing storm.
+
+ Oh, beautiful! that rainbow span,
+ O'er dim Crane-neck was bended;
+ One bright foot touched the eastern hills,
+ And one with ocean blended.
+
+ By green Pentucket's southern'slope
+ The small boat glided fast;
+ The watchers of the Block-house saw
+ The strangers as they passed.
+
+ That night a stalwart garrison
+ Sat shaking in their shoes,
+ To hear the dip of Indian oars,
+ The glide of birch canoes.
+
+ The fisher-wives of Salisbury--
+ The men were all away--
+ Looked out to see the stranger oar
+ Upon their waters play.
+
+ Deer-Island's rocks and fir-trees threw
+ Their sunset-shadows o'er them,
+ And Newbury's spire and weathercock
+ Peered o'er the pines before them.
+
+ Around the Black Rocks, on their left,
+ The marsh lay broad and green;
+ And on their right, with dwarf shrubs crowned,
+ Plum Island's hills were seen.
+
+ With skilful hand and wary eye
+ The harbor-bar was crossed;
+ A plaything of the restless wave,
+ The boat on ocean tossed.
+
+ The glory of the sunset heaven
+ On land and water lay;
+ On the steep hills of Agawam,
+ On cape, and bluff, and bay.
+
+ They passed the gray rocks of Cape Ann,
+ And Gloucester's harbor-bar;
+ The watch-fire of the garrison
+ Shone like a setting star.
+
+ How brightly broke the morning
+ On Massachusetts Bay!
+ Blue wave, and bright green island,
+ Rejoicing in the day.
+
+ On passed the bark in safety
+ Round isle and headland steep;
+ No tempest broke above them,
+ No fog-cloud veiled the deep.
+
+ Far round the bleak and stormy Cape
+ The venturous Macy passed,
+ And on Nantucket's naked isle
+ Drew up his boat at last.
+
+ And how, in log-built cabin,
+ They braved the rough sea-weather;
+ And there, in peace and quietness,
+ Went down life's vale together;
+
+ How others drew around them,
+ And how their fishing sped,
+ Until to every wind of heaven
+ Nantucket's sails were spread;
+
+ How pale Want alternated
+ With Plenty's golden smile;
+ Behold, is it not written
+ In the annals of the isle?
+
+ And yet that isle remaineth
+ A refuge of the free,
+ As when true-hearted Macy
+ Beheld it from the sea.
+
+ Free as the winds that winnow
+ Her shrubless hills of sand,
+ Free as the waves that batter
+ Along her yielding land.
+
+ Than hers, at duty's summons,
+ No loftier spirit stirs,
+ Nor falls o'er human suffering
+ A readier tear then hers.
+
+ God bless the sea-beat island!
+ And grant forevermore,
+ That charity and freedom dwell
+ As now upon her shore!
+
+ 1841.
+
+
+
+
+THE KNIGHT OF ST. JOHN.
+
+ ERE down yon blue Carpathian hills
+ The sun shall sink again,
+ Farewell to life and all its ills,
+ Farewell to cell and chain!
+
+ These prison shades are dark and cold,
+ But, darker far than they,
+ The shadow of a sorrow old
+ Is on my heart alway.
+
+ For since the day when Warkworth wood
+ Closed o'er my steed, and I,
+ An alien from my name and blood,
+ A weed cast out to die,--
+
+ When, looking back in sunset light,
+ I saw her turret gleam,
+ And from its casement, far and white,
+ Her sign of farewell stream,
+
+ Like one who, from some desert shore,
+ Doth home's green isles descry,
+ And, vainly longing, gazes o'er
+ The waste of wave and sky;
+
+ So from the desert of my fate
+ I gaze across the past;
+ Forever on life's dial-plate
+ The shade is backward cast!
+
+ I've wandered wide from shore to shore,
+ I've knelt at many a shrine;
+ And bowed me to the rocky floor
+ Where Bethlehem's tapers shine;
+
+ And by the Holy Sepulchre
+ I've pledged my knightly sword
+ To Christ, His blessed Church, and her,
+ The Mother of our Lord.
+
+ Oh, vain the vow, and vain the strife!
+ How vain do all things seem!
+ My soul is in the past, and life
+ To-day is but a dream.
+
+ In vain the penance strange and long,
+ And hard for flesh to bear;
+ The prayer, the fasting, and the thong,
+ And sackcloth shirt of hair.
+
+ The eyes of memory will not sleep,
+ Its ears are open still;
+ And vigils with the past they keep
+ Against my feeble will.
+
+ And still the loves and joys of old
+ Do evermore uprise;
+ I see the flow of locks of gold,
+ The shine of loving eyes!
+
+ Ah me! upon another's breast
+ Those golden locks recline;
+ I see upon another rest
+ The glance that once was mine.
+
+ "O faithless priest! O perjured knight!"
+ I hear the Master cry;
+ "Shut out the vision from thy sight,
+ Let Earth and Nature die.
+
+ "The Church of God is now thy spouse,
+ And thou the bridegroom art;
+ Then let the burden of thy vows
+ Crush down thy human heart!"
+
+ In vain! This heart its grief must know,
+ Till life itself hath ceased,
+ And falls beneath the self-same blow
+ The lover and the priest!
+
+ O pitying Mother! souls of light,
+ And saints and martyrs old!
+ Pray for a weak and sinful knight,
+ A suffering man uphold.
+
+ Then let the Paynim work his will,
+ And death unbind my chain,
+ Ere down yon blue Carpathian hill
+ The sun shall fall again.
+
+ 1843
+
+
+
+
+CASSANDRA SOUTHWICK.
+
+In 1658 two young persons, son and daughter of Lawrence Smithwick of
+Salem, who had himself been imprisoned and deprived of nearly all his
+property for having entertained Quakers at his house, were fined for
+non-attendance at church. They being unable to pay the fine, the General
+Court issued an order empowering "the Treasurer of the County to sell
+the said persons to any of the English nation of Virginia or Barbadoes,
+to answer said fines." An attempt was made to carry this order into
+execution, but no shipmaster was found willing to convey them to the
+West Indies.
+
+ To the God of all sure mercies let my blessing rise
+ to-day,
+ From the scoffer and the cruel He hath plucked
+ the spoil away;
+ Yea, He who cooled the furnace around the faithful
+ three,
+ And tamed the Chaldean lions, hath set His hand-
+ maid free!
+ Last night I saw the sunset melt through my prison
+ bars,
+ Last night across my damp earth-floor fell the pale
+ gleam of stars;
+ In the coldness and the darkness all through the
+ long night-time,
+ My grated casement whitened with autumn's early
+ rime.
+ Alone, in that dark sorrow, hour after hour crept
+ by;
+ Star after star looked palely in and sank adown
+ the sky;
+ No sound amid night's stillness, save that which
+ seemed to be
+ The dull and heavy beating of the pulses of the sea;
+
+ All night I sat unsleeping, for I knew that on the
+ morrow
+ The ruler and the cruel priest would mock me in
+ my sorrow,
+ Dragged to their place of market, and bargained
+ for and sold,
+ Like a lamb before the shambles, like a heifer
+ from the fold!
+
+ Oh, the weakness of the flesh was there, the
+ shrinking and the shame;
+ And the low voice of the Tempter like whispers to
+ me came:
+ "Why sit'st thou thus forlornly," the wicked
+ murmur said,
+ "Damp walls thy bower of beauty, cold earth thy
+ maiden bed?
+
+ "Where be the smiling faces, and voices soft and
+ sweet,
+ Seen in thy father's dwelling, heard in the pleasant
+ street?
+ Where be the youths whose glances, the summer
+ Sabbath through,
+ Turned tenderly and timidly unto thy father's pew?
+
+
+ "Why sit'st thou here, Cassandra?-Bethink
+ thee with what mirth
+ Thy happy schoolmates gather around the warm
+ bright hearth;
+ How the crimson shadows tremble on foreheads
+ white and fair,
+ On eyes of merry girlhood, half hid in golden hair.
+
+ "Not for thee the hearth-fire brightens, not for
+ thee kind words are spoken,
+ Not for thee the nuts of Wenham woods by laughing
+ boys are broken;
+ No first-fruits of the orchard within thy lap are
+ laid,
+ For thee no flowers of autumn the youthful hunters
+ braid.
+
+ "O weak, deluded maiden!--by crazy fancies
+ led,
+ With wild and raving railers an evil path to tread;
+ To leave a wholesome worship, and teaching pure
+ and sound,
+ And mate with maniac women, loose-haired and
+ sackcloth bound,--
+
+ "Mad scoffers of the priesthood; who mock at
+ things divine,
+ Who rail against the pulpit, and holy bread and
+ wine;
+ Sore from their cart-tail scourgings, and from the
+ pillory lame,
+ Rejoicing in their wretchedness, and glorying in
+ their shame.
+
+ "And what a fate awaits thee!--a sadly toiling
+ slave,
+ Dragging the slowly lengthening chain of bondage
+ to the grave!
+ Think of thy woman's nature, subdued in hopeless
+ thrall,
+ The easy prey of any, the scoff and scorn of all!"
+
+ Oh, ever as the Tempter spoke, and feeble Nature's
+ fears
+ Wrung drop by drop the scalding flow of unavailing
+ tears,
+ I wrestled down the evil thoughts, and strove in
+ silent prayer,
+ To feel, O Helper of the weak! that Thou indeed
+ wert there!
+
+ I thought of Paul and Silas, within Philippi's cell,
+ And how from Peter's sleeping limbs the prison
+ shackles fell,
+ Till I seemed to hear the trailing of an angel's
+ robe of white,
+ And to feel a blessed presence invisible to sight.
+
+ Bless the Lord for all his mercies!--for the peace
+ and love I felt,
+ Like dew of Hermon's holy hill, upon my spirit
+ melt;
+ When "Get behind me, Satan!" was the language
+ of my heart,
+ And I felt the Evil Tempter with all his doubts
+ depart.
+
+ Slow broke the gray cold morning; again the sunshine
+ fell,
+ Flecked with the shade of bar and grate within
+ my lonely cell;
+ The hoar-frost melted on the wall, and upward
+ from the street
+ Came careless laugh and idle word, and tread of
+ passing feet.
+
+ At length the heavy bolts fell back, my door was
+ open cast,
+ And slowly at the sheriff's side, up the long street
+ I passed;
+ I heard the murmur round me, and felt, but dared
+ not see,
+ How, from every door and window, the people
+ gazed on me.
+
+ And doubt and fear fell on me, shame burned upon
+ my cheek,
+ Swam earth and sky around me, my trembling
+ limbs grew weak:
+ "O Lord! support thy handmaid; and from her
+ soul cast out
+ The fear of man, which brings a snare, the weakness
+ and the doubt."
+
+ Then the dreary shadows scattered, like a cloud in
+ morning's breeze,
+ And a low deep voice within me seemed whispering
+ words like these:
+ "Though thy earth be as the iron, and thy heaven
+ a brazen wall,
+ Trust still His loving-kindness whose power is over
+ all."
+
+ We paused at length, where at my feet the sunlit
+ waters broke
+ On glaring reach of shining beach, and shingly
+ wall of rock;
+ The merchant-ships lay idly there, in hard clear
+ lines on high,
+ Tracing with rope and slender spar their network
+ on the sky.
+
+ And there were ancient citizens, cloak-wrapped
+ and grave and cold,
+ And grim and stout sea-captains with faces bronzed
+ and old,
+ And on his horse, with Rawson, his cruel clerk at
+ hand,
+ Sat dark and haughty Endicott, the ruler of the
+ land.
+
+ And poisoning with his evil words the ruler's ready
+ ear,
+ The priest leaned o'er his saddle, with laugh and
+ scoff and jeer;
+ It stirred my soul, and from my lips the seal of
+ silence broke,
+ As if through woman's weakness a warning spirit
+ spoke.
+
+ I cried, "The Lord rebuke thee, thou smiter of the
+ meek,
+ Thou robber of the righteous, thou trampler of
+ the weak!
+ Go light the dark, cold hearth-stones,--go turn
+ the prison lock
+ Of the poor hearts thou hast hunted, thou wolf
+ amid the flock!"
+
+ Dark lowered the brows of Endicott, and with a
+ deeper red
+ O'er Rawson's wine-empurpled cheek the flush of
+ anger spread;
+ "Good people," quoth the white-lipped priest,
+ "heed not her words so wild,
+ Her Master speaks within her,--the Devil owns
+ his child!"
+
+ But gray heads shook, and young brows knit, the
+ while the sheriff read
+ That law the wicked rulers against the poor have
+ made,
+ Who to their house of Rimmon and idol priesthood
+ bring
+ No bended knee of worship, nor gainful offering.
+
+ Then to the stout sea-captains the sheriff, turning,
+ said,--
+ "Which of ye, worthy seamen, will take this
+ Quaker maid?
+ In the Isle of fair Barbadoes, or on Virginia's
+ shore,
+ You may hold her at a higher price than Indian
+ girl or Moor."
+
+ Grim and silent stood the captains; and when
+ again he cried,
+ "Speak out, my worthy seamen!"--no voice, no
+ sign replied;
+ But I felt a hard hand press my own, and kind
+ words met my ear,--
+ "God bless thee, and preserve thee, my gentle girl
+ and dear!"
+
+ A weight seemed lifted from my heart, a pitying
+ friend was nigh,--
+ I felt it in his hard, rough hand, and saw it in his
+ eye;
+ And when again the sheriff spoke, that voice, so
+ kind to me,
+ Growled back its stormy answer like the roaring
+ of the sea,--
+
+ "Pile my ship with bars of silver, pack with coins
+ of Spanish gold,
+ From keel-piece up to deck-plank, the roomage of
+ her hold,
+ By the living God who made me!--I would sooner
+ in your bay
+ Sink ship and crew and cargo, than bear this child
+ away!"
+
+ "Well answered, worthy captain, shame on their
+ cruel laws!"
+ Ran through the crowd in murmurs loud the people's
+ just applause.
+ "Like the herdsman of Tekoa, in Israel of old,
+ Shall we see the poor and righteous again for
+ silver sold?"
+
+ I looked on haughty Endicott; with weapon half-
+ way drawn,
+ Swept round the throng his lion glare of bitter hate
+ and scorn;
+ Fiercely he drew his bridle-rein, and turned in
+ silence back,
+ And sneering priest and baffled clerk rode
+ murmuring in his track.
+
+ Hard after them the sheriff looked, in bitterness of
+ soul;
+ Thrice smote his staff upon the ground, and
+ crushed his parchment roll.
+ "Good friends," he said, "since both have fled,
+ the ruler and the priest,
+ Judge ye, if from their further work I be not well
+ released."
+
+ Loud was the cheer which, full and clear, swept
+ round the silent bay,
+ As, with kind words and kinder looks, he bade me
+ go my way;
+ For He who turns the courses of the streamlet of
+ the glen,
+ And the river of great waters, had turned the
+ hearts of men.
+
+ Oh, at that hour the very earth seemed changed
+ beneath my eye,
+ A holier wonder round me rose the blue walls of
+ the sky,
+ A lovelier light on rock and hill and stream and
+ woodland lay,
+ And softer lapsed on sunnier sands the waters of
+ the bay.
+
+ Thanksgiving to the Lord of life! to Him all
+ praises be,
+ Who from the hands of evil men hath set his hand-
+ maid free;
+ All praise to Him before whose power the mighty
+ are afraid,
+ Who takes the crafty in the snare which for the
+ poor is laid!
+
+ Sing, O my soul, rejoicingly, on evening's twilight
+ calm
+ Uplift the loud thanksgiving, pour forth the grateful
+ psalm;
+ Let all dear hearts with me rejoice, as did the
+ saints of old,
+ When of the Lord's good angel the rescued Peter
+ told.
+
+ And weep and howl, ye evil priests and mighty
+ men of wrong,
+ The Lord shall smite the proud, and lay His hand
+ upon the strong.
+ Woe to the wicked rulers in His avenging hour!
+ Woe to the wolves who seek the flocks to raven
+ and devour!
+
+ But let the humble ones arise, the poor in heart
+ be glad,
+ And let the mourning ones again with robes of
+ praise be clad.
+ For He who cooled the furnace, and smoothed the
+ stormy wave,
+ And tamed the Chaldean lions, is mighty still to
+ save!
+
+ 1843.
+
+
+
+
+THE NEW WIFE AND THE OLD.
+
+The following ballad is founded upon one of the marvellous legends
+connected with the famous General ----, of Hampton, New Hampshire,
+who was regarded by his neighbors as a Yankee Faust, in league with
+the adversary. I give the story, as I heard it when a child, from a
+venerable family visitant.
+
+
+ DARK the halls, and cold the feast,
+ Gone the bridemaids, gone the priest.
+ All is over, all is done,
+ Twain of yesterday are one!
+ Blooming girl and manhood gray,
+ Autumn in the arms of May!
+
+ Hushed within and hushed without,
+ Dancing feet and wrestlers' shout;
+ Dies the bonfire on the hill;
+ All is dark and all is still,
+ Save the starlight, save the breeze
+ Moaning through the graveyard trees,
+ And the great sea-waves below,
+ Pulse of the midnight beating slow.
+
+ From the brief dream of a bride
+ She hath wakened, at his side.
+ With half-uttered shriek and start,--
+ Feels she not his beating heart?
+ And the pressure of his arm,
+ And his breathing near and warm?
+
+ Lightly from the bridal bed
+ Springs that fair dishevelled head,
+ And a feeling, new, intense,
+ Half of shame, half innocence,
+ Maiden fear and wonder speaks
+ Through her lips and changing cheeks.
+
+ From the oaken mantel glowing,
+ Faintest light the lamp is throwing
+ On the mirror's antique mould,
+ High-backed chair, and wainscot old,
+ And, through faded curtains stealing,
+ His dark sleeping face revealing.
+
+ Listless lies the strong man there,
+ Silver-streaked his careless hair;
+ Lips of love have left no trace
+ On that hard and haughty face;
+ And that forehead's knitted thought
+ Love's soft hand hath not unwrought.
+
+ "Yet," she sighs, "he loves me well,
+ More than these calm lips will tell.
+ Stooping to my lowly state,
+ He hath made me rich and great,
+ And I bless him, though he be
+ Hard and stern to all save me!"
+
+ While she speaketh, falls the light
+ O'er her fingers small and white;
+ Gold and gem, and costly ring
+ Back the timid lustre fling,--
+ Love's selectest gifts, and rare,
+ His proud hand had fastened there.
+
+ Gratefully she marks the glow
+ From those tapering lines of snow;
+ Fondly o'er the sleeper bending
+ His black hair with golden blending,
+ In her soft and light caress,
+ Cheek and lip together press.
+
+ Ha!--that start of horror! why
+ That wild stare and wilder cry,
+ Full of terror, full of pain?
+ Is there madness in her brain?
+ Hark! that gasping, hoarse and low,
+ "Spare me,--spare me,--let me go!"
+
+ God have mercy!--icy cold
+ Spectral hands her own enfold,
+ Drawing silently from them
+ Love's fair gifts of gold and gem.
+ "Waken! save me!" still as death
+ At her side he slumbereth.
+
+ Ring and bracelet all are gone,
+ And that ice-cold hand withdrawn;
+ But she hears a murmur low,
+ Full of sweetness, full of woe,
+ Half a sigh and half a moan
+ "Fear not! give the dead her own!"
+
+ Ah!--the dead wife's voice she knows!
+ That cold hand whose pressure froze,
+ Once in warmest life had borne
+ Gem and band her own hath worn.
+ "Wake thee! wake thee!" Lo, his eyes
+ Open with a dull surprise.
+
+ In his arms the strong man folds her,
+ Closer to his breast he holds her;
+ Trembling limbs his own are meeting,
+ And he feels her heart's quick beating
+ "Nay, my dearest, why this fear?"
+ "Hush!" she saith, "the dead is here!"
+
+ "Nay, a dream,--an idle dream."
+ But before the lamp's pale gleam
+ Tremblingly her hand she raises.
+ There no more the diamond blazes,
+ Clasp of pearl, or ring of gold,--
+ "Ah!" she sighs, "her hand was cold!"
+
+ Broken words of cheer he saith,
+ But his dark lip quivereth,
+ And as o'er the past he thinketh,
+ From his young wife's arms he shrinketh;
+ Can those soft arms round him lie,
+ Underneath his dead wife's eye?
+
+ She her fair young head can rest
+ Soothed and childlike on his breast,
+ And in trustful innocence
+ Draw new strength and courage thence;
+ He, the proud man, feels within
+ But the cowardice of sin!
+
+ She can murmur in her thought
+ Simple prayers her mother taught,
+ And His blessed angels call,
+ Whose great love is over all;
+ He, alone, in prayerless pride,
+ Meets the dark Past at her side!
+
+ One, who living shrank with dread
+ From his look, or word, or tread,
+ Unto whom her early grave
+ Was as freedom to the slave,
+ Moves him at this midnight hour,
+ With the dead's unconscious power!
+
+ Ah, the dead, the unforgot!
+ From their solemn homes of thought,
+ Where the cypress shadows blend
+ Darkly over foe and friend,
+ Or in love or sad rebuke,
+ Back upon the living look.
+
+ And the tenderest ones and weakest,
+ Who their wrongs have borne the meekest,
+ Lifting from those dark, still places,
+ Sweet and sad-remembered faces,
+ O'er the guilty hearts behind
+ An unwitting triumph find.
+
+ 1843
+
+
+
+
+THE BRIDAL OF PENNACOOK.
+
+Winnepurkit, otherwise called George, Sachem of Saugus, married a
+daughter of Passaconaway, the great Pennacook chieftain, in 1662. The
+wedding took place at Pennacook (now Concord, N. H.), and the ceremonies
+closed with a great feast. According to the usages of the chiefs,
+Passaconaway ordered a select number of his men to accompany the
+newly-married couple to the dwelling of the husband, where in turn there
+was another great feast. Some time after, the wife of Winnepurkit
+expressing a desire to visit her father's house was permitted to go,
+accompanied by a brave escort of her husband's chief men. But when she
+wished to return, her father sent a messenger to Saugus, informing her
+husband, and asking him to come and take her away. He returned for
+answer that he had escorted his wife to her father's house in a style
+that became a chief, and that now if she wished to return, her father
+must send her back, in the same way. This Passaconaway refused to do,
+and it is said that here terminated the connection of his daughter with
+the Saugus chief.--Vide MORTON'S New Canaan.
+
+
+ WE had been wandering for many days
+ Through the rough northern country. We had seen
+ The sunset, with its bars of purple cloud,
+ Like a new heaven, shine upward from the lake
+ Of Winnepiseogee; and had felt
+ The sunrise breezes, midst the leafy isles
+ Which stoop their summer beauty to the lips
+ Of the bright waters. We had checked our steeds,
+ Silent with wonder, where the mountain wall
+ Is piled to heaven; and, through the narrow rift
+ Of the vast rocks, against whose rugged feet
+ Beats the mad torrent with perpetual roar,
+ Where noonday is as twilight, and the wind
+ Comes burdened with the everlasting moan
+ Of forests and of far-off waterfalls,
+ We had looked upward where the summer sky,
+ Tasselled with clouds light-woven by the sun,
+ Sprung its blue arch above the abutting crags
+ O'er-roofing the vast portal of the land
+ Beyond the wall of mountains. We had passed
+ The high source of the Saco; and bewildered
+ In the dwarf spruce-belts of the Crystal Hills,
+ Had heard above us, like a voice in the cloud,
+ The horn of Fabyan sounding; and atop
+ Of old Agioochook had seen the mountains
+ Piled to the northward, shagged with wood, and thick
+ As meadow mole-hills,--the far sea of Casco,
+ A white gleam on the horizon of the east;
+ Fair lakes, embosomed in the woods and hills;
+ Moosehillock's mountain range, and Kearsarge
+ Lifting his granite forehead to the sun!
+
+ And we had rested underneath the oaks
+ Shadowing the bank, whose grassy spires are shaken
+ By the perpetual beating of the falls
+ Of the wild Ammonoosuc. We had tracked
+ The winding Pemigewasset, overhung
+ By beechen shadows, whitening down its rocks,
+ Or lazily gliding through its intervals,
+ From waving rye-fields sending up the gleam
+ Of sunlit waters. We had seen the moon
+ Rising behind Umbagog's eastern pines,
+ Like a great Indian camp-fire; and its beams
+ At midnight spanning with a bridge of silver
+ The Merrimac by Uncanoonuc's falls.
+
+ There were five souls of us whom travel's chance
+ Had thrown together in these wild north hills
+ A city lawyer, for a month escaping
+ From his dull office, where the weary eye
+ Saw only hot brick walls and close thronged streets;
+ Briefless as yet, but with an eye to see
+ Life's sunniest side, and with a heart to take
+ Its chances all as godsends; and his brother,
+ Pale from long pulpit studies, yet retaining
+ The warmth and freshness of a genial heart,
+ Whose mirror of the beautiful and true,
+ In Man and Nature, was as yet undimmed
+ By dust of theologic strife, or breath
+ Of sect, or cobwebs of scholastic lore;
+ Like a clear crystal calm of water, taking
+ The hue and image of o'erleaning flowers,
+ Sweet human faces, white clouds of the noon,
+ Slant starlight glimpses through the dewy leaves,
+ And tenderest moonrise. 'T was, in truth, a study,
+ To mark his spirit, alternating between
+ A decent and professional gravity
+ And an irreverent mirthfulness, which often
+ Laughed in the face of his divinity,
+ Plucked off the sacred ephod, quite unshrined
+ The oracle, and for the pattern priest
+ Left us the man. A shrewd, sagacious merchant,
+ To whom the soiled sheet found in Crawford's inn,
+ Giving the latest news of city stocks
+ And sales of cotton, had a deeper meaning
+ Than the great presence of the awful mountains
+ Glorified by the sunset; and his daughter,
+ A delicate flower on whom had blown too long
+ Those evil winds, which, sweeping from the ice
+ And winnowing the fogs of Labrador,
+ Shed their cold blight round Massachusetts Bay,
+ With the same breath which stirs Spring's opening leaves
+ And lifts her half-formed flower-bell on its stem,
+ Poisoning our seaside atmosphere.
+
+ It chanced that as we turned upon our homeward way,
+ A drear northeastern storm came howling up
+ The valley of the Saco; and that girl
+ Who had stood with us upon Mount Washington,
+ Her brown locks ruffled by the wind which whirled
+ In gusts around its sharp, cold pinnacle,
+ Who had joined our gay trout-fishing in the streams
+ Which lave that giant's feet; whose laugh was heard
+ Like a bird's carol on the sunrise breeze
+ Which swelled our sail amidst the lake's green islands,
+ Shrank from its harsh, chill breath, and visibly drooped
+ Like a flower in the frost. So, in that quiet inn
+ Which looks from Conway on the mountains piled
+ Heavily against the horizon of the north,
+ Like summer thunder-clouds, we made our home
+ And while the mist hung over dripping hills,
+ And the cold wind-driven rain-drops all day long
+ Beat their sad music upon roof and pane,
+ We strove to cheer our gentle invalid.
+
+ The lawyer in the pauses of the storm
+ Went angling down the Saco, and, returning,
+ Recounted his adventures and mishaps;
+ Gave us the history of his scaly clients,
+ Mingling with ludicrous yet apt citations
+ Of barbarous law Latin, passages
+ From Izaak Walton's Angler, sweet and fresh
+ As the flower-skirted streams of Staffordshire,
+ Where, under aged trees, the southwest wind
+ Of soft June mornings fanned the thin, white hair
+ Of the sage fisher. And, if truth be told,
+ Our youthful candidate forsook his sermons,
+ His commentaries, articles and creeds,
+ For the fair page of human loveliness,
+ The missal of young hearts, whose sacred text
+ Is music, its illumining, sweet smiles.
+ He sang the songs she loved; and in his low,
+ Deep, earnest voice, recited many a page
+ Of poetry, the holiest, tenderest lines
+ Of the sad bard of Olney, the sweet songs,
+ Simple and beautiful as Truth and Nature,
+ Of him whose whitened locks on Rydal Mount
+ Are lifted yet by morning breezes blowing
+ From the green hills, immortal in his lays.
+ And for myself, obedient to her wish,
+ I searched our landlord's proffered library,--
+ A well-thumbed Bunyan, with its nice wood pictures
+ Of scaly fiends and angels not unlike them;
+ Watts' unmelodious psalms; Astrology's
+ Last home, a musty pile of almanacs,
+ And an old chronicle of border wars
+ And Indian history. And, as I read
+ A story of the marriage of the Chief
+ Of Saugus to the dusky Weetamoo,
+ Daughter of Passaconaway, who dwelt
+ In the old time upon the Merrimac,
+ Our fair one, in the playful exercise
+ Of her prerogative,--the right divine
+ Of youth and beauty,--bade us versify
+ The legend, and with ready pencil sketched
+ Its plan and outlines, laughingly assigning
+ To each his part, and barring our excuses
+ With absolute will. So, like the cavaliers
+ Whose voices still are heard in the Romance
+ Of silver-tongued Boccaccio, on the banks
+ Of Arno, with soft tales of love beguiling
+ The ear of languid beauty, plague-exiled
+ From stately Florence, we rehearsed our rhymes
+ To their fair auditor, and shared by turns
+ Her kind approval and her playful censure.
+
+ It may be that these fragments owe alone
+ To the fair setting of their circumstances,--
+ The associations of time, scene, and audience,--
+ Their place amid the pictures which fill up
+ The chambers of my memory. Yet I trust
+ That some, who sigh, while wandering in thought,
+ Pilgrims of Romance o'er the olden world,
+ That our broad land,--our sea-like lakes and mountains
+ Piled to the clouds, our rivers overhung
+ By forests which have known no other change
+ For ages than the budding and the fall
+ Of leaves, our valleys lovelier than those
+ Which the old poets sang of,--should but figure
+ On the apocryphal chart of speculation
+ As pastures, wood-lots, mill-sites, with the privileges,
+ Rights, and appurtenances, which make up
+ A Yankee Paradise, unsung, unknown,
+ To beautiful tradition; even their names,
+ Whose melody yet lingers like the last
+ Vibration of the red man's requiem,
+ Exchanged for syllables significant,
+ Of cotton-mill and rail-car, will look kindly
+ Upon this effort to call up the ghost
+ Of our dim Past, and listen with pleased ear
+ To the responses of the questioned Shade.
+
+
+
+
+I. THE MERRIMAC.
+
+ O child of that white-crested mountain whose
+ springs
+ Gush forth in the shade of the cliff-eagle's
+ wings,
+ Down whose slopes to the lowlands thy wild waters
+ shine,
+ Leaping gray walls of rock, flashing through the
+ dwarf pine;
+ From that cloud-curtained cradle so cold and so
+ lone,
+ From the arms of that wintry-locked mother of
+ stone,
+ By hills hung with forests, through vales wide and
+ free,
+ Thy mountain-born brightness glanced down to the
+ sea.
+
+ No bridge arched thy waters save that where the
+ trees
+ Stretched their long arms above thee and kissed in
+ the breeze:
+ No sound save the lapse of the waves on thy
+ shores,
+ The plunging of otters, the light dip of oars.
+
+ Green-tufted, oak-shaded, by Amoskeag's fall
+ Thy twin Uncanoonucs rose stately and tall,
+ Thy Nashua meadows lay green and unshorn,
+ And the hills of Pentucket were tasselled with
+ corn.
+ But thy Pennacook valley was fairer than these,
+ And greener its grasses and taller its trees,
+ Ere the sound of an axe in the forest had rung,
+ Or the mower his scythe in the meadows had
+ swung.
+
+ In their sheltered repose looking out from the
+ wood
+ The bark-builded wigwams of Pennacook stood;
+ There glided the corn-dance, the council-fire shone,
+ And against the red war-post the hatchet was
+ thrown.
+
+ There the old smoked in silence their pipes, and
+ the young
+ To the pike and the white-perch their baited lines
+ flung;
+ There the boy shaped his arrows, and there the
+ shy maid
+ Wove her many-hued baskets and bright wampum
+ braid.
+
+ O Stream of the Mountains! if answer of thine
+ Could rise from thy waters to question of mine,
+ Methinks through the din of thy thronged banks
+ a moan
+ Of sorrow would swell for the days which have
+ gone.
+
+ Not for thee the dull jar of the loom and the wheel,
+ The gliding of shuttles, the ringing of steel;
+ But that old voice of waters, of bird and of breeze,
+ The dip of the wild-fowl, the rustling of trees.
+
+
+
+
+II. THE BASHABA.
+
+ Lift we the twilight curtains of the Past,
+ And, turning from familiar sight and sound,
+ Sadly and full of reverence let us cast
+ A glance upon Tradition's shadowy ground,
+ Led by the few pale lights which, glimmering round
+ That dim, strange land of Eld, seem dying fast;
+ And that which history gives not to the eye,
+ The faded coloring of Time's tapestry,
+ Let Fancy, with her dream-dipped brush, supply.
+
+ Roof of bark and walls of pine,
+ Through whose chinks the sunbeams shine,
+ Tracing many a golden line
+ On the ample floor within;
+ Where, upon that earth-floor stark,
+ Lay the gaudy mats of bark,
+ With the bear's hide, rough and dark,
+ And the red-deer's skin.
+
+ Window-tracery, small and slight,
+ Woven of the willow white,
+ Lent a dimly checkered light;
+ And the night-stars glimmered down,
+ Where the lodge-fire's heavy smoke,
+ Slowly through an opening broke,
+ In the low roof, ribbed with oak,
+ Sheathed with hemlock brown.
+
+ Gloomed behind the changeless shade
+ By the solemn pine-wood made;
+ Through the rugged palisade,
+ In the open foreground planted,
+ Glimpses came of rowers rowing,
+ Stir of leaves and wild-flowers blowing,
+ Steel-like gleams of water flowing,
+ In the sunlight slanted.
+
+ Here the mighty Bashaba
+ Held his long-unquestioned sway,
+ From the White Hills, far away,
+ To the great sea's sounding shore;
+ Chief of chiefs, his regal word
+ All the river Sachems heard,
+ At his call the war-dance stirred,
+ Or was still once more.
+
+ There his spoils of chase and war,
+ Jaw of wolf and black bear's paw,
+ Panther's skin and eagle's claw,
+ Lay beside his axe and bow;
+ And, adown the roof-pole hung,
+ Loosely on a snake-skin strung,
+ In the smoke his scalp-locks swung
+ Grimly to and fro.
+
+ Nightly down the river going,
+ Swifter was the hunter's rowing,
+ When he saw that lodge-fire, glowing
+ O'er the waters still and red;
+ And the squaw's dark eye burned brighter,
+ And she drew her blanket tighter,
+ As, with quicker step and lighter,
+ From that door she fled.
+
+ For that chief had magic skill,
+ And a Panisee's dark will,
+ Over powers of good and ill,
+ Powers which bless and powers which ban;
+ Wizard lord of Pennacook,
+ Chiefs upon their war-path shook,
+ When they met the steady look
+ Of that wise dark man.
+
+ Tales of him the gray squaw told,
+ When the winter night-wind cold
+ Pierced her blanket's thickest fold,
+ And her fire burned low and small,
+ Till the very child abed,
+ Drew its bear-skin over bead,
+ Shrinking from the pale lights shed
+ On the trembling wall.
+
+ All the subtle spirits hiding
+ Under earth or wave, abiding
+ In the caverned rock, or riding
+ Misty clouds or morning breeze;
+ Every dark intelligence,
+ Secret soul, and influence
+ Of all things which outward sense
+ Feels, or bears, or sees,--
+
+ These the wizard's skill confessed,
+ At his bidding banned or blessed,
+ Stormful woke or lulled to rest
+ Wind and cloud, and fire and flood;
+ Burned for him the drifted snow,
+ Bade through ice fresh lilies blow,
+ And the leaves of summer grow
+ Over winter's wood!
+
+ Not untrue that tale of old!
+ Now, as then, the wise and bold
+ All the powers of Nature hold
+ Subject to their kingly will;
+ From the wondering crowds ashore,
+ Treading life's wild waters o'er,
+ As upon a marble floor,
+ Moves the strong man still.
+
+ Still, to such, life's elements
+ With their sterner laws dispense,
+ And the chain of consequence
+ Broken in their pathway lies;
+ Time and change their vassals making,
+ Flowers from icy pillows waking,
+ Tresses of the sunrise shaking
+ Over midnight skies.
+ Still, to th' earnest soul, the sun
+ Rests on towered Gibeon,
+ And the moon of Ajalon
+ Lights the battle-grounds of life;
+ To his aid the strong reverses
+ Hidden powers and giant forces,
+ And the high stars, in their courses,
+ Mingle in his strife!
+
+
+
+
+III. THE DAUGHTER.
+
+ The soot-black brows of men, the yell
+ Of women thronging round the bed,
+ The tinkling charm of ring and shell,
+ The Powah whispering o'er the dead!
+
+ All these the Sachem's home had known,
+ When, on her journey long and wild
+ To the dim World of Souls, alone,
+ In her young beauty passed the mother of his child.
+
+ Three bow-shots from the Sachem's dwelling
+ They laid her in the walnut shade,
+ Where a green hillock gently swelling
+ Her fitting mound of burial made.
+ There trailed the vine in summer hours,
+ The tree-perched squirrel dropped his shell,--
+ On velvet moss and pale-hued flowers,
+ Woven with leaf and spray, the softened sunshine fell!
+
+ The Indian's heart is hard and cold,
+ It closes darkly o'er its care,
+ And formed in Nature's sternest mould,
+ Is slow to feel, and strong to bear.
+ The war-paint on the Sachem's face,
+ Unwet with tears, shone fierce and red,
+ And still, in battle or in chase,
+ Dry leaf and snow-rime crisped beneath his
+ foremost tread.
+
+ Yet when her name was heard no more,
+ And when the robe her mother gave,
+ And small, light moccasin she wore,
+ Had slowly wasted on her grave,
+ Unmarked of him the dark maids sped
+ Their sunset dance and moonlit play;
+ No other shared his lonely bed,
+ No other fair young head upon his bosom lay.
+
+ A lone, stern man. Yet, as sometimes
+ The tempest-smitten tree receives
+ From one small root the sap which climbs
+ Its topmost spray and crowning leaves,
+ So from his child the Sachem drew
+ A life of Love and Hope, and felt
+ His cold and rugged nature through
+ The softness and the warmth of her young
+ being melt.
+
+ A laugh which in the woodland rang
+ Bemocking April's gladdest bird,--
+ A light and graceful form which sprang
+ To meet him when his step was heard,--
+ Eyes by his lodge-fire flashing dark,
+ Small fingers stringing bead and shell
+ Or weaving mats of bright-hued bark,--
+ With these the household-god had graced
+ his wigwam well.
+
+ Child of the forest! strong and free,
+ Slight-robed, with loosely flowing hair,
+ She swam the lake or climbed the tree,
+ Or struck the flying bird in air.
+ O'er the heaped drifts of winter's moon
+ Her snow-shoes tracked the hunter's way;
+ And dazzling in the summer noon
+ The blade of her light oar threw off its shower
+ of spray!
+
+ Unknown to her the rigid rule,
+ The dull restraint, the chiding frown,
+ The weary torture of the school,
+ The taming of wild nature down.
+ Her only lore, the legends told
+ Around the hunter's fire at night;
+ Stars rose and set, and seasons rolled,
+ Flowers bloomed and snow-flakes fell, unquestioned
+ in her sight.
+
+ Unknown to her the subtle skill
+ With which the artist-eye can trace
+ In rock and tree and lake and hill
+ The outlines of divinest grace;
+ Unknown the fine soul's keen unrest,
+ Which sees, admires, yet yearns alway;
+ Too closely on her mother's breast
+ To note her smiles of love the child of Nature lay!
+
+ It is enough for such to be
+ Of common, natural things a part,
+ To feel, with bird and stream and tree,
+ The pulses of the same great heart;
+ But we, from Nature long exiled,
+ In our cold homes of Art and Thought
+ Grieve like the stranger-tended child,
+ Which seeks its mother's arms, and sees but feels
+ them not.
+
+ The garden rose may richly bloom
+ In cultured soil and genial air,
+ To cloud the light of Fashion's room
+ Or droop in Beauty's midnight hair;
+ In lonelier grace, to sun and dew
+ The sweetbrier on the hillside shows
+ Its single leaf and fainter hue,
+ Untrained and wildly free, yet still a sister rose!
+
+ Thus o'er the heart of Weetamoo
+ Their mingling shades of joy and ill
+ The instincts of her nature threw;
+ The savage was a woman still.
+ Midst outlines dim of maiden schemes,
+ Heart-colored prophecies of life,
+ Rose on the ground of her young dreams
+ The light of a new home, the lover and the wife.
+
+
+
+
+IV. THE WEDDING.
+
+ Cool and dark fell the autumn night,
+ But the Bashaba's wigwam glowed with light,
+ For down from its roof, by green withes hung,
+ Flaring and smoking the pine-knots swung.
+
+ And along the river great wood-fires
+ Shot into the night their long, red spires,
+ Showing behind the tall, dark wood,
+ Flashing before on the sweeping flood.
+
+ In the changeful wind, with shimmer and shade,
+ Now high, now low, that firelight played,
+ On tree-leaves wet with evening dews,
+ On gliding water and still canoes.
+
+ The trapper that night on Turee's brook,
+ And the weary fisher on Contoocook,
+ Saw over the marshes, and through the pine,
+ And down on the river, the dance-lights shine.
+ For the Saugus Sachem had come to woo
+ The Bashaba's daughter Weetamoo,
+ And laid at her father's feet that night
+ His softest furs and wampum white.
+
+ From the Crystal Hills to the far southeast
+ The river Sagamores came to the feast;
+ And chiefs whose homes the sea-winds shook
+ Sat down on the mats of Pennacook.
+
+ They came from Sunapee's shore of rock,
+ From the snowy sources of Snooganock,
+ And from rough Coos whose thick woods shake
+ Their pine-cones in Umbagog Lake.
+
+ From Ammonoosuc's mountain pass,
+ Wild as his home, came Chepewass;
+ And the Keenomps of the bills which throw
+ Their shade on the Smile of Manito.
+
+ With pipes of peace and bows unstrung,
+ Glowing with paint came old and young,
+ In wampum and furs and feathers arrayed,
+ To the dance and feast the Bashaba made.
+
+ Bird of the air and beast of the field,
+ All which the woods and the waters yield,
+ On dishes of birch and hemlock piled,
+ Garnished and graced that banquet wild.
+
+ Steaks of the brown bear fat and large
+ From the rocky slopes of the Kearsarge;
+ Delicate trout from Babboosuck brook,
+ And salmon speared in the Contoocook;
+
+ Squirrels which fed where nuts fell thick
+ in the gravelly bed of the Otternic;
+ And small wild-hens in reed-snares caught
+ from the banks of Sondagardee brought;
+
+ Pike and perch from the Suncook taken,
+ Nuts from the trees of the Black Hills shaken,
+ Cranberries picked in the Squamscot bog,
+ And grapes from the vines of Piscataquog:
+
+ And, drawn from that great stone vase which stands
+ In the river scooped by a spirit's hands,
+ Garnished with spoons of shell and horn,
+ Stood the birchen dishes of smoking corn.
+
+ Thus bird of the air and beast of the field,
+ All which the woods and the waters yield,
+ Furnished in that olden day
+ The bridal feast of the Bashaba.
+
+ And merrily when that feast was done
+ On the fire-lit green the dance begun,
+ With squaws' shrill stave, and deeper hum
+ Of old men beating the Indian drum.
+
+ Painted and plumed, with scalp-locks flowing,
+ And red arms tossing and black eyes glowing,
+ Now in the light and now in the shade
+ Around the fires the dancers played.
+
+ The step was quicker, the song more shrill,
+ And the beat of the small drums louder still
+ Whenever within the circle drew
+ The Saugus Sachem and Weetamoo.
+
+ The moons of forty winters had shed
+ Their snow upon that chieftain's head,
+ And toil and care and battle's chance
+ Had seamed his hard, dark countenance.
+
+ A fawn beside the bison grim,--
+ Why turns the bride's fond eye on him,
+ In whose cold look is naught beside
+ The triumph of a sullen pride?
+
+ Ask why the graceful grape entwines
+ The rough oak with her arm of vines;
+ And why the gray rock's rugged cheek
+ The soft lips of the mosses seek.
+
+ Why, with wise instinct, Nature seems
+ To harmonize her wide extremes,
+ Linking the stronger with the weak,
+ The haughty with the soft and meek!
+
+
+
+
+V. THE NEW HOME.
+
+ A wild and broken landscape, spiked with firs,
+ Roughening the bleak horizon's northern edge;
+ Steep, cavernous hillsides, where black hemlock
+ spurs
+ And sharp, gray splinters of the wind-swept
+ ledge
+ Pierced the thin-glazed ice, or bristling rose,
+ Where the cold rim of the sky sunk down upon
+ the snows.
+
+ And eastward cold, wide marshes stretched away,
+ Dull, dreary flats without a bush or tree,
+ O'er-crossed by icy creeks, where twice a day
+ Gurgled the waters of the moon-struck sea;
+ And faint with distance came the stifled roar,
+ The melancholy lapse of waves on that low shore.
+
+ No cheerful village with its mingling smokes,
+ No laugh of children wrestling in the snow,
+ No camp-fire blazing through the hillside oaks,
+ No fishers kneeling on the ice below;
+ Yet midst all desolate things of sound and view,
+ Through the long winter moons smiled dark-eyed
+ Weetamoo.
+
+ Her heart had found a home; and freshly all
+ Its beautiful affections overgrew
+ Their rugged prop. As o'er some granite wall
+ Soft vine-leaves open to the moistening dew
+ And warm bright sun, the love of that young wife
+ Found on a hard cold breast the dew and warmth
+ of life.
+
+ The steep, bleak hills, the melancholy shore,
+ The long, dead level of the marsh between,
+ A coloring of unreal beauty wore
+ Through the soft golden mist of young love seen.
+ For o'er those hills and from that dreary plain,
+ Nightly she welcomed home her hunter chief again.
+
+ No warmth of heart, no passionate burst of feeling,
+ Repaid her welcoming smile and parting kiss,
+ No fond and playful dalliance half concealing,
+ Under the guise of mirth, its tenderness;
+
+ But, in their stead, the warrior's settled pride,
+ And vanity's pleased smile with homage satisfied.
+
+ Enough for Weetamoo, that she alone
+ Sat on his mat and slumbered at his side;
+ That he whose fame to her young ear had flown
+ Now looked upon her proudly as his bride;
+ That he whose name the Mohawk trembling heard
+ Vouchsafed to her at times a kindly look or word.
+
+ For she had learned the maxims of her race,
+ Which teach the woman to become a slave,
+ And feel herself the pardonless disgrace
+ Of love's fond weakness in the wise and brave,--
+ The scandal and the shame which they incur,
+ Who give to woman all which man requires of her.
+
+ So passed the winter moons. The sun at last
+ Broke link by link the frost chain of the rills,
+ And the warm breathings of the southwest passed
+ Over the hoar rime of the Saugus hills;
+ The gray and desolate marsh grew green once more,
+ And the birch-tree's tremulous shade fell round the
+ Sachem's door.
+
+ Then from far Pennacook swift runners came,
+ With gift and greeting for the Saugus chief;
+ Beseeching him in the great Sachem's name,
+ That, with the coming of the flower and leaf,
+ The song of birds, the warm breeze and the rain,
+ Young Weetamoo might greet her lonely sire again.
+
+ And Winnepurkit called his chiefs together,
+ And a grave council in his wigwam met,
+ Solemn and brief in words, considering whether
+ The rigid rules of forest etiquette
+ Permitted Weetamoo once more to look
+ Upon her father's face and green-banked
+ Pennacook.
+
+ With interludes of pipe-smoke and strong water,
+ The forest sages pondered, and at length,
+ Concluded in a body to escort her
+ Up to her father's home of pride and strength,
+ Impressing thus on Pennacook a sense
+ Of Winnepurkit's power and regal consequence.
+
+ So through old woods which Aukeetamit's hand,
+ A soft and many-shaded greenness lent,
+ Over high breezy hills, and meadow land
+ Yellow with flowers, the wild procession went,
+ Till, rolling down its wooded banks between,
+ A broad, clear, mountain stream, the Merrimac
+ was seen.
+
+ The hunter leaning on his bow undrawn,
+ The fisher lounging on the pebbled shores,
+ Squaws in the clearing dropping the seed-corn,
+ Young children peering through the wigwam doors,
+ Saw with delight, surrounded by her train
+ Of painted Saugus braves, their Weetamoo again.
+
+
+
+
+VI. AT PENNACOOK.
+
+ The hills are dearest which our childish feet
+ Have climbed the earliest; and the streams most sweet
+ Are ever those at which our young lips drank,
+ Stooped to their waters o'er the grassy bank.
+
+ Midst the cold dreary sea-watch, Home's hearth-light
+ Shines round the helmsman plunging through the night;
+ And still, with inward eye, the traveller sees
+ In close, dark, stranger streets his native trees.
+
+ The home-sick dreamer's brow is nightly fanned
+ By breezes whispering of his native land,
+ And on the stranger's dim and dying eye
+ The soft, sweet pictures of his childhood lie.
+
+ Joy then for Weetamoo, to sit once more
+ A child upon her father's wigwam floor!
+ Once more with her old fondness to beguile
+ From his cold eye the strange light of a smile.
+
+ The long, bright days of summer swiftly passed,
+ The dry leaves whirled in autumn's rising blast,
+ And evening cloud and whitening sunrise rime
+ Told of the coming of the winter-time.
+
+ But vainly looked, the while, young Weetamoo,
+ Down the dark river for her chief's canoe;
+ No dusky messenger from Saugus brought
+ The grateful tidings which the young wife sought.
+
+ At length a runner from her father sent,
+ To Winnepurkit's sea-cooled wigwam went
+ "Eagle of Saugus,--in the woods the dove
+ Mourns for the shelter of thy wings of love."
+
+ But the dark chief of Saugus turned aside
+ In the grim anger of hard-hearted pride;
+ "I bore her as became a chieftain's daughter,
+ Up to her home beside the gliding water.
+
+ If now no more a mat for her is found
+ Of all which line her father's wigwam round,
+ Let Pennacook call out his warrior train,
+ And send her back with wampum gifts again."
+
+ The baffled runner turned upon his track,
+ Bearing the words of Winnepurkit back.
+ "Dog of the Marsh," cried Pennacook, "no more
+ Shall child of mine sit on his wigwam floor.
+
+ "Go, let him seek some meaner squaw to spread
+ The stolen bear-skin of his beggar's bed;
+ Son of a fish-hawk! let him dig his clams
+ For some vile daughter of the Agawams,
+
+ "Or coward Nipmucks! may his scalp dry black
+ In Mohawk smoke, before I send her back."
+ He shook his clenched hand towards the ocean wave,
+ While hoarse assent his listening council gave.
+
+ Alas poor bride! can thy grim sire impart
+ His iron hardness to thy woman's heart?
+ Or cold self-torturing pride like his atone
+ For love denied and life's warm beauty flown?
+
+ On Autumn's gray and mournful grave the snow
+ Hung its white wreaths; with stifled voice and low
+ The river crept, by one vast bridge o'er-crossed,
+ Built by the boar-locked artisan of Frost.
+
+ And many a moon in beauty newly born
+ Pierced the red sunset with her silver horn,
+ Or, from the east, across her azure field
+ Rolled the wide brightness of her full-orbed shield.
+
+ Yet Winnepurkit came not,--on the mat
+ Of the scorned wife her dusky rival sat;
+ And he, the while, in Western woods afar,
+ Urged the long chase, or trod the path of war.
+
+ Dry up thy tears, young daughter of a chief!
+ Waste not on him the sacredness of grief;
+ Be the fierce spirit of thy sire thine own,
+ His lips of scorning, and his heart of stone.
+
+ What heeds the warrior of a hundred fights,
+ The storm-worn watcher through long hunting nights,
+ Cold, crafty, proud of woman's weak distress,
+ Her home-bound grief and pining loneliness?
+
+
+
+
+VII. THE DEPARTURE.
+
+ The wild March rains had fallen fast and long
+ The snowy mountains of the North among,
+ Making each vale a watercourse, each hill
+ Bright with the cascade of some new-made rill.
+
+ Gnawed by the sunbeams, softened by the rain,
+ Heaved underneath by the swollen current's strain,
+ The ice-bridge yielded, and the Merrimac
+ Bore the huge ruin crashing down its track.
+
+ On that strong turbid water, a small boat
+ Guided by one weak hand was seen to float;
+ Evil the fate which loosed it from the shore,
+ Too early voyager with too frail an oar!
+
+ Down the vexed centre of that rushing tide,
+ The thick huge ice-blocks threatening either side,
+ The foam-white rocks of Amoskeag in view,
+ With arrowy swiftness sped that light canoe.
+
+ The trapper, moistening his moose's meat
+ On the wet bank by Uncanoonuc's feet,
+ Saw the swift boat flash down the troubled stream;
+ Slept he, or waked he? was it truth or dream?
+
+ The straining eye bent fearfully before,
+ The small hand clenching on the useless oar,
+ The bead-wrought blanket trailing o'er the water--
+ He knew them all--woe for the Sachem's daughter!
+
+ Sick and aweary of her lonely life,
+ Heedless of peril, the still faithful wife
+ Had left her mother's grave, her father's door,
+ To seek the wigwam of her chief once more.
+
+ Down the white rapids like a sear leaf whirled,
+ On the sharp rocks and piled-up ices hurled,
+ Empty and broken, circled the canoe
+ In the vexed pool below--but where was Weetamoo.
+
+
+
+
+VIII. SONG OF INDIAN WOMEN.
+
+ The Dark eye has left us,
+ The Spring-bird has flown;
+ On the pathway of spirits
+ She wanders alone.
+ The song of the wood-dove has died on our shore
+ Mat wonck kunna-monee! We hear it no more!
+
+ O dark water Spirit
+ We cast on thy wave
+ These furs which may never
+ Hang over her grave;
+ Bear down to the lost one the robes that she wore
+ Mat wonck kunna-monee! We see her no more!
+
+ Of the strange land she walks in
+ No Powah has told:
+ It may burn with the sunshine,
+ Or freeze with the cold.
+ Let us give to our lost one the robes that she wore:
+ Mat wonck kunna-monee! We see her no more!
+
+ The path she is treading
+ Shall soon be our own;
+ Each gliding in shadow
+ Unseen and alone!
+ In vain shall we call on the souls gone before:
+ Mat wonck kunna-monee! They hear us no more!
+
+ O mighty Sowanna!
+ Thy gateways unfold,
+ From thy wigwam of sunset
+ Lift curtains of gold!
+
+ Take home the poor Spirit whose journey is o'er
+ Mat wonck kunna-monee! We see her no more!
+
+ So sang the Children of the Leaves beside
+ The broad, dark river's coldly flowing tide;
+ Now low, now harsh, with sob-like pause and swell,
+ On the high wind their voices rose and fell.
+ Nature's wild music,--sounds of wind-swept trees,
+ The scream of birds, the wailing of the breeze,
+ The roar of waters, steady, deep, and strong,--
+ Mingled and murmured in that farewell song.
+
+ 1844.
+
+
+
+
+BARCLAY OF URY.
+
+Among the earliest converts to the doctrines of Friends in Scotland was
+Barclay of Ury, an old and distinguished soldier, who had fought under
+Gustavus Adolphus, in Germany. As a Quaker, he became the object of
+persecution and abuse at the hands of the magistrates and the populace.
+None bore the indignities of the mob with greater patience and nobleness
+of soul than this once proud gentleman and soldier. One of his friends,
+on an occasion of uncommon rudeness, lamented that he should be treated
+so harshly in his old age who had been so honored before. "I find more
+satisfaction," said Barclay, "as well as honor, in being thus insulted
+for my religious principles, than when, a few years ago, it was usual
+for the magistrates, as I passed the city of Aberdeen, to meet me on the
+road and conduct me to public entertainment in their hall, and then
+escort me out again, to gain my favor."
+
+ Up the streets of Aberdeen,
+ By the kirk and college green,
+ Rode the Laird of Ury;
+ Close behind him, close beside,
+ Foul of mouth and evil-eyed,
+ Pressed the mob in fury.
+
+ Flouted him the drunken churl,
+ Jeered at him the serving-girl,
+ Prompt to please her master;
+ And the begging carlin, late
+ Fed and clothed at Ury's gate,
+ Cursed him as he passed her.
+
+ Yet, with calm and stately mien,
+ Up the streets of Aberdeen
+ Came he slowly riding;
+ And, to all he saw and heard,
+ Answering not with bitter word,
+ Turning not for chiding.
+
+ Came a troop with broadswords swinging,
+ Bits and bridles sharply ringing,
+ Loose and free and froward;
+ Quoth the foremost, "Ride him down!
+ Push him! prick him! through the town
+ Drive the Quaker coward!"
+
+ But from out the thickening crowd
+ Cried a sudden voice and loud
+ "Barclay! Ho! a Barclay!"
+ And the old man at his side
+ Saw a comrade, battle tried,
+ Scarred and sunburned darkly;
+
+ Who with ready weapon bare,
+ Fronting to the troopers there,
+ Cried aloud: "God save us,
+ Call ye coward him who stood
+ Ankle deep in Lutzen's blood,
+ With the brave Gustavus?"
+
+ "Nay, I do not need thy sword,
+ Comrade mine," said Ury's lord;
+ "Put it up, I pray thee
+ Passive to His holy will,
+ Trust I in my Master still,
+ Even though He slay me.
+
+ "Pledges of thy love and faith,
+ Proved on many a field of death,
+ Not by me are needed."
+ Marvelled much that henchman bold,
+ That his laird, so stout of old,
+ Now so meekly pleaded.
+
+ "Woe's the day!" he sadly said,
+ With a slowly shaking head,
+ And a look of pity;
+ "Ury's honest lord reviled,
+ Mock of knave and sport of child,
+ In his own good city.
+
+ "Speak the word, and, master mine,
+ As we charged on Tilly's line,
+ And his Walloon lancers,
+ Smiting through their midst we'll teach
+ Civil look and decent speech
+ To these boyish prancers!"
+
+ "Marvel not, mine ancient friend,
+ Like beginning, like the end:"
+ Quoth the Laird of Ury;
+ "Is the sinful servant more
+ Than his gracious Lord who bore
+ Bonds and stripes in Jewry?
+
+ "Give me joy that in His name
+ I can bear, with patient frame,
+ All these vain ones offer;
+ While for them He suffereth long,
+ Shall I answer wrong with wrong,
+ Scoffing with the scoffer?
+
+ "Happier I, with loss of all,
+ Hunted, outlawed, held in thrall,
+ With few friends to greet me,
+ Than when reeve and squire were seen,
+ Riding out from Aberdeen,
+ With bared heads to meet me.
+
+ "When each goodwife, o'er and o'er,
+ Blessed me as I passed her door;
+ And the snooded daughter,
+ Through her casement glancing down,
+ Smiled on him who bore renown
+ From red fields of slaughter.
+
+ "Hard to feel the stranger's scoff,
+ Hard the old friend's falling off,
+ Hard to learn forgiving;
+ But the Lord His own rewards,
+ And His love with theirs accords,
+ Warm and fresh and living.
+
+ "Through this dark and stormy night
+ Faith beholds a feeble light
+ Up the blackness streaking;
+ Knowing God's own time is best,
+ In a patient hope I rest
+ For the full day-breaking!"
+
+ So the Laird of Ury said,
+ Turning slow his horse's head
+ Towards the Tolbooth prison,
+ Where, through iron gates, he heard
+ Poor disciples of the Word
+ Preach of Christ arisen!
+
+ Not in vain, Confessor old,
+ Unto us the tale is told
+ Of thy day of trial;
+ Every age on him who strays
+ From its broad and beaten ways
+ Pours its seven-fold vial.
+
+ Happy he whose inward ear
+ Angel comfortings can hear,
+ O'er the rabble's laughter;
+ And while Hatred's fagots burn,
+ Glimpses through the smoke discern
+ Of the good hereafter.
+
+ Knowing this, that never yet
+ Share of Truth was vainly set
+ In the world's wide fallow;
+ After hands shall sow the seed,
+ After hands from hill and mead
+ Reap the harvests yellow.
+
+ Thus, with somewhat of the Seer,
+ Must the moral pioneer
+ From the Future borrow;
+ Clothe the waste with dreams of grain,
+ And, on midnight's sky of rain,
+ Paint the golden morrow!
+
+
+
+
+THE ANGELS OF BUENA VISTA.
+
+A letter-writer from Mexico during the Mexican war, when detailing some
+of the incidents at the terrible fight of Buena Vista, mentioned that
+Mexican women were seen hovering near the field of death, for the
+purpose of giving aid and succor to the wounded. One poor woman was
+found surrounded by the maimed and suffering of both armies, ministering
+to the wants of Americans as well as Mexicans, with impartial
+tenderness.
+
+ SPEAK and tell us, our Ximena, looking northward
+ far away,
+ O'er the camp of the invaders, o'er the Mexican
+ array,
+ Who is losing? who is winning? are they far or
+ come they near?
+ Look abroad, and tell us, sister, whither rolls the
+ storm we hear.
+ Down the hills of Angostura still the storm of
+ battle rolls;
+ Blood is flowing, men are dying; God have mercy
+ on their souls!
+ "Who is losing? who is winning?" Over hill
+ and over plain,
+ I see but smoke of cannon clouding through the
+ mountain rain.
+
+ Holy Mother! keep our brothers! Look, Ximena,
+ look once more.
+ "Still I see the fearful whirlwind rolling darkly
+ as before,
+ Bearing on, in strange confusion, friend and foeman,
+ foot and horse,
+ Like some wild and troubled torrent sweeping
+ down its mountain course."
+
+ Look forth once more, Ximena! "Ah! the smoke
+ has rolled away;
+ And I see the Northern rifles gleaming down the
+ ranks of gray.
+ Hark! that sudden blast of bugles! there the troop
+ of Minon wheels;
+ There the Northern horses thunder, with the cannon
+ at their heels.
+
+ "Jesu, pity I how it thickens I now retreat and
+ now advance!
+ Bight against the blazing cannon shivers Puebla's
+ charging lance!
+ Down they go, the brave young riders; horse and
+ foot together fall;
+ Like a ploughshare in the fallow, through them
+ ploughs the Northern ball."
+
+ Nearer came the storm and nearer, rolling fast and
+ frightful on!
+ Speak, Ximena, speak and tell us, who has lost,
+ and who has won?
+ Alas! alas! I know not; friend and foe together
+ fall,
+ O'er the dying rush the living: pray, my sisters,
+ for them all!
+
+ "Lo! the wind the smoke is lifting. Blessed
+ Mother, save my brain!
+ I can see the wounded crawling slowly out from
+ heaps of slain.
+ Now they stagger, blind and bleeding; now they
+ fall, and strive to rise;
+ Hasten, sisters, haste and save them, lest they die
+ before our eyes!
+
+ "O my hearts love! O my dear one! lay thy
+ poor head on my knee;
+ Dost thou know the lips that kiss thee? Canst
+ thou hear me? canst thou see?
+ O my husband, brave and gentle! O my Bernal,
+ look once more
+ On the blessed cross before thee! Mercy!
+ all is o'er!"
+
+ Dry thy tears, my poor Ximena; lay thy dear one
+ down to rest;
+ Let his hands be meekly folded, lay the cross upon
+ his breast;
+ Let his dirge be sung hereafter, and his funeral
+ masses said;
+ To-day, thou poor bereaved one, the living ask thy
+ aid.
+
+ Close beside her, faintly moaning, fair and young,
+ a soldier lay,
+ Torn with shot and pierced with lances, bleeding
+ slow his life away;
+ But, as tenderly before him the lorn Ximena knelt,
+ She saw the Northern eagle shining on his pistol-
+ belt.
+
+ With a stifled cry of horror straight she turned
+ away her head;
+ With a sad and bitter feeling looked she back upon
+ her dead;
+ But she heard the youth's low moaning, and his
+ struggling breath of pain,
+ And she raised the cooling water to his parching
+ lips again.
+
+ Whispered low the dying soldier, pressed her hand
+ and faintly smiled;
+ Was that pitying face his mother's? did she watch
+ beside her child?
+ All his stranger words with meaning her woman's
+ heart supplied;
+ With her kiss upon his forehead, "Mother!"
+ murmured he, and died!
+
+ "A bitter curse upon them, poor boy, who led thee
+ forth,
+ From some gentle, sad-eyed mother, weeping, lonely,
+ in the North!"
+ Spake the mournful Mexic woman, as she laid him
+ with her dead,
+ And turned to soothe the living, and bind the
+ wounds which bled.
+
+ "Look forth once more, Ximena!" Like a cloud
+ before the wind
+ Rolls the battle down the mountains, leaving blood
+ and death behind;
+ Ah! they plead in vain for mercy; in the dust the
+ wounded strive;
+ "Hide your faces, holy angels! O thou Christ of
+ God, forgive!"
+
+ Sink, O Night, among thy mountains! let the cool,
+ gray shadows fall;
+ Dying brothers, fighting demons, drop thy curtain
+ over all!
+ Through the thickening winter twilight, wide apart
+ the battle rolled,
+ In its sheath the sabre rested, and the cannon's
+ lips grew cold.
+
+ But the noble Mexic women still their holy task
+ pursued,
+ Through that long, dark night of sorrow, worn and
+ faint and lacking food.
+ Over weak and suffering brothers, with a tender
+ care they hung,
+ And the dying foeman blessed them in a strange
+ and Northern tongue.
+
+ Not wholly lost, O Father! is this evil world of
+ ours;
+ Upward, through its blood and ashes, spring afresh
+ the Eden flowers;
+ From its smoking hell of battle, Love and Pity
+ send their prayer,
+ And still thy white-winged angels hover dimly in
+ our air!
+
+ 1847.
+
+
+
+
+THE LEGEND OF ST. MARK.
+
+"This legend (to which my attention was called by my friend Charles
+Sumner), is the subject of a celebrated picture by Tintoretto, of which
+Mr. Rogers possesses the original sketch. The slave lies on the ground,
+amid a crowd of spectators, who look on, animated by all the various
+emotions of sympathy, rage, terror; a woman, in front, with a child in
+her arms, has always been admired for the lifelike vivacity of her
+attitude and expression. The executioner holds up the broken implements;
+St. Mark, with a headlong movement, seems to rush down from heaven in
+haste to save his worshipper. The dramatic grouping in this picture is
+wonderful; the coloring, in its gorgeous depth and harmony, is, in Mr.
+Rogers's sketch, finer than in the picture."--MRS. JAMESON'S Sacred and
+Legendary Art, I. 154.
+
+ THE day is closing dark and cold,
+ With roaring blast and sleety showers;
+ And through the dusk the lilacs wear
+ The bloom of snow, instead of flowers.
+
+ I turn me from the gloom without,
+ To ponder o'er a tale of old;
+ A legend of the age of Faith,
+ By dreaming monk or abbess told.
+
+ On Tintoretto's canvas lives
+ That fancy of a loving heart,
+ In graceful lines and shapes of power,
+ And hues immortal as his art.
+
+ In Provence (so the story runs)
+ There lived a lord, to whom, as slave,
+ A peasant-boy of tender years
+ The chance of trade or conquest gave.
+
+ Forth-looking from the castle tower,
+ Beyond the hills with almonds dark,
+ The straining eye could scarce discern
+ The chapel of the good St. Mark.
+
+ And there, when bitter word or fare
+ The service of the youth repaid,
+ By stealth, before that holy shrine,
+ For grace to bear his wrong, he prayed.
+
+ The steed stamped at the castle gate,
+ The boar-hunt sounded on the hill;
+ Why stayed the Baron from the chase,
+ With looks so stern, and words so ill?
+
+ "Go, bind yon slave! and let him learn,
+ By scath of fire and strain of cord,
+ How ill they speed who give dead saints
+ The homage due their living lord!"
+
+ They bound him on the fearful rack,
+ When, through the dungeon's vaulted dark,
+ He saw the light of shining robes,
+ And knew the face of good St. Mark.
+
+ Then sank the iron rack apart,
+ The cords released their cruel clasp,
+ The pincers, with their teeth of fire,
+ Fell broken from the torturer's grasp.
+
+ And lo! before the Youth and Saint,
+ Barred door and wall of stone gave way;
+ And up from bondage and the night
+ They passed to freedom and the day!
+
+ O dreaming monk! thy tale is true;
+ O painter! true thy pencil's art;
+ in tones of hope and prophecy,
+ Ye whisper to my listening heart!
+
+ Unheard no burdened heart's appeal
+ Moans up to God's inclining ear;
+ Unheeded by his tender eye,
+ Falls to the earth no sufferer's tear.
+
+ For still the Lord alone is God
+ The pomp and power of tyrant man
+ Are scattered at his lightest breath,
+ Like chaff before the winnower's fan.
+
+ Not always shall the slave uplift
+ His heavy hands to Heaven in vain.
+ God's angel, like the good St. Mark,
+ Comes shining down to break his chain!
+
+ O weary ones! ye may not see
+ Your helpers in their downward flight;
+ Nor hear the sound of silver wings
+ Slow beating through the hush of night!
+
+ But not the less gray Dothan shone,
+ With sunbright watchers bending low,
+ That Fear's dim eye beheld alone
+ The spear-heads of the Syrian foe.
+
+ There are, who, like the Seer of old,
+ Can see the helpers God has sent,
+ And how life's rugged mountain-side
+ Is white with many an angel tent!
+
+ They hear the heralds whom our Lord
+ Sends down his pathway to prepare;
+ And light, from others hidden, shines
+ On their high place of faith and prayer.
+
+ Let such, for earth's despairing ones,
+ Hopeless, yet longing to be free,
+ Breathe once again the Prophet's prayer
+ "Lord, ope their eyes, that they may see!"
+
+ 1849.
+
+
+
+
+KATHLEEN.
+
+This ballad was originally published in my prose work, Leaves from
+Margaret Smith's Journal, as the song of a wandering Milesian
+schoolmaster. In the seventeenth century, slavery in the New World was
+by no means confined to the natives of Africa. Political offenders and
+criminals were transported by the British government to the plantations
+of Barbadoes and Virginia, where they were sold like cattle in the
+market. Kidnapping of free and innocent white persons was practised to a
+considerable extent in the seaports of the United Kingdom.
+
+ O NORAH, lay your basket down,
+ And rest your weary hand,
+ And come and hear me sing a song
+ Of our old Ireland.
+
+ There was a lord of Galaway,
+ A mighty lord was he;
+ And he did wed a second wife,
+ A maid of low degree.
+
+ But he was old, and she was young,
+ And so, in evil spite,
+ She baked the black bread for his kin,
+ And fed her own with white.
+
+ She whipped the maids and starved the kern,
+ And drove away the poor;
+ "Ah, woe is me!" the old lord said,
+ "I rue my bargain sore!"
+
+ This lord he had a daughter fair,
+ Beloved of old and young,
+ And nightly round the shealing-fires
+ Of her the gleeman sung.
+
+ "As sweet and good is young Kathleen
+ As Eve before her fall;"
+ So sang the harper at the fair,
+ So harped he in the hall.
+
+ "Oh, come to me, my daughter dear!
+ Come sit upon my knee,
+ For looking in your face, Kathleen,
+ Your mother's own I see!"
+
+ He smoothed and smoothed her hair away,
+ He kissed her forehead fair;
+ "It is my darling Mary's brow,
+ It is my darling's hair!"
+
+ Oh, then spake up the angry dame,
+ "Get up, get up," quoth she,
+ "I'll sell ye over Ireland,
+ I'll sell ye o'er the sea!"
+
+ She clipped her glossy hair away,
+ That none her rank might know;
+ She took away her gown of silk,
+ And gave her one of tow,
+
+ And sent her down to Limerick town
+ And to a seaman sold
+ This daughter of an Irish lord
+ For ten good pounds in gold.
+
+ The lord he smote upon his breast,
+ And tore his beard so gray;
+ But he was old, and she was young,
+ And so she had her way.
+
+ Sure that same night the Banshee howled
+ To fright the evil dame,
+ And fairy folks, who loved Kathleen,
+ With funeral torches came.
+
+ She watched them glancing through the trees,
+ And glimmering down the hill;
+ They crept before the dead-vault door,
+ And there they all stood still!
+
+ "Get up, old man! the wake-lights shine!"
+ "Ye murthering witch," quoth he,
+ "So I'm rid of your tongue, I little care
+ If they shine for you or me."
+
+ "Oh, whoso brings my daughter back,
+ My gold and land shall have!"
+ Oh, then spake up his handsome page,
+ "No gold nor land I crave!
+
+ "But give to me your daughter dear,
+ Give sweet Kathleen to me,
+ Be she on sea or be she on land,
+ I'll bring her back to thee."
+
+ "My daughter is a lady born,
+ And you of low degree,
+ But she shall be your bride the day
+ You bring her back to me."
+
+ He sailed east, he sailed west,
+ And far and long sailed he,
+ Until he came to Boston town,
+ Across the great salt sea.
+
+ "Oh, have ye seen the young Kathleen,
+ The flower of Ireland?
+ Ye'll know her by her eyes so blue,
+ And by her snow-white hand!"
+
+ Out spake an ancient man, "I know
+ The maiden whom ye mean;
+ I bought her of a Limerick man,
+ And she is called Kathleen.
+
+ "No skill hath she in household work,
+ Her hands are soft and white,
+ Yet well by loving looks and ways
+ She doth her cost requite."
+
+ So up they walked through Boston town,
+ And met a maiden fair,
+ A little basket on her arm
+ So snowy-white and bare.
+
+ "Come hither, child, and say hast thou
+ This young man ever seen?"
+ They wept within each other's arms,
+ The page and young Kathleen.
+
+ "Oh give to me this darling child,
+ And take my purse of gold."
+ "Nay, not by me," her master said,
+ "Shall sweet Kathleen be sold.
+
+ "We loved her in the place of one
+ The Lord hath early ta'en;
+ But, since her heart's in Ireland,
+ We give her back again!"
+
+ Oh, for that same the saints in heaven
+ For his poor soul shall pray,
+ And Mary Mother wash with tears
+ His heresies away.
+
+ Sure now they dwell in Ireland;
+ As you go up Claremore
+ Ye'll see their castle looking down
+ The pleasant Galway shore.
+
+ And the old lord's wife is dead and gone,
+ And a happy man is he,
+ For he sits beside his own Kathleen,
+ With her darling on his knee.
+
+ 1849.
+
+
+
+
+THE WELL OF LOCH MAREE
+
+Pennant, in his Voyage to the Hebrides, describes the holy well of Loch
+Maree, the waters of which were supposed to effect a miraculous cure of
+melancholy, trouble, and insanity.
+
+ CALM on the breast of Loch Maree
+ A little isle reposes;
+ A shadow woven of the oak
+ And willow o'er it closes.
+
+ Within, a Druid's mound is seen,
+ Set round with stony warders;
+ A fountain, gushing through the turf,
+ Flows o'er its grassy borders.
+
+ And whoso bathes therein his brow,
+ With care or madness burning,
+ Feels once again his healthful thought
+ And sense of peace returning.
+
+ O restless heart and fevered brain,
+ Unquiet and unstable,
+ That holy well of Loch Maree
+ Is more than idle fable!
+
+ Life's changes vex, its discords stun,
+ Its glaring sunshine blindeth,
+ And blest is he who on his way
+ That fount of healing findeth!
+
+ The shadows of a humbled will
+ And contrite heart are o'er it;
+ Go read its legend, "TRUST IN GOD,"
+ On Faith's white stones before it.
+
+ 1850.
+
+
+
+
+THE CHAPEL OF THE HERMITS.
+
+The incident upon which this poem is based is related in a note to
+Bernardin Henri Saint Pierre's Etudes de la Nature. "We arrived at the
+habitation of the Hermits a little before they sat down to their table,
+and while they were still at church. J. J. Rousseau proposed to me to
+offer up our devotions. The hermits were reciting the Litanies of
+Providence, which are remarkably beautiful. After we had addressed our
+prayers to God, and the hermits were proceeding to the refectory,
+Rousseau said to me, with his heart overflowing, 'At this moment I
+experience what is said in the gospel: Where two or three are gathered
+together in my name, there am I in the midst of them. There is here a
+feeling of peace and happiness which penetrates the soul.' I said, 'If
+Finelon had lived, you would have been a Catholic.' He exclaimed, with
+tears in his eyes, 'Oh, if Finelon were alive, I would struggle to get
+into his service, even as a lackey!'" In my sketch of Saint Pierre, it
+will be seen that I have somewhat antedated the period of his old age.
+At that time he was not probably more than fifty. In describing him, I
+have by no means exaggerated his own history of his mental condition at
+the period of the story. In the fragmentary Sequel to his Studies of
+Nature, he thus speaks of himself: "The ingratitude of those of whom I
+had deserved kindness, unexpected family misfortunes, the total loss of
+my small patrimony through enterprises solely undertaken for the benefit
+of my country, the debts under which I lay oppressed, the blasting of
+all my hopes,--these combined calamities made dreadful inroads upon my
+health and reason. . . . I found it impossible to continue in a room
+where there was company, especially if the doors were shut. I could not
+even cross an alley in a public garden, if several persons had got
+together in it. When alone, my malady subsided. I felt myself likewise
+at ease in places where I saw children only. At the sight of any one
+walking up to the place where I was, I felt my whole frame agitated, and
+retired. I often said to myself, 'My sole study has been to merit well
+of mankind; why do I fear them?'"
+
+He attributes his improved health of mind and body to the counsels of
+his friend, J. J. Rousseau. "I renounced," says he, "my books. I threw
+my eyes upon the works of nature, which spake to all my senses a
+language which neither time nor nations have it in their power to alter.
+Thenceforth my histories and my journals were the herbage of the fields
+and meadows. My thoughts did not go forth painfully after them, as in
+the case of human systems; but their thoughts, under a thousand engaging
+forms, quietly sought me. In these I studied, without effort, the laws
+of that Universal Wisdom which had surrounded me from the cradle, but on
+which heretofore I had bestowed little attention."
+
+Speaking of Rousseau, he says: "I derived inexpressible satisfaction
+from his society. What I prized still more than his genius was his
+probity. He was one of the few literary characters, tried in the furnace
+of affliction, to whom you could, with perfect security, confide your
+most secret thoughts. . . . Even when he deviated, and became the victim
+of himself or of others, he could forget his own misery in devotion to
+the welfare of mankind. He was uniformly the advocate of the miserable.
+There might be inscribed on his tomb these affecting words from that
+Book of which he carried always about him some select passages, during
+the last years of his life: 'His sins, which are many, are forgiven, for
+he loved much.'"
+
+ "I do believe, and yet, in grief,
+ I pray for help to unbelief;
+ For needful strength aside to lay
+ The daily cumberings of my way.
+
+ "I'm sick at heart of craft and cant,
+ Sick of the crazed enthusiast's rant,
+ Profession's smooth hypocrisies,
+ And creeds of iron, and lives of ease.
+
+ "I ponder o'er the sacred word,
+ I read the record of our Lord;
+ And, weak and troubled, envy them
+ Who touched His seamless garment's hem;
+
+ "Who saw the tears of love He wept
+ Above the grave where Lazarus slept;
+ And heard, amidst the shadows dim
+ Of Olivet, His evening hymn.
+
+ "How blessed the swineherd's low estate,
+ The beggar crouching at the gate,
+ The leper loathly and abhorred,
+ Whose eyes of flesh beheld the Lord!
+
+ "O sacred soil His sandals pressed!
+ Sweet fountains of His noonday rest!
+ O light and air of Palestine,
+ Impregnate with His life divine!
+
+ "Oh, bear me thither! Let me look
+ On Siloa's pool, and Kedron's brook;
+ Kneel at Gethsemane, and by
+ Gennesaret walk, before I die!
+
+ "Methinks this cold and northern night
+ Would melt before that Orient light;
+ And, wet by Hermon's dew and rain,
+ My childhood's faith revive again!"
+
+ So spake my friend, one autumn day,
+ Where the still river slid away
+ Beneath us, and above the brown
+ Red curtains of the woods shut down.
+
+ Then said I,--for I could not brook
+ The mute appealing of his look,--
+ "I, too, am weak, and faith is small,
+ And blindness happeneth unto all.
+
+ "Yet, sometimes glimpses on my sight,
+ Through present wrong, the eternal right;
+ And, step by step, since time began,
+ I see the steady gain of man;
+
+ "That all of good the past hath had
+ Remains to make our own time glad,
+ Our common daily life divine,
+ And every land a Palestine.
+
+ "Thou weariest of thy present state;
+ What gain to thee time's holiest date?
+ The doubter now perchance had been
+ As High Priest or as Pilate then!
+
+ "What thought Chorazin's scribes? What faith
+ In Him had Nain and Nazareth?
+ Of the few followers whom He led
+ One sold Him,--all forsook and fled.
+
+ "O friend! we need nor rock nor sand,
+ Nor storied stream of Morning-Land;
+ The heavens are glassed in Merrimac,--
+ What more could Jordan render back?
+
+ "We lack but open eye and ear
+ To find the Orient's marvels here;
+ The still small voice in autumn's hush,
+ Yon maple wood the burning bush.
+
+ "For still the new transcends the old,
+ In signs and tokens manifold;
+ Slaves rise up men; the olive waves,
+ With roots deep set in battle graves!
+
+ "Through the harsh noises of our day
+ A low, sweet prelude finds its way;
+ Through clouds of doubt, and creeds of fear,
+ A light is breaking, calm and clear.
+
+ "That song of Love, now low and far,
+ Erelong shall swell from star to star!
+ That light, the breaking day, which tips
+ The golden-spired Apocalypse!"
+
+ Then, when my good friend shook his head,
+ And, sighing, sadly smiled, I said:
+ "Thou mind'st me of a story told
+ In rare Bernardin's leaves of gold."
+
+ And while the slanted sunbeams wove
+ The shadows of the frost-stained grove,
+ And, picturing all, the river ran
+ O'er cloud and wood, I thus began:--
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+ In Mount Valerien's chestnut wood
+ The Chapel of the Hermits stood;
+ And thither, at the close of day,
+ Came two old pilgrims, worn and gray.
+
+ One, whose impetuous youth defied
+ The storms of Baikal's wintry side,
+ And mused and dreamed where tropic day
+ Flamed o'er his lost Virginia's bay.
+
+ His simple tale of love and woe
+ All hearts had melted, high or low;--
+ A blissful pain, a sweet distress,
+ Immortal in its tenderness.
+
+ Yet, while above his charmed page
+ Beat quick the young heart of his age,
+ He walked amidst the crowd unknown,
+ A sorrowing old man, strange and lone.
+
+ A homeless, troubled age,--the gray
+ Pale setting of a weary day;
+ Too dull his ear for voice of praise,
+ Too sadly worn his brow for bays.
+
+ Pride, lust of power and glory, slept;
+ Yet still his heart its young dream kept,
+ And, wandering like the deluge-dove,
+ Still sought the resting-place of love.
+
+ And, mateless, childless, envied more
+ The peasant's welcome from his door
+ By smiling eyes at eventide,
+ Than kingly gifts or lettered pride.
+
+ Until, in place of wife and child,
+ All-pitying Nature on him smiled,
+ And gave to him the golden keys
+ To all her inmost sanctities.
+
+ Mild Druid of her wood-paths dim!
+ She laid her great heart bare to him,
+ Its loves and sweet accords;--he saw
+ The beauty of her perfect law.
+
+ The language of her signs he knew,
+ What notes her cloudy clarion blew;
+ The rhythm of autumn's forest dyes,
+ The hymn of sunset's painted skies.
+
+ And thus he seemed to hear the song
+ Which swept, of old, the stars along;
+ And to his eyes the earth once more
+ Its fresh and primal beauty wore.
+
+ Who sought with him, from summer air,
+ And field and wood, a balm for care;
+ And bathed in light of sunset skies
+ His tortured nerves and weary eyes?
+
+ His fame on all the winds had flown;
+ His words had shaken crypt and throne;
+ Like fire, on camp and court and cell
+ They dropped, and kindled as they fell.
+
+ Beneath the pomps of state, below
+ The mitred juggler's masque and show,
+ A prophecy, a vague hope, ran
+ His burning thought from man to man.
+
+ For peace or rest too well he saw
+ The fraud of priests, the wrong of law,
+ And felt how hard, between the two,
+ Their breath of pain the millions drew.
+
+ A prophet-utterance, strong and wild,
+ The weakness of an unweaned child,
+ A sun-bright hope for human-kind,
+ And self-despair, in him combined.
+
+ He loathed the false, yet lived not true
+ To half the glorious truths he knew;
+ The doubt, the discord, and the sin,
+ He mourned without, he felt within.
+
+ Untrod by him the path he showed,
+ Sweet pictures on his easel glowed
+ Of simple faith, and loves of home,
+ And virtue's golden days to come.
+
+ But weakness, shame, and folly made
+ The foil to all his pen portrayed;
+ Still, where his dreamy splendors shone,
+ The shadow of himself was thrown.
+
+ Lord, what is man, whose thought, at times,
+ Up to Thy sevenfold brightness climbs,
+ While still his grosser instinct clings
+ To earth, like other creeping things!
+
+ So rich in words, in acts so mean;
+ So high, so low; chance-swung between
+ The foulness of the penal pit
+ And Truth's clear sky, millennium-lit!
+
+ Vain, pride of star-lent genius!--vain,
+ Quick fancy and creative brain,
+ Unblest by prayerful sacrifice,
+ Absurdly great, or weakly wise!
+
+ Midst yearnings for a truer life,
+ Without were fears, within was strife;
+ And still his wayward act denied
+ The perfect good for which he sighed.
+
+ The love he sent forth void returned;
+ The fame that crowned him scorched and burned,
+ Burning, yet cold and drear and lone,--
+ A fire-mount in a frozen zone!
+
+ Like that the gray-haired sea-king passed,
+ Seen southward from his sleety mast,
+ About whose brows of changeless frost
+ A wreath of flame the wild winds tossed.
+
+ Far round the mournful beauty played
+ Of lambent light and purple shade,
+ Lost on the fixed and dumb despair
+ Of frozen earth and sea and air!
+
+ A man apart, unknown, unloved
+ By those whose wrongs his soul had moved,
+ He bore the ban of Church and State,
+ The good man's fear, the bigot's hate!
+
+ Forth from the city's noise and throng,
+ Its pomp and shame, its sin and wrong,
+ The twain that summer day had strayed
+ To Mount Valerien's chestnut shade.
+
+ To them the green fields and the wood
+ Lent something of their quietude,
+ And golden-tinted sunset seemed
+ Prophetical of all they dreamed.
+
+ The hermits from their simple cares
+ The bell was calling home to prayers,
+ And, listening to its sound, the twain
+ Seemed lapped in childhood's trust again.
+
+ Wide open stood the chapel door;
+ A sweet old music, swelling o'er
+ Low prayerful murmurs, issued thence,--
+ The Litanies of Providence!
+
+ Then Rousseau spake: "Where two or three
+ In His name meet, He there will be!"
+ And then, in silence, on their knees
+ They sank beneath the chestnut-trees.
+
+ As to the blind returning light,
+ As daybreak to the Arctic night,
+ Old faith revived; the doubts of years
+ Dissolved in reverential tears.
+
+ That gush of feeling overpast,
+ "Ah me!" Bernardin sighed at last,
+ I would thy bitterest foes could see
+ Thy heart as it is seen of me!
+
+ "No church of God hast thou denied;
+ Thou hast but spurned in scorn aside
+ A bare and hollow counterfeit,
+ Profaning the pure name of it!
+
+ "With dry dead moss and marish weeds
+ His fire the western herdsman feeds,
+ And greener from the ashen plain
+ The sweet spring grasses rise again.
+
+ "Nor thunder-peal nor mighty wind
+ Disturb the solid sky behind;
+ And through the cloud the red bolt rends
+ The calm, still smile of Heaven descends.
+
+ "Thus through the world, like bolt and blast,
+ And scourging fire, thy words have passed.
+ Clouds break,--the steadfast heavens remain;
+ Weeds burn,--the ashes feed the grain!
+
+ "But whoso strives with wrong may find
+ Its touch pollute, its darkness blind;
+ And learn, as latent fraud is shown
+ In others' faith, to doubt his own.
+
+ "With dream and falsehood, simple trust
+ And pious hope we tread in dust;
+ Lost the calm faith in goodness,--lost
+ The baptism of the Pentecost!
+
+ "Alas!--the blows for error meant
+ Too oft on truth itself are spent,
+ As through the false and vile and base
+ Looks forth her sad, rebuking face.
+
+ "Not ours the Theban's charmed life;
+ We come not scathless from the strife!
+ The Python's coil about us clings,
+ The trampled Hydra bites and stings!
+
+ "Meanwhile, the sport of seeming chance,
+ The plastic shapes of circumstance,
+ What might have been we fondly guess,
+ If earlier born, or tempted less.
+
+ "And thou, in these wild, troubled days,
+ Misjudged alike in blame and praise,
+ Unsought and undeserved the same
+ The skeptic's praise, the bigot's blame;--
+
+ "I cannot doubt, if thou hadst been
+ Among the highly favored men
+ Who walked on earth with Fenelon,
+ He would have owned thee as his son;
+
+ "And, bright with wings of cherubim
+ Visibly waving over him,
+ Seen through his life, the Church had seemed
+ All that its old confessors dreamed."
+
+ "I would have been," Jean Jaques replied,
+ "The humblest servant at his side,
+ Obscure, unknown, content to see
+ How beautiful man's life may be!
+
+ "Oh, more than thrice-blest relic, more
+ Than solemn rite or sacred lore,
+ The holy life of one who trod
+ The foot-marks of the Christ of God!
+
+ "Amidst a blinded world he saw
+ The oneness of the Dual law;
+ That Heaven's sweet peace on Earth began,
+ And God was loved through love of man.
+
+ "He lived the Truth which reconciled
+ The strong man Reason, Faith, the child;
+ In him belief and act were one,
+ The homilies of duty done!"
+
+ So speaking, through the twilight gray
+ The two old pilgrims went their way.
+ What seeds of life that day were sown,
+ The heavenly watchers knew alone.
+
+ Time passed, and Autumn came to fold
+ Green Summer in her brown and gold;
+ Time passed, and Winter's tears of snow
+ Dropped on the grave-mound of Rousseau.
+
+ "The tree remaineth where it fell,
+ The pained on earth is pained in hell!"
+ So priestcraft from its altars cursed
+ The mournful doubts its falsehood nursed.
+
+ Ah! well of old the Psalmist prayed,
+ "Thy hand, not man's, on me be laid!"
+ Earth frowns below, Heaven weeps above,
+ And man is hate, but God is love!
+
+ No Hermits now the wanderer sees,
+ Nor chapel with its chestnut-trees;
+ A morning dream, a tale that's told,
+ The wave of change o'er all has rolled.
+
+ Yet lives the lesson of that day;
+ And from its twilight cool and gray
+ Comes up a low, sad whisper, "Make
+ The truth thine own, for truth's own sake.
+
+ "Why wait to see in thy brief span
+ Its perfect flower and fruit in man?
+ No saintly touch can save; no balm
+ Of healing hath the martyr's palm.
+
+ "Midst soulless forms, and false pretence
+ Of spiritual pride and pampered sense,
+ A voice saith, 'What is that to thee?
+ Be true thyself, and follow Me!
+
+ "In days when throne and altar heard
+ The wanton's wish, the bigot's word,
+ And pomp of state and ritual show
+ Scarce hid the loathsome death below,--
+
+ "Midst fawning priests and courtiers foul,
+ The losel swarm of crown and cowl,
+ White-robed walked Francois Fenelon,
+ Stainless as Uriel in the sun!
+
+ "Yet in his time the stake blazed red,
+ The poor were eaten up like bread
+ Men knew him not; his garment's hem
+ No healing virtue had for them.
+
+ "Alas! no present saint we find;
+ The white cymar gleams far behind,
+ Revealed in outline vague, sublime,
+ Through telescopic mists of time!
+
+ "Trust not in man with passing breath,
+ But in the Lord, old Scripture saith;
+ The truth which saves thou mayst not blend
+ With false professor, faithless friend.
+
+ "Search thine own heart. What paineth thee
+ In others in thyself may be;
+ All dust is frail, all flesh is weak;
+ Be thou the true man thou dost seek!
+
+ "Where now with pain thou treadest, trod
+ The whitest of the saints of God!
+ To show thee where their feet were set,
+ the light which led them shineth yet.
+
+ "The footprints of the life divine,
+ Which marked their path, remain in thine;
+ And that great Life, transfused in theirs,
+ Awaits thy faith, thy love, thy prayers!"
+
+ A lesson which I well may heed,
+ A word of fitness to my need;
+ So from that twilight cool and gray
+ Still saith a voice, or seems to say.
+
+ We rose, and slowly homeward turned,
+ While down the west the sunset burned;
+ And, in its light, hill, wood, and tide,
+ And human forms seemed glorified.
+
+ The village homes transfigured stood,
+ And purple bluffs, whose belting wood
+ Across the waters leaned to hold
+ The yellow leaves like lamps of hold.
+
+ Then spake my friend: "Thy words are true;
+ Forever old, forever new,
+ These home-seen splendors are the same
+ Which over Eden's sunsets came.
+
+ "To these bowed heavens let wood and hill
+ Lift voiceless praise and anthem still;
+ Fall, warm with blessing, over them,
+ Light of the New Jerusalem!
+
+ "Flow on, sweet river, like the stream
+ Of John's Apocalyptic dream
+ This mapled ridge shall Horeb be,
+ Yon green-banked lake our Galilee!
+
+ "Henceforth my heart shall sigh no more
+ For olden time and holier shore;
+ God's love and blessing, then and there,
+ Are now and here and everywhere."
+
+ 1851.
+
+
+
+
+TAULER.
+
+ TAULER, the preacher, walked, one autumn day,
+ Without the walls of Strasburg, by the Rhine,
+ Pondering the solemn Miracle of Life;
+ As one who, wandering in a starless night,
+ Feels momently the jar of unseen waves,
+ And hears the thunder of an unknown sea,
+ Breaking along an unimagined shore.
+
+ And as he walked he prayed. Even the same
+ Old prayer with which, for half a score of years,
+ Morning, and noon, and evening, lip and heart
+ Had groaned: "Have pity upon me, Lord!
+ Thou seest, while teaching others, I am blind.
+ Send me a man who can direct my steps!"
+
+ Then, as he mused, he heard along his path
+ A sound as of an old man's staff among
+ The dry, dead linden-leaves; and, looking up,
+ He saw a stranger, weak, and poor, and old.
+
+ "Peace be unto thee, father!" Tauler said,
+ "God give thee a good day!" The old man raised
+ Slowly his calm blue eyes. "I thank thee, son;
+ But all my days are good, and none are ill."
+
+ Wondering thereat, the preacher spake again,
+ "God give thee happy life." The old man smiled,
+ "I never am unhappy."
+
+ Tauler laid
+ His hand upon the stranger's coarse gray sleeve
+ "Tell me, O father, what thy strange words mean.
+ Surely man's days are evil, and his life
+ Sad as the grave it leads to." "Nay, my son,
+ Our times are in God's hands, and all our days
+ Are as our needs; for shadow as for sun,
+ For cold as heat, for want as wealth, alike
+ Our thanks are due, since that is best which is;
+ And that which is not, sharing not His life,
+ Is evil only as devoid of good.
+ And for the happiness of which I spake,
+ I find it in submission to his will,
+ And calm trust in the holy Trinity
+ Of Knowledge, Goodness, and Almighty Power."
+
+ Silently wondering, for a little space,
+ Stood the great preacher; then he spake as one
+ Who, suddenly grappling with a haunting thought
+ Which long has followed, whispering through the dark
+ Strange terrors, drags it, shrieking, into light
+ "What if God's will consign thee hence to Hell?"
+
+ "Then," said the stranger, cheerily, "be it so.
+ What Hell may be I know not; this I know,--
+ I cannot lose the presence of the Lord.
+ One arm, Humility, takes hold upon
+ His dear Humanity; the other, Love,
+ Clasps his Divinity. So where I go
+ He goes; and better fire-walled Hell with Him
+ Than golden-gated Paradise without."
+
+ Tears sprang in Tauler's eyes. A sudden light,
+ Like the first ray which fell on chaos, clove
+ Apart the shadow wherein he had walked
+ Darkly at noon. And, as the strange old man
+ Went his slow way, until his silver hair
+ Set like the white moon where the hills of vine
+ Slope to the Rhine, he bowed his head and said
+ "My prayer is answered. God hath sent the man
+ Long sought, to teach me, by his simple trust,
+ Wisdom the weary schoolmen never knew."
+
+ So, entering with a changed and cheerful step
+ The city gates, he saw, far down the street,
+ A mighty shadow break the light of noon,
+ Which tracing backward till its airy lines
+ Hardened to stony plinths, he raised his eyes
+ O'er broad facade and lofty pediment,
+ O'er architrave and frieze and sainted niche,
+ Up the stone lace-work chiselled by the wise
+ Erwin of Steinbach, dizzily up to where
+ In the noon-brightness the great Minster's tower,
+ Jewelled with sunbeams on its mural crown,
+ Rose like a visible prayer. "Behold!" he said,
+ "The stranger's faith made plain before mine eyes.
+ As yonder tower outstretches to the earth
+ The dark triangle of its shade alone
+ When the clear day is shining on its top,
+ So, darkness in the pathway of Man's life
+ Is but the shadow of God's providence,
+ By the great Sun of Wisdom cast thereon;
+ And what is dark below is light in Heaven."
+
+ 1853.
+
+
+
+
+THE HERMIT OF THE THEBAID.
+
+ O strong, upwelling prayers of faith,
+ From inmost founts of life ye start,--
+ The spirit's pulse, the vital breath
+ Of soul and heart!
+
+ From pastoral toil, from traffic's din,
+ Alone, in crowds, at home, abroad,
+ Unheard of man, ye enter in
+ The ear of God.
+
+ Ye brook no forced and measured tasks,
+ Nor weary rote, nor formal chains;
+ The simple heart, that freely asks
+ In love, obtains.
+
+ For man the living temple is
+ The mercy-seat and cherubim,
+ And all the holy mysteries,
+ He bears with him.
+
+ And most avails the prayer of love,
+ Which, wordless, shapes itself in needs,
+ And wearies Heaven for naught above
+ Our common needs.
+
+ Which brings to God's all-perfect will
+ That trust of His undoubting child
+ Whereby all seeming good and ill
+ Are reconciled.
+
+ And, seeking not for special signs
+ Of favor, is content to fall
+ Within the providence which shines
+ And rains on all.
+
+ Alone, the Thebaid hermit leaned
+ At noontime o'er the sacred word.
+ Was it an angel or a fiend
+ Whose voice be heard?
+
+ It broke the desert's hush of awe,
+ A human utterance, sweet and mild;
+ And, looking up, the hermit saw
+ A little child.
+
+ A child, with wonder-widened eyes,
+ O'erawed and troubled by the sight
+ Of hot, red sands, and brazen skies,
+ And anchorite.
+
+ "What dost thou here, poor man? No shade
+ Of cool, green palms, nor grass, nor well,
+ Nor corn, nor vines." The hermit said
+ "With God I dwell.
+
+ "Alone with Him in this great calm,
+ I live not by the outward sense;
+ My Nile his love, my sheltering palm
+ His providence."
+
+ The child gazed round him. "Does God live
+ Here only?--where the desert's rim
+ Is green with corn, at morn and eve,
+ We pray to Him.
+
+ "My brother tills beside the Nile
+ His little field; beneath the leaves
+ My sisters sit and spin, the while
+ My mother weaves.
+
+ "And when the millet's ripe heads fall,
+ And all the bean-field hangs in pod,
+ My mother smiles, and, says that all
+ Are gifts from God."
+
+ Adown the hermit's wasted cheeks
+ Glistened the flow of human tears;
+ "Dear Lord!" he said, "Thy angel speaks,
+ Thy servant hears."
+
+ Within his arms the child he took,
+ And thought of home and life with men;
+ And all his pilgrim feet forsook
+ Returned again.
+
+ The palmy shadows cool and long,
+ The eyes that smiled through lavish locks,
+ Home's cradle-hymn and harvest-song,
+ And bleat of flocks.
+
+ "O child!" he said, "thou teachest me
+ There is no place where God is not;
+ That love will make, where'er it be,
+ A holy spot."
+
+ He rose from off the desert sand,
+ And, leaning on his staff of thorn,
+ Went with the young child hand in hand,
+ Like night with morn.
+
+ They crossed the desert's burning line,
+ And heard the palm-tree's rustling fan,
+ The Nile-bird's cry, the low of kine,
+ And voice of man.
+
+ Unquestioning, his childish guide
+ He followed, as the small hand led
+ To where a woman, gentle-eyed,
+ Her distaff fed.
+
+ She rose, she clasped her truant boy,
+ She thanked the stranger with her eyes;
+ The hermit gazed in doubt and joy
+ And dumb surprise.
+
+ And lo!--with sudden warmth and light
+ A tender memory thrilled his frame;
+ New-born, the world-lost anchorite
+ A man became.
+
+ "O sister of El Zara's race,
+ Behold me!--had we not one mother?"
+ She gazed into the stranger's face
+ "Thou art my brother!"
+
+ "And when to share our evening meal,
+ She calls the stranger at the door,
+ She says God fills the hands that deal
+ Food to the poor."
+
+ "O kin of blood! Thy life of use
+ And patient trust is more than mine;
+ And wiser than the gray recluse
+ This child of thine.
+
+ "For, taught of him whom God hath sent,
+ That toil is praise, and love is prayer,
+ I come, life's cares and pains content
+ With thee to share."
+
+ Even as his foot the threshold crossed,
+ The hermit's better life began;
+ Its holiest saint the Thebaid lost,
+ And found a man!
+
+ 1854.
+
+
+
+
+MAUD MULLER.
+
+The recollection of some descendants of a Hessian deserter in the
+Revolutionary war bearing the name of Muller doubtless suggested the
+somewhat infelicitous title of a New England idyl. The poem had no real
+foundation in fact, though a hint of it may have been found in recalling
+an incident, trivial in itself, of a journey on the picturesque Maine
+seaboard with my sister some years before it was written. We had stopped
+to rest our tired horse under the shade of an apple-tree, and refresh
+him with water from a little brook which rippled through the stone wall
+across the road. A very beautiful young girl in scantest summer attire
+was at work in the hay-field, and as we talked with her we noticed that
+she strove to hide her bare feet by raking hay over them, blushing as
+she did so, through the tan of her cheek and neck.
+
+ Maud Muller on a summer's day,
+ Raked the meadow sweet with hay.
+
+ Beneath her torn hat glowed the wealth
+ Of simple beauty and rustic-health.
+
+ Singing, she wrought, and her merry glee
+ The mock-bird echoed from his tree.
+
+ But when she glanced to the far-off town,
+ White from its hill-slope looking down,
+
+ The sweet song died, and a vague unrest
+ And a nameless longing filled her breast,--
+
+ A wish, that she hardly dared to own,
+ For something better than she had known.
+
+ The Judge rode slowly down the lane,
+ Smoothing his horse's chestnut mane.
+
+ He drew his bridle in the shade
+ Of the apple-trees, to greet the maid,
+
+ And asked a draught from the spring that flowed
+ Through the meadow across the road.
+
+ She stooped where the cool spring bubbled up,
+ And filled for him her small tin cup,
+
+ And blushed as she gave it, looking down
+ On her feet so bare, and her tattered gown.
+
+ "Thanks!" said the Judge; "a sweeter draught
+ From a fairer hand was never quaffed."
+
+ He spoke of the grass and flowers and trees,
+ Of the singing birds and the humming bees;
+
+ Then talked of the haying, and wondered whether
+ The cloud in the west would bring foul weather.
+
+ And Maud forgot her brier-torn gown,
+ And her graceful ankles bare and brown;
+
+ And listened, while a pleased surprise
+ Looked from her long-lashed hazel eyes.
+
+ At last, like one who for delay
+ Seeks a vain excuse, he rode away.
+
+ Maud Muller looked and sighed: "Ah me!
+ That I the Judge's bride might be!
+
+ "He would dress me up in silks so fine,
+ And praise and toast me at his wine.
+
+ "My father should wear a broadcloth coat;
+ My brother should sail a painted boat.
+
+ "I'd dress my mother so grand and gay,
+ And the baby should have a new toy each day.
+
+ "And I'd feed the hungry and clothe the poor,
+ And all should bless me who left our door."
+
+ The Judge looked back as he climbed the hill,
+ And saw Maud Muller standing still.
+
+ A form more fair, a face more sweet,
+ Ne'er hath it been my lot to meet.
+
+ "And her modest answer and graceful air
+ Show her wise and good as she is fair.
+
+ "Would she were mine, and I to-day,
+ Like her, a harvester of hay;
+
+ "No doubtful balance of rights and wrongs,
+ Nor weary lawyers with endless tongues,
+
+ "But low of cattle and song of birds,
+ And health and quiet and loving words."
+
+ But he thought of his sisters, proud and cold,
+ And his mother, vain of her rank and gold.
+
+ So, closing his heart, the Judge rode on,
+ And Maud was left in the field alone.
+
+ But the lawyers smiled that afternoon,
+ When he hummed in court an old love-tune;
+
+ And the young girl mused beside the well
+ Till the rain on the unraked clover fell.
+
+ He wedded a wife of richest dower,
+ Who lived for fashion, as he for power.
+
+ Yet oft, in his marble hearth's bright glow,
+ He watched a picture come and go;
+
+ And sweet Maud Muller's hazel eyes
+ Looked out in their innocent surprise.
+
+ Oft, when the wine in his glass was red,
+ He longed for the wayside well instead;
+
+ And closed his eyes on his garnished rooms
+ To dream of meadows and clover-blooms.
+
+ And the proud man sighed, with a secret pain,
+ "Ah, that I were free again!
+
+ "Free as when I rode that day,
+ Where the barefoot maiden raked her hay."
+
+ She wedded a man unlearned and poor,
+ And many children played round her door.
+
+ But care and sorrow, and childbirth pain,
+ Left their traces on heart and brain.
+
+ And oft, when the summer sun shone hot
+ On the new-mown hay in the meadow lot,
+
+ And she heard the little spring brook fall
+ Over the roadside, through the wall,
+
+ In the shade of the apple-tree again
+ She saw a rider draw his rein.
+
+ And, gazing down with timid grace,
+ She felt his pleased eyes read her face.
+
+ Sometimes her narrow kitchen walls
+ Stretched away into stately halls;
+
+ The weary wheel to a spinnet turned,
+ The tallow candle an astral burned,
+
+ And for him who sat by the chimney lug,
+ Dozing and grumbling o'er pipe and mug,
+
+ A manly form at her side she saw,
+ And joy was duty and love was law.
+
+ Then she took up her burden of life again,
+ Saying only, "It might have been."
+
+ Alas for maiden, alas for Judge,
+ For rich repiner and household drudge!
+
+ God pity them both! and pity us all,
+ Who vainly the dreams of youth recall.
+
+ For of all sad words of tongue or pen,
+ The saddest are these: "It might have been!"
+
+ Ah, well! for us all some sweet hope lies
+ Deeply buried from human eyes;
+
+ And, in the hereafter, angels may
+ Roll the stone from its grave away!
+
+ 1854.
+
+
+
+
+MARY GARVIN.
+
+ FROM the heart of Waumbek Methna, from the
+ lake that never fails,
+ Falls the Saco in the green lap of Conway's
+ intervales;
+ There, in wild and virgin freshness, its waters
+ foam and flow,
+ As when Darby Field first saw them, two hundred
+ years ago.
+
+ But, vexed in all its seaward course with bridges,
+ dams, and mills,
+ How changed is Saco's stream, how lost its freedom
+ of the hills,
+ Since travelled Jocelyn, factor Vines, and stately
+ Champernoon
+ Heard on its banks the gray wolf's howl, the trumpet
+ of the loon!
+
+ With smoking axle hot with speed, with steeds of
+ fire and steam,
+ Wide-waked To-day leaves Yesterday behind him
+ like a dream.
+ Still, from the hurrying train of Life, fly backward
+ far and fast
+ The milestones of the fathers, the landmarks of
+ the past.
+
+ But human hearts remain unchanged: the sorrow
+ and the sin,
+ The loves and hopes and fears of old, are to our
+ own akin;
+
+ And if, in tales our fathers told, the songs our
+ mothers sung,
+ Tradition wears a snowy beard, Romance is always
+ young.
+
+ O sharp-lined man of traffic, on Saco's banks today!
+ O mill-girl watching late and long the shuttle's
+ restless play!
+ Let, for the once, a listening ear the working hand
+ beguile,
+ And lend my old Provincial tale, as suits, a tear or
+ smile!
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+ The evening gun had sounded from gray Fort
+ Mary's walls;
+ Through the forest, like a wild beast, roared and
+ plunged the Saco's' falls.
+
+ And westward on the sea-wind, that damp and
+ gusty grew,
+ Over cedars darkening inland the smokes of Spurwink
+ blew.
+
+ On the hearth of Farmer Garvin, blazed the crackling
+ walnut log;
+ Right and left sat dame and goodman, and between
+ them lay the dog,
+
+ Head on paws, and tail slow wagging, and beside
+ him on her mat,
+ Sitting drowsy in the firelight, winked and purred
+ the mottled cat.
+
+ "Twenty years!" said Goodman Garvin, speaking
+ sadly, under breath,
+ And his gray head slowly shaking, as one who
+ speaks of death.
+
+ The goodwife dropped her needles: "It is twenty
+ years to-day,
+ Since the Indians fell on Saco, and stole our child
+ away."
+
+ Then they sank into the silence, for each knew
+ the other's thought,
+ Of a great and common sorrow, and words were,
+ needed not.
+
+ "Who knocks?" cried Goodman Garvin. The
+ door was open thrown;
+ On two strangers, man and maiden, cloaked and
+ furred, the fire-light shone.
+
+ One with courteous gesture lifted the bear-skin
+ from his head;
+ "Lives here Elkanah Garvin?" "I am he," the
+ goodman said.
+
+ "Sit ye down, and dry and warm ye, for the night
+ is chill with rain."
+ And the goodwife drew the settle, and stirred the
+ fire amain.
+
+ The maid unclasped her cloak-hood, the firelight
+ glistened fair
+ In her large, moist eyes, and over soft folds of
+ dark brown hair.
+
+ Dame Garvin looked upon her: "It is Mary's self
+ I see!"
+ "Dear heart!" she cried, "now tell me, has my
+ child come back to me?"
+
+ "My name indeed is Mary," said the stranger sobbing
+ wild;
+ "Will you be to me a mother? I am Mary Garvin's child!"
+
+ "She sleeps by wooded Simcoe, but on her dying
+ day
+ She bade my father take me to her kinsfolk far
+ away.
+
+ "And when the priest besought her to do me no
+ such wrong,
+ She said, 'May God forgive me! I have closed
+ my heart too long.'
+
+ "'When I hid me from my father, and shut out
+ my mother's call,
+ I sinned against those dear ones, and the Father
+ of us all.
+
+ "'Christ's love rebukes no home-love, breaks no
+ tie of kin apart;
+ Better heresy in doctrine, than heresy of heart.
+
+ "'Tell me not the Church must censure: she who
+ wept the Cross beside
+ Never made her own flesh strangers, nor the claims
+ of blood denied;
+
+ "'And if she who wronged her parents, with her
+ child atones to them,
+ Earthly daughter, Heavenly Mother! thou at least
+ wilt not condemn!'
+
+ "So, upon her death-bed lying, my blessed mother
+ spake;
+ As we come to do her bidding, So receive us for her
+ sake."
+
+ "God be praised!" said Goodwife Garvin, "He taketh,
+ and He gives;
+ He woundeth, but He healeth; in her child our
+ daughter lives!"
+
+ "Amen!" the old man answered, as he brushed a
+ tear away,
+ And, kneeling by his hearthstone, said, with reverence,
+ "Let us pray."
+
+ All its Oriental symbols, and its Hebrew pararphrase,
+ Warm with earnest life and feeling, rose his prayer
+ of love and praise.
+
+ But he started at beholding, as he rose from off
+ his knee,
+ The stranger cross his forehead with the sign of
+ Papistrie.
+
+ "What is this?" cried Farmer Garvin. "Is an English
+ Christian's home
+ A chapel or a mass-house, that you make the sign
+ of Rome?"
+
+ Then the young girl knelt beside him, kissed his
+ trembling hand, and cried:
+ Oh, forbear to chide my father; in that faith my
+ mother died!
+
+ "On her wooden cross at Simcoe the dews and
+ sunshine fall,
+ As they fall on Spurwink's graveyard; and the
+ dear God watches all!"
+
+ The old man stroked the fair head that rested on
+ his knee;
+ "Your words, dear child," he answered, "are God's
+ rebuke to me.
+
+ "Creed and rite perchance may differ, yet our
+ faith and hope be one.
+ Let me be your father's father, let him be to me
+ a son."
+
+ When the horn, on Sabbath morning, through the
+ still and frosty air,
+ From Spurwink, Pool, and Black Point, called to
+ sermon and to prayer,
+
+ To the goodly house of worship, where, in order
+ due and fit,
+ As by public vote directed, classed and ranked the
+ people sit;
+
+ Mistress first and goodwife after, clerkly squire
+ before the clown,
+ "From the brave coat, lace-embroidered, to the gray
+ frock, shading down;"
+
+ From the pulpit read the preacher, "Goodman
+ Garvin and his wife
+ Fain would thank the Lord, whose kindness has
+ followed them through life,
+
+ "For the great and crowning mercy, that their
+ daughter, from the wild,
+ Where she rests (they hope in God's peace), has
+ sent to them her child;
+
+ "And the prayers of all God's people they ask,
+ that they may prove
+ Not unworthy, through their weakness, of such
+ special proof of love."
+
+ As the preacher prayed, uprising, the aged couple
+ stood,
+ And the fair Canadian also, in her modest maiden-
+ hood.
+
+ Thought the elders, grave and doubting, "She is
+ Papist born and bred;"
+ Thought the young men, "'T is an angel in Mary
+ Garvin's stead!"
+
+
+
+
+THE RANGER.
+
+Originally published as Martha Mason; a Song of the Old
+French War.
+
+ ROBERT RAWLIN!--Frosts were falling
+ When the ranger's horn was calling
+ Through the woods to Canada.
+
+ Gone the winter's sleet and snowing,
+ Gone the spring-time's bud and blowing,
+ Gone the summer's harvest mowing,
+ And again the fields are gray.
+ Yet away, he's away!
+ Faint and fainter hope is growing
+ In the hearts that mourn his stay.
+
+ Where the lion, crouching high on
+ Abraham's rock with teeth of iron,
+ Glares o'er wood and wave away,
+ Faintly thence, as pines far sighing,
+ Or as thunder spent and dying,
+ Come the challenge and replying,
+ Come the sounds of flight and fray.
+ Well-a-day! Hope and pray!
+ Some are living, some are lying
+ In their red graves far away.
+
+ Straggling rangers, worn with dangers,
+ Homeward faring, weary strangers
+ Pass the farm-gate on their way;
+ Tidings of the dead and living,
+ Forest march and ambush, giving,
+ Till the maidens leave their weaving,
+ And the lads forget their play.
+ "Still away, still away!"
+ Sighs a sad one, sick with grieving,
+ "Why does Robert still delay!"
+
+ Nowhere fairer, sweeter, rarer,
+ Does the golden-locked fruit bearer
+ Through his painted woodlands stray,
+ Than where hillside oaks and beeches
+ Overlook the long, blue reaches,
+ Silver coves and pebbled beaches,
+ And green isles of Casco Bay;
+ Nowhere day, for delay,
+ With a tenderer look beseeches,
+ "Let me with my charmed earth stay."
+
+ On the grain-lands of the mainlands
+ Stands the serried corn like train-bands,
+ Plume and pennon rustling gay;
+ Out at sea, the islands wooded,
+ Silver birches, golden-hooded,
+ Set with maples, crimson-blooded,
+ White sea-foam and sand-hills gray,
+ Stretch away, far away.
+ Dim and dreamy, over-brooded
+ By the hazy autumn day.
+
+ Gayly chattering to the clattering
+ Of the brown nuts downward pattering,
+ Leap the squirrels, red and gray.
+ On the grass-land, on the fallow,
+ Drop the apples, red and yellow;
+ Drop the russet pears and mellow,
+ Drop the red leaves all the day.
+ And away, swift away,
+ Sun and cloud, o'er hill and hollow
+ Chasing, weave their web of play.
+
+ "Martha Mason, Martha Mason,
+ Prithee tell us of the reason
+ Why you mope at home to-day
+ Surely smiling is not sinning;
+ Leave, your quilling, leave your spinning;
+ What is all your store of linen,
+ If your heart is never gay?
+ Come away, come away!
+ Never yet did sad beginning
+ Make the task of life a play."
+
+ Overbending, till she's blending
+ With the flaxen skein she's tending
+ Pale brown tresses smoothed away
+ From her face of patient sorrow,
+ Sits she, seeking but to borrow,
+ From the trembling hope of morrow,
+ Solace for the weary day.
+ "Go your way, laugh and play;
+ Unto Him who heeds the sparrow
+ And the lily, let me pray."
+
+ "With our rally, rings the valley,--
+ Join us!" cried the blue-eyed Nelly;
+ "Join us!" cried the laughing May,
+ "To the beach we all are going,
+ And, to save the task of rowing,
+ West by north the wind is blowing,
+ Blowing briskly down the bay
+ Come away, come away!
+ Time and tide are swiftly flowing,
+ Let us take them while we may!
+
+ "Never tell us that you'll fail us,
+ Where the purple beach-plum mellows
+ On the bluffs so wild and gray.
+ Hasten, for the oars are falling;
+ Hark, our merry mates are calling;
+ Time it is that we were all in,
+ Singing tideward down the bay!"
+ "Nay, nay, let me stay;
+ Sore and sad for Robert Rawlin
+ Is my heart," she said, "to-day."
+
+ "Vain your calling for Rob Rawlin
+ Some red squaw his moose-meat's broiling,
+ Or some French lass, singing gay;
+ Just forget as he's forgetting;
+ What avails a life of fretting?
+ If some stars must needs be setting,
+ Others rise as good as they."
+ "Cease, I pray; go your way!"
+ Martha cries, her eyelids wetting;
+ "Foul and false the words you say!"
+
+ "Martha Mason, hear to reason!--
+ Prithee, put a kinder face on!"
+ "Cease to vex me," did she say;
+ "Better at his side be lying,
+ With the mournful pine-trees sighing,
+ And the wild birds o'er us crying,
+ Than to doubt like mine a prey;
+ While away, far away,
+ Turns my heart, forever trying
+ Some new hope for each new day.
+
+ "When the shadows veil the meadows,
+ And the sunset's golden ladders
+ Sink from twilight's walls of gray,--
+ From the window of my dreaming,
+ I can see his sickle gleaming,
+ Cheery-voiced, can hear him teaming
+ Down the locust-shaded way;
+ But away, swift away,
+ Fades the fond, delusive seeming,
+ And I kneel again to pray.
+
+ "When the growing dawn is showing,
+ And the barn-yard cock is crowing,
+ And the horned moon pales away
+ From a dream of him awaking,
+ Every sound my heart is making
+ Seems a footstep of his taking;
+ Then I hush the thought, and say,
+ 'Nay, nay, he's away!'
+ Ah! my heart, my heart is breaking
+ For the dear one far away."
+
+ Look up, Martha! worn and swarthy,
+ Glows a face of manhood worthy
+ "Robert!" "Martha!" all they say.
+ O'er went wheel and reel together,
+ Little cared the owner whither;
+ Heart of lead is heart of feather,
+ Noon of night is noon of day!
+ Come away, come away!
+ When such lovers meet each other,
+ Why should prying idlers stay?
+
+ Quench the timber's fallen embers,
+ Quench the red leaves in December's
+ Hoary rime and chilly spray.
+ But the hearth shall kindle clearer,
+ Household welcomes sound sincerer,
+ Heart to loving heart draw nearer,
+ When the bridal bells shall say:
+ "Hope and pray, trust alway;
+ Life is sweeter, love is dearer,
+ For the trial and delay!"
+
+ 1856.
+
+
+
+
+THE GARRISON OF CAPE ANN.
+
+ FROM the hills of home forth looking, far beneath
+ the tent-like span
+ Of the sky, I see the white gleam of the headland
+ of Cape Ann.
+ Well I know its coves and beaches to the ebb-tide
+ glimmering down,
+ And the white-walled hamlet children of its ancient
+ fishing town.
+
+ Long has passed the summer morning, and its
+ memory waxes old,
+ When along yon breezy headlands with a pleasant
+ friend I strolled.
+ Ah! the autumn sun is shining, and the ocean
+ wind blows cool,
+ And the golden-rod and aster bloom around thy
+ grave, Rantoul!
+
+ With the memory of that morning by the summer
+ sea I blend
+ A wild and wondrous story, by the younger Mather
+ penned,
+ In that quaint Magnalia Christi, with all strange
+ and marvellous things,
+ Heaped up huge and undigested, like the chaos
+ Ovid sings.
+
+ Dear to me these far, faint glimpses of the dual
+ life of old,
+ Inward, grand with awe and reverence; outward,
+ mean and coarse and cold;
+ Gleams of mystic beauty playing over dull and
+ vulgar clay,
+ Golden-threaded fancies weaving in a web of
+ hodden gray.
+
+ The great eventful Present hides the Past; but
+ through the din
+ Of its loud life hints and echoes from the life
+ behind steal in;
+ And the lore of homeland fireside, and the legendary
+ rhyme,
+ Make the task of duty lighter which the true man
+ owes his time.
+
+ So, with something of the feeling which the Covenanter
+ knew,
+ When with pious chisel wandering Scotland's
+ moorland graveyards through,
+ From the graves of old traditions I part the black-
+ berry-vines,
+ Wipe the moss from off the headstones, and retouch
+ the faded lines.
+
+ Where the sea-waves back and forward, hoarse
+ with rolling pebbles, ran,
+ The garrison-house stood watching on the gray
+ rocks of Cape Ann;
+ On its windy site uplifting gabled roof and palisade,
+ And rough walls of unhewn timber with the moonlight
+ overlaid.
+
+ On his slow round walked the sentry, south and
+ eastward looking forth
+ O'er a rude and broken coast-line, white with
+ breakers stretching north,--
+ Wood and rock and gleaming sand-drift, jagged
+ capes, with bush and tree,
+ Leaning inland from the smiting of the wild and
+ gusty sea.
+
+ Before the deep-mouthed chimney, dimly lit by
+ dying brands,
+ Twenty soldiers sat and waited, with their muskets
+ in their hands;
+ On the rough-hewn oaken table the venison haunch
+ was shared,
+ And the pewter tankard circled slowly round from
+ beard to beard.
+
+ Long they sat and talked together,--talked of
+ wizards Satan-sold;
+ Of all ghostly sights and noises,--signs and wonders
+ manifold;
+ Of the spectre-ship of Salem, with the dead men
+ in her shrouds,
+ Sailing sheer above the water, in the loom of morning
+ clouds;
+
+ Of the marvellous valley hidden in the depths of
+ Gloucester woods,
+ Full of plants that love the summer,--blooms of
+ warmer latitudes;
+ Where the Arctic birch is braided by the tropic's
+ flowery vines,
+ And the white magnolia-blossoms star the twilight
+ of the pines!
+
+ But their voices sank yet lower, sank to husky
+ tones of fear,
+ As they spake of present tokens of the powers of
+ evil near;
+ Of a spectral host, defying stroke of steel and aim
+ of gun;
+ Never yet was ball to slay them in the mould of
+ mortals run.
+
+ Thrice, with plumes and flowing scalp-locks, from
+ the midnight wood they came,--
+ Thrice around the block-house marching, met, unharmed,
+ its volleyed flame;
+ Then, with mocking laugh and gesture, sunk in
+ earth or lost in air,
+ All the ghostly wonder vanished, and the moonlit
+ sands lay bare.
+
+ Midnight came; from out the forest moved a
+ dusky mass that soon
+ Grew to warriors, plumed and painted, grimly
+ marching in the moon.
+ "Ghosts or witches," said the captain, "thus I foil
+ the Evil One!"
+ And he rammed a silver button, from his doublet,
+ down his gun.
+
+ Once again the spectral horror moved the guarded
+ wall about;
+ Once again the levelled muskets through the palisades
+ flashed out,
+ With that deadly aim the squirrel on his tree-top
+ might not shun,
+ Nor the beach-bird seaward flying with his slant
+ wing to the sun.
+
+ Like the idle rain of summer sped the harmless
+ shower of lead.
+ With a laugh of fierce derision, once again the
+ phantoms fled;
+ Once again, without a shadow on the sands the
+ moonlight lay,
+ And the white smoke curling through it drifted
+ slowly down the bay!
+
+ "God preserve us!" said the captain; "never
+ mortal foes were there;
+ They have vanished with their leader, Prince and
+ Power of the air!
+ Lay aside your useless weapons; skill and prowess
+ naught avail;
+ They who do the Devil's service wear their master's
+ coat of mail!"
+
+ So the night grew near to cock-crow, when again
+ a warning call
+ Roused the score of weary soldiers watching round
+ the dusky hall
+ And they looked to flint and priming, and they
+ longed for break of day;
+ But the captain closed his Bible: "Let us cease
+ from man, and pray!"
+
+ To the men who went before us, all the unseen
+ powers seemed near,
+ And their steadfast strength of courage struck its
+ roots in holy fear.
+ Every hand forsook the musket, every head was
+ bowed and bare,
+ Every stout knee pressed the flag-stones, as the
+ captain led in prayer.
+
+ Ceased thereat the mystic marching of the spectres
+ round the wall,
+ But a sound abhorred, unearthly, smote the ears
+ and hearts of all,--
+ Howls of rage and shrieks of anguish! Never
+ after mortal man
+ Saw the ghostly leaguers marching round the
+ block-house of Cape Ann.
+
+ So to us who walk in summer through the cool and
+ sea-blown town,
+ From the childhood of its people comes the solemn
+ legend down.
+ Not in vain the ancient fiction, in whose moral
+ lives the youth
+ And the fitness and the freshness of an undecaying
+ truth.
+
+ Soon or late to all our dwellings come the spectres
+ of the mind,
+ Doubts and fears and dread forebodings, in the
+ darkness undefined;
+ Round us throng the grim projections of the heart
+ and of the brain,
+ And our pride of strength is weakness, and the
+ cunning hand is vain.
+
+ In the dark we cry like children; and no answer
+ from on high
+ Breaks the crystal spheres of silence, and no white
+ wings downward fly;
+ But the heavenly help we pray for comes to faith,
+ and not to sight,
+ And our prayers themselves drive backward all the
+ spirits of the night!
+
+ 1857.
+
+
+
+
+THE GIFT OF TRITEMIUS.
+
+ TRITEMIUS of Herbipolis, one day,
+ While kneeling at the altar's foot to pray,
+ Alone with God, as was his pious choice,
+ Heard from without a miserable voice,
+ A sound which seemed of all sad things to tell,
+ As of a lost soul crying out of hell.
+
+ Thereat the Abbot paused; the chain whereby
+ His thoughts went upward broken by that cry;
+ And, looking from the casement, saw below
+ A wretched woman, with gray hair a-flow,
+ And withered hands held up to him, who cried
+ For alms as one who might not be denied.
+
+ She cried, "For the dear love of Him who gave
+ His life for ours, my child from bondage save,--
+ My beautiful, brave first-born, chained with slaves
+ In the Moor's galley, where the sun-smit waves
+ Lap the white walls of Tunis!"--"What I can
+ I give," Tritemius said, "my prayers."--"O man
+ Of God!" she cried, for grief had made her bold,
+ "Mock me not thus; I ask not prayers, but gold.
+ Words will not serve me, alms alone suffice;
+ Even while I speak perchance my first-born dies."
+
+ "Woman!" Tritemius answered, "from our door
+ None go unfed, hence are we always poor;
+ A single soldo is our only store.
+ Thou hast our prayers;--what can we give thee
+ more?"
+
+ "Give me," she said, "the silver candlesticks
+ On either side of the great crucifix.
+ God well may spare them on His errands sped,
+ Or He can give you golden ones instead."
+
+ Then spake Tritemius, "Even as thy word,
+ Woman, so be it! Our most gracious Lord,
+ Who loveth mercy more than sacrifice,
+ Pardon me if a human soul I prize
+ Above the gifts upon his altar piled!
+ Take what thou askest, and redeem thy child."
+
+ But his hand trembled as the holy alms
+ He placed within the beggar's eager palms;
+ And as she vanished down the linden shade,
+ He bowed his head and for forgiveness prayed.
+ So the day passed, and when the twilight came
+ He woke to find the chapel all aflame,
+ And, dumb with grateful wonder, to behold
+ Upon the altar candlesticks of gold!
+
+ 1857.
+
+
+
+
+SKIPPER IRESON'S RIDE.
+
+In the valuable and carefully prepared History of Marblehead, published
+in 1879 by Samuel Roads, Jr., it is stated that the crew of Captain
+Ireson, rather than himself, were responsible for the abandonment of the
+disabled vessel. To screen themselves they charged their captain with
+the crime. In view of this the writer of the ballad addressed the
+following letter to the historian:--
+
+OAK KNOLL, DANVERS, 5 mo. 18, 1880.
+MY DEAR FRIEND: I heartily thank thee for a copy of thy History of
+Marblehead. I have read it with great interest and think good use has
+been made of the abundant material. No town in Essex County has a record
+more honorable than Marblehead; no one has done more to develop the
+industrial interests of our New England seaboard, and certainly none
+have given such evidence of self-sacrificing patriotism. I am glad the
+story of it has been at last told, and told so well. I have now no doubt
+that thy version of Skipper Ireson's ride is the correct one. My verse
+was founded solely on a fragment of rhyme which I heard from one of my
+early schoolmates, a native of Marblehead. I supposed the story to which
+it referred dated back at least a century. I knew nothing of the
+participators, and the narrative of the ballad was pure fancy. I am glad
+for the sake of truth and justice that the real facts are given in thy
+book. I certainly would not knowingly do injustice to any one, dead or
+living.
+
+I am very truly thy friend,
+JOHN G. WHITTIER.
+
+
+ OF all the rides since, the birth of time,
+ Told in story or sung in rhyme,--
+ On Apuleius's Golden Ass,
+ Or one-eyed Calendar's horse of brass;
+ Witch astride of a human back,
+ Islam's prophet on Al-Borak,--
+ The strangest ride that ever was sped
+ Was Ireson's, out from Marblehead!
+ Old Floyd Ireson, for his hard heart,
+ Tarred and feathered and carried in a cart
+ By the women of Marblehead!
+ Body of turkey, head of owl,
+ Wings a-droop like a rained-on fowl,
+ Feathered and ruffled in every part,
+ Skipper Ireson stood in the cart.
+ Scores of women, old and young,
+ Strong of muscle, and glib of tongue,
+ Pushed and pulled up the rocky lane,
+ Shouting and singing the shrill refrain
+ "Here's Flud Oirson, fur his horrd horrt,
+ Torr'd an' futherr'd an' corr'd in a corrt
+ By the women o' Morble'ead!"
+
+ Wrinkled scolds with hands on hips,
+ Girls in bloom of cheek and lips,
+ Wild-eyed, free-limbed, such as chase
+ Bacchus round some antique vase,
+ Brief of skirt, with ankles bare,
+ Loose of kerchief and loose of hair,
+ With conch-shells blowing and fish-horns' twang,
+ Over and over the Manads sang
+ "Here's Flud Oirson, fur his horrd horrt,
+ Torr'd an' futherr'd an dorr'd in a corrt
+ By the women o' Morble'ead!"
+
+ Small pity for him!--He sailed away
+ From a leaking ship, in Chaleur Bay,--
+ Sailed away from a sinking wreck,
+ With his own town's-people on her deck!
+ "Lay by! lay by!" they called to him.
+ Back he answered, "Sink or swim!
+ Brag of your catch of fish again!"
+ And off he sailed through the fog and rain!
+ Old Floyd Ireson, for his hard heart,
+ Tarred and feathered and carried in a cart
+ By the women of Marblehead!
+
+ Fathoms deep in dark Chaleur
+ That wreck shall lie forevermore.
+ Mother and sister, wife and maid,
+ Looked from the rocks of Marblehead
+ Over the moaning and rainy sea,--
+ Looked for the coming that might not be!
+ What did the winds and the sea-birds say
+ Of the cruel captain who sailed away?--
+ Old Floyd Ireson, for his hard heart,
+ Tarred and feathered and carried in a cart
+ By the women of Marblehead!
+
+ Through the street, on either side,
+ Up flew windows, doors swung wide;
+ Sharp-tongued spinsters, old wives gray,
+ Treble lent the fish-horn's bray.
+ Sea-worn grandsires, cripple-bound,
+ Hulks of old sailors run aground,
+ Shook head, and fist, and hat, and cane,
+ And cracked with curses the hoarse refrain
+ "Here's Flud Oirson, fur his horrd horrt,
+ Torr'd an' futherr'd an' corr'd in a corrt
+ By the women o''Morble'ead!"
+
+ Sweetly along the Salem road
+ Bloom of orchard and lilac showed.
+ Little the wicked skipper knew
+ Of the fields so green and the sky so blue.
+ Riding there in his sorry trim,
+ Like to Indian idol glum and grim,
+ Scarcely he seemed the sound to hear
+ Of voices shouting, far and near
+ "Here's Flud Oirson, fur his horrd horrt,
+ Torr'd an' futherr'd an' corr'd in a corrt
+ By the women o' Morble'ead!"
+
+ "Hear me, neighbors!" at last he cried,--
+ "What to me is this noisy ride?
+ What is the shame that clothes the skin
+ To the nameless horror that lives within?
+ Waking or sleeping, I see a wreck,
+ And hear a cry from a reeling deck!
+ Hate me and curse me,--I only dread
+ The hand of God and the face of the dead!"
+ Said old Floyd Ireson, for his hard heart,
+ Tarred and feathered and carried in a cart
+ By the women of Marblehead!
+
+ Then the wife of the skipper lost at sea
+ Said, "God has touched him! why should we?"
+ Said an old wife mourning her only son,
+ "Cut the rogue's tether and let him run!"
+ So with soft relentings and rude excuse,
+ Half scorn, half pity, they cut him loose,
+ And gave him a cloak to hide him in,
+ And left him alone with his shame and sin.
+ Poor Floyd Ireson, for his hard heart,
+ Tarred and feathered and carried in a cart
+ By the women of Marblehead!
+
+ 1857.
+
+
+
+
+THE SYCAMORES.
+
+Hugh Tallant was the first Irish resident of Haverhill, Mass. He planted
+the button-wood trees on the bank of the river below the village in the
+early part of the seventeenth century. Unfortunately this noble avenue
+is now nearly destroyed.
+
+ In the outskirts of the village,
+ On the river's winding shores,
+ Stand the Occidental plane-trees,
+ Stand the ancient sycamores.
+
+ One long century hath been numbered,
+ And another half-way told,
+ Since the rustic Irish gleeman
+ Broke for them the virgin mould.
+
+ Deftly set to Celtic music,
+ At his violin's sound they grew,
+ Through the moonlit eves of summer,
+ Making Amphion's fable true.
+
+ Rise again, then poor Hugh Tallant
+ Pass in jerkin green along,
+ With thy eyes brimful of laughter,
+ And thy mouth as full of song.
+
+ Pioneer of Erin's outcasts,
+ With his fiddle and his pack;
+ Little dreamed the village Saxons
+ Of the myriads at his back.
+
+ How he wrought with spade and fiddle,
+ Delved by day and sang by night,
+ With a hand that never wearied,
+ And a heart forever light,--
+
+ Still the gay tradition mingles
+ With a record grave and drear,
+ Like the rollic air of Cluny,
+ With the solemn march of Mear.
+
+ When the box-tree, white with blossoms,
+ Made the sweet May woodlands glad,
+ And the Aronia by the river
+ Lighted up the swarming shad,
+
+ And the bulging nets swept shoreward,
+ With their silver-sided haul,
+ Midst the shouts of dripping fishers,
+ He was merriest of them all.
+
+ When, among the jovial huskers,
+ Love stole in at Labor's side,
+ With the lusty airs of England,
+ Soft his Celtic measures vied.
+
+ Songs of love and wailing lyke--wake,
+ And the merry fair's carouse;
+ Of the wild Red Fox of Erin
+ And the Woman of Three Cows,
+
+ By the blazing hearths of winter,
+ Pleasant seemed his simple tales,
+ Midst the grimmer Yorkshire legends
+ And the mountain myths of Wales.
+
+ How the souls in Purgatory
+ Scrambled up from fate forlorn,
+ On St. Eleven's sackcloth ladder,
+ Slyly hitched to Satan's horn.
+
+ Of the fiddler who at Tara
+ Played all night to ghosts of kings;
+ Of the brown dwarfs, and the fairies
+ Dancing in their moorland rings.
+
+ Jolliest of our birds of singing,
+ Best he loved the Bob-o-link.
+ "Hush!" he 'd say, "the tipsy fairies
+ Hear the little folks in drink!"
+
+ Merry-faced, with spade and fiddle,
+ Singing through the ancient town,
+ Only this, of poor Hugh Tallant,
+ Hath Tradition handed down.
+
+ Not a stone his grave discloses;
+ But if yet his spirit walks,
+ 'T is beneath the trees he planted,
+ And when Bob-o-Lincoln talks;
+
+ Green memorials of the gleeman!
+ Linking still the river-shores,
+ With their shadows cast by sunset,
+ Stand Hugh Tallant's sycamores!
+
+ When the Father of his Country
+ Through the north-land riding came,
+ And the roofs were starred with banners,
+ And the steeples rang acclaim,--
+
+ When each war-scarred Continental,
+ Leaving smithy, mill, and farm,
+ Waved his rusted sword in welcome,
+ And shot off his old king's arm,--
+
+ Slowly passed that August Presence
+ Down the thronged and shouting street;
+ Village girls as white as angels,
+ Scattering flowers around his feet.
+
+ Midway, where the plane-tree's shadow
+ Deepest fell, his rein he drew
+ On his stately head, uncovered,
+ Cool and soft the west-wind blew.
+
+ And he stood up in his stirrups,
+ Looking up and looking down
+ On the hills of Gold and Silver
+ Rimming round the little town,--
+
+ On the river, full of sunshine,
+ To the lap of greenest vales
+ Winding down from wooded headlands,
+ Willow-skirted, white with sails.
+
+ And he said, the landscape sweeping
+ Slowly with his ungloved hand,
+ "I have seen no prospect fairer
+ In this goodly Eastern land."
+
+ Then the bugles of his escort
+ Stirred to life the cavalcade
+ And that head, so bare and stately,
+ Vanished down the depths of shade.
+
+ Ever since, in town and farm-house,
+ Life has had its ebb and flow;
+ Thrice hath passed the human harvest
+ To its garner green and low.
+
+ But the trees the gleeman planted,
+ Through the changes, changeless stand;
+ As the marble calm of Tadmor
+ Mocks the desert's shifting sand.
+
+ Still the level moon at rising
+ Silvers o'er each stately shaft;
+ Still beneath them, half in shadow,
+ Singing, glides the pleasure craft;
+
+ Still beneath them, arm-enfolded,
+ Love and Youth together stray;
+ While, as heart to heart beats faster,
+ More and more their feet delay.
+
+ Where the ancient cobbler, Keezar,
+ On the open hillside wrought,
+ Singing, as he drew his stitches,
+ Songs his German masters taught,
+
+ Singing, with his gray hair floating
+ Round his rosy ample face,--
+ Now a thousand Saxon craftsmen
+ Stitch and hammer in his place.
+
+ All the pastoral lanes so grassy
+ Now are Traffic's dusty streets;
+ From the village, grown a city,
+ Fast the rural grace retreats.
+
+ But, still green, and tall, and stately,
+ On the river's winding shores,
+ Stand the Occidental plane-trees,
+ Stand, Hugh Taliant's sycamores.
+
+ 1857.
+
+
+
+
+THE PIPES AT LUCKNOW.
+
+An incident of the Sepoy mutiny.
+
+ PIPES of the misty moorlands,
+ Voice of the glens and hills;
+ The droning of the torrents,
+ The treble of the rills!
+ Not the braes of broom and heather,
+ Nor the mountains dark with rain,
+ Nor maiden bower, nor border tower,
+ Have heard your sweetest strain!
+
+ Dear to the Lowland reaper,
+ And plaided mountaineer,--
+ To the cottage and the castle
+ The Scottish pipes are dear;--
+ Sweet sounds the ancient pibroch
+ O'er mountain, loch, and glade;
+ But the sweetest of all music
+ The pipes at Lucknow played.
+
+ Day by day the Indian tiger
+ Louder yelled, and nearer crept;
+ Round and round the jungle-serpent
+ Near and nearer circles swept.
+ "Pray for rescue, wives and mothers,--
+ Pray to-day!" the soldier said;
+ "To-morrow, death's between us
+ And the wrong and shame we dread."
+
+ Oh, they listened, looked, and waited,
+ Till their hope became despair;
+ And the sobs of low bewailing
+ Filled the pauses of their prayer.
+ Then up spake a Scottish maiden,
+ With her ear unto the ground
+ "Dinna ye hear it?--dinna ye hear it?
+ The pipes o' Havelock sound!"
+
+ Hushed the wounded man his groaning;
+ Hushed the wife her little ones;
+ Alone they heard the drum-roll
+ And the roar of Sepoy guns.
+ But to sounds of home and childhood
+ The Highland ear was true;--
+ As her mother's cradle-crooning
+ The mountain pipes she knew.
+
+ Like the march of soundless music
+ Through the vision of the seer,
+ More of feeling than of hearing,
+ Of the heart than of the ear,
+ She knew the droning pibroch,
+ She knew the Campbell's call
+ "Hark! hear ye no' MacGregor's,
+ The grandest o' them all!"
+
+ Oh, they listened, dumb and breathless,
+ And they caught the sound at last;
+ Faint and far beyond the Goomtee
+ Rose and fell the piper's blast
+ Then a burst of wild thanksgiving
+ Mingled woman's voice and man's;
+ "God be praised!--the march of Havelock!
+ The piping of the clans!"
+
+ Louder, nearer, fierce as vengeance,
+ Sharp and shrill as swords at strife,
+ Came the wild MacGregor's clan-call,
+ Stinging all the air to life.
+ But when the far-off dust-cloud
+ To plaided legions grew,
+ Full tenderly and blithesomely
+ The pipes of rescue blew!
+
+ Round the silver domes of Lucknow,
+ Moslem mosque and Pagan shrine,
+ Breathed the air to Britons dearest,
+ The air of Auld Lang Syne.
+ O'er the cruel roll of war-drums
+ Rose that sweet and homelike strain;
+ And the tartan clove the turban,
+ As the Goomtee cleaves the plain.
+
+ Dear to the corn-land reaper
+ And plaided mountaineer,--
+ To the cottage and the castle
+ The piper's song is dear.
+ Sweet sounds the Gaelic pibroch
+ O'er mountain, glen, and glade;
+ But the sweetest of all music
+ The Pipes at Lucknow played!
+
+ 1858.
+
+
+
+
+TELLING THE BEES.
+
+A remarkable custom, brought from the Old Country, formerly prevailed
+in the rural districts of New England. On the death of a member of the
+family, the bees were at once informed of the event, and their hives
+dressed in mourning. This ceremonial was supposed to be necessary to
+prevent the swarms from leaving their hives and seeking a new home.
+
+ HERE is the place; right over the hill
+ Runs the path I took;
+ You can see the gap in the old wall still,
+ And the stepping-stones in the shallow brook.
+
+ There is the house, with the gate red-barred,
+ And the poplars tall;
+ And the barn's brown length, and the cattle-yard,
+ And the white horns tossing above the wall.
+
+ There are the beehives ranged in the sun;
+ And down by the brink
+ Of the brook are her poor flowers, weed-o'errun,
+ Pansy and daffodil, rose and pink.
+
+ A year has gone, as the tortoise goes,
+ Heavy and slow;
+ And the same rose blooms, and the same sun glows,
+ And the same brook sings of a year ago.
+
+ There's the same sweet clover-smell in the breeze;
+ And the June sun warm
+ Tangles his wings of fire in the trees,
+ Setting, as then, over Fernside farm.
+
+ I mind me how with a lover's care
+ From my Sunday coat
+ I brushed off the burrs, and smoothed my hair,
+ And cooled at the brookside my brow and
+ throat.
+
+ Since we parted, a month had passed,--
+ To love, a year;
+ Down through the beeches I looked at last
+ On the little red gate and the well-sweep near.
+
+ I can see it all now,--the slantwise rain
+ Of light through the leaves,
+ The sundown's blaze on her window-pane,
+ The bloom of her roses under the eaves.
+
+ Just the same as a month before,--
+ The house and the trees,
+ The barn's brown gable, the vine by the door,--
+ Nothing changed but the hives of bees.
+
+ Before them, under the garden wall,
+ Forward and back,
+ Went drearily singing the chore-girl small,
+ Draping each hive with a shred of black.
+
+ Trembling, I listened: the summer sun
+ Had the chill of snow;
+ For I knew she was telling the bees of one
+ Gone on the journey we all must go.
+
+ Then I said to myself, "My Mary weeps
+ For the dead to-day;
+ Haply her blind old grandsire sleeps
+ The fret and the pain of his age away."
+
+ But her dog whined low; on the doorway sill,
+ With his cane to his chin,
+ The old man sat; and the chore-girl still
+ Sung to the bees stealing out and in.
+
+ And the song she was singing ever since
+ In my ear sounds on:--
+ "Stay at home, pretty bees, fly not hence!
+ Mistress Mary is dead and gone!"
+
+ 1858.
+
+
+
+
+THE SWAN SONG OF PARSON AVERY.
+
+In Young's Chronicles of Massachusetts Bay front 1623 to 1636 may be
+found Anthony Thacher's Narrative of his Shipwreck. Thacher was Avery's
+companion and survived to tell the tale. Mather's Magnalia, III. 2,
+gives further Particulars of Parson Avery's End, and suggests the title
+of the poem.
+
+ When the reaper's task was ended, and the
+ summer wearing late,
+ Parson Avery sailed from Newbury, with his wife
+ and children eight,
+ Dropping down the river-harbor in the shallop
+ "Watch and Wait."
+
+ Pleasantly lay the clearings in the mellow summer-
+ morn,
+ With the newly planted orchards dropping their
+ fruits first-born,
+ And the home-roofs like brown islands amid a sea
+ of corn.
+
+ Broad meadows reached out seaward the tided
+ creeks between,
+ And hills rolled wave-like inland, with oaks and
+ walnuts green;--
+ A fairer home, a goodlier land, his eyes had never
+ seen.
+
+ Yet away sailed Parson Avery, away where duty led,
+ And the voice of God seemed calling, to break the
+ living bread
+ To the souls of fishers starving on the rocks of
+ Marblehead.
+
+ All day they sailed: at nightfall the pleasant land-
+ breeze died,
+ The blackening sky, at midnight, its starry lights
+ denied,
+ And far and low the thunder of tempest prophesied.
+
+ Blotted out were all the coast-lines, gone were rock,
+ and wood, and sand;
+ Grimly anxious stood the skipper with the rudder
+ in his hand,
+ And questioned of the darkness what was sea and
+ what was land.
+
+ And the preacher heard his dear ones, nestled
+ round him, weeping sore,
+ "Never heed, my little children! Christ is walking
+ on before;
+ To the pleasant land of heaven, where the sea shall
+ be no more."
+
+ All at once the great cloud parted, like a curtain
+ drawn aside,
+ To let down the torch of lightning on the terror
+ far and wide;
+ And the thunder and the whirlwind together smote
+ the tide.
+
+ There was wailing in the shallop, woman's wail
+ and man's despair,
+ A crash of breaking timbers on the rocks so sharp
+ and bare,
+ And, through it all, the murmur of Father Avery's
+ prayer.
+
+ From his struggle in the darkness with the wild
+ waves and the blast,
+ On a rock, where every billow broke above him as
+ it passed,
+ Alone, of all his household, the man of God was
+ cast.
+
+ There a comrade heard him praying, in the pause
+ of wave and wind
+ "All my own have gone before me, and I linger
+ just behind;
+ Not for life I ask, but only for the rest Thy
+ ransomed find!
+
+ "In this night of death I challenge the promise of
+ Thy word!--
+ Let me see the great salvation of which mine ears
+ have heard!--
+ Let me pass from hence forgiven, through the
+ grace of Christ, our Lord!
+
+ "In the baptism of these waters wash white my
+ every sin,
+ And let me follow up to Thee my household and
+ my kin!
+ Open the sea-gate of Thy heaven, and let me enter
+ in!"
+
+ When the Christian sings his death-song, all the
+ listening heavens draw near,
+ And the angels, leaning over the walls of crystal,
+ hear
+ How the notes so faint and broken swell to music
+ in God's ear.
+
+ The ear of God was open to His servant's last
+ request;
+ As the strong wave swept him downward the sweet
+ hymn upward pressed,
+ And the soul of Father Avery went, singing, to its
+ rest.
+
+ There was wailing on the mainland, from the rocks
+ of Marblehead;
+ In the stricken church of Newbury the notes of
+ prayer were read;
+ And long, by board and hearthstone, the living
+ mourned the dead.
+
+ And still the fishers outbound, or scudding from
+ the squall,
+ With grave and reverent faces, the ancient tale
+ recall,
+ When they see the white waves breaking on the
+ Rock of Avery's Fall!
+
+ 1808.
+
+
+
+
+THE DOUBLE-HEADED SNAKE OF NEWBURY.
+
+"Concerning ye Amphisbaena, as soon as I received your commands, I made
+diligent inquiry: . . . he assures me yt it had really two heads, one
+at each end; two mouths, two stings or tongues."--REV. CHRISTOPHER
+TOPPAN to COTTON MATHER.
+
+ FAR away in the twilight time
+ Of every people, in every clime,
+ Dragons and griffins and monsters dire,
+ Born of water, and air, and fire,
+ Or nursed, like the Python, in the mud
+ And ooze of the old Deucalion flood,
+ Crawl and wriggle and foam with rage,
+ Through dusk tradition and ballad age.
+ So from the childhood of Newbury town
+ And its time of fable the tale comes down
+ Of a terror which haunted bush and brake,
+ The Amphisbaena, the Double Snake!
+
+ Thou who makest the tale thy mirth,
+ Consider that strip of Christian earth
+ On the desolate shore of a sailless sea,
+ Full of terror and mystery,
+ Half redeemed from the evil hold
+ Of the wood so dreary, and dark, and old,
+ Which drank with its lips of leaves the dew
+ When Time was young, and the world was new,
+ And wove its shadows with sun and moon,
+ Ere the stones of Cheops were squared and hewn.
+ Think of the sea's dread monotone,
+ Of the mournful wail from the pine-wood blown,
+ Of the strange, vast splendors that lit the North,
+ Of the troubled throes of the quaking earth,
+ And the dismal tales the Indian told,
+ Till the settler's heart at his hearth grew cold,
+ And he shrank from the tawny wizard boasts,
+ And the hovering shadows seemed full of ghosts,
+ And above, below, and on every side,
+ The fear of his creed seemed verified;--
+ And think, if his lot were now thine own,
+ To grope with terrors nor named nor known,
+ How laxer muscle and weaker nerve
+ And a feebler faith thy need might serve;
+ And own to thyself the wonder more
+ That the snake had two heads, and not a score!
+
+ Whether he lurked in the Oldtown fen
+ Or the gray earth-flax of the Devil's Den,
+ Or swam in the wooded Artichoke,
+ Or coiled by the Northman's Written Rock,
+ Nothing on record is left to show;
+ Only the fact that he lived, we know,
+ And left the cast of a double head
+ In the scaly mask which he yearly shed.
+ For he carried a head where his tail should be,
+ And the two, of course, could never agree,
+ But wriggled about with main and might,
+ Now to the left and now to the right;
+ Pulling and twisting this way and that,
+ Neither knew what the other was at.
+
+ A snake with two beads, lurking so near!
+ Judge of the wonder, guess at the fear!
+ Think what ancient gossips might say,
+ Shaking their heads in their dreary way,
+ Between the meetings on Sabbath-day!
+ How urchins, searching at day's decline
+ The Common Pasture for sheep or kine,
+ The terrible double-ganger heard
+ In leafy rustle or whir of bird!
+ Think what a zest it gave to the sport,
+ In berry-time, of the younger sort,
+ As over pastures blackberry-twined,
+ Reuben and Dorothy lagged behind,
+ And closer and closer, for fear of harm,
+ The maiden clung to her lover's arm;
+ And how the spark, who was forced to stay,
+ By his sweetheart's fears, till the break of day,
+ Thanked the snake for the fond delay.
+
+ Far and wide the tale was told,
+ Like a snowball growing while it rolled.
+ The nurse hushed with it the baby's cry;
+ And it served, in the worthy minister's eye,
+ To paint the primitive serpent by.
+ Cotton Mather came galloping down
+ All the way to Newbury town,
+ With his eyes agog and his ears set wide,
+ And his marvellous inkhorn at his side;
+ Stirring the while in the shallow pool
+ Of his brains for the lore he learned at school,
+ To garnish the story, with here a streak
+ Of Latin, and there another of Greek
+ And the tales he heard and the notes he took,
+ Behold! are they not in his Wonder-Book?
+
+ Stories, like dragons, are hard to kill.
+ If the snake does not, the tale runs still
+ In Byfield Meadows, on Pipestave Hill.
+ And still, whenever husband and wife
+ Publish the shame of their daily strife,
+ And, with mad cross-purpose, tug and strain
+ At either end of the marriage-chain,
+ The gossips say, with a knowing shake
+ Of their gray heads, "Look at the Double Snake
+ One in body and two in will,
+ The Amphisbaena is living still!"
+
+ 1859.
+
+
+
+
+MABEL MARTIN.
+
+A HARVEST IDYL.
+
+Susanna Martin, an aged woman of Amesbury, Mass., was tried and executed
+for the alleged crime of witchcraft. Her home was in what is now known
+as Pleasant Valley on the Merrimac, a little above the old Ferry way,
+where, tradition says, an attempt was made to assassinate Sir Edmund
+Andros on his way to Falmouth (afterward Portland) and Pemaquid, which
+was frustrated by a warning timely given. Goody Martin was the only
+woman hanged on the north side of the Merrimac during the dreadful
+delusion. The aged wife of Judge Bradbury who lived on the other side of
+the Powow River was imprisoned and would have been put to death but for
+the collapse of the hideous persecution.
+
+The substance of the poem which follows was published under the name of
+The Witch's Daughter, in The National Era in 1857. In 1875 my publishers
+desired to issue it with illustrations, and I then enlarged it and
+otherwise altered it to its present form. The principal addition was in
+the verses which constitute Part I.
+
+
+
+
+PROEM.
+
+ I CALL the old time back: I bring my lay
+ in tender memory of the summer day
+ When, where our native river lapsed away,
+
+ We dreamed it over, while the thrushes made
+ Songs of their own, and the great pine-trees laid
+ On warm noonlights the masses of their shade.
+
+ And she was with us, living o'er again
+ Her life in ours, despite of years and pain,--
+ The Autumn's brightness after latter rain.
+
+ Beautiful in her holy peace as one
+ Who stands, at evening, when the work is done,
+ Glorified in the setting of the sun!
+
+ Her memory makes our common landscape seem
+ Fairer than any of which painters dream;
+ Lights the brown hills and sings in every stream;
+
+ For she whose speech was always truth's pure gold
+ Heard, not unpleased, its simple legends told,
+ And loved with us the beautiful and old.
+
+
+
+
+I. THE RIVER VALLEY.
+
+ Across the level tableland,
+ A grassy, rarely trodden way,
+ With thinnest skirt of birchen spray
+
+ And stunted growth of cedar, leads
+ To where you see the dull plain fall
+ Sheer off, steep-slanted, ploughed by all
+
+ The seasons' rainfalls. On its brink
+ The over-leaning harebells swing,
+ With roots half bare the pine-trees cling;
+
+ And, through the shadow looking west,
+ You see the wavering river flow
+ Along a vale, that far below
+
+ Holds to the sun, the sheltering hills
+ And glimmering water-line between,
+ Broad fields of corn and meadows green,
+
+ And fruit-bent orchards grouped around
+ The low brown roofs and painted eaves,
+ And chimney-tops half hid in leaves.
+
+ No warmer valley hides behind
+ Yon wind-scourged sand-dunes, cold and bleak;
+ No fairer river comes to seek
+
+ The wave-sung welcome of the sea,
+ Or mark the northmost border line
+ Of sun-loved growths of nut and vine.
+
+ Here, ground-fast in their native fields,
+ Untempted by the city's gain,
+ The quiet farmer folk remain
+
+ Who bear the pleasant name of Friends,
+ And keep their fathers' gentle ways
+ And simple speech of Bible days;
+
+ In whose neat homesteads woman holds
+ With modest ease her equal place,
+ And wears upon her tranquil face
+
+ The look of one who, merging not
+ Her self-hood in another's will,
+ Is love's and duty's handmaid still.
+
+ Pass with me down the path that winds
+ Through birches to the open land,
+ Where, close upon the river strand
+
+ You mark a cellar, vine o'errun,
+ Above whose wall of loosened stones
+ The sumach lifts its reddening cones,
+
+ And the black nightshade's berries shine,
+ And broad, unsightly burdocks fold
+ The household ruin, century-old.
+
+ Here, in the dim colonial time
+ Of sterner lives and gloomier faith,
+ A woman lived, tradition saith,
+
+ Who wrought her neighbors foul annoy,
+ And witched and plagued the country-side,
+ Till at the hangman's hand she died.
+
+ Sit with me while the westering day
+ Falls slantwise down the quiet vale,
+ And, haply ere yon loitering sail,
+
+ That rounds the upper headland, falls
+ Below Deer Island's pines, or sees
+ Behind it Hawkswood's belt of trees
+
+ Rise black against the sinking sun,
+ My idyl of its days of old,
+ The valley's legend, shall be told.
+
+
+
+
+II. THE HUSKING.
+
+ It was the pleasant harvest-time,
+ When cellar-bins are closely stowed,
+ And garrets bend beneath their load,
+
+ And the old swallow-haunted barns,--
+ Brown-gabled, long, and full of seams
+ Through which the rooted sunlight streams,
+
+ And winds blow freshly in, to shake
+ The red plumes of the roosted cocks,
+ And the loose hay-mow's scented locks,
+
+ Are filled with summer's ripened stores,
+ Its odorous grass and barley sheaves,
+ From their low scaffolds to their eaves.
+
+ On Esek Harden's oaken floor,
+ With many an autumn threshing worn,
+ Lay the heaped ears of unhusked corn.
+
+ And thither came young men and maids,
+ Beneath a moon that, large and low,
+ Lit that sweet eve of long ago.
+
+ They took their places; some by chance,
+ And others by a merry voice
+ Or sweet smile guided to their choice.
+
+ How pleasantly the rising moon,
+ Between the shadow of the mows,
+ Looked on them through the great elm-boughs!
+
+ On sturdy boyhood, sun-embrowned,
+ On girlhood with its solid curves
+ Of healthful strength and painless nerves!
+
+ And jests went round, and laughs that made
+ The house-dog answer with his howl,
+ And kept astir the barn-yard fowl;
+
+ And quaint old songs their fathers sung
+ In Derby dales and Yorkshire moors,
+ Ere Norman William trod their shores;
+
+ And tales, whose merry license shook
+ The fat sides of the Saxon thane,
+ Forgetful of the hovering Dane,--
+
+ Rude plays to Celt and Cimbri known,
+ The charms and riddles that beguiled
+ On Oxus' banks the young world's child,--
+
+ That primal picture-speech wherein
+ Have youth and maid the story told,
+ So new in each, so dateless old,
+
+ Recalling pastoral Ruth in her
+ Who waited, blushing and demure,
+ The red-ear's kiss of forfeiture.
+
+ But still the sweetest voice was mute
+ That river-valley ever heard
+ From lips of maid or throat of bird;
+
+ For Mabel Martin sat apart,
+ And let the hay-mow's shadow fall
+ Upon the loveliest face of all.
+
+ She sat apart, as one forbid,
+ Who knew that none would condescend
+ To own the Witch-wife's child a friend.
+
+ The seasons scarce had gone their round,
+ Since curious thousands thronged to see
+ Her mother at the gallows-tree;
+
+ And mocked the prison-palsied limbs
+ That faltered on the fatal stairs,
+ And wan lip trembling with its prayers!
+
+ Few questioned of the sorrowing child,
+ Or, when they saw the mother die;
+ Dreamed of the daughter's agony.
+
+ They went up to their homes that day,
+ As men and Christians justified
+ God willed it, and the wretch had died!
+
+ Dear God and Father of us all,
+ Forgive our faith in cruel lies,--
+ Forgive the blindness that denies!
+
+ Forgive thy creature when he takes,
+ For the all-perfect love Thou art,
+ Some grim creation of his heart.
+
+ Cast down our idols, overturn
+ Our bloody altars; let us see
+ Thyself in Thy humanity!
+
+ Young Mabel from her mother's grave
+ Crept to her desolate hearth-stone,
+ And wrestled with her fate alone;
+
+ With love, and anger, and despair,
+ The phantoms of disordered sense,
+ The awful doubts of Providence!
+
+ Oh, dreary broke the winter days,
+ And dreary fell the winter nights
+ When, one by one, the neighboring lights
+
+ Went out, and human sounds grew still,
+ And all the phantom-peopled dark
+ Closed round her hearth-fire's dying spark.
+
+ And summer days were sad and long,
+ And sad the uncompanioned eyes,
+ And sadder sunset-tinted leaves,
+
+ And Indian Summer's airs of balm;
+ She scarcely felt the soft caress,
+ The beauty died of loneliness!
+
+ The school-boys jeered her as they passed,
+ And, when she sought the house of prayer,
+ Her mother's curse pursued her there.
+
+ And still o'er many a neighboring door
+ She saw the horseshoe's curved charm,
+ To guard against her mother's harm!
+
+ That mother, poor and sick and lame,
+ Who daily, by the old arm-chair,
+ Folded her withered hands in prayer;--
+
+ Who turned, in Salem's dreary jail,
+ Her worn old Bible o'er and o'er,
+ When her dim eyes could read no more!
+
+ Sore tried and pained, the poor girl kept
+ Her faith, and trusted that her way,
+ So dark, would somewhere meet the day.
+
+ And still her weary wheel went round
+ Day after day, with no relief
+ Small leisure have the poor for grief.
+
+
+
+
+III. THE CHAMPION.
+
+ So in the shadow Mabel sits;
+ Untouched by mirth she sees and hears,
+ Her smile is sadder than her tears.
+
+ But cruel eyes have found her out,
+ And cruel lips repeat her name,
+ And taunt her with her mother's shame.
+
+ She answered not with railing words,
+ But drew her apron o'er her face,
+ And, sobbing, glided from the place.
+
+ And only pausing at the door,
+ Her sad eyes met the troubled gaze
+ Of one who, in her better days,
+
+ Had been her warm and steady friend,
+ Ere yet her mother's doom had made
+ Even Esek Harden half afraid.
+
+ He felt that mute appeal of tears,
+ And, starting, with an angry frown,
+ Hushed all the wicked murmurs down.
+
+ "Good neighbors mine," he sternly said,
+ "This passes harmless mirth or jest;
+ I brook no insult to my guest.
+
+ "She is indeed her mother's child;
+ But God's sweet pity ministers
+ Unto no whiter soul than hers.
+
+ "Let Goody Martin rest in peace;
+ I never knew her harm a fly,
+ And witch or not, God knows--not I.
+
+ "I know who swore her life away;
+ And as God lives, I'd not condemn
+ An Indian dog on word of them."
+
+ The broadest lands in all the town,
+ The skill to guide, the power to awe,
+ Were Harden's; and his word was law.
+
+ None dared withstand him to his face,
+ But one sly maiden spake aside
+ "The little witch is evil-eyed!
+
+ "Her mother only killed a cow,
+ Or witched a churn or dairy-pan;
+ But she, forsooth, must charm a man!"
+
+
+
+
+IV. IN THE SHADOW.
+
+ Poor Mabel, homeward turning, passed
+ The nameless terrors of the wood,
+ And saw, as if a ghost pursued,
+
+ Her shadow gliding in the moon;
+ The soft breath of the west-wind gave
+ A chill as from her mother's grave.
+
+ How dreary seemed the silent house!
+ Wide in the moonbeams' ghastly glare
+ Its windows had a dead man's stare!
+
+ And, like a gaunt and spectral hand,
+ The tremulous shadow of a birch
+ Reached out and touched the door's low porch,
+
+ As if to lift its latch; hard by,
+ A sudden warning call she beard,
+ The night-cry of a boding bird.
+
+ She leaned against the door; her face,
+ So fair, so young, so full of pain,
+ White in the moonlight's silver rain.
+
+ The river, on its pebbled rim,
+ Made music such as childhood knew;
+ The door-yard tree was whispered through
+
+ By voices such as childhood's ear
+ Had heard in moonlights long ago;
+ And through the willow-boughs below.
+
+ She saw the rippled waters shine;
+ Beyond, in waves of shade and light,
+ The hills rolled off into the night.
+
+ She saw and heard, but over all
+ A sense of some transforming spell,
+ The shadow of her sick heart fell.
+
+ And still across the wooded space
+ The harvest lights of Harden shone,
+ And song and jest and laugh went on.
+
+ And he, so gentle, true, and strong,
+ Of men the bravest and the best,
+ Had he, too, scorned her with the rest?
+
+ She strove to drown her sense of wrong,
+ And, in her old and simple way,
+ To teach her bitter heart to pray.
+
+ Poor child! the prayer, begun in faith,
+ Grew to a low, despairing cry
+ Of utter misery: "Let me die!
+
+ "Oh! take me from the scornful eyes,
+ And hide me where the cruel speech
+ And mocking finger may not reach!
+
+ "I dare not breathe my mother's name
+ A daughter's right I dare not crave
+ To weep above her unblest grave!
+
+ "Let me not live until my heart,
+ With few to pity, and with none
+ To love me, hardens into stone.
+
+ "O God! have mercy on Thy child,
+ Whose faith in Thee grows weak and small,
+ And take me ere I lose it all!"
+
+ A shadow on the moonlight fell,
+ And murmuring wind and wave became
+ A voice whose burden was her name.
+
+
+
+
+V. THE BETROTHAL.
+
+ Had then God heard her? Had He sent
+ His angel down? In flesh and blood,
+ Before her Esek Harden stood!
+
+ He laid his hand upon her arm
+ "Dear Mabel, this no more shall be;
+ Who scoffs at you must scoff at me.
+
+ "You know rough Esek Harden well;
+ And if he seems no suitor gay,
+ And if his hair is touched with gray,
+
+ "The maiden grown shall never find
+ His heart less warm than when she smiled,
+ Upon his knees, a little child!"
+
+ Her tears of grief were tears of joy,
+ As, folded in his strong embrace,
+ She looked in Esek Harden's face.
+
+ "O truest friend of all'" she said,
+ "God bless you for your kindly thought,
+ And make me worthy of my lot!"
+
+ He led her forth, and, blent in one,
+ Beside their happy pathway ran
+ The shadows of the maid and man.
+
+ He led her through his dewy fields,
+ To where the swinging lanterns glowed,
+ And through the doors the huskers showed.
+
+ "Good friends and neighbors!" Esek said,
+ "I'm weary of this lonely life;
+ In Mabel see my chosen wife!
+
+ "She greets you kindly, one and all;
+ The past is past, and all offence
+ Falls harmless from her innocence.
+
+ "Henceforth she stands no more alone;
+ You know what Esek Harden is;--
+ He brooks no wrong to him or his.
+
+ "Now let the merriest tales be told,
+ And let the sweetest songs be sung
+ That ever made the old heart young!
+
+ "For now the lost has found a home;
+ And a lone hearth shall brighter burn,
+ As all the household joys return!"
+
+ Oh, pleasantly the harvest-moon,
+ Between the shadow of the mows,
+ Looked on them through the great elm--boughs!
+
+ On Mabel's curls of golden hair,
+ On Esek's shaggy strength it fell;
+ And the wind whispered, "It is well!"
+
+
+
+
+THE PROPHECY OF SAMUEL SEWALL.
+
+The prose version of this prophecy is to be found in Sewall's The New
+Heaven upon the New Earth, 1697, quoted in Joshua Coffin's History of
+Newbury. Judge Sewall's father, Henry Sewall, was one of the pioneers
+of Newbury.
+
+ Up and down the village streets
+ Strange are the forms my fancy meets,
+ For the thoughts and things of to-day are hid,
+ And through the veil of a closed lid
+ The ancient worthies I see again
+ I hear the tap of the elder's cane,
+ And his awful periwig I see,
+ And the silver buckles of shoe and knee.
+ Stately and slow, with thoughtful air,
+ His black cap hiding his whitened hair,
+ Walks the Judge of the great Assize,
+ Samuel Sewall the good and wise.
+ His face with lines of firmness wrought,
+ He wears the look of a man unbought,
+ Who swears to his hurt and changes not;
+ Yet, touched and softened nevertheless
+ With the grace of Christian gentleness,
+ The face that a child would climb to kiss!
+ True and tender and brave and just,
+ That man might honor and woman trust.
+
+ Touching and sad, a tale is told,
+ Like a penitent hymn of the Psalmist old,
+ Of the fast which the good man lifelong kept to
+ With a haunting sorrow that never slept,
+ As the circling year brought round the time
+ Of an error that left the sting of crime,
+ When he sat on the bench of the witchcraft courts,
+ With the laws of Moses and Hale's Reports,
+ And spake, in the name of both, the word
+ That gave the witch's neck to the cord,
+ And piled the oaken planks that pressed
+ The feeble life from the warlock's breast!
+ All the day long, from dawn to dawn,
+ His door was bolted, his curtain drawn;
+ No foot on his silent threshold trod,
+ No eye looked on him save that of God,
+ As he baffled the ghosts of the dead with charms
+ Of penitent tears, and prayers, and psalms,
+ And, with precious proofs from the sacred word
+ Of the boundless pity and love of the Lord,
+ His faith confirmed and his trust renewed
+ That the sin of his ignorance, sorely rued,
+ Might be washed away in the mingled flood
+ Of his human sorrow and Christ's dear blood!
+
+ Green forever the memory be
+ Of the Judge of the old Theocracy,
+ Whom even his errors glorified,
+ Like a far-seen, sunlit mountain-side
+ By the cloudy shadows which o'er it glide!
+ Honor and praise to the Puritan
+ Who the halting step of his age outran,
+ And, seeing the infinite worth of man
+ In the priceless gift the Father gave,
+ In the infinite love that stooped to save,
+ Dared not brand his brother a slave
+ "Who doth such wrong," he was wont to say,
+ In his own quaint, picture-loving way,
+ "Flings up to Heaven a hand-grenade
+ Which God shall cast down upon his head!"
+
+ Widely as heaven and hell, contrast
+ That brave old jurist of the past
+ And the cunning trickster and knave of courts
+ Who the holy features of Truth distorts,
+ Ruling as right the will of the strong,
+ Poverty, crime, and weakness wrong;
+ Wide-eared to power, to the wronged and weak
+ Deaf as Egypt's gods of leek;
+ Scoffing aside at party's nod
+ Order of nature and law of God;
+ For whose dabbled ermine respect were waste,
+ Reverence folly, and awe misplaced;
+ Justice of whom 't were vain to seek
+ As from Koordish robber or Syrian Sheik!
+ Oh, leave the wretch to his bribes and sins;
+ Let him rot in the web of lies he spins!
+ To the saintly soul of the early day,
+ To the Christian judge, let us turn and say
+ "Praise and thanks for an honest man!--
+ Glory to God for the Puritan!"
+
+ I see, far southward, this quiet day,
+ The hills of Newbury rolling away,
+ With the many tints of the season gay,
+ Dreamily blending in autumn mist
+ Crimson, and gold, and amethyst.
+ Long and low, with dwarf trees crowned,
+ Plum Island lies, like a whale aground,
+ A stone's toss over the narrow sound.
+ Inland, as far as the eye can go,
+ The hills curve round like a bended bow;
+ A silver arrow from out them sprung,
+ I see the shine of the Quasycung;
+ And, round and round, over valley and hill,
+ Old roads winding, as old roads will,
+ Here to a ferry, and there to a mill;
+ And glimpses of chimneys and gabled eaves,
+ Through green elm arches and maple leaves,--
+ Old homesteads sacred to all that can
+ Gladden or sadden the heart of man,
+ Over whose thresholds of oak and stone
+ Life and Death have come and gone
+ There pictured tiles in the fireplace show,
+ Great beams sag from the ceiling low,
+ The dresser glitters with polished wares,
+ The long clock ticks on the foot-worn stairs,
+ And the low, broad chimney shows the crack
+ By the earthquake made a century back.
+ Up from their midst springs the village spire
+ With the crest of its cock in the sun afire;
+ Beyond are orchards and planting lands,
+ And great salt marshes and glimmering sands,
+ And, where north and south the coast-lines run,
+ The blink of the sea in breeze and sun!
+
+ I see it all like a chart unrolled,
+ But my thoughts are full of the past and old,
+ I hear the tales of my boyhood told;
+ And the shadows and shapes of early days
+ Flit dimly by in the veiling haze,
+ With measured movement and rhythmic chime
+ Weaving like shuttles my web of rhyme.
+ I think of the old man wise and good
+ Who once on yon misty hillsides stood,
+ (A poet who never measured rhyme,
+ A seer unknown to his dull-eared time,)
+ And, propped on his staff of age, looked down,
+ With his boyhood's love, on his native town,
+ Where, written, as if on its hills and plains,
+ His burden of prophecy yet remains,
+ For the voices of wood, and wave, and wind
+ To read in the ear of the musing mind:--
+
+ "As long as Plum Island, to guard the coast
+ As God appointed, shall keep its post;
+ As long as a salmon shall haunt the deep
+ Of Merrimac River, or sturgeon leap;
+ As long as pickerel swift and slim,
+ Or red-backed perch, in Crane Pond swim;
+ As long as the annual sea-fowl know
+ Their time to come and their time to go;
+ As long as cattle shall roam at will
+ The green, grass meadows by Turkey Hill;
+ As long as sheep shall look from the side
+ Of Oldtown Hill on marishes wide,
+ And Parker River, and salt-sea tide;
+ As long as a wandering pigeon shall search
+ The fields below from his white-oak perch,
+ When the barley-harvest is ripe and shorn,
+ And the dry husks fall from the standing corn;
+ As long as Nature shall not grow old,
+ Nor drop her work from her doting hold,
+ And her care for the Indian corn forget,
+ And the yellow rows in pairs to set;--
+ So long shall Christians here be born,
+ Grow up and ripen as God's sweet corn!--
+ By the beak of bird, by the breath of frost,
+ Shall never a holy ear be lost,
+ But, husked by Death in the Planter's sight,
+ Be sown again in the fields of light!"
+
+ The Island still is purple with plums,
+ Up the river the salmon comes,
+ The sturgeon leaps, and the wild-fowl feeds
+ On hillside berries and marish seeds,--
+ All the beautiful signs remain,
+ From spring-time sowing to autumn rain
+ The good man's vision returns again!
+ And let us hope, as well we can,
+ That the Silent Angel who garners man
+ May find some grain as of old lie found
+ In the human cornfield ripe and sound,
+ And the Lord of the Harvest deign to own
+ The precious seed by the fathers sown!
+
+ 1859.
+
+
+
+
+THE RED RIPER VOYAGEUR.
+
+ OUT and in the river is winding
+ The links of its long, red chain,
+ Through belts of dusky pine-land
+ And gusty leagues of plain.
+
+ Only, at times, a smoke-wreath
+ With the drifting cloud-rack joins,--
+ The smoke of the hunting-lodges
+ Of the wild Assiniboins.
+
+ Drearily blows the north-wind
+ From the land of ice and snow;
+ The eyes that look are weary,
+ And heavy the hands that row.
+
+ And with one foot on the water,
+ And one upon the shore,
+ The Angel of Shadow gives warning
+ That day shall be no more.
+
+ Is it the clang of wild-geese?
+ Is it the Indian's yell,
+ That lends to the voice of the north-wind
+ The tones of a far-off bell?
+
+ The voyageur smiles as he listens
+ To the sound that grows apace;
+ Well he knows the vesper ringing
+ Of the bells of St. Boniface.
+
+ The bells of the Roman Mission,
+ That call from their turrets twain,
+ To the boatman on the river,
+ To the hunter on the plain!
+
+ Even so in our mortal journey
+ The bitter north-winds blow,
+ And thus upon life's Red River
+ Our hearts, as oarsmen, row.
+
+ And when the Angel of Shadow
+ Rests his feet on wave and shore,
+ And our eyes grow dim with watching
+ And our hearts faint at the oar,
+
+ Happy is he who heareth
+ The signal of his release
+ In the bells of the Holy City,
+ The chimes of eternal peace!
+
+ 1859
+
+
+
+
+THE PREACHER.
+
+George Whitefield, the celebrated preacher, died at Newburyport in 1770,
+and was buried under the church which has since borne his name.
+
+ ITS windows flashing to the sky,
+ Beneath a thousand roofs of brown,
+ Far down the vale, my friend and I
+ Beheld the old and quiet town;
+ The ghostly sails that out at sea
+ Flapped their white wings of mystery;
+ The beaches glimmering in the sun,
+ And the low wooded capes that run
+ Into the sea-mist north and south;
+ The sand-bluffs at the river's mouth;
+ The swinging chain-bridge, and, afar,
+ The foam-line of the harbor-bar.
+
+ Over the woods and meadow-lands
+ A crimson-tinted shadow lay,
+ Of clouds through which the setting day
+ Flung a slant glory far away.
+ It glittered on the wet sea-sands,
+ It flamed upon the city's panes,
+ Smote the white sails of ships that wore
+ Outward or in, and glided o'er
+ The steeples with their veering vanes!
+
+ Awhile my friend with rapid search
+ O'erran the landscape. "Yonder spire
+ Over gray roofs, a shaft of fire;
+ What is it, pray?"--"The Whitefield Church!
+ Walled about by its basement stones,
+ There rest the marvellous prophet's bones."
+ Then as our homeward way we walked,
+ Of the great preacher's life we talked;
+ And through the mystery of our theme
+ The outward glory seemed to stream,
+ And Nature's self interpreted
+ The doubtful record of the dead;
+ And every level beam that smote
+ The sails upon the dark afloat
+ A symbol of the light became,
+ Which touched the shadows of our blame,
+ With tongues of Pentecostal flame.
+
+ Over the roofs of the pioneers
+ Gathers the moss of a hundred years;
+ On man and his works has passed the change
+ Which needs must be in a century's range.
+ The land lies open and warm in the sun,
+ Anvils clamor and mill-wheels run,--
+ Flocks on the hillsides, herds on the plain,
+ The wilderness gladdened with fruit and grain!
+ But the living faith of the settlers old
+ A dead profession their children hold;
+ To the lust of office and greed of trade
+ A stepping-stone is the altar made.
+
+ The church, to place and power the door,
+ Rebukes the sin of the world no more,
+ Nor sees its Lord in the homeless poor.
+ Everywhere is the grasping hand,
+ And eager adding of land to land;
+ And earth, which seemed to the fathers meant
+ But as a pilgrim's wayside tent,--
+ A nightly shelter to fold away
+ When the Lord should call at the break of day,--
+ Solid and steadfast seems to be,
+ And Time has forgotten Eternity!
+
+ But fresh and green from the rotting roots
+ Of primal forests the young growth shoots;
+ From the death of the old the new proceeds,
+ And the life of truth from the rot of creeds
+ On the ladder of God, which upward leads,
+ The steps of progress are human needs.
+ For His judgments still are a mighty deep,
+ And the eyes of His providence never sleep
+ When the night is darkest He gives the morn;
+ When the famine is sorest, the wine and corn!
+
+ In the church of the wilderness Edwards wrought,
+ Shaping his creed at the forge of thought;
+ And with Thor's own hammer welded and bent
+ The iron links of his argument,
+ Which strove to grasp in its mighty span
+ The purpose of God and the fate of man
+ Yet faithful still, in his daily round
+ To the weak, and the poor, and sin-sick found,
+ The schoolman's lore and the casuist's art
+ Drew warmth and life from his fervent heart.
+
+ Had he not seen in the solitudes
+ Of his deep and dark Northampton woods
+ A vision of love about him fall?
+ Not the blinding splendor which fell on Saul,
+ But the tenderer glory that rests on them
+ Who walk in the New Jerusalem,
+ Where never the sun nor moon are known,
+ But the Lord and His love are the light alone
+ And watching the sweet, still countenance
+ Of the wife of his bosom rapt in trance,
+ Had he not treasured each broken word
+ Of the mystical wonder seen and heard;
+ And loved the beautiful dreamer more
+ That thus to the desert of earth she bore
+ Clusters of Eshcol from Canaan's shore?
+
+ As the barley-winnower, holding with pain
+ Aloft in waiting his chaff and grain,
+ Joyfully welcomes the far-off breeze
+ Sounding the pine-tree's slender keys,
+ So he who had waited long to hear
+ The sound of the Spirit drawing near,
+ Like that which the son of Iddo heard
+ When the feet of angels the myrtles stirred,
+ Felt the answer of prayer, at last,
+ As over his church the afflatus passed,
+ Breaking its sleep as breezes break
+ To sun-bright ripples a stagnant lake.
+
+ At first a tremor of silent fear,
+ The creep of the flesh at danger near,
+ A vague foreboding and discontent,
+ Over the hearts of the people went.
+ All nature warned in sounds and signs
+ The wind in the tops of the forest pines
+ In the name of the Highest called to prayer,
+ As the muezzin calls from the minaret stair.
+ Through ceiled chambers of secret sin
+ Sudden and strong the light shone in;
+ A guilty sense of his neighbor's needs
+ Startled the man of title-deeds;
+ The trembling hand of the worldling shook
+ The dust of years from the Holy Book;
+ And the psalms of David, forgotten long,
+ Took the place of the scoffer's song.
+
+ The impulse spread like the outward course
+ Of waters moved by a central force;
+ The tide of spiritual life rolled down
+ From inland mountains to seaboard town.
+
+ Prepared and ready the altar stands
+ Waiting the prophet's outstretched hands
+ And prayer availing, to downward call
+ The fiery answer in view of all.
+ Hearts are like wax in the furnace; who
+ Shall mould, and shape, and cast them anew?
+ Lo! by the Merrimac Whitefield stands
+ In the temple that never was made by hands,--
+ Curtains of azure, and crystal wall,
+ And dome of the sunshine over all--
+ A homeless pilgrim, with dubious name
+ Blown about on the winds of fame;
+ Now as an angel of blessing classed,
+ And now as a mad enthusiast.
+ Called in his youth to sound and gauge
+ The moral lapse of his race and age,
+ And, sharp as truth, the contrast draw
+ Of human frailty and perfect law;
+ Possessed by the one dread thought that lent
+ Its goad to his fiery temperament,
+ Up and down the world he went,
+ A John the Baptist crying, Repent!
+
+ No perfect whole can our nature make;
+ Here or there the circle will break;
+ The orb of life as it takes the light
+ On one side leaves the other in night.
+ Never was saint so good and great
+ As to give no chance at St. Peter's gate
+ For the plea of the Devil's advocate.
+ So, incomplete by his being's law,
+ The marvellous preacher had his flaw;
+ With step unequal, and lame with faults,
+ His shade on the path of History halts.
+
+ Wisely and well said the Eastern bard
+ Fear is easy, but love is hard,--
+ Easy to glow with the Santon's rage,
+ And walk on the Meccan pilgrimage;
+ But he is greatest and best who can
+ Worship Allah by loving man.
+ Thus he,--to whom, in the painful stress
+ Of zeal on fire from its own excess,
+ Heaven seemed so vast and earth so small
+ That man was nothing, since God was all,--
+ Forgot, as the best at times have done,
+ That the love of the Lord and of man are one.
+ Little to him whose feet unshod
+ The thorny path of the desert trod,
+ Careless of pain, so it led to God,
+ Seemed the hunger-pang and the poor man's wrong,
+ The weak ones trodden beneath the strong.
+ Should the worm be chooser?--the clay withstand
+ The shaping will of the potter's hand?
+
+ In the Indian fable Arjoon hears
+ The scorn of a god rebuke his fears
+ "Spare thy pity!" Krishna saith;
+ "Not in thy sword is the power of death!
+ All is illusion,--loss but seems;
+ Pleasure and pain are only dreams;
+ Who deems he slayeth doth not kill;
+ Who counts as slain is living still.
+ Strike, nor fear thy blow is crime;
+ Nothing dies but the cheats of time;
+ Slain or slayer, small the odds
+ To each, immortal as Indra's gods!"
+
+ So by Savannah's banks of shade,
+ The stones of his mission the preacher laid
+ On the heart of the negro crushed and rent,
+ And made of his blood the wall's cement;
+ Bade the slave-ship speed from coast to coast,
+ Fanned by the wings of the Holy Ghost;
+ And begged, for the love of Christ, the gold
+ Coined from the hearts in its groaning hold.
+ What could it matter, more or less
+ Of stripes, and hunger, and weariness?
+ Living or dying, bond or free,
+ What was time to eternity?
+
+ Alas for the preacher's cherished schemes!
+ Mission and church are now but dreams;
+ Nor prayer nor fasting availed the plan
+ To honor God through the wrong of man.
+ Of all his labors no trace remains
+ Save the bondman lifting his hands in chains.
+ The woof he wove in the righteous warp
+ Of freedom-loving Oglethorpe,
+ Clothes with curses the goodly land,
+ Changes its greenness and bloom to sand;
+ And a century's lapse reveals once more
+ The slave-ship stealing to Georgia's shore.
+ Father of Light! how blind is he
+ Who sprinkles the altar he rears to Thee
+ With the blood and tears of humanity!
+
+ He erred: shall we count His gifts as naught?
+ Was the work of God in him unwrought?
+ The servant may through his deafness err,
+ And blind may be God's messenger;
+ But the Errand is sure they go upon,--
+ The word is spoken, the deed is done.
+ Was the Hebrew temple less fair and good
+ That Solomon bowed to gods of wood?
+ For his tempted heart and wandering feet,
+ Were the songs of David less pure and sweet?
+ So in light and shadow the preacher went,
+ God's erring and human instrument;
+ And the hearts of the people where he passed
+ Swayed as the reeds sway in the blast,
+ Under the spell of a voice which took
+ In its compass the flow of Siloa's brook,
+ And the mystical chime of the bells of gold
+ On the ephod's hem of the priest of old,--
+ Now the roll of thunder, and now the awe
+ Of the trumpet heard in the Mount of Law.
+
+ A solemn fear on the listening crowd
+ Fell like the shadow of a cloud.
+ The sailor reeling from out the ships
+ Whose masts stood thick in the river-slips
+ Felt the jest and the curse die on his lips.
+ Listened the fisherman rude and hard,
+ The calker rough from the builder's yard;
+ The man of the market left his load,
+ The teamster leaned on his bending goad,
+ The maiden, and youth beside her, felt
+ Their hearts in a closer union melt,
+ And saw the flowers of their love in bloom
+ Down the endless vistas of life to come.
+ Old age sat feebly brushing away
+ From his ears the scanty locks of gray;
+ And careless boyhood, living the free
+ Unconscious life of bird and tree,
+ Suddenly wakened to a sense
+ Of sin and its guilty consequence.
+ It was as if an angel's voice
+ Called the listeners up for their final choice;
+ As if a strong hand rent apart
+ The veils of sense from soul and heart,
+ Showing in light ineffable
+ The joys of heaven and woes of hell
+ All about in the misty air
+ The hills seemed kneeling in silent prayer;
+ The rustle of leaves, the moaning sedge,
+ The water's lap on its gravelled edge,
+ The wailing pines, and, far and faint,
+ The wood-dove's note of sad complaint,--
+ To the solemn voice of the preacher lent
+ An undertone as of low lament;
+ And the note of the sea from its sand coast,
+ On the easterly wind, now heard, now lost,
+ Seemed the murmurous sound of the judgment host.
+
+ Yet wise men doubted, and good men wept,
+ As that storm of passion above them swept,
+ And, comet-like, adding flame to flame,
+ The priests of the new Evangel came,--
+ Davenport, flashing upon the crowd,
+ Charged like summer's electric cloud,
+ Now holding the listener still as death
+ With terrible warnings under breath,
+ Now shouting for joy, as if he viewed
+ The vision of Heaven's beatitude!
+ And Celtic Tennant, his long coat bound
+ Like a monk's with leathern girdle round,
+ Wild with the toss of unshorn hair,
+ And wringing of hands, and, eyes aglare,
+ Groaning under the world's despair!
+ Grave pastors, grieving their flocks to lose,
+ Prophesied to the empty pews
+ That gourds would wither, and mushrooms die,
+ And noisiest fountains run soonest dry,
+ Like the spring that gushed in Newbury Street,
+ Under the tramp of the earthquake's feet,
+ A silver shaft in the air and light,
+ For a single day, then lost in night,
+ Leaving only, its place to tell,
+ Sandy fissure and sulphurous smell.
+ With zeal wing-clipped and white-heat cool,
+ Moved by the spirit in grooves of rule,
+ No longer harried, and cropped, and fleeced,
+ Flogged by sheriff and cursed by priest,
+ But by wiser counsels left at ease
+ To settle quietly on his lees,
+ And, self-concentred, to count as done
+ The work which his fathers well begun,
+ In silent protest of letting alone,
+ The Quaker kept the way of his own,--
+ A non-conductor among the wires,
+ With coat of asbestos proof to fires.
+ And quite unable to mend his pace
+ To catch the falling manna of grace,
+ He hugged the closer his little store
+ Of faith, and silently prayed for more.
+ And vague of creed and barren of rite,
+ But holding, as in his Master's sight,
+ Act and thought to the inner light,
+ The round of his simple duties walked,
+ And strove to live what the others talked.
+
+ And who shall marvel if evil went
+ Step by step with the good intent,
+ And with love and meekness, side by side,
+ Lust of the flesh and spiritual pride?--
+ That passionate longings and fancies vain
+ Set the heart on fire and crazed the brain?
+ That over the holy oracles
+ Folly sported with cap and bells?
+ That goodly women and learned men
+ Marvelling told with tongue and pen
+ How unweaned children chirped like birds
+ Texts of Scripture and solemn words,
+ Like the infant seers of the rocky glens
+ In the Puy de Dome of wild Cevennes
+ Or baby Lamas who pray and preach
+ From Tartir cradles in Buddha's speech?
+
+ In the war which Truth or Freedom wages
+ With impious fraud and the wrong of ages,
+ Hate and malice and self-love mar
+ The notes of triumph with painful jar,
+ And the helping angels turn aside
+ Their sorrowing faces the shame to bide.
+ Never on custom's oiled grooves
+ The world to a higher level moves,
+ But grates and grinds with friction hard
+ On granite boulder and flinty shard.
+ The heart must bleed before it feels,
+ The pool be troubled before it heals;
+ Ever by losses the right must gain,
+ Every good have its birth of pain;
+ The active Virtues blush to find
+ The Vices wearing their badge behind,
+ And Graces and Charities feel the fire
+ Wherein the sins of the age expire;
+ The fiend still rends as of old he rent
+ The tortured body from which he went.
+
+ But Time tests all. In the over-drift
+ And flow of the Nile, with its annual gift,
+ Who cares for the Hadji's relics sunk?
+ Who thinks of the drowned-out Coptic monk?
+ The tide that loosens the temple's stones,
+ And scatters the sacred ibis-bones,
+ Drives away from the valley-land
+ That Arab robber, the wandering sand,
+ Moistens the fields that know no rain,
+ Fringes the desert with belts of grain,
+ And bread to the sower brings again.
+ So the flood of emotion deep and strong
+ Troubled the land as it swept along,
+ But left a result of holier lives,
+ Tenderer-mothers and worthier wives.
+ The husband and father whose children fled
+ And sad wife wept when his drunken tread
+ Frightened peace from his roof-tree's shade,
+ And a rock of offence his hearthstone made,
+ In a strength that was not his own began
+ To rise from the brute's to the plane of man.
+ Old friends embraced, long held apart
+ By evil counsel and pride of heart;
+ And penitence saw through misty tears,
+ In the bow of hope on its cloud of fears,
+ The promise of Heaven's eternal years,--
+ The peace of God for the world's annoy,--
+ Beauty for ashes, and oil of joy
+ Under the church of Federal Street,
+ Under the tread of its Sabbath feet,
+ Walled about by its basement stones,
+ Lie the marvellous preacher's bones.
+ No saintly honors to them are shown,
+ No sign nor miracle have they known;
+ But he who passes the ancient church
+ Stops in the shade of its belfry-porch,
+ And ponders the wonderful life of him
+ Who lies at rest in that charnel dim.
+ Long shall the traveller strain his eye
+ From the railroad car, as it plunges by,
+ And the vanishing town behind him search
+ For the slender spire of the Whitefield Church;
+ And feel for one moment the ghosts of trade,
+ And fashion, and folly, and pleasure laid,
+ By the thought of that life of pure intent,
+ That voice of warning yet eloquent,
+ Of one on the errands of angels sent.
+ And if where he labored the flood of sin
+ Like a tide from the harbor-bar sets in,
+ And over a life of tune and sense
+ The church-spires lift their vain defence,
+ As if to scatter the bolts of God
+ With the points of Calvin's thunder-rod,--
+ Still, as the gem of its civic crown,
+ Precious beyond the world's renown,
+ His memory hallows the ancient town!
+
+ 1859.
+
+
+
+
+THE TRUCE OF PISCATAQUA.
+
+In the winter of 1675-76, the Eastern Indians, who had been making war
+upon the New Hampshire settlements, were so reduced in numbers by
+fighting and famine that they agreed to a peace with Major Waldron at
+Dover, but the peace was broken in the fall of 1676. The famous chief,
+Squando, was the principal negotiator on the part of the savages. He had
+taken up the hatchet to revenge the brutal treatment of his child by
+drunken white sailors, which caused its death.
+
+It not unfrequently happened during the Border wars that young white
+children were adopted by their Indian captors, and so kindly treated
+that they were unwilling to leave the free, wild life of the woods; and
+in some instances they utterly refused to go back with their parents to
+their old homes and civilization.
+
+ RAZE these long blocks of brick and stone,
+ These huge mill-monsters overgrown;
+ Blot out the humbler piles as well,
+ Where, moved like living shuttles, dwell
+ The weaving genii of the bell;
+ Tear from the wild Cocheco's track
+ The dams that hold its torrents back;
+ And let the loud-rejoicing fall
+ Plunge, roaring, down its rocky wall;
+ And let the Indian's paddle play
+ On the unbridged Piscataqua!
+ Wide over hill and valley spread
+ Once more the forest, dusk and dread,
+ With here and there a clearing cut
+ From the walled shadows round it shut;
+ Each with its farm-house builded rude,
+ By English yeoman squared and hewed,
+ And the grim, flankered block-house bound
+ With bristling palisades around.
+ So, haply shall before thine eyes
+ The dusty veil of centuries rise,
+ The old, strange scenery overlay
+ The tamer pictures of to-day,
+ While, like the actors in a play,
+ Pass in their ancient guise along
+ The figures of my border song
+ What time beside Cocheco's flood
+ The white man and the red man stood,
+ With words of peace and brotherhood;
+ When passed the sacred calumet
+ From lip to lip with fire-draught wet,
+ And, puffed in scorn, the peace-pipe's smoke
+ Through the gray beard of Waldron broke,
+ And Squando's voice, in suppliant plea
+ For mercy, struck the haughty key
+ Of one who held, in any fate,
+ His native pride inviolate!
+
+ "Let your ears be opened wide!
+ He who speaks has never lied.
+ Waldron of Piscataqua,
+ Hear what Squando has to say!
+
+ "Squando shuts his eyes and sees,
+ Far off, Saco's hemlock-trees.
+ In his wigwam, still as stone,
+ Sits a woman all alone,
+
+ "Wampum beads and birchen strands
+ Dropping from her careless hands,
+ Listening ever for the fleet
+ Patter of a dead child's feet!
+
+ "When the moon a year ago
+ Told the flowers the time to blow,
+ In that lonely wigwam smiled
+ Menewee, our little child.
+
+ "Ere that moon grew thin and old,
+ He was lying still and cold;
+ Sent before us, weak and small,
+ When the Master did not call!
+
+ "On his little grave I lay;
+ Three times went and came the day,
+ Thrice above me blazed the noon,
+ Thrice upon me wept the moon.
+
+ "In the third night-watch I heard,
+ Far and low, a spirit-bird;
+ Very mournful, very wild,
+ Sang the totem of my child.
+
+ "'Menewee, poor Menewee,
+ Walks a path he cannot see
+ Let the white man's wigwam light
+ With its blaze his steps aright.
+
+ "'All-uncalled, he dares not show
+ Empty hands to Manito
+ Better gifts he cannot bear
+ Than the scalps his slayers wear.'
+
+ "All the while the totem sang,
+ Lightning blazed and thunder rang;
+ And a black cloud, reaching high,
+ Pulled the white moon from the sky.
+
+ "I, the medicine-man, whose ear
+ All that spirits bear can hear,--
+ I, whose eyes are wide to see
+ All the things that are to be,--
+
+ "Well I knew the dreadful signs
+ In the whispers of the pines,
+ In the river roaring loud,
+ In the mutter of the cloud.
+
+ "At the breaking of the day,
+ From the grave I passed away;
+ Flowers bloomed round me, birds sang glad,
+ But my heart was hot and mad.
+
+ "There is rust on Squando's knife,
+ From the warm, red springs of life;
+ On the funeral hemlock-trees
+ Many a scalp the totem sees.
+
+ "Blood for blood! But evermore
+ Squando's heart is sad and sore;
+ And his poor squaw waits at home
+ For the feet that never come!
+
+ "Waldron of Cocheco, hear!
+ Squando speaks, who laughs at fear;
+ Take the captives he has ta'en;
+ Let the land have peace again!"
+
+ As the words died on his tongue,
+ Wide apart his warriors swung;
+ Parted, at the sign he gave,
+ Right and left, like Egypt's wave.
+
+ And, like Israel passing free
+ Through the prophet-charmed sea,
+ Captive mother, wife, and child
+ Through the dusky terror filed.
+
+ One alone, a little maid,
+ Middleway her steps delayed,
+ Glancing, with quick, troubled sight,
+ Round about from red to white.
+
+ Then his hand the Indian laid
+ On the little maiden's head,
+ Lightly from her forehead fair
+ Smoothing back her yellow hair.
+
+ "Gift or favor ask I none;
+ What I have is all my own
+ Never yet the birds have sung,
+ Squando hath a beggar's tongue.'
+
+ "Yet for her who waits at home,
+ For the dead who cannot come,
+ Let the little Gold-hair be
+ In the place of Menewee!
+
+ "Mishanock, my little star!
+ Come to Saco's pines afar;
+ Where the sad one waits at home,
+ Wequashim, my moonlight, come!"
+
+ "What!" quoth Waldron, "leave a child
+ Christian-born to heathens wild?
+ As God lives, from Satan's hand
+ I will pluck her as a brand!"
+
+ "Hear me, white man!" Squando cried;
+ "Let the little one decide.
+ Wequashim, my moonlight, say,
+ Wilt thou go with me, or stay?"
+
+ Slowly, sadly, half afraid,
+ Half regretfully, the maid
+ Owned the ties of blood and race,--
+ Turned from Squando's pleading face.
+
+ Not a word the Indian spoke,
+ But his wampum chain he broke,
+ And the beaded wonder hung
+ On that neck so fair and young.
+
+ Silence-shod, as phantoms seem
+ In the marches of a dream,
+ Single-filed, the grim array
+ Through the pine-trees wound away.
+
+ Doubting, trembling, sore amazed,
+ Through her tears the young child gazed.
+ "God preserve her!" Waldron said;
+ "Satan hath bewitched the maid!"
+
+ Years went and came. At close of day
+ Singing came a child from play,
+ Tossing from her loose-locked head
+ Gold in sunshine, brown in shade.
+
+ Pride was in the mother's look,
+ But her head she gravely shook,
+ And with lips that fondly smiled
+ Feigned to chide her truant child.
+
+ Unabashed, the maid began
+ "Up and down the brook I ran,
+ Where, beneath the bank so steep,
+ Lie the spotted trout asleep.
+
+ "'Chip!' went squirrel on the wall,
+ After me I heard him call,
+ And the cat-bird on the tree
+ Tried his best to mimic me.
+
+ "Where the hemlocks grew so dark
+ That I stopped to look and hark,
+ On a log, with feather-hat,
+ By the path, an Indian sat.
+
+ "Then I cried, and ran away;
+ But he called, and bade me stay;
+ And his voice was good and mild
+ As my mother's to her child.
+
+ "And he took my wampum chain,
+ Looked and looked it o'er again;
+ Gave me berries, and, beside,
+ On my neck a plaything tied."
+
+ Straight the mother stooped to see
+ What the Indian's gift might be.
+ On the braid of wampum hung,
+ Lo! a cross of silver swung.
+
+ Well she knew its graven sign,
+ Squando's bird and totem pine;
+ And, a mirage of the brain,
+ Flowed her childhood back again.
+
+ Flashed the roof the sunshine through,
+ Into space the walls outgrew;
+ On the Indian's wigwam-mat,
+ Blossom-crowned, again she sat.
+
+ Cool she felt the west-wind blow,
+ In her ear the pines sang low,
+ And, like links from out a chain,
+ Dropped the years of care and pain.
+ From the outward toil and din,
+ From the griefs that gnaw within,
+ To the freedom of the woods
+ Called the birds, and winds, and floods.
+
+ Well, O painful minister!
+ Watch thy flock, but blame not her,
+ If her ear grew sharp to hear
+ All their voices whispering near.
+
+ Blame her not, as to her soul
+ All the desert's glamour stole,
+ That a tear for childhood's loss
+ Dropped upon the Indian's cross.
+
+ When, that night, the Book was read,
+ And she bowed her widowed head,
+ And a prayer for each loved name
+ Rose like incense from a flame,
+
+ With a hope the creeds forbid
+ In her pitying bosom hid,
+ To the listening ear of Heaven
+ Lo! the Indian's name was given.
+
+ 1860.
+
+
+
+
+MY PLAYMATE.
+
+ THE pines were dark on Ramoth hill,
+ Their song was soft and low;
+ The blossoms in the sweet May wind
+ Were falling like the snow.
+
+ The blossoms drifted at our feet,
+ The orchard birds sang clear;
+ The sweetest and the saddest day
+ It seemed of all the year.
+
+ For, more to me than birds or flowers,
+ My playmate left her home,
+ And took with her the laughing spring,
+ The music and the bloom.
+
+ She kissed the lips of kith and kin,
+ She laid her hand in mine
+ What more could ask the bashful boy
+ Who fed her father's kine?
+
+ She left us in the bloom of May
+ The constant years told o'er
+ Their seasons with as sweet May morns,
+ But she came back no more.
+
+ I walk, with noiseless feet, the round
+ Of uneventful years;
+ Still o'er and o'er I sow the spring
+ And reap the autumn ears.
+
+ She lives where all the golden year
+ Her summer roses blow;
+ The dusky children of the sun
+ Before her come and go.
+
+ There haply with her jewelled hands
+ She smooths her silken gown,--
+ No more the homespun lap wherein
+ I shook the walnuts down.
+
+ The wild grapes wait us by the brook,
+ The brown nuts on the hill,
+ And still the May-day flowers make sweet
+ The woods of Follymill.
+
+ The lilies blossom in the pond,
+ The bird builds in the tree,
+ The dark pines sing on Ramoth hill
+ The slow song of the sea.
+
+ I wonder if she thinks of them,
+ And how the old time seems,--
+ If ever the pines of Ramoth wood
+ Are sounding in her dreams.
+
+ I see her face, I hear her voice;
+ Does she remember mine?
+ And what to her is now the boy
+ Who fed her father's kine?
+
+ What cares she that the orioles build
+ For other eyes than ours,--
+ That other hands with nuts are filled,
+ And other laps with flowers?
+
+ O playmate in the golden time!
+ Our mossy seat is green,
+ Its fringing violets blossom yet,
+ The old trees o'er it lean.
+
+ The winds so sweet with birch and fern
+ A sweeter memory blow;
+ And there in spring the veeries sing
+ The song of long ago.
+
+ And still the pines of Ramoth wood
+ Are moaning like the sea,--
+
+ The moaning of the sea of change
+ Between myself and thee!
+
+ 1860.
+
+
+
+
+COBBLER KEEZAR'S VISION.
+
+This ballad was written on the occasion of a Horticultural Festival.
+Cobbler Keezar was a noted character among the first settlers in the
+valley of the Merrimac.
+
+ The beaver cut his timber
+ With patient teeth that day,
+ The minks were fish-wards, and the crows
+ Surveyors of highway,--
+
+ When Keezar sat on the hillside
+ Upon his cobbler's form,
+ With a pan of coals on either hand
+ To keep his waxed-ends warm.
+
+ And there, in the golden weather,
+ He stitched and hammered and sung;
+ In the brook he moistened his leather,
+ In the pewter mug his tongue.
+
+ Well knew the tough old Teuton
+ Who brewed the stoutest ale,
+ And he paid the goodwife's reckoning
+ In the coin of song and tale.
+
+ The songs they still are singing
+ Who dress the hills of vine,
+ The tales that haunt the Brocken
+ And whisper down the Rhine.
+
+ Woodsy and wild and lonesome,
+ The swift stream wound away,
+ Through birches and scarlet maples
+ Flashing in foam and spray,--
+
+ Down on the sharp-horned ledges
+ Plunging in steep cascade,
+ Tossing its white-maned waters
+ Against the hemlock's shade.
+
+ Woodsy and wild and lonesome,
+ East and west and north and south;
+ Only the village of fishers
+ Down at the river's mouth;
+
+ Only here and there a clearing,
+ With its farm-house rude and new,
+ And tree-stumps, swart as Indians,
+ Where the scanty harvest grew.
+
+ No shout of home-bound reapers,
+ No vintage-song he heard,
+ And on the green no dancing feet
+ The merry violin stirred.
+
+ "Why should folk be glum," said Keezar,
+ "When Nature herself is glad,
+ And the painted woods are laughing
+ At the faces so sour and sad?"
+
+ Small heed had the careless cobbler
+ What sorrow of heart was theirs
+ Who travailed in pain with the births of God,
+ And planted a state with prayers,--
+
+ Hunting of witches and warlocks,
+ Smiting the heathen horde,--
+ One hand on the mason's trowel,
+ And one on the soldier's sword.
+
+ But give him his ale and cider,
+ Give him his pipe and song,
+ Little he cared for Church or State,
+ Or the balance of right and wrong.
+
+ "T is work, work, work," he muttered,--
+ "And for rest a snuffle of psalms!"
+ He smote on his leathern apron
+ With his brown and waxen palms.
+
+ "Oh for the purple harvests
+ Of the days when I was young
+ For the merry grape-stained maidens,
+ And the pleasant songs they sung!
+
+ "Oh for the breath of vineyards,
+ Of apples and nuts and wine
+ For an oar to row and a breeze to blow
+ Down the grand old river Rhine!"
+
+ A tear in his blue eye glistened,
+ And dropped on his beard so gray.
+ "Old, old am I," said Keezar,
+ "And the Rhine flows far away!"
+
+ But a cunning man was the cobbler;
+ He could call the birds from the trees,
+ Charm the black snake out of the ledges,
+ And bring back the swarming bees.
+
+ All the virtues of herbs and metals,
+ All the lore of the woods, he knew,
+ And the arts of the Old World mingle
+ With the marvels of the New.
+
+ Well he knew the tricks of magic,
+ And the lapstone on his knee
+ Had the gift of the Mormon's goggles
+ Or the stone of Doctor Dee.
+
+ For the mighty master Agrippa
+ Wrought it with spell and rhyme
+ From a fragment of mystic moonstone
+ In the tower of Nettesheim.
+
+ To a cobbler Minnesinger
+ The marvellous stone gave he,--
+ And he gave it, in turn, to Keezar,
+ Who brought it over the sea.
+
+ He held up that mystic lapstone,
+ He held it up like a lens,
+ And he counted the long years coming
+ Ey twenties and by tens.
+
+ "One hundred years," quoth Keezar,
+ "And fifty have I told
+ Now open the new before me,
+ And shut me out the old!"
+
+ Like a cloud of mist, the blackness
+ Rolled from the magic stone,
+ And a marvellous picture mingled
+ The unknown and the known.
+
+ Still ran the stream to the river,
+ And river and ocean joined;
+ And there were the bluffs and the blue sea-line,
+ And cold north hills behind.
+
+ But--the mighty forest was broken
+ By many a steepled town,
+ By many a white-walled farm-house,
+ And many a garner brown.
+
+ Turning a score of mill-wheels,
+ The stream no more ran free;
+ White sails on the winding river,
+ White sails on the far-off sea.
+
+ Below in the noisy village
+ The flags were floating gay,
+ And shone on a thousand faces
+ The light of a holiday.
+
+ Swiftly the rival ploughmen
+ Turned the brown earth from their shares;
+ Here were the farmer's treasures,
+ There were the craftsman's wares.
+
+ Golden the goodwife's butter,
+ Ruby her currant-wine;
+ Grand were the strutting turkeys,
+ Fat were the beeves and swine.
+
+ Yellow and red were the apples,
+ And the ripe pears russet-brown,
+ And the peaches had stolen blushes
+ From the girls who shook them down.
+
+ And with blooms of hill and wildwood,
+ That shame the toil of art,
+ Mingled the gorgeous blossoms
+ Of the garden's tropic heart.
+
+ "What is it I see?" said Keezar
+ "Am I here, or am I there?
+ Is it a fete at Bingen?
+ Do I look on Frankfort fair?
+
+ "But where are the clowns and puppets,
+ And imps with horns and tail?
+ And where are the Rhenish flagons?
+ And where is the foaming ale?
+
+ "Strange things, I know, will happen,--
+ Strange things the Lord permits;
+ But that droughty folk should be jolly
+ Puzzles my poor old wits.
+
+ "Here are smiling manly faces,
+ And the maiden's step is gay;
+ Nor sad by thinking, nor mad by drinking,
+ Nor mopes, nor fools, are they.
+
+ "Here's pleasure without regretting,
+ And good without abuse,
+ The holiday and the bridal
+ Of beauty and of use.
+
+ "Here's a priest and there is a Quaker,
+ Do the cat and dog agree?
+ Have they burned the stocks for ovenwood?
+ Have they cut down the gallows-tree?
+
+ "Would the old folk know their children?
+ Would they own the graceless town,
+ With never a ranter to worry
+ And never a witch to drown?"
+
+
+ Loud laughed the cobbler Keezar,
+ Laughed like a school-boy gay;
+ Tossing his arms above him,
+ The lapstone rolled away.
+
+ It rolled down the rugged hillside,
+ It spun like a wheel bewitched,
+ It plunged through the leaning willows,
+ And into the river pitched.
+
+ There, in the deep, dark water,
+ The magic stone lies still,
+ Under the leaning willows
+ In the shadow of the hill.
+
+ But oft the idle fisher
+ Sits on the shadowy bank,
+ And his dreams make marvellous pictures
+ Where the wizard's lapstone sank.
+
+ And still, in the summer twilights,
+ When the river seems to run
+ Out from the inner glory,
+ Warm with the melted sun,
+
+ The weary mill-girl lingers
+ Beside the charmed stream,
+ And the sky and the golden water
+ Shape and color her dream.
+
+ Air wave the sunset gardens,
+ The rosy signals fly;
+ Her homestead beckons from the cloud,
+ And love goes sailing by.
+
+ 1861.
+
+
+
+
+AMY WENTWORTH
+
+TO WILLIAM BRADFORD.
+
+ As they who watch by sick-beds find relief
+ Unwittingly from the great stress of grief
+ And anxious care, in fantasies outwrought
+ From the hearth's embers flickering low, or caught
+ From whispering wind, or tread of passing feet,
+ Or vagrant memory calling up some sweet
+ Snatch of old song or romance, whence or why
+ They scarcely know or ask,--so, thou and I,
+ Nursed in the faith that Truth alone is strong
+ In the endurance which outwearies Wrong,
+ With meek persistence baffling brutal force,
+ And trusting God against the universe,--
+ We, doomed to watch a strife we may not share
+ With other weapons than the patriot's prayer,
+ Yet owning, with full hearts and moistened eyes,
+ The awful beauty of self-sacrifice,
+ And wrung by keenest sympathy for all
+ Who give their loved ones for the living wall
+ 'Twixt law and treason,--in this evil day
+ May haply find, through automatic play
+ Of pen and pencil, solace to our pain,
+ And hearten others with the strength we gain.
+ I know it has been said our times require
+ No play of art, nor dalliance with the lyre,
+ No weak essay with Fancy's chloroform
+ To calm the hot, mad pulses of the storm,
+ But the stern war-blast rather, such as sets
+ The battle's teeth of serried bayonets,
+ And pictures grim as Vernet's. Yet with these
+ Some softer tints may blend, and milder keys
+ Relieve the storm-stunned ear. Let us keep sweet,
+ If so we may, our hearts, even while we eat
+ The bitter harvest of our own device
+ And half a century's moral cowardice.
+ As Nurnberg sang while Wittenberg defied,
+ And Kranach painted by his Luther's side,
+ And through the war-march of the Puritan
+ The silver stream of Marvell's music ran,
+ So let the household melodies be sung,
+ The pleasant pictures on the wall be hung--
+ So let us hold against the hosts of night
+ And slavery all our vantage-ground of light.
+ Let Treason boast its savagery, and shake
+ From its flag-folds its symbol rattlesnake,
+ Nurse its fine arts, lay human skins in tan,
+ And carve its pipe-bowls from the bones of man,
+ And make the tale of Fijian banquets dull
+ By drinking whiskey from a loyal skull,--
+ But let us guard, till this sad war shall cease,
+ (God grant it soon!) the graceful arts of peace
+ No foes are conquered who the victors teach
+ Their vandal manners and barbaric speech.
+
+ And while, with hearts of thankfulness, we bear
+ Of the great common burden our full share,
+ Let none upbraid us that the waves entice
+ Thy sea-dipped pencil, or some quaint device,
+ Rhythmic, and sweet, beguiles my pen away
+ From the sharp strifes and sorrows of to-day.
+ Thus, while the east-wind keen from Labrador
+ Sings it the leafless elms, and from the shore
+ Of the great sea comes the monotonous roar
+ Of the long-breaking surf, and all the sky
+ Is gray with cloud, home-bound and dull, I try
+ To time a simple legend to the sounds
+ Of winds in the woods, and waves on pebbled bounds,--
+ A song for oars to chime with, such as might
+ Be sung by tired sea-painters, who at night
+ Look from their hemlock camps, by quiet cove
+ Or beach, moon-lighted, on the waves they love.
+ (So hast thou looked, when level sunset lay
+ On the calm bosom of some Eastern bay,
+ And all the spray-moist rocks and waves that rolled
+ Up the white sand-slopes flashed with ruddy gold.)
+ Something it has--a flavor of the sea,
+ And the sea's freedom--which reminds of thee.
+ Its faded picture, dimly smiling down
+ From the blurred fresco of the ancient town,
+ I have not touched with warmer tints in vain,
+ If, in this dark, sad year, it steals one thought
+ from pain.
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+
+ Her fingers shame the ivory keys
+ They dance so light along;
+ The bloom upon her parted lips
+ Is sweeter than the song.
+
+ O perfumed suitor, spare thy smiles!
+ Her thoughts are not of thee;
+ She better loves the salted wind,
+ The voices of the sea.
+
+ Her heart is like an outbound ship
+ That at its anchor swings;
+ The murmur of the stranded shell
+ Is in the song she sings.
+
+ She sings, and, smiling, hears her praise,
+ But dreams the while of one
+ Who watches from his sea-blown deck
+ The icebergs in the sun.
+
+ She questions all the winds that blow,
+ And every fog-wreath dim,
+ And bids the sea-birds flying north
+ Bear messages to him.
+
+ She speeds them with the thanks of men
+ He perilled life to save,
+ And grateful prayers like holy oil
+ To smooth for him the wave.
+
+ Brown Viking of the fishing-smack!
+ Fair toast of all the town!--
+ The skipper's jerkin ill beseems
+ The lady's silken gown!
+
+ But ne'er shall Amy Wentworth wear
+ For him the blush of shame
+ Who dares to set his manly gifts
+ Against her ancient name.
+
+ The stream is brightest at its spring,
+ And blood is not like wine;
+ Nor honored less than he who heirs
+ Is he who founds a line.
+
+ Full lightly shall the prize be won,
+ If love be Fortune's spur;
+ And never maiden stoops to him
+ Who lifts himself to her.
+
+ Her home is brave in Jaffrey Street,
+ With stately stairways worn
+ By feet of old Colonial knights
+ And ladies gentle-born.
+
+ Still green about its ample porch
+ The English ivy twines,
+ Trained back to show in English oak
+ The herald's carven signs.
+
+ And on her, from the wainscot old,
+ Ancestral faces frown,--
+ And this has worn the soldier's sword,
+ And that the judge's gown.
+
+ But, strong of will and proud as they,
+ She walks the gallery floor
+ As if she trod her sailor's deck
+ By stormy Labrador.
+
+ The sweetbrier blooms on Kittery-side,
+ And green are Elliot's bowers;
+ Her garden is the pebbled beach,
+ The mosses are her flowers.
+
+ She looks across the harbor-bar
+ To see the white gulls fly;
+ His greeting from the Northern sea
+ Is in their clanging cry.
+
+ She hums a song, and dreams that he,
+ As in its romance old,
+ Shall homeward ride with silken sails
+ And masts of beaten gold!
+
+ Oh, rank is good, and gold is fair,
+ And high and low mate ill;
+ But love has never known a law
+ Beyond its own sweet will!
+
+ 1862.
+
+
+
+
+THE COUNTESS.
+
+TO E. W.
+
+I inscribed this poem to Dr. Elias Weld of Haverhill, Massachusetts,
+to whose kindness I was much indebted in my boyhood. He was the one
+cultivated man in the neighborhood. His small but well-chosen library
+was placed at my disposal. He is the "wise old doctor" of Snow-Bound.
+Count Francois de Vipart with his cousin Joseph Rochemont de Poyen came
+to the United States in the early part of the present century. They took
+up their residence at Rocks Village on the Merrimac, where they both
+married. The wife of Count Vipart was Mary Ingalls, who as my father
+remembered her was a very lovely young girl. Her wedding dress, as
+described by a lady still living, was "pink satin with an overdress of
+white lace, and white satin slippers." She died in less than a year
+after her marriage. Her husband returned to his native country. He lies
+buried in the family tomb of the Viparts at Bordeaux.
+
+ I KNOW not, Time and Space so intervene,
+ Whether, still waiting with a trust serene,
+ Thou bearest up thy fourscore years and ten,
+ Or, called at last, art now Heaven's citizen;
+ But, here or there, a pleasant thought of thee,
+ Like an old friend, all day has been with me.
+ The shy, still boy, for whom thy kindly hand
+ Smoothed his hard pathway to the wonder-land
+ Of thought and fancy, in gray manhood yet
+ Keeps green the memory of his early debt.
+ To-day, when truth and falsehood speak their words
+ Through hot-lipped cannon and the teeth of swords,
+ Listening with quickened heart and ear intent
+ To each sharp clause of that stern argument,
+ I still can hear at times a softer note
+ Of the old pastoral music round me float,
+ While through the hot gleam of our civil strife
+ Looms the green mirage of a simpler life.
+ As, at his alien post, the sentinel
+ Drops the old bucket in the homestead well,
+ And hears old voices in the winds that toss
+ Above his head the live-oak's beard of moss,
+ So, in our trial-time, and under skies
+ Shadowed by swords like Islam's paradise,
+ I wait and watch, and let my fancy stray
+ To milder scenes and youth's Arcadian day;
+ And howsoe'er the pencil dipped in dreams
+ Shades the brown woods or tints the sunset streams,
+ The country doctor in the foreground seems,
+ Whose ancient sulky down the village lanes
+ Dragged, like a war-car, captive ills and pains.
+ I could not paint the scenery of my song,
+ Mindless of one who looked thereon so long;
+ Who, night and day, on duty's lonely round,
+ Made friends o' the woods and rocks, and knew the sound
+ Of each small brook, and what the hillside trees
+ Said to the winds that touched their leafy keys;
+ Who saw so keenly and so well could paint
+ The village-folk, with all their humors quaint,
+ The parson ambling on his wall-eyed roan.
+ Grave and erect, with white hair backward blown;
+ The tough old boatman, half amphibious grown;
+ The muttering witch-wife of the gossip's tale,
+ And the loud straggler levying his blackmail,--
+ Old customs, habits, superstitions, fears,
+ All that lies buried under fifty years.
+ To thee, as is most fit, I bring my lay,
+ And, grateful, own the debt I cannot pay.
+
+ . . . . . . . . . .
+
+ Over the wooded northern ridge,
+ Between its houses brown,
+ To the dark tunnel of the bridge
+ The street comes straggling down.
+
+ You catch a glimpse, through birch and pine,
+ Of gable, roof, and porch,
+ The tavern with its swinging sign,
+ The sharp horn of the church.
+
+ The river's steel-blue crescent curves
+ To meet, in ebb and flow,
+ The single broken wharf that serves
+ For sloop and gundelow.
+
+ With salt sea-scents along its shores
+ The heavy hay-boats crawl,
+ The long antennae of their oars
+ In lazy rise and fall.
+
+ Along the gray abutment's wall
+ The idle shad-net dries;
+ The toll-man in his cobbler's stall
+ Sits smoking with closed eyes.
+
+ You hear the pier's low undertone
+ Of waves that chafe and gnaw;
+ You start,--a skipper's horn is blown
+ To raise the creaking draw.
+
+ At times a blacksmith's anvil sounds
+ With slow and sluggard beat,
+ Or stage-coach on its dusty rounds
+ Fakes up the staring street.
+
+ A place for idle eyes and ears,
+ A cobwebbed nook of dreams;
+ Left by the stream whose waves are years
+ The stranded village seems.
+
+ And there, like other moss and rust,
+ The native dweller clings,
+ And keeps, in uninquiring trust,
+ The old, dull round of things.
+
+ The fisher drops his patient lines,
+ The farmer sows his grain,
+ Content to hear the murmuring pines
+ Instead of railroad-train.
+
+ Go where, along the tangled steep
+ That slopes against the west,
+ The hamlet's buried idlers sleep
+ In still profounder rest.
+
+ Throw back the locust's flowery plume,
+ The birch's pale-green scarf,
+ And break the web of brier and bloom
+ From name and epitaph.
+
+ A simple muster-roll of death,
+ Of pomp and romance shorn,
+ The dry, old names that common breath
+ Has cheapened and outworn.
+
+ Yet pause by one low mound, and part
+ The wild vines o'er it laced,
+ And read the words by rustic art
+ Upon its headstone traced.
+
+ Haply yon white-haired villager
+ Of fourscore years can say
+ What means the noble name of her
+ Who sleeps with common clay.
+
+ An exile from the Gascon land
+ Found refuge here and rest,
+ And loved, of all the village band,
+ Its fairest and its best.
+
+ He knelt with her on Sabbath morns,
+ He worshipped through her eyes,
+ And on the pride that doubts and scorns
+ Stole in her faith's surprise.
+
+ Her simple daily life he saw
+ By homeliest duties tried,
+ In all things by an untaught law
+ Of fitness justified.
+
+ For her his rank aside he laid;
+ He took the hue and tone
+ Of lowly life and toil, and made
+ Her simple ways his own.
+
+ Yet still, in gay and careless ease,
+ To harvest-field or dance
+ He brought the gentle courtesies,
+ The nameless grace of France.
+
+ And she who taught him love not less
+ From him she loved in turn
+ Caught in her sweet unconsciousness
+ What love is quick to learn.
+
+ Each grew to each in pleased accord,
+ Nor knew the gazing town
+ If she looked upward to her lord
+ Or he to her looked down.
+
+ How sweet, when summer's day was o'er,
+ His violin's mirth and wail,
+ The walk on pleasant Newbury's shore,
+ The river's moonlit sail!
+
+ Ah! life is brief, though love be long;
+ The altar and the bier,
+ The burial hymn and bridal song,
+ Were both in one short year!
+
+ Her rest is quiet on the hill,
+ Beneath the locust's bloom
+ Far off her lover sleeps as still
+ Within his scutcheoned tomb.
+
+ The Gascon lord, the village maid,
+ In death still clasp their hands;
+ The love that levels rank and grade
+ Unites their severed lands.
+
+ What matter whose the hillside grave,
+ Or whose the blazoned stone?
+ Forever to her western wave
+ Shall whisper blue Garonne!
+
+ O Love!--so hallowing every soil
+ That gives thy sweet flower room,
+ Wherever, nursed by ease or toil,
+ The human heart takes bloom!--
+
+ Plant of lost Eden, from the sod
+ Of sinful earth unriven,
+ White blossom of the trees of God
+ Dropped down to us from heaven!
+
+ This tangled waste of mound and stone
+ Is holy for thy sale;
+ A sweetness which is all thy own
+ Breathes out from fern and brake.
+
+ And while ancestral pride shall twine
+ The Gascon's tomb with flowers,
+ Fall sweetly here, O song of mine,
+ With summer's bloom and showers!
+
+ And let the lines that severed seem
+ Unite again in thee,
+ As western wave and Gallic stream
+ Are mingled in one sea!
+
+ 1863.
+
+
+
+
+AMONG THE HILLS
+
+This poem, when originally published, was dedicated to Annie Fields,
+wife of the distinguished publisher, James T. Fields, of Boston, in
+grateful acknowledgment of the strength and inspiration I have found in
+her friendship and sympathy. The poem in its first form was entitled The
+Wife: an Idyl of Bearcamp Water, and appeared in The Atlantic Monthly
+for January, 1868. When I published the volume Among the Hills, in
+December of the same year, I expanded the Prelude and filled out also
+the outlines of the story.
+
+
+ PRELUDE.
+
+ ALONG the roadside, like the flowers of gold
+ That tawny Incas for their gardens wrought,
+ Heavy with sunshine droops the golden-rod,
+ And the red pennons of the cardinal-flowers
+ Hang motionless upon their upright staves.
+ The sky is hot and hazy, and the wind,
+ Vying-weary with its long flight from the south,
+ Unfelt; yet, closely scanned, yon maple leaf
+ With faintest motion, as one stirs in dreams,
+ Confesses it. The locust by the wall
+ Stabs the noon-silence with his sharp alarm.
+ A single hay-cart down the dusty road
+ Creaks slowly, with its driver fast asleep
+ On the load's top. Against the neighboring hill,
+ Huddled along the stone wall's shady side,
+ The sheep show white, as if a snowdrift still
+ Defied the dog-star. Through the open door
+ A drowsy smell of flowers-gray heliotrope,
+ And white sweet clover, and shy mignonette--
+ Comes faintly in, and silent chorus lends
+ To the pervading symphony of peace.
+ No time is this for hands long over-worn
+ To task their strength; and (unto Him be praise
+ Who giveth quietness!) the stress and strain
+ Of years that did the work of centuries
+ Have ceased, and we can draw our breath once more
+ Freely and full. So, as yon harvesters
+ Make glad their nooning underneath the elms
+ With tale and riddle and old snatch of song,
+ I lay aside grave themes, and idly turn
+ The leaves of memory's sketch-book, dreaming o'er
+ Old summer pictures of the quiet hills,
+ And human life, as quiet, at their feet.
+
+ And yet not idly all. A farmer's son,
+ Proud of field-lore and harvest craft, and feeling
+ All their fine possibilities, how rich
+ And restful even poverty and toil
+ Become when beauty, harmony, and love
+ Sit at their humble hearth as angels sat
+ At evening in the patriarch's tent, when man
+ Makes labor noble, and his farmer's frock
+ The symbol of a Christian chivalry
+ Tender and just and generous to her
+ Who clothes with grace all duty; still, I know
+ Too well the picture has another side,--
+ How wearily the grind of toil goes on
+ Where love is wanting, how the eye and ear
+ And heart are starved amidst the plenitude
+ Of nature, and how hard and colorless
+ Is life without an atmosphere. I look
+ Across the lapse of half a century,
+ And call to mind old homesteads, where no flower
+ Told that the spring had come, but evil weeds,
+ Nightshade and rough-leaved burdock in the place
+ Of the sweet doorway greeting of the rose
+ And honeysuckle, where the house walls seemed
+ Blistering in sun, without a tree or vine
+ To cast the tremulous shadow of its leaves
+ Across the curtainless windows, from whose panes
+ Fluttered the signal rags of shiftlessness.
+ Within, the cluttered kitchen-floor, unwashed
+ (Broom-clean I think they called it); the best room
+ Stifling with cellar damp, shut from the air
+ In hot midsummer, bookless, pictureless,
+ Save the inevitable sampler hung
+ Over the fireplace, or a mourning piece,
+ A green-haired woman, peony-cheeked, beneath
+ Impossible willows; the wide-throated hearth
+ Bristling with faded pine-boughs half concealing
+ The piled-up rubbish at the chimney's back;
+ And, in sad keeping with all things about them,
+ Shrill, querulous-women, sour and sullen men,
+ Untidy, loveless, old before their time,
+ With scarce a human interest save their own
+ Monotonous round of small economies,
+ Or the poor scandal of the neighborhood;
+ Blind to the beauty everywhere revealed,
+ Treading the May-flowers with regardless feet;
+ For them the song-sparrow and the bobolink
+ Sang not, nor winds made music in the leaves;
+ For them in vain October's holocaust
+ Burned, gold and crimson, over all the hills,
+ The sacramental mystery of the woods.
+ Church-goers, fearful of the unseen Powers,
+ But grumbling over pulpit-tax and pew-rent,
+ Saving, as shrewd economists, their souls
+ And winter pork with the least possible outlay
+ Of salt and sanctity; in daily life
+ Showing as little actual comprehension
+ Of Christian charity and love and duty,
+ As if the Sermon on the Mount had been
+ Outdated like a last year's almanac
+ Rich in broad woodlands and in half-tilled fields,
+ And yet so pinched and bare and comfortless,
+ The veriest straggler limping on his rounds,
+ The sun and air his sole inheritance,
+ Laughed at a poverty that paid its taxes,
+ And hugged his rags in self-complacency!
+
+ Not such should be the homesteads of a land
+ Where whoso wisely wills and acts may dwell
+ As king and lawgiver, in broad-acred state,
+ With beauty, art, taste, culture, books, to make
+ His hour of leisure richer than a life
+ Of fourscore to the barons of old time,
+ Our yeoman should be equal to his home
+ Set in the fair, green valleys, purple walled,
+ A man to match his mountains, not to creep
+ Dwarfed and abased below them. I would fain
+ In this light way (of which I needs must own
+ With the knife-grinder of whom Canning sings,
+ "Story, God bless you! I have none to tell you!")
+ Invite the eye to see and heart to feel
+ The beauty and the joy within their reach,--
+ Home, and home loves, and the beatitudes
+ Of nature free to all. Haply in years
+ That wait to take the places of our own,
+ Heard where some breezy balcony looks down
+ On happy homes, or where the lake in the moon
+ Sleeps dreaming of the mountains, fair as Ruth,
+ In the old Hebrew pastoral, at the feet
+ Of Boaz, even this simple lay of mine
+ May seem the burden of a prophecy,
+ Finding its late fulfilment in a change
+ Slow as the oak's growth, lifting manhood up
+ Through broader culture, finer manners, love,
+ And reverence, to the level of the hills.
+
+ O Golden Age, whose light is of the dawn,
+ And not of sunset, forward, not behind,
+ Flood the new heavens and earth, and with thee bring
+ All the old virtues, whatsoever things
+ Are pure and honest and of good repute,
+ But add thereto whatever bard has sung
+ Or seer has told of when in trance and dream
+ They saw the Happy Isles of prophecy
+ Let Justice hold her scale, and Truth divide
+ Between the right and wrong; but give the heart
+ The freedom of its fair inheritance;
+ Let the poor prisoner, cramped and starved so long,
+ At Nature's table feast his ear and eye
+ With joy and wonder; let all harmonies
+ Of sound, form, color, motion, wait upon
+ The princely guest, whether in soft attire
+ Of leisure clad, or the coarse frock of toil,
+ And, lending life to the dead form of faith,
+ Give human nature reverence for the sake
+ Of One who bore it, making it divine
+ With the ineffable tenderness of God;
+ Let common need, the brotherhood of prayer,
+ The heirship of an unknown destiny,
+ The unsolved mystery round about us, make
+ A man more precious than the gold of Ophir.
+ Sacred, inviolate, unto whom all things
+ Should minister, as outward types and signs
+ Of the eternal beauty which fulfils
+ The one great purpose of creation, Love,
+ The sole necessity of Earth and Heaven!
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+ For weeks the clouds had raked the hills
+ And vexed the vales with raining,
+ And all the woods were sad with mist,
+ And all the brooks complaining.
+
+ At last, a sudden night-storm tore
+ The mountain veils asunder,
+ And swept the valleys clean before
+ The besom of the thunder.
+
+ Through Sandwich notch the west-wind sang
+ Good morrow to the cotter;
+ And once again Chocorua's horn
+ Of shadow pierced the water.
+
+ Above his broad lake Ossipee,
+ Once more the sunshine wearing,
+ Stooped, tracing on that silver shield
+ His grim armorial bearing.
+
+ Clear drawn against the hard blue sky,
+ The peaks had winter's keenness;
+ And, close on autumn's frost, the vales
+ Had more than June's fresh greenness.
+
+ Again the sodden forest floors
+ With golden lights were checkered,
+ Once more rejoicing leaves in wind
+ And sunshine danced and flickered.
+
+ It was as if the summer's late
+ Atoning for it's sadness
+ Had borrowed every season's charm
+ To end its days in gladness.
+
+ Rivers of gold-mist flowing down
+ From far celestial fountains,--
+ The great sun flaming through the rifts
+ Beyond the wall of mountains.
+
+ We paused at last where home-bound cows
+ Brought down the pasture's treasure,
+ And in the barn the rhythmic flails
+ Beat out a harvest measure.
+
+ We heard the night-hawk's sullen plunge,
+ The crow his tree-mates calling
+ The shadows lengthening down the slopes
+ About our feet were falling.
+
+ And through them smote the level sun
+ In broken lines of splendor,
+ Touched the gray rocks and made the green
+ Of the shorn grass more tender.
+
+ The maples bending o'er the gate,
+ Their arch of leaves just tinted
+ With yellow warmth, the golden glow
+ Of coming autumn hinted.
+
+ Keen white between the farm-house showed,
+ And smiled on porch and trellis,
+ The fair democracy of flowers
+ That equals cot and palace.
+
+ And weaving garlands for her dog,
+ 'Twixt chidings and caresses,
+ A human flower of childhood shook
+ The sunshine from her tresses.
+
+ Clear drawn against the hard blue sky,
+ The peaks had winter's keenness;
+ And, close on autumn's frost, the vales
+ Had more than June's fresh greenness.
+
+ Again the sodden forest floors
+ With golden lights were checkered,
+ Once more rejoicing leaves in wind
+ And sunshine danced and flickered.
+
+ It was as if the summer's late
+ Atoning for it's sadness
+ Had borrowed every season's charm
+ To end its days in gladness.
+
+ I call to mind those banded vales
+ Of shadow and of shining,
+ Through which, my hostess at my side,
+ I drove in day's declining.
+
+ We held our sideling way above
+ The river's whitening shallows,
+ By homesteads old, with wide-flung barns
+ Swept through and through by swallows;
+
+ By maple orchards, belts of pine
+ And larches climbing darkly
+ The mountain slopes, and, over all,
+ The great peaks rising starkly.
+
+ You should have seen that long hill-range
+ With gaps of brightness riven,--
+ How through each pass and hollow streamed
+ The purpling lights of heaven,--
+
+ On either hand we saw the signs
+ Of fancy and of shrewdness,
+ Where taste had wound its arms of vines
+ Round thrift's uncomely rudeness.
+
+ The sun-brown farmer in his frock
+ Shook hands, and called to Mary
+ Bare-armed, as Juno might, she came,
+ White-aproned from her dairy.
+
+ Her air, her smile, her motions, told
+ Of womanly completeness;
+ A music as of household songs
+ Was in her voice of sweetness.
+
+ Not fair alone in curve and line,
+ But something more and better,
+ The secret charm eluding art,
+ Its spirit, not its letter;--
+
+ An inborn grace that nothing lacked
+ Of culture or appliance,
+ The warmth of genial courtesy,
+ The calm of self-reliance.
+
+ Before her queenly womanhood
+ How dared our hostess utter
+ The paltry errand of her need
+ To buy her fresh-churned butter?
+
+ She led the way with housewife pride,
+ Her goodly store disclosing,
+ Full tenderly the golden balls
+ With practised hands disposing.
+
+ Then, while along the western hills
+ We watched the changeful glory
+ Of sunset, on our homeward way,
+ I heard her simple story.
+
+ The early crickets sang; the stream
+ Plashed through my friend's narration
+ Her rustic patois of the hills
+ Lost in my free-translation.
+
+ "More wise," she said, "than those who swarm
+ Our hills in middle summer,
+ She came, when June's first roses blow,
+ To greet the early comer.
+
+ "From school and ball and rout she came,
+ The city's fair, pale daughter,
+ To drink the wine of mountain air
+ Beside the Bearcamp Water.
+
+ "Her step grew firmer on the hills
+ That watch our homesteads over;
+ On cheek and lip, from summer fields,
+ She caught the bloom of clover.
+
+ "For health comes sparkling in the streams
+ From cool Chocorua stealing
+ There's iron in our Northern winds;
+ Our pines are trees of healing.
+
+ "She sat beneath the broad-armed elms
+ That skirt the mowing-meadow,
+ And watched the gentle west-wind weave
+ The grass with shine and shadow.
+
+ "Beside her, from the summer heat
+ To share her grateful screening,
+ With forehead bared, the farmer stood,
+ Upon his pitchfork leaning.
+
+ "Framed in its damp, dark locks, his face
+ Had nothing mean or common,--
+ Strong, manly, true, the tenderness
+ And pride beloved of woman.
+
+ "She looked up, glowing with the health
+ The country air had brought her,
+ And, laughing, said: 'You lack a wife,
+ Your mother lacks a daughter.
+
+ "'To mend your frock and bake your bread
+ You do not need a lady
+ Be sure among these brown old homes
+ Is some one waiting ready,--
+
+ "'Some fair, sweet girl with skilful hand
+ And cheerful heart for treasure,
+ Who never played with ivory keys,
+ Or danced the polka's measure.'
+
+ "He bent his black brows to a frown,
+ He set his white teeth tightly.
+ ''T is well,' he said, 'for one like you
+ To choose for me so lightly.
+
+ "You think, because my life is rude
+ I take no note of sweetness
+ I tell you love has naught to do
+ With meetness or unmeetness.
+
+ "'Itself its best excuse, it asks
+ No leave of pride or fashion
+ When silken zone or homespun frock
+ It stirs with throbs of passion.
+
+ "'You think me deaf and blind: you bring
+ Your winning graces hither
+ As free as if from cradle-time
+ We two had played together.
+
+ "'You tempt me with your laughing eyes,
+ Your cheek of sundown's blushes,
+ A motion as of waving grain,
+ A music as of thrushes.
+
+ "'The plaything of your summer sport,
+ The spells you weave around me
+ You cannot at your will undo,
+ Nor leave me as you found me.
+
+ "'You go as lightly as you came,
+ Your life is well without me;
+ What care you that these hills will close
+ Like prison-walls about me?
+
+ "'No mood is mine to seek a wife,
+ Or daughter for my mother
+ Who loves you loses in that love
+ All power to love another!
+
+ "'I dare your pity or your scorn,
+ With pride your own exceeding;
+ I fling my heart into your lap
+ Without a word of pleading.'
+
+ "She looked up in his face of pain
+ So archly, yet so tender
+ 'And if I lend you mine,' she said,
+ 'Will you forgive the lender?
+
+ "'Nor frock nor tan can hide the man;
+ And see you not, my farmer,
+ How weak and fond a woman waits
+ Behind this silken armor?
+
+ "'I love you: on that love alone,
+ And not my worth, presuming,
+ Will you not trust for summer fruit
+ The tree in May-day blooming?'
+
+ "Alone the hangbird overhead,
+ His hair-swung cradle straining,
+ Looked down to see love's miracle,--
+ The giving that is gaining.
+
+ "And so the farmer found a wife,
+ His mother found a daughter
+ There looks no happier home than hers
+ On pleasant Bearcamp Water.
+
+ "Flowers spring to blossom where she walks
+ The careful ways of duty;
+ Our hard, stiff lines of life with her
+ Are flowing curves of beauty.
+
+ "Our homes are cheerier for her sake,
+ Our door-yards brighter blooming,
+ And all about the social air
+ Is sweeter for her coming.
+
+ "Unspoken homilies of peace
+ Her daily life is preaching;
+ The still refreshment of the dew
+ Is her unconscious teaching.
+
+ "And never tenderer hand than hers
+ Unknits the brow of ailing;
+ Her garments to the sick man's ear
+ Have music in their trailing.
+
+ "And when, in pleasant harvest moons,
+ The youthful huskers gather,
+ Or sleigh-drives on the mountain ways
+ Defy the winter weather,--
+
+ "In sugar-camps, when south and warm
+ The winds of March are blowing,
+ And sweetly from its thawing veins
+ The maple's blood is flowing,--
+
+ "In summer, where some lilied pond
+ Its virgin zone is baring,
+ Or where the ruddy autumn fire
+ Lights up the apple-paring,--
+
+ "The coarseness of a ruder time
+ Her finer mirth displaces,
+ A subtler sense of pleasure fills
+ Each rustic sport she graces.
+
+ "Her presence lends its warmth and health
+ To all who come before it.
+ If woman lost us Eden, such
+ As she alone restore it.
+
+ "For larger life and wiser aims
+ The farmer is her debtor;
+ Who holds to his another's heart
+ Must needs be worse or better.
+
+ "Through her his civic service shows
+ A purer-toned ambition;
+ No double consciousness divides
+ The man and politician.
+
+ "In party's doubtful ways he trusts
+ Her instincts to determine;
+ At the loud polls, the thought of her
+ Recalls Christ's Mountain Sermon.
+
+ "He owns her logic of the heart,
+ And wisdom of unreason,
+ Supplying, while he doubts and weighs,
+ The needed word in season.
+
+ "He sees with pride her richer thought,
+ Her fancy's freer ranges;
+ And love thus deepened to respect
+ Is proof against all changes.
+
+ "And if she walks at ease in ways
+ His feet are slow to travel,
+ And if she reads with cultured eyes
+ What his may scarce unravel,
+
+ "Still clearer, for her keener sight
+ Of beauty and of wonder,
+ He learns the meaning of the hills
+ He dwelt from childhood under.
+
+ "And higher, warmed with summer lights,
+ Or winter-crowned and hoary,
+ The ridged horizon lifts for him
+ Its inner veils of glory.
+
+ "He has his own free, bookless lore,
+ The lessons nature taught him,
+ The wisdom which the woods and hills
+ And toiling men have brought him:
+
+ "The steady force of will whereby
+ Her flexile grace seems sweeter;
+ The sturdy counterpoise which makes
+ Her woman's life completer.
+
+ "A latent fire of soul which lacks
+ No breath of love to fan it;
+ And wit, that, like his native brooks,
+ Plays over solid granite.
+
+ "How dwarfed against his manliness
+ She sees the poor pretension,
+ The wants, the aims, the follies, born
+ Of fashion and convention.
+
+ "How life behind its accidents
+ Stands strong and self-sustaining,
+ The human fact transcending all
+ The losing and the gaining.
+
+ "And so in grateful interchange
+ Of teacher and of hearer,
+ Their lives their true distinctness keep
+ While daily drawing nearer.
+
+ "And if the husband or the wife
+ In home's strong light discovers
+ Such slight defaults as failed to meet
+ The blinded eyes of lovers,
+
+ "Why need we care to ask?--who dreams
+ Without their thorns of roses,
+ Or wonders that the truest steel
+ The readiest spark discloses?
+
+ "For still in mutual sufferance lies
+ The secret of true living;
+ Love scarce is love that never knows
+ The sweetness of forgiving.
+
+ "We send the Squire to General Court,
+ He takes his young wife thither;
+ No prouder man election day
+ Rides through the sweet June weather.
+
+ "He sees with eyes of manly trust
+ All hearts to her inclining;
+ Not less for him his household light
+ That others share its shining."
+
+ Thus, while my hostess spake, there grew
+ Before me, warmer tinted
+ And outlined with a tenderer grace,
+ The picture that she hinted.
+
+ The sunset smouldered as we drove
+ Beneath the deep hill-shadows.
+ Below us wreaths of white fog walked
+ Like ghosts the haunted meadows.
+
+ Sounding the summer night, the stars
+ Dropped down their golden plummets;
+ The pale arc of the Northern lights
+ Rose o'er the mountain summits,
+
+ Until, at last, beneath its bridge,
+ We heard the Bearcamp flowing,
+ And saw across the mapled lawn
+ The welcome home lights glowing.
+
+ And, musing on the tale I heard,
+ 'T were well, thought I, if often
+ To rugged farm-life came the gift
+ To harmonize and soften;
+
+ If more and more we found the troth
+ Of fact and fancy plighted,
+ And culture's charm and labor's strength
+ In rural homes united,--
+
+ The simple life, the homely hearth,
+ With beauty's sphere surrounding,
+ And blessing toil where toil abounds
+ With graces more abounding.
+
+ 1868.
+
+
+
+
+THE DOLE OF JARL THORKELL.
+
+ THE land was pale with famine
+ And racked with fever-pain;
+ The frozen fiords were fishless,
+ The earth withheld her grain.
+
+ Men saw the boding Fylgja
+ Before them come and go,
+ And, through their dreams, the Urdarmoon
+ From west to east sailed slow.
+
+ Jarl Thorkell of Thevera
+ At Yule-time made his vow;
+ On Rykdal's holy Doom-stone
+ He slew to Frey his cow.
+
+ To bounteous Frey he slew her;
+ To Skuld, the younger Norn,
+ Who watches over birth and death,
+ He gave her calf unborn.
+
+ And his little gold-haired daughter
+ Took up the sprinkling-rod,
+ And smeared with blood the temple
+ And the wide lips of the god.
+
+ Hoarse below, the winter water
+ Ground its ice-blocks o'er and o'er;
+ Jets of foam, like ghosts of dead waves,
+ Rose and fell along the shore.
+
+ The red torch of the Jokul,
+ Aloft in icy space,
+ Shone down on the bloody Horg-stones
+ And the statue's carven face.
+
+ And closer round and grimmer
+ Beneath its baleful light
+ The Jotun shapes of mountains
+ Came crowding through the night.
+
+ The gray-haired Hersir trembled
+ As a flame by wind is blown;
+ A weird power moved his white lips,
+ And their voice was not his own.
+
+ "The AEsir thirst!" he muttered;
+ "The gods must have more blood
+ Before the tun shall blossom
+ Or fish shall fill the flood.
+
+ "The AEsir thirst and hunger,
+ And hence our blight and ban;
+ The mouths of the strong gods water
+ For the flesh and blood of man!
+
+ "Whom shall we give the strong ones?
+ Not warriors, sword on thigh;
+ But let the nursling infant
+ And bedrid old man die."
+
+ "So be it!" cried the young men,
+ "There needs nor doubt nor parle."
+ But, knitting hard his red brows,
+ In silence stood the Jarl.
+
+ A sound of woman's weeping
+ At the temple door was heard,
+ But the old men bowed their white heads,
+ And answered not a word.
+
+ Then the Dream-wife of Thingvalla,
+ A Vala young and fair,
+ Sang softly, stirring with her breath
+ The veil of her loose hair.
+
+ She sang: "The winds from Alfheim
+ Bring never sound of strife;
+ The gifts for Frey the meetest
+ Are not of death, but life.
+
+ "He loves the grass-green meadows,
+ The grazing kine's sweet breath;
+ He loathes your bloody Horg-stones,
+ Your gifts that smell of death.
+
+ "No wrong by wrong is righted,
+ No pain is cured by pain;
+ The blood that smokes from Doom-rings
+ Falls back in redder rain.
+
+ "The gods are what you make them,
+ As earth shall Asgard prove;
+ And hate will come of hating,
+ And love will come of love.
+
+ "Make dole of skyr and black bread
+ That old and young may live;
+ And look to Frey for favor
+ When first like Frey you give.
+
+ "Even now o'er Njord's sea-meadows
+ The summer dawn begins
+ The tun shall have its harvest,
+ The fiord its glancing fins."
+
+ Then up and swore Jarl Thorkell
+ "By Gimli and by Hel,
+ O Vala of Thingvalla,
+ Thou singest wise and well!
+
+ "Too dear the AEsir's favors
+ Bought with our children's lives;
+ Better die than shame in living
+ Our mothers and our wives.
+
+ "The full shall give his portion
+ To him who hath most need;
+ Of curdled skyr and black bread,
+ Be daily dole decreed."
+
+ He broke from off his neck-chain
+ Three links of beaten gold;
+ And each man, at his bidding,
+ Brought gifts for young and old.
+
+ Then mothers nursed their children,
+ And daughters fed their sires,
+ And Health sat down with Plenty
+ Before the next Yule fires.
+
+ The Horg-stones stand in Rykdal;
+ The Doom-ring still remains;
+ But the snows of a thousand winters
+ Have washed away the stains.
+
+ Christ ruleth now; the Asir
+ Have found their twilight dim;
+ And, wiser than she dreamed, of old
+ The Vala sang of Him
+
+ 1868.
+
+
+
+
+THE TWO RABBINS.
+
+ THE Rabbi Nathan two-score years and ten
+ Walked blameless through the evil world, and then,
+ Just as the almond blossomed in his hair,
+ Met a temptation all too strong to bear,
+ And miserably sinned. So, adding not
+ Falsehood to guilt, he left his seat, and taught
+ No more among the elders, but went out
+ From the great congregation girt about
+ With sackcloth, and with ashes on his head,
+ Making his gray locks grayer. Long he prayed,
+ Smiting his breast; then, as the Book he laid
+ Open before him for the Bath-Col's choice,
+ Pausing to hear that Daughter of a Voice,
+ Behold the royal preacher's words: "A friend
+ Loveth at all times, yea, unto the end;
+ And for the evil day thy brother lives."
+ Marvelling, he said: "It is the Lord who gives
+ Counsel in need. At Ecbatana dwells
+ Rabbi Ben Isaac, who all men excels
+ In righteousness and wisdom, as the trees
+ Of Lebanon the small weeds that the bees
+ Bow with their weight. I will arise, and lay
+ My sins before him."
+
+ And he went his way
+ Barefooted, fasting long, with many prayers;
+ But even as one who, followed unawares,
+ Suddenly in the darkness feels a hand
+ Thrill with its touch his own, and his cheek fanned
+ By odors subtly sweet, and whispers near
+ Of words he loathes, yet cannot choose but hear,
+ So, while the Rabbi journeyed, chanting low
+ The wail of David's penitential woe,
+ Before him still the old temptation came,
+ And mocked him with the motion and the shame
+ Of such desires that, shuddering, he abhorred
+ Himself; and, crying mightily to the Lord
+ To free his soul and cast the demon out,
+ Smote with his staff the blankness round about.
+
+ At length, in the low light of a spent day,
+ The towers of Ecbatana far away
+ Rose on the desert's rim; and Nathan, faint
+ And footsore, pausing where for some dead saint
+ The faith of Islam reared a domed tomb,
+ Saw some one kneeling in the shadow, whom
+ He greeted kindly: "May the Holy One
+ Answer thy prayers, O stranger!" Whereupon
+ The shape stood up with a loud cry, and then,
+ Clasped in each other's arms, the two gray men
+ Wept, praising Him whose gracious providence
+ Made their paths one. But straightway, as the sense
+ Of his transgression smote him, Nathan tore
+ Himself away: "O friend beloved, no more
+ Worthy am I to touch thee, for I came,
+ Foul from my sins, to tell thee all my shame.
+ Haply thy prayers, since naught availeth mine,
+ May purge my soul, and make it white like thine.
+ Pity me, O Ben Isaac, I have sinned!"
+
+ Awestruck Ben Isaac stood. The desert wind
+ Blew his long mantle backward, laying bare
+ The mournful secret of his shirt of hair.
+ "I too, O friend, if not in act," he said,
+ "In thought have verily sinned. Hast thou not read,
+ 'Better the eye should see than that desire
+ Should wander?' Burning with a hidden fire
+ That tears and prayers quench not, I come to thee
+ For pity and for help, as thou to me.
+ Pray for me, O my friend!" But Nathan cried,
+ "Pray thou for me, Ben Isaac!"
+
+ Side by side
+ In the low sunshine by the turban stone
+ They knelt; each made his brother's woe his own,
+ Forgetting, in the agony and stress
+ Of pitying love, his claim of selfishness;
+ Peace, for his friend besought, his own became;
+ His prayers were answered in another's name;
+ And, when at last they rose up to embrace,
+ Each saw God's pardon in his brother's face!
+
+ Long after, when his headstone gathered moss,
+ Traced on the targum-marge of Onkelos
+ In Rabbi Nathan's hand these words were read:
+ "_Hope not the cure of sin till Self is dead;
+ Forget it in love's service, and the debt
+ Thou, canst not pay the angels shall forget;
+ Heaven's gate is shut to him who comes alone;
+ Save thou a soul, and it shall save thy own!_"
+
+ 1868.
+
+
+
+
+NOREMBEGA.
+
+Norembega, or Norimbegue, is the name given by early French fishermen
+and explorers to a fabulous country south of Cape Breton, first
+discovered by Verrazzani in 1524. It was supposed to have a magnificent
+city of the same name on a great river, probably the Penobscot. The site
+of this barbaric city is laid down on a map published at Antwerp in
+1570. In 1604 Champlain sailed in search of the Northern Eldorado,
+twenty-two leagues up the Penobscot from the Isle Haute. He supposed the
+river to be that of Norembega, but wisely came to the conclusion that
+those travellers who told of the great city had never seen it. He saw no
+evidences of anything like civilization, but mentions the finding of a
+cross, very old and mossy, in the woods.
+
+ THE winding way the serpent takes
+ The mystic water took,
+ From where, to count its beaded lakes,
+ The forest sped its brook.
+
+ A narrow space 'twixt shore and shore,
+ For sun or stars to fall,
+ While evermore, behind, before,
+ Closed in the forest wall.
+
+ The dim wood hiding underneath
+ Wan flowers without a name;
+ Life tangled with decay and death,
+ League after league the same.
+
+ Unbroken over swamp and hill
+ The rounding shadow lay,
+ Save where the river cut at will
+ A pathway to the day.
+
+ Beside that track of air and light,
+ Weak as a child unweaned,
+ At shut of day a Christian knight
+ Upon his henchman leaned.
+
+ The embers of the sunset's fires
+ Along the clouds burned down;
+ "I see," he said, "the domes and spires
+ Of Norembega town."
+
+ "Alack! the domes, O master mine,
+ Are golden clouds on high;
+ Yon spire is but the branchless pine
+ That cuts the evening sky."
+
+ "Oh, hush and hark! What sounds are these
+ But chants and holy hymns?"
+ "Thou hear'st the breeze that stirs the trees
+ Though all their leafy limbs."
+
+ "Is it a chapel bell that fills
+ The air with its low tone?"
+ "Thou hear'st the tinkle of the rills,
+ The insect's vesper drone."
+
+ "The Christ be praised!--He sets for me
+ A blessed cross in sight!"
+ "Now, nay, 't is but yon blasted tree
+ With two gaunt arms outright!"
+
+ "Be it wind so sad or tree so stark,
+ It mattereth not, my knave;
+ Methinks to funeral hymns I hark,
+ The cross is for my grave!
+
+ "My life is sped; I shall not see
+ My home-set sails again;
+ The sweetest eyes of Normandie
+ Shall watch for me in vain.
+
+ "Yet onward still to ear and eye
+ The baffling marvel calls;
+ I fain would look before I die
+ On Norembega's walls.
+
+ "So, haply, it shall be thy part
+ At Christian feet to lay
+ The mystery of the desert's heart
+ My dead hand plucked away.
+
+ "Leave me an hour of rest; go thou
+ And look from yonder heights;
+ Perchance the valley even now
+ Is starred with city lights."
+
+ The henchman climbed the nearest hill,
+ He saw nor tower nor town,
+ But, through the drear woods, lone and still,
+ The river rolling down.
+
+ He heard the stealthy feet of things
+ Whose shapes he could not see,
+ A flutter as of evil wings,
+ The fall of a dead tree.
+
+ The pines stood black against the moon,
+ A sword of fire beyond;
+ He heard the wolf howl, and the loon
+ Laugh from his reedy pond.
+
+ He turned him back: "O master dear,
+ We are but men misled;
+ And thou hast sought a city here
+ To find a grave instead."
+
+ "As God shall will! what matters where
+ A true man's cross may stand,
+ So Heaven be o'er it here as there
+ In pleasant Norman land?
+
+ "These woods, perchance, no secret hide
+ Of lordly tower and hall;
+ Yon river in its wanderings wide
+ Has washed no city wall;
+
+ "Yet mirrored in the sullen stream
+ The holy stars are given
+ Is Norembega, then, a dream
+ Whose waking is in Heaven?
+
+ "No builded wonder of these lands
+ My weary eyes shall see;
+ A city never made with hands
+ Alone awaiteth me--
+
+ "'_Urbs Syon mystica_;' I see
+ Its mansions passing fair,
+ '_Condita caelo_;' let me be,
+ Dear Lord, a dweller there!"
+
+ Above the dying exile hung
+ The vision of the bard,
+ As faltered on his failing tongue
+ The song of good Bernard.
+
+ The henchman dug at dawn a grave
+ Beneath the hemlocks brown,
+ And to the desert's keeping gave
+ The lord of fief and town.
+
+ Years after, when the Sieur Champlain
+ Sailed up the unknown stream,
+ And Norembega proved again
+ A shadow and a dream,
+
+ He found the Norman's nameless grave
+ Within the hemlock's shade,
+ And, stretching wide its arms to save,
+ The sign that God had made,
+
+ The cross-boughed tree that marked the spot
+ And made it holy ground
+ He needs the earthly city not
+ Who hath the heavenly found.
+
+ 1869.
+
+
+
+
+MIRIAM.
+
+TO FREDERICK A. P. BARNARD.
+
+ THE years are many since, in youth and hope,
+ Under the Charter Oak, our horoscope
+ We drew thick-studded with all favoring stars.
+ Now, with gray beards, and faces seamed with scars
+ From life's hard battle, meeting once again,
+ We smile, half sadly, over dreams so vain;
+ Knowing, at last, that it is not in man
+ Who walketh to direct his steps, or plan
+ His permanent house of life. Alike we loved
+ The muses' haunts, and all our fancies moved
+ To measures of old song. How since that day
+ Our feet have parted from the path that lay
+ So fair before us! Rich, from lifelong search
+ Of truth, within thy Academic porch
+ Thou sittest now, lord of a realm of fact,
+ Thy servitors the sciences exact;
+ Still listening with thy hand on Nature's keys,
+ To hear the Samian's spheral harmonies
+ And rhythm of law. I called from dream and song,
+ Thank God! so early to a strife so long,
+ That, ere it closed, the black, abundant hair
+ Of boyhood rested silver-sown and spare
+ On manhood's temples, now at sunset-chime
+ Tread with fond feet the path of morning time.
+ And if perchance too late I linger where
+ The flowers have ceased to blow, and trees are bare,
+ Thou, wiser in thy choice, wilt scarcely blame
+ The friend who shields his folly with thy name.
+ AMESBURY, 10th mo., 1870.
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+ One Sabbath day my friend and I
+ After the meeting, quietly
+ Passed from the crowded village lanes,
+ White with dry dust for lack of rains,
+ And climbed the neighboring slope, with feet
+ Slackened and heavy from the heat,
+ Although the day was wellnigh done,
+ And the low angle of the sun
+ Along the naked hillside cast
+ Our shadows as of giants vast.
+ We reached, at length, the topmost swell,
+ Whence, either way, the green turf fell
+ In terraces of nature down
+ To fruit-hung orchards, and the town
+ With white, pretenceless houses, tall
+ Church-steeples, and, o'ershadowing all,
+ Huge mills whose windows had the look
+ Of eager eyes that ill could brook
+ The Sabbath rest. We traced the track
+ Of the sea-seeking river back,
+ Glistening for miles above its mouth,
+ Through the long valley to the south,
+ And, looking eastward, cool to view,
+ Stretched the illimitable blue
+ Of ocean, from its curved coast-line;
+ Sombred and still, the warm sunshine
+ Filled with pale gold-dust all the reach
+ Of slumberous woods from hill to beach,--
+ Slanted on walls of thronged retreats
+ From city toil and dusty streets,
+ On grassy bluff, and dune of sand,
+ And rocky islands miles from land;
+ Touched the far-glancing sails, and showed
+ White lines of foam where long waves flowed
+ Dumb in the distance. In the north,
+ Dim through their misty hair, looked forth
+ The space-dwarfed mountains to the sea,
+ From mystery to mystery!
+
+ So, sitting on that green hill-slope,
+ We talked of human life, its hope
+ And fear, and unsolved doubts, and what
+ It might have been, and yet was not.
+ And, when at last the evening air
+ Grew sweeter for the bells of prayer
+ Ringing in steeples far below,
+ We watched the people churchward go,
+ Each to his place, as if thereon
+ The true shekinah only shone;
+ And my friend queried how it came
+ To pass that they who owned the same
+ Great Master still could not agree
+ To worship Him in company.
+ Then, broadening in his thought, he ran
+ Over the whole vast field of man,--
+ The varying forms of faith and creed
+ That somehow served the holders' need;
+ In which, unquestioned, undenied,
+ Uncounted millions lived and died;
+ The bibles of the ancient folk,
+ Through which the heart of nations spoke;
+ The old moralities which lent
+ To home its sweetness and content,
+ And rendered possible to bear
+ The life of peoples everywhere
+ And asked if we, who boast of light,
+ Claim not a too exclusive right
+ To truths which must for all be meant,
+ Like rain and sunshine freely sent.
+ In bondage to the letter still,
+ We give it power to cramp and kill,--
+ To tax God's fulness with a scheme
+ Narrower than Peter's house-top dream,
+ His wisdom and his love with plans
+ Poor and inadequate as man's.
+ It must be that He witnesses
+ Somehow to all men that He is
+ That something of His saving grace
+ Reaches the lowest of the race,
+ Who, through strange creed and rite, may draw
+ The hints of a diviner law.
+ We walk in clearer light;--but then,
+ Is He not God?--are they not men?
+ Are His responsibilities
+ For us alone and not for these?
+
+ And I made answer: "Truth is one;
+ And, in all lands beneath the sun,
+ Whoso hath eyes to see may see
+ The tokens of its unity.
+ No scroll of creed its fulness wraps,
+ We trace it not by school-boy maps,
+ Free as the sun and air it is
+ Of latitudes and boundaries.
+ In Vedic verse, in dull Koran,
+ Are messages of good to man;
+ The angels to our Aryan sires
+ Talked by the earliest household fires;
+ The prophets of the elder day,
+ The slant-eyed sages of Cathay,
+ Read not the riddle all amiss
+ Of higher life evolved from this.
+
+ "Nor doth it lessen what He taught,
+ Or make the gospel Jesus brought
+ Less precious, that His lips retold
+ Some portion of that truth of old;
+ Denying not the proven seers,
+ The tested wisdom of the years;
+ Confirming with his own impress
+ The common law of righteousness.
+ We search the world for truth; we cull
+ The good, the pure, the beautiful,
+ From graven stone and written scroll,
+ From all old flower-fields of the soul;
+ And, weary seekers of the best,
+ We come back laden from our quest,
+ To find that all the sages said
+ Is in the Book our mothers read,
+ And all our treasure of old thought
+ In His harmonious fulness wrought
+ Who gathers in one sheaf complete
+ The scattered blades of God's sown wheat,
+ The common growth that maketh good
+ His all-embracing Fatherhood.
+
+ "Wherever through the ages rise
+ The altars of self-sacrifice,
+ Where love its arms has opened wide,
+ Or man for man has calmly died,
+ I see the same white wings outspread
+ That hovered o'er the Master's head!
+ Up from undated time they come,
+ The martyr souls of heathendom,
+ And to His cross and passion bring
+ Their fellowship of suffering.
+ I trace His presence in the blind
+ Pathetic gropings of my kind,--
+ In prayers from sin and sorrow wrung,
+ In cradle-hymns of life they sung,
+ Each, in its measure, but a part
+ Of the unmeasured Over-Heart;
+ And with a stronger faith confess
+ The greater that it owns the less.
+ Good cause it is for thankfulness
+ That the world-blessing of His life
+ With the long past is not at strife;
+ That the great marvel of His death
+ To the one order witnesseth,
+ No doubt of changeless goodness wakes,
+ No link of cause and sequence breaks,
+ But, one with nature, rooted is
+ In the eternal verities;
+ Whereby, while differing in degree
+ As finite from infinity,
+ The pain and loss for others borne,
+ Love's crown of suffering meekly worn,
+ The life man giveth for his friend
+ Become vicarious in the end;
+ Their healing place in nature take,
+ And make life sweeter for their sake.
+
+ "So welcome I from every source
+ The tokens of that primal Force,
+ Older than heaven itself, yet new
+ As the young heart it reaches to,
+ Beneath whose steady impulse rolls
+ The tidal wave of human souls;
+ Guide, comforter, and inward word,
+ The eternal spirit of the Lord
+ Nor fear I aught that science brings
+ From searching through material things;
+ Content to let its glasses prove,
+ Not by the letter's oldness move,
+ The myriad worlds on worlds that course
+ The spaces of the universe;
+ Since everywhere the Spirit walks
+ The garden of the heart, and talks
+ With man, as under Eden's trees,
+ In all his varied languages.
+ Why mourn above some hopeless flaw
+ In the stone tables of the law,
+ When scripture every day afresh
+ Is traced on tablets of the flesh?
+ By inward sense, by outward signs,
+ God's presence still the heart divines;
+ Through deepest joy of Him we learn,
+ In sorest grief to Him we turn,
+ And reason stoops its pride to share
+ The child-like instinct of a prayer."
+
+ And then, as is my wont, I told
+ A story of the days of old,
+ Not found in printed books,--in sooth,
+ A fancy, with slight hint of truth,
+ Showing how differing faiths agree
+ In one sweet law of charity.
+ Meanwhile the sky had golden grown,
+ Our faces in its glory shone;
+ But shadows down the valley swept,
+ And gray below the ocean slept,
+ As time and space I wandered o'er
+ To tread the Mogul's marble floor,
+ And see a fairer sunset fall
+ On Jumna's wave and Agra's wall.
+
+ The good Shah Akbar (peace be his alway!)
+ Came forth from the Divan at close of day
+ Bowed with the burden of his many cares,
+ Worn with the hearing of unnumbered prayers,--
+ Wild cries for justice, the importunate
+ Appeals of greed and jealousy and hate,
+ And all the strife of sect and creed and rite,
+ Santon and Gouroo waging holy fight
+ For the wise monarch, claiming not to be
+ Allah's avenger, left his people free,
+ With a faint hope, his Book scarce justified,
+ That all the paths of faith, though severed wide,
+ O'er which the feet of prayerful reverence passed,
+ Met at the gate of Paradise at last.
+
+ He sought an alcove of his cool hareem,
+ Where, far beneath, he heard the Jumna's stream
+ Lapse soft and low along his palace wall,
+ And all about the cool sound of the fall
+ Of fountains, and of water circling free
+ Through marble ducts along the balcony;
+ The voice of women in the distance sweet,
+ And, sweeter still, of one who, at his feet,
+ Soothed his tired ear with songs of a far land
+ Where Tagus shatters on the salt sea-sand
+ The mirror of its cork-grown hills of drouth
+ And vales of vine, at Lisbon's harbor-mouth.
+
+ The date-palms rustled not; the peepul laid
+ Its topmost boughs against the balustrade,
+ Motionless as the mimic leaves and vines
+ That, light and graceful as the shawl-designs
+ Of Delhi or Umritsir, twined in stone;
+ And the tired monarch, who aside had thrown
+ The day's hard burden, sat from care apart,
+ And let the quiet steal into his heart
+ From the still hour. Below him Agra slept,
+ By the long light of sunset overswept
+ The river flowing through a level land,
+ By mango-groves and banks of yellow sand,
+ Skirted with lime and orange, gay kiosks,
+ Fountains at play, tall minarets of mosques,
+ Fair pleasure-gardens, with their flowering trees
+ Relieved against the mournful cypresses;
+ And, air-poised lightly as the blown sea-foam,
+ The marble wonder of some holy dome
+ Hung a white moonrise over the still wood,
+ Glassing its beauty in a stiller flood.
+
+ Silent the monarch gazed, until the night
+ Swift-falling hid the city from his sight;
+ Then to the woman at his feet he said
+ "Tell me, O Miriam, something thou hast read
+ In childhood of the Master of thy faith,
+ Whom Islam also owns. Our Prophet saith
+ 'He was a true apostle, yea, a Word
+ And Spirit sent before me from the Lord.'
+ Thus the Book witnesseth; and well I know
+ By what thou art, O dearest, it is so.
+ As the lute's tone the maker's hand betrays,
+ The sweet disciple speaks her Master's praise."
+
+ Then Miriam, glad of heart, (for in some sort
+ She cherished in the Moslem's liberal court
+ The sweet traditions of a Christian child;
+ And, through her life of sense, the undefiled
+ And chaste ideal of the sinless One
+ Gazed on her with an eye she might not shun,--
+ The sad, reproachful look of pity, born
+ Of love that hath no part in wrath or scorn,)
+ Began, with low voice and moist eyes, to tell
+ Of the all-loving Christ, and what befell
+ When the fierce zealots, thirsting for her blood,
+ Dragged to his feet a shame of womanhood.
+ How, when his searching answer pierced within
+ Each heart, and touched the secret of its sin,
+ And her accusers fled his face before,
+ He bade the poor one go and sin no more.
+ And Akbar said, after a moment's thought,
+ "Wise is the lesson by thy prophet taught;
+ Woe unto him who judges and forgets
+ What hidden evil his own heart besets!
+ Something of this large charity I find
+ In all the sects that sever human kind;
+ I would to Allah that their lives agreed
+ More nearly with the lesson of their creed!
+ Those yellow Lamas who at Meerut pray
+ By wind and water power, and love to say
+ 'He who forgiveth not shall, unforgiven,
+ Fail of the rest of Buddha,' and who even
+ Spare the black gnat that stings them, vex my ears
+ With the poor hates and jealousies and fears
+ Nursed in their human hives. That lean, fierce priest
+ Of thy own people, (be his heart increased
+ By Allah's love!) his black robes smelling yet
+ Of Goa's roasted Jews, have I not met
+ Meek-faced, barefooted, crying in the street
+ The saying of his prophet true and sweet,--
+ 'He who is merciful shall mercy meet!'"
+
+ But, next day, so it chanced, as night began
+ To fall, a murmur through the hareem ran
+ That one, recalling in her dusky face
+ The full-lipped, mild-eyed beauty of a race
+ Known as the blameless Ethiops of Greek song,
+ Plotting to do her royal master wrong,
+ Watching, reproachful of the lingering light,
+ The evening shadows deepen for her flight,
+ Love-guided, to her home in a far land,
+ Now waited death at the great Shah's command.
+ Shapely as that dark princess for whose smile
+ A world was bartered, daughter of the Nile
+ Herself, and veiling in her large, soft eyes
+ The passion and the languor of her skies,
+ The Abyssinian knelt low at the feet
+ Of her stern lord: "O king, if it be meet,
+ And for thy honor's sake," she said, "that I,
+ Who am the humblest of thy slaves, should die,
+ I will not tax thy mercy to forgive.
+ Easier it is to die than to outlive
+ All that life gave me,--him whose wrong of thee
+ Was but the outcome of his love for me,
+ Cherished from childhood, when, beneath the shade
+ Of templed Axum, side by side we played.
+ Stolen from his arms, my lover followed me
+ Through weary seasons over land and sea;
+ And two days since, sitting disconsolate
+ Within the shadow of the hareem gate,
+ Suddenly, as if dropping from the sky,
+ Down from the lattice of the balcony
+ Fell the sweet song by Tigre's cowherds sung
+ In the old music of his native tongue.
+ He knew my voice, for love is quick of ear,
+ Answering in song.
+
+ This night he waited near
+ To fly with me. The fault was mine alone
+ He knew thee not, he did but seek his own;
+ Who, in the very shadow of thy throne,
+ Sharing thy bounty, knowing all thou art,
+ Greatest and best of men, and in her heart
+ Grateful to tears for favor undeserved,
+ Turned ever homeward, nor one moment swerved
+ From her young love. He looked into my eyes,
+ He heard my voice, and could not otherwise
+ Than he hath done; yet, save one wild embrace
+ When first we stood together face to face,
+ And all that fate had done since last we met
+ Seemed but a dream that left us children yet,
+ He hath not wronged thee nor thy royal bed;
+ Spare him, O king! and slay me in his stead!"
+
+ But over Akbar's brows the frown hung black,
+ And, turning to the eunuch at his back,
+ "Take them," he said, "and let the Jumna's waves
+ Hide both my shame and these accursed slaves!"
+ His loathly length the unsexed bondman bowed
+ "On my head be it!"
+
+ Straightway from a cloud
+ Of dainty shawls and veils of woven mist
+ The Christian Miriam rose, and, stooping, kissed
+ The monarch's hand. Loose down her shoulders bare
+ Swept all the rippled darkness of her hair,
+ Veiling the bosom that, with high, quick swell
+ Of fear and pity, through it rose and fell.
+
+ "Alas!" she cried, "hast thou forgotten quite
+ The words of Him we spake of yesternight?
+ Or thy own prophet's, 'Whoso doth endure
+ And pardon, of eternal life is sure'?
+ O great and good! be thy revenge alone
+ Felt in thy mercy to the erring shown;
+ Let thwarted love and youth their pardon plead,
+ Who sinned but in intent, and not in deed!"
+
+ One moment the strong frame of Akbar shook
+ With the great storm of passion. Then his look
+ Softened to her uplifted face, that still
+ Pleaded more strongly than all words, until
+ Its pride and anger seemed like overblown,
+ Spent clouds of thunder left to tell alone
+ Of strife and overcoming. With bowed head,
+ And smiting on his bosom: "God," he said,
+ "Alone is great, and let His holy name
+ Be honored, even to His servant's shame!
+ Well spake thy prophet, Miriam,--he alone
+ Who hath not sinned is meet to cast a stone
+ At such as these, who here their doom await,
+ Held like myself in the strong grasp of fate.
+ They sinned through love, as I through love forgive;
+ Take them beyond my realm, but let them live!"
+
+ And, like a chorus to the words of grace,
+ The ancient Fakir, sitting in his place,
+ Motionless as an idol and as grim,
+ In the pavilion Akbar built for him
+ Under the court-yard trees, (for he was wise,
+ Knew Menu's laws, and through his close-shut eyes
+ Saw things far off, and as an open book
+ Into the thoughts of other men could look,)
+ Began, half chant, half howling, to rehearse
+ The fragment of a holy Vedic verse;
+ And thus it ran: "He who all things forgives
+ Conquers himself and all things else, and lives
+ Above the reach of wrong or hate or fear,
+ Calm as the gods, to whom he is most dear."
+
+ Two leagues from Agra still the traveller sees
+ The tomb of Akbar through its cypress-trees;
+ And, near at hand, the marble walls that hide
+ The Christian Begum sleeping at his side.
+ And o'er her vault of burial (who shall tell
+ If it be chance alone or miracle?)
+ The Mission press with tireless hand unrolls
+ The words of Jesus on its lettered scrolls,--
+ Tells, in all tongues, the tale of mercy o'er,
+ And bids the guilty, "Go and sin no more!"
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+ It now was dew-fall; very still
+ The night lay on the lonely hill,
+ Down which our homeward steps we bent,
+ And, silent, through great silence went,
+ Save that the tireless crickets played
+ Their long, monotonous serenade.
+ A young moon, at its narrowest,
+ Curved sharp against the darkening west;
+ And, momently, the beacon's star,
+ Slow wheeling o'er its rock afar,
+ From out the level darkness shot
+ One instant and again was not.
+ And then my friend spake quietly
+ The thought of both: "Yon crescent see!
+ Like Islam's symbol-moon it gives
+ Hints of the light whereby it lives
+ Somewhat of goodness, something true
+ From sun and spirit shining through
+ All faiths, all worlds, as through the dark
+ Of ocean shines the lighthouse spark,
+ Attests the presence everywhere
+ Of love and providential care.
+ The faith the old Norse heart confessed
+ In one dear name,--the hopefulest
+ And tenderest heard from mortal lips
+ In pangs of birth or death, from ships
+ Ice-bitten in the winter sea,
+ Or lisped beside a mother's knee,--
+ The wiser world hath not outgrown,
+ And the All-Father is our own!"
+
+
+
+
+NAUHAUGHT, THE DEACON.
+
+ NAUHAUGHT, the Indian deacon, who of old
+ Dwelt, poor but blameless, where his narrowing Cape
+ Stretches its shrunk arm out to all the winds
+ And the relentless smiting of the waves,
+ Awoke one morning from a pleasant dream
+ Of a good angel dropping in his hand
+ A fair, broad gold-piece, in the name of God.
+
+ He rose and went forth with the early day
+ Far inland, where the voices of the waves
+ Mellowed and Mingled with the whispering leaves,
+ As, through the tangle of the low, thick woods,
+ He searched his traps. Therein nor beast nor bird
+ He found; though meanwhile in the reedy pools
+ The otter plashed, and underneath the pines
+ The partridge drummed: and as his thoughts went back
+ To the sick wife and little child at home,
+ What marvel that the poor man felt his faith
+ Too weak to bear its burden,--like a rope
+ That, strand by strand uncoiling, breaks above
+ The hand that grasps it. "Even now, O Lord!
+ Send me," he prayed, "the angel of my dream!
+ Nauhaught is very poor; he cannot wait."
+
+ Even as he spake he heard at his bare feet
+ A low, metallic clink, and, looking down,
+ He saw a dainty purse with disks of gold
+ Crowding its silken net. Awhile he held
+ The treasure up before his eyes, alone
+ With his great need, feeling the wondrous coins
+ Slide through his eager fingers, one by one.
+ So then the dream was true. The angel brought
+ One broad piece only; should he take all these?
+ Who would be wiser, in the blind, dumb woods?
+ The loser, doubtless rich, would scarcely miss
+ This dropped crumb from a table always full.
+ Still, while he mused, he seemed to hear the cry
+ Of a starved child; the sick face of his wife
+ Tempted him. Heart and flesh in fierce revolt
+ Urged the wild license of his savage youth
+ Against his later scruples. Bitter toil,
+ Prayer, fasting, dread of blame, and pitiless eyes
+ To watch his halting,--had he lost for these
+ The freedom of the woods;--the hunting-grounds
+ Of happy spirits for a walled-in heaven
+ Of everlasting psalms? One healed the sick
+ Very far off thousands of moons ago
+ Had he not prayed him night and day to come
+ And cure his bed-bound wife? Was there a hell?
+ Were all his fathers' people writhing there--
+ Like the poor shell-fish set to boil alive--
+ Forever, dying never? If he kept
+ This gold, so needed, would the dreadful God
+ Torment him like a Mohawk's captive stuck
+ With slow-consuming splinters? Would the saints
+ And the white angels dance and laugh to see him
+ Burn like a pitch-pine torch? His Christian garb
+ Seemed falling from him; with the fear and shame
+ Of Adam naked at the cool of day,
+ He gazed around. A black snake lay in coil
+ On the hot sand, a crow with sidelong eye
+ Watched from a dead bough. All his Indian lore
+ Of evil blending with a convert's faith
+ In the supernal terrors of the Book,
+ He saw the Tempter in the coiling snake
+ And ominous, black-winged bird; and all the while
+ The low rebuking of the distant waves
+ Stole in upon him like the voice of God
+ Among the trees of Eden. Girding up
+ His soul's loins with a resolute hand, he thrust
+ The base thought from him: "Nauhaught, be a man
+ Starve, if need be; but, while you live, look out
+ From honest eyes on all men, unashamed.
+ God help me! I am deacon of the church,
+ A baptized, praying Indian! Should I do
+ This secret meanness, even the barken knots
+ Of the old trees would turn to eyes to see it,
+ The birds would tell of it, and all the leaves
+ Whisper above me: 'Nauhaught is a thief!'
+ The sun would know it, and the stars that hide
+ Behind his light would watch me, and at night
+ Follow me with their sharp, accusing eyes.
+ Yea, thou, God, seest me!" Then Nauhaught drew
+ Closer his belt of leather, dulling thus
+ The pain of hunger, and walked bravely back
+ To the brown fishing-hamlet by the sea;
+ And, pausing at the inn-door, cheerily asked
+ "Who hath lost aught to-day?"
+ "I," said a voice;
+ "Ten golden pieces, in a silken purse,
+ My daughter's handiwork." He looked, and to
+ One stood before him in a coat of frieze,
+ And the glazed hat of a seafaring man,
+ Shrewd-faced, broad-shouldered, with no trace of wings.
+ Marvelling, he dropped within the stranger's hand
+ The silken web, and turned to go his way.
+ But the man said: "A tithe at least is yours;
+ Take it in God's name as an honest man."
+ And as the deacon's dusky fingers closed
+ Over the golden gift, "Yea, in God's name
+ I take it, with a poor man's thanks," he said.
+ So down the street that, like a river of sand,
+ Ran, white in sunshine, to the summer sea,
+ He sought his home singing and praising God;
+ And when his neighbors in their careless way
+ Spoke of the owner of the silken purse--
+ A Wellfleet skipper, known in every port
+ That the Cape opens in its sandy wall--
+ He answered, with a wise smile, to himself
+ "I saw the angel where they see a man."
+ 1870.
+
+
+
+
+THE SISTERS.
+
+ ANNIE and Rhoda, sisters twain,
+ Woke in the night to the sound of rain,
+
+ The rush of wind, the ramp and roar
+ Of great waves climbing a rocky shore.
+
+ Annie rose up in her bed-gown white,
+ And looked out into the storm and night.
+
+ "Hush, and hearken!" she cried in fear,
+ "Hearest thou nothing, sister dear?"
+
+ "I hear the sea, and the plash of rain,
+ And roar of the northeast hurricane.
+
+ "Get thee back to the bed so warm,
+ No good comes of watching a storm.
+
+ "What is it to thee, I fain would know,
+ That waves are roaring and wild winds blow?
+
+ "No lover of thine's afloat to miss
+ The harbor-lights on a night like this."
+
+ "But I heard a voice cry out my name,
+ Up from the sea on the wind it came.
+
+ "Twice and thrice have I heard it call,
+ And the voice is the voice of Estwick Hall!"
+
+ On her pillow the sister tossed her head.
+ "Hall of the Heron is safe," she said.
+
+ "In the tautest schooner that ever swam
+ He rides at anchor in Anisquam.
+
+ "And, if in peril from swamping sea
+ Or lee shore rocks, would he call on thee?"
+
+ But the girl heard only the wind and tide,
+ And wringing her small white hands she cried,
+
+ "O sister Rhoda, there's something wrong;
+ I hear it again, so loud and long.
+
+ "'Annie! Annie!' I hear it call,
+ And the voice is the voice of Estwick Hall!"
+
+ Up sprang the elder, with eyes aflame,
+ "Thou liest! He never would call thy name!
+
+ "If he did, I would pray the wind and sea
+ To keep him forever from thee and me!"
+
+ Then out of the sea blew a dreadful blast;
+ Like the cry of a dying man it passed.
+
+ The young girl hushed on her lips a groan,
+ But through her tears a strange light shone,--
+
+ The solemn joy of her heart's release
+ To own and cherish its love in peace.
+
+ "Dearest!" she whispered, under breath,
+ "Life was a lie, but true is death.
+
+ "The love I hid from myself away
+ Shall crown me now in the light of day.
+
+ "My ears shall never to wooer list,
+ Never by lover my lips be kissed.
+
+ "Sacred to thee am I henceforth,
+ Thou in heaven and I on earth!"
+
+ She came and stood by her sister's bed
+ "Hall of the Heron is dead!" she said.
+
+ "The wind and the waves their work have done,
+ We shall see him no more beneath the sun.
+
+ "Little will reek that heart of thine,
+ It loved him not with a love like mine.
+
+ "I, for his sake, were he but here,
+ Could hem and 'broider thy bridal gear,
+
+ "Though hands should tremble and eyes be wet,
+ And stitch for stitch in my heart be set.
+
+ "But now my soul with his soul I wed;
+ Thine the living, and mine the dead!"
+
+ 1871.
+
+
+
+
+MARGUERITE.
+
+MASSACHUSETTS BAY, 1760.
+
+Upwards of one thousand of the Acadian peasants forcibly taken from
+their homes on the Gaspereau and Basin of Minas were assigned to the
+several towns of the Massachusetts colony, the children being bound by
+the authorities to service or labor.
+
+ THE robins sang in the orchard, the buds into
+ blossoms grew;
+ Little of human sorrow the buds and the robins
+ knew!
+ Sick, in an alien household, the poor French
+ neutral lay;
+ Into her lonesome garret fell the light of the April
+ day,
+ Through the dusty window, curtained by the spider's
+ warp and woof,
+ On the loose-laid floor of hemlock, on oaken ribs
+ of roof,
+ The bedquilt's faded patchwork, the teacups on the
+ stand,
+ The wheel with flaxen tangle, as it dropped from
+ her sick hand.
+
+ What to her was the song of the robin, or warm
+ morning light,
+ As she lay in the trance of the dying, heedless of
+ sound or sight?
+
+ Done was the work of her bands, she had eaten her
+ bitter bread;
+ The world of the alien people lay behind her dim
+ and dead.
+
+ But her soul went back to its child-time; she saw
+ the sun o'erflow
+ With gold the Basin of Minas, and set over
+ Gaspereau;
+
+ The low, bare flats at ebb-tide, the rush of the sea
+ at flood,
+ Through inlet and creek and river, from dike to
+ upland wood;
+
+ The gulls in the red of morning, the fish-hawk's
+ rise and fall,
+ The drift of the fog in moonshine, over the dark
+ coast-wall.
+
+ She saw the face of her mother, she heard the song
+ she sang;
+ And far off, faintly, slowly, the bell for vespers
+ rang.
+
+ By her bed the hard-faced mistress sat, smoothing
+ the wrinkled sheet,
+ Peering into the face, so helpless, and feeling the
+ ice-cold feet.
+
+ With a vague remorse atoning for her greed and
+ long abuse,
+ By care no longer heeded and pity too late for use.
+
+ Up the stairs of the garret softly the son of the
+ mistress stepped,
+ Leaned over the head-board, covering his face with
+ his hands, and wept.
+
+ Outspake the mother, who watched him sharply,
+ with brow a-frown
+ "What! love you the Papist, the beggar, the
+ charge of the town?"
+
+ Be she Papist or beggar who lies here, I know
+ and God knows
+ I love her, and fain would go with her wherever
+ she goes!
+
+ "O mother! that sweet face came pleading, for
+ love so athirst.
+ You saw but the town-charge; I knew her God's
+ angel at first."
+
+ Shaking her gray head, the mistress hushed down
+ a bitter cry;
+ And awed by the silence and shadow of death
+ drawing nigh,
+
+ She murmured a psalm of the Bible; but closer
+ the young girl pressed,
+ With the last of her life in her fingers, the cross
+ to her breast.
+
+ "My son, come away," cried the mother, her voice
+ cruel grown.
+ "She is joined to her idols, like Ephraim; let her
+ alone!"
+
+ But he knelt with his hand on her forehead, his
+ lips to her ear,
+ And he called back the soul that was passing
+ "Marguerite, do you hear?"
+
+ She paused on the threshold of Heaven; love, pity,
+ surprise,
+ Wistful, tender, lit up for an instant the cloud of
+ her eyes.
+
+ With his heart on his lips he kissed her, but never
+ her cheek grew red,
+ And the words the living long for he spake in the
+ ear of the dead.
+
+ And the robins sang in the orchard, where buds to
+ blossoms grew;
+ Of the folded hands and the still face never the
+ robins knew!
+
+ 1871.
+
+
+
+
+THE ROBIN.
+
+ MY old Welsh neighbor over the way
+ Crept slowly out in the sun of spring,
+ Pushed from her ears the locks of gray,
+ And listened to hear the robin sing.
+
+ Her grandson, playing at marbles, stopped,
+ And, cruel in sport as boys will be,
+ Tossed a stone at the bird, who hopped
+ From bough to bough in the apple-tree.
+
+ "Nay!" said the grandmother; "have you not heard,
+ My poor, bad boy! of the fiery pit,
+ And how, drop by drop, this merciful bird
+ Carries the water that quenches it?
+
+ "He brings cool dew in his little bill,
+ And lets it fall on the souls of sin
+ You can see the mark on his red breast still
+ Of fires that scorch as he drops it in.
+
+ "My poor Bron rhuddyn! my breast-burned bird,
+ Singing so sweetly from limb to limb,
+ Very dear to the heart of Our Lord
+ Is he who pities the lost like Him!"
+
+ "Amen!" I said to the beautiful myth;
+ "Sing, bird of God, in my heart as well:
+ Each good thought is a drop wherewith
+ To cool and lessen the fires of hell.
+
+ "Prayers of love like rain-drops fall,
+ Tears of pity are cooling dew,
+ And dear to the heart of Our Lord are all
+ Who suffer like Him in the good they do!"
+
+ 1871.
+
+
+
+
+THE PENNSYLVANIA PILGRIM.
+
+INTRODUCTORY NOTE.
+
+THE beginning of German emigration to America may be traced to the
+personal influence of William Penn, who in 1677 visited the Continent,
+and made the acquaintance of an intelligent and highly cultivated circle
+of Pietists, or Mystics, who, reviving in the seventeenth century the
+spiritual faith and worship of Tauler and the "Friends of God" in the
+fourteenth, gathered about the pastor Spener, and the young and
+beautiful Eleonora Johanna Von Merlau. In this circle originated the
+Frankfort Land Company, which bought of William Penn, the Governor of
+Pennsylvania, a tract of land near the new city of Philadelphia. The
+company's agent in the New World was a rising young lawyer, Francis
+Daniel Pastorius, son of Judge Pastorius, of Windsheim, who, at the age
+of seventeen, entered the University of Altorf. He studied law at,
+Strasburg, Basle, and Jena, and at Ratisbon, the seat of the Imperial
+Government, obtained a practical knowledge of international polity.
+Successful in all his examinations and disputations, he received the
+degree of Doctor of Law at Nuremberg in 1676. In 1679 he was a
+law-lecturer at Frankfort, where he became deeply interested in the
+teachings of Dr. Spener. In 1680-81 he travelled in France, England,
+Ireland, and Italy with his friend Herr Von Rodeck. "I was," he says,
+"glad to enjoy again the company of my Christian friends, rather than be
+with Von Rodeck feasting and dancing." In 1683, in company with a small
+number of German Friends, he emigrated to America, settling upon the
+Frankfort Company's tract between the Schuylkill and the Delaware
+rivers. The township was divided into four hamlets, namely, Germantown,
+Krisheim, Crefield, and Sommerhausen. Soon after his arrival he united
+himself with the Society of Friends, and became one of its most able and
+devoted members, as well as the recognized head and lawgiver of the
+settlement. He married, two years after his arrival, Anneke (Anna),
+daughter of Dr. Klosterman, of Muhlheim. In the year 1688 he drew up a
+memorial against slaveholding, which was adopted by the Germantown
+Friends and sent up to the Monthly Meeting, and thence to the Yearly
+Meeting at Philadelphia. It is noteworthy as the first protest made by
+a religious body against Negro Slavery. The original document was
+discovered in 1844 by the Philadelphia antiquarian, Nathan Kite, and
+published in The Friend (Vol. XVIII. No. 16). It is a bold and direct
+appeal to the best instincts of the heart. "Have not," he asks, "these
+negroes as much right to fight for their freedom as you have to keep
+them slaves?" Under the wise direction of Pastorius, the German-town
+settlement grew and prospered. The inhabitants planted orchards and
+vineyards, and surrounded themselves with souvenirs of their old home.
+A large number of them were linen-weavers, as well as small farmers.
+The Quakers were the principal sect, but men of all religions were
+tolerated, and lived together in harmony. In 1692 Richard Frame
+published, in what he called verse, a Description of Pennsylvania, in
+which he alludes to the settlement:--
+
+ "The German town of which I spoke before,
+ Which is at least in length one mile or more,
+ Where lives High German people and Low Dutch,
+ Whose trade in weaving linen cloth is much,
+ --There grows the flax, as also you may know
+ That from the same they do divide the tow.
+ Their trade suits well their habitation,
+ We find convenience for their occupation."
+
+Pastorius seems to have been on intimate terms with William Penn, Thomas
+Lloyd, Chief Justice Logan, Thomas Story, and other leading men in the
+Province belonging to his own religious society, as also with Kelpius,
+the learned Mystic of the Wissahickon, with the pastor of the Swedes'
+church, and the leaders of the Mennonites. He wrote a description of
+Pennsylvania, which was published at Frankfort and Leipsic in 1700 and
+1701. His Lives of the Saints, etc., written in German and dedicated to
+Professor Schurmberg, his old teacher, was published in 1690. He left
+behind him many unpublished manuscripts covering a very wide range of
+subjects, most of which are now lost. One huge manuscript folio,
+entitled Hive Beestock, Melliotropheum Alucar, or Rusca Apium, still
+remains, containing one thousand pages with about one hundred lines to a
+page. It is a medley of knowledge and fancy, history, philosophy, and
+poetry, written in seven languages. A large portion of his poetry is
+devoted to the pleasures of gardening, the description of flowers, and
+the care of bees. The following specimen of his punning Latin is
+addressed to an orchard-pilferer:--
+
+ "Quisquis in haec furtim reptas viridaria nostra
+ Tangere fallaci poma caveto mane,
+ Si non obsequeris faxit Deus omne quod opto,
+ Cum malis nostris ut mala cuncta feras."
+
+Professor Oswald Seidensticker, to whose papers in Der Deutsche Pioneer
+and that able periodical the Penn Monthly, of Philadelphia, I am
+indebted for many of the foregoing facts in regard to the German
+pilgrims of the New World, thus closes his notice of Pastorius:--
+"No tombstone, not even a record of burial, indicates where his remains
+have found their last resting-place, and the pardonable desire to
+associate the homage due to this distinguished man with some visible
+memento can not be gratified. There is no reason to suppose that he was
+interred in any other place than the Friends' old burying-ground in
+Germantown, though the fact is not attested by any definite source of
+information. After all, this obliteration of the last trace of his
+earthly existence is but typical of what has overtaken the times which
+he represents; that Germantown which he founded, which saw him live and
+move, is at present but a quaint idyl of the past, almost a myth, barely
+remembered and little cared for by the keener race that has succeeded.
+The Pilgrims of Plymouth have not lacked historian and poet. Justice has
+been done to their faith, courage, and self-sacrifice, and to the mighty
+influence of their endeavors to establish righteousness on the earth.
+The Quaker pilgrims of Pennsylvania, seeking the same object by
+different means, have not been equally fortunate. The power of their
+testimony for truth and holiness, peace and freedom, enforced only by
+what Milton calls "the unresistible might of meekness," has been felt
+through two centuries in the amelioration of penal severities, the
+abolition of slavery, the reform of the erring, the relief of the poor
+and suffering,--felt, in brief, in every step of human progress. But of
+the men themselves, with the single exception of William Penn, scarcely
+anything is known. Contrasted, from the outset, with the stern,
+aggressive Puritans of New England, they have come to be regarded as
+"a feeble folk," with a personality as doubtful as their unrecorded
+graves. They were not soldiers, like Miles Standish; they had no figure
+so picturesque as Vane, no leader so rashly brave and haughty as
+Endicott. No Cotton Mather wrote their Magnalia; they had no awful drama
+of supernaturalism in which Satan and his angels were actors; and the
+only witch mentioned in their simple annals was a poor old Swedish
+woman, who, on complaint of her countrywomen, was tried and acquitted
+of everything but imbecility and folly. Nothing but common-place offices
+of civility came to pass between them and the Indians; indeed, their
+enemies taunted them with the fact that the savages did not regard them
+as Christians, but just such men as themselves. Yet it must be apparent
+to every careful observer of the progress of American civilization that
+its two principal currents had their sources in the entirely opposite
+directions of the Puritan and Quaker colonies. To use the words of a
+late writer: "The historical forces, with which no others may be
+compared in their influence on the people, have been those of the
+Puritan and the Quaker. The strength of the one was in the confession of
+an invisible Presence, a righteous, eternal Will, which would establish
+righteousness on earth; and thence arose the conviction of a direct
+personal responsibility, which could be tempted by no external splendor
+and could be shaken by no internal agitation, and could not be evaded or
+transferred. The strength of the other was the witness in the human
+spirit to an eternal Word, an Inner Voice which spoke to each alone,
+while yet it spoke to every man; a Light which each was to follow, and
+which yet was the light of the world; and all other voices were silent
+before this, and the solitary path whither it led was more sacred than
+the worn ways of cathedral-aisles." It will be sufficiently apparent to
+the reader that, in the poem which follows, I have attempted nothing
+beyond a study of the life and times of the Pennsylvania colonist,--a
+simple picture of a noteworthy man and his locality. The colors of my
+sketch are all very sober, toned down to the quiet and dreamy atmosphere
+through which its subject is visible. Whether, in the glare and tumult
+of the present time, such a picture will find favor may well be
+questioned. I only know that it has beguiled for me some hours of
+weariness, and that, whatever may be its measure of public appreciation,
+it has been to me its own reward.
+ J. G. W.
+AMESBURY, 5th mo., 1872.
+
+
+ Hail to posterity!
+ Hail, future men of Germanopolis!
+ Let the young generations yet to be
+ Look kindly upon this.
+ Think how your fathers left their native land,--
+ Dear German-land! O sacred hearths and homes!--
+
+ And, where the wild beast roams,
+ In patience planned
+ New forest-homes beyond the mighty sea,
+ There undisturbed and free
+ To live as brothers of one family.
+ What pains and cares befell,
+ What trials and what fears,
+ Remember, and wherein we have done well
+ Follow our footsteps, men of coming years!
+ Where we have failed to do
+ Aright, or wisely live,
+ Be warned by us, the better way pursue,
+ And, knowing we were human, even as you,
+ Pity us and forgive!
+ Farewell, Posterity!
+ Farewell, dear Germany
+ Forevermore farewell!
+
+ (From the Latin of Francis DANIEL PASTORIUS in
+ the Germantown Records. 1688.)
+
+
+ PRELUDE.
+
+ I SING the Pilgrim of a softer clime
+ And milder speech than those brave men's who brought
+ To the ice and iron of our winter time
+ A will as firm, a creed as stern, and wrought
+ With one mailed hand, and with the other fought.
+ Simply, as fits my theme, in homely rhyme
+ I sing the blue-eyed German Spener taught,
+ Through whose veiled, mystic faith the Inward Light,
+ Steady and still, an easy brightness, shone,
+ Transfiguring all things in its radiance white.
+ The garland which his meekness never sought
+ I bring him; over fields of harvest sown
+ With seeds of blessing, now to ripeness grown,
+ I bid the sower pass before the reapers' sight.
+
+ . . . . . . . . . .
+
+ Never in tenderer quiet lapsed the day
+ From Pennsylvania's vales of spring away,
+ Where, forest-walled, the scattered hamlets lay
+
+ Along the wedded rivers. One long bar
+ Of purple cloud, on which the evening star
+ Shone like a jewel on a scimitar,
+
+ Held the sky's golden gateway. Through the deep
+ Hush of the woods a murmur seemed to creep,
+ The Schuylkill whispering in a voice of sleep.
+
+ All else was still. The oxen from their ploughs
+ Rested at last, and from their long day's browse
+ Came the dun files of Krisheim's home-bound cows.
+
+ And the young city, round whose virgin zone
+ The rivers like two mighty arms were thrown,
+ Marked by the smoke of evening fires alone,
+
+ Lay in the distance, lovely even then
+ With its fair women and its stately men
+ Gracing the forest court of William Penn,
+
+ Urban yet sylvan; in its rough-hewn frames
+ Of oak and pine the dryads held their claims,
+ And lent its streets their pleasant woodland names.
+
+ Anna Pastorius down the leafy lane
+ Looked city-ward, then stooped to prune again
+ Her vines and simples, with a sigh of pain.
+
+ For fast the streaks of ruddy sunset paled
+ In the oak clearing, and, as daylight failed,
+ Slow, overhead, the dusky night-birds sailed.
+
+ Again she looked: between green walls of shade,
+ With low-bent head as if with sorrow weighed,
+ Daniel Pastorius slowly came and said,
+
+ "God's peace be with thee, Anna!" Then he stood
+ Silent before her, wrestling with the mood
+ Of one who sees the evil and not good.
+
+ "What is it, my Pastorius?" As she spoke,
+ A slow, faint smile across his features broke,
+ Sadder than tears. "Dear heart," he said, "our folk
+
+ "Are even as others. Yea, our goodliest Friends
+ Are frail; our elders have their selfish ends,
+ And few dare trust the Lord to make amends
+
+ "For duty's loss. So even our feeble word
+ For the dumb slaves the startled meeting heard
+ As if a stone its quiet waters stirred;
+
+ "And, as the clerk ceased reading, there began
+ A ripple of dissent which downward ran
+ In widening circles, as from man to man.
+
+ "Somewhat was said of running before sent,
+ Of tender fear that some their guide outwent,
+ Troublers of Israel. I was scarce intent
+
+ "On hearing, for behind the reverend row
+ Of gallery Friends, in dumb and piteous show,
+ I saw, methought, dark faces full of woe.
+
+ "And, in the spirit, I was taken where
+ They toiled and suffered; I was made aware
+ Of shame and wrath and anguish and despair!
+
+ "And while the meeting smothered our poor plea
+ With cautious phrase, a Voice there seemed to be,
+ As ye have done to these ye do to me!'
+
+ "So it all passed; and the old tithe went on
+ Of anise, mint, and cumin, till the sun
+ Set, leaving still the weightier work undone.
+
+ "Help, for the good man faileth! Who is strong,
+ If these be weak? Who shall rebuke the wrong,
+ If these consent? How long, O Lord! how long!"
+
+ He ceased; and, bound in spirit with the bound,
+ With folded arms, and eyes that sought the ground,
+ Walked musingly his little garden round.
+
+ About him, beaded with the falling dew,
+ Rare plants of power and herbs of healing grew,
+ Such as Van Helmont and Agrippa knew.
+
+ For, by the lore of Gorlitz' gentle sage,
+ With the mild mystics of his dreamy age
+ He read the herbal signs of nature's page,
+
+ As once he heard in sweet Von Merlau's' bowers
+ Fair as herself, in boyhood's happy hours,
+ The pious Spener read his creed in flowers.
+
+ "The dear Lord give us patience!" said his wife,
+ Touching with finger-tip an aloe, rife
+ With leaves sharp-pointed like an Aztec knife
+
+ Or Carib spear, a gift to William Penn
+ From the rare gardens of John Evelyn,
+ Brought from the Spanish Main by merchantmen.
+
+ "See this strange plant its steady purpose hold,
+ And, year by year, its patient leaves unfold,
+ Till the young eyes that watched it first are old.
+
+ "But some time, thou hast told me, there shall come
+ A sudden beauty, brightness, and perfume,
+ The century-moulded bud shall burst in bloom.
+
+ "So may the seed which hath been sown to-day
+ Grow with the years, and, after long delay,
+ Break into bloom, and God's eternal Yea!
+
+ "Answer at last the patient prayers of them
+ Who now, by faith alone, behold its stem
+ Crowned with the flowers of Freedom's diadem.
+
+ "Meanwhile, to feel and suffer, work and wait,
+ Remains for us. The wrong indeed is great,
+ But love and patience conquer soon or late."
+
+ "Well hast thou said, my Anna!" Tenderer
+ Than youth's caress upon the head of her
+ Pastorius laid his hand. "Shall we demur
+
+ "Because the vision tarrieth? In an hour
+ We dream not of, the slow-grown bud may flower,
+ And what was sown in weakness rise in power!"
+
+ Then through the vine-draped door whose legend read,
+ "Procul este profani!" Anna led
+ To where their child upon his little bed
+
+ Looked up and smiled. "Dear heart," she said, "if we
+ Must bearers of a heavy burden be,
+ Our boy, God willing, yet the day shall see
+
+ "When from the gallery to the farthest seat,
+ Slave and slave-owner shall no longer meet,
+ But all sit equal at the Master's feet."
+
+ On the stone hearth the blazing walnut block
+ Set the low walls a-glimmer, showed the cock
+ Rebuking Peter on the Van Wyck clock,
+
+ Shone on old tomes of law and physic, side
+ By side with Fox and Belimen, played at hide
+ And seek with Anna, midst her household pride
+
+ Of flaxen webs, and on the table, bare
+ Of costly cloth or silver cup, but where,
+ Tasting the fat shads of the Delaware,
+
+ The courtly Penn had praised the goodwife's cheer,
+ And quoted Horace o'er her home brewed beer,
+ Till even grave Pastorius smiled to hear.
+
+ In such a home, beside the Schuylkill's wave,
+ He dwelt in peace with God and man, and gave
+ Food to the poor and shelter to the slave.
+
+ For all too soon the New World's scandal shamed
+ The righteous code by Penn and Sidney framed,
+ And men withheld the human rights they claimed.
+
+ And slowly wealth and station sanction lent,
+ And hardened avarice, on its gains intent,
+ Stifled the inward whisper of dissent.
+
+ Yet all the while the burden rested sore
+ On tender hearts. At last Pastorius bore
+ Their warning message to the Church's door
+
+ In God's name; and the leaven of the word
+ Wrought ever after in the souls who heard,
+ And a dead conscience in its grave-clothes stirred
+
+ To troubled life, and urged the vain excuse
+ Of Hebrew custom, patriarchal use,
+ Good in itself if evil in abuse.
+
+ Gravely Pastorius listened, not the less
+ Discerning through the decent fig-leaf dress
+ Of the poor plea its shame of selfishness.
+
+ One Scripture rule, at least, was unforgot;
+ He hid the outcast, and betrayed him not;
+ And, when his prey the human hunter sought,
+
+ He scrupled not, while Anna's wise delay
+ And proffered cheer prolonged the master's stay,
+ To speed the black guest safely on his way.
+
+ Yet, who shall guess his bitter grief who lends
+ His life to some great cause, and finds his friends
+ Shame or betray it for their private ends?
+
+ How felt the Master when his chosen strove
+ In childish folly for their seats above;
+ And that fond mother, blinded by her love,
+
+ Besought him that her sons, beside his throne,
+ Might sit on either hand? Amidst his own
+ A stranger oft, companionless and lone,
+
+ God's priest and prophet stands. The martyr's pain
+ Is not alone from scourge and cell and chain;
+ Sharper the pang when, shouting in his train,
+
+ His weak disciples by their lives deny
+ The loud hosannas of their daily cry,
+ And make their echo of his truth a lie.
+
+ His forest home no hermit's cell he found,
+ Guests, motley-minded, drew his hearth around,
+ And held armed truce upon its neutral ground.
+
+ There Indian chiefs with battle-bows unstrung,
+ Strong, hero-limbed, like those whom Homer sung,
+ Pastorius fancied, when the world was young,
+
+ Came with their tawny women, lithe and tall,
+ Like bronzes in his friend Von Rodeck's hall,
+ Comely, if black, and not unpleasing all.
+
+ There hungry folk in homespun drab and gray
+ Drew round his board on Monthly Meeting day,
+ Genial, half merry in their friendly way.
+
+ Or, haply, pilgrims from the Fatherland,
+ Weak, timid, homesick, slow to understand
+ The New World's promise, sought his helping hand.
+
+ Or painful Kelpius from his hermit den
+ By Wissahickon, maddest of good men,
+ Dreamed o'er the Chiliast dreams of Petersen.
+
+ Deep in the woods, where the small river slid
+ Snake-like in shade, the Helmstadt Mystic hid,
+ Weird as a wizard, over arts forbid,
+
+ Reading the books of Daniel and of John,
+ And Behmen's Morning-Redness, through the Stone
+ Of Wisdom, vouchsafed to his eyes alone,
+
+ Whereby he read what man ne'er read before,
+ And saw the visions man shall see no more,
+ Till the great angel, striding sea and shore,
+
+ Shall bid all flesh await, on land or ships,
+ The warning trump of the Apocalypse,
+ Shattering the heavens before the dread eclipse.
+
+ Or meek-eyed Mennonist his bearded chin
+ Leaned o'er the gate; or Ranter, pure within,
+ Aired his perfection in a world of sin.
+
+ Or, talking of old home scenes, Op der Graaf
+ Teased the low back-log with his shodden staff,
+ Till the red embers broke into a laugh
+
+ And dance of flame, as if they fain would cheer
+ The rugged face, half tender, half austere,
+ Touched with the pathos of a homesick tear!
+
+ Or Sluyter, saintly familist, whose word
+ As law the Brethren of the Manor heard,
+ Announced the speedy terrors of the Lord,
+
+ And turned, like Lot at Sodom, from his race,
+ Above a wrecked world with complacent face
+ Riding secure upon his plank of grace!
+
+ Haply, from Finland's birchen groves exiled,
+ Manly in thought, in simple ways a child,
+ His white hair floating round his visage mild,
+
+ The Swedish pastor sought the Quaker's door,
+ Pleased from his neighbor's lips to hear once more
+ His long-disused and half-forgotten lore.
+
+ For both could baffle Babel's lingual curse,
+ And speak in Bion's Doric, and rehearse
+ Cleanthes' hymn or Virgil's sounding verse.
+
+ And oft Pastorius and the meek old man
+ Argued as Quaker and as Lutheran,
+ Ending in Christian love, as they began.
+
+ With lettered Lloyd on pleasant morns he strayed
+ Where Sommerhausen over vales of shade
+ Looked miles away, by every flower delayed,
+
+ Or song of bird, happy and free with one
+ Who loved, like him, to let his memory run
+ Over old fields of learning, and to sun
+
+ Himself in Plato's wise philosophies,
+ And dream with Philo over mysteries
+ Whereof the dreamer never finds the keys;
+
+ To touch all themes of thought, nor weakly stop
+ For doubt of truth, but let the buckets drop
+ Deep down and bring the hidden waters up
+
+ For there was freedom in that wakening time
+ Of tender souls; to differ was not crime;
+ The varying bells made up the perfect chime.
+
+ On lips unlike was laid the altar's coal,
+ The white, clear light, tradition-colored, stole
+ Through the stained oriel of each human soul.
+
+ Gathered from many sects, the Quaker brought
+ His old beliefs, adjusting to the thought
+ That moved his soul the creed his fathers taught.
+
+ One faith alone, so broad that all mankind
+ Within themselves its secret witness find,
+ The soul's communion with the Eternal Mind,
+
+ The Spirit's law, the Inward Rule and Guide,
+ Scholar and peasant, lord and serf, allied,
+ The polished Penn and Cromwell's Ironside.
+
+ As still in Hemskerck's Quaker Meeting, face
+ By face in Flemish detail, we may trace
+ How loose-mouthed boor and fine ancestral grace
+
+ Sat in close contrast,--the clipt-headed churl,
+ Broad market-dame, and simple serving-girl
+ By skirt of silk and periwig in curl
+
+ For soul touched soul; the spiritual treasure-trove
+ Made all men equal, none could rise above
+ Nor sink below that level of God's love.
+
+ So, with his rustic neighbors sitting down,
+ The homespun frock beside the scholar's gown,
+ Pastorius to the manners of the town
+
+ Added the freedom of the woods, and sought
+ The bookless wisdom by experience taught,
+ And learned to love his new-found home, while not
+
+ Forgetful of the old; the seasons went
+ Their rounds, and somewhat to his spirit lent
+ Of their own calm and measureless content.
+
+ Glad even to tears, he heard the robin sing
+ His song of welcome to the Western spring,
+ And bluebird borrowing from the sky his wing.
+
+ And when the miracle of autumn came,
+ And all the woods with many-colored flame
+ Of splendor, making summer's greenness tame,
+
+ Burned, unconsumed, a voice without a sound
+ Spake to him from each kindled bush around,
+ And made the strange, new landscape holy ground
+
+ And when the bitter north-wind, keen and swift,
+ Swept the white street and piled the dooryard drift,
+ He exercised, as Friends might say, his gift
+
+ Of verse, Dutch, English, Latin, like the hash
+ Of corn and beans in Indian succotash;
+ Dull, doubtless, but with here and there a flash
+
+ Of wit and fine conceit,--the good man's play
+ Of quiet fancies, meet to while away
+ The slow hours measuring off an idle day.
+
+ At evening, while his wife put on her look
+ Of love's endurance, from its niche he took
+ The written pages of his ponderous book.
+
+ And read, in half the languages of man,
+ His "Rusca Apium," which with bees began,
+ And through the gamut of creation ran.
+
+ Or, now and then, the missive of some friend
+ In gray Altorf or storied Nurnberg penned
+ Dropped in upon him like a guest to spend
+
+ The night beneath his roof-tree. Mystical
+ The fair Von Merlau spake as waters fall
+ And voices sound in dreams, and yet withal
+
+ Human and sweet, as if each far, low tone,
+ Over the roses of her gardens blown
+ Brought the warm sense of beauty all her own.
+
+ Wise Spener questioned what his friend could trace
+ Of spiritual influx or of saving grace
+ In the wild natures of the Indian race.
+
+ And learned Schurmberg, fain, at times, to look
+ From Talmud, Koran, Veds, and Pentateuch,
+ Sought out his pupil in his far-off nook,
+
+ To query with him of climatic change,
+ Of bird, beast, reptile, in his forest range,
+ Of flowers and fruits and simples new and strange.
+
+ And thus the Old and New World reached their hands
+ Across the water, and the friendly lands
+ Talked with each other from their severed strands.
+
+ Pastorius answered all: while seed and root
+ Sent from his new home grew to flower and fruit
+ Along the Rhine and at the Spessart's foot;
+
+ And, in return, the flowers his boyhood knew
+ Smiled at his door, the same in form and hue,
+ And on his vines the Rhenish clusters grew.
+
+ No idler he; whoever else might shirk,
+ He set his hand to every honest work,--
+ Farmer and teacher, court and meeting clerk.
+
+ Still on the town seal his device is found,
+ Grapes, flax, and thread-spool on a trefoil ground,
+ With "Vinum, Linum et Textrinum" wound.
+
+ One house sufficed for gospel and for law,
+ Where Paul and Grotius, Scripture text and saw,
+ Assured the good, and held the rest in awe.
+
+ Whatever legal maze he wandered through,
+ He kept the Sermon on the Mount in view,
+ And justice always into mercy grew.
+
+ No whipping-post he needed, stocks, nor jail,
+ Nor ducking-stool; the orchard-thief grew pale
+ At his rebuke, the vixen ceased to rail,
+
+ The usurer's grasp released the forfeit land;
+ The slanderer faltered at the witness-stand,
+ And all men took his counsel for command.
+
+ Was it caressing air, the brooding love
+ Of tenderer skies than German land knew of,
+ Green calm below, blue quietness above,
+
+ Still flow of water, deep repose of wood
+ That, with a sense of loving Fatherhood
+ And childlike trust in the Eternal Good,
+
+ Softened all hearts, and dulled the edge of hate,
+ Hushed strife, and taught impatient zeal to wait
+ The slow assurance of the better state?
+
+ Who knows what goadings in their sterner way
+ O'er jagged ice, relieved by granite gray,
+ Blew round the men of Massachusetts Bay?
+
+ What hate of heresy the east-wind woke?
+ What hints of pitiless power and terror spoke
+ In waves that on their iron coast-line broke?
+
+ Be it as it may: within the Land of Penn
+ The sectary yielded to the citizen,
+ And peaceful dwelt the many-creeded men.
+
+ Peace brooded over all. No trumpet stung
+ The air to madness, and no steeple flung
+ Alarums down from bells at midnight rung.
+
+ The land slept well. The Indian from his face
+ Washed all his war-paint off, and in the place
+ Of battle-marches sped the peaceful chase,
+
+ Or wrought for wages at the white man's side,--
+ Giving to kindness what his native pride
+ And lazy freedom to all else denied.
+
+ And well the curious scholar loved the old
+ Traditions that his swarthy neighbors told
+ By wigwam-fires when nights were growing cold,
+
+ Discerned the fact round which their fancy drew
+ Its dreams, and held their childish faith more true
+ To God and man than half the creeds he knew.
+
+ The desert blossomed round him; wheat-fields rolled
+ Beneath the warm wind waves of green and gold;
+ The planted ear returned its hundred-fold.
+
+ Great clusters ripened in a warmer sun
+ Than that which by the Rhine stream shines upon
+ The purpling hillsides with low vines o'errun.
+
+ About each rustic porch the humming-bird
+ Tried with light bill, that scarce a petal stirred,
+ The Old World flowers to virgin soil transferred;
+
+ And the first-fruits of pear and apple, bending
+ The young boughs down, their gold and russet blending,
+ Made glad his heart, familiar odors lending
+
+ To the fresh fragrance of the birch and pine,
+ Life-everlasting, bay, and eglantine,
+ And all the subtle scents the woods combine.
+
+ Fair First-Day mornings, steeped in summer calm,
+ Warm, tender, restful, sweet with woodland balm,
+ Came to him, like some mother-hallowed psalm
+
+ To the tired grinder at the noisy wheel
+ Of labor, winding off from memory's reel
+ A golden thread of music. With no peal
+
+ Of bells to call them to the house of praise,
+ The scattered settlers through green forest-ways
+ Walked meeting-ward. In reverent amaze
+
+ The Indian trapper saw them, from the dim
+ Shade of the alders on the rivulet's rim,
+ Seek the Great Spirit's house to talk with Him.
+
+ There, through the gathered stillness multiplied
+ And made intense by sympathy, outside
+ The sparrows sang, and the gold-robin cried,
+
+ A-swing upon his elm. A faint perfume
+ Breathed through the open windows of the room
+ From locust-trees, heavy with clustered bloom.
+
+ Thither, perchance, sore-tried confessors came,
+ Whose fervor jail nor pillory could tame,
+ Proud of the cropped ears meant to be their shame,
+
+ Men who had eaten slavery's bitter bread
+ In Indian isles; pale women who had bled
+ Under the hangman's lash, and bravely said
+
+ God's message through their prison's iron bars;
+ And gray old soldier-converts, seamed with scars
+ From every stricken field of England's wars.
+
+ Lowly before the Unseen Presence knelt
+ Each waiting heart, till haply some one felt
+ On his moved lips the seal of silence melt.
+
+ Or, without spoken words, low breathings stole
+ Of a diviner life from soul to soul,
+ Baptizing in one tender thought the whole.
+
+ When shaken hands announced the meeting o'er,
+ The friendly group still lingered at the door,
+ Greeting, inquiring, sharing all the store
+
+ Of weekly tidings. Meanwhile youth and maid
+ Down the green vistas of the woodland strayed,
+ Whispered and smiled and oft their feet delayed.
+
+ Did the boy's whistle answer back the thrushes?
+ Did light girl laughter ripple through the bushes,
+ As brooks make merry over roots and rushes?
+
+ Unvexed the sweet air seemed. Without a wound
+ The ear of silence heard, and every sound
+ Its place in nature's fine accordance found.
+
+ And solemn meeting, summer sky and wood,
+ Old kindly faces, youth and maidenhood
+ Seemed, like God's new creation, very good!
+
+ And, greeting all with quiet smile and word,
+ Pastorius went his way. The unscared bird
+ Sang at his side; scarcely the squirrel stirred
+
+ At his hushed footstep on the mossy sod;
+ And, wheresoe'er the good man looked or trod,
+ He felt the peace of nature and of God.
+
+ His social life wore no ascetic form,
+ He loved all beauty, without fear of harm,
+ And in his veins his Teuton blood ran warm.
+
+ Strict to himself, of other men no spy,
+ He made his own no circuit-judge to try
+ The freer conscience of his neighbors by.
+
+ With love rebuking, by his life alone,
+ Gracious and sweet, the better way was shown,
+ The joy of one, who, seeking not his own,
+
+ And faithful to all scruples, finds at last
+ The thorns and shards of duty overpast,
+ And daily life, beyond his hope's forecast,
+
+ Pleasant and beautiful with sight and sound,
+ And flowers upspringing in its narrow round,
+ And all his days with quiet gladness crowned.
+
+ He sang not; but, if sometimes tempted strong,
+ He hummed what seemed like Altorf's Burschen-song;
+ His good wife smiled, and did not count it wrong.
+
+ For well he loved his boyhood's brother band;
+ His Memory, while he trod the New World's strand,
+ A double-ganger walked the Fatherland!
+
+ If, when on frosty Christmas eves the light
+ Shone on his quiet hearth, he missed the sight
+ Of Yule-log, Tree, and Christ-child all in white;
+
+ And closed his eyes, and listened to the sweet
+ Old wait-songs sounding down his native street,
+ And watched again the dancers' mingling feet;
+
+ Yet not the less, when once the vision passed,
+ He held the plain and sober maxims fast
+ Of the dear Friends with whom his lot was cast.
+
+ Still all attuned to nature's melodies,
+ He loved the bird's song in his dooryard trees,
+ And the low hum of home-returning bees;
+
+ The blossomed flax, the tulip-trees in bloom
+ Down the long street, the beauty and perfume
+ Of apple-boughs, the mingling light and gloom
+
+ Of Sommerhausen's woodlands, woven through
+ With sun--threads; and the music the wind drew,
+ Mournful and sweet, from leaves it overblew.
+
+ And evermore, beneath this outward sense,
+ And through the common sequence of events,
+ He felt the guiding hand of Providence
+
+ Reach out of space. A Voice spake in his ear,
+ And to all other voices far and near
+ Died at that whisper, full of meanings clear.
+
+ The Light of Life shone round him; one by one
+ The wandering lights, that all-misleading run,
+ Went out like candles paling in the sun.
+
+ That Light he followed, step by step, where'er
+ It led, as in the vision of the seer
+ The wheels moved as the spirit in the clear
+
+ And terrible crystal moved, with all their eyes
+ Watching the living splendor sink or rise,
+ Its will their will, knowing no otherwise.
+
+ Within himself he found the law of right,
+ He walked by faith and not the letter's sight,
+ And read his Bible by the Inward Light.
+
+ And if sometimes the slaves of form and rule,
+ Frozen in their creeds like fish in winter's pool,
+ Tried the large tolerance of his liberal school,
+
+ His door was free to men of every name,
+ He welcomed all the seeking souls who came,
+ And no man's faith he made a cause of blame.
+
+ But best he loved in leisure hours to see
+ His own dear Friends sit by him knee to knee,
+ In social converse, genial, frank, and free.
+
+ There sometimes silence (it were hard to tell
+ Who owned it first) upon the circle fell,
+ Hushed Anna's busy wheel, and laid its spell
+
+ On the black boy who grimaced by the hearth,
+ To solemnize his shining face of mirth;
+ Only the old clock ticked amidst the dearth
+
+ Of sound; nor eye was raised nor hand was stirred
+ In that soul-sabbath, till at last some word
+ Of tender counsel or low prayer was heard.
+
+ Then guests, who lingered but farewell to say
+ And take love's message, went their homeward way;
+ So passed in peace the guileless Quaker's day.
+
+ His was the Christian's unsung Age of Gold,
+ A truer idyl than the bards have told
+ Of Arno's banks or Arcady of old.
+
+ Where still the Friends their place of burial keep,
+ And century-rooted mosses o'er it creep,
+ The Nurnberg scholar and his helpmeet sleep.
+
+ And Anna's aloe? If it flowered at last
+ In Bartram's garden, did John Woolman cast
+ A glance upon it as he meekly passed?
+
+ And did a secret sympathy possess
+ That tender soul, and for the slave's redress
+ Lend hope, strength, patience? It were vain to
+ guess.
+
+ Nay, were the plant itself but mythical,
+ Set in the fresco of tradition's wall
+ Like Jotham's bramble, mattereth not at all.
+
+ Enough to know that, through the winter's frost
+ And summer's heat, no seed of truth is lost,
+ And every duty pays at last its cost.
+
+ For, ere Pastorius left the sun and air,
+ God sent the answer to his life-long prayer;
+ The child was born beside the Delaware,
+
+ Who, in the power a holy purpose lends,
+ Guided his people unto nobler ends,
+ And left them worthier of the name of Friends.
+
+ And to! the fulness of the time has come,
+ And over all the exile's Western home,
+ From sea to sea the flowers of freedom bloom!
+
+ And joy-bells ring, and silver trumpets blow;
+ But not for thee, Pastorius! Even so
+ The world forgets, but the wise angels know.
+
+
+
+
+KING VOLMER AND ELSIE.
+
+AFTER THE DANISH OF CHRISTIAN WINTER.
+
+ WHERE, over heathen doom-rings and gray stones
+ of the Horg,
+ In its little Christian city stands the church of
+ Vordingborg,
+ In merry mood King Volmer sat, forgetful of his
+ power,
+ As idle as the Goose of Gold that brooded on his
+ tower.
+
+ Out spake the King to Henrik, his young and faithful
+ squire
+ "Dar'st trust thy little Elsie, the maid of thy
+ desire?"
+ "Of all the men in Denmark she loveth only me
+ As true to me is Elsie as thy Lily is to thee."
+
+ Loud laughed the king: "To-morrow shall bring
+ another day,
+ When I myself will test her; she will not say me
+ nay."
+ Thereat the lords and gallants, that round about
+ him stood,
+ Wagged all their heads in concert and smiled as
+ courtiers should.
+
+ The gray lark sings o'er Vordingborg, and on the
+ ancient town
+ From the tall tower of Valdemar the Golden Goose
+ looks down;
+ The yellow grain is waving in the pleasant wind of
+ morn,
+ The wood resounds with cry of hounds and blare
+ of hunter's horn.
+
+ In the garden of her father little Elsie sits and
+ spins,
+ And, singing with the early birds, her daily task,
+ begins.
+ Gay tulips bloom and sweet mint curls around her
+ garden-bower,
+ But she is sweeter than the mint and fairer than
+ the flower.
+
+ About her form her kirtle blue clings lovingly, and,
+ white
+ As snow, her loose sleeves only leave her small,
+ round wrists in sight;
+ Below, the modest petticoat can only half conceal
+ The motion of the lightest foot that ever turned a
+ wheel.
+
+ The cat sits purring at her side, bees hum in
+ sunshine warm;
+ But, look! she starts, she lifts her face, she shades
+ it with her arm.
+ And, hark! a train of horsemen, with sound of
+ dog and horn,
+ Come leaping o'er the ditches, come trampling
+ down the corn!
+
+ Merrily rang the bridle-reins, and scarf and plume
+ streamed gay,
+ As fast beside her father's gate the riders held
+ their way;
+ And one was brave in scarlet cloak, with golden
+ spur on heel,
+ And, as he checked his foaming steed, the maiden
+ checked her wheel.
+
+ "All hail among thy roses, the fairest rose to me!
+ For weary months in secret my heart has longed for
+ thee!"
+ What noble knight was this? What words for
+ modest maiden's ear?
+ She dropped a lowly courtesy of bashfulness and
+ fear.
+
+ She lifted up her spinning-wheel; she fain would
+ seek the door,
+ Trembling in every limb, her cheek with blushes
+ crimsoned o'er.
+ "Nay, fear me not," the rider said, "I offer heart
+ and hand,
+ Bear witness these good Danish knights who round
+ about me stand.
+
+ "I grant you time to think of this, to answer as
+ you may,
+ For to-morrow, little Elsie, shall bring another day."
+ He spake the old phrase slyly as, glancing round
+ his train,
+ He saw his merry followers seek to hide their
+ smiles in vain.
+
+ "The snow of pearls I'll scatter in your curls of
+ golden hair,
+ I'll line with furs the velvet of the kirtle that you
+ wear;
+ All precious gems shall twine your neck; and in
+ a chariot gay
+ You shall ride, my little Elsie, behind four steeds
+ of gray.
+
+ "And harps shall sound, and flutes shall play, and
+ brazen lamps shall glow;
+ On marble floors your feet shall weave the dances
+ to and fro.
+ At frosty eventide for us the blazing hearth shall
+ shine,
+ While, at our ease, we play at draughts, and drink
+ the blood-red wine."
+
+ Then Elsie raised her head and met her wooer face
+ to face;
+ A roguish smile shone in her eye and on her lip
+ found place.
+ Back from her low white forehead the curls of
+ gold she threw,
+ And lifted up her eyes to his, steady and clear and
+ blue.
+
+ "I am a lowly peasant, and you a gallant knight;
+ I will not trust a love that soon may cool and turn
+ to slight.
+ If you would wed me henceforth be a peasant, not
+ a lord;
+ I bid you hang upon the wall your tried and trusty
+ sword."
+
+ "To please you, Elsie, I will lay keen Dynadel
+ away,
+ And in its place will swing the scythe and mow
+ your father's hay."
+ "Nay, but your gallant scarlet cloak my eyes can
+ never bear;
+ A Vadmal coat, so plain and gray, is all that you
+ must wear."
+
+ "Well, Vadmal will I wear for you," the rider
+ gayly spoke,
+ "And on the Lord's high altar I'll lay my scarlet
+ cloak."
+ "But mark," she said, "no stately horse my peasant
+ love must ride,
+ A yoke of steers before the plough is all that he
+ must guide."
+
+ The knight looked down upon his steed: "Well,
+ let him wander free
+ No other man must ride the horse that has been
+ backed by me.
+ Henceforth I'll tread the furrow and to my oxen
+ talk,
+ If only little Elsie beside my plough will walk."
+
+ "You must take from out your cellar cask of wine
+ and flask and can;
+ The homely mead I brew you may serve a peasant.
+ man."
+ "Most willingly, fair Elsie, I'll drink that mead
+ of thine,
+ And leave my minstrel's thirsty throat to drain
+ my generous wine."
+
+ "Now break your shield asunder, and shatter sign
+ and boss,
+ Unmeet for peasant-wedded arms, your knightly
+ knee across.
+ And pull me down your castle from top to basement
+ wall,
+ And let your plough trace furrows in the ruins of
+ your hall!"
+
+ Then smiled he with a lofty pride; right well at
+ last he knew
+ The maiden of the spinning-wheel was to her troth.
+ plight true.
+ "Ah, roguish little Elsie! you act your part full
+ well
+ You know that I must bear my shield and in my
+ castle dwell!
+
+ "The lions ramping on that shield between the
+ hearts aflame
+ Keep watch o'er Denmark's honor, and guard her
+ ancient name.
+
+ "For know that I am Volmer; I dwell in yonder
+ towers,
+ Who ploughs them ploughs up Denmark, this
+ goodly home of ours'.
+
+ "I tempt no more, fair Elsie! your heart I know
+ is true;
+ Would God that all our maidens were good and
+ pure as you!
+ Well have you pleased your monarch, and he shall
+ well repay;
+ God's peace! Farewell! To-morrow will bring
+ another day!"
+
+ He lifted up his bridle hand, he spurred his good
+ steed then,
+ And like a whirl-blast swept away with all his
+ gallant men.
+ The steel hoofs beat the rocky path; again on
+ winds of morn
+ The wood resounds with cry of hounds and blare
+ of hunter's horn.
+
+ "Thou true and ever faithful!" the listening
+ Henrik cried;
+ And, leaping o'er the green hedge, he stood by
+ Elsie's side.
+ None saw the fond embracing, save, shining from
+ afar,
+ The Golden Goose that watched them from the
+ tower of Valdemar.
+
+ O darling girls of Denmark! of all the flowers
+ that throng
+ Her vales of spring the fairest, I sing for you my
+ song.
+ No praise as yours so bravely rewards the singer's
+ skill;
+ Thank God! of maids like Elsie the land has
+ plenty still!
+
+ 1872.
+
+
+
+
+THE THREE BELLS.
+
+ BENEATH the low-hung night cloud
+ That raked her splintering mast
+ The good ship settled slowly,
+ The cruel leak gained fast.
+
+ Over the awful ocean
+ Her signal guns pealed out.
+ Dear God! was that Thy answer
+ From the horror round about?
+
+ A voice came down the wild wind,
+ "Ho! ship ahoy!" its cry
+ "Our stout Three Bells of Glasgow
+ Shall lay till daylight by!"
+
+ Hour after hour crept slowly,
+ Yet on the heaving swells
+ Tossed up and down the ship-lights,
+ The lights of the Three Bells!
+
+ And ship to ship made signals,
+ Man answered back to man,
+ While oft, to cheer and hearten,
+ The Three Bells nearer ran;
+
+ And the captain from her taffrail
+ Sent down his hopeful cry
+ "Take heart! Hold on!" he shouted;
+ "The Three Bells shall lay by!"
+
+ All night across the waters
+ The tossing lights shone clear;
+ All night from reeling taffrail
+ The Three Bells sent her cheer.
+
+ And when the dreary watches
+ Of storm and darkness passed,
+ Just as the wreck lurched under,
+ All souls were saved at last.
+
+ Sail on, Three Bells, forever,
+ In grateful memory sail!
+ Ring on, Three Bells of rescue,
+ Above the wave and gale!
+
+ Type of the Love eternal,
+ Repeat the Master's cry,
+ As tossing through our darkness
+ The lights of God draw nigh!
+
+ 1872.
+
+
+
+
+JOHN UNDERHILL.
+
+ A SCORE of years had come and gone
+ Since the Pilgrims landed on Plymouth stone,
+ When Captain Underhill, bearing scars
+ From Indian ambush and Flemish wars,
+ Left three-hilled Boston and wandered down,
+ East by north, to Cocheco town.
+
+ With Vane the younger, in counsel sweet,
+ He had sat at Anna Hutchinson's feet,
+ And, when the bolt of banishment fell
+ On the head of his saintly oracle,
+ He had shared her ill as her good report,
+ And braved the wrath of the General Court.
+
+ He shook from his feet as he rode away
+ The dust of the Massachusetts Bay.
+ The world might bless and the world might ban,
+ What did it matter the perfect man,
+ To whom the freedom of earth was given,
+ Proof against sin, and sure of heaven?
+
+ He cheered his heart as he rode along
+ With screed of Scripture and holy song,
+ Or thought how he rode with his lances free
+ By the Lower Rhine and the Zuyder-Zee,
+ Till his wood-path grew to a trodden road,
+ And Hilton Point in the distance showed.
+
+ He saw the church with the block-house nigh,
+ The two fair rivers, the flakes thereby,
+ And, tacking to windward, low and crank,
+ The little shallop from Strawberry Bank;
+ And he rose in his stirrups and looked abroad
+ Over land and water, and praised the Lord.
+
+ Goodly and stately and grave to see,
+ Into the clearing's space rode he,
+ With the sun on the hilt of his sword in sheath,
+ And his silver buckles and spurs beneath,
+ And the settlers welcomed him, one and all,
+ From swift Quampeagan to Gonic Fall.
+
+ And he said to the elders: "Lo, I come
+ As the way seemed open to seek a home.
+ Somewhat the Lord hath wrought by my hands
+ In the Narragansett and Netherlands,
+ And if here ye have work for a Christian man,
+ I will tarry, and serve ye as best I can.
+
+ "I boast not of gifts, but fain would own
+ The wonderful favor God hath shown,
+ The special mercy vouchsafed one day
+ On the shore of Narragansett Bay,
+ As I sat, with my pipe, from the camp aside,
+ And mused like Isaac at eventide.
+
+ "A sudden sweetness of peace I found,
+ A garment of gladness wrapped me round;
+ I felt from the law of works released,
+ The strife of the flesh and spirit ceased,
+ My faith to a full assurance grew,
+ And all I had hoped for myself I knew.
+
+ "Now, as God appointeth, I keep my way,
+ I shall not stumble, I shall not stray;
+ He hath taken away my fig-leaf dress,
+ I wear the robe of His righteousness;
+ And the shafts of Satan no more avail
+ Than Pequot arrows on Christian mail."
+
+ "Tarry with us," the settlers cried,
+ "Thou man of God, as our ruler and guide."
+ And Captain Underhill bowed his head.
+ "The will of the Lord be done!" he said.
+ And the morrow beheld him sitting down
+ In the ruler's seat in Cocheco town.
+
+ And he judged therein as a just man should;
+ His words were wise and his rule was good;
+ He coveted not his neighbor's land,
+ From the holding of bribes he shook his hand;
+ And through the camps of the heathen ran
+ A wholesome fear of the valiant man.
+
+ But the heart is deceitful, the good Book saith,
+ And life hath ever a savor of death.
+ Through hymns of triumph the tempter calls,
+ And whoso thinketh he standeth falls.
+ Alas! ere their round the seasons ran,
+ There was grief in the soul of the saintly man.
+
+ The tempter's arrows that rarely fail
+ Had found the joints of his spiritual mail;
+ And men took note of his gloomy air,
+ The shame in his eye, the halt in his prayer,
+ The signs of a battle lost within,
+ The pain of a soul in the coils of sin.
+
+ Then a whisper of scandal linked his name
+ With broken vows and a life of blame;
+ And the people looked askance on him
+ As he walked among them sullen and grim,
+ Ill at ease, and bitter of word,
+ And prompt of quarrel with hand or sword.
+
+ None knew how, with prayer and fasting still,
+ He strove in the bonds of his evil will;
+ But he shook himself like Samson at length,
+ And girded anew his loins of strength,
+ And bade the crier go up and down
+ And call together the wondering town.
+
+ Jeer and murmur and shaking of head
+ Ceased as he rose in his place and said
+ "Men, brethren, and fathers, well ye know
+ How I came among you a year ago,
+ Strong in the faith that my soul was freed
+ From sin of feeling, or thought, or deed.
+
+ "I have sinned, I own it with grief and shame,
+ But not with a lie on my lips I came.
+ In my blindness I verily thought my heart
+ Swept and garnished in every part.
+ He chargeth His angels with folly; He sees
+ The heavens unclean. Was I more than these?
+
+ "I urge no plea. At your feet I lay
+ The trust you gave me, and go my way.
+ Hate me or pity me, as you will,
+ The Lord will have mercy on sinners still;
+ And I, who am chiefest, say to all,
+ Watch and pray, lest ye also fall."
+
+ No voice made answer: a sob so low
+ That only his quickened ear could know
+ Smote his heart with a bitter pain,
+ As into the forest he rode again,
+ And the veil of its oaken leaves shut down
+ On his latest glimpse of Cocheco town.
+
+ Crystal-clear on the man of sin
+ The streams flashed up, and the sky shone in;
+ On his cheek of fever the cool wind blew,
+ The leaves dropped on him their tears of dew,
+ And angels of God, in the pure, sweet guise
+ Of flowers, looked on him with sad surprise.
+
+ Was his ear at fault that brook and breeze
+ Sang in their saddest of minor keys?
+ What was it the mournful wood-thrush said?
+ What whispered the pine-trees overhead?
+ Did he hear the Voice on his lonely way
+ That Adam heard in the cool of day?
+
+ Into the desert alone rode he,
+ Alone with the Infinite Purity;
+ And, bowing his soul to its tender rebuke,
+ As Peter did to the Master's look,
+ He measured his path with prayers of pain
+ For peace with God and nature again.
+
+ And in after years to Cocheco came
+ The bruit of a once familiar name;
+ How among the Dutch of New Netherlands,
+ From wild Danskamer to Haarlem sands,
+ A penitent soldier preached the Word,
+ And smote the heathen with Gideon's sword!
+
+ And the heart of Boston was glad to hear
+ How he harried the foe on the long frontier,
+ And heaped on the land against him barred
+ The coals of his generous watch and ward.
+ Frailest and bravest! the Bay State still
+ Counts with her worthies John Underhill.
+
+ 1873.
+
+
+
+
+CONDUCTOR BRADLEY.
+
+A railway conductor who lost his life in an accident on a Connecticut
+railway, May 9, 1873.
+
+
+ CONDUCTOR BRADLEY, (always may his name
+ Be said with reverence!) as the swift doom came,
+ Smitten to death, a crushed and mangled frame,
+
+ Sank, with the brake he grasped just where he stood
+ To do the utmost that a brave man could,
+ And die, if needful, as a true man should.
+
+ Men stooped above him; women dropped their tears
+ On that poor wreck beyond all hopes or fears,
+ Lost in the strength and glory of his years.
+
+ What heard they? Lo! the ghastly lips of pain,
+ Dead to all thought save duty's, moved again
+ "Put out the signals for the other train!"
+
+ No nobler utterance since the world began
+ From lips of saint or martyr ever ran,
+ Electric, through the sympathies of man.
+
+ Ah me! how poor and noteless seem to this
+ The sick-bed dramas of self-consciousness,
+ Our sensual fears of pain and hopes of bliss!
+
+ Oh, grand, supreme endeavor! Not in vain
+ That last brave act of failing tongue and brain
+ Freighted with life the downward rushing train,
+
+ Following the wrecked one, as wave follows wave,
+ Obeyed the warning which the dead lips gave.
+ Others he saved, himself he could not save.
+
+ Nay, the lost life was saved. He is not dead
+ Who in his record still the earth shall tread
+ With God's clear aureole shining round his head.
+
+ We bow as in the dust, with all our pride
+ Of virtue dwarfed the noble deed beside.
+ God give us grace to live as Bradley died!
+
+ 1873.
+
+
+
+
+THE WITCH OF WENHAM.
+
+The house is still standing in Danvers, Mass., where, it is said, a
+suspected witch was confined overnight in the attic, which was bolted
+fast. In the morning when the constable came to take her to Salem for
+trial she was missing, although the door was still bolted. Her escape
+was doubtless aided by her friends, but at the time it was attributed
+to Satanic interference.
+
+
+ I.
+
+ ALONG Crane River's sunny slopes
+ Blew warm the winds of May,
+ And over Naumkeag's ancient oaks
+ The green outgrew the gray.
+
+ The grass was green on Rial-side,
+ The early birds at will
+ Waked up the violet in its dell,
+ The wind-flower on its hill.
+
+ "Where go you, in your Sunday coat,
+ Son Andrew, tell me, pray."
+ For striped perch in Wenham Lake
+ I go to fish to-day."
+
+ "Unharmed of thee in Wenham Lake
+ The mottled perch shall be
+ A blue-eyed witch sits on the bank
+ And weaves her net for thee.
+
+ "She weaves her golden hair; she sings
+ Her spell-song low and faint;
+ The wickedest witch in Salem jail
+ Is to that girl a saint."
+
+ "Nay, mother, hold thy cruel tongue;
+ God knows," the young man cried,
+ "He never made a whiter soul
+ Than hers by Wenham side.
+
+ "She tends her mother sick and blind,
+ And every want supplies;
+ To her above the blessed Book
+ She lends her soft blue eyes.
+
+ "Her voice is glad with holy songs,
+ Her lips are sweet with prayer;
+ Go where you will, in ten miles round
+ Is none more good and fair."
+
+ "Son Andrew, for the love of God
+ And of thy mother, stay!"
+ She clasped her hands, she wept aloud,
+ But Andrew rode away.
+
+ "O reverend sir, my Andrew's soul
+ The Wenham witch has caught;
+ She holds him with the curled gold
+ Whereof her snare is wrought.
+
+ "She charms him with her great blue eyes,
+ She binds him with her hair;
+ Oh, break the spell with holy words,
+ Unbind him with a prayer!"
+
+ "Take heart," the painful preacher said,
+ "This mischief shall not be;
+ The witch shall perish in her sins
+ And Andrew shall go free.
+
+ "Our poor Ann Putnam testifies
+ She saw her weave a spell,
+ Bare-armed, loose-haired, at full of moon,
+ Around a dried-up well.
+
+ "'Spring up, O well!' she softly sang
+ The Hebrew's old refrain
+ (For Satan uses Bible words),
+ Till water flowed a-main.
+
+ "And many a goodwife heard her speak
+ By Wenham water words
+ That made the buttercups take wings
+ And turn to yellow birds.
+
+ "They say that swarming wild bees seek
+ The hive at her command;
+ And fishes swim to take their food
+ From out her dainty hand.
+
+ "Meek as she sits in meeting-time,
+ The godly minister
+ Notes well the spell that doth compel
+ The young men's eyes to her.
+
+ "The mole upon her dimpled chin
+ Is Satan's seal and sign;
+ Her lips are red with evil bread
+ And stain of unblest wine.
+
+ "For Tituba, my Indian, saith
+ At Quasycung she took
+ The Black Man's godless sacrament
+ And signed his dreadful book.
+
+ "Last night my sore-afflicted child
+ Against the young witch cried.
+ To take her Marshal Herrick rides
+ Even now to Wenham side."
+
+ The marshal in his saddle sat,
+ His daughter at his knee;
+ "I go to fetch that arrant witch,
+ Thy fair playmate," quoth he.
+
+ "Her spectre walks the parsonage,
+ And haunts both hall and stair;
+ They know her by the great blue eyes
+ And floating gold of hair."
+
+ "They lie, they lie, my father dear!
+ No foul old witch is she,
+ But sweet and good and crystal-pure
+ As Wenham waters be."
+
+ "I tell thee, child, the Lord hath set
+ Before us good and ill,
+ And woe to all whose carnal loves
+ Oppose His righteous will.
+
+ "Between Him and the powers of hell
+ Choose thou, my child, to-day
+ No sparing hand, no pitying eye,
+ When God commands to slay!"
+
+ He went his way; the old wives shook
+ With fear as he drew nigh;
+ The children in the dooryards held
+ Their breath as he passed by.
+
+ Too well they knew the gaunt gray horse
+ The grim witch-hunter rode
+ The pale Apocalyptic beast
+ By grisly Death bestrode.
+
+
+ II.
+
+ Oh, fair the face of Wenham Lake
+ Upon the young girl's shone,
+ Her tender mouth, her dreaming eyes,
+ Her yellow hair outblown.
+
+ By happy youth and love attuned
+ To natural harmonies,
+ The singing birds, the whispering wind,
+ She sat beneath the trees.
+
+ Sat shaping for her bridal dress
+ Her mother's wedding gown,
+ When lo! the marshal, writ in hand,
+ From Alford hill rode down.
+
+ His face was hard with cruel fear,
+ He grasped the maiden's hands
+ "Come with me unto Salem town,
+ For so the law commands!"
+
+ "Oh, let me to my mother say
+ Farewell before I go!"
+ He closer tied her little hands
+ Unto his saddle bow.
+
+ "Unhand me," cried she piteously,
+ "For thy sweet daughter's sake."
+ "I'll keep my daughter safe," he said,
+ "From the witch of Wenham Lake."
+
+ "Oh, leave me for my mother's sake,
+ She needs my eyes to see."
+ "Those eyes, young witch, the crows shall peck
+ From off the gallows-tree."
+
+ He bore her to a farm-house old,
+ And up its stairway long,
+ And closed on her the garret-door
+ With iron bolted strong.
+
+ The day died out, the night came down
+ Her evening prayer she said,
+ While, through the dark, strange faces seemed
+ To mock her as she prayed.
+
+ The present horror deepened all
+ The fears her childhood knew;
+ The awe wherewith the air was filled
+ With every breath she drew.
+
+ And could it be, she trembling asked,
+ Some secret thought or sin
+ Had shut good angels from her heart
+ And let the bad ones in?
+
+ Had she in some forgotten dream
+ Let go her hold on Heaven,
+ And sold herself unwittingly
+ To spirits unforgiven?
+
+ Oh, weird and still the dark hours passed;
+ No human sound she heard,
+ But up and down the chimney stack
+ The swallows moaned and stirred.
+
+ And o'er her, with a dread surmise
+ Of evil sight and sound,
+ The blind bats on their leathern wings
+ Went wheeling round and round.
+
+ Low hanging in the midnight sky
+ Looked in a half-faced moon.
+ Was it a dream, or did she hear
+ Her lover's whistled tune?
+
+ She forced the oaken scuttle back;
+ A whisper reached her ear
+ "Slide down the roof to me," it said,
+ "So softly none may hear."
+
+ She slid along the sloping roof
+ Till from its eaves she hung,
+ And felt the loosened shingles yield
+ To which her fingers clung.
+
+ Below, her lover stretched his hands
+ And touched her feet so small;
+ "Drop down to me, dear heart," he said,
+ "My arms shall break the fall."
+
+ He set her on his pillion soft,
+ Her arms about him twined;
+ And, noiseless as if velvet-shod,
+ They left the house behind.
+
+ But when they reached the open way,
+ Full free the rein he cast;
+ Oh, never through the mirk midnight
+ Rode man and maid more fast.
+
+ Along the wild wood-paths they sped,
+ The bridgeless streams they swam;
+ At set of moon they passed the Bass,
+ At sunrise Agawam.
+
+ At high noon on the Merrimac
+ The ancient ferryman
+ Forgot, at times, his idle oars,
+ So fair a freight to scan.
+
+ And when from off his grounded boat
+ He saw them mount and ride,
+ "God keep her from the evil eye,
+ And harm of witch!" he cried.
+
+ The maiden laughed, as youth will laugh
+ At all its fears gone by;
+ "He does not know," she whispered low,
+ "A little witch am I."
+
+ All day he urged his weary horse,
+ And, in the red sundown,
+ Drew rein before a friendly door
+ In distant Berwick town.
+
+ A fellow-feeling for the wronged
+ The Quaker people felt;
+ And safe beside their kindly hearths
+ The hunted maiden dwelt,
+
+ Until from off its breast the land
+ The haunting horror threw,
+ And hatred, born of ghastly dreams,
+ To shame and pity grew.
+
+ Sad were the year's spring morns, and sad
+ Its golden summer day,
+ But blithe and glad its withered fields,
+ And skies of ashen gray;
+
+ For spell and charm had power no more,
+ The spectres ceased to roam,
+ And scattered households knelt again
+ Around the hearths of home.
+
+ And when once more by Beaver Dam
+ The meadow-lark outsang,
+ And once again on all the hills
+ The early violets sprang,
+
+ And all the windy pasture slopes
+ Lay green within the arms
+ Of creeks that bore the salted sea
+ To pleasant inland farms,
+
+ The smith filed off the chains he forged,
+ The jail-bolts backward fell;
+ And youth and hoary age came forth
+ Like souls escaped from hell.
+
+ 1877
+
+
+
+
+KING SOLOMON AND THE ANTS
+
+ OUT from Jerusalem
+ The king rode with his great
+ War chiefs and lords of state,
+ And Sheba's queen with them;
+
+ Comely, but black withal,
+ To whom, perchance, belongs
+ That wondrous Song of songs,
+ Sensuous and mystical,
+
+ Whereto devout souls turn
+ In fond, ecstatic dream,
+ And through its earth-born theme
+ The Love of loves discern.
+
+ Proud in the Syrian sun,
+ In gold and purple sheen,
+ The dusky Ethiop queen
+ Smiled on King Solomon.
+
+ Wisest of men, he knew
+ The languages of all
+ The creatures great or small
+ That trod the earth or flew.
+
+ Across an ant-hill led
+ The king's path, and he heard
+ Its small folk, and their word
+ He thus interpreted:
+
+ "Here comes the king men greet
+ As wise and good and just,
+ To crush us in the dust
+ Under his heedless feet."
+
+ The great king bowed his head,
+ And saw the wide surprise
+ Of the Queen of Sheba's eyes
+ As he told her what they said.
+
+ "O king!" she whispered sweet,
+ "Too happy fate have they
+ Who perish in thy way
+ Beneath thy gracious feet!
+
+ "Thou of the God-lent crown,
+ Shall these vile creatures dare
+ Murmur against thee where
+ The knees of kings kneel down?"
+
+ "Nay," Solomon replied,
+ "The wise and strong should seek
+ The welfare of the weak,"
+ And turned his horse aside.
+
+ His train, with quick alarm,
+ Curved with their leader round
+ The ant-hill's peopled mound,
+ And left it free from harm.
+
+ The jewelled head bent low;
+ "O king!" she said, "henceforth
+ The secret of thy worth
+ And wisdom well I know.
+
+ "Happy must be the State
+ Whose ruler heedeth more
+ The murmurs of the poor
+ Than flatteries of the great."
+
+ 1877.
+
+
+
+
+IN THE "OLD SOUTH."
+
+On the 8th of July, 1677, Margaret Brewster with four other Friends
+went into the South Church in time of meeting, "in sack-cloth, with
+ashes upon her head, barefoot, and her face blackened," and delivered
+"a warning from the great God of Heaven and Earth to the Rulers and
+Magistrates of Boston." For the offence she was sentenced to be "whipped
+at a cart's tail up and down the Town, with twenty lashes."
+
+ SHE came and stood in the Old South Church,
+ A wonder and a sign,
+ With a look the old-time sibyls wore,
+ Half-crazed and half-divine.
+
+ Save the mournful sackcloth about her wound,
+ Unclothed as the primal mother,
+ With limbs that trembled and eyes that blazed
+ With a fire she dare not smother.
+
+ Loose on her shoulders fell her hair,
+ With sprinkled ashes gray;
+ She stood in the broad aisle strange and weird
+ As a soul at the judgment day.
+
+ And the minister paused in his sermon's midst,
+ And the people held their breath,
+ For these were the words the maiden spoke
+ Through lips as the lips of death:
+
+ "Thus saith the Lord, with equal feet
+ All men my courts shall tread,
+ And priest and ruler no more shall eat
+ My people up like bread!
+
+ "Repent! repent! ere the Lord shall speak
+ In thunder and breaking seals
+ Let all souls worship Him in the way
+ His light within reveals."
+
+ She shook the dust from her naked feet,
+ And her sackcloth closer drew,
+ And into the porch of the awe-hushed church
+ She passed like a ghost from view.
+
+ They whipped her away at the tail o' the cart
+ Through half the streets of the town,
+ But the words she uttered that day nor fire
+ Could burn nor water drown.
+
+ And now the aisles of the ancient church
+ By equal feet are trod,
+ And the bell that swings in its belfry rings
+ Freedom to worship God!
+
+ And now whenever a wrong is done
+ It thrills the conscious walls;
+ The stone from the basement cries aloud
+ And the beam from the timber calls.
+
+ There are steeple-houses on every hand,
+ And pulpits that bless and ban,
+ And the Lord will not grudge the single church
+ That is set apart for man.
+
+ For in two commandments are all the law
+ And the prophets under the sun,
+ And the first is last and the last is first,
+ And the twain are verily one.
+
+ So, long as Boston shall Boston be,
+ And her bay-tides rise and fall,
+ Shall freedom stand in the Old South Church
+ And plead for the rights of all!
+
+ 1877.
+
+
+
+
+THE HENCHMAN.
+
+ MY lady walks her morning round,
+ My lady's page her fleet greyhound,
+ My lady's hair the fond winds stir,
+ And all the birds make songs for her.
+
+ Her thrushes sing in Rathburn bowers,
+ And Rathburn side is gay with flowers;
+ But ne'er like hers, in flower or bird,
+ Was beauty seen or music heard.
+
+ The distance of the stars is hers;
+ The least of all her worshippers,
+ The dust beneath her dainty heel,
+ She knows not that I see or feel.
+
+ Oh, proud and calm!--she cannot know
+ Where'er she goes with her I go;
+ Oh, cold and fair!--she cannot guess
+ I kneel to share her hound's caress!
+
+ Gay knights beside her hunt and hawk,
+ I rob their ears of her sweet talk;
+ Her suitors come from east and west,
+ I steal her smiles from every guest.
+
+ Unheard of her, in loving words,
+ I greet her with the song of birds;
+ I reach her with her green-armed bowers,
+ I kiss her with the lips of flowers.
+
+ The hound and I are on her trail,
+ The wind and I uplift her veil;
+ As if the calm, cold moon she were,
+ And I the tide, I follow her.
+
+ As unrebuked as they, I share
+ The license of the sun and air,
+ And in a common homage hide
+ My worship from her scorn and pride.
+
+ World-wide apart, and yet so near,
+ I breathe her charmed atmosphere,
+ Wherein to her my service brings
+ The reverence due to holy things.
+
+ Her maiden pride, her haughty name,
+ My dumb devotion shall not shame;
+ The love that no return doth crave
+ To knightly levels lifts the slave,
+
+ No lance have I, in joust or fight,
+ To splinter in my lady's sight
+ But, at her feet, how blest were I
+ For any need of hers to die!
+
+ 1877.
+
+
+
+
+THE DEAD FEAST OF THE KOL-FOLK.
+
+E. B. Tylor in his Primitive Culture, chapter xii., gives an account of
+the reverence paid the dead by the Kol tribes of Chota Nagpur, Assam.
+"When a Ho or Munda," he says, "has been burned on the funeral pile,
+collected morsels of his bones are carried in procession with a solemn,
+ghostly, sliding step, keeping time to the deep-sounding drum, and when
+the old woman who carries the bones on her bamboo tray lowers it from
+time to time, then girls who carry pitchers and brass vessels mournfully
+reverse them to show that they are empty; thus the remains are taken to
+visit every house in the village, and every dwelling of a friend or
+relative for miles, and the inmates come out to mourn and praise the
+goodness of the departed; the bones are carried to all the dead man's
+favorite haunts, to the fields he cultivated, to the grove he planted,
+to the threshing-floor where he worked, to the village dance-room where
+he made merry. At last they are taken to the grave, and buried in an
+earthen vase upon a store of food, covered with one of those huge stone
+slabs which European visitors wonder at in the districts of the
+aborigines of India." In the Journal of the Asiatic Society, Bengal,
+vol. ix., p. 795, is a Ho dirge.
+
+
+ WE have opened the door,
+ Once, twice, thrice!
+ We have swept the floor,
+ We have boiled the rice.
+ Come hither, come hither!
+ Come from the far lands,
+ Come from the star lands,
+ Come as before!
+ We lived long together,
+ We loved one another;
+ Come back to our life.
+ Come father, come mother,
+ Come sister and brother,
+ Child, husband, and wife,
+ For you we are sighing.
+ Come take your old places,
+ Come look in our faces,
+ The dead on the dying,
+ Come home!
+
+ We have opened the door,
+ Once, twice, thrice!
+ We have kindled the coals,
+ And we boil the rice
+ For the feast of souls.
+ Come hither, come hither!
+ Think not we fear you,
+ Whose hearts are so near you.
+ Come tenderly thought on,
+ Come all unforgotten,
+ Come from the shadow-lands,
+ From the dim meadow-lands
+ Where the pale grasses bend
+ Low to our sighing.
+ Come father, come mother,
+ Come sister and brother,
+ Come husband and friend,
+ The dead to the dying,
+ Come home!
+
+ We have opened the door
+ You entered so oft;
+ For the feast of souls
+ We have kindled the coals,
+ And we boil the rice soft.
+ Come you who are dearest
+ To us who are nearest,
+ Come hither, come hither,
+ From out the wild weather;
+ The storm clouds are flying,
+ The peepul is sighing;
+ Come in from the rain.
+ Come father, come mother,
+ Come sister and brother,
+ Come husband and lover,
+ Beneath our roof-cover.
+ Look on us again,
+ The dead on the dying,
+ Come home!
+
+ We have opened the door!
+ For the feast of souls
+ We have kindled the coals
+ We may kindle no more!
+ Snake, fever, and famine,
+ The curse of the Brahmin,
+ The sun and the dew,
+ They burn us, they bite us,
+ They waste us and smite us;
+ Our days are but few
+ In strange lands far yonder
+ To wonder and wander
+ We hasten to you.
+ List then to our sighing,
+ While yet we are here
+ Nor seeing nor hearing,
+ We wait without fearing,
+ To feel you draw near.
+ O dead, to the dying
+ Come home!
+
+ 1879.
+
+
+
+
+THE KHAN'S DEVIL.
+
+
+ THE Khan came from Bokhara town
+ To Hamza, santon of renown.
+
+ "My head is sick, my hands are weak;
+ Thy help, O holy man, I seek."
+
+ In silence marking for a space
+ The Khan's red eyes and purple face,
+
+ Thick voice, and loose, uncertain tread,
+ "Thou hast a devil!" Hamza said.
+
+ "Allah forbid!" exclaimed the Khan.
+ Rid me of him at once, O man!"
+
+ "Nay," Hamza said, "no spell of mine
+ Can slay that cursed thing of thine.
+
+ "Leave feast and wine, go forth and drink
+ Water of healing on the brink
+
+ "Where clear and cold from mountain snows,
+ The Nahr el Zeben downward flows.
+
+ "Six moons remain, then come to me;
+ May Allah's pity go with thee!"
+
+ Awestruck, from feast and wine the Khan
+ Went forth where Nahr el Zeben ran.
+
+ Roots were his food, the desert dust
+ His bed, the water quenched his thirst;
+
+ And when the sixth moon's scimetar
+ Curved sharp above the evening star,
+
+ He sought again the santon's door,
+ Not weak and trembling as before,
+
+ But strong of limb and clear of brain;
+ "Behold," he said, "the fiend is slain."
+
+ "Nay," Hamza answered, "starved and drowned,
+ The curst one lies in death-like swound.
+
+ "But evil breaks the strongest gyves,
+ And jins like him have charmed lives.
+
+ "One beaker of the juice of grape
+ May call him up in living shape.
+
+ "When the red wine of Badakshan
+ Sparkles for thee, beware, O Khan,
+
+ "With water quench the fire within,
+ And drown each day thy devilkin!"
+
+ Thenceforth the great Khan shunned the cup
+ As Shitan's own, though offered up,
+
+ With laughing eyes and jewelled hands,
+ By Yarkand's maids and Samarcand's.
+
+ And, in the lofty vestibule
+ Of the medress of Kaush Kodul,
+
+ The students of the holy law
+ A golden-lettered tablet saw,
+
+ With these words, by a cunning hand,
+ Graved on it at the Khan's command:
+
+ "In Allah's name, to him who hath
+ A devil, Khan el Hamed saith,
+
+ "Wisely our Prophet cursed the vine
+ The fiend that loves the breath of wine,
+
+ "No prayer can slay, no marabout
+ Nor Meccan dervis can drive out.
+
+ "I, Khan el Hamed, know the charm
+ That robs him of his power to harm.
+
+ "Drown him, O Islam's child! the spell
+ To save thee lies in tank and well!"
+
+ 1879.
+
+
+
+
+THE KING'S MISSIVE.
+
+1661.
+
+This ballad, originally written for The Memorial History of Boston,
+describes, with pardonable poetic license, a memorable incident in the
+annals of the city. The interview between Shattuck and the Governor took
+place, I have since learned, in the residence of the latter, and not
+in the Council Chamber. The publication of the ballad led to some
+discussion as to the historical truthfulness of the picture, but I have
+seen no reason to rub out any of the figures or alter the lines and
+colors.
+
+
+ UNDER the great hill sloping bare
+ To cove and meadow and Common lot,
+ In his council chamber and oaken chair,
+ Sat the worshipful Governor Endicott.
+ A grave, strong man, who knew no peer
+ In the pilgrim land, where he ruled in fear
+ Of God, not man, and for good or ill
+ Held his trust with an iron will.
+
+ He had shorn with his sword the cross from out
+ The flag, and cloven the May-pole down,
+ Harried the heathen round about,
+ And whipped the Quakers from town to town.
+ Earnest and honest, a man at need
+ To burn like a torch for his own harsh creed,
+ He kept with the flaming brand of his zeal
+ The gate of the holy common weal.
+
+ His brow was clouded, his eye was stern,
+ With a look of mingled sorrow and wrath;
+ "Woe's me!" he murmured: "at every turn
+ The pestilent Quakers are in my path!
+ Some we have scourged, and banished some,
+ Some hanged, more doomed, and still they come,
+ Fast as the tide of yon bay sets in,
+ Sowing their heresy's seed of sin.
+
+ "Did we count on this? Did we leave behind
+ The graves of our kin, the comfort and ease
+ Of our English hearths and homes, to find
+ Troublers of Israel such as these?
+ Shall I spare? Shall I pity them? God forbid!
+ I will do as the prophet to Agag did
+ They come to poison the wells of the Word,
+ I will hew them in pieces before the Lord!"
+
+ The door swung open, and Rawson the clerk
+ Entered, and whispered under breath,
+ "There waits below for the hangman's work
+ A fellow banished on pain of death--
+ Shattuck, of Salem, unhealed of the whip,
+ Brought over in Master Goldsmith's ship
+ At anchor here in a Christian port,
+ With freight of the devil and all his sort!"
+
+ Twice and thrice on the chamber floor
+ Striding fiercely from wall to wall,
+ "The Lord do so to me and more,"
+ The Governor cried, "if I hang not all!
+ Bring hither the Quaker." Calm, sedate,
+ With the look of a man at ease with fate,
+ Into that presence grim and dread
+ Came Samuel Shattuck, with hat on head.
+
+ "Off with the knave's hat!" An angry hand
+ Smote down the offence; but the wearer said,
+ With a quiet smile, "By the king's command
+ I bear his message and stand in his stead."
+ In the Governor's hand a missive he laid
+ With the royal arms on its seal displayed,
+ And the proud man spake as he gazed thereat,
+ Uncovering, "Give Mr. Shattuck his hat."
+
+ He turned to the Quaker, bowing low,--
+ "The king commandeth your friends' release;
+ Doubt not he shall be obeyed, although
+ To his subjects' sorrow and sin's increase.
+ What he here enjoineth, John Endicott,
+ His loyal servant, questioneth not.
+ You are free! God grant the spirit you own
+ May take you from us to parts unknown."
+
+ So the door of the jail was open cast,
+ And, like Daniel, out of the lion's den
+ Tender youth and girlhood passed,
+ With age-bowed women and gray-locked men.
+ And the voice of one appointed to die
+ Was lifted in praise and thanks on high,
+ And the little maid from New Netherlands
+ Kissed, in her joy, the doomed man's hands.
+
+ And one, whose call was to minister
+ To the souls in prison, beside him went,
+ An ancient woman, bearing with her
+ The linen shroud for his burial meant.
+ For she, not counting her own life dear,
+ In the strength of a love that cast out fear,
+ Had watched and served where her brethren died,
+ Like those who waited the cross beside.
+
+ One moment they paused on their way to look
+ On the martyr graves by the Common side,
+ And much scourged Wharton of Salem took
+ His burden of prophecy up and cried
+ "Rest, souls of the valiant! Not in vain
+ Have ye borne the Master's cross of pain;
+ Ye have fought the fight, ye are victors crowned,
+ With a fourfold chain ye have Satan bound!"
+
+ The autumn haze lay soft and still
+ On wood and meadow and upland farms;
+ On the brow of Snow Hill the great windmill
+ Slowly and lazily swung its arms;
+ Broad in the sunshine stretched away,
+ With its capes and islands, the turquoise bay;
+ And over water and dusk of pines
+ Blue hills lifted their faint outlines.
+
+ The topaz leaves of the walnut glowed,
+ The sumach added its crimson fleck,
+ And double in air and water showed
+ The tinted maples along the Neck;
+ Through frost flower clusters of pale star-mist,
+ And gentian fringes of amethyst,
+ And royal plumes of golden-rod,
+ The grazing cattle on Centry trod.
+
+ But as they who see not, the Quakers saw
+ The world about them; they only thought
+ With deep thanksgiving and pious awe
+ On the great deliverance God had wrought.
+ Through lane and alley the gazing town
+ Noisily followed them up and down;
+ Some with scoffing and brutal jeer,
+ Some with pity and words of cheer.
+
+ One brave voice rose above the din.
+ Upsall, gray with his length of days,
+ Cried from the door of his Red Lion Inn
+ "Men of Boston, give God the praise
+ No more shall innocent blood call down
+ The bolts of wrath on your guilty town.
+ The freedom of worship, dear to you,
+ Is dear to all, and to all is due.
+
+ "I see the vision of days to come,
+ When your beautiful City of the Bay
+ Shall be Christian liberty's chosen home,
+ And none shall his neighbor's rights gainsay.
+ The varying notes of worship shall blend
+ And as one great prayer to God ascend,
+ And hands of mutual charity raise
+ Walls of salvation and gates of praise."
+
+ So passed the Quakers through Boston town,
+ Whose painful ministers sighed to see
+ The walls of their sheep-fold falling down,
+ And wolves of heresy prowling free.
+ But the years went on, and brought no wrong;
+ With milder counsels the State grew strong,
+ As outward Letter and inward Light
+ Kept the balance of truth aright.
+
+ The Puritan spirit perishing not,
+ To Concord's yeomen the signal sent,
+ And spake in the voice of the cannon-shot
+ That severed the chains of a continent.
+ With its gentler mission of peace and good-will
+ The thought of the Quaker is living still,
+ And the freedom of soul he prophesied
+ Is gospel and law where the martyrs died.
+
+ 1880.
+
+
+
+
+VALUATION.
+
+ THE old Squire said, as he stood by his gate,
+ And his neighbor, the Deacon, went by,
+ "In spite of my bank stock and real estate,
+ You are better off, Deacon, than I.
+
+ "We're both growing old, and the end's drawing near,
+ You have less of this world to resign,
+ But in Heaven's appraisal your assets, I fear,
+ Will reckon up greater than mine.
+
+ "They say I am rich, but I'm feeling so poor,
+ I wish I could swap with you even
+ The pounds I have lived for and laid up in store
+ For the shillings and pence you have given."
+
+ "Well, Squire," said the Deacon, with shrewd
+ common sense,
+ While his eye had a twinkle of fun,
+ "Let your pounds take the way of my shillings
+ and pence,
+ And the thing can be easily done!"
+
+ 1880.
+
+
+
+
+RABBI ISHMAEL.
+
+"Rabbi Ishmael Ben Elisha said, Once, I entered into the Holy of Holies
+(as High Priest) to burn incense, when I saw Aktriel (the Divine Crown)
+Jah, Lord of Hosts, sitting upon a throne, high and lifted up, who said
+unto me, 'Ishmael, my son, bless me.' I answered, 'May it please Thee to
+make Thy compassion prevail over Thine anger; may it be revealed above
+Thy other attributes; mayest Thou deal with Thy children according to
+it, and not according to the strict measure of judgment.' It seemed to
+me that He bowed His head, as though to answer Amen to my blessing."--
+Talmud (Beraehoth, I. f. 6. b.)
+
+
+ THE Rabbi Ishmael, with the woe and sin
+ Of the world heavy upon him, entering in
+ The Holy of Holies, saw an awful Face
+ With terrible splendor filling all the place.
+ "O Ishmael Ben Elisha!" said a voice,
+ "What seekest thou? What blessing is thy choice?"
+ And, knowing that he stood before the Lord,
+ Within the shadow of the cherubim,
+ Wide-winged between the blinding light and him,
+ He bowed himself, and uttered not a word,
+ But in the silence of his soul was prayer
+ "O Thou Eternal! I am one of all,
+ And nothing ask that others may not share.
+ Thou art almighty; we are weak and small,
+ And yet Thy children: let Thy mercy spare!"
+ Trembling, he raised his eyes, and in the place
+ Of the insufferable glory, lo! a face
+ Of more than mortal tenderness, that bent
+ Graciously down in token of assent,
+ And, smiling, vanished! With strange joy elate,
+ The wondering Rabbi sought the temple's gate.
+ Radiant as Moses from the Mount, he stood
+ And cried aloud unto the multitude
+ "O Israel, hear! The Lord our God is good!
+ Mine eyes have seen his glory and his grace;
+ Beyond his judgments shall his love endure;
+ The mercy of the All Merciful is sure!"
+
+ 1881.
+
+
+
+
+THE ROCK-TOMB OF BRADORE.
+
+H. Y. Hind, in Explorations in the Interior of the Labrador Peninsula
+(ii. 166) mentions the finding of a rock tomb near the little fishing
+port of Bradore, with the inscription upon it which is given in the
+poem.
+
+ A DREAR and desolate shore!
+ Where no tree unfolds its leaves,
+ And never the spring wind weaves
+ Green grass for the hunter's tread;
+ A land forsaken and dead,
+ Where the ghostly icebergs go
+ And come with the ebb and flow
+ Of the waters of Bradore!
+
+ A wanderer, from a land
+ By summer breezes fanned,
+ Looked round him, awed, subdued,
+ By the dreadful solitude,
+ Hearing alone the cry
+ Of sea-birds clanging by,
+ The crash and grind of the floe,
+ Wail of wind and wash of tide.
+ "O wretched land!" he cried,
+ "Land of all lands the worst,
+ God forsaken and curst!
+ Thy gates of rock should show
+ The words the Tuscan seer
+ Read in the Realm of Woe
+ Hope entereth not here!"
+
+ Lo! at his feet there stood
+ A block of smooth larch wood,
+ Waif of some wandering wave,
+ Beside a rock-closed cave
+ By Nature fashioned for a grave;
+ Safe from the ravening bear
+ And fierce fowl of the air,
+ Wherein to rest was laid
+ A twenty summers' maid,
+ Whose blood had equal share
+ Of the lands of vine and snow,
+ Half French, half Eskimo.
+ In letters uneffaced,
+ Upon the block were traced
+ The grief and hope of man,
+ And thus the legend ran
+ "We loved her!
+ Words cannot tell how well!
+ We loved her!
+ God loved her!
+ And called her home to peace and rest.
+ We love her."
+
+ The stranger paused and read.
+ "O winter land!" he said,
+ "Thy right to be I own;
+ God leaves thee not alone.
+ And if thy fierce winds blow
+ Over drear wastes of rock and snow,
+ And at thy iron gates
+ The ghostly iceberg waits,
+ Thy homes and hearts are dear.
+ Thy sorrow o'er thy sacred dust
+ Is sanctified by hope and trust;
+ God's love and man's are here.
+ And love where'er it goes
+ Makes its own atmosphere;
+ Its flowers of Paradise
+ Take root in the eternal ice,
+ And bloom through Polar snows!"
+
+ 1881.
+
+
+
+
+THE BAY OF SEVEN ISLANDS.
+
+The volume in which "The Bay of Seven Islands" was published was
+dedicated to the late Edwin Percy Whipple, to whom more than to any
+other person I was indebted for public recognition as one worthy of a
+place in American literature, at a time when it required a great degree
+of courage to urge such a claim for a pro-scribed abolitionist. Although
+younger than I, he had gained the reputation of a brilliant essayist,
+and was regarded as the highest American authority in criticism. His wit
+and wisdom enlivened a small literary circle of young men including
+Thomas Starr King, the eloquent preacher, and Daniel N. Haskell of the
+Daily Transcript, who gathered about our common friend dames T. Fields
+at the Old Corner Bookstore. The poem which gave title to the volume I
+inscribed to my friend and neighbor Harriet Prescott Spofford, whose
+poems have lent a new interest to our beautiful river-valley.
+
+ From the green Amesbury hill which bears the name
+ Of that half mythic ancestor of mine
+ Who trod its slopes two hundred years ago,
+ Down the long valley of the Merrimac,
+ Midway between me and the river's mouth,
+ I see thy home, set like an eagle's nest
+ Among Deer Island's immemorial pines,
+ Crowning the crag on which the sunset breaks
+ Its last red arrow. Many a tale and song,
+ Which thou hast told or sung, I call to mind,
+ Softening with silvery mist the woods and hills,
+ The out-thrust headlands and inreaching bays
+ Of our northeastern coast-line, trending where
+ The Gulf, midsummer, feels the chill blockade
+ Of icebergs stranded at its northern gate.
+
+ To thee the echoes of the Island Sound
+ Answer not vainly, nor in vain the moan
+ Of the South Breaker prophesying storm.
+ And thou hast listened, like myself, to men
+ Sea-periled oft where Anticosti lies
+ Like a fell spider in its web of fog,
+ Or where the Grand Bank shallows with the wrecks
+ Of sunken fishers, and to whom strange isles
+ And frost-rimmed bays and trading stations seem
+ Familiar as Great Neck and Kettle Cove,
+ Nubble and Boon, the common names of home.
+ So let me offer thee this lay of mine,
+ Simple and homely, lacking much thy play
+ Of color and of fancy. If its theme
+ And treatment seem to thee befitting youth
+ Rather than age, let this be my excuse
+ It has beguiled some heavy hours and called
+ Some pleasant memories up; and, better still,
+ Occasion lent me for a kindly word
+ To one who is my neighbor and my friend.
+
+ 1883.
+
+ . . . . . . . . . .
+
+
+ The skipper sailed out of the harbor mouth,
+ Leaving the apple-bloom of the South
+ For the ice of the Eastern seas,
+ In his fishing schooner Breeze.
+
+ Handsome and brave and young was he,
+ And the maids of Newbury sighed to see
+ His lessening white sail fall
+ Under the sea's blue wall.
+
+ Through the Northern Gulf and the misty screen
+ Of the isles of Mingan and Madeleine,
+ St. Paul's and Blanc Sablon,
+ The little Breeze sailed on,
+
+ Backward and forward, along the shore
+ Of lorn and desolate Labrador,
+ And found at last her way
+ To the Seven Islands Bay.
+
+ The little hamlet, nestling below
+ Great hills white with lingering snow,
+ With its tin-roofed chapel stood
+ Half hid in the dwarf spruce wood;
+
+ Green-turfed, flower-sown, the last outpost
+ Of summer upon the dreary coast,
+ With its gardens small and spare,
+ Sad in the frosty air.
+
+ Hard by where the skipper's schooner lay,
+ A fisherman's cottage looked away
+ Over isle and bay, and behind
+ On mountains dim-defined.
+
+ And there twin sisters, fair and young,
+ Laughed with their stranger guest, and sung
+ In their native tongue the lays
+ Of the old Provencal days.
+
+ Alike were they, save the faint outline
+ Of a scar on Suzette's forehead fine;
+ And both, it so befell,
+ Loved the heretic stranger well.
+
+ Both were pleasant to look upon,
+ But the heart of the skipper clave to one;
+ Though less by his eye than heart
+ He knew the twain apart.
+
+ Despite of alien race and creed,
+ Well did his wooing of Marguerite speed;
+ And the mother's wrath was vain
+ As the sister's jealous pain.
+
+ The shrill-tongued mistress her house forbade,
+ And solemn warning was sternly said
+ By the black-robed priest, whose word
+ As law the hamlet heard.
+
+ But half by voice and half by signs
+ The skipper said, "A warm sun shines
+ On the green-banked Merrimac;
+ Wait, watch, till I come back.
+
+ "And when you see, from my mast head,
+ The signal fly of a kerchief red,
+ My boat on the shore shall wait;
+ Come, when the night is late."
+
+ Ah! weighed with childhood's haunts and friends,
+ And all that the home sky overbends,
+ Did ever young love fail
+ To turn the trembling scale?
+
+ Under the night, on the wet sea sands,
+ Slowly unclasped their plighted hands
+ One to the cottage hearth,
+ And one to his sailor's berth.
+
+ What was it the parting lovers heard?
+ Nor leaf, nor ripple, nor wing of bird,
+ But a listener's stealthy tread
+ On the rock-moss, crisp and dead.
+
+ He weighed his anchor, and fished once more
+ By the black coast-line of Labrador;
+ And by love and the north wind driven,
+ Sailed back to the Islands Seven.
+
+ In the sunset's glow the sisters twain
+ Saw the Breeze come sailing in again;
+ Said Suzette, "Mother dear,
+ The heretic's sail is here."
+
+ "Go, Marguerite, to your room, and hide;
+ Your door shall be bolted!" the mother cried:
+ While Suzette, ill at ease,
+ Watched the red sign of the Breeze.
+
+ At midnight, down to the waiting skiff
+ She stole in the shadow of the cliff;
+ And out of the Bay's mouth ran
+ The schooner with maid and man.
+
+ And all night long, on a restless bed,
+ Her prayers to the Virgin Marguerite said
+ And thought of her lover's pain
+ Waiting for her in vain.
+
+ Did he pace the sands? Did he pause to hear
+ The sound of her light step drawing near?
+ And, as the slow hours passed,
+ Would he doubt her faith at last?
+
+ But when she saw through the misty pane,
+ The morning break on a sea of rain,
+ Could even her love avail
+ To follow his vanished sail?
+
+ Meantime the Breeze, with favoring wind,
+ Left the rugged Moisic hills behind,
+ And heard from an unseen shore
+ The falls of Manitou roar.
+
+ On the morrow's morn, in the thick, gray weather
+ They sat on the reeling deck together,
+ Lover and counterfeit,
+ Of hapless Marguerite.
+
+ With a lover's hand, from her forehead fair
+ He smoothed away her jet-black hair.
+ What was it his fond eyes met?
+ The scar of the false Suzette!
+
+ Fiercely he shouted: "Bear away
+ East by north for Seven Isles Bay!"
+ The maiden wept and prayed,
+ But the ship her helm obeyed.
+
+ Once more the Bay of the Isles they found
+ They heard the bell of the chapel sound,
+ And the chant of the dying sung
+ In the harsh, wild Indian tongue.
+
+ A feeling of mystery, change, and awe
+ Was in all they heard and all they saw
+ Spell-bound the hamlet lay
+ In the hush of its lonely bay.
+
+ And when they came to the cottage door,
+ The mother rose up from her weeping sore,
+ And with angry gestures met
+ The scared look of Suzette.
+
+ "Here is your daughter," the skipper said;
+ "Give me the one I love instead."
+ But the woman sternly spake;
+ "Go, see if the dead will wake!"
+
+ He looked. Her sweet face still and white
+ And strange in the noonday taper light,
+ She lay on her little bed,
+ With the cross at her feet and head.
+
+ In a passion of grief the strong man bent
+ Down to her face, and, kissing it, went
+ Back to the waiting Breeze,
+ Back to the mournful seas.
+
+ Never again to the Merrimac
+ And Newbury's homes that bark came back.
+ Whether her fate she met
+ On the shores of Carraquette,
+
+ Miscou, or Tracadie, who can say?
+ But even yet at Seven Isles Bay
+ Is told the ghostly tale
+ Of a weird, unspoken sail,
+
+ In the pale, sad light of the Northern day
+ Seen by the blanketed Montagnais,
+ Or squaw, in her small kyack,
+ Crossing the spectre's track.
+
+ On the deck a maiden wrings her hands;
+ Her likeness kneels on the gray coast sands;
+ One in her wild despair,
+ And one in the trance of prayer.
+
+ She flits before no earthly blast,
+ The red sign fluttering from her mast,
+ Over the solemn seas,
+ The ghost of the schooner Breeze!
+
+ 1882.
+
+
+
+
+THE WISHING BRIDGE.
+
+ AMONG the legends sung or said
+ Along our rocky shore,
+ The Wishing Bridge of Marblehead
+ May well be sung once more.
+
+ An hundred years ago (so ran
+ The old-time story) all
+ Good wishes said above its span
+ Would, soon or late, befall.
+
+ If pure and earnest, never failed
+ The prayers of man or maid
+ For him who on the deep sea sailed,
+ For her at home who stayed.
+
+ Once thither came two girls from school,
+ And wished in childish glee
+ And one would be a queen and rule,
+ And one the world would see.
+
+ Time passed; with change of hopes and fears,
+ And in the self-same place,
+ Two women, gray with middle years,
+ Stood, wondering, face to face.
+
+ With wakened memories, as they met,
+ They queried what had been
+ "A poor man's wife am I, and yet,"
+ Said one, "I am a queen.
+
+ "My realm a little homestead is,
+ Where, lacking crown and throne,
+ I rule by loving services
+ And patient toil alone."
+
+ The other said: "The great world lies
+ Beyond me as it lay;
+ O'er love's and duty's boundaries
+ My feet may never stray.
+
+ "I see but common sights of home,
+ Its common sounds I hear,
+ My widowed mother's sick-bed room
+ Sufficeth for my sphere.
+
+ "I read to her some pleasant page
+ Of travel far and wide,
+ And in a dreamy pilgrimage
+ We wander side by side.
+
+ "And when, at last, she falls asleep,
+ My book becomes to me
+ A magic glass: my watch I keep,
+ But all the world I see.
+
+ "A farm-wife queen your place you fill,
+ While fancy's privilege
+ Is mine to walk the earth at will,
+ Thanks to the Wishing Bridge."
+
+ "Nay, leave the legend for the truth,"
+ The other cried, "and say
+ God gives the wishes of our youth,
+ But in His own best way!"
+
+ 1882.
+
+
+
+
+HOW THE WOMEN WENT FROM DOVER.
+
+The following is a copy of the warrant issued by Major Waldron, of
+Dover, in 1662. The Quakers, as was their wont, prophesied against him,
+and saw, as they supposed, the fulfilment of their prophecy when, many
+years after, he was killed by the Indians.
+
+ To the constables of Dover, Hampton, Salisbury, Newbury, Rowley,
+ Ipswich, Wenham, Lynn, Boston, Roxbury, Dedham, and until these
+ vagabond Quakers are carried out of this jurisdiction. You, and
+ every one of you, are required, in the King's Majesty's name, to
+ take these vagabond Quakers, Anne Colman, Mary Tomkins, and Alice
+ Ambrose, and make them fast to the cart's tail, and driving the
+ cart through your several towns, to whip them upon their naked
+ backs not exceeding ten stripes apiece on each of them, in each
+ town; and so to convey them from constable to constable till they
+ are out of this jurisdiction, as you will answer it at your peril;
+ and this shall be your warrant.
+ RICHARD WALDRON.
+ Dated at Dover, December 22, 1662.
+
+This warrant was executed only in Dover and Hampton. At Salisbury the
+constable refused to obey it. He was sustained by the town's people, who
+were under the influence of Major Robert Pike, the leading man in the
+lower valley of the Merrimac, who stood far in advance of his time, as
+an advocate of religious freedom, and an opponent of ecclesiastical
+authority. He had the moral courage to address an able and manly letter
+to the court at Salem, remonstrating against the witchcraft trials.
+
+
+ THE tossing spray of Cocheco's fall
+ Hardened to ice on its rocky wall,
+ As through Dover town in the chill, gray dawn,
+ Three women passed, at the cart-tail drawn!
+
+ Bared to the waist, for the north wind's grip
+ And keener sting of the constable's whip,
+ The blood that followed each hissing blow
+ Froze as it sprinkled the winter snow.
+
+ Priest and ruler, boy and maid
+ Followed the dismal cavalcade;
+ And from door and window, open thrown,
+ Looked and wondered gaffer and crone.
+
+ "God is our witness," the victims cried,
+ We suffer for Him who for all men died;
+ The wrong ye do has been done before,
+ We bear the stripes that the Master bore!
+
+ And thou, O Richard Waldron, for whom
+ We hear the feet of a coming doom,
+ On thy cruel heart and thy hand of wrong
+ Vengeance is sure, though it tarry long.
+
+ "In the light of the Lord, a flame we see
+ Climb and kindle a proud roof-tree;
+ And beneath it an old man lying dead,
+ With stains of blood on his hoary head."
+
+ "Smite, Goodman Hate-Evil!--harder still!"
+ The magistrate cried, "lay on with a will!
+ Drive out of their bodies the Father of Lies,
+ Who through them preaches and prophesies!"
+
+ So into the forest they held their way,
+ By winding river and frost-rimmed bay,
+ Over wind-swept hills that felt the beat
+ Of the winter sea at their icy feet.
+
+ The Indian hunter, searching his traps,
+ Peered stealthily through the forest gaps;
+ And the outlying settler shook his head,--
+ "They're witches going to jail," he said.
+
+ At last a meeting-house came in view;
+ A blast on his horn the constable blew;
+ And the boys of Hampton cried up and down,
+ "The Quakers have come!" to the wondering town.
+
+ From barn and woodpile the goodman came;
+ The goodwife quitted her quilting frame,
+ With her child at her breast; and, hobbling slow,
+ The grandam followed to see the show.
+
+ Once more the torturing whip was swung,
+ Once more keen lashes the bare flesh stung.
+ "Oh, spare! they are bleeding!"' a little maid cried,
+ And covered her face the sight to hide.
+
+ A murmur ran round the crowd: "Good folks,"
+ Quoth the constable, busy counting the strokes,
+ "No pity to wretches like these is due,
+ They have beaten the gospel black and blue!"
+
+ Then a pallid woman, in wild-eyed fear,
+ With her wooden noggin of milk drew near.
+ "Drink, poor hearts!" a rude hand smote
+ Her draught away from a parching throat.
+
+ "Take heed," one whispered, "they'll take your cow
+ For fines, as they took your horse and plough,
+ And the bed from under you." "Even so,"
+ She said; "they are cruel as death, I know."
+
+ Then on they passed, in the waning day,
+ Through Seabrook woods, a weariful way;
+ By great salt meadows and sand-hills bare,
+ And glimpses of blue sea here and there.
+
+ By the meeting-house in Salisbury town,
+ The sufferers stood, in the red sundown,
+ Bare for the lash! O pitying Night,
+ Drop swift thy curtain and hide the sight.
+
+ With shame in his eye and wrath on his lip
+ The Salisbury constable dropped his whip.
+ "This warrant means murder foul and red;
+ Cursed is he who serves it," he said.
+
+ "Show me the order, and meanwhile strike
+ A blow at your peril!" said Justice Pike.
+ Of all the rulers the land possessed,
+ Wisest and boldest was he and best.
+
+ He scoffed at witchcraft; the priest he met
+ As man meets man; his feet he set
+ Beyond his dark age, standing upright,
+ Soul-free, with his face to the morning light.
+
+ He read the warrant: "These convey
+ From our precincts; at every town on the way
+ Give each ten lashes." "God judge the brute!
+ I tread his order under my foot!
+
+ "Cut loose these poor ones and let them go;
+ Come what will of it, all men shall know
+ No warrant is good, though backed by the Crown,
+ For whipping women in Salisbury town!"
+
+ The hearts of the villagers, half released
+ From creed of terror and rule of priest,
+ By a primal instinct owned the right
+ Of human pity in law's despite.
+
+ For ruth and chivalry only slept,
+ His Saxon manhood the yeoman kept;
+ Quicker or slower, the same blood ran
+ In the Cavalier and the Puritan.
+
+ The Quakers sank on their knees in praise
+ And thanks. A last, low sunset blaze
+ Flashed out from under a cloud, and shed
+ A golden glory on each bowed head.
+
+ The tale is one of an evil time,
+ When souls were fettered and thought was crime,
+ And heresy's whisper above its breath
+ Meant shameful scourging and bonds and death!
+
+ What marvel, that hunted and sorely tried,
+ Even woman rebuked and prophesied,
+ And soft words rarely answered back
+ The grim persuasion of whip and rack.
+
+ If her cry from the whipping-post and jail
+ Pierced sharp as the Kenite's driven nail,
+ O woman, at ease in these happier days,
+ Forbear to judge of thy sister's ways!
+
+ How much thy beautiful life may owe
+ To her faith and courage thou canst not know,
+ Nor how from the paths of thy calm retreat
+ She smoothed the thorns with her bleeding feet.
+
+ 1883.
+
+
+
+
+SAINT GREGORY'S GUEST.
+
+ A TALE for Roman guides to tell
+ To careless, sight-worn travellers still,
+ Who pause beside the narrow cell
+ Of Gregory on the Caelian Hill.
+
+ One day before the monk's door came
+ A beggar, stretching empty palms,
+ Fainting and fast-sick, in the name
+ Of the Most Holy asking alms.
+
+ And the monk answered, "All I have
+ In this poor cell of mine I give,
+ The silver cup my mother gave;
+ In Christ's name take thou it, and live."
+
+ Years passed; and, called at last to bear
+ The pastoral crook and keys of Rome,
+ The poor monk, in Saint Peter's chair,
+ Sat the crowned lord of Christendom.
+
+ "Prepare a feast," Saint Gregory cried,
+ "And let twelve beggars sit thereat."
+ The beggars came, and one beside,
+ An unknown stranger, with them sat.
+
+ "I asked thee not," the Pontiff spake,
+ "O stranger; but if need be thine,
+ I bid thee welcome, for the sake
+ Of Him who is thy Lord and mine."
+
+ A grave, calm face the stranger raised,
+ Like His who on Gennesaret trod,
+ Or His on whom the Chaldeans gazed,
+ Whose form was as the Son of God.
+
+ "Know'st thou," he said, "thy gift of old?"
+ And in the hand he lifted up
+ The Pontiff marvelled to behold
+ Once more his mother's silver cup.
+
+ "Thy prayers and alms have risen, and bloom
+ Sweetly among the flowers of heaven.
+ I am The Wonderful, through whom
+ Whate'er thou askest shall be given."
+
+ He spake and vanished. Gregory fell
+ With his twelve guests in mute accord
+ Prone on their faces, knowing well
+ Their eyes of flesh had seen the Lord.
+
+ The old-time legend is not vain;
+ Nor vain thy art, Verona's Paul,
+ Telling it o'er and o'er again
+ On gray Vicenza's frescoed wall.
+
+ Still wheresoever pity shares
+ Its bread with sorrow, want, and sin,
+ And love the beggar's feast prepares,
+ The uninvited Guest comes in.
+
+ Unheard, because our ears are dull,
+ Unseen, because our eyes are dim,
+ He walks our earth, The Wonderful,
+ And all good deeds are done to Him.
+
+ 1883.
+
+
+
+
+BIRCHBROOK MILL.
+
+ A NOTELESS stream, the Birchbrook runs
+ Beneath its leaning trees;
+ That low, soft ripple is its own,
+ That dull roar is the sea's.
+
+ Of human signs it sees alone
+ The distant church spire's tip,
+ And, ghost-like, on a blank of gray,
+ The white sail of a ship.
+
+ No more a toiler at the wheel,
+ It wanders at its will;
+ Nor dam nor pond is left to tell
+ Where once was Birchbrook mill.
+
+ The timbers of that mill have fed
+ Long since a farmer's fires;
+ His doorsteps are the stones that ground
+ The harvest of his sires.
+
+ Man trespassed here; but Nature lost
+ No right of her domain;
+ She waited, and she brought the old
+ Wild beauty back again.
+
+ By day the sunlight through the leaves
+ Falls on its moist, green sod,
+ And wakes the violet bloom of spring
+ And autumn's golden-rod.
+
+ Its birches whisper to the wind,
+ The swallow dips her wings
+ In the cool spray, and on its banks
+ The gray song-sparrow sings.
+
+ But from it, when the dark night falls,
+ The school-girl shrinks with dread;
+ The farmer, home-bound from his fields,
+ Goes by with quickened tread.
+
+ They dare not pause to hear the grind
+ Of shadowy stone on stone;
+ The plashing of a water-wheel
+ Where wheel there now is none.
+
+ Has not a cry of pain been heard
+ Above the clattering mill?
+ The pawing of an unseen horse,
+ Who waits his mistress still?
+
+ Yet never to the listener's eye
+ Has sight confirmed the sound;
+ A wavering birch line marks alone
+ The vacant pasture ground.
+
+ No ghostly arms fling up to heaven
+ The agony of prayer;
+ No spectral steed impatient shakes
+ His white mane on the air.
+
+ The meaning of that common dread
+ No tongue has fitly told;
+ The secret of the dark surmise
+ The brook and birches hold.
+
+ What nameless horror of the past
+ Broods here forevermore?
+ What ghost his unforgiven sin
+ Is grinding o'er and o'er?
+
+ Does, then, immortal memory play
+ The actor's tragic part,
+ Rehearsals of a mortal life
+ And unveiled human heart?
+
+ God's pity spare a guilty soul
+ That drama of its ill,
+ And let the scenic curtain fall
+ On Birchbrook's haunted mill
+
+ 1884.
+
+
+
+
+THE TWO ELIZABETHS.
+
+Read at the unveiling of the bust of Elizabeth Fry at the Friends'
+School, Providence, R. I.
+
+A. D. 1209.
+
+ AMIDST Thuringia's wooded hills she dwelt,
+ A high-born princess, servant of the poor,
+ Sweetening with gracious words the food she dealt
+ To starving throngs at Wartburg's blazoned door.
+
+ A blinded zealot held her soul in chains,
+ Cramped the sweet nature that he could not kill,
+ Scarred her fair body with his penance-pains,
+ And gauged her conscience by his narrow will.
+
+ God gave her gifts of beauty and of grace,
+ With fast and vigil she denied them all;
+ Unquestioning, with sad, pathetic face,
+ She followed meekly at her stern guide's call.
+
+ So drooped and died her home-blown rose of bliss
+ In the chill rigor of a discipline
+ That turned her fond lips from her children's kiss,
+ And made her joy of motherhood a sin.
+
+ To their sad level by compassion led,
+ One with the low and vile herself she made,
+ While thankless misery mocked the hand that fed,
+ And laughed to scorn her piteous masquerade.
+
+ But still, with patience that outwearied hate,
+ She gave her all while yet she had to give;
+ And then her empty hands, importunate,
+ In prayer she lifted that the poor might live.
+
+ Sore pressed by grief, and wrongs more hard to bear,
+ And dwarfed and stifled by a harsh control,
+ She kept life fragrant with good deeds and prayer,
+ And fresh and pure the white flower of her soul.
+
+ Death found her busy at her task: one word
+ Alone she uttered as she paused to die,
+ "Silence!"--then listened even as one who heard
+ With song and wing the angels drawing nigh!
+
+ Now Fra Angelico's roses fill her hands,
+ And, on Murillo's canvas, Want and Pain
+ Kneel at her feet. Her marble image stands
+ Worshipped and crowned in Marburg's holy fane.
+
+ Yea, wheresoe'er her Church its cross uprears,
+ Wide as the world her story still is told;
+ In manhood's reverence, woman's prayers and tears,
+ She lives again whose grave is centuries old.
+
+ And still, despite the weakness or the blame
+ Of blind submission to the blind, she hath
+ A tender place in hearts of every name,
+ And more than Rome owns Saint Elizabeth!
+
+
+ A. D. 1780.
+
+ Slow ages passed: and lo! another came,
+ An English matron, in whose simple faith
+ Nor priestly rule nor ritual had claim,
+ A plain, uncanonized Elizabeth.
+
+ No sackcloth robe, nor ashen-sprinkled hair,
+ Nor wasting fast, nor scourge, nor vigil long,
+ Marred her calm presence. God had made her fair,
+ And she could do His goodly work no wrong.
+
+ Their yoke is easy and their burden light
+ Whose sole confessor is the Christ of God;
+ Her quiet trust and faith transcending sight
+ Smoothed to her feet the difficult paths she trod.
+
+ And there she walked, as duty bade her go,
+ Safe and unsullied as a cloistered nun,
+ Shamed with her plainness Fashion's gaudy show,
+ And overcame the world she did not shun.
+
+ In Earlham's bowers, in Plashet's liberal hall,
+ In the great city's restless crowd and din,
+ Her ear was open to the Master's call,
+ And knew the summons of His voice within.
+
+ Tender as mother, beautiful as wife,
+ Amidst the throngs of prisoned crime she stood
+ In modest raiment faultless as her life,
+ The type of England's worthiest womanhood.
+
+ To melt the hearts that harshness turned to stone
+ The sweet persuasion of her lips sufficed,
+ And guilt, which only hate and fear had known,
+ Saw in her own the pitying love of Christ.
+
+ So wheresoe'er the guiding Spirit went
+ She followed, finding every prison cell
+ It opened for her sacred as a tent
+ Pitched by Gennesaret or by Jacob's well.
+
+ And Pride and Fashion felt her strong appeal,
+ And priest and ruler marvelled as they saw
+ How hand in hand went wisdom with her zeal,
+ And woman's pity kept the bounds of law.
+
+ She rests in God's peace; but her memory stirs
+ The air of earth as with an angel's wings,
+ And warms and moves the hearts of men like hers,
+ The sainted daughter of Hungarian kings.
+
+ United now, the Briton and the Hun,
+ Each, in her own time, faithful unto death,
+ Live sister souls! in name and spirit one,
+ Thuringia's saint and our Elizabeth!
+
+ 1885.
+
+
+
+
+REQUITAL.
+
+ As Islam's Prophet, when his last day drew
+ Nigh to its close, besought all men to say
+ Whom he had wronged, to whom he then should pay
+ A debt forgotten, or for pardon sue,
+ And, through the silence of his weeping friends,
+ A strange voice cried: "Thou owest me a debt,"
+ "Allah be praised!" he answered. "Even yet
+ He gives me power to make to thee amends.
+ O friend! I thank thee for thy timely word."
+ So runs the tale. Its lesson all may heed,
+ For all have sinned in thought, or word, or deed,
+ Or, like the Prophet, through neglect have erred.
+ All need forgiveness, all have debts to pay
+ Ere the night cometh, while it still is day.
+
+ 1885.
+
+
+
+
+THE HOMESTEAD.
+
+ AGAINST the wooded hills it stands,
+ Ghost of a dead home, staring through
+ Its broken lights on wasted lands
+ Where old-time harvests grew.
+
+ Unploughed, unsown, by scythe unshorn,
+ The poor, forsaken farm-fields lie,
+ Once rich and rife with golden corn
+ And pale green breadths of rye.
+
+ Of healthful herb and flower bereft,
+ The garden plot no housewife keeps;
+ Through weeds and tangle only left,
+ The snake, its tenant, creeps.
+
+ A lilac spray, still blossom-clad,
+ Sways slow before the empty rooms;
+ Beside the roofless porch a sad
+ Pathetic red rose blooms.
+
+ His track, in mould and dust of drouth,
+ On floor and hearth the squirrel leaves,
+ And in the fireless chimney's mouth
+ His web the spider weaves.
+
+ The leaning barn, about to fall,
+ Resounds no more on husking eves;
+ No cattle low in yard or stall,
+ No thresher beats his sheaves.
+
+ So sad, so drear! It seems almost
+ Some haunting Presence makes its sign;
+ That down yon shadowy lane some ghost
+ Might drive his spectral kine!
+
+ O home so desolate and lorn!
+ Did all thy memories die with thee?
+ Were any wed, were any born,
+ Beneath this low roof-tree?
+
+ Whose axe the wall of forest broke,
+ And let the waiting sunshine through?
+ What goodwife sent the earliest smoke
+ Up the great chimney flue?
+
+ Did rustic lovers hither come?
+ Did maidens, swaying back and forth
+ In rhythmic grace, at wheel and loom,
+ Make light their toil with mirth?
+
+ Did child feet patter on the stair?
+ Did boyhood frolic in the snow?
+ Did gray age, in her elbow chair,
+ Knit, rocking to and fro?
+
+ The murmuring brook, the sighing breeze,
+ The pine's slow whisper, cannot tell;
+ Low mounds beneath the hemlock-trees
+ Keep the home secrets well.
+
+ Cease, mother-land, to fondly boast
+ Of sons far off who strive and thrive,
+ Forgetful that each swarming host
+ Must leave an emptier hive.
+
+ O wanderers from ancestral soil,
+ Leave noisome mill and chaffering store:
+ Gird up your loins for sturdier toil,
+ And build the home once more!
+
+ Come back to bayberry-scented slopes,
+ And fragrant fern, and ground-nut vine;
+ Breathe airs blown over holt and copse
+ Sweet with black birch and pine.
+
+ What matter if the gains are small
+ That life's essential wants supply?
+ Your homestead's title gives you all
+ That idle wealth can buy.
+
+ All that the many-dollared crave,
+ The brick-walled slaves of 'Change and mart,
+ Lawns, trees, fresh air, and flowers, you have,
+ More dear for lack of art.
+
+ Your own sole masters, freedom-willed,
+ With none to bid you go or stay,
+ Till the old fields your fathers tilled,
+ As manly men as they!
+
+ With skill that spares your toiling hands,
+ And chemic aid that science brings,
+ Reclaim the waste and outworn lands,
+ And reign thereon as kings
+
+ 1886.
+
+
+
+
+HOW THE ROBIN CAME.
+
+AN ALGONQUIN LEGEND.
+
+ HAPPY young friends, sit by me,
+ Under May's blown apple-tree,
+ While these home-birds in and out
+ Through the blossoms flit about.
+ Hear a story, strange and old,
+ By the wild red Indians told,
+ How the robin came to be:
+
+ Once a great chief left his son,--
+ Well-beloved, his only one,--
+ When the boy was well-nigh grown,
+ In the trial-lodge alone.
+ Left for tortures long and slow
+ Youths like him must undergo,
+ Who their pride of manhood test,
+ Lacking water, food, and rest.
+
+ Seven days the fast he kept,
+ Seven nights he never slept.
+ Then the young boy, wrung with pain,
+ Weak from nature's overstrain,
+ Faltering, moaned a low complaint
+ "Spare me, father, for I faint!"
+ But the chieftain, haughty-eyed,
+ Hid his pity in his pride.
+ "You shall be a hunter good,
+ Knowing never lack of food;
+ You shall be a warrior great,
+ Wise as fox and strong as bear;
+ Many scalps your belt shall wear,
+ If with patient heart you wait
+ Bravely till your task is done.
+ Better you should starving die
+ Than that boy and squaw should cry
+ Shame upon your father's son!"
+
+ When next morn the sun's first rays
+ Glistened on the hemlock sprays,
+ Straight that lodge the old chief sought,
+ And boiled sainp and moose meat brought.
+ "Rise and eat, my son!" he said.
+ Lo, he found the poor boy dead!
+
+ As with grief his grave they made,
+ And his bow beside him laid,
+ Pipe, and knife, and wampum-braid,
+ On the lodge-top overhead,
+ Preening smooth its breast of red
+ And the brown coat that it wore,
+ Sat a bird, unknown before.
+ And as if with human tongue,
+ "Mourn me not," it said, or sung;
+ "I, a bird, am still your son,
+ Happier than if hunter fleet,
+ Or a brave, before your feet
+ Laying scalps in battle won.
+ Friend of man, my song shall cheer
+ Lodge and corn-land; hovering near,
+ To each wigwam I shall bring
+ Tidings of the corning spring;
+ Every child my voice shall know
+ In the moon of melting snow,
+ When the maple's red bud swells,
+ And the wind-flower lifts its bells.
+ As their fond companion
+ Men shall henceforth own your son,
+ And my song shall testify
+ That of human kin am I."
+
+ Thus the Indian legend saith
+ How, at first, the robin came
+ With a sweeter life from death,
+ Bird for boy, and still the same.
+ If my young friends doubt that this
+ Is the robin's genesis,
+ Not in vain is still the myth
+ If a truth be found therewith
+ Unto gentleness belong
+ Gifts unknown to pride and wrong;
+ Happier far than hate is praise,--
+ He who sings than he who slays.
+
+
+
+
+BANISHED FROM MASSACHUSETTS.
+
+1660.
+
+On a painting by E. A. Abbey. The General Court of Massachusetts enacted
+Oct. 19, 1658, that "any person or persons of the cursed sect of
+Quakers" should, on conviction of the same, be banished, on pain
+of death, from the jurisdiction of the common-wealth.
+
+
+ OVER the threshold of his pleasant home
+ Set in green clearings passed the exiled Friend,
+ In simple trust, misdoubting not the end.
+ "Dear heart of mine!" he said, "the time has come
+ To trust the Lord for shelter." One long gaze
+ The goodwife turned on each familiar thing,--
+ The lowing kine, the orchard blossoming,
+ The open door that showed the hearth-fire's blaze,--
+ And calmly answered, "Yes, He will provide."
+ Silent and slow they crossed the homestead's bound,
+ Lingering the longest by their child's grave-mound.
+ "Move on, or stay and hang!" the sheriff cried.
+ They left behind them more than home or land,
+ And set sad faces to an alien strand.
+
+ Safer with winds and waves than human wrath,
+ With ravening wolves than those whose zeal for God
+ Was cruelty to man, the exiles trod
+ Drear leagues of forest without guide or path,
+ Or launching frail boats on the uncharted sea,
+ Round storm-vexed capes, whose teeth of granite ground
+ The waves to foam, their perilous way they wound,
+ Enduring all things so their souls were free.
+ Oh, true confessors, shaming them who did
+ Anew the wrong their Pilgrim Fathers bore
+ For you the Mayflower spread her sail once more,
+ Freighted with souls, to all that duty bid
+ Faithful as they who sought an unknown land,
+ O'er wintry seas, from Holland's Hook of Sand!
+
+ So from his lost home to the darkening main,
+ Bodeful of storm, stout Macy held his way,
+ And, when the green shore blended with the gray,
+ His poor wife moaned: "Let us turn back again."
+ "Nay, woman, weak of faith, kneel down," said he,
+ And say thy prayers: the Lord himself will steer;
+ And led by Him, nor man nor devils I fear!
+ So the gray Southwicks, from a rainy sea,
+ Saw, far and faint, the loom of land, and gave
+ With feeble voices thanks for friendly ground
+ Whereon to rest their weary feet, and found
+ A peaceful death-bed and a quiet grave
+ Where, ocean-walled, and wiser than his age,
+ The lord of Shelter scorned the bigot's rage.
+ Aquidneck's isle, Nantucket's lonely shores,
+ And Indian-haunted Narragansett saw
+ The way-worn travellers round their camp-fire draw,
+ Or heard the plashing of their weary oars.
+ And every place whereon they rested grew
+ Happier for pure and gracious womanhood,
+ And men whose names for stainless honor stood,
+ Founders of States and rulers wise and true.
+ The Muse of history yet shall make amends
+ To those who freedom, peace, and justice taught,
+ Beyond their dark age led the van of thought,
+ And left unforfeited the name of Friends.
+ O mother State, how foiled was thy design
+ The gain was theirs, the loss alone was thine.
+
+
+
+
+THE BROWN DWARF OF RUGEN.
+
+The hint of this ballad is found in Arndt's Murchen, Berlin, 1816. The
+ballad appeared first in St. Nicholas, whose young readers were advised,
+while smiling at the absurd superstition, to remember that bad
+companionship and evil habits, desires, and passions are more to be
+dreaded now than the Elves and Trolls who frightened the children of
+past ages.
+
+
+ THE pleasant isle of Rugen looks the Baltic water o'er,
+ To the silver-sanded beaches of the Pomeranian
+ shore;
+
+ And in the town of Rambin a little boy and maid
+ Plucked the meadow-flowers together and in the
+ sea-surf played.
+
+ Alike were they in beauty if not in their degree
+ He was the Amptman's first-born, the miller's
+ child was she.
+
+ Now of old the isle of Rugen was full of Dwarfs
+ and Trolls,
+ The brown-faced little Earth-men, the people without
+ souls;
+
+ And for every man and woman in Rugen's island
+ found
+ Walking in air and sunshine, a Troll was
+ underground.
+
+ It chanced the little maiden, one morning, strolled
+ away
+ Among the haunted Nine Hills, where the elves
+ and goblins play.
+
+ That day, in barley-fields below, the harvesters had
+ known
+ Of evil voices in the air, and heard the small horns
+ blown.
+
+ She came not back; the search for her in field and
+ wood was vain
+ They cried her east, they cried her west, but she
+ came not again.
+
+ "She's down among the Brown Dwarfs," said the
+ dream-wives wise and old,
+ And prayers were made, and masses said, and
+ Rambin's church bell tolled.
+
+ Five years her father mourned her; and then John
+ Deitrich said
+ "I will find my little playmate, be she alive or
+ dead."
+
+ He watched among the Nine Hills, he heard the
+ Brown Dwarfs sing,
+ And saw them dance by moonlight merrily in a
+ ring.
+
+ And when their gay-robed leader tossed up his cap
+ of red,
+ Young Deitrich caught it as it fell, and thrust it
+ on his head.
+
+ The Troll came crouching at his feet and wept for
+ lack of it.
+ "Oh, give me back my magic cap, for your great
+ head unfit!"
+
+ "Nay," Deitrich said; "the Dwarf who throws his
+ charmed cap away,
+ Must serve its finder at his will, and for his folly
+ pay.
+
+ "You stole my pretty Lisbeth, and hid her in the
+ earth;
+ And you shall ope the door of glass and let me
+ lead her forth."
+
+ "She will not come; she's one of us; she's
+ mine!" the Brown Dwarf said;
+ The day is set, the cake is baked, to-morrow we
+ shall wed."
+
+ "The fell fiend fetch thee!" Deitrich cried, "and
+ keep thy foul tongue still.
+ Quick! open, to thy evil world, the glass door of
+ the hill!"
+
+ The Dwarf obeyed; and youth and Troll down, the
+ long stair-way passed,
+ And saw in dim and sunless light a country strange
+ and vast.
+
+ Weird, rich, and wonderful, he saw the elfin
+ under-land,--
+ Its palaces of precious stones, its streets of golden
+ sand.
+
+ He came unto a banquet-hall with tables richly
+ spread,
+ Where a young maiden served to him the red wine
+ and the bread.
+
+ How fair she seemed among the Trolls so ugly and
+ so wild!
+ Yet pale and very sorrowful, like one who never
+ smiled!
+
+ Her low, sweet voice, her gold-brown hair, her tender
+ blue eyes seemed
+ Like something he had seen elsewhere or some.
+ thing he had dreamed.
+
+ He looked; he clasped her in his arms; he knew
+ the long-lost one;
+ "O Lisbeth! See thy playmate--I am the
+ Amptman's son!"
+
+ She leaned her fair head on his breast, and through
+ her sobs she spoke
+ "Oh, take me from this evil place, and from the
+ elfin folk,
+
+ "And let me tread the grass-green fields and smell
+ the flowers again,
+ And feel the soft wind on my cheek and hear the
+ dropping rain!
+
+ "And oh, to hear the singing bird, the rustling of
+ the tree,
+ The lowing cows, the bleat of sheep, the voices of
+ the sea;
+
+ "And oh, upon my father's knee to sit beside the
+ door,
+ And hear the bell of vespers ring in Rambin
+ church once more!"
+
+ He kissed her cheek, he kissed her lips; the Brown
+ Dwarf groaned to see,
+ And tore his tangled hair and ground his long
+ teeth angrily.
+
+ But Deitrich said: "For five long years this tender
+ Christian maid
+ Has served you in your evil world and well must
+ she be paid!
+
+ "Haste!--hither bring me precious gems, the
+ richest in your store;
+ Then when we pass the gate of glass, you'll take
+ your cap once more."
+
+ No choice was left the baffled Troll, and, murmuring,
+ he obeyed,
+ And filled the pockets of the youth and apron of
+ the maid.
+
+ They left the dreadful under-land and passed the
+ gate of glass;
+ They felt the sunshine's warm caress, they trod the
+ soft, green grass.
+
+ And when, beneath, they saw the Dwarf stretch up
+ to them his brown
+ And crooked claw-like fingers, they tossed his red
+ cap down.
+
+ Oh, never shone so bright a sun, was never sky so
+ blue,
+ As hand in hand they homeward walked the pleasant
+ meadows through!
+
+ And never sang the birds so sweet in Rambin's
+ woods before,
+ And never washed the waves so soft along the Baltic
+ shore;
+
+ And when beneath his door-yard trees the father
+ met his child,
+ The bells rung out their merriest peal, the folks
+ with joy ran wild.
+
+
+
+
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+<head>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=utf-8" />
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Style-Type" content="text/css" />
+<title>The Works of Whittier, Volume I (of VII) by John Greenleaf Whittier</title>
+
+<style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; }
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+
+<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Works of Whittier, Volume I (of VII), by John Greenleaf Whittier</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+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 <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
+are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
+country where you are located before using this eBook.
+</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The Works of Whittier, Volume I (of VII)<br />
+  Narrative And Legendary Poems</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: John Greenleaf Whittier</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: October 2, 2003 [eBook #9567]<br />
+[Most recently updated: September 26, 2021]</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: David Widger</div>
+<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE WORKS OF WHITTIER ***</div>
+
+ <h1>
+ THE WORKS OF JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER, Volume I (of VII)
+ </h1>
+ <h2>
+ NARRATIVE AND LEGENDARY POEMS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ By John Greenleaf Whittier
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+
+ <p class="toc">
+ <big><b>CONTENTS</b></big>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0001"> <b>VOLUME I. NARRATIVE AND LEGENDARY POEMS</b>
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0002"> PUBLISHERS' ADVERTISEMENT </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0003"> PROEM </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_INTR"> INTRODUCTION </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0005"> <b>NARRATIVE AND LEGENDARY POEMS</b> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0006"> THE VAUDOIS TEACHER. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0007"> THE FEMALE MARTYR. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0008"> EXTRACT FROM "A NEW ENGLAND LEGEND." </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0009"> THE DEMON OF THE STUDY. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0010"> THE FOUNTAIN. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0011"> PENTUCKET. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0012"> THE NORSEMEN. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0013"> FUNERAL TREE OF THE SOKOKIS. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0014"> ST. JOHN. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0015"> THE CYPRESS-TREE OF CEYLON. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0016"> THE EXILES. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0017"> THE KNIGHT OF ST. JOHN. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0018"> CASSANDRA SOUTHWICK. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0019"> THE NEW WIFE AND THE OLD. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0020"> <b>THE BRIDAL OF PENNACOOK.</b> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0021"> I. THE MERRIMAC. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0022"> II. THE BASHABA. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0023"> III. THE DAUGHTER. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0024"> IV. THE WEDDING. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0025"> V. THE NEW HOME. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0026"> VI. AT PENNACOOK. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0027"> VII. THE DEPARTURE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0028"> VIII. SONG OF INDIAN WOMEN. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0029"> BARCLAY OF URY. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0030"> THE ANGELS OF BUENA VISTA. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0031"> THE LEGEND OF ST. MARK. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0032"> KATHLEEN. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0033"> THE WELL OF LOCH MAREE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0034"> THE CHAPEL OF THE HERMITS. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0035"> TAULER. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0036"> THE HERMIT OF THE THEBAID. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0037"> MAUD MULLER. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0038"> MARY GARVIN. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0039"> THE RANGER. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0040"> THE GARRISON OF CAPE ANN. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0041"> THE GIFT OF TRITEMIUS. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0042"> SKIPPER IRESON'S RIDE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0043"> THE SYCAMORES. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0044"> THE PIPES AT LUCKNOW. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0045"> TELLING THE BEES. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0046"> THE SWAN SONG OF PARSON AVERY. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0047"> THE DOUBLE-HEADED SNAKE OF NEWBURY. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0048"> MABEL MARTIN. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0049"> <b>PROEM.</b> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0050"> I. THE RIVER VALLEY. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0051"> II. THE HUSKING. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0052"> III. THE CHAMPION. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0053"> IV. IN THE SHADOW. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0054"> V. THE BETROTHAL. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0055"> THE PROPHECY OF SAMUEL SEWALL. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0056"> THE RED RIPER VOYAGEUR. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0057"> THE PREACHER. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0058"> THE TRUCE OF PISCATAQUA. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0059"> MY PLAYMATE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0060"> COBBLER KEEZAR'S VISION. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0061"> AMY WENTWORTH </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0062"> THE COUNTESS. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0063"> AMONG THE HILLS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0064"> THE DOLE OF JARL THORKELL. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0065"> THE TWO RABBINS. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0066"> NOREMBEGA. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0067"> MIRIAM. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0068"> NAUHAUGHT, THE DEACON. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0069"> THE SISTERS. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0070"> MARGUERITE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0071"> THE ROBIN. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0072"> THE PENNSYLVANIA PILGRIM. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0073"> KING VOLMER AND ELSIE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0074"> THE THREE BELLS. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0075"> JOHN UNDERHILL. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0076"> CONDUCTOR BRADLEY. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0077"> THE WITCH OF WENHAM. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0078"> KING SOLOMON AND THE ANTS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0079"> IN THE "OLD SOUTH." </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0080"> THE HENCHMAN. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0081"> THE DEAD FEAST OF THE KOL-FOLK. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0082"> THE KHAN'S DEVIL. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0083"> THE KING'S MISSIVE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0084"> VALUATION. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0085"> RABBI ISHMAEL. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0086"> THE ROCK-TOMB OF BRADORE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0087"> THE BAY OF SEVEN ISLANDS. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0088"> THE WISHING BRIDGE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0089"> HOW THE WOMEN WENT FROM DOVER. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0090"> SAINT GREGORY'S GUEST. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0091"> BIRCHBROOK MILL. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0092"> THE TWO ELIZABETHS. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0093"> REQUITAL. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0094"> THE HOMESTEAD. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0095"> HOW THE ROBIN CAME. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0096"> BANISHED FROM MASSACHUSETTS. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0097"> THE BROWN DWARF OF RUGEN. </a>
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ VOLUME I. NARRATIVE AND LEGENDARY POEMS
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PUBLISHERS' ADVERTISEMENT
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The Standard Library Edition of Mr. Whittier's writings comprises his
+ poetical and prose works as re-arranged and thoroughly revised by himself
+ or with his cooperation. Mr. Whittier has supplied such additional
+ information regarding the subject and occasion of certain poems as may be
+ stated in brief head-notes, and this edition has been much enriched by the
+ poet's personal comment. So far as practicable the dates of publication of
+ the various articles have been given, and since these were originally
+ published soon after composition, the dates of their first appearance have
+ been taken as determining the time at which they were written. At the
+ request of the Publishers, Mr. Whittier has allowed his early poems,
+ discarded from previous collections, to be placed, in the general order of
+ their appearance, in an appendix to the final volume of poems. By this
+ means the present edition is made so complete and retrospective that
+ students of the poet's career will always find the most abundant material
+ for their purpose. The Publishers congratulate themselves and the public
+ that the careful attention which Mr. Whittier has been able to give to
+ this revision of his works has resulted in so comprehensive and
+ well-adjusted a collection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The portraits prefixed to the several volumes have been chosen with a view
+ to illustrating successive periods in the poet's life. The original
+ sources and dates are indicated in each case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ NOTE.&mdash;The portrait prefixed to this volume was etched by S. A.
+ Schoff, in 1888, after a painting by Bass Otis, a pupil of Gilbert Stuart,
+ made in the winter of 1836-1837.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PROEM
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ I LOVE the old melodious lays
+ Which softly melt the ages through,
+ The songs of Spenser's golden days,
+ Arcadian Sidney's silvery phrase,
+ Sprinkling our noon of time with freshest morning dew.
+
+ Yet, vainly in my quiet hours
+ To breathe their marvellous notes I try;
+ I feel them, as the leaves and flowers
+ In silence feel the dewy showers,
+ And drink with glad, still lips the blessing of the sky.
+
+ The rigor of a frozen clime,
+ The harshness of an untaught ear,
+ The jarring words of one whose rhyme
+ Beat often Labor's hurried time,
+ Or Duty's rugged march through storm and strife, are here.
+
+ Of mystic beauty, dreamy grace,
+ No rounded art the lack supplies;
+ Unskilled the subtle lines to trace,
+ Or softer shades of Nature's face,
+ I view her common forms with unanointed eyes.
+
+ Nor mine the seer-like power to show
+ The secrets of the heart and mind;
+ To drop the plummet-line below
+ Our common world of joy and woe,
+ A more intense despair or brighter hope to find.
+
+ Yet here at least an earnest sense
+ Of human right and weal is shown;
+ A hate of tyranny intense,
+ And hearty in its vehemence,
+ As if my brother's pain and sorrow were my own.
+
+ O Freedom! if to me belong
+ Nor mighty Milton's gift divine,
+ Nor Marvell's wit and graceful song,
+ Still with a love as deep and strong
+ As theirs, I lay, like them, my best gifts on thy shrine.
+
+ AMESBURY, 11th mo., 1847.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_INTR" id="link2H_INTR">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ INTRODUCTION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The edition of my poems published in 1857 contained the following note by
+ way of preface:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In these volumes, for the first time, a complete collection of my
+ poetical writings has been made. While it is satisfactory to know that
+ these scattered children of my brain have found a home, I cannot but
+ regret that I have been unable, by reason of illness, to give that
+ attention to their revision and arrangement, which respect for the
+ opinions of others and my own afterthought and experience demand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That there are pieces in this collection which I would 'willingly let
+ die,' I am free to confess. But it is now too late to disown them, and I
+ must submit to the inevitable penalty of poetical as well as other sins.
+ There are others, intimately connected with the author's life and times,
+ which owe their tenacity of vitality to the circumstances under which they
+ were written, and the events by which they were suggested.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The long poem of Mogg Megone was in a great measure composed in early
+ life; and it is scarcely necessary to say that its subject is not such as
+ the writer would have chosen at any subsequent period."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a lapse of thirty years since the above was written, I have been
+ requested by my publishers to make some preparation for a new and revised
+ edition of my poems. I cannot flatter myself that I have added much to the
+ interest of the work beyond the correction of my own errors and those of
+ the press, with the addition of a few heretofore unpublished pieces, and
+ occasional notes of explanation which seemed necessary. I have made an
+ attempt to classify the poems under a few general heads, and have
+ transferred the long poem of Mogg Megone to the Appendix, with other
+ specimens of my earlier writings. I have endeavored to affix the dates of
+ composition or publication as far as possible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In looking over these poems I have not been unmindful of occasional
+ prosaic lines and verbal infelicities, but at this late day I have neither
+ strength nor patience to undertake their correction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps a word of explanation may be needed in regard to a class of poems
+ written between the years 1832 and 1865. Of their defects from an artistic
+ point of view it is not necessary to speak. They were the earnest and
+ often vehement expression of the writer's thought and feeling at critical
+ periods in the great conflict between Freedom and Slavery. They were
+ written with no expectation that they would survive the occasions which
+ called them forth: they were protests, alarm signals, trumpet-calls to
+ action, words wrung from the writer's heart, forged at white heat, and of
+ course lacking the finish and careful word-selection which reflection and
+ patient brooding over them might have given. Such as they are, they belong
+ to the history of the Anti-Slavery movement, and may serve as way-marks of
+ its progress. If their language at times seems severe and harsh, the
+ monstrous wrong of Slavery which provoked it must be its excuse, if any is
+ needed. In attacking it, we did not measure our words. "It is," said
+ Garrison, "a waste of politeness to be courteous to the devil." But in
+ truth the contest was, in a great measure, an impersonal one,&mdash;hatred
+ of slavery and not of slave-masters.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "No common wrong provoked our zeal,
+ The silken gauntlet which is thrown
+ In such a quarrel rings like steel."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Even Thomas Jefferson, in his terrible denunciation of Slavery in the
+ Notes on Virginia, says "It is impossible to be temperate and pursue the
+ subject of Slavery." After the great contest was over, no class of the
+ American people were more ready, with kind words and deprecation of harsh
+ retaliation, to welcome back the revolted States than the Abolitionists;
+ and none have since more heartily rejoiced at the fast increasing
+ prosperity of the South.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Grateful for the measure of favor which has been accorded to my
+writings, I leave this edition with the public. It contains all that I
+care to re-publish, and some things which, had the matter of choice been
+left solely to myself, I should have omitted.
+ J. G. W.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h1>
+ NARRATIVE AND LEGENDARY POEMS
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE VAUDOIS TEACHER.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ This poem was suggested by the account given of the manner which the
+ Waldenses disseminated their principles among the Catholic gentry. They
+ gained access to the house through their occupation as peddlers of silks,
+ jewels, and trinkets. "Having disposed of some of their goods," it is said
+ by a writer who quotes the inquisitor Rainerus Sacco, "they cautiously
+ intimated that they had commodities far more valuable than these,
+ inestimable jewels, which they would show if they could be protected from
+ the clergy. They would then give their purchasers a Bible or Testament;
+ and thereby many were deluded into heresy." The poem, under the title Le
+ Colporteur Vaudois, was translated into French by Professor G. de Felice,
+ of Montauban, and further naturalized by Professor Alexandre Rodolphe
+ Vinet, who quoted it in his lectures on French literature, afterwards
+ published. It became familiar in this form to the Waldenses, who adopted
+ it as a household poem. An American clergyman, J. C. Fletcher, frequently
+ heard it when he was a student, about the year 1850, in the theological
+ seminary at Geneva, Switzerland, but the authorship of the poem was
+ unknown to those who used it. Twenty-five years later, Mr. Fletcher,
+ learning the name of the author, wrote to the moderator of the Waldensian
+ synod at La Tour, giving the information. At the banquet which closed the
+ meeting of the synod, the moderator announced the fact, and was instructed
+ in the name of the Waldensian church to write to me a letter of thanks. My
+ letter, written in reply, was translated into Italian and printed
+ throughout Italy.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "O LADY fair, these silks of mine
+ are beautiful and rare,&mdash;
+ The richest web of the Indian loom, which beauty's
+ queen might wear;
+ And my pearls are pure as thy own fair neck, with whose
+ radiant light they vie;
+ I have brought them with me a weary way,&mdash;will my
+ gentle lady buy?"
+
+ The lady smiled on the worn old man through the
+ dark and clustering curls
+ Which veiled her brow, as she bent to view his
+ silks and glittering pearls;
+ And she placed their price in the old man's hand
+ and lightly turned away,
+ But she paused at the wanderer's earnest call,&mdash;
+ "My gentle lady, stay!
+
+ "O lady fair, I have yet a gem which a purer
+ lustre flings,
+ Than the diamond flash of the jewelled crown on
+ the lofty brow of kings;
+ A wonderful pearl of exceeding price, whose virtue
+ shall not decay,
+ Whose light shall be as a spell to thee and a
+ blessing on thy way!"
+
+ The lady glanced at the mirroring steel where her
+ form of grace was seen,
+ Where her eye shone clear, and her dark locks
+ waved their clasping pearls between;
+ "Bring forth thy pearl of exceeding worth, thou
+ traveller gray and old,
+ And name the price of thy precious gem, and my
+ page shall count thy gold."
+
+ The cloud went off from the pilgrim's brow, as a
+ small and meagre book,
+ Unchased with gold or gem of cost, from his
+ folding robe he took!
+ "Here, lady fair, is the pearl of price, may it prove
+ as such to thee
+ Nay, keep thy gold&mdash;I ask it not, for the word of
+ God is free!"
+
+ The hoary traveller went his way, but the gift he
+ left behind
+ Hath had its pure and perfect work on that high-
+ born maiden's mind,
+ And she hath turned from the pride of sin to the
+ lowliness of truth,
+ And given her human heart to God in its beautiful
+ hour of youth
+
+ And she hath left the gray old halls, where an evil
+ faith had power,
+ The courtly knights of her father's train, and the
+ maidens of her bower;
+ And she hath gone to the Vaudois vales by lordly
+ feet untrod,
+ Where the poor and needy of earth are rich in the
+ perfect love of God!
+ 1830.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE FEMALE MARTYR.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Mary G&mdash;&mdash;-, aged eighteen, a "Sister of Charity," died in one
+ of our Atlantic cities, during the prevalence of the Indian cholera, while
+ in voluntary attendance upon the sick.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "BRING out your dead!" The midnight street
+ Heard and gave back the hoarse, low call;
+ Harsh fell the tread of hasty feet,
+ Glanced through the dark the coarse white sheet,
+ Her coffin and her pall.
+ "What&mdash;only one!" the brutal hack-man said,
+ As, with an oath, he spurned away the dead.
+
+ How sunk the inmost hearts of all,
+ As rolled that dead-cart slowly by,
+ With creaking wheel and harsh hoof-fall!
+ The dying turned him to the wall,
+ To hear it and to die!
+ Onward it rolled; while oft its driver stayed,
+ And hoarsely clamored, "Ho! bring out your dead."
+
+ It paused beside the burial-place;
+ "Toss in your load!" and it was done.
+ With quick hand and averted face,
+ Hastily to the grave's embrace
+ They cast them, one by one,
+ Stranger and friend, the evil and the just,
+ Together trodden in the churchyard dust.
+
+ And thou, young martyr! thou wast there;
+ No white-robed sisters round thee trod,
+ Nor holy hymn, nor funeral prayer
+ Rose through the damp and noisome air,
+ Giving thee to thy God;
+ Nor flower, nor cross, nor hallowed taper gave
+ Grace to the dead, and beauty to the grave!
+
+ Yet, gentle sufferer! there shall be,
+ In every heart of kindly feeling,
+ A rite as holy paid to thee
+ As if beneath the convent-tree
+ Thy sisterhood were kneeling,
+ At vesper hours, like sorrowing angels, keeping
+ Their tearful watch around thy place of sleeping.
+
+ For thou wast one in whom the light
+ Of Heaven's own love was kindled well;
+ Enduring with a martyr's might,
+ Through weary day and wakeful night,
+ Far more than words may tell
+ Gentle, and meek, and lowly, and unknown,
+ Thy mercies measured by thy God alone!
+
+ Where manly hearts were failing, where
+ The throngful street grew foul with death,
+ O high-souled martyr! thou wast there,
+ Inhaling, from the loathsome air,
+ Poison with every breath.
+ Yet shrinking not from offices of dread
+ For the wrung dying, and the unconscious dead.
+
+ And, where the sickly taper shed
+ Its light through vapors, damp, confined,
+ Hushed as a seraph's fell thy tread,
+ A new Electra by the bed
+ Of suffering human-kind!
+ Pointing the spirit, in its dark dismay,
+ To that pure hope which fadeth not away.
+
+ Innocent teacher of the high
+ And holy mysteries of Heaven!
+ How turned to thee each glazing eye,
+ In mute and awful sympathy,
+ As thy low prayers were given;
+ And the o'er-hovering Spoiler wore, the while,
+ An angel's features, a deliverer's smile!
+
+ A blessed task! and worthy one
+ Who, turning from the world, as thou,
+ Before life's pathway had begun
+ To leave its spring-time flower and sun,
+ Had sealed her early vow;
+ Giving to God her beauty and her youth,
+ Her pure affections and her guileless truth.
+
+ Earth may not claim thee. Nothing here
+ Could be for thee a meet reward;
+ Thine is a treasure far more dear
+ Eye hath not seen it, nor the ear
+ Of living mortal heard
+ The joys prepared, the promised bliss above,
+ The holy presence of Eternal Love!
+
+ Sleep on in peace. The earth has not
+ A nobler name than thine shall be.
+ The deeds by martial manhood wrought,
+ The lofty energies of thought,
+ The fire of poesy,
+ These have but frail and fading honors; thine
+ Shall Time unto Eternity consign.
+
+ Yea, and when thrones shall crumble down,
+ And human pride and grandeur fall,
+ The herald's line of long renown,
+ The mitre and the kingly crown,&mdash;
+ Perishing glories all!
+ The pure devotion of thy generous heart
+ Shall live in Heaven, of which it was a part.
+ 1833.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ EXTRACT FROM "A NEW ENGLAND LEGEND."
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ (Originally a part of the author's Moll Pitcher.)
+ </h3>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ How has New England's romance fled,
+ Even as a vision of the morning!
+ Its rites foredone, its guardians dead,
+ Its priestesses, bereft of dread,
+ Waking the veriest urchin's scorning!
+ Gone like the Indian wizard's yell
+ And fire-dance round the magic rock,
+ Forgotten like the Druid's spell
+ At moonrise by his holy oak!
+ No more along the shadowy glen
+ Glide the dim ghosts of murdered men;
+ No more the unquiet churchyard dead
+ Glimpse upward from their turfy bed,
+ Startling the traveller, late and lone;
+ As, on some night of starless weather,
+ They silently commune together,
+ Each sitting on his own head-stone
+ The roofless house, decayed, deserted,
+ Its living tenants all departed,
+ No longer rings with midnight revel
+ Of witch, or ghost, or goblin evil;
+ No pale blue flame sends out its flashes
+ Through creviced roof and shattered sashes!
+ The witch-grass round the hazel spring
+ May sharply to the night-air sing,
+ But there no more shall withered hags
+ Refresh at ease their broomstick nags,
+ Or taste those hazel-shadowed waters
+ As beverage meet for Satan's daughters;
+ No more their mimic tones be heard,
+ The mew of cat, the chirp of bird,
+ Shrill blending with the hoarser laughter
+ Of the fell demon following after!
+ The cautious goodman nails no more
+ A horseshoe on his outer door,
+ Lest some unseemly hag should fit
+ To his own mouth her bridle-bit;
+ The goodwife's churn no more refuses
+ Its wonted culinary uses
+ Until, with heated needle burned,
+ The witch has to her place returned!
+ Our witches are no longer old
+ And wrinkled beldames, Satan-sold,
+ But young and gay and laughing creatures,
+ With the heart's sunshine on their features;
+ Their sorcery&mdash;the light which dances
+ Where the raised lid unveils its glances;
+ Or that low-breathed and gentle tone,
+ The music of Love's twilight hours,
+ Soft, dream-like, as a fairy's moan
+ Above her nightly closing flowers,
+ Sweeter than that which sighed of yore
+ Along the charmed Ausonian shore!
+ Even she, our own weird heroine,
+ Sole Pythoness of ancient Lynn,'
+ Sleeps calmly where the living laid her;
+ And the wide realm of sorcery,
+ Left by its latest mistress free,
+ Hath found no gray and skilled invader.
+ So&mdash;perished Albion's "glammarye,"
+ With him in Melrose Abbey sleeping,
+ His charmed torch beside his knee,
+ That even the dead himself might see
+ The magic scroll within his keeping.
+ And now our modern Yankee sees
+ Nor omens, spells, nor mysteries;
+ And naught above, below, around,
+ Of life or death, of sight or sound,
+ Whate'er its nature, form, or look,
+ Excites his terror or surprise,
+ All seeming to his knowing eyes
+ Familiar as his "catechise,"
+ Or "Webster's Spelling-Book."
+
+ 1833.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE DEMON OF THE STUDY.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ THE Brownie sits in the Scotchman's room,
+ And eats his meat and drinks his ale,
+ And beats the maid with her unused broom,
+ And the lazy lout with his idle flail;
+ But he sweeps the floor and threshes the corn,
+ And hies him away ere the break of dawn.
+
+ The shade of Denmark fled from the sun,
+ And the Cocklane ghost from the barn-loft cheer,
+ The fiend of Faust was a faithful one,
+ Agrippa's demon wrought in fear,
+ And the devil of Martin Luther sat
+ By the stout monk's side in social chat.
+
+ The Old Man of the Sea, on the neck of him
+ Who seven times crossed the deep,
+ Twined closely each lean and withered limb,
+ Like the nightmare in one's sleep.
+ But he drank of the wine, and Sindbad cast
+ The evil weight from his back at last.
+
+ But the demon that cometh day by day
+ To my quiet room and fireside nook,
+ Where the casement light falls dim and gray
+ On faded painting and ancient book,
+ Is a sorrier one than any whose names
+ Are chronicled well by good King James.
+
+ No bearer of burdens like Caliban,
+ No runner of errands like Ariel,
+ He comes in the shape of a fat old man,
+ Without rap of knuckle or pull of bell;
+ And whence he comes, or whither he goes,
+ I know as I do of the wind which blows.
+
+ A stout old man with a greasy hat
+ Slouched heavily down to his dark, red nose,
+ And two gray eyes enveloped in fat,
+ Looking through glasses with iron bows.
+ Read ye, and heed ye, and ye who can,
+ Guard well your doors from that old man!
+
+ He comes with a careless "How d' ye do?"
+ And seats himself in my elbow-chair;
+ And my morning paper and pamphlet new
+ Fall forthwith under his special care,
+ And he wipes his glasses and clears his throat,
+ And, button by button, unfolds his coat.
+
+ And then he reads from paper and book,
+ In a low and husky asthmatic tone,
+ With the stolid sameness of posture and look
+ Of one who reads to himself alone;
+ And hour after hour on my senses come
+ That husky wheeze and that dolorous hum.
+
+ The price of stocks, the auction sales,
+ The poet's song and the lover's glee,
+ The horrible murders, the seaboard gales,
+ The marriage list, and the jeu d'esprit,
+ All reach my ear in the self-same tone,&mdash;
+ I shudder at each, but the fiend reads on!
+
+ Oh, sweet as the lapse of water at noon
+ O'er the mossy roots of some forest tree,
+ The sigh of the wind in the woods of June,
+ Or sound of flutes o'er a moonlight sea,
+ Or the low soft music, perchance, which seems
+ To float through the slumbering singer's dreams,
+
+ So sweet, so dear is the silvery tone,
+ Of her in whose features I sometimes look,
+ As I sit at eve by her side alone,
+ And we read by turns, from the self-same book,
+ Some tale perhaps of the olden time,
+ Some lover's romance or quaint old rhyme.
+
+ Then when the story is one of woe,&mdash;
+ Some prisoner's plaint through his dungeon-bar,
+ Her blue eye glistens with tears, and low
+ Her voice sinks down like a moan afar;
+ And I seem to hear that prisoner's wail,
+ And his face looks on me worn and pale.
+
+ And when she reads some merrier song,
+ Her voice is glad as an April bird's,
+ And when the tale is of war and wrong,
+ A trumpet's summons is in her words,
+ And the rush of the hosts I seem to hear,
+ And see the tossing of plume and spear!
+
+ Oh, pity me then, when, day by day,
+ The stout fiend darkens my parlor door;
+ And reads me perchance the self-same lay
+ Which melted in music, the night before,
+ From lips as the lips of Hylas sweet,
+ And moved like twin roses which zephyrs meet!
+
+ I cross my floor with a nervous tread,
+ I whistle and laugh and sing and shout,
+ I flourish my cane above his head,
+ And stir up the fire to roast him out;
+ I topple the chairs, and drum on the pane,
+ And press my hands on my ears, in vain!
+
+ I've studied Glanville and James the wise,
+ And wizard black-letter tomes which treat
+ Of demons of every name and size
+ Which a Christian man is presumed to meet,
+ But never a hint and never a line
+ Can I find of a reading fiend like mine.
+
+ I've crossed the Psalter with Brady and Tate,
+ And laid the Primer above them all,
+ I've nailed a horseshoe over the grate,
+ And hung a wig to my parlor wall
+ Once worn by a learned Judge, they say,
+ At Salem court in the witchcraft day!
+
+ "Conjuro te, sceleratissime,
+ Abire ad tuum locum!"&mdash;still
+ Like a visible nightmare he sits by me,&mdash;
+ The exorcism has lost its skill;
+ And I hear again in my haunted room
+ The husky wheeze and the dolorous hum!
+
+ Ah! commend me to Mary Magdalen
+ With her sevenfold plagues, to the wandering Jew,
+ To the terrors which haunted Orestes when
+ The furies his midnight curtains drew,
+ But charm him off, ye who charm him can,
+ That reading demon, that fat old man!
+
+ 1835.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE FOUNTAIN.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ On the declivity of a hill in Salisbury, Essex County, is a fountain of
+ clear water, gushing from the very roots of a venerable oak. It is about
+ two miles from the junction of the Powow River with the Merrimac.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ TRAVELLER! on thy journey toiling
+ By the swift Powow,
+ With the summer sunshine falling
+ On thy heated brow,
+ Listen, while all else is still,
+ To the brooklet from the hill.
+
+ Wild and sweet the flowers are blowing
+ By that streamlet's side,
+ And a greener verdure showing
+ Where its waters glide,
+ Down the hill-slope murmuring on,
+ Over root and mossy stone.
+
+ Where yon oak his broad arms flingeth
+ O'er the sloping hill,
+ Beautiful and freshly springeth
+ That soft-flowing rill,
+ Through its dark roots wreathed and bare,
+ Gushing up to sun and air.
+
+ Brighter waters sparkled never
+ In that magic well,
+ Of whose gift of life forever
+ Ancient legends tell,
+ In the lonely desert wasted,
+ And by mortal lip untasted.
+
+ Waters which the proud Castilian
+ Sought with longing eyes,
+ Underneath the bright pavilion
+ Of the Indian skies,
+ Where his forest pathway lay
+ Through the blooms of Florida.
+
+ Years ago a lonely stranger,
+ With the dusky brow
+ Of the outcast forest-ranger,
+ Crossed the swift Powow,
+ And betook him to the rill
+ And the oak upon the hill.
+
+ O'er his face of moody sadness
+ For an instant shone
+ Something like a gleam of gladness,
+ As he stooped him down
+ To the fountain's grassy side,
+ And his eager thirst supplied.
+
+ With the oak its shadow throwing
+ O'er his mossy seat,
+ And the cool, sweet waters flowing
+ Softly at his feet,
+ Closely by the fountain's rim
+ That lone Indian seated him.
+
+ Autumn's earliest frost had given
+ To the woods below
+ Hues of beauty, such as heaven
+ Lendeth to its bow;
+ And the soft breeze from the west
+ Scarcely broke their dreamy rest.
+
+ Far behind was Ocean striving
+ With his chains of sand;
+ Southward, sunny glimpses giving,
+ 'Twixt the swells of land,
+ Of its calm and silvery track,
+ Rolled the tranquil Merrimac.
+
+ Over village, wood, and meadow
+ Gazed that stranger man,
+ Sadly, till the twilight shadow
+ Over all things ran,
+ Save where spire and westward pane
+ Flashed the sunset back again.
+
+ Gazing thus upon the dwelling
+ Of his warrior sires,
+ Where no lingering trace was telling
+ Of their wigwam fires,
+ Who the gloomy thoughts might know
+ Of that wandering child of woe?
+
+ Naked lay, in sunshine glowing,
+ Hills that once had stood
+ Down their sides the shadows throwing
+ Of a mighty wood,
+ Where the deer his covert kept,
+ And the eagle's pinion swept!
+
+ Where the birch canoe had glided
+ Down the swift Powow,
+ Dark and gloomy bridges strided
+ Those clear waters now;
+ And where once the beaver swam,
+ Jarred the wheel and frowned the dam.
+
+ For the wood-bird's merry singing,
+ And the hunter's cheer,
+ Iron clang and hammer's ringing
+ Smote upon his ear;
+ And the thick and sullen smoke
+ From the blackened forges broke.
+
+ Could it be his fathers ever
+ Loved to linger here?
+ These bare hills, this conquered river,&mdash;
+ Could they hold them dear,
+ With their native loveliness
+ Tamed and tortured into this?
+
+ Sadly, as the shades of even
+ Gathered o'er the hill,
+ While the western half of heaven
+ Blushed with sunset still,
+ From the fountain's mossy seat
+ Turned the Indian's weary feet.
+
+ Year on year hath flown forever,
+ But he came no more
+ To the hillside on the river
+ Where he came before.
+ But the villager can tell
+ Of that strange man's visit well.
+
+ And the merry children, laden
+ With their fruits or flowers,
+ Roving boy and laughing maiden,
+ In their school-day hours,
+ Love the simple tale to tell
+ Of the Indian and his well.
+
+ 1837
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PENTUCKET.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The village of Haverhill, on the Merrimac, called by the Indians
+ Pentucket, was for nearly seventeen years a frontier town, and during
+ thirty years endured all the horrors of savage warfare. In the year 1708,
+ a combined body of French and Indians, under the command of De Chaillons,
+ and Hertel de Rouville, the famous and bloody sacker of Deerfield, made an
+ attack upon the village, which at that time contained only thirty houses.
+ Sixteen of the villagers were massacred, and a still larger number made
+ prisoners. About thirty of the enemy also fell, among them Hertel de
+ Rouville. The minister of the place, Benjamin Rolfe, was killed by a shot
+ through his own door. In a paper entitled The Border War of 1708,
+ published in my collection of Recreations and Miscellanies, I have given a
+ prose narrative of the surprise of Haverhill.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ How sweetly on the wood-girt town
+ The mellow light of sunset shone!
+ Each small, bright lake, whose waters still
+ Mirror the forest and the hill,
+ Reflected from its waveless breast
+ The beauty of a cloudless west,
+ Glorious as if a glimpse were given
+ Within the western gates of heaven,
+ Left, by the spirit of the star
+ Of sunset's holy hour, ajar!
+
+ Beside the river's tranquil flood
+ The dark and low-walled dwellings stood,
+ Where many a rood of open land
+ Stretched up and down on either hand,
+ With corn-leaves waving freshly green
+ The thick and blackened stumps between.
+ Behind, unbroken, deep and dread,
+ The wild, untravelled forest spread,
+ Back to those mountains, white and cold,
+ Of which the Indian trapper told,
+ Upon whose summits never yet
+ Was mortal foot in safety set.
+
+ Quiet and calm without a fear,
+ Of danger darkly lurking near,
+ The weary laborer left his plough,
+ The milkmaid carolled by her cow;
+ From cottage door and household hearth
+ Rose songs of praise, or tones of mirth.
+
+ At length the murmur died away,
+ And silence on that village lay.
+ &mdash;So slept Pompeii, tower and hall,
+ Ere the quick earthquake swallowed all,
+ Undreaming of the fiery fate
+ Which made its dwellings desolate.
+
+ Hours passed away. By moonlight sped
+ The Merrimac along his bed.
+ Bathed in the pallid lustre, stood
+ Dark cottage-wall and rock and wood,
+ Silent, beneath that tranquil beam,
+ As the hushed grouping of a dream.
+ Yet on the still air crept a sound,
+ No bark of fox, nor rabbit's bound,
+ Nor stir of wings, nor waters flowing,
+ Nor leaves in midnight breezes blowing.
+
+ Was that the tread of many feet,
+ Which downward from the hillside beat?
+ What forms were those which darkly stood
+ Just on the margin of the wood?&mdash;
+ Charred tree-stumps in the moonlight dim,
+ Or paling rude, or leafless limb?
+ No,&mdash;through the trees fierce eyeballs glowed,
+ Dark human forms in moonshine showed,
+ Wild from their native wilderness,
+ With painted limbs and battle-dress.
+
+ A yell the dead might wake to hear
+ Swelled on the night air, far and clear;
+ Then smote the Indian tomahawk
+ On crashing door and shattering lock;
+
+ Then rang the rifle-shot, and then
+ The shrill death-scream of stricken men,&mdash;
+ Sank the red axe in woman's brain,
+ And childhood's cry arose in vain.
+ Bursting through roof and window came,
+ Red, fast, and fierce, the kindled flame,
+ And blended fire and moonlight glared
+ On still dead men and scalp-knives bared.
+
+ The morning sun looked brightly through
+ The river willows, wet with dew.
+ No sound of combat filled the air,
+ No shout was heard, nor gunshot there;
+ Yet still the thick and sullen smoke
+ From smouldering ruins slowly broke;
+ And on the greensward many a stain,
+ And, here and there, the mangled slain,
+ Told how that midnight bolt had sped
+ Pentucket, on thy fated head.
+
+ Even now the villager can tell
+ Where Rolfe beside his hearthstone fell,
+ Still show the door of wasting oak,
+ Through which the fatal death-shot broke,
+ And point the curious stranger where
+ De Rouville's corse lay grim and bare;
+ Whose hideous head, in death still feared,
+ Bore not a trace of hair or beard;
+ And still, within the churchyard ground,
+ Heaves darkly up the ancient mound,
+ Whose grass-grown surface overlies
+ The victims of that sacrifice.
+ 1838.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE NORSEMEN.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In the early part of the present century, a fragment of a statue, rudely
+ chiselled from dark gray stone, was found in the town of Bradford, on the
+ Merrimac. Its origin must be left entirely to conjecture. The fact that
+ the ancient Northmen visited the north-east coast of North America and
+ probably New England, some centuries before the discovery of the western
+ world by Columbus, is very generally admitted.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ GIFT from the cold and silent Past!
+ A relic to the present cast,
+ Left on the ever-changing strand
+ Of shifting and unstable sand,
+ Which wastes beneath the steady chime
+ And beating of the waves of Time!
+ Who from its bed of primal rock
+ First wrenched thy dark, unshapely block?
+ Whose hand, of curious skill untaught,
+ Thy rude and savage outline wrought?
+
+ The waters of my native stream
+ Are glancing in the sun's warm beam;
+ From sail-urged keel and flashing oar
+ The circles widen to its shore;
+ And cultured field and peopled town
+ Slope to its willowed margin down.
+ Yet, while this morning breeze is bringing
+ The home-life sound of school-bells ringing,
+ And rolling wheel, and rapid jar
+ Of the fire-winged and steedless car,
+ And voices from the wayside near
+ Come quick and blended on my ear,&mdash;
+ A spell is in this old gray stone,
+ My thoughts are with the Past alone!
+
+ A change!&mdash;The steepled town no more
+ Stretches along the sail-thronged shore;
+ Like palace-domes in sunset's cloud,
+ Fade sun-gilt spire and mansion proud
+ Spectrally rising where they stood,
+ I see the old, primeval wood;
+ Dark, shadow-like, on either hand
+ I see its solemn waste expand;
+ It climbs the green and cultured hill,
+ It arches o'er the valley's rill,
+ And leans from cliff and crag to throw
+ Its wild arms o'er the stream below.
+ Unchanged, alone, the same bright river
+ Flows on, as it will flow forever
+ I listen, and I hear the low
+ Soft ripple where its waters go;
+ I hear behind the panther's cry,
+ The wild-bird's scream goes thrilling by,
+ And shyly on the river's brink
+ The deer is stooping down to drink.
+
+ But hark!&mdash;from wood and rock flung back,
+ What sound comes up the Merrimac?
+ What sea-worn barks are those which throw
+ The light spray from each rushing prow?
+ Have they not in the North Sea's blast
+ Bowed to the waves the straining mast?
+ Their frozen sails the low, pale sun
+ Of Thule's night has shone upon;
+ Flapped by the sea-wind's gusty sweep
+ Round icy drift, and headland steep.
+ Wild Jutland's wives and Lochlin's daughters
+ Have watched them fading o'er the waters,
+ Lessening through driving mist and spray,
+ Like white-winged sea-birds on their way!
+
+ Onward they glide,&mdash;and now I view
+ Their iron-armed and stalwart crew;
+ Joy glistens in each wild blue eye,
+ Turned to green earth and summer sky.
+ Each broad, seamed breast has cast aside
+ Its cumbering vest of shaggy hide;
+ Bared to the sun and soft warm air,
+ Streams back the Norsemen's yellow hair.
+ I see the gleam of axe and spear,
+ The sound of smitten shields I hear,
+ Keeping a harsh and fitting time
+ To Saga's chant, and Runic rhyme;
+ Such lays as Zetland's Scald has sung,
+ His gray and naked isles among;
+ Or muttered low at midnight hour
+ Round Odin's mossy stone of power.
+ The wolf beneath the Arctic moon
+ Has answered to that startling rune;
+ The Gael has heard its stormy swell,
+ The light Frank knows its summons well;
+ Iona's sable-stoled Culdee
+ Has heard it sounding o'er the sea,
+ And swept, with hoary beard and hair,
+ His altar's foot in trembling prayer.
+
+ 'T is past,&mdash;the 'wildering vision dies
+ In darkness on my dreaming eyes
+ The forest vanishes in air,
+ Hill-slope and vale lie starkly bare;
+ I hear the common tread of men,
+ And hum of work-day life again;
+
+ The mystic relic seems alone
+ A broken mass of common stone;
+ And if it be the chiselled limb
+ Of Berserker or idol grim,
+ A fragment of Valhalla's Thor,
+ The stormy Viking's god of War,
+ Or Praga of the Runic lay,
+ Or love-awakening Siona,
+ I know not,&mdash;for no graven line,
+ Nor Druid mark, nor Runic sign,
+ Is left me here, by which to trace
+ Its name, or origin, or place.
+ Yet, for this vision of the Past,
+ This glance upon its darkness cast,
+ My spirit bows in gratitude
+ Before the Giver of all good,
+ Who fashioned so the human mind,
+ That, from the waste of Time behind,
+ A simple stone, or mound of earth,
+ Can summon the departed forth;
+ Quicken the Past to life again,
+ The Present lose in what hath been,
+ And in their primal freshness show
+ The buried forms of long ago.
+ As if a portion of that Thought
+ By which the Eternal will is wrought,
+ Whose impulse fills anew with breath
+ The frozen solitude of Death,
+ To mortal mind were sometimes lent,
+ To mortal musings sometimes sent,
+ To whisper-even when it seems
+ But Memory's fantasy of dreams&mdash;
+ Through the mind's waste of woe and sin,
+ Of an immortal origin!
+
+ 1841.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0013" id="link2H_4_0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ FUNERAL TREE OF THE SOKOKIS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Polan, chief of the Sokokis Indians of the country between Agamenticus and
+ Casco Bay, was killed at Windham on Sebago Lake in the spring of 1756.
+ After the whites had retired, the surviving Indians "swayed" or bent down
+ a young tree until its roots were upturned, placed the body of their chief
+ beneath it, then released the tree, which, in springing back to its old
+ position, covered the grave. The Sokokis were early converts to the
+ Catholic faith. Most of them, prior to the year 1756, had removed to the
+ French settlements on the St. Francois.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ AROUND Sebago's lonely lake
+ There lingers not a breeze to break
+ The mirror which its waters make.
+
+ The solemn pines along its shore,
+ The firs which hang its gray rocks o'er,
+ Are painted on its glassy floor.
+
+ The sun looks o'er, with hazy eye,
+ The snowy mountain-tops which lie
+ Piled coldly up against the sky.
+
+ Dazzling and white! save where the bleak,
+ Wild winds have bared some splintering peak,
+ Or snow-slide left its dusky streak.
+
+ Yet green are Saco's banks below,
+ And belts of spruce and cedar show,
+ Dark fringing round those cones of snow.
+
+ The earth hath felt the breath of spring,
+ Though yet on her deliverer's wing
+ The lingering frosts of winter cling.
+
+ Fresh grasses fringe the meadow-brooks,
+ And mildly from its sunny nooks
+ The blue eye of the violet looks.
+
+ And odors from the springing grass,
+ The sweet birch and the sassafras,
+ Upon the scarce-felt breezes pass.
+
+ Her tokens of renewing care
+ Hath Nature scattered everywhere,
+ In bud and flower, and warmer air.
+
+ But in their hour of bitterness,
+ What reek the broken Sokokis,
+ Beside their slaughtered chief, of this?
+
+ The turf's red stain is yet undried,
+ Scarce have the death-shot echoes died
+ Along Sebago's wooded side;
+
+ And silent now the hunters stand,
+ Grouped darkly, where a swell of land
+ Slopes upward from the lake's white sand.
+
+ Fire and the axe have swept it bare,
+ Save one lone beech, unclosing there
+ Its light leaves in the vernal air.
+
+ With grave, cold looks, all sternly mute,
+ They break the damp turf at its foot,
+ And bare its coiled and twisted root.
+
+ They heave the stubborn trunk aside,
+ The firm roots from the earth divide,&mdash;
+ The rent beneath yawns dark and wide.
+
+ And there the fallen chief is laid,
+ In tasselled garb of skins arrayed,
+ And girded with his wampum-braid.
+
+ The silver cross he loved is pressed
+ Beneath the heavy arms, which rest
+ Upon his scarred and naked breast.
+
+ 'T is done: the roots are backward sent,
+ The beechen-tree stands up unbent,
+ The Indian's fitting monument!
+
+ When of that sleeper's broken race
+ Their green and pleasant dwelling-place,
+ Which knew them once, retains no trace;
+
+ Oh, long may sunset's light be shed
+ As now upon that beech's head,
+ A green memorial of the dead!
+
+ There shall his fitting requiem be,
+ In northern winds, that, cold and free,
+ Howl nightly in that funeral tree.
+
+ To their wild wail the waves which break
+ Forever round that lonely lake
+ A solemn undertone shall make!
+
+ And who shall deem the spot unblest,
+ Where Nature's younger children rest,
+ Lulled on their sorrowing mother's breast?
+
+ Deem ye that mother loveth less
+ These bronzed forms of the wilderness
+ She foldeth in her long caress?
+
+ As sweet o'er them her wild-flowers blow,
+ As if with fairer hair and brow
+ The blue-eyed Saxon slept below.
+
+ What though the places of their rest
+ No priestly knee hath ever pressed,&mdash;
+ No funeral rite nor prayer hath blessed?
+
+ What though the bigot's ban be there,
+ And thoughts of wailing and despair,
+ And cursing in the place of prayer.
+
+ Yet Heaven hath angels watching round
+ The Indian's lowliest forest-mound,&mdash;
+ And they have made it holy ground.
+
+ There ceases man's frail judgment; all
+ His powerless bolts of cursing fall
+ Unheeded on that grassy pall.
+
+ O peeled and hunted and reviled,
+ Sleep on, dark tenant of the wild!
+ Great Nature owns her simple child!
+
+ And Nature's God, to whom alone
+ The secret of the heart is known,&mdash;
+ The hidden language traced thereon;
+
+ Who from its many cumberings
+ Of form and creed, and outward things,
+ To light the naked spirit brings;
+
+ Not with our partial eye shall scan,
+ Not with our pride and scorn shall ban,
+ The spirit of our brother man!
+ 1841.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0014" id="link2H_4_0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ ST. JOHN.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The fierce rivalry between Charles de La Tour, a Protestant, and D'Aulnay
+ Charnasy, a Catholic, for the possession of Acadia, forms one of the most
+ romantic passages in the history of the New World. La Tour received aid in
+ several instances from the Puritan colony of Massachusetts. During one of
+ his voyages for the purpose of obtaining arms and provisions for his
+ establishment at St. John, his castle was attacked by D'Aulnay, and
+ successfully defended by its high-spirited mistress. A second attack
+ however followed in the fourth month, 1647, when D'Aulnay was successful,
+ and the garrison was put to the sword. Lady La Tour languished a few days
+ in the hands of her enemy, and then died of grief.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "To the winds give our banner!
+ Bear homeward again!"
+ Cried the Lord of Acadia,
+ Cried Charles of Estienne;
+ From the prow of his shallop
+ He gazed, as the sun,
+ From its bed in the ocean,
+ Streamed up the St. John.
+
+ O'er the blue western waters
+ That shallop had passed,
+ Where the mists of Penobscot
+ Clung damp on her mast.
+ St. Saviour had looked
+ On the heretic sail,
+ As the songs of the Huguenot
+ Rose on the gale.
+
+ The pale, ghostly fathers
+ Remembered her well,
+ And had cursed her while passing,
+ With taper and bell;
+ But the men of Monhegan,
+ Of Papists abhorred,
+ Had welcomed and feasted
+ The heretic Lord.
+
+ They had loaded his shallop
+ With dun-fish and ball,
+ With stores for his larder,
+ And steel for his wall.
+ Pemaquid, from her bastions
+ And turrets of stone,
+ Had welcomed his coming
+ With banner and gun.
+
+ And the prayers of the elders
+ Had followed his way,
+ As homeward he glided,
+ Down Pentecost Bay.
+ Oh, well sped La Tour
+ For, in peril and pain,
+ His lady kept watch,
+ For his coming again.
+
+ O'er the Isle of the Pheasant
+ The morning sun shone,
+ On the plane-trees which shaded
+ The shores of St. John.
+ "Now, why from yon battlements
+ Speaks not my love!
+ Why waves there no banner
+ My fortress above?"
+
+ Dark and wild, from his deck
+ St. Estienne gazed about,
+ On fire-wasted dwellings,
+ And silent redoubt;
+ From the low, shattered walls
+ Which the flame had o'errun,
+ There floated no banner,
+ There thundered no gun!
+
+ But beneath the low arch
+ Of its doorway there stood
+ A pale priest of Rome,
+ In his cloak and his hood.
+ With the bound of a lion,
+ La Tour sprang to land,
+ On the throat of the Papist
+ He fastened his hand.
+
+ "Speak, son of the Woman
+ Of scarlet and sin!
+ What wolf has been prowling
+ My castle within?"
+ From the grasp of the soldier
+ The Jesuit broke,
+ Half in scorn, half in sorrow,
+ He smiled as he spoke:
+
+ "No wolf, Lord of Estienne,
+ Has ravaged thy hall,
+ But thy red-handed rival,
+ With fire, steel, and ball!
+ On an errand of mercy
+ I hitherward came,
+ While the walls of thy castle
+ Yet spouted with flame.
+
+ "Pentagoet's dark vessels
+ Were moored in the bay,
+ Grim sea-lions, roaring
+ Aloud for their prey."
+ "But what of my lady?"
+ Cried Charles of Estienne.
+ "On the shot-crumbled turret
+ Thy lady was seen:
+
+ "Half-veiled in the smoke-cloud,
+ Her hand grasped thy pennon,
+ While her dark tresses swayed
+ In the hot breath of cannon!
+ But woe to the heretic,
+ Evermore woe!
+ When the son of the church
+ And the cross is his foe!
+
+ "In the track of the shell,
+ In the path of the ball,
+ Pentagoet swept over
+ The breach of the wall!
+ Steel to steel, gun to gun,
+ One moment,&mdash;and then
+ Alone stood the victor,
+ Alone with his men!
+
+ "Of its sturdy defenders,
+ Thy lady alone
+ Saw the cross-blazoned banner
+ Float over St. John."
+ "Let the dastard look to it!"
+ Cried fiery Estienne,
+ "Were D'Aulnay King Louis,
+ I'd free her again!"
+
+ "Alas for thy lady!
+ No service from thee
+ Is needed by her
+ Whom the Lord hath set free;
+ Nine days, in stern silence,
+ Her thraldom she bore,
+ But the tenth morning came,
+ And Death opened her door!"
+
+ As if suddenly smitten
+ La Tour staggered back;
+ His hand grasped his sword-hilt,
+ His forehead grew black.
+ He sprang on the deck
+ Of his shallop again.
+ "We cruise now for vengeance!
+ Give way!" cried Estienne.
+
+ "Massachusetts shall hear
+ Of the Huguenot's wrong,
+ And from island and creekside
+ Her fishers shall throng!
+ Pentagoet shall rue
+ What his Papists have done,
+ When his palisades echo
+ The Puritan's gun!"
+
+ Oh, the loveliest of heavens
+ Hung tenderly o'er him,
+ There were waves in the sunshine,
+ And green isles before him:
+ But a pale hand was beckoning
+ The Huguenot on;
+ And in blackness and ashes
+ Behind was St. John!
+
+ 1841
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0015" id="link2H_4_0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE CYPRESS-TREE OF CEYLON.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Ibn Batuta, the celebrated Mussulman traveller of the fourteenth century,
+ speaks of a cypress-tree in Ceylon, universally held sacred by the
+ natives, the leaves of which were said to fall only at certain intervals,
+ and he who had the happiness to find and eat one of them was restored, at
+ once, to youth and vigor. The traveller saw several venerable Jogees, or
+ saints, sitting silent and motionless under the tree, patiently awaiting
+ the falling of a leaf.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ THEY sat in silent watchfulness
+ The sacred cypress-tree about,
+ And, from beneath old wrinkled brows,
+ Their failing eyes looked out.
+
+ Gray Age and Sickness waiting there
+ Through weary night and lingering day,&mdash;
+ Grim as the idols at their side,
+ And motionless as they.
+
+ Unheeded in the boughs above
+ The song of Ceylon's birds was sweet;
+ Unseen of them the island flowers
+ Bloomed brightly at their feet.
+
+ O'er them the tropic night-storm swept,
+ The thunder crashed on rock and hill;
+ The cloud-fire on their eyeballs blazed,
+ Yet there they waited still!
+
+ What was the world without to them?
+ The Moslem's sunset-call, the dance
+ Of Ceylon's maids, the passing gleam
+ Of battle-flag and lance?
+
+ They waited for that falling leaf
+ Of which the wandering Jogees sing:
+ Which lends once more to wintry age
+ The greenness of its spring.
+
+ Oh, if these poor and blinded ones
+ In trustful patience wait to feel
+ O'er torpid pulse and failing limb
+ A youthful freshness steal;
+
+ Shall we, who sit beneath that Tree
+ Whose healing leaves of life are shed,
+ In answer to the breath of prayer,
+ Upon the waiting head;
+
+ Not to restore our failing forms,
+ And build the spirit's broken shrine,
+ But on the fainting soul to shed
+ A light and life divine&mdash;
+
+ Shall we grow weary in our watch,
+ And murmur at the long delay?
+ Impatient of our Father's time
+ And His appointed way?
+
+ Or shall the stir of outward things
+ Allure and claim the Christian's eye,
+ When on the heathen watcher's ear
+ Their powerless murmurs die?
+
+ Alas! a deeper test of faith
+ Than prison cell or martyr's stake,
+ The self-abasing watchfulness
+ Of silent prayer may make.
+
+ We gird us bravely to rebuke
+ Our erring brother in the wrong,&mdash;
+ And in the ear of Pride and Power
+ Our warning voice is strong.
+
+ Easier to smite with Peter's sword
+ Than "watch one hour" in humbling prayer.
+ Life's "great things," like the Syrian lord,
+ Our hearts can do and dare.
+
+ But oh! we shrink from Jordan's side,
+ From waters which alone can save;
+
+ And murmur for Abana's banks
+ And Pharpar's brighter wave.
+
+ O Thou, who in the garden's shade
+ Didst wake Thy weary ones again,
+ Who slumbered at that fearful hour
+ Forgetful of Thy pain;
+
+ Bend o'er us now, as over them,
+ And set our sleep-bound spirits free,
+ Nor leave us slumbering in the watch
+ Our souls should keep with Thee!
+
+ 1841
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0016" id="link2H_4_0016">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE EXILES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The incidents upon which the following ballad has its foundation about the
+ year 1660. Thomas Macy was one of the first, if not the first white
+ settler of Nantucket. The career of Macy is briefly but carefully outlined
+ in James S. Pike's The New Puritan.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ THE goodman sat beside his door
+ One sultry afternoon,
+ With his young wife singing at his side
+ An old and goodly tune.
+
+ A glimmer of heat was in the air,&mdash;
+ The dark green woods were still;
+ And the skirts of a heavy thunder-cloud
+ Hung over the western hill.
+
+ Black, thick, and vast arose that cloud
+ Above the wilderness,
+
+ As some dark world from upper air
+ Were stooping over this.
+
+ At times the solemn thunder pealed,
+ And all was still again,
+ Save a low murmur in the air
+ Of coming wind and rain.
+
+ Just as the first big rain-drop fell,
+ A weary stranger came,
+ And stood before the farmer's door,
+ With travel soiled and lame.
+
+ Sad seemed he, yet sustaining hope
+ Was in his quiet glance,
+ And peace, like autumn's moonlight, clothed
+ His tranquil countenance,&mdash;
+
+ A look, like that his Master wore
+ In Pilate's council-hall:
+ It told of wrongs, but of a love
+ Meekly forgiving all.
+
+ "Friend! wilt thou give me shelter here?"
+ The stranger meekly said;
+ And, leaning on his oaken staff,
+ The goodman's features read.
+
+ "My life is hunted,&mdash;evil men
+ Are following in my track;
+ The traces of the torturer's whip
+ Are on my aged back;
+
+ "And much, I fear, 't will peril thee
+ Within thy doors to take
+ A hunted seeker of the Truth,
+ Oppressed for conscience' sake."
+
+ Oh, kindly spoke the goodman's wife,
+ "Come in, old man!" quoth she,
+ "We will not leave thee to the storm,
+ Whoever thou mayst be."
+
+ Then came the aged wanderer in,
+ And silent sat him down;
+ While all within grew dark as night
+ Beneath the storm-cloud's frown.
+
+ But while the sudden lightning's blaze
+ Filled every cottage nook,
+ And with the jarring thunder-roll
+ The loosened casements shook,
+
+ A heavy tramp of horses' feet
+ Came sounding up the lane,
+ And half a score of horse, or more,
+ Came plunging through the rain.
+
+ "Now, Goodman Macy, ope thy door,&mdash;
+ We would not be house-breakers;
+ A rueful deed thou'st done this day,
+ In harboring banished Quakers."
+
+ Out looked the cautious goodman then,
+ With much of fear and awe,
+ For there, with broad wig drenched with rain
+ The parish priest he saw.
+
+ Open thy door, thou wicked man,
+ And let thy pastor in,
+ And give God thanks, if forty stripes
+ Repay thy deadly sin."
+
+ "What seek ye?" quoth the goodman;
+ "The stranger is my guest;
+ He is worn with toil and grievous wrong,&mdash;
+ Pray let the old man rest."
+
+ "Now, out upon thee, canting knave!"
+ And strong hands shook the door.
+ "Believe me, Macy," quoth the priest,
+ "Thou 'lt rue thy conduct sore."
+
+ Then kindled Macy's eye of fire
+ "No priest who walks the earth,
+ Shall pluck away the stranger-guest
+ Made welcome to my hearth."
+
+ Down from his cottage wall he caught
+ The matchlock, hotly tried
+ At Preston-pans and Marston-moor,
+ By fiery Ireton's side;
+
+ Where Puritan, and Cavalier,
+ With shout and psalm contended;
+ And Rupert's oath, and Cromwell's prayer,
+ With battle-thunder blended.
+
+ Up rose the ancient stranger then
+ "My spirit is not free
+ To bring the wrath and violence
+ Of evil men on thee;
+
+ "And for thyself, I pray forbear,
+ Bethink thee of thy Lord,
+ Who healed again the smitten ear,
+ And sheathed His follower's sword.
+
+ "I go, as to the slaughter led.
+ Friends of the poor, farewell!"
+ Beneath his hand the oaken door
+ Back on its hinges fell.
+
+ "Come forth, old graybeard, yea and nay,"
+ The reckless scoffers cried,
+ As to a horseman's saddle-bow
+ The old man's arms were tied.
+
+ And of his bondage hard and long
+ In Boston's crowded jail,
+ Where suffering woman's prayer was heard,
+ With sickening childhood's wail,
+
+ It suits not with our tale to tell;
+ Those scenes have passed away;
+ Let the dim shadows of the past
+ Brood o'er that evil day.
+
+ "Ho, sheriff!" quoth the ardent priest,
+ "Take Goodman Macy too;
+ The sin of this day's heresy
+ His back or purse shall rue."
+
+ "Now, goodwife, haste thee!" Macy cried.
+ She caught his manly arm;
+ Behind, the parson urged pursuit,
+ With outcry and alarm.
+
+ Ho! speed the Macys, neck or naught,&mdash;
+ The river-course was near;
+ The plashing on its pebbled shore
+ Was music to their ear.
+
+ A gray rock, tasselled o'er with birch,
+ Above the waters hung,
+ And at its base, with every wave,
+ A small light wherry swung.
+
+ A leap&mdash;they gain the boat&mdash;and there
+ The goodman wields his oar;
+ "Ill luck betide them all," he cried,
+ "The laggards on the shore."
+
+ Down through the crashing underwood,
+ The burly sheriff came:&mdash;
+ "Stand, Goodman Macy, yield thyself;
+ Yield in the King's own name."
+
+ "Now out upon thy hangman's face!"
+ Bold Macy answered then,&mdash;
+ "Whip women, on the village green,
+ But meddle not with men."
+
+ The priest came panting to the shore,
+ His grave cocked hat was gone;
+ Behind him, like some owl's nest, hung
+ His wig upon a thorn.
+
+ "Come back,&mdash;come back!" the parson cried,
+ "The church's curse beware."
+ "Curse, an' thou wilt," said Macy, "but
+ Thy blessing prithee spare."
+
+ "Vile scoffer!" cried the baffled priest,
+ "Thou 'lt yet the gallows see."
+ "Who's born to be hanged will not be drowned,"
+ Quoth Macy, merrily;
+
+ "And so, sir sheriff and priest, good-by!"
+ He bent him to his oar,
+ And the small boat glided quietly
+ From the twain upon the shore.
+
+ Now in the west, the heavy clouds
+ Scattered and fell asunder,
+ While feebler came the rush of rain,
+ And fainter growled the thunder.
+
+ And through the broken clouds, the sun
+ Looked out serene and warm,
+ Painting its holy symbol-light
+ Upon the passing storm.
+
+ Oh, beautiful! that rainbow span,
+ O'er dim Crane-neck was bended;
+ One bright foot touched the eastern hills,
+ And one with ocean blended.
+
+ By green Pentucket's southern'slope
+ The small boat glided fast;
+ The watchers of the Block-house saw
+ The strangers as they passed.
+
+ That night a stalwart garrison
+ Sat shaking in their shoes,
+ To hear the dip of Indian oars,
+ The glide of birch canoes.
+
+ The fisher-wives of Salisbury&mdash;
+ The men were all away&mdash;
+ Looked out to see the stranger oar
+ Upon their waters play.
+
+ Deer-Island's rocks and fir-trees threw
+ Their sunset-shadows o'er them,
+ And Newbury's spire and weathercock
+ Peered o'er the pines before them.
+
+ Around the Black Rocks, on their left,
+ The marsh lay broad and green;
+ And on their right, with dwarf shrubs crowned,
+ Plum Island's hills were seen.
+
+ With skilful hand and wary eye
+ The harbor-bar was crossed;
+ A plaything of the restless wave,
+ The boat on ocean tossed.
+
+ The glory of the sunset heaven
+ On land and water lay;
+ On the steep hills of Agawam,
+ On cape, and bluff, and bay.
+
+ They passed the gray rocks of Cape Ann,
+ And Gloucester's harbor-bar;
+ The watch-fire of the garrison
+ Shone like a setting star.
+
+ How brightly broke the morning
+ On Massachusetts Bay!
+ Blue wave, and bright green island,
+ Rejoicing in the day.
+
+ On passed the bark in safety
+ Round isle and headland steep;
+ No tempest broke above them,
+ No fog-cloud veiled the deep.
+
+ Far round the bleak and stormy Cape
+ The venturous Macy passed,
+ And on Nantucket's naked isle
+ Drew up his boat at last.
+
+ And how, in log-built cabin,
+ They braved the rough sea-weather;
+ And there, in peace and quietness,
+ Went down life's vale together;
+
+ How others drew around them,
+ And how their fishing sped,
+ Until to every wind of heaven
+ Nantucket's sails were spread;
+
+ How pale Want alternated
+ With Plenty's golden smile;
+ Behold, is it not written
+ In the annals of the isle?
+
+ And yet that isle remaineth
+ A refuge of the free,
+ As when true-hearted Macy
+ Beheld it from the sea.
+
+ Free as the winds that winnow
+ Her shrubless hills of sand,
+ Free as the waves that batter
+ Along her yielding land.
+
+ Than hers, at duty's summons,
+ No loftier spirit stirs,
+ Nor falls o'er human suffering
+ A readier tear then hers.
+
+ God bless the sea-beat island!
+ And grant forevermore,
+ That charity and freedom dwell
+ As now upon her shore!
+
+ 1841.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0017" id="link2H_4_0017">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE KNIGHT OF ST. JOHN.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ERE down yon blue Carpathian hills
+ The sun shall sink again,
+ Farewell to life and all its ills,
+ Farewell to cell and chain!
+
+ These prison shades are dark and cold,
+ But, darker far than they,
+ The shadow of a sorrow old
+ Is on my heart alway.
+
+ For since the day when Warkworth wood
+ Closed o'er my steed, and I,
+ An alien from my name and blood,
+ A weed cast out to die,&mdash;
+
+ When, looking back in sunset light,
+ I saw her turret gleam,
+ And from its casement, far and white,
+ Her sign of farewell stream,
+
+ Like one who, from some desert shore,
+ Doth home's green isles descry,
+ And, vainly longing, gazes o'er
+ The waste of wave and sky;
+
+ So from the desert of my fate
+ I gaze across the past;
+ Forever on life's dial-plate
+ The shade is backward cast!
+
+ I've wandered wide from shore to shore,
+ I've knelt at many a shrine;
+ And bowed me to the rocky floor
+ Where Bethlehem's tapers shine;
+
+ And by the Holy Sepulchre
+ I've pledged my knightly sword
+ To Christ, His blessed Church, and her,
+ The Mother of our Lord.
+
+ Oh, vain the vow, and vain the strife!
+ How vain do all things seem!
+ My soul is in the past, and life
+ To-day is but a dream.
+
+ In vain the penance strange and long,
+ And hard for flesh to bear;
+ The prayer, the fasting, and the thong,
+ And sackcloth shirt of hair.
+
+ The eyes of memory will not sleep,
+ Its ears are open still;
+ And vigils with the past they keep
+ Against my feeble will.
+
+ And still the loves and joys of old
+ Do evermore uprise;
+ I see the flow of locks of gold,
+ The shine of loving eyes!
+
+ Ah me! upon another's breast
+ Those golden locks recline;
+ I see upon another rest
+ The glance that once was mine.
+
+ "O faithless priest! O perjured knight!"
+ I hear the Master cry;
+ "Shut out the vision from thy sight,
+ Let Earth and Nature die.
+
+ "The Church of God is now thy spouse,
+ And thou the bridegroom art;
+ Then let the burden of thy vows
+ Crush down thy human heart!"
+
+ In vain! This heart its grief must know,
+ Till life itself hath ceased,
+ And falls beneath the self-same blow
+ The lover and the priest!
+
+ O pitying Mother! souls of light,
+ And saints and martyrs old!
+ Pray for a weak and sinful knight,
+ A suffering man uphold.
+
+ Then let the Paynim work his will,
+ And death unbind my chain,
+ Ere down yon blue Carpathian hill
+ The sun shall fall again.
+
+ 1843
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0018" id="link2H_4_0018">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CASSANDRA SOUTHWICK.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In 1658 two young persons, son and daughter of Lawrence Smithwick of
+ Salem, who had himself been imprisoned and deprived of nearly all his
+ property for having entertained Quakers at his house, were fined for
+ non-attendance at church. They being unable to pay the fine, the General
+ Court issued an order empowering "the Treasurer of the County to sell the
+ said persons to any of the English nation of Virginia or Barbadoes, to
+ answer said fines." An attempt was made to carry this order into
+ execution, but no shipmaster was found willing to convey them to the West
+ Indies.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ To the God of all sure mercies let my blessing rise
+ to-day,
+ From the scoffer and the cruel He hath plucked
+ the spoil away;
+ Yea, He who cooled the furnace around the faithful
+ three,
+ And tamed the Chaldean lions, hath set His hand-
+ maid free!
+ Last night I saw the sunset melt through my prison
+ bars,
+ Last night across my damp earth-floor fell the pale
+ gleam of stars;
+ In the coldness and the darkness all through the
+ long night-time,
+ My grated casement whitened with autumn's early
+ rime.
+ Alone, in that dark sorrow, hour after hour crept
+ by;
+ Star after star looked palely in and sank adown
+ the sky;
+ No sound amid night's stillness, save that which
+ seemed to be
+ The dull and heavy beating of the pulses of the sea;
+
+ All night I sat unsleeping, for I knew that on the
+ morrow
+ The ruler and the cruel priest would mock me in
+ my sorrow,
+ Dragged to their place of market, and bargained
+ for and sold,
+ Like a lamb before the shambles, like a heifer
+ from the fold!
+
+ Oh, the weakness of the flesh was there, the
+ shrinking and the shame;
+ And the low voice of the Tempter like whispers to
+ me came:
+ "Why sit'st thou thus forlornly," the wicked
+ murmur said,
+ "Damp walls thy bower of beauty, cold earth thy
+ maiden bed?
+
+ "Where be the smiling faces, and voices soft and
+ sweet,
+ Seen in thy father's dwelling, heard in the pleasant
+ street?
+ Where be the youths whose glances, the summer
+ Sabbath through,
+ Turned tenderly and timidly unto thy father's pew?
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Why sit'st thou here, Cassandra?-Bethink
+ thee with what mirth
+ Thy happy schoolmates gather around the warm
+ bright hearth;
+ How the crimson shadows tremble on foreheads
+ white and fair,
+ On eyes of merry girlhood, half hid in golden hair.
+
+ "Not for thee the hearth-fire brightens, not for
+ thee kind words are spoken,
+ Not for thee the nuts of Wenham woods by laughing
+ boys are broken;
+ No first-fruits of the orchard within thy lap are
+ laid,
+ For thee no flowers of autumn the youthful hunters
+ braid.
+
+ "O weak, deluded maiden!&mdash;by crazy fancies
+ led,
+ With wild and raving railers an evil path to tread;
+ To leave a wholesome worship, and teaching pure
+ and sound,
+ And mate with maniac women, loose-haired and
+ sackcloth bound,&mdash;
+
+ "Mad scoffers of the priesthood; who mock at
+ things divine,
+ Who rail against the pulpit, and holy bread and
+ wine;
+ Sore from their cart-tail scourgings, and from the
+ pillory lame,
+ Rejoicing in their wretchedness, and glorying in
+ their shame.
+
+ "And what a fate awaits thee!&mdash;a sadly toiling
+ slave,
+ Dragging the slowly lengthening chain of bondage
+ to the grave!
+ Think of thy woman's nature, subdued in hopeless
+ thrall,
+ The easy prey of any, the scoff and scorn of all!"
+
+ Oh, ever as the Tempter spoke, and feeble Nature's
+ fears
+ Wrung drop by drop the scalding flow of unavailing
+ tears,
+ I wrestled down the evil thoughts, and strove in
+ silent prayer,
+ To feel, O Helper of the weak! that Thou indeed
+ wert there!
+
+ I thought of Paul and Silas, within Philippi's cell,
+ And how from Peter's sleeping limbs the prison
+ shackles fell,
+ Till I seemed to hear the trailing of an angel's
+ robe of white,
+ And to feel a blessed presence invisible to sight.
+
+ Bless the Lord for all his mercies!&mdash;for the peace
+ and love I felt,
+ Like dew of Hermon's holy hill, upon my spirit
+ melt;
+ When "Get behind me, Satan!" was the language
+ of my heart,
+ And I felt the Evil Tempter with all his doubts
+ depart.
+
+ Slow broke the gray cold morning; again the sunshine
+ fell,
+ Flecked with the shade of bar and grate within
+ my lonely cell;
+ The hoar-frost melted on the wall, and upward
+ from the street
+ Came careless laugh and idle word, and tread of
+ passing feet.
+
+ At length the heavy bolts fell back, my door was
+ open cast,
+ And slowly at the sheriff's side, up the long street
+ I passed;
+ I heard the murmur round me, and felt, but dared
+ not see,
+ How, from every door and window, the people
+ gazed on me.
+
+ And doubt and fear fell on me, shame burned upon
+ my cheek,
+ Swam earth and sky around me, my trembling
+ limbs grew weak:
+ "O Lord! support thy handmaid; and from her
+ soul cast out
+ The fear of man, which brings a snare, the weakness
+ and the doubt."
+
+ Then the dreary shadows scattered, like a cloud in
+ morning's breeze,
+ And a low deep voice within me seemed whispering
+ words like these:
+ "Though thy earth be as the iron, and thy heaven
+ a brazen wall,
+ Trust still His loving-kindness whose power is over
+ all."
+
+ We paused at length, where at my feet the sunlit
+ waters broke
+ On glaring reach of shining beach, and shingly
+ wall of rock;
+ The merchant-ships lay idly there, in hard clear
+ lines on high,
+ Tracing with rope and slender spar their network
+ on the sky.
+
+ And there were ancient citizens, cloak-wrapped
+ and grave and cold,
+ And grim and stout sea-captains with faces bronzed
+ and old,
+ And on his horse, with Rawson, his cruel clerk at
+ hand,
+ Sat dark and haughty Endicott, the ruler of the
+ land.
+
+ And poisoning with his evil words the ruler's ready
+ ear,
+ The priest leaned o'er his saddle, with laugh and
+ scoff and jeer;
+ It stirred my soul, and from my lips the seal of
+ silence broke,
+ As if through woman's weakness a warning spirit
+ spoke.
+
+ I cried, "The Lord rebuke thee, thou smiter of the
+ meek,
+ Thou robber of the righteous, thou trampler of
+ the weak!
+ Go light the dark, cold hearth-stones,&mdash;go turn
+ the prison lock
+ Of the poor hearts thou hast hunted, thou wolf
+ amid the flock!"
+
+ Dark lowered the brows of Endicott, and with a
+ deeper red
+ O'er Rawson's wine-empurpled cheek the flush of
+ anger spread;
+ "Good people," quoth the white-lipped priest,
+ "heed not her words so wild,
+ Her Master speaks within her,&mdash;the Devil owns
+ his child!"
+
+ But gray heads shook, and young brows knit, the
+ while the sheriff read
+ That law the wicked rulers against the poor have
+ made,
+ Who to their house of Rimmon and idol priesthood
+ bring
+ No bended knee of worship, nor gainful offering.
+
+ Then to the stout sea-captains the sheriff, turning,
+ said,&mdash;
+ "Which of ye, worthy seamen, will take this
+ Quaker maid?
+ In the Isle of fair Barbadoes, or on Virginia's
+ shore,
+ You may hold her at a higher price than Indian
+ girl or Moor."
+
+ Grim and silent stood the captains; and when
+ again he cried,
+ "Speak out, my worthy seamen!"&mdash;no voice, no
+ sign replied;
+ But I felt a hard hand press my own, and kind
+ words met my ear,&mdash;
+ "God bless thee, and preserve thee, my gentle girl
+ and dear!"
+
+ A weight seemed lifted from my heart, a pitying
+ friend was nigh,&mdash;
+ I felt it in his hard, rough hand, and saw it in his
+ eye;
+ And when again the sheriff spoke, that voice, so
+ kind to me,
+ Growled back its stormy answer like the roaring
+ of the sea,&mdash;
+
+ "Pile my ship with bars of silver, pack with coins
+ of Spanish gold,
+ From keel-piece up to deck-plank, the roomage of
+ her hold,
+ By the living God who made me!&mdash;I would sooner
+ in your bay
+ Sink ship and crew and cargo, than bear this child
+ away!"
+
+ "Well answered, worthy captain, shame on their
+ cruel laws!"
+ Ran through the crowd in murmurs loud the people's
+ just applause.
+ "Like the herdsman of Tekoa, in Israel of old,
+ Shall we see the poor and righteous again for
+ silver sold?"
+
+ I looked on haughty Endicott; with weapon half-
+ way drawn,
+ Swept round the throng his lion glare of bitter hate
+ and scorn;
+ Fiercely he drew his bridle-rein, and turned in
+ silence back,
+ And sneering priest and baffled clerk rode
+ murmuring in his track.
+
+ Hard after them the sheriff looked, in bitterness of
+ soul;
+ Thrice smote his staff upon the ground, and
+ crushed his parchment roll.
+ "Good friends," he said, "since both have fled,
+ the ruler and the priest,
+ Judge ye, if from their further work I be not well
+ released."
+
+ Loud was the cheer which, full and clear, swept
+ round the silent bay,
+ As, with kind words and kinder looks, he bade me
+ go my way;
+ For He who turns the courses of the streamlet of
+ the glen,
+ And the river of great waters, had turned the
+ hearts of men.
+
+ Oh, at that hour the very earth seemed changed
+ beneath my eye,
+ A holier wonder round me rose the blue walls of
+ the sky,
+ A lovelier light on rock and hill and stream and
+ woodland lay,
+ And softer lapsed on sunnier sands the waters of
+ the bay.
+
+ Thanksgiving to the Lord of life! to Him all
+ praises be,
+ Who from the hands of evil men hath set his hand-
+ maid free;
+ All praise to Him before whose power the mighty
+ are afraid,
+ Who takes the crafty in the snare which for the
+ poor is laid!
+
+ Sing, O my soul, rejoicingly, on evening's twilight
+ calm
+ Uplift the loud thanksgiving, pour forth the grateful
+ psalm;
+ Let all dear hearts with me rejoice, as did the
+ saints of old,
+ When of the Lord's good angel the rescued Peter
+ told.
+
+ And weep and howl, ye evil priests and mighty
+ men of wrong,
+ The Lord shall smite the proud, and lay His hand
+ upon the strong.
+ Woe to the wicked rulers in His avenging hour!
+ Woe to the wolves who seek the flocks to raven
+ and devour!
+
+ But let the humble ones arise, the poor in heart
+ be glad,
+ And let the mourning ones again with robes of
+ praise be clad.
+ For He who cooled the furnace, and smoothed the
+ stormy wave,
+ And tamed the Chaldean lions, is mighty still to
+ save!
+
+ 1843.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0019" id="link2H_4_0019">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE NEW WIFE AND THE OLD.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The following ballad is founded upon one of the marvellous legends
+ connected with the famous General &mdash;&mdash;, of Hampton, New
+ Hampshire, who was regarded by his neighbors as a Yankee Faust, in league
+ with the adversary. I give the story, as I heard it when a child, from a
+ venerable family visitant.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ DARK the halls, and cold the feast,
+ Gone the bridemaids, gone the priest.
+ All is over, all is done,
+ Twain of yesterday are one!
+ Blooming girl and manhood gray,
+ Autumn in the arms of May!
+
+ Hushed within and hushed without,
+ Dancing feet and wrestlers' shout;
+ Dies the bonfire on the hill;
+ All is dark and all is still,
+ Save the starlight, save the breeze
+ Moaning through the graveyard trees,
+ And the great sea-waves below,
+ Pulse of the midnight beating slow.
+
+ From the brief dream of a bride
+ She hath wakened, at his side.
+ With half-uttered shriek and start,&mdash;
+ Feels she not his beating heart?
+ And the pressure of his arm,
+ And his breathing near and warm?
+
+ Lightly from the bridal bed
+ Springs that fair dishevelled head,
+ And a feeling, new, intense,
+ Half of shame, half innocence,
+ Maiden fear and wonder speaks
+ Through her lips and changing cheeks.
+
+ From the oaken mantel glowing,
+ Faintest light the lamp is throwing
+ On the mirror's antique mould,
+ High-backed chair, and wainscot old,
+ And, through faded curtains stealing,
+ His dark sleeping face revealing.
+
+ Listless lies the strong man there,
+ Silver-streaked his careless hair;
+ Lips of love have left no trace
+ On that hard and haughty face;
+ And that forehead's knitted thought
+ Love's soft hand hath not unwrought.
+
+ "Yet," she sighs, "he loves me well,
+ More than these calm lips will tell.
+ Stooping to my lowly state,
+ He hath made me rich and great,
+ And I bless him, though he be
+ Hard and stern to all save me!"
+
+ While she speaketh, falls the light
+ O'er her fingers small and white;
+ Gold and gem, and costly ring
+ Back the timid lustre fling,&mdash;
+ Love's selectest gifts, and rare,
+ His proud hand had fastened there.
+
+ Gratefully she marks the glow
+ From those tapering lines of snow;
+ Fondly o'er the sleeper bending
+ His black hair with golden blending,
+ In her soft and light caress,
+ Cheek and lip together press.
+
+ Ha!&mdash;that start of horror! why
+ That wild stare and wilder cry,
+ Full of terror, full of pain?
+ Is there madness in her brain?
+ Hark! that gasping, hoarse and low,
+ "Spare me,&mdash;spare me,&mdash;let me go!"
+
+ God have mercy!&mdash;icy cold
+ Spectral hands her own enfold,
+ Drawing silently from them
+ Love's fair gifts of gold and gem.
+ "Waken! save me!" still as death
+ At her side he slumbereth.
+
+ Ring and bracelet all are gone,
+ And that ice-cold hand withdrawn;
+ But she hears a murmur low,
+ Full of sweetness, full of woe,
+ Half a sigh and half a moan
+ "Fear not! give the dead her own!"
+
+ Ah!&mdash;the dead wife's voice she knows!
+ That cold hand whose pressure froze,
+ Once in warmest life had borne
+ Gem and band her own hath worn.
+ "Wake thee! wake thee!" Lo, his eyes
+ Open with a dull surprise.
+
+ In his arms the strong man folds her,
+ Closer to his breast he holds her;
+ Trembling limbs his own are meeting,
+ And he feels her heart's quick beating
+ "Nay, my dearest, why this fear?"
+ "Hush!" she saith, "the dead is here!"
+
+ "Nay, a dream,&mdash;an idle dream."
+ But before the lamp's pale gleam
+ Tremblingly her hand she raises.
+ There no more the diamond blazes,
+ Clasp of pearl, or ring of gold,&mdash;
+ "Ah!" she sighs, "her hand was cold!"
+
+ Broken words of cheer he saith,
+ But his dark lip quivereth,
+ And as o'er the past he thinketh,
+ From his young wife's arms he shrinketh;
+ Can those soft arms round him lie,
+ Underneath his dead wife's eye?
+
+ She her fair young head can rest
+ Soothed and childlike on his breast,
+ And in trustful innocence
+ Draw new strength and courage thence;
+ He, the proud man, feels within
+ But the cowardice of sin!
+
+ She can murmur in her thought
+ Simple prayers her mother taught,
+ And His blessed angels call,
+ Whose great love is over all;
+ He, alone, in prayerless pride,
+ Meets the dark Past at her side!
+
+ One, who living shrank with dread
+ From his look, or word, or tread,
+ Unto whom her early grave
+ Was as freedom to the slave,
+ Moves him at this midnight hour,
+ With the dead's unconscious power!
+
+ Ah, the dead, the unforgot!
+ From their solemn homes of thought,
+ Where the cypress shadows blend
+ Darkly over foe and friend,
+ Or in love or sad rebuke,
+ Back upon the living look.
+
+ And the tenderest ones and weakest,
+ Who their wrongs have borne the meekest,
+ Lifting from those dark, still places,
+ Sweet and sad-remembered faces,
+ O'er the guilty hearts behind
+ An unwitting triumph find.
+
+ 1843
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0020" id="link2H_4_0020">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE BRIDAL OF PENNACOOK.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Winnepurkit, otherwise called George, Sachem of Saugus, married a daughter
+ of Passaconaway, the great Pennacook chieftain, in 1662. The wedding took
+ place at Pennacook (now Concord, N. H.), and the ceremonies closed with a
+ great feast. According to the usages of the chiefs, Passaconaway ordered a
+ select number of his men to accompany the newly-married couple to the
+ dwelling of the husband, where in turn there was another great feast. Some
+ time after, the wife of Winnepurkit expressing a desire to visit her
+ father's house was permitted to go, accompanied by a brave escort of her
+ husband's chief men. But when she wished to return, her father sent a
+ messenger to Saugus, informing her husband, and asking him to come and
+ take her away. He returned for answer that he had escorted his wife to her
+ father's house in a style that became a chief, and that now if she wished
+ to return, her father must send her back, in the same way. This
+ Passaconaway refused to do, and it is said that here terminated the
+ connection of his daughter with the Saugus chief.&mdash;Vide MORTON'S New
+ Canaan.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ WE had been wandering for many days
+ Through the rough northern country. We had seen
+ The sunset, with its bars of purple cloud,
+ Like a new heaven, shine upward from the lake
+ Of Winnepiseogee; and had felt
+ The sunrise breezes, midst the leafy isles
+ Which stoop their summer beauty to the lips
+ Of the bright waters. We had checked our steeds,
+ Silent with wonder, where the mountain wall
+ Is piled to heaven; and, through the narrow rift
+ Of the vast rocks, against whose rugged feet
+ Beats the mad torrent with perpetual roar,
+ Where noonday is as twilight, and the wind
+ Comes burdened with the everlasting moan
+ Of forests and of far-off waterfalls,
+ We had looked upward where the summer sky,
+ Tasselled with clouds light-woven by the sun,
+ Sprung its blue arch above the abutting crags
+ O'er-roofing the vast portal of the land
+ Beyond the wall of mountains. We had passed
+ The high source of the Saco; and bewildered
+ In the dwarf spruce-belts of the Crystal Hills,
+ Had heard above us, like a voice in the cloud,
+ The horn of Fabyan sounding; and atop
+ Of old Agioochook had seen the mountains
+ Piled to the northward, shagged with wood, and thick
+ As meadow mole-hills,&mdash;the far sea of Casco,
+ A white gleam on the horizon of the east;
+ Fair lakes, embosomed in the woods and hills;
+ Moosehillock's mountain range, and Kearsarge
+ Lifting his granite forehead to the sun!
+
+ And we had rested underneath the oaks
+ Shadowing the bank, whose grassy spires are shaken
+ By the perpetual beating of the falls
+ Of the wild Ammonoosuc. We had tracked
+ The winding Pemigewasset, overhung
+ By beechen shadows, whitening down its rocks,
+ Or lazily gliding through its intervals,
+ From waving rye-fields sending up the gleam
+ Of sunlit waters. We had seen the moon
+ Rising behind Umbagog's eastern pines,
+ Like a great Indian camp-fire; and its beams
+ At midnight spanning with a bridge of silver
+ The Merrimac by Uncanoonuc's falls.
+
+ There were five souls of us whom travel's chance
+ Had thrown together in these wild north hills
+ A city lawyer, for a month escaping
+ From his dull office, where the weary eye
+ Saw only hot brick walls and close thronged streets;
+ Briefless as yet, but with an eye to see
+ Life's sunniest side, and with a heart to take
+ Its chances all as godsends; and his brother,
+ Pale from long pulpit studies, yet retaining
+ The warmth and freshness of a genial heart,
+ Whose mirror of the beautiful and true,
+ In Man and Nature, was as yet undimmed
+ By dust of theologic strife, or breath
+ Of sect, or cobwebs of scholastic lore;
+ Like a clear crystal calm of water, taking
+ The hue and image of o'erleaning flowers,
+ Sweet human faces, white clouds of the noon,
+ Slant starlight glimpses through the dewy leaves,
+ And tenderest moonrise. 'T was, in truth, a study,
+ To mark his spirit, alternating between
+ A decent and professional gravity
+ And an irreverent mirthfulness, which often
+ Laughed in the face of his divinity,
+ Plucked off the sacred ephod, quite unshrined
+ The oracle, and for the pattern priest
+ Left us the man. A shrewd, sagacious merchant,
+ To whom the soiled sheet found in Crawford's inn,
+ Giving the latest news of city stocks
+ And sales of cotton, had a deeper meaning
+ Than the great presence of the awful mountains
+ Glorified by the sunset; and his daughter,
+ A delicate flower on whom had blown too long
+ Those evil winds, which, sweeping from the ice
+ And winnowing the fogs of Labrador,
+ Shed their cold blight round Massachusetts Bay,
+ With the same breath which stirs Spring's opening leaves
+ And lifts her half-formed flower-bell on its stem,
+ Poisoning our seaside atmosphere.
+
+ It chanced that as we turned upon our homeward way,
+ A drear northeastern storm came howling up
+ The valley of the Saco; and that girl
+ Who had stood with us upon Mount Washington,
+ Her brown locks ruffled by the wind which whirled
+ In gusts around its sharp, cold pinnacle,
+ Who had joined our gay trout-fishing in the streams
+ Which lave that giant's feet; whose laugh was heard
+ Like a bird's carol on the sunrise breeze
+ Which swelled our sail amidst the lake's green islands,
+ Shrank from its harsh, chill breath, and visibly drooped
+ Like a flower in the frost. So, in that quiet inn
+ Which looks from Conway on the mountains piled
+ Heavily against the horizon of the north,
+ Like summer thunder-clouds, we made our home
+ And while the mist hung over dripping hills,
+ And the cold wind-driven rain-drops all day long
+ Beat their sad music upon roof and pane,
+ We strove to cheer our gentle invalid.
+
+ The lawyer in the pauses of the storm
+ Went angling down the Saco, and, returning,
+ Recounted his adventures and mishaps;
+ Gave us the history of his scaly clients,
+ Mingling with ludicrous yet apt citations
+ Of barbarous law Latin, passages
+ From Izaak Walton's Angler, sweet and fresh
+ As the flower-skirted streams of Staffordshire,
+ Where, under aged trees, the southwest wind
+ Of soft June mornings fanned the thin, white hair
+ Of the sage fisher. And, if truth be told,
+ Our youthful candidate forsook his sermons,
+ His commentaries, articles and creeds,
+ For the fair page of human loveliness,
+ The missal of young hearts, whose sacred text
+ Is music, its illumining, sweet smiles.
+ He sang the songs she loved; and in his low,
+ Deep, earnest voice, recited many a page
+ Of poetry, the holiest, tenderest lines
+ Of the sad bard of Olney, the sweet songs,
+ Simple and beautiful as Truth and Nature,
+ Of him whose whitened locks on Rydal Mount
+ Are lifted yet by morning breezes blowing
+ From the green hills, immortal in his lays.
+ And for myself, obedient to her wish,
+ I searched our landlord's proffered library,&mdash;
+ A well-thumbed Bunyan, with its nice wood pictures
+ Of scaly fiends and angels not unlike them;
+ Watts' unmelodious psalms; Astrology's
+ Last home, a musty pile of almanacs,
+ And an old chronicle of border wars
+ And Indian history. And, as I read
+ A story of the marriage of the Chief
+ Of Saugus to the dusky Weetamoo,
+ Daughter of Passaconaway, who dwelt
+ In the old time upon the Merrimac,
+ Our fair one, in the playful exercise
+ Of her prerogative,&mdash;the right divine
+ Of youth and beauty,&mdash;bade us versify
+ The legend, and with ready pencil sketched
+ Its plan and outlines, laughingly assigning
+ To each his part, and barring our excuses
+ With absolute will. So, like the cavaliers
+ Whose voices still are heard in the Romance
+ Of silver-tongued Boccaccio, on the banks
+ Of Arno, with soft tales of love beguiling
+ The ear of languid beauty, plague-exiled
+ From stately Florence, we rehearsed our rhymes
+ To their fair auditor, and shared by turns
+ Her kind approval and her playful censure.
+
+ It may be that these fragments owe alone
+ To the fair setting of their circumstances,&mdash;
+ The associations of time, scene, and audience,&mdash;
+ Their place amid the pictures which fill up
+ The chambers of my memory. Yet I trust
+ That some, who sigh, while wandering in thought,
+ Pilgrims of Romance o'er the olden world,
+ That our broad land,&mdash;our sea-like lakes and mountains
+ Piled to the clouds, our rivers overhung
+ By forests which have known no other change
+ For ages than the budding and the fall
+ Of leaves, our valleys lovelier than those
+ Which the old poets sang of,&mdash;should but figure
+ On the apocryphal chart of speculation
+ As pastures, wood-lots, mill-sites, with the privileges,
+ Rights, and appurtenances, which make up
+ A Yankee Paradise, unsung, unknown,
+ To beautiful tradition; even their names,
+ Whose melody yet lingers like the last
+ Vibration of the red man's requiem,
+ Exchanged for syllables significant,
+ Of cotton-mill and rail-car, will look kindly
+ Upon this effort to call up the ghost
+ Of our dim Past, and listen with pleased ear
+ To the responses of the questioned Shade.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0021" id="link2H_4_0021">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ I. THE MERRIMAC.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ O child of that white-crested mountain whose
+ springs
+ Gush forth in the shade of the cliff-eagle's
+ wings,
+ Down whose slopes to the lowlands thy wild waters
+ shine,
+ Leaping gray walls of rock, flashing through the
+ dwarf pine;
+ From that cloud-curtained cradle so cold and so
+ lone,
+ From the arms of that wintry-locked mother of
+ stone,
+ By hills hung with forests, through vales wide and
+ free,
+ Thy mountain-born brightness glanced down to the
+ sea.
+
+ No bridge arched thy waters save that where the
+ trees
+ Stretched their long arms above thee and kissed in
+ the breeze:
+ No sound save the lapse of the waves on thy
+ shores,
+ The plunging of otters, the light dip of oars.
+
+ Green-tufted, oak-shaded, by Amoskeag's fall
+ Thy twin Uncanoonucs rose stately and tall,
+ Thy Nashua meadows lay green and unshorn,
+ And the hills of Pentucket were tasselled with
+ corn.
+ But thy Pennacook valley was fairer than these,
+ And greener its grasses and taller its trees,
+ Ere the sound of an axe in the forest had rung,
+ Or the mower his scythe in the meadows had
+ swung.
+
+ In their sheltered repose looking out from the
+ wood
+ The bark-builded wigwams of Pennacook stood;
+ There glided the corn-dance, the council-fire shone,
+ And against the red war-post the hatchet was
+ thrown.
+
+ There the old smoked in silence their pipes, and
+ the young
+ To the pike and the white-perch their baited lines
+ flung;
+ There the boy shaped his arrows, and there the
+ shy maid
+ Wove her many-hued baskets and bright wampum
+ braid.
+
+ O Stream of the Mountains! if answer of thine
+ Could rise from thy waters to question of mine,
+ Methinks through the din of thy thronged banks
+ a moan
+ Of sorrow would swell for the days which have
+ gone.
+
+ Not for thee the dull jar of the loom and the wheel,
+ The gliding of shuttles, the ringing of steel;
+ But that old voice of waters, of bird and of breeze,
+ The dip of the wild-fowl, the rustling of trees.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0022" id="link2H_4_0022">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ II. THE BASHABA.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Lift we the twilight curtains of the Past,
+ And, turning from familiar sight and sound,
+ Sadly and full of reverence let us cast
+ A glance upon Tradition's shadowy ground,
+ Led by the few pale lights which, glimmering round
+ That dim, strange land of Eld, seem dying fast;
+ And that which history gives not to the eye,
+ The faded coloring of Time's tapestry,
+ Let Fancy, with her dream-dipped brush, supply.
+
+ Roof of bark and walls of pine,
+ Through whose chinks the sunbeams shine,
+ Tracing many a golden line
+ On the ample floor within;
+ Where, upon that earth-floor stark,
+ Lay the gaudy mats of bark,
+ With the bear's hide, rough and dark,
+ And the red-deer's skin.
+
+ Window-tracery, small and slight,
+ Woven of the willow white,
+ Lent a dimly checkered light;
+ And the night-stars glimmered down,
+ Where the lodge-fire's heavy smoke,
+ Slowly through an opening broke,
+ In the low roof, ribbed with oak,
+ Sheathed with hemlock brown.
+
+ Gloomed behind the changeless shade
+ By the solemn pine-wood made;
+ Through the rugged palisade,
+ In the open foreground planted,
+ Glimpses came of rowers rowing,
+ Stir of leaves and wild-flowers blowing,
+ Steel-like gleams of water flowing,
+ In the sunlight slanted.
+
+ Here the mighty Bashaba
+ Held his long-unquestioned sway,
+ From the White Hills, far away,
+ To the great sea's sounding shore;
+ Chief of chiefs, his regal word
+ All the river Sachems heard,
+ At his call the war-dance stirred,
+ Or was still once more.
+
+ There his spoils of chase and war,
+ Jaw of wolf and black bear's paw,
+ Panther's skin and eagle's claw,
+ Lay beside his axe and bow;
+ And, adown the roof-pole hung,
+ Loosely on a snake-skin strung,
+ In the smoke his scalp-locks swung
+ Grimly to and fro.
+
+ Nightly down the river going,
+ Swifter was the hunter's rowing,
+ When he saw that lodge-fire, glowing
+ O'er the waters still and red;
+ And the squaw's dark eye burned brighter,
+ And she drew her blanket tighter,
+ As, with quicker step and lighter,
+ From that door she fled.
+
+ For that chief had magic skill,
+ And a Panisee's dark will,
+ Over powers of good and ill,
+ Powers which bless and powers which ban;
+ Wizard lord of Pennacook,
+ Chiefs upon their war-path shook,
+ When they met the steady look
+ Of that wise dark man.
+
+ Tales of him the gray squaw told,
+ When the winter night-wind cold
+ Pierced her blanket's thickest fold,
+ And her fire burned low and small,
+ Till the very child abed,
+ Drew its bear-skin over bead,
+ Shrinking from the pale lights shed
+ On the trembling wall.
+
+ All the subtle spirits hiding
+ Under earth or wave, abiding
+ In the caverned rock, or riding
+ Misty clouds or morning breeze;
+ Every dark intelligence,
+ Secret soul, and influence
+ Of all things which outward sense
+ Feels, or bears, or sees,&mdash;
+
+ These the wizard's skill confessed,
+ At his bidding banned or blessed,
+ Stormful woke or lulled to rest
+ Wind and cloud, and fire and flood;
+ Burned for him the drifted snow,
+ Bade through ice fresh lilies blow,
+ And the leaves of summer grow
+ Over winter's wood!
+
+ Not untrue that tale of old!
+ Now, as then, the wise and bold
+ All the powers of Nature hold
+ Subject to their kingly will;
+ From the wondering crowds ashore,
+ Treading life's wild waters o'er,
+ As upon a marble floor,
+ Moves the strong man still.
+
+ Still, to such, life's elements
+ With their sterner laws dispense,
+ And the chain of consequence
+ Broken in their pathway lies;
+ Time and change their vassals making,
+ Flowers from icy pillows waking,
+ Tresses of the sunrise shaking
+ Over midnight skies.
+ Still, to th' earnest soul, the sun
+ Rests on towered Gibeon,
+ And the moon of Ajalon
+ Lights the battle-grounds of life;
+ To his aid the strong reverses
+ Hidden powers and giant forces,
+ And the high stars, in their courses,
+ Mingle in his strife!
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0023" id="link2H_4_0023">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ III. THE DAUGHTER.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The soot-black brows of men, the yell
+ Of women thronging round the bed,
+ The tinkling charm of ring and shell,
+ The Powah whispering o'er the dead!
+
+ All these the Sachem's home had known,
+ When, on her journey long and wild
+ To the dim World of Souls, alone,
+ In her young beauty passed the mother of his child.
+
+ Three bow-shots from the Sachem's dwelling
+ They laid her in the walnut shade,
+ Where a green hillock gently swelling
+ Her fitting mound of burial made.
+ There trailed the vine in summer hours,
+ The tree-perched squirrel dropped his shell,&mdash;
+ On velvet moss and pale-hued flowers,
+ Woven with leaf and spray, the softened sunshine fell!
+
+ The Indian's heart is hard and cold,
+ It closes darkly o'er its care,
+ And formed in Nature's sternest mould,
+ Is slow to feel, and strong to bear.
+ The war-paint on the Sachem's face,
+ Unwet with tears, shone fierce and red,
+ And still, in battle or in chase,
+ Dry leaf and snow-rime crisped beneath his
+ foremost tread.
+
+ Yet when her name was heard no more,
+ And when the robe her mother gave,
+ And small, light moccasin she wore,
+ Had slowly wasted on her grave,
+ Unmarked of him the dark maids sped
+ Their sunset dance and moonlit play;
+ No other shared his lonely bed,
+ No other fair young head upon his bosom lay.
+
+ A lone, stern man. Yet, as sometimes
+ The tempest-smitten tree receives
+ From one small root the sap which climbs
+ Its topmost spray and crowning leaves,
+ So from his child the Sachem drew
+ A life of Love and Hope, and felt
+ His cold and rugged nature through
+ The softness and the warmth of her young
+ being melt.
+
+ A laugh which in the woodland rang
+ Bemocking April's gladdest bird,&mdash;
+ A light and graceful form which sprang
+ To meet him when his step was heard,&mdash;
+ Eyes by his lodge-fire flashing dark,
+ Small fingers stringing bead and shell
+ Or weaving mats of bright-hued bark,&mdash;
+ With these the household-god had graced
+ his wigwam well.
+
+ Child of the forest! strong and free,
+ Slight-robed, with loosely flowing hair,
+ She swam the lake or climbed the tree,
+ Or struck the flying bird in air.
+ O'er the heaped drifts of winter's moon
+ Her snow-shoes tracked the hunter's way;
+ And dazzling in the summer noon
+ The blade of her light oar threw off its shower
+ of spray!
+
+ Unknown to her the rigid rule,
+ The dull restraint, the chiding frown,
+ The weary torture of the school,
+ The taming of wild nature down.
+ Her only lore, the legends told
+ Around the hunter's fire at night;
+ Stars rose and set, and seasons rolled,
+ Flowers bloomed and snow-flakes fell, unquestioned
+ in her sight.
+
+ Unknown to her the subtle skill
+ With which the artist-eye can trace
+ In rock and tree and lake and hill
+ The outlines of divinest grace;
+ Unknown the fine soul's keen unrest,
+ Which sees, admires, yet yearns alway;
+ Too closely on her mother's breast
+ To note her smiles of love the child of Nature lay!
+
+ It is enough for such to be
+ Of common, natural things a part,
+ To feel, with bird and stream and tree,
+ The pulses of the same great heart;
+ But we, from Nature long exiled,
+ In our cold homes of Art and Thought
+ Grieve like the stranger-tended child,
+ Which seeks its mother's arms, and sees but feels
+ them not.
+
+ The garden rose may richly bloom
+ In cultured soil and genial air,
+ To cloud the light of Fashion's room
+ Or droop in Beauty's midnight hair;
+ In lonelier grace, to sun and dew
+ The sweetbrier on the hillside shows
+ Its single leaf and fainter hue,
+ Untrained and wildly free, yet still a sister rose!
+
+ Thus o'er the heart of Weetamoo
+ Their mingling shades of joy and ill
+ The instincts of her nature threw;
+ The savage was a woman still.
+ Midst outlines dim of maiden schemes,
+ Heart-colored prophecies of life,
+ Rose on the ground of her young dreams
+ The light of a new home, the lover and the wife.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0024" id="link2H_4_0024">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ IV. THE WEDDING.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Cool and dark fell the autumn night,
+ But the Bashaba's wigwam glowed with light,
+ For down from its roof, by green withes hung,
+ Flaring and smoking the pine-knots swung.
+
+ And along the river great wood-fires
+ Shot into the night their long, red spires,
+ Showing behind the tall, dark wood,
+ Flashing before on the sweeping flood.
+
+ In the changeful wind, with shimmer and shade,
+ Now high, now low, that firelight played,
+ On tree-leaves wet with evening dews,
+ On gliding water and still canoes.
+
+ The trapper that night on Turee's brook,
+ And the weary fisher on Contoocook,
+ Saw over the marshes, and through the pine,
+ And down on the river, the dance-lights shine.
+ For the Saugus Sachem had come to woo
+ The Bashaba's daughter Weetamoo,
+ And laid at her father's feet that night
+ His softest furs and wampum white.
+
+ From the Crystal Hills to the far southeast
+ The river Sagamores came to the feast;
+ And chiefs whose homes the sea-winds shook
+ Sat down on the mats of Pennacook.
+
+ They came from Sunapee's shore of rock,
+ From the snowy sources of Snooganock,
+ And from rough Coos whose thick woods shake
+ Their pine-cones in Umbagog Lake.
+
+ From Ammonoosuc's mountain pass,
+ Wild as his home, came Chepewass;
+ And the Keenomps of the bills which throw
+ Their shade on the Smile of Manito.
+
+ With pipes of peace and bows unstrung,
+ Glowing with paint came old and young,
+ In wampum and furs and feathers arrayed,
+ To the dance and feast the Bashaba made.
+
+ Bird of the air and beast of the field,
+ All which the woods and the waters yield,
+ On dishes of birch and hemlock piled,
+ Garnished and graced that banquet wild.
+
+ Steaks of the brown bear fat and large
+ From the rocky slopes of the Kearsarge;
+ Delicate trout from Babboosuck brook,
+ And salmon speared in the Contoocook;
+
+ Squirrels which fed where nuts fell thick
+ in the gravelly bed of the Otternic;
+ And small wild-hens in reed-snares caught
+ from the banks of Sondagardee brought;
+
+ Pike and perch from the Suncook taken,
+ Nuts from the trees of the Black Hills shaken,
+ Cranberries picked in the Squamscot bog,
+ And grapes from the vines of Piscataquog:
+
+ And, drawn from that great stone vase which stands
+ In the river scooped by a spirit's hands,
+ Garnished with spoons of shell and horn,
+ Stood the birchen dishes of smoking corn.
+
+ Thus bird of the air and beast of the field,
+ All which the woods and the waters yield,
+ Furnished in that olden day
+ The bridal feast of the Bashaba.
+
+ And merrily when that feast was done
+ On the fire-lit green the dance begun,
+ With squaws' shrill stave, and deeper hum
+ Of old men beating the Indian drum.
+
+ Painted and plumed, with scalp-locks flowing,
+ And red arms tossing and black eyes glowing,
+ Now in the light and now in the shade
+ Around the fires the dancers played.
+
+ The step was quicker, the song more shrill,
+ And the beat of the small drums louder still
+ Whenever within the circle drew
+ The Saugus Sachem and Weetamoo.
+
+ The moons of forty winters had shed
+ Their snow upon that chieftain's head,
+ And toil and care and battle's chance
+ Had seamed his hard, dark countenance.
+
+ A fawn beside the bison grim,&mdash;
+ Why turns the bride's fond eye on him,
+ In whose cold look is naught beside
+ The triumph of a sullen pride?
+
+ Ask why the graceful grape entwines
+ The rough oak with her arm of vines;
+ And why the gray rock's rugged cheek
+ The soft lips of the mosses seek.
+
+ Why, with wise instinct, Nature seems
+ To harmonize her wide extremes,
+ Linking the stronger with the weak,
+ The haughty with the soft and meek!
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0025" id="link2H_4_0025">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ V. THE NEW HOME.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ A wild and broken landscape, spiked with firs,
+ Roughening the bleak horizon's northern edge;
+ Steep, cavernous hillsides, where black hemlock
+ spurs
+ And sharp, gray splinters of the wind-swept
+ ledge
+ Pierced the thin-glazed ice, or bristling rose,
+ Where the cold rim of the sky sunk down upon
+ the snows.
+
+ And eastward cold, wide marshes stretched away,
+ Dull, dreary flats without a bush or tree,
+ O'er-crossed by icy creeks, where twice a day
+ Gurgled the waters of the moon-struck sea;
+ And faint with distance came the stifled roar,
+ The melancholy lapse of waves on that low shore.
+
+ No cheerful village with its mingling smokes,
+ No laugh of children wrestling in the snow,
+ No camp-fire blazing through the hillside oaks,
+ No fishers kneeling on the ice below;
+ Yet midst all desolate things of sound and view,
+ Through the long winter moons smiled dark-eyed
+ Weetamoo.
+
+ Her heart had found a home; and freshly all
+ Its beautiful affections overgrew
+ Their rugged prop. As o'er some granite wall
+ Soft vine-leaves open to the moistening dew
+ And warm bright sun, the love of that young wife
+ Found on a hard cold breast the dew and warmth
+ of life.
+
+ The steep, bleak hills, the melancholy shore,
+ The long, dead level of the marsh between,
+ A coloring of unreal beauty wore
+ Through the soft golden mist of young love seen.
+ For o'er those hills and from that dreary plain,
+ Nightly she welcomed home her hunter chief again.
+
+ No warmth of heart, no passionate burst of feeling,
+ Repaid her welcoming smile and parting kiss,
+ No fond and playful dalliance half concealing,
+ Under the guise of mirth, its tenderness;
+
+ But, in their stead, the warrior's settled pride,
+ And vanity's pleased smile with homage satisfied.
+
+ Enough for Weetamoo, that she alone
+ Sat on his mat and slumbered at his side;
+ That he whose fame to her young ear had flown
+ Now looked upon her proudly as his bride;
+ That he whose name the Mohawk trembling heard
+ Vouchsafed to her at times a kindly look or word.
+
+ For she had learned the maxims of her race,
+ Which teach the woman to become a slave,
+ And feel herself the pardonless disgrace
+ Of love's fond weakness in the wise and brave,&mdash;
+ The scandal and the shame which they incur,
+ Who give to woman all which man requires of her.
+
+ So passed the winter moons. The sun at last
+ Broke link by link the frost chain of the rills,
+ And the warm breathings of the southwest passed
+ Over the hoar rime of the Saugus hills;
+ The gray and desolate marsh grew green once more,
+ And the birch-tree's tremulous shade fell round the
+ Sachem's door.
+
+ Then from far Pennacook swift runners came,
+ With gift and greeting for the Saugus chief;
+ Beseeching him in the great Sachem's name,
+ That, with the coming of the flower and leaf,
+ The song of birds, the warm breeze and the rain,
+ Young Weetamoo might greet her lonely sire again.
+
+ And Winnepurkit called his chiefs together,
+ And a grave council in his wigwam met,
+ Solemn and brief in words, considering whether
+ The rigid rules of forest etiquette
+ Permitted Weetamoo once more to look
+ Upon her father's face and green-banked
+ Pennacook.
+
+ With interludes of pipe-smoke and strong water,
+ The forest sages pondered, and at length,
+ Concluded in a body to escort her
+ Up to her father's home of pride and strength,
+ Impressing thus on Pennacook a sense
+ Of Winnepurkit's power and regal consequence.
+
+ So through old woods which Aukeetamit's hand,
+ A soft and many-shaded greenness lent,
+ Over high breezy hills, and meadow land
+ Yellow with flowers, the wild procession went,
+ Till, rolling down its wooded banks between,
+ A broad, clear, mountain stream, the Merrimac
+ was seen.
+
+ The hunter leaning on his bow undrawn,
+ The fisher lounging on the pebbled shores,
+ Squaws in the clearing dropping the seed-corn,
+ Young children peering through the wigwam doors,
+ Saw with delight, surrounded by her train
+ Of painted Saugus braves, their Weetamoo again.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0026" id="link2H_4_0026">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VI. AT PENNACOOK.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The hills are dearest which our childish feet
+ Have climbed the earliest; and the streams most sweet
+ Are ever those at which our young lips drank,
+ Stooped to their waters o'er the grassy bank.
+
+ Midst the cold dreary sea-watch, Home's hearth-light
+ Shines round the helmsman plunging through the night;
+ And still, with inward eye, the traveller sees
+ In close, dark, stranger streets his native trees.
+
+ The home-sick dreamer's brow is nightly fanned
+ By breezes whispering of his native land,
+ And on the stranger's dim and dying eye
+ The soft, sweet pictures of his childhood lie.
+
+ Joy then for Weetamoo, to sit once more
+ A child upon her father's wigwam floor!
+ Once more with her old fondness to beguile
+ From his cold eye the strange light of a smile.
+
+ The long, bright days of summer swiftly passed,
+ The dry leaves whirled in autumn's rising blast,
+ And evening cloud and whitening sunrise rime
+ Told of the coming of the winter-time.
+
+ But vainly looked, the while, young Weetamoo,
+ Down the dark river for her chief's canoe;
+ No dusky messenger from Saugus brought
+ The grateful tidings which the young wife sought.
+
+ At length a runner from her father sent,
+ To Winnepurkit's sea-cooled wigwam went
+ "Eagle of Saugus,&mdash;in the woods the dove
+ Mourns for the shelter of thy wings of love."
+
+ But the dark chief of Saugus turned aside
+ In the grim anger of hard-hearted pride;
+ "I bore her as became a chieftain's daughter,
+ Up to her home beside the gliding water.
+
+ If now no more a mat for her is found
+ Of all which line her father's wigwam round,
+ Let Pennacook call out his warrior train,
+ And send her back with wampum gifts again."
+
+ The baffled runner turned upon his track,
+ Bearing the words of Winnepurkit back.
+ "Dog of the Marsh," cried Pennacook, "no more
+ Shall child of mine sit on his wigwam floor.
+
+ "Go, let him seek some meaner squaw to spread
+ The stolen bear-skin of his beggar's bed;
+ Son of a fish-hawk! let him dig his clams
+ For some vile daughter of the Agawams,
+
+ "Or coward Nipmucks! may his scalp dry black
+ In Mohawk smoke, before I send her back."
+ He shook his clenched hand towards the ocean wave,
+ While hoarse assent his listening council gave.
+
+ Alas poor bride! can thy grim sire impart
+ His iron hardness to thy woman's heart?
+ Or cold self-torturing pride like his atone
+ For love denied and life's warm beauty flown?
+
+ On Autumn's gray and mournful grave the snow
+ Hung its white wreaths; with stifled voice and low
+ The river crept, by one vast bridge o'er-crossed,
+ Built by the boar-locked artisan of Frost.
+
+ And many a moon in beauty newly born
+ Pierced the red sunset with her silver horn,
+ Or, from the east, across her azure field
+ Rolled the wide brightness of her full-orbed shield.
+
+ Yet Winnepurkit came not,&mdash;on the mat
+ Of the scorned wife her dusky rival sat;
+ And he, the while, in Western woods afar,
+ Urged the long chase, or trod the path of war.
+
+ Dry up thy tears, young daughter of a chief!
+ Waste not on him the sacredness of grief;
+ Be the fierce spirit of thy sire thine own,
+ His lips of scorning, and his heart of stone.
+
+ What heeds the warrior of a hundred fights,
+ The storm-worn watcher through long hunting nights,
+ Cold, crafty, proud of woman's weak distress,
+ Her home-bound grief and pining loneliness?
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0027" id="link2H_4_0027">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VII. THE DEPARTURE.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The wild March rains had fallen fast and long
+ The snowy mountains of the North among,
+ Making each vale a watercourse, each hill
+ Bright with the cascade of some new-made rill.
+
+ Gnawed by the sunbeams, softened by the rain,
+ Heaved underneath by the swollen current's strain,
+ The ice-bridge yielded, and the Merrimac
+ Bore the huge ruin crashing down its track.
+
+ On that strong turbid water, a small boat
+ Guided by one weak hand was seen to float;
+ Evil the fate which loosed it from the shore,
+ Too early voyager with too frail an oar!
+
+ Down the vexed centre of that rushing tide,
+ The thick huge ice-blocks threatening either side,
+ The foam-white rocks of Amoskeag in view,
+ With arrowy swiftness sped that light canoe.
+
+ The trapper, moistening his moose's meat
+ On the wet bank by Uncanoonuc's feet,
+ Saw the swift boat flash down the troubled stream;
+ Slept he, or waked he? was it truth or dream?
+
+ The straining eye bent fearfully before,
+ The small hand clenching on the useless oar,
+ The bead-wrought blanket trailing o'er the water&mdash;
+ He knew them all&mdash;woe for the Sachem's daughter!
+
+ Sick and aweary of her lonely life,
+ Heedless of peril, the still faithful wife
+ Had left her mother's grave, her father's door,
+ To seek the wigwam of her chief once more.
+
+ Down the white rapids like a sear leaf whirled,
+ On the sharp rocks and piled-up ices hurled,
+ Empty and broken, circled the canoe
+ In the vexed pool below&mdash;but where was Weetamoo.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0028" id="link2H_4_0028">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VIII. SONG OF INDIAN WOMEN.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The Dark eye has left us,
+ The Spring-bird has flown;
+ On the pathway of spirits
+ She wanders alone.
+ The song of the wood-dove has died on our shore
+ Mat wonck kunna-monee! We hear it no more!
+
+ O dark water Spirit
+ We cast on thy wave
+ These furs which may never
+ Hang over her grave;
+ Bear down to the lost one the robes that she wore
+ Mat wonck kunna-monee! We see her no more!
+
+ Of the strange land she walks in
+ No Powah has told:
+ It may burn with the sunshine,
+ Or freeze with the cold.
+ Let us give to our lost one the robes that she wore:
+ Mat wonck kunna-monee! We see her no more!
+
+ The path she is treading
+ Shall soon be our own;
+ Each gliding in shadow
+ Unseen and alone!
+ In vain shall we call on the souls gone before:
+ Mat wonck kunna-monee! They hear us no more!
+
+ O mighty Sowanna!
+ Thy gateways unfold,
+ From thy wigwam of sunset
+ Lift curtains of gold!
+
+ Take home the poor Spirit whose journey is o'er
+ Mat wonck kunna-monee! We see her no more!
+
+ So sang the Children of the Leaves beside
+ The broad, dark river's coldly flowing tide;
+ Now low, now harsh, with sob-like pause and swell,
+ On the high wind their voices rose and fell.
+ Nature's wild music,&mdash;sounds of wind-swept trees,
+ The scream of birds, the wailing of the breeze,
+ The roar of waters, steady, deep, and strong,&mdash;
+ Mingled and murmured in that farewell song.
+
+ 1844.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0029" id="link2H_4_0029">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ BARCLAY OF URY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Among the earliest converts to the doctrines of Friends in Scotland was
+ Barclay of Ury, an old and distinguished soldier, who had fought under
+ Gustavus Adolphus, in Germany. As a Quaker, he became the object of
+ persecution and abuse at the hands of the magistrates and the populace.
+ None bore the indignities of the mob with greater patience and nobleness
+ of soul than this once proud gentleman and soldier. One of his friends, on
+ an occasion of uncommon rudeness, lamented that he should be treated so
+ harshly in his old age who had been so honored before. "I find more
+ satisfaction," said Barclay, "as well as honor, in being thus insulted for
+ my religious principles, than when, a few years ago, it was usual for the
+ magistrates, as I passed the city of Aberdeen, to meet me on the road and
+ conduct me to public entertainment in their hall, and then escort me out
+ again, to gain my favor."
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Up the streets of Aberdeen,
+ By the kirk and college green,
+ Rode the Laird of Ury;
+ Close behind him, close beside,
+ Foul of mouth and evil-eyed,
+ Pressed the mob in fury.
+
+ Flouted him the drunken churl,
+ Jeered at him the serving-girl,
+ Prompt to please her master;
+ And the begging carlin, late
+ Fed and clothed at Ury's gate,
+ Cursed him as he passed her.
+
+ Yet, with calm and stately mien,
+ Up the streets of Aberdeen
+ Came he slowly riding;
+ And, to all he saw and heard,
+ Answering not with bitter word,
+ Turning not for chiding.
+
+ Came a troop with broadswords swinging,
+ Bits and bridles sharply ringing,
+ Loose and free and froward;
+ Quoth the foremost, "Ride him down!
+ Push him! prick him! through the town
+ Drive the Quaker coward!"
+
+ But from out the thickening crowd
+ Cried a sudden voice and loud
+ "Barclay! Ho! a Barclay!"
+ And the old man at his side
+ Saw a comrade, battle tried,
+ Scarred and sunburned darkly;
+
+ Who with ready weapon bare,
+ Fronting to the troopers there,
+ Cried aloud: "God save us,
+ Call ye coward him who stood
+ Ankle deep in Lutzen's blood,
+ With the brave Gustavus?"
+
+ "Nay, I do not need thy sword,
+ Comrade mine," said Ury's lord;
+ "Put it up, I pray thee
+ Passive to His holy will,
+ Trust I in my Master still,
+ Even though He slay me.
+
+ "Pledges of thy love and faith,
+ Proved on many a field of death,
+ Not by me are needed."
+ Marvelled much that henchman bold,
+ That his laird, so stout of old,
+ Now so meekly pleaded.
+
+ "Woe's the day!" he sadly said,
+ With a slowly shaking head,
+ And a look of pity;
+ "Ury's honest lord reviled,
+ Mock of knave and sport of child,
+ In his own good city.
+
+ "Speak the word, and, master mine,
+ As we charged on Tilly's line,
+ And his Walloon lancers,
+ Smiting through their midst we'll teach
+ Civil look and decent speech
+ To these boyish prancers!"
+
+ "Marvel not, mine ancient friend,
+ Like beginning, like the end:"
+ Quoth the Laird of Ury;
+ "Is the sinful servant more
+ Than his gracious Lord who bore
+ Bonds and stripes in Jewry?
+
+ "Give me joy that in His name
+ I can bear, with patient frame,
+ All these vain ones offer;
+ While for them He suffereth long,
+ Shall I answer wrong with wrong,
+ Scoffing with the scoffer?
+
+ "Happier I, with loss of all,
+ Hunted, outlawed, held in thrall,
+ With few friends to greet me,
+ Than when reeve and squire were seen,
+ Riding out from Aberdeen,
+ With bared heads to meet me.
+
+ "When each goodwife, o'er and o'er,
+ Blessed me as I passed her door;
+ And the snooded daughter,
+ Through her casement glancing down,
+ Smiled on him who bore renown
+ From red fields of slaughter.
+
+ "Hard to feel the stranger's scoff,
+ Hard the old friend's falling off,
+ Hard to learn forgiving;
+ But the Lord His own rewards,
+ And His love with theirs accords,
+ Warm and fresh and living.
+
+ "Through this dark and stormy night
+ Faith beholds a feeble light
+ Up the blackness streaking;
+ Knowing God's own time is best,
+ In a patient hope I rest
+ For the full day-breaking!"
+
+ So the Laird of Ury said,
+ Turning slow his horse's head
+ Towards the Tolbooth prison,
+ Where, through iron gates, he heard
+ Poor disciples of the Word
+ Preach of Christ arisen!
+
+ Not in vain, Confessor old,
+ Unto us the tale is told
+ Of thy day of trial;
+ Every age on him who strays
+ From its broad and beaten ways
+ Pours its seven-fold vial.
+
+ Happy he whose inward ear
+ Angel comfortings can hear,
+ O'er the rabble's laughter;
+ And while Hatred's fagots burn,
+ Glimpses through the smoke discern
+ Of the good hereafter.
+
+ Knowing this, that never yet
+ Share of Truth was vainly set
+ In the world's wide fallow;
+ After hands shall sow the seed,
+ After hands from hill and mead
+ Reap the harvests yellow.
+
+ Thus, with somewhat of the Seer,
+ Must the moral pioneer
+ From the Future borrow;
+ Clothe the waste with dreams of grain,
+ And, on midnight's sky of rain,
+ Paint the golden morrow!
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0030" id="link2H_4_0030">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE ANGELS OF BUENA VISTA.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ A letter-writer from Mexico during the Mexican war, when detailing some of
+ the incidents at the terrible fight of Buena Vista, mentioned that Mexican
+ women were seen hovering near the field of death, for the purpose of
+ giving aid and succor to the wounded. One poor woman was found surrounded
+ by the maimed and suffering of both armies, ministering to the wants of
+ Americans as well as Mexicans, with impartial tenderness.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ SPEAK and tell us, our Ximena, looking northward
+ far away,
+ O'er the camp of the invaders, o'er the Mexican
+ array,
+ Who is losing? who is winning? are they far or
+ come they near?
+ Look abroad, and tell us, sister, whither rolls the
+ storm we hear.
+ Down the hills of Angostura still the storm of
+ battle rolls;
+ Blood is flowing, men are dying; God have mercy
+ on their souls!
+ "Who is losing? who is winning?" Over hill
+ and over plain,
+ I see but smoke of cannon clouding through the
+ mountain rain.
+
+ Holy Mother! keep our brothers! Look, Ximena,
+ look once more.
+ "Still I see the fearful whirlwind rolling darkly
+ as before,
+ Bearing on, in strange confusion, friend and foeman,
+ foot and horse,
+ Like some wild and troubled torrent sweeping
+ down its mountain course."
+
+ Look forth once more, Ximena! "Ah! the smoke
+ has rolled away;
+ And I see the Northern rifles gleaming down the
+ ranks of gray.
+ Hark! that sudden blast of bugles! there the troop
+ of Minon wheels;
+ There the Northern horses thunder, with the cannon
+ at their heels.
+
+ "Jesu, pity I how it thickens I now retreat and
+ now advance!
+ Bight against the blazing cannon shivers Puebla's
+ charging lance!
+ Down they go, the brave young riders; horse and
+ foot together fall;
+ Like a ploughshare in the fallow, through them
+ ploughs the Northern ball."
+
+ Nearer came the storm and nearer, rolling fast and
+ frightful on!
+ Speak, Ximena, speak and tell us, who has lost,
+ and who has won?
+ Alas! alas! I know not; friend and foe together
+ fall,
+ O'er the dying rush the living: pray, my sisters,
+ for them all!
+
+ "Lo! the wind the smoke is lifting. Blessed
+ Mother, save my brain!
+ I can see the wounded crawling slowly out from
+ heaps of slain.
+ Now they stagger, blind and bleeding; now they
+ fall, and strive to rise;
+ Hasten, sisters, haste and save them, lest they die
+ before our eyes!
+
+ "O my hearts love! O my dear one! lay thy
+ poor head on my knee;
+ Dost thou know the lips that kiss thee? Canst
+ thou hear me? canst thou see?
+ O my husband, brave and gentle! O my Bernal,
+ look once more
+ On the blessed cross before thee! Mercy!
+ all is o'er!"
+
+ Dry thy tears, my poor Ximena; lay thy dear one
+ down to rest;
+ Let his hands be meekly folded, lay the cross upon
+ his breast;
+ Let his dirge be sung hereafter, and his funeral
+ masses said;
+ To-day, thou poor bereaved one, the living ask thy
+ aid.
+
+ Close beside her, faintly moaning, fair and young,
+ a soldier lay,
+ Torn with shot and pierced with lances, bleeding
+ slow his life away;
+ But, as tenderly before him the lorn Ximena knelt,
+ She saw the Northern eagle shining on his pistol-
+ belt.
+
+ With a stifled cry of horror straight she turned
+ away her head;
+ With a sad and bitter feeling looked she back upon
+ her dead;
+ But she heard the youth's low moaning, and his
+ struggling breath of pain,
+ And she raised the cooling water to his parching
+ lips again.
+
+ Whispered low the dying soldier, pressed her hand
+ and faintly smiled;
+ Was that pitying face his mother's? did she watch
+ beside her child?
+ All his stranger words with meaning her woman's
+ heart supplied;
+ With her kiss upon his forehead, "Mother!"
+ murmured he, and died!
+
+ "A bitter curse upon them, poor boy, who led thee
+ forth,
+ From some gentle, sad-eyed mother, weeping, lonely,
+ in the North!"
+ Spake the mournful Mexic woman, as she laid him
+ with her dead,
+ And turned to soothe the living, and bind the
+ wounds which bled.
+
+ "Look forth once more, Ximena!" Like a cloud
+ before the wind
+ Rolls the battle down the mountains, leaving blood
+ and death behind;
+ Ah! they plead in vain for mercy; in the dust the
+ wounded strive;
+ "Hide your faces, holy angels! O thou Christ of
+ God, forgive!"
+
+ Sink, O Night, among thy mountains! let the cool,
+ gray shadows fall;
+ Dying brothers, fighting demons, drop thy curtain
+ over all!
+ Through the thickening winter twilight, wide apart
+ the battle rolled,
+ In its sheath the sabre rested, and the cannon's
+ lips grew cold.
+
+ But the noble Mexic women still their holy task
+ pursued,
+ Through that long, dark night of sorrow, worn and
+ faint and lacking food.
+ Over weak and suffering brothers, with a tender
+ care they hung,
+ And the dying foeman blessed them in a strange
+ and Northern tongue.
+
+ Not wholly lost, O Father! is this evil world of
+ ours;
+ Upward, through its blood and ashes, spring afresh
+ the Eden flowers;
+ From its smoking hell of battle, Love and Pity
+ send their prayer,
+ And still thy white-winged angels hover dimly in
+ our air!
+
+ 1847.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0031" id="link2H_4_0031">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE LEGEND OF ST. MARK.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ "This legend (to which my attention was called by my friend Charles
+ Sumner), is the subject of a celebrated picture by Tintoretto, of which
+ Mr. Rogers possesses the original sketch. The slave lies on the ground,
+ amid a crowd of spectators, who look on, animated by all the various
+ emotions of sympathy, rage, terror; a woman, in front, with a child in her
+ arms, has always been admired for the lifelike vivacity of her attitude
+ and expression. The executioner holds up the broken implements; St. Mark,
+ with a headlong movement, seems to rush down from heaven in haste to save
+ his worshipper. The dramatic grouping in this picture is wonderful; the
+ coloring, in its gorgeous depth and harmony, is, in Mr. Rogers's sketch,
+ finer than in the picture."&mdash;MRS. JAMESON'S Sacred and Legendary Art,
+ I. 154.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ THE day is closing dark and cold,
+ With roaring blast and sleety showers;
+ And through the dusk the lilacs wear
+ The bloom of snow, instead of flowers.
+
+ I turn me from the gloom without,
+ To ponder o'er a tale of old;
+ A legend of the age of Faith,
+ By dreaming monk or abbess told.
+
+ On Tintoretto's canvas lives
+ That fancy of a loving heart,
+ In graceful lines and shapes of power,
+ And hues immortal as his art.
+
+ In Provence (so the story runs)
+ There lived a lord, to whom, as slave,
+ A peasant-boy of tender years
+ The chance of trade or conquest gave.
+
+ Forth-looking from the castle tower,
+ Beyond the hills with almonds dark,
+ The straining eye could scarce discern
+ The chapel of the good St. Mark.
+
+ And there, when bitter word or fare
+ The service of the youth repaid,
+ By stealth, before that holy shrine,
+ For grace to bear his wrong, he prayed.
+
+ The steed stamped at the castle gate,
+ The boar-hunt sounded on the hill;
+ Why stayed the Baron from the chase,
+ With looks so stern, and words so ill?
+
+ "Go, bind yon slave! and let him learn,
+ By scath of fire and strain of cord,
+ How ill they speed who give dead saints
+ The homage due their living lord!"
+
+ They bound him on the fearful rack,
+ When, through the dungeon's vaulted dark,
+ He saw the light of shining robes,
+ And knew the face of good St. Mark.
+
+ Then sank the iron rack apart,
+ The cords released their cruel clasp,
+ The pincers, with their teeth of fire,
+ Fell broken from the torturer's grasp.
+
+ And lo! before the Youth and Saint,
+ Barred door and wall of stone gave way;
+ And up from bondage and the night
+ They passed to freedom and the day!
+
+ O dreaming monk! thy tale is true;
+ O painter! true thy pencil's art;
+ in tones of hope and prophecy,
+ Ye whisper to my listening heart!
+
+ Unheard no burdened heart's appeal
+ Moans up to God's inclining ear;
+ Unheeded by his tender eye,
+ Falls to the earth no sufferer's tear.
+
+ For still the Lord alone is God
+ The pomp and power of tyrant man
+ Are scattered at his lightest breath,
+ Like chaff before the winnower's fan.
+
+ Not always shall the slave uplift
+ His heavy hands to Heaven in vain.
+ God's angel, like the good St. Mark,
+ Comes shining down to break his chain!
+
+ O weary ones! ye may not see
+ Your helpers in their downward flight;
+ Nor hear the sound of silver wings
+ Slow beating through the hush of night!
+
+ But not the less gray Dothan shone,
+ With sunbright watchers bending low,
+ That Fear's dim eye beheld alone
+ The spear-heads of the Syrian foe.
+
+ There are, who, like the Seer of old,
+ Can see the helpers God has sent,
+ And how life's rugged mountain-side
+ Is white with many an angel tent!
+
+ They hear the heralds whom our Lord
+ Sends down his pathway to prepare;
+ And light, from others hidden, shines
+ On their high place of faith and prayer.
+
+ Let such, for earth's despairing ones,
+ Hopeless, yet longing to be free,
+ Breathe once again the Prophet's prayer
+ "Lord, ope their eyes, that they may see!"
+
+ 1849.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0032" id="link2H_4_0032">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ KATHLEEN.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ This ballad was originally published in my prose work, Leaves from
+ Margaret Smith's Journal, as the song of a wandering Milesian
+ schoolmaster. In the seventeenth century, slavery in the New World was by
+ no means confined to the natives of Africa. Political offenders and
+ criminals were transported by the British government to the plantations of
+ Barbadoes and Virginia, where they were sold like cattle in the market.
+ Kidnapping of free and innocent white persons was practised to a
+ considerable extent in the seaports of the United Kingdom.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ O NORAH, lay your basket down,
+ And rest your weary hand,
+ And come and hear me sing a song
+ Of our old Ireland.
+
+ There was a lord of Galaway,
+ A mighty lord was he;
+ And he did wed a second wife,
+ A maid of low degree.
+
+ But he was old, and she was young,
+ And so, in evil spite,
+ She baked the black bread for his kin,
+ And fed her own with white.
+
+ She whipped the maids and starved the kern,
+ And drove away the poor;
+ "Ah, woe is me!" the old lord said,
+ "I rue my bargain sore!"
+
+ This lord he had a daughter fair,
+ Beloved of old and young,
+ And nightly round the shealing-fires
+ Of her the gleeman sung.
+
+ "As sweet and good is young Kathleen
+ As Eve before her fall;"
+ So sang the harper at the fair,
+ So harped he in the hall.
+
+ "Oh, come to me, my daughter dear!
+ Come sit upon my knee,
+ For looking in your face, Kathleen,
+ Your mother's own I see!"
+
+ He smoothed and smoothed her hair away,
+ He kissed her forehead fair;
+ "It is my darling Mary's brow,
+ It is my darling's hair!"
+
+ Oh, then spake up the angry dame,
+ "Get up, get up," quoth she,
+ "I'll sell ye over Ireland,
+ I'll sell ye o'er the sea!"
+
+ She clipped her glossy hair away,
+ That none her rank might know;
+ She took away her gown of silk,
+ And gave her one of tow,
+
+ And sent her down to Limerick town
+ And to a seaman sold
+ This daughter of an Irish lord
+ For ten good pounds in gold.
+
+ The lord he smote upon his breast,
+ And tore his beard so gray;
+ But he was old, and she was young,
+ And so she had her way.
+
+ Sure that same night the Banshee howled
+ To fright the evil dame,
+ And fairy folks, who loved Kathleen,
+ With funeral torches came.
+
+ She watched them glancing through the trees,
+ And glimmering down the hill;
+ They crept before the dead-vault door,
+ And there they all stood still!
+
+ "Get up, old man! the wake-lights shine!"
+ "Ye murthering witch," quoth he,
+ "So I'm rid of your tongue, I little care
+ If they shine for you or me."
+
+ "Oh, whoso brings my daughter back,
+ My gold and land shall have!"
+ Oh, then spake up his handsome page,
+ "No gold nor land I crave!
+
+ "But give to me your daughter dear,
+ Give sweet Kathleen to me,
+ Be she on sea or be she on land,
+ I'll bring her back to thee."
+
+ "My daughter is a lady born,
+ And you of low degree,
+ But she shall be your bride the day
+ You bring her back to me."
+
+ He sailed east, he sailed west,
+ And far and long sailed he,
+ Until he came to Boston town,
+ Across the great salt sea.
+
+ "Oh, have ye seen the young Kathleen,
+ The flower of Ireland?
+ Ye'll know her by her eyes so blue,
+ And by her snow-white hand!"
+
+ Out spake an ancient man, "I know
+ The maiden whom ye mean;
+ I bought her of a Limerick man,
+ And she is called Kathleen.
+
+ "No skill hath she in household work,
+ Her hands are soft and white,
+ Yet well by loving looks and ways
+ She doth her cost requite."
+
+ So up they walked through Boston town,
+ And met a maiden fair,
+ A little basket on her arm
+ So snowy-white and bare.
+
+ "Come hither, child, and say hast thou
+ This young man ever seen?"
+ They wept within each other's arms,
+ The page and young Kathleen.
+
+ "Oh give to me this darling child,
+ And take my purse of gold."
+ "Nay, not by me," her master said,
+ "Shall sweet Kathleen be sold.
+
+ "We loved her in the place of one
+ The Lord hath early ta'en;
+ But, since her heart's in Ireland,
+ We give her back again!"
+
+ Oh, for that same the saints in heaven
+ For his poor soul shall pray,
+ And Mary Mother wash with tears
+ His heresies away.
+
+ Sure now they dwell in Ireland;
+ As you go up Claremore
+ Ye'll see their castle looking down
+ The pleasant Galway shore.
+
+ And the old lord's wife is dead and gone,
+ And a happy man is he,
+ For he sits beside his own Kathleen,
+ With her darling on his knee.
+
+ 1849.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0033" id="link2H_4_0033">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE WELL OF LOCH MAREE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Pennant, in his Voyage to the Hebrides, describes the holy well of Loch
+ Maree, the waters of which were supposed to effect a miraculous cure of
+ melancholy, trouble, and insanity.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ CALM on the breast of Loch Maree
+ A little isle reposes;
+ A shadow woven of the oak
+ And willow o'er it closes.
+
+ Within, a Druid's mound is seen,
+ Set round with stony warders;
+ A fountain, gushing through the turf,
+ Flows o'er its grassy borders.
+
+ And whoso bathes therein his brow,
+ With care or madness burning,
+ Feels once again his healthful thought
+ And sense of peace returning.
+
+ O restless heart and fevered brain,
+ Unquiet and unstable,
+ That holy well of Loch Maree
+ Is more than idle fable!
+
+ Life's changes vex, its discords stun,
+ Its glaring sunshine blindeth,
+ And blest is he who on his way
+ That fount of healing findeth!
+
+ The shadows of a humbled will
+ And contrite heart are o'er it;
+ Go read its legend, "TRUST IN GOD,"
+ On Faith's white stones before it.
+
+ 1850.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0034" id="link2H_4_0034">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE CHAPEL OF THE HERMITS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The incident upon which this poem is based is related in a note to
+ Bernardin Henri Saint Pierre's Etudes de la Nature. "We arrived at the
+ habitation of the Hermits a little before they sat down to their table,
+ and while they were still at church. J. J. Rousseau proposed to me to
+ offer up our devotions. The hermits were reciting the Litanies of
+ Providence, which are remarkably beautiful. After we had addressed our
+ prayers to God, and the hermits were proceeding to the refectory, Rousseau
+ said to me, with his heart overflowing, 'At this moment I experience what
+ is said in the gospel: Where two or three are gathered together in my
+ name, there am I in the midst of them. There is here a feeling of peace
+ and happiness which penetrates the soul.' I said, 'If Finelon had lived,
+ you would have been a Catholic.' He exclaimed, with tears in his eyes,
+ 'Oh, if Finelon were alive, I would struggle to get into his service, even
+ as a lackey!'" In my sketch of Saint Pierre, it will be seen that I have
+ somewhat antedated the period of his old age. At that time he was not
+ probably more than fifty. In describing him, I have by no means
+ exaggerated his own history of his mental condition at the period of the
+ story. In the fragmentary Sequel to his Studies of Nature, he thus speaks
+ of himself: "The ingratitude of those of whom I had deserved kindness,
+ unexpected family misfortunes, the total loss of my small patrimony
+ through enterprises solely undertaken for the benefit of my country, the
+ debts under which I lay oppressed, the blasting of all my hopes,&mdash;these
+ combined calamities made dreadful inroads upon my health and reason. . . .
+ I found it impossible to continue in a room where there was company,
+ especially if the doors were shut. I could not even cross an alley in a
+ public garden, if several persons had got together in it. When alone, my
+ malady subsided. I felt myself likewise at ease in places where I saw
+ children only. At the sight of any one walking up to the place where I
+ was, I felt my whole frame agitated, and retired. I often said to myself,
+ 'My sole study has been to merit well of mankind; why do I fear them?'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He attributes his improved health of mind and body to the counsels of his
+ friend, J. J. Rousseau. "I renounced," says he, "my books. I threw my eyes
+ upon the works of nature, which spake to all my senses a language which
+ neither time nor nations have it in their power to alter. Thenceforth my
+ histories and my journals were the herbage of the fields and meadows. My
+ thoughts did not go forth painfully after them, as in the case of human
+ systems; but their thoughts, under a thousand engaging forms, quietly
+ sought me. In these I studied, without effort, the laws of that Universal
+ Wisdom which had surrounded me from the cradle, but on which heretofore I
+ had bestowed little attention."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Speaking of Rousseau, he says: "I derived inexpressible satisfaction from
+ his society. What I prized still more than his genius was his probity. He
+ was one of the few literary characters, tried in the furnace of
+ affliction, to whom you could, with perfect security, confide your most
+ secret thoughts. . . . Even when he deviated, and became the victim of
+ himself or of others, he could forget his own misery in devotion to the
+ welfare of mankind. He was uniformly the advocate of the miserable. There
+ might be inscribed on his tomb these affecting words from that Book of
+ which he carried always about him some select passages, during the last
+ years of his life: 'His sins, which are many, are forgiven, for he loved
+ much.'"
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "I do believe, and yet, in grief,
+ I pray for help to unbelief;
+ For needful strength aside to lay
+ The daily cumberings of my way.
+
+ "I'm sick at heart of craft and cant,
+ Sick of the crazed enthusiast's rant,
+ Profession's smooth hypocrisies,
+ And creeds of iron, and lives of ease.
+
+ "I ponder o'er the sacred word,
+ I read the record of our Lord;
+ And, weak and troubled, envy them
+ Who touched His seamless garment's hem;
+
+ "Who saw the tears of love He wept
+ Above the grave where Lazarus slept;
+ And heard, amidst the shadows dim
+ Of Olivet, His evening hymn.
+
+ "How blessed the swineherd's low estate,
+ The beggar crouching at the gate,
+ The leper loathly and abhorred,
+ Whose eyes of flesh beheld the Lord!
+
+ "O sacred soil His sandals pressed!
+ Sweet fountains of His noonday rest!
+ O light and air of Palestine,
+ Impregnate with His life divine!
+
+ "Oh, bear me thither! Let me look
+ On Siloa's pool, and Kedron's brook;
+ Kneel at Gethsemane, and by
+ Gennesaret walk, before I die!
+
+ "Methinks this cold and northern night
+ Would melt before that Orient light;
+ And, wet by Hermon's dew and rain,
+ My childhood's faith revive again!"
+
+ So spake my friend, one autumn day,
+ Where the still river slid away
+ Beneath us, and above the brown
+ Red curtains of the woods shut down.
+
+ Then said I,&mdash;for I could not brook
+ The mute appealing of his look,&mdash;
+ "I, too, am weak, and faith is small,
+ And blindness happeneth unto all.
+
+ "Yet, sometimes glimpses on my sight,
+ Through present wrong, the eternal right;
+ And, step by step, since time began,
+ I see the steady gain of man;
+
+ "That all of good the past hath had
+ Remains to make our own time glad,
+ Our common daily life divine,
+ And every land a Palestine.
+
+ "Thou weariest of thy present state;
+ What gain to thee time's holiest date?
+ The doubter now perchance had been
+ As High Priest or as Pilate then!
+
+ "What thought Chorazin's scribes? What faith
+ In Him had Nain and Nazareth?
+ Of the few followers whom He led
+ One sold Him,&mdash;all forsook and fled.
+
+ "O friend! we need nor rock nor sand,
+ Nor storied stream of Morning-Land;
+ The heavens are glassed in Merrimac,&mdash;
+ What more could Jordan render back?
+
+ "We lack but open eye and ear
+ To find the Orient's marvels here;
+ The still small voice in autumn's hush,
+ Yon maple wood the burning bush.
+
+ "For still the new transcends the old,
+ In signs and tokens manifold;
+ Slaves rise up men; the olive waves,
+ With roots deep set in battle graves!
+
+ "Through the harsh noises of our day
+ A low, sweet prelude finds its way;
+ Through clouds of doubt, and creeds of fear,
+ A light is breaking, calm and clear.
+
+ "That song of Love, now low and far,
+ Erelong shall swell from star to star!
+ That light, the breaking day, which tips
+ The golden-spired Apocalypse!"
+
+ Then, when my good friend shook his head,
+ And, sighing, sadly smiled, I said:
+ "Thou mind'st me of a story told
+ In rare Bernardin's leaves of gold."
+
+ And while the slanted sunbeams wove
+ The shadows of the frost-stained grove,
+ And, picturing all, the river ran
+ O'er cloud and wood, I thus began:&mdash;
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+ In Mount Valerien's chestnut wood
+ The Chapel of the Hermits stood;
+ And thither, at the close of day,
+ Came two old pilgrims, worn and gray.
+
+ One, whose impetuous youth defied
+ The storms of Baikal's wintry side,
+ And mused and dreamed where tropic day
+ Flamed o'er his lost Virginia's bay.
+
+ His simple tale of love and woe
+ All hearts had melted, high or low;&mdash;
+ A blissful pain, a sweet distress,
+ Immortal in its tenderness.
+
+ Yet, while above his charmed page
+ Beat quick the young heart of his age,
+ He walked amidst the crowd unknown,
+ A sorrowing old man, strange and lone.
+
+ A homeless, troubled age,&mdash;the gray
+ Pale setting of a weary day;
+ Too dull his ear for voice of praise,
+ Too sadly worn his brow for bays.
+
+ Pride, lust of power and glory, slept;
+ Yet still his heart its young dream kept,
+ And, wandering like the deluge-dove,
+ Still sought the resting-place of love.
+
+ And, mateless, childless, envied more
+ The peasant's welcome from his door
+ By smiling eyes at eventide,
+ Than kingly gifts or lettered pride.
+
+ Until, in place of wife and child,
+ All-pitying Nature on him smiled,
+ And gave to him the golden keys
+ To all her inmost sanctities.
+
+ Mild Druid of her wood-paths dim!
+ She laid her great heart bare to him,
+ Its loves and sweet accords;&mdash;he saw
+ The beauty of her perfect law.
+
+ The language of her signs he knew,
+ What notes her cloudy clarion blew;
+ The rhythm of autumn's forest dyes,
+ The hymn of sunset's painted skies.
+
+ And thus he seemed to hear the song
+ Which swept, of old, the stars along;
+ And to his eyes the earth once more
+ Its fresh and primal beauty wore.
+
+ Who sought with him, from summer air,
+ And field and wood, a balm for care;
+ And bathed in light of sunset skies
+ His tortured nerves and weary eyes?
+
+ His fame on all the winds had flown;
+ His words had shaken crypt and throne;
+ Like fire, on camp and court and cell
+ They dropped, and kindled as they fell.
+
+ Beneath the pomps of state, below
+ The mitred juggler's masque and show,
+ A prophecy, a vague hope, ran
+ His burning thought from man to man.
+
+ For peace or rest too well he saw
+ The fraud of priests, the wrong of law,
+ And felt how hard, between the two,
+ Their breath of pain the millions drew.
+
+ A prophet-utterance, strong and wild,
+ The weakness of an unweaned child,
+ A sun-bright hope for human-kind,
+ And self-despair, in him combined.
+
+ He loathed the false, yet lived not true
+ To half the glorious truths he knew;
+ The doubt, the discord, and the sin,
+ He mourned without, he felt within.
+
+ Untrod by him the path he showed,
+ Sweet pictures on his easel glowed
+ Of simple faith, and loves of home,
+ And virtue's golden days to come.
+
+ But weakness, shame, and folly made
+ The foil to all his pen portrayed;
+ Still, where his dreamy splendors shone,
+ The shadow of himself was thrown.
+
+ Lord, what is man, whose thought, at times,
+ Up to Thy sevenfold brightness climbs,
+ While still his grosser instinct clings
+ To earth, like other creeping things!
+
+ So rich in words, in acts so mean;
+ So high, so low; chance-swung between
+ The foulness of the penal pit
+ And Truth's clear sky, millennium-lit!
+
+ Vain, pride of star-lent genius!&mdash;vain,
+ Quick fancy and creative brain,
+ Unblest by prayerful sacrifice,
+ Absurdly great, or weakly wise!
+
+ Midst yearnings for a truer life,
+ Without were fears, within was strife;
+ And still his wayward act denied
+ The perfect good for which he sighed.
+
+ The love he sent forth void returned;
+ The fame that crowned him scorched and burned,
+ Burning, yet cold and drear and lone,&mdash;
+ A fire-mount in a frozen zone!
+
+ Like that the gray-haired sea-king passed,
+ Seen southward from his sleety mast,
+ About whose brows of changeless frost
+ A wreath of flame the wild winds tossed.
+
+ Far round the mournful beauty played
+ Of lambent light and purple shade,
+ Lost on the fixed and dumb despair
+ Of frozen earth and sea and air!
+
+ A man apart, unknown, unloved
+ By those whose wrongs his soul had moved,
+ He bore the ban of Church and State,
+ The good man's fear, the bigot's hate!
+
+ Forth from the city's noise and throng,
+ Its pomp and shame, its sin and wrong,
+ The twain that summer day had strayed
+ To Mount Valerien's chestnut shade.
+
+ To them the green fields and the wood
+ Lent something of their quietude,
+ And golden-tinted sunset seemed
+ Prophetical of all they dreamed.
+
+ The hermits from their simple cares
+ The bell was calling home to prayers,
+ And, listening to its sound, the twain
+ Seemed lapped in childhood's trust again.
+
+ Wide open stood the chapel door;
+ A sweet old music, swelling o'er
+ Low prayerful murmurs, issued thence,&mdash;
+ The Litanies of Providence!
+
+ Then Rousseau spake: "Where two or three
+ In His name meet, He there will be!"
+ And then, in silence, on their knees
+ They sank beneath the chestnut-trees.
+
+ As to the blind returning light,
+ As daybreak to the Arctic night,
+ Old faith revived; the doubts of years
+ Dissolved in reverential tears.
+
+ That gush of feeling overpast,
+ "Ah me!" Bernardin sighed at last,
+ I would thy bitterest foes could see
+ Thy heart as it is seen of me!
+
+ "No church of God hast thou denied;
+ Thou hast but spurned in scorn aside
+ A bare and hollow counterfeit,
+ Profaning the pure name of it!
+
+ "With dry dead moss and marish weeds
+ His fire the western herdsman feeds,
+ And greener from the ashen plain
+ The sweet spring grasses rise again.
+
+ "Nor thunder-peal nor mighty wind
+ Disturb the solid sky behind;
+ And through the cloud the red bolt rends
+ The calm, still smile of Heaven descends.
+
+ "Thus through the world, like bolt and blast,
+ And scourging fire, thy words have passed.
+ Clouds break,&mdash;the steadfast heavens remain;
+ Weeds burn,&mdash;the ashes feed the grain!
+
+ "But whoso strives with wrong may find
+ Its touch pollute, its darkness blind;
+ And learn, as latent fraud is shown
+ In others' faith, to doubt his own.
+
+ "With dream and falsehood, simple trust
+ And pious hope we tread in dust;
+ Lost the calm faith in goodness,&mdash;lost
+ The baptism of the Pentecost!
+
+ "Alas!&mdash;the blows for error meant
+ Too oft on truth itself are spent,
+ As through the false and vile and base
+ Looks forth her sad, rebuking face.
+
+ "Not ours the Theban's charmed life;
+ We come not scathless from the strife!
+ The Python's coil about us clings,
+ The trampled Hydra bites and stings!
+
+ "Meanwhile, the sport of seeming chance,
+ The plastic shapes of circumstance,
+ What might have been we fondly guess,
+ If earlier born, or tempted less.
+
+ "And thou, in these wild, troubled days,
+ Misjudged alike in blame and praise,
+ Unsought and undeserved the same
+ The skeptic's praise, the bigot's blame;&mdash;
+
+ "I cannot doubt, if thou hadst been
+ Among the highly favored men
+ Who walked on earth with Fenelon,
+ He would have owned thee as his son;
+
+ "And, bright with wings of cherubim
+ Visibly waving over him,
+ Seen through his life, the Church had seemed
+ All that its old confessors dreamed."
+
+ "I would have been," Jean Jaques replied,
+ "The humblest servant at his side,
+ Obscure, unknown, content to see
+ How beautiful man's life may be!
+
+ "Oh, more than thrice-blest relic, more
+ Than solemn rite or sacred lore,
+ The holy life of one who trod
+ The foot-marks of the Christ of God!
+
+ "Amidst a blinded world he saw
+ The oneness of the Dual law;
+ That Heaven's sweet peace on Earth began,
+ And God was loved through love of man.
+
+ "He lived the Truth which reconciled
+ The strong man Reason, Faith, the child;
+ In him belief and act were one,
+ The homilies of duty done!"
+
+ So speaking, through the twilight gray
+ The two old pilgrims went their way.
+ What seeds of life that day were sown,
+ The heavenly watchers knew alone.
+
+ Time passed, and Autumn came to fold
+ Green Summer in her brown and gold;
+ Time passed, and Winter's tears of snow
+ Dropped on the grave-mound of Rousseau.
+
+ "The tree remaineth where it fell,
+ The pained on earth is pained in hell!"
+ So priestcraft from its altars cursed
+ The mournful doubts its falsehood nursed.
+
+ Ah! well of old the Psalmist prayed,
+ "Thy hand, not man's, on me be laid!"
+ Earth frowns below, Heaven weeps above,
+ And man is hate, but God is love!
+
+ No Hermits now the wanderer sees,
+ Nor chapel with its chestnut-trees;
+ A morning dream, a tale that's told,
+ The wave of change o'er all has rolled.
+
+ Yet lives the lesson of that day;
+ And from its twilight cool and gray
+ Comes up a low, sad whisper, "Make
+ The truth thine own, for truth's own sake.
+
+ "Why wait to see in thy brief span
+ Its perfect flower and fruit in man?
+ No saintly touch can save; no balm
+ Of healing hath the martyr's palm.
+
+ "Midst soulless forms, and false pretence
+ Of spiritual pride and pampered sense,
+ A voice saith, 'What is that to thee?
+ Be true thyself, and follow Me!
+
+ "In days when throne and altar heard
+ The wanton's wish, the bigot's word,
+ And pomp of state and ritual show
+ Scarce hid the loathsome death below,&mdash;
+
+ "Midst fawning priests and courtiers foul,
+ The losel swarm of crown and cowl,
+ White-robed walked Francois Fenelon,
+ Stainless as Uriel in the sun!
+
+ "Yet in his time the stake blazed red,
+ The poor were eaten up like bread
+ Men knew him not; his garment's hem
+ No healing virtue had for them.
+
+ "Alas! no present saint we find;
+ The white cymar gleams far behind,
+ Revealed in outline vague, sublime,
+ Through telescopic mists of time!
+
+ "Trust not in man with passing breath,
+ But in the Lord, old Scripture saith;
+ The truth which saves thou mayst not blend
+ With false professor, faithless friend.
+
+ "Search thine own heart. What paineth thee
+ In others in thyself may be;
+ All dust is frail, all flesh is weak;
+ Be thou the true man thou dost seek!
+
+ "Where now with pain thou treadest, trod
+ The whitest of the saints of God!
+ To show thee where their feet were set,
+ the light which led them shineth yet.
+
+ "The footprints of the life divine,
+ Which marked their path, remain in thine;
+ And that great Life, transfused in theirs,
+ Awaits thy faith, thy love, thy prayers!"
+
+ A lesson which I well may heed,
+ A word of fitness to my need;
+ So from that twilight cool and gray
+ Still saith a voice, or seems to say.
+
+ We rose, and slowly homeward turned,
+ While down the west the sunset burned;
+ And, in its light, hill, wood, and tide,
+ And human forms seemed glorified.
+
+ The village homes transfigured stood,
+ And purple bluffs, whose belting wood
+ Across the waters leaned to hold
+ The yellow leaves like lamps of hold.
+
+ Then spake my friend: "Thy words are true;
+ Forever old, forever new,
+ These home-seen splendors are the same
+ Which over Eden's sunsets came.
+
+ "To these bowed heavens let wood and hill
+ Lift voiceless praise and anthem still;
+ Fall, warm with blessing, over them,
+ Light of the New Jerusalem!
+
+ "Flow on, sweet river, like the stream
+ Of John's Apocalyptic dream
+ This mapled ridge shall Horeb be,
+ Yon green-banked lake our Galilee!
+
+ "Henceforth my heart shall sigh no more
+ For olden time and holier shore;
+ God's love and blessing, then and there,
+ Are now and here and everywhere."
+
+ 1851.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0035" id="link2H_4_0035">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ TAULER.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ TAULER, the preacher, walked, one autumn day,
+ Without the walls of Strasburg, by the Rhine,
+ Pondering the solemn Miracle of Life;
+ As one who, wandering in a starless night,
+ Feels momently the jar of unseen waves,
+ And hears the thunder of an unknown sea,
+ Breaking along an unimagined shore.
+
+ And as he walked he prayed. Even the same
+ Old prayer with which, for half a score of years,
+ Morning, and noon, and evening, lip and heart
+ Had groaned: "Have pity upon me, Lord!
+ Thou seest, while teaching others, I am blind.
+ Send me a man who can direct my steps!"
+
+ Then, as he mused, he heard along his path
+ A sound as of an old man's staff among
+ The dry, dead linden-leaves; and, looking up,
+ He saw a stranger, weak, and poor, and old.
+
+ "Peace be unto thee, father!" Tauler said,
+ "God give thee a good day!" The old man raised
+ Slowly his calm blue eyes. "I thank thee, son;
+ But all my days are good, and none are ill."
+
+ Wondering thereat, the preacher spake again,
+ "God give thee happy life." The old man smiled,
+ "I never am unhappy."
+
+ Tauler laid
+ His hand upon the stranger's coarse gray sleeve
+ "Tell me, O father, what thy strange words mean.
+ Surely man's days are evil, and his life
+ Sad as the grave it leads to." "Nay, my son,
+ Our times are in God's hands, and all our days
+ Are as our needs; for shadow as for sun,
+ For cold as heat, for want as wealth, alike
+ Our thanks are due, since that is best which is;
+ And that which is not, sharing not His life,
+ Is evil only as devoid of good.
+ And for the happiness of which I spake,
+ I find it in submission to his will,
+ And calm trust in the holy Trinity
+ Of Knowledge, Goodness, and Almighty Power."
+
+ Silently wondering, for a little space,
+ Stood the great preacher; then he spake as one
+ Who, suddenly grappling with a haunting thought
+ Which long has followed, whispering through the dark
+ Strange terrors, drags it, shrieking, into light
+ "What if God's will consign thee hence to Hell?"
+
+ "Then," said the stranger, cheerily, "be it so.
+ What Hell may be I know not; this I know,&mdash;
+ I cannot lose the presence of the Lord.
+ One arm, Humility, takes hold upon
+ His dear Humanity; the other, Love,
+ Clasps his Divinity. So where I go
+ He goes; and better fire-walled Hell with Him
+ Than golden-gated Paradise without."
+
+ Tears sprang in Tauler's eyes. A sudden light,
+ Like the first ray which fell on chaos, clove
+ Apart the shadow wherein he had walked
+ Darkly at noon. And, as the strange old man
+ Went his slow way, until his silver hair
+ Set like the white moon where the hills of vine
+ Slope to the Rhine, he bowed his head and said
+ "My prayer is answered. God hath sent the man
+ Long sought, to teach me, by his simple trust,
+ Wisdom the weary schoolmen never knew."
+
+ So, entering with a changed and cheerful step
+ The city gates, he saw, far down the street,
+ A mighty shadow break the light of noon,
+ Which tracing backward till its airy lines
+ Hardened to stony plinths, he raised his eyes
+ O'er broad facade and lofty pediment,
+ O'er architrave and frieze and sainted niche,
+ Up the stone lace-work chiselled by the wise
+ Erwin of Steinbach, dizzily up to where
+ In the noon-brightness the great Minster's tower,
+ Jewelled with sunbeams on its mural crown,
+ Rose like a visible prayer. "Behold!" he said,
+ "The stranger's faith made plain before mine eyes.
+ As yonder tower outstretches to the earth
+ The dark triangle of its shade alone
+ When the clear day is shining on its top,
+ So, darkness in the pathway of Man's life
+ Is but the shadow of God's providence,
+ By the great Sun of Wisdom cast thereon;
+ And what is dark below is light in Heaven."
+
+ 1853.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0036" id="link2H_4_0036">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE HERMIT OF THE THEBAID.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ O strong, upwelling prayers of faith,
+ From inmost founts of life ye start,&mdash;
+ The spirit's pulse, the vital breath
+ Of soul and heart!
+
+ From pastoral toil, from traffic's din,
+ Alone, in crowds, at home, abroad,
+ Unheard of man, ye enter in
+ The ear of God.
+
+ Ye brook no forced and measured tasks,
+ Nor weary rote, nor formal chains;
+ The simple heart, that freely asks
+ In love, obtains.
+
+ For man the living temple is
+ The mercy-seat and cherubim,
+ And all the holy mysteries,
+ He bears with him.
+
+ And most avails the prayer of love,
+ Which, wordless, shapes itself in needs,
+ And wearies Heaven for naught above
+ Our common needs.
+
+ Which brings to God's all-perfect will
+ That trust of His undoubting child
+ Whereby all seeming good and ill
+ Are reconciled.
+
+ And, seeking not for special signs
+ Of favor, is content to fall
+ Within the providence which shines
+ And rains on all.
+
+ Alone, the Thebaid hermit leaned
+ At noontime o'er the sacred word.
+ Was it an angel or a fiend
+ Whose voice be heard?
+
+ It broke the desert's hush of awe,
+ A human utterance, sweet and mild;
+ And, looking up, the hermit saw
+ A little child.
+
+ A child, with wonder-widened eyes,
+ O'erawed and troubled by the sight
+ Of hot, red sands, and brazen skies,
+ And anchorite.
+
+ "What dost thou here, poor man? No shade
+ Of cool, green palms, nor grass, nor well,
+ Nor corn, nor vines." The hermit said
+ "With God I dwell.
+
+ "Alone with Him in this great calm,
+ I live not by the outward sense;
+ My Nile his love, my sheltering palm
+ His providence."
+
+ The child gazed round him. "Does God live
+ Here only?&mdash;where the desert's rim
+ Is green with corn, at morn and eve,
+ We pray to Him.
+
+ "My brother tills beside the Nile
+ His little field; beneath the leaves
+ My sisters sit and spin, the while
+ My mother weaves.
+
+ "And when the millet's ripe heads fall,
+ And all the bean-field hangs in pod,
+ My mother smiles, and, says that all
+ Are gifts from God."
+
+ Adown the hermit's wasted cheeks
+ Glistened the flow of human tears;
+ "Dear Lord!" he said, "Thy angel speaks,
+ Thy servant hears."
+
+ Within his arms the child he took,
+ And thought of home and life with men;
+ And all his pilgrim feet forsook
+ Returned again.
+
+ The palmy shadows cool and long,
+ The eyes that smiled through lavish locks,
+ Home's cradle-hymn and harvest-song,
+ And bleat of flocks.
+
+ "O child!" he said, "thou teachest me
+ There is no place where God is not;
+ That love will make, where'er it be,
+ A holy spot."
+
+ He rose from off the desert sand,
+ And, leaning on his staff of thorn,
+ Went with the young child hand in hand,
+ Like night with morn.
+
+ They crossed the desert's burning line,
+ And heard the palm-tree's rustling fan,
+ The Nile-bird's cry, the low of kine,
+ And voice of man.
+
+ Unquestioning, his childish guide
+ He followed, as the small hand led
+ To where a woman, gentle-eyed,
+ Her distaff fed.
+
+ She rose, she clasped her truant boy,
+ She thanked the stranger with her eyes;
+ The hermit gazed in doubt and joy
+ And dumb surprise.
+
+ And lo!&mdash;with sudden warmth and light
+ A tender memory thrilled his frame;
+ New-born, the world-lost anchorite
+ A man became.
+
+ "O sister of El Zara's race,
+ Behold me!&mdash;had we not one mother?"
+ She gazed into the stranger's face
+ "Thou art my brother!"
+
+ "And when to share our evening meal,
+ She calls the stranger at the door,
+ She says God fills the hands that deal
+ Food to the poor."
+
+ "O kin of blood! Thy life of use
+ And patient trust is more than mine;
+ And wiser than the gray recluse
+ This child of thine.
+
+ "For, taught of him whom God hath sent,
+ That toil is praise, and love is prayer,
+ I come, life's cares and pains content
+ With thee to share."
+
+ Even as his foot the threshold crossed,
+ The hermit's better life began;
+ Its holiest saint the Thebaid lost,
+ And found a man!
+
+ 1854.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0037" id="link2H_4_0037">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ MAUD MULLER.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The recollection of some descendants of a Hessian deserter in the
+ Revolutionary war bearing the name of Muller doubtless suggested the
+ somewhat infelicitous title of a New England idyl. The poem had no real
+ foundation in fact, though a hint of it may have been found in recalling
+ an incident, trivial in itself, of a journey on the picturesque Maine
+ seaboard with my sister some years before it was written. We had stopped
+ to rest our tired horse under the shade of an apple-tree, and refresh him
+ with water from a little brook which rippled through the stone wall across
+ the road. A very beautiful young girl in scantest summer attire was at
+ work in the hay-field, and as we talked with her we noticed that she
+ strove to hide her bare feet by raking hay over them, blushing as she did
+ so, through the tan of her cheek and neck.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Maud Muller on a summer's day,
+ Raked the meadow sweet with hay.
+
+ Beneath her torn hat glowed the wealth
+ Of simple beauty and rustic-health.
+
+ Singing, she wrought, and her merry glee
+ The mock-bird echoed from his tree.
+
+ But when she glanced to the far-off town,
+ White from its hill-slope looking down,
+
+ The sweet song died, and a vague unrest
+ And a nameless longing filled her breast,&mdash;
+
+ A wish, that she hardly dared to own,
+ For something better than she had known.
+
+ The Judge rode slowly down the lane,
+ Smoothing his horse's chestnut mane.
+
+ He drew his bridle in the shade
+ Of the apple-trees, to greet the maid,
+
+ And asked a draught from the spring that flowed
+ Through the meadow across the road.
+
+ She stooped where the cool spring bubbled up,
+ And filled for him her small tin cup,
+
+ And blushed as she gave it, looking down
+ On her feet so bare, and her tattered gown.
+
+ "Thanks!" said the Judge; "a sweeter draught
+ From a fairer hand was never quaffed."
+
+ He spoke of the grass and flowers and trees,
+ Of the singing birds and the humming bees;
+
+ Then talked of the haying, and wondered whether
+ The cloud in the west would bring foul weather.
+
+ And Maud forgot her brier-torn gown,
+ And her graceful ankles bare and brown;
+
+ And listened, while a pleased surprise
+ Looked from her long-lashed hazel eyes.
+
+ At last, like one who for delay
+ Seeks a vain excuse, he rode away.
+
+ Maud Muller looked and sighed: "Ah me!
+ That I the Judge's bride might be!
+
+ "He would dress me up in silks so fine,
+ And praise and toast me at his wine.
+
+ "My father should wear a broadcloth coat;
+ My brother should sail a painted boat.
+
+ "I'd dress my mother so grand and gay,
+ And the baby should have a new toy each day.
+
+ "And I'd feed the hungry and clothe the poor,
+ And all should bless me who left our door."
+
+ The Judge looked back as he climbed the hill,
+ And saw Maud Muller standing still.
+
+ A form more fair, a face more sweet,
+ Ne'er hath it been my lot to meet.
+
+ "And her modest answer and graceful air
+ Show her wise and good as she is fair.
+
+ "Would she were mine, and I to-day,
+ Like her, a harvester of hay;
+
+ "No doubtful balance of rights and wrongs,
+ Nor weary lawyers with endless tongues,
+
+ "But low of cattle and song of birds,
+ And health and quiet and loving words."
+
+ But he thought of his sisters, proud and cold,
+ And his mother, vain of her rank and gold.
+
+ So, closing his heart, the Judge rode on,
+ And Maud was left in the field alone.
+
+ But the lawyers smiled that afternoon,
+ When he hummed in court an old love-tune;
+
+ And the young girl mused beside the well
+ Till the rain on the unraked clover fell.
+
+ He wedded a wife of richest dower,
+ Who lived for fashion, as he for power.
+
+ Yet oft, in his marble hearth's bright glow,
+ He watched a picture come and go;
+
+ And sweet Maud Muller's hazel eyes
+ Looked out in their innocent surprise.
+
+ Oft, when the wine in his glass was red,
+ He longed for the wayside well instead;
+
+ And closed his eyes on his garnished rooms
+ To dream of meadows and clover-blooms.
+
+ And the proud man sighed, with a secret pain,
+ "Ah, that I were free again!
+
+ "Free as when I rode that day,
+ Where the barefoot maiden raked her hay."
+
+ She wedded a man unlearned and poor,
+ And many children played round her door.
+
+ But care and sorrow, and childbirth pain,
+ Left their traces on heart and brain.
+
+ And oft, when the summer sun shone hot
+ On the new-mown hay in the meadow lot,
+
+ And she heard the little spring brook fall
+ Over the roadside, through the wall,
+
+ In the shade of the apple-tree again
+ She saw a rider draw his rein.
+
+ And, gazing down with timid grace,
+ She felt his pleased eyes read her face.
+
+ Sometimes her narrow kitchen walls
+ Stretched away into stately halls;
+
+ The weary wheel to a spinnet turned,
+ The tallow candle an astral burned,
+
+ And for him who sat by the chimney lug,
+ Dozing and grumbling o'er pipe and mug,
+
+ A manly form at her side she saw,
+ And joy was duty and love was law.
+
+ Then she took up her burden of life again,
+ Saying only, "It might have been."
+
+ Alas for maiden, alas for Judge,
+ For rich repiner and household drudge!
+
+ God pity them both! and pity us all,
+ Who vainly the dreams of youth recall.
+
+ For of all sad words of tongue or pen,
+ The saddest are these: "It might have been!"
+
+ Ah, well! for us all some sweet hope lies
+ Deeply buried from human eyes;
+
+ And, in the hereafter, angels may
+ Roll the stone from its grave away!
+
+ 1854.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0038" id="link2H_4_0038">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ MARY GARVIN.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ FROM the heart of Waumbek Methna, from the
+ lake that never fails,
+ Falls the Saco in the green lap of Conway's
+ intervales;
+ There, in wild and virgin freshness, its waters
+ foam and flow,
+ As when Darby Field first saw them, two hundred
+ years ago.
+
+ But, vexed in all its seaward course with bridges,
+ dams, and mills,
+ How changed is Saco's stream, how lost its freedom
+ of the hills,
+ Since travelled Jocelyn, factor Vines, and stately
+ Champernoon
+ Heard on its banks the gray wolf's howl, the trumpet
+ of the loon!
+
+ With smoking axle hot with speed, with steeds of
+ fire and steam,
+ Wide-waked To-day leaves Yesterday behind him
+ like a dream.
+ Still, from the hurrying train of Life, fly backward
+ far and fast
+ The milestones of the fathers, the landmarks of
+ the past.
+
+ But human hearts remain unchanged: the sorrow
+ and the sin,
+ The loves and hopes and fears of old, are to our
+ own akin;
+
+ And if, in tales our fathers told, the songs our
+ mothers sung,
+ Tradition wears a snowy beard, Romance is always
+ young.
+
+ O sharp-lined man of traffic, on Saco's banks today!
+ O mill-girl watching late and long the shuttle's
+ restless play!
+ Let, for the once, a listening ear the working hand
+ beguile,
+ And lend my old Provincial tale, as suits, a tear or
+ smile!
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+ The evening gun had sounded from gray Fort
+ Mary's walls;
+ Through the forest, like a wild beast, roared and
+ plunged the Saco's' falls.
+
+ And westward on the sea-wind, that damp and
+ gusty grew,
+ Over cedars darkening inland the smokes of Spurwink
+ blew.
+
+ On the hearth of Farmer Garvin, blazed the crackling
+ walnut log;
+ Right and left sat dame and goodman, and between
+ them lay the dog,
+
+ Head on paws, and tail slow wagging, and beside
+ him on her mat,
+ Sitting drowsy in the firelight, winked and purred
+ the mottled cat.
+
+ "Twenty years!" said Goodman Garvin, speaking
+ sadly, under breath,
+ And his gray head slowly shaking, as one who
+ speaks of death.
+
+ The goodwife dropped her needles: "It is twenty
+ years to-day,
+ Since the Indians fell on Saco, and stole our child
+ away."
+
+ Then they sank into the silence, for each knew
+ the other's thought,
+ Of a great and common sorrow, and words were,
+ needed not.
+
+ "Who knocks?" cried Goodman Garvin. The
+ door was open thrown;
+ On two strangers, man and maiden, cloaked and
+ furred, the fire-light shone.
+
+ One with courteous gesture lifted the bear-skin
+ from his head;
+ "Lives here Elkanah Garvin?" "I am he," the
+ goodman said.
+
+ "Sit ye down, and dry and warm ye, for the night
+ is chill with rain."
+ And the goodwife drew the settle, and stirred the
+ fire amain.
+
+ The maid unclasped her cloak-hood, the firelight
+ glistened fair
+ In her large, moist eyes, and over soft folds of
+ dark brown hair.
+
+ Dame Garvin looked upon her: "It is Mary's self
+ I see!"
+ "Dear heart!" she cried, "now tell me, has my
+ child come back to me?"
+
+ "My name indeed is Mary," said the stranger sobbing
+ wild;
+ "Will you be to me a mother? I am Mary Garvin's child!"
+
+ "She sleeps by wooded Simcoe, but on her dying
+ day
+ She bade my father take me to her kinsfolk far
+ away.
+
+ "And when the priest besought her to do me no
+ such wrong,
+ She said, 'May God forgive me! I have closed
+ my heart too long.'
+
+ "'When I hid me from my father, and shut out
+ my mother's call,
+ I sinned against those dear ones, and the Father
+ of us all.
+
+ "'Christ's love rebukes no home-love, breaks no
+ tie of kin apart;
+ Better heresy in doctrine, than heresy of heart.
+
+ "'Tell me not the Church must censure: she who
+ wept the Cross beside
+ Never made her own flesh strangers, nor the claims
+ of blood denied;
+
+ "'And if she who wronged her parents, with her
+ child atones to them,
+ Earthly daughter, Heavenly Mother! thou at least
+ wilt not condemn!'
+
+ "So, upon her death-bed lying, my blessed mother
+ spake;
+ As we come to do her bidding, So receive us for her
+ sake."
+
+ "God be praised!" said Goodwife Garvin, "He taketh,
+ and He gives;
+ He woundeth, but He healeth; in her child our
+ daughter lives!"
+
+ "Amen!" the old man answered, as he brushed a
+ tear away,
+ And, kneeling by his hearthstone, said, with reverence,
+ "Let us pray."
+
+ All its Oriental symbols, and its Hebrew pararphrase,
+ Warm with earnest life and feeling, rose his prayer
+ of love and praise.
+
+ But he started at beholding, as he rose from off
+ his knee,
+ The stranger cross his forehead with the sign of
+ Papistrie.
+
+ "What is this?" cried Farmer Garvin. "Is an English
+ Christian's home
+ A chapel or a mass-house, that you make the sign
+ of Rome?"
+
+ Then the young girl knelt beside him, kissed his
+ trembling hand, and cried:
+ Oh, forbear to chide my father; in that faith my
+ mother died!
+
+ "On her wooden cross at Simcoe the dews and
+ sunshine fall,
+ As they fall on Spurwink's graveyard; and the
+ dear God watches all!"
+
+ The old man stroked the fair head that rested on
+ his knee;
+ "Your words, dear child," he answered, "are God's
+ rebuke to me.
+
+ "Creed and rite perchance may differ, yet our
+ faith and hope be one.
+ Let me be your father's father, let him be to me
+ a son."
+
+ When the horn, on Sabbath morning, through the
+ still and frosty air,
+ From Spurwink, Pool, and Black Point, called to
+ sermon and to prayer,
+
+ To the goodly house of worship, where, in order
+ due and fit,
+ As by public vote directed, classed and ranked the
+ people sit;
+
+ Mistress first and goodwife after, clerkly squire
+ before the clown,
+ "From the brave coat, lace-embroidered, to the gray
+ frock, shading down;"
+
+ From the pulpit read the preacher, "Goodman
+ Garvin and his wife
+ Fain would thank the Lord, whose kindness has
+ followed them through life,
+
+ "For the great and crowning mercy, that their
+ daughter, from the wild,
+ Where she rests (they hope in God's peace), has
+ sent to them her child;
+
+ "And the prayers of all God's people they ask,
+ that they may prove
+ Not unworthy, through their weakness, of such
+ special proof of love."
+
+ As the preacher prayed, uprising, the aged couple
+ stood,
+ And the fair Canadian also, in her modest maiden-
+ hood.
+
+ Thought the elders, grave and doubting, "She is
+ Papist born and bred;"
+ Thought the young men, "'T is an angel in Mary
+ Garvin's stead!"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0039" id="link2H_4_0039">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE RANGER.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Originally published as Martha Mason; a Song of the Old French War.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ROBERT RAWLIN!&mdash;Frosts were falling
+ When the ranger's horn was calling
+ Through the woods to Canada.
+
+ Gone the winter's sleet and snowing,
+ Gone the spring-time's bud and blowing,
+ Gone the summer's harvest mowing,
+ And again the fields are gray.
+ Yet away, he's away!
+ Faint and fainter hope is growing
+ In the hearts that mourn his stay.
+
+ Where the lion, crouching high on
+ Abraham's rock with teeth of iron,
+ Glares o'er wood and wave away,
+ Faintly thence, as pines far sighing,
+ Or as thunder spent and dying,
+ Come the challenge and replying,
+ Come the sounds of flight and fray.
+ Well-a-day! Hope and pray!
+ Some are living, some are lying
+ In their red graves far away.
+
+ Straggling rangers, worn with dangers,
+ Homeward faring, weary strangers
+ Pass the farm-gate on their way;
+ Tidings of the dead and living,
+ Forest march and ambush, giving,
+ Till the maidens leave their weaving,
+ And the lads forget their play.
+ "Still away, still away!"
+ Sighs a sad one, sick with grieving,
+ "Why does Robert still delay!"
+
+ Nowhere fairer, sweeter, rarer,
+ Does the golden-locked fruit bearer
+ Through his painted woodlands stray,
+ Than where hillside oaks and beeches
+ Overlook the long, blue reaches,
+ Silver coves and pebbled beaches,
+ And green isles of Casco Bay;
+ Nowhere day, for delay,
+ With a tenderer look beseeches,
+ "Let me with my charmed earth stay."
+
+ On the grain-lands of the mainlands
+ Stands the serried corn like train-bands,
+ Plume and pennon rustling gay;
+ Out at sea, the islands wooded,
+ Silver birches, golden-hooded,
+ Set with maples, crimson-blooded,
+ White sea-foam and sand-hills gray,
+ Stretch away, far away.
+ Dim and dreamy, over-brooded
+ By the hazy autumn day.
+
+ Gayly chattering to the clattering
+ Of the brown nuts downward pattering,
+ Leap the squirrels, red and gray.
+ On the grass-land, on the fallow,
+ Drop the apples, red and yellow;
+ Drop the russet pears and mellow,
+ Drop the red leaves all the day.
+ And away, swift away,
+ Sun and cloud, o'er hill and hollow
+ Chasing, weave their web of play.
+
+ "Martha Mason, Martha Mason,
+ Prithee tell us of the reason
+ Why you mope at home to-day
+ Surely smiling is not sinning;
+ Leave, your quilling, leave your spinning;
+ What is all your store of linen,
+ If your heart is never gay?
+ Come away, come away!
+ Never yet did sad beginning
+ Make the task of life a play."
+
+ Overbending, till she's blending
+ With the flaxen skein she's tending
+ Pale brown tresses smoothed away
+ From her face of patient sorrow,
+ Sits she, seeking but to borrow,
+ From the trembling hope of morrow,
+ Solace for the weary day.
+ "Go your way, laugh and play;
+ Unto Him who heeds the sparrow
+ And the lily, let me pray."
+
+ "With our rally, rings the valley,&mdash;
+ Join us!" cried the blue-eyed Nelly;
+ "Join us!" cried the laughing May,
+ "To the beach we all are going,
+ And, to save the task of rowing,
+ West by north the wind is blowing,
+ Blowing briskly down the bay
+ Come away, come away!
+ Time and tide are swiftly flowing,
+ Let us take them while we may!
+
+ "Never tell us that you'll fail us,
+ Where the purple beach-plum mellows
+ On the bluffs so wild and gray.
+ Hasten, for the oars are falling;
+ Hark, our merry mates are calling;
+ Time it is that we were all in,
+ Singing tideward down the bay!"
+ "Nay, nay, let me stay;
+ Sore and sad for Robert Rawlin
+ Is my heart," she said, "to-day."
+
+ "Vain your calling for Rob Rawlin
+ Some red squaw his moose-meat's broiling,
+ Or some French lass, singing gay;
+ Just forget as he's forgetting;
+ What avails a life of fretting?
+ If some stars must needs be setting,
+ Others rise as good as they."
+ "Cease, I pray; go your way!"
+ Martha cries, her eyelids wetting;
+ "Foul and false the words you say!"
+
+ "Martha Mason, hear to reason!&mdash;
+ Prithee, put a kinder face on!"
+ "Cease to vex me," did she say;
+ "Better at his side be lying,
+ With the mournful pine-trees sighing,
+ And the wild birds o'er us crying,
+ Than to doubt like mine a prey;
+ While away, far away,
+ Turns my heart, forever trying
+ Some new hope for each new day.
+
+ "When the shadows veil the meadows,
+ And the sunset's golden ladders
+ Sink from twilight's walls of gray,&mdash;
+ From the window of my dreaming,
+ I can see his sickle gleaming,
+ Cheery-voiced, can hear him teaming
+ Down the locust-shaded way;
+ But away, swift away,
+ Fades the fond, delusive seeming,
+ And I kneel again to pray.
+
+ "When the growing dawn is showing,
+ And the barn-yard cock is crowing,
+ And the horned moon pales away
+ From a dream of him awaking,
+ Every sound my heart is making
+ Seems a footstep of his taking;
+ Then I hush the thought, and say,
+ 'Nay, nay, he's away!'
+ Ah! my heart, my heart is breaking
+ For the dear one far away."
+
+ Look up, Martha! worn and swarthy,
+ Glows a face of manhood worthy
+ "Robert!" "Martha!" all they say.
+ O'er went wheel and reel together,
+ Little cared the owner whither;
+ Heart of lead is heart of feather,
+ Noon of night is noon of day!
+ Come away, come away!
+ When such lovers meet each other,
+ Why should prying idlers stay?
+
+ Quench the timber's fallen embers,
+ Quench the red leaves in December's
+ Hoary rime and chilly spray.
+ But the hearth shall kindle clearer,
+ Household welcomes sound sincerer,
+ Heart to loving heart draw nearer,
+ When the bridal bells shall say:
+ "Hope and pray, trust alway;
+ Life is sweeter, love is dearer,
+ For the trial and delay!"
+
+ 1856.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0040" id="link2H_4_0040">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE GARRISON OF CAPE ANN.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ FROM the hills of home forth looking, far beneath
+ the tent-like span
+ Of the sky, I see the white gleam of the headland
+ of Cape Ann.
+ Well I know its coves and beaches to the ebb-tide
+ glimmering down,
+ And the white-walled hamlet children of its ancient
+ fishing town.
+
+ Long has passed the summer morning, and its
+ memory waxes old,
+ When along yon breezy headlands with a pleasant
+ friend I strolled.
+ Ah! the autumn sun is shining, and the ocean
+ wind blows cool,
+ And the golden-rod and aster bloom around thy
+ grave, Rantoul!
+
+ With the memory of that morning by the summer
+ sea I blend
+ A wild and wondrous story, by the younger Mather
+ penned,
+ In that quaint Magnalia Christi, with all strange
+ and marvellous things,
+ Heaped up huge and undigested, like the chaos
+ Ovid sings.
+
+ Dear to me these far, faint glimpses of the dual
+ life of old,
+ Inward, grand with awe and reverence; outward,
+ mean and coarse and cold;
+ Gleams of mystic beauty playing over dull and
+ vulgar clay,
+ Golden-threaded fancies weaving in a web of
+ hodden gray.
+
+ The great eventful Present hides the Past; but
+ through the din
+ Of its loud life hints and echoes from the life
+ behind steal in;
+ And the lore of homeland fireside, and the legendary
+ rhyme,
+ Make the task of duty lighter which the true man
+ owes his time.
+
+ So, with something of the feeling which the Covenanter
+ knew,
+ When with pious chisel wandering Scotland's
+ moorland graveyards through,
+ From the graves of old traditions I part the black-
+ berry-vines,
+ Wipe the moss from off the headstones, and retouch
+ the faded lines.
+
+ Where the sea-waves back and forward, hoarse
+ with rolling pebbles, ran,
+ The garrison-house stood watching on the gray
+ rocks of Cape Ann;
+ On its windy site uplifting gabled roof and palisade,
+ And rough walls of unhewn timber with the moonlight
+ overlaid.
+
+ On his slow round walked the sentry, south and
+ eastward looking forth
+ O'er a rude and broken coast-line, white with
+ breakers stretching north,&mdash;
+ Wood and rock and gleaming sand-drift, jagged
+ capes, with bush and tree,
+ Leaning inland from the smiting of the wild and
+ gusty sea.
+
+ Before the deep-mouthed chimney, dimly lit by
+ dying brands,
+ Twenty soldiers sat and waited, with their muskets
+ in their hands;
+ On the rough-hewn oaken table the venison haunch
+ was shared,
+ And the pewter tankard circled slowly round from
+ beard to beard.
+
+ Long they sat and talked together,&mdash;talked of
+ wizards Satan-sold;
+ Of all ghostly sights and noises,&mdash;signs and wonders
+ manifold;
+ Of the spectre-ship of Salem, with the dead men
+ in her shrouds,
+ Sailing sheer above the water, in the loom of morning
+ clouds;
+
+ Of the marvellous valley hidden in the depths of
+ Gloucester woods,
+ Full of plants that love the summer,&mdash;blooms of
+ warmer latitudes;
+ Where the Arctic birch is braided by the tropic's
+ flowery vines,
+ And the white magnolia-blossoms star the twilight
+ of the pines!
+
+ But their voices sank yet lower, sank to husky
+ tones of fear,
+ As they spake of present tokens of the powers of
+ evil near;
+ Of a spectral host, defying stroke of steel and aim
+ of gun;
+ Never yet was ball to slay them in the mould of
+ mortals run.
+
+ Thrice, with plumes and flowing scalp-locks, from
+ the midnight wood they came,&mdash;
+ Thrice around the block-house marching, met, unharmed,
+ its volleyed flame;
+ Then, with mocking laugh and gesture, sunk in
+ earth or lost in air,
+ All the ghostly wonder vanished, and the moonlit
+ sands lay bare.
+
+ Midnight came; from out the forest moved a
+ dusky mass that soon
+ Grew to warriors, plumed and painted, grimly
+ marching in the moon.
+ "Ghosts or witches," said the captain, "thus I foil
+ the Evil One!"
+ And he rammed a silver button, from his doublet,
+ down his gun.
+
+ Once again the spectral horror moved the guarded
+ wall about;
+ Once again the levelled muskets through the palisades
+ flashed out,
+ With that deadly aim the squirrel on his tree-top
+ might not shun,
+ Nor the beach-bird seaward flying with his slant
+ wing to the sun.
+
+ Like the idle rain of summer sped the harmless
+ shower of lead.
+ With a laugh of fierce derision, once again the
+ phantoms fled;
+ Once again, without a shadow on the sands the
+ moonlight lay,
+ And the white smoke curling through it drifted
+ slowly down the bay!
+
+ "God preserve us!" said the captain; "never
+ mortal foes were there;
+ They have vanished with their leader, Prince and
+ Power of the air!
+ Lay aside your useless weapons; skill and prowess
+ naught avail;
+ They who do the Devil's service wear their master's
+ coat of mail!"
+
+ So the night grew near to cock-crow, when again
+ a warning call
+ Roused the score of weary soldiers watching round
+ the dusky hall
+ And they looked to flint and priming, and they
+ longed for break of day;
+ But the captain closed his Bible: "Let us cease
+ from man, and pray!"
+
+ To the men who went before us, all the unseen
+ powers seemed near,
+ And their steadfast strength of courage struck its
+ roots in holy fear.
+ Every hand forsook the musket, every head was
+ bowed and bare,
+ Every stout knee pressed the flag-stones, as the
+ captain led in prayer.
+
+ Ceased thereat the mystic marching of the spectres
+ round the wall,
+ But a sound abhorred, unearthly, smote the ears
+ and hearts of all,&mdash;
+ Howls of rage and shrieks of anguish! Never
+ after mortal man
+ Saw the ghostly leaguers marching round the
+ block-house of Cape Ann.
+
+ So to us who walk in summer through the cool and
+ sea-blown town,
+ From the childhood of its people comes the solemn
+ legend down.
+ Not in vain the ancient fiction, in whose moral
+ lives the youth
+ And the fitness and the freshness of an undecaying
+ truth.
+
+ Soon or late to all our dwellings come the spectres
+ of the mind,
+ Doubts and fears and dread forebodings, in the
+ darkness undefined;
+ Round us throng the grim projections of the heart
+ and of the brain,
+ And our pride of strength is weakness, and the
+ cunning hand is vain.
+
+ In the dark we cry like children; and no answer
+ from on high
+ Breaks the crystal spheres of silence, and no white
+ wings downward fly;
+ But the heavenly help we pray for comes to faith,
+ and not to sight,
+ And our prayers themselves drive backward all the
+ spirits of the night!
+
+ 1857.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0041" id="link2H_4_0041">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE GIFT OF TRITEMIUS.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ TRITEMIUS of Herbipolis, one day,
+ While kneeling at the altar's foot to pray,
+ Alone with God, as was his pious choice,
+ Heard from without a miserable voice,
+ A sound which seemed of all sad things to tell,
+ As of a lost soul crying out of hell.
+
+ Thereat the Abbot paused; the chain whereby
+ His thoughts went upward broken by that cry;
+ And, looking from the casement, saw below
+ A wretched woman, with gray hair a-flow,
+ And withered hands held up to him, who cried
+ For alms as one who might not be denied.
+
+ She cried, "For the dear love of Him who gave
+ His life for ours, my child from bondage save,&mdash;
+ My beautiful, brave first-born, chained with slaves
+ In the Moor's galley, where the sun-smit waves
+ Lap the white walls of Tunis!"&mdash;"What I can
+ I give," Tritemius said, "my prayers."&mdash;"O man
+ Of God!" she cried, for grief had made her bold,
+ "Mock me not thus; I ask not prayers, but gold.
+ Words will not serve me, alms alone suffice;
+ Even while I speak perchance my first-born dies."
+
+ "Woman!" Tritemius answered, "from our door
+ None go unfed, hence are we always poor;
+ A single soldo is our only store.
+ Thou hast our prayers;&mdash;what can we give thee
+ more?"
+
+ "Give me," she said, "the silver candlesticks
+ On either side of the great crucifix.
+ God well may spare them on His errands sped,
+ Or He can give you golden ones instead."
+
+ Then spake Tritemius, "Even as thy word,
+ Woman, so be it! Our most gracious Lord,
+ Who loveth mercy more than sacrifice,
+ Pardon me if a human soul I prize
+ Above the gifts upon his altar piled!
+ Take what thou askest, and redeem thy child."
+
+ But his hand trembled as the holy alms
+ He placed within the beggar's eager palms;
+ And as she vanished down the linden shade,
+ He bowed his head and for forgiveness prayed.
+ So the day passed, and when the twilight came
+ He woke to find the chapel all aflame,
+ And, dumb with grateful wonder, to behold
+ Upon the altar candlesticks of gold!
+
+ 1857.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0042" id="link2H_4_0042">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ SKIPPER IRESON'S RIDE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In the valuable and carefully prepared History of Marblehead, published in
+ 1879 by Samuel Roads, Jr., it is stated that the crew of Captain Ireson,
+ rather than himself, were responsible for the abandonment of the disabled
+ vessel. To screen themselves they charged their captain with the crime. In
+ view of this the writer of the ballad addressed the following letter to
+ the historian:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ OAK KNOLL, DANVERS, 5 mo. 18, 1880. MY DEAR FRIEND: I heartily thank thee
+ for a copy of thy History of Marblehead. I have read it with great
+ interest and think good use has been made of the abundant material. No
+ town in Essex County has a record more honorable than Marblehead; no one
+ has done more to develop the industrial interests of our New England
+ seaboard, and certainly none have given such evidence of self-sacrificing
+ patriotism. I am glad the story of it has been at last told, and told so
+ well. I have now no doubt that thy version of Skipper Ireson's ride is the
+ correct one. My verse was founded solely on a fragment of rhyme which I
+ heard from one of my early schoolmates, a native of Marblehead. I supposed
+ the story to which it referred dated back at least a century. I knew
+ nothing of the participators, and the narrative of the ballad was pure
+ fancy. I am glad for the sake of truth and justice that the real facts are
+ given in thy book. I certainly would not knowingly do injustice to any
+ one, dead or living.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am very truly thy friend, JOHN G. WHITTIER.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ OF all the rides since, the birth of time,
+ Told in story or sung in rhyme,&mdash;
+ On Apuleius's Golden Ass,
+ Or one-eyed Calendar's horse of brass;
+ Witch astride of a human back,
+ Islam's prophet on Al-Borak,&mdash;
+ The strangest ride that ever was sped
+ Was Ireson's, out from Marblehead!
+ Old Floyd Ireson, for his hard heart,
+ Tarred and feathered and carried in a cart
+ By the women of Marblehead!
+ Body of turkey, head of owl,
+ Wings a-droop like a rained-on fowl,
+ Feathered and ruffled in every part,
+ Skipper Ireson stood in the cart.
+ Scores of women, old and young,
+ Strong of muscle, and glib of tongue,
+ Pushed and pulled up the rocky lane,
+ Shouting and singing the shrill refrain
+ "Here's Flud Oirson, fur his horrd horrt,
+ Torr'd an' futherr'd an' corr'd in a corrt
+ By the women o' Morble'ead!"
+
+ Wrinkled scolds with hands on hips,
+ Girls in bloom of cheek and lips,
+ Wild-eyed, free-limbed, such as chase
+ Bacchus round some antique vase,
+ Brief of skirt, with ankles bare,
+ Loose of kerchief and loose of hair,
+ With conch-shells blowing and fish-horns' twang,
+ Over and over the Manads sang
+ "Here's Flud Oirson, fur his horrd horrt,
+ Torr'd an' futherr'd an dorr'd in a corrt
+ By the women o' Morble'ead!"
+
+ Small pity for him!&mdash;He sailed away
+ From a leaking ship, in Chaleur Bay,&mdash;
+ Sailed away from a sinking wreck,
+ With his own town's-people on her deck!
+ "Lay by! lay by!" they called to him.
+ Back he answered, "Sink or swim!
+ Brag of your catch of fish again!"
+ And off he sailed through the fog and rain!
+ Old Floyd Ireson, for his hard heart,
+ Tarred and feathered and carried in a cart
+ By the women of Marblehead!
+
+ Fathoms deep in dark Chaleur
+ That wreck shall lie forevermore.
+ Mother and sister, wife and maid,
+ Looked from the rocks of Marblehead
+ Over the moaning and rainy sea,&mdash;
+ Looked for the coming that might not be!
+ What did the winds and the sea-birds say
+ Of the cruel captain who sailed away?&mdash;
+ Old Floyd Ireson, for his hard heart,
+ Tarred and feathered and carried in a cart
+ By the women of Marblehead!
+
+ Through the street, on either side,
+ Up flew windows, doors swung wide;
+ Sharp-tongued spinsters, old wives gray,
+ Treble lent the fish-horn's bray.
+ Sea-worn grandsires, cripple-bound,
+ Hulks of old sailors run aground,
+ Shook head, and fist, and hat, and cane,
+ And cracked with curses the hoarse refrain
+ "Here's Flud Oirson, fur his horrd horrt,
+ Torr'd an' futherr'd an' corr'd in a corrt
+ By the women o''Morble'ead!"
+
+ Sweetly along the Salem road
+ Bloom of orchard and lilac showed.
+ Little the wicked skipper knew
+ Of the fields so green and the sky so blue.
+ Riding there in his sorry trim,
+ Like to Indian idol glum and grim,
+ Scarcely he seemed the sound to hear
+ Of voices shouting, far and near
+ "Here's Flud Oirson, fur his horrd horrt,
+ Torr'd an' futherr'd an' corr'd in a corrt
+ By the women o' Morble'ead!"
+
+ "Hear me, neighbors!" at last he cried,&mdash;
+ "What to me is this noisy ride?
+ What is the shame that clothes the skin
+ To the nameless horror that lives within?
+ Waking or sleeping, I see a wreck,
+ And hear a cry from a reeling deck!
+ Hate me and curse me,&mdash;I only dread
+ The hand of God and the face of the dead!"
+ Said old Floyd Ireson, for his hard heart,
+ Tarred and feathered and carried in a cart
+ By the women of Marblehead!
+
+ Then the wife of the skipper lost at sea
+ Said, "God has touched him! why should we?"
+ Said an old wife mourning her only son,
+ "Cut the rogue's tether and let him run!"
+ So with soft relentings and rude excuse,
+ Half scorn, half pity, they cut him loose,
+ And gave him a cloak to hide him in,
+ And left him alone with his shame and sin.
+ Poor Floyd Ireson, for his hard heart,
+ Tarred and feathered and carried in a cart
+ By the women of Marblehead!
+
+ 1857.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0043" id="link2H_4_0043">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE SYCAMORES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Hugh Tallant was the first Irish resident of Haverhill, Mass. He planted
+ the button-wood trees on the bank of the river below the village in the
+ early part of the seventeenth century. Unfortunately this noble avenue is
+ now nearly destroyed.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ In the outskirts of the village,
+ On the river's winding shores,
+ Stand the Occidental plane-trees,
+ Stand the ancient sycamores.
+
+ One long century hath been numbered,
+ And another half-way told,
+ Since the rustic Irish gleeman
+ Broke for them the virgin mould.
+
+ Deftly set to Celtic music,
+ At his violin's sound they grew,
+ Through the moonlit eves of summer,
+ Making Amphion's fable true.
+
+ Rise again, then poor Hugh Tallant
+ Pass in jerkin green along,
+ With thy eyes brimful of laughter,
+ And thy mouth as full of song.
+
+ Pioneer of Erin's outcasts,
+ With his fiddle and his pack;
+ Little dreamed the village Saxons
+ Of the myriads at his back.
+
+ How he wrought with spade and fiddle,
+ Delved by day and sang by night,
+ With a hand that never wearied,
+ And a heart forever light,&mdash;
+
+ Still the gay tradition mingles
+ With a record grave and drear,
+ Like the rollic air of Cluny,
+ With the solemn march of Mear.
+
+ When the box-tree, white with blossoms,
+ Made the sweet May woodlands glad,
+ And the Aronia by the river
+ Lighted up the swarming shad,
+
+ And the bulging nets swept shoreward,
+ With their silver-sided haul,
+ Midst the shouts of dripping fishers,
+ He was merriest of them all.
+
+ When, among the jovial huskers,
+ Love stole in at Labor's side,
+ With the lusty airs of England,
+ Soft his Celtic measures vied.
+
+ Songs of love and wailing lyke&mdash;wake,
+ And the merry fair's carouse;
+ Of the wild Red Fox of Erin
+ And the Woman of Three Cows,
+
+ By the blazing hearths of winter,
+ Pleasant seemed his simple tales,
+ Midst the grimmer Yorkshire legends
+ And the mountain myths of Wales.
+
+ How the souls in Purgatory
+ Scrambled up from fate forlorn,
+ On St. Eleven's sackcloth ladder,
+ Slyly hitched to Satan's horn.
+
+ Of the fiddler who at Tara
+ Played all night to ghosts of kings;
+ Of the brown dwarfs, and the fairies
+ Dancing in their moorland rings.
+
+ Jolliest of our birds of singing,
+ Best he loved the Bob-o-link.
+ "Hush!" he 'd say, "the tipsy fairies
+ Hear the little folks in drink!"
+
+ Merry-faced, with spade and fiddle,
+ Singing through the ancient town,
+ Only this, of poor Hugh Tallant,
+ Hath Tradition handed down.
+
+ Not a stone his grave discloses;
+ But if yet his spirit walks,
+ 'T is beneath the trees he planted,
+ And when Bob-o-Lincoln talks;
+
+ Green memorials of the gleeman!
+ Linking still the river-shores,
+ With their shadows cast by sunset,
+ Stand Hugh Tallant's sycamores!
+
+ When the Father of his Country
+ Through the north-land riding came,
+ And the roofs were starred with banners,
+ And the steeples rang acclaim,&mdash;
+
+ When each war-scarred Continental,
+ Leaving smithy, mill, and farm,
+ Waved his rusted sword in welcome,
+ And shot off his old king's arm,&mdash;
+
+ Slowly passed that August Presence
+ Down the thronged and shouting street;
+ Village girls as white as angels,
+ Scattering flowers around his feet.
+
+ Midway, where the plane-tree's shadow
+ Deepest fell, his rein he drew
+ On his stately head, uncovered,
+ Cool and soft the west-wind blew.
+
+ And he stood up in his stirrups,
+ Looking up and looking down
+ On the hills of Gold and Silver
+ Rimming round the little town,&mdash;
+
+ On the river, full of sunshine,
+ To the lap of greenest vales
+ Winding down from wooded headlands,
+ Willow-skirted, white with sails.
+
+ And he said, the landscape sweeping
+ Slowly with his ungloved hand,
+ "I have seen no prospect fairer
+ In this goodly Eastern land."
+
+ Then the bugles of his escort
+ Stirred to life the cavalcade
+ And that head, so bare and stately,
+ Vanished down the depths of shade.
+
+ Ever since, in town and farm-house,
+ Life has had its ebb and flow;
+ Thrice hath passed the human harvest
+ To its garner green and low.
+
+ But the trees the gleeman planted,
+ Through the changes, changeless stand;
+ As the marble calm of Tadmor
+ Mocks the desert's shifting sand.
+
+ Still the level moon at rising
+ Silvers o'er each stately shaft;
+ Still beneath them, half in shadow,
+ Singing, glides the pleasure craft;
+
+ Still beneath them, arm-enfolded,
+ Love and Youth together stray;
+ While, as heart to heart beats faster,
+ More and more their feet delay.
+
+ Where the ancient cobbler, Keezar,
+ On the open hillside wrought,
+ Singing, as he drew his stitches,
+ Songs his German masters taught,
+
+ Singing, with his gray hair floating
+ Round his rosy ample face,&mdash;
+ Now a thousand Saxon craftsmen
+ Stitch and hammer in his place.
+
+ All the pastoral lanes so grassy
+ Now are Traffic's dusty streets;
+ From the village, grown a city,
+ Fast the rural grace retreats.
+
+ But, still green, and tall, and stately,
+ On the river's winding shores,
+ Stand the Occidental plane-trees,
+ Stand, Hugh Taliant's sycamores.
+
+ 1857.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0044" id="link2H_4_0044">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE PIPES AT LUCKNOW.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ An incident of the Sepoy mutiny.
+ </h3>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ PIPES of the misty moorlands,
+ Voice of the glens and hills;
+ The droning of the torrents,
+ The treble of the rills!
+ Not the braes of broom and heather,
+ Nor the mountains dark with rain,
+ Nor maiden bower, nor border tower,
+ Have heard your sweetest strain!
+
+ Dear to the Lowland reaper,
+ And plaided mountaineer,&mdash;
+ To the cottage and the castle
+ The Scottish pipes are dear;&mdash;
+ Sweet sounds the ancient pibroch
+ O'er mountain, loch, and glade;
+ But the sweetest of all music
+ The pipes at Lucknow played.
+
+ Day by day the Indian tiger
+ Louder yelled, and nearer crept;
+ Round and round the jungle-serpent
+ Near and nearer circles swept.
+ "Pray for rescue, wives and mothers,&mdash;
+ Pray to-day!" the soldier said;
+ "To-morrow, death's between us
+ And the wrong and shame we dread."
+
+ Oh, they listened, looked, and waited,
+ Till their hope became despair;
+ And the sobs of low bewailing
+ Filled the pauses of their prayer.
+ Then up spake a Scottish maiden,
+ With her ear unto the ground
+ "Dinna ye hear it?&mdash;dinna ye hear it?
+ The pipes o' Havelock sound!"
+
+ Hushed the wounded man his groaning;
+ Hushed the wife her little ones;
+ Alone they heard the drum-roll
+ And the roar of Sepoy guns.
+ But to sounds of home and childhood
+ The Highland ear was true;&mdash;
+ As her mother's cradle-crooning
+ The mountain pipes she knew.
+
+ Like the march of soundless music
+ Through the vision of the seer,
+ More of feeling than of hearing,
+ Of the heart than of the ear,
+ She knew the droning pibroch,
+ She knew the Campbell's call
+ "Hark! hear ye no' MacGregor's,
+ The grandest o' them all!"
+
+ Oh, they listened, dumb and breathless,
+ And they caught the sound at last;
+ Faint and far beyond the Goomtee
+ Rose and fell the piper's blast
+ Then a burst of wild thanksgiving
+ Mingled woman's voice and man's;
+ "God be praised!&mdash;the march of Havelock!
+ The piping of the clans!"
+
+ Louder, nearer, fierce as vengeance,
+ Sharp and shrill as swords at strife,
+ Came the wild MacGregor's clan-call,
+ Stinging all the air to life.
+ But when the far-off dust-cloud
+ To plaided legions grew,
+ Full tenderly and blithesomely
+ The pipes of rescue blew!
+
+ Round the silver domes of Lucknow,
+ Moslem mosque and Pagan shrine,
+ Breathed the air to Britons dearest,
+ The air of Auld Lang Syne.
+ O'er the cruel roll of war-drums
+ Rose that sweet and homelike strain;
+ And the tartan clove the turban,
+ As the Goomtee cleaves the plain.
+
+ Dear to the corn-land reaper
+ And plaided mountaineer,&mdash;
+ To the cottage and the castle
+ The piper's song is dear.
+ Sweet sounds the Gaelic pibroch
+ O'er mountain, glen, and glade;
+ But the sweetest of all music
+ The Pipes at Lucknow played!
+
+ 1858.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0045" id="link2H_4_0045">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ TELLING THE BEES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ A remarkable custom, brought from the Old Country, formerly prevailed in
+ the rural districts of New England. On the death of a member of the
+ family, the bees were at once informed of the event, and their hives
+ dressed in mourning. This ceremonial was supposed to be necessary to
+ prevent the swarms from leaving their hives and seeking a new home.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ HERE is the place; right over the hill
+ Runs the path I took;
+ You can see the gap in the old wall still,
+ And the stepping-stones in the shallow brook.
+
+ There is the house, with the gate red-barred,
+ And the poplars tall;
+ And the barn's brown length, and the cattle-yard,
+ And the white horns tossing above the wall.
+
+ There are the beehives ranged in the sun;
+ And down by the brink
+ Of the brook are her poor flowers, weed-o'errun,
+ Pansy and daffodil, rose and pink.
+
+ A year has gone, as the tortoise goes,
+ Heavy and slow;
+ And the same rose blooms, and the same sun glows,
+ And the same brook sings of a year ago.
+
+ There's the same sweet clover-smell in the breeze;
+ And the June sun warm
+ Tangles his wings of fire in the trees,
+ Setting, as then, over Fernside farm.
+
+ I mind me how with a lover's care
+ From my Sunday coat
+ I brushed off the burrs, and smoothed my hair,
+ And cooled at the brookside my brow and
+ throat.
+
+ Since we parted, a month had passed,&mdash;
+ To love, a year;
+ Down through the beeches I looked at last
+ On the little red gate and the well-sweep near.
+
+ I can see it all now,&mdash;the slantwise rain
+ Of light through the leaves,
+ The sundown's blaze on her window-pane,
+ The bloom of her roses under the eaves.
+
+ Just the same as a month before,&mdash;
+ The house and the trees,
+ The barn's brown gable, the vine by the door,&mdash;
+ Nothing changed but the hives of bees.
+
+ Before them, under the garden wall,
+ Forward and back,
+ Went drearily singing the chore-girl small,
+ Draping each hive with a shred of black.
+
+ Trembling, I listened: the summer sun
+ Had the chill of snow;
+ For I knew she was telling the bees of one
+ Gone on the journey we all must go.
+
+ Then I said to myself, "My Mary weeps
+ For the dead to-day;
+ Haply her blind old grandsire sleeps
+ The fret and the pain of his age away."
+
+ But her dog whined low; on the doorway sill,
+ With his cane to his chin,
+ The old man sat; and the chore-girl still
+ Sung to the bees stealing out and in.
+
+ And the song she was singing ever since
+ In my ear sounds on:&mdash;
+ "Stay at home, pretty bees, fly not hence!
+ Mistress Mary is dead and gone!"
+
+ 1858.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0046" id="link2H_4_0046">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE SWAN SONG OF PARSON AVERY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In Young's Chronicles of Massachusetts Bay front 1623 to 1636 may be found
+ Anthony Thacher's Narrative of his Shipwreck. Thacher was Avery's
+ companion and survived to tell the tale. Mather's Magnalia, III. 2, gives
+ further Particulars of Parson Avery's End, and suggests the title of the
+ poem.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ When the reaper's task was ended, and the
+ summer wearing late,
+ Parson Avery sailed from Newbury, with his wife
+ and children eight,
+ Dropping down the river-harbor in the shallop
+ "Watch and Wait."
+
+ Pleasantly lay the clearings in the mellow summer-
+ morn,
+ With the newly planted orchards dropping their
+ fruits first-born,
+ And the home-roofs like brown islands amid a sea
+ of corn.
+
+ Broad meadows reached out seaward the tided
+ creeks between,
+ And hills rolled wave-like inland, with oaks and
+ walnuts green;&mdash;
+ A fairer home, a goodlier land, his eyes had never seen.
+
+ Yet away sailed Parson Avery, away where duty led,
+ And the voice of God seemed calling, to break the
+ living bread
+ To the souls of fishers starving on the rocks of
+ Marblehead.
+
+ All day they sailed: at nightfall the pleasant land-
+ breeze died,
+ The blackening sky, at midnight, its starry lights
+ denied,
+ And far and low the thunder of tempest prophesied.
+
+ Blotted out were all the coast-lines, gone were rock,
+ and wood, and sand;
+ Grimly anxious stood the skipper with the rudder
+ in his hand,
+ And questioned of the darkness what was sea and
+ what was land.
+
+ And the preacher heard his dear ones, nestled
+ round him, weeping sore,
+ "Never heed, my little children! Christ is walking
+ on before;
+ To the pleasant land of heaven, where the sea shall
+ be no more."
+
+ All at once the great cloud parted, like a curtain
+ drawn aside,
+ To let down the torch of lightning on the terror
+ far and wide;
+ And the thunder and the whirlwind together smote
+ the tide.
+
+ There was wailing in the shallop, woman's wail
+ and man's despair,
+ A crash of breaking timbers on the rocks so sharp
+ and bare,
+ And, through it all, the murmur of Father Avery's
+ prayer.
+
+ From his struggle in the darkness with the wild
+ waves and the blast,
+ On a rock, where every billow broke above him as
+ it passed,
+ Alone, of all his household, the man of God was
+ cast.
+
+ There a comrade heard him praying, in the pause
+ of wave and wind
+ "All my own have gone before me, and I linger
+ just behind;
+ Not for life I ask, but only for the rest Thy
+ ransomed find!
+
+ "In this night of death I challenge the promise of
+ Thy word!&mdash;
+ Let me see the great salvation of which mine ears
+ have heard!&mdash;
+ Let me pass from hence forgiven, through the
+ grace of Christ, our Lord!
+
+ "In the baptism of these waters wash white my
+ every sin,
+ And let me follow up to Thee my household and
+ my kin!
+ Open the sea-gate of Thy heaven, and let me enter
+ in!"
+
+ When the Christian sings his death-song, all the
+ listening heavens draw near,
+ And the angels, leaning over the walls of crystal,
+ hear
+ How the notes so faint and broken swell to music
+ in God's ear.
+
+ The ear of God was open to His servant's last
+ request;
+ As the strong wave swept him downward the sweet
+ hymn upward pressed,
+ And the soul of Father Avery went, singing, to its
+ rest.
+
+ There was wailing on the mainland, from the rocks
+ of Marblehead;
+ In the stricken church of Newbury the notes of
+ prayer were read;
+ And long, by board and hearthstone, the living
+ mourned the dead.
+
+ And still the fishers outbound, or scudding from
+ the squall,
+ With grave and reverent faces, the ancient tale
+ recall,
+ When they see the white waves breaking on the
+ Rock of Avery's Fall!
+
+ 1808.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0047" id="link2H_4_0047">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE DOUBLE-HEADED SNAKE OF NEWBURY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ "Concerning ye Amphisbaena, as soon as I received your commands, I made
+ diligent inquiry: . . . he assures me yt it had really two heads, one at
+ each end; two mouths, two stings or tongues."&mdash;REV. CHRISTOPHER
+ TOPPAN to COTTON MATHER.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ FAR away in the twilight time
+ Of every people, in every clime,
+ Dragons and griffins and monsters dire,
+ Born of water, and air, and fire,
+ Or nursed, like the Python, in the mud
+ And ooze of the old Deucalion flood,
+ Crawl and wriggle and foam with rage,
+ Through dusk tradition and ballad age.
+ So from the childhood of Newbury town
+ And its time of fable the tale comes down
+ Of a terror which haunted bush and brake,
+ The Amphisbaena, the Double Snake!
+
+ Thou who makest the tale thy mirth,
+ Consider that strip of Christian earth
+ On the desolate shore of a sailless sea,
+ Full of terror and mystery,
+ Half redeemed from the evil hold
+ Of the wood so dreary, and dark, and old,
+ Which drank with its lips of leaves the dew
+ When Time was young, and the world was new,
+ And wove its shadows with sun and moon,
+ Ere the stones of Cheops were squared and hewn.
+ Think of the sea's dread monotone,
+ Of the mournful wail from the pine-wood blown,
+ Of the strange, vast splendors that lit the North,
+ Of the troubled throes of the quaking earth,
+ And the dismal tales the Indian told,
+ Till the settler's heart at his hearth grew cold,
+ And he shrank from the tawny wizard boasts,
+ And the hovering shadows seemed full of ghosts,
+ And above, below, and on every side,
+ The fear of his creed seemed verified;&mdash;
+ And think, if his lot were now thine own,
+ To grope with terrors nor named nor known,
+ How laxer muscle and weaker nerve
+ And a feebler faith thy need might serve;
+ And own to thyself the wonder more
+ That the snake had two heads, and not a score!
+
+ Whether he lurked in the Oldtown fen
+ Or the gray earth-flax of the Devil's Den,
+ Or swam in the wooded Artichoke,
+ Or coiled by the Northman's Written Rock,
+ Nothing on record is left to show;
+ Only the fact that he lived, we know,
+ And left the cast of a double head
+ In the scaly mask which he yearly shed.
+ For he carried a head where his tail should be,
+ And the two, of course, could never agree,
+ But wriggled about with main and might,
+ Now to the left and now to the right;
+ Pulling and twisting this way and that,
+ Neither knew what the other was at.
+
+ A snake with two beads, lurking so near!
+ Judge of the wonder, guess at the fear!
+ Think what ancient gossips might say,
+ Shaking their heads in their dreary way,
+ Between the meetings on Sabbath-day!
+ How urchins, searching at day's decline
+ The Common Pasture for sheep or kine,
+ The terrible double-ganger heard
+ In leafy rustle or whir of bird!
+ Think what a zest it gave to the sport,
+ In berry-time, of the younger sort,
+ As over pastures blackberry-twined,
+ Reuben and Dorothy lagged behind,
+ And closer and closer, for fear of harm,
+ The maiden clung to her lover's arm;
+ And how the spark, who was forced to stay,
+ By his sweetheart's fears, till the break of day,
+ Thanked the snake for the fond delay.
+
+ Far and wide the tale was told,
+ Like a snowball growing while it rolled.
+ The nurse hushed with it the baby's cry;
+ And it served, in the worthy minister's eye,
+ To paint the primitive serpent by.
+ Cotton Mather came galloping down
+ All the way to Newbury town,
+ With his eyes agog and his ears set wide,
+ And his marvellous inkhorn at his side;
+ Stirring the while in the shallow pool
+ Of his brains for the lore he learned at school,
+ To garnish the story, with here a streak
+ Of Latin, and there another of Greek
+ And the tales he heard and the notes he took,
+ Behold! are they not in his Wonder-Book?
+
+ Stories, like dragons, are hard to kill.
+ If the snake does not, the tale runs still
+ In Byfield Meadows, on Pipestave Hill.
+ And still, whenever husband and wife
+ Publish the shame of their daily strife,
+ And, with mad cross-purpose, tug and strain
+ At either end of the marriage-chain,
+ The gossips say, with a knowing shake
+ Of their gray heads, "Look at the Double Snake
+ One in body and two in will,
+ The Amphisbaena is living still!"
+
+ 1859.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0048" id="link2H_4_0048">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ MABEL MARTIN.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ A HARVEST IDYL.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Susanna Martin, an aged woman of Amesbury, Mass., was tried and executed
+ for the alleged crime of witchcraft. Her home was in what is now known as
+ Pleasant Valley on the Merrimac, a little above the old Ferry way, where,
+ tradition says, an attempt was made to assassinate Sir Edmund Andros on
+ his way to Falmouth (afterward Portland) and Pemaquid, which was
+ frustrated by a warning timely given. Goody Martin was the only woman
+ hanged on the north side of the Merrimac during the dreadful delusion. The
+ aged wife of Judge Bradbury who lived on the other side of the Powow River
+ was imprisoned and would have been put to death but for the collapse of
+ the hideous persecution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The substance of the poem which follows was published under the name of
+ The Witch's Daughter, in The National Era in 1857. In 1875 my publishers
+ desired to issue it with illustrations, and I then enlarged it and
+ otherwise altered it to its present form. The principal addition was in
+ the verses which constitute Part I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0049" id="link2H_4_0049">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PROEM.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ I CALL the old time back: I bring my lay
+ in tender memory of the summer day
+ When, where our native river lapsed away,
+
+ We dreamed it over, while the thrushes made
+ Songs of their own, and the great pine-trees laid
+ On warm noonlights the masses of their shade.
+
+ And she was with us, living o'er again
+ Her life in ours, despite of years and pain,&mdash;
+ The Autumn's brightness after latter rain.
+
+ Beautiful in her holy peace as one
+ Who stands, at evening, when the work is done,
+ Glorified in the setting of the sun!
+
+ Her memory makes our common landscape seem
+ Fairer than any of which painters dream;
+ Lights the brown hills and sings in every stream;
+
+ For she whose speech was always truth's pure gold
+ Heard, not unpleased, its simple legends told,
+ And loved with us the beautiful and old.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0050" id="link2H_4_0050">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ I. THE RIVER VALLEY.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Across the level tableland,
+ A grassy, rarely trodden way,
+ With thinnest skirt of birchen spray
+
+ And stunted growth of cedar, leads
+ To where you see the dull plain fall
+ Sheer off, steep-slanted, ploughed by all
+
+ The seasons' rainfalls. On its brink
+ The over-leaning harebells swing,
+ With roots half bare the pine-trees cling;
+
+ And, through the shadow looking west,
+ You see the wavering river flow
+ Along a vale, that far below
+
+ Holds to the sun, the sheltering hills
+ And glimmering water-line between,
+ Broad fields of corn and meadows green,
+
+ And fruit-bent orchards grouped around
+ The low brown roofs and painted eaves,
+ And chimney-tops half hid in leaves.
+
+ No warmer valley hides behind
+ Yon wind-scourged sand-dunes, cold and bleak;
+ No fairer river comes to seek
+
+ The wave-sung welcome of the sea,
+ Or mark the northmost border line
+ Of sun-loved growths of nut and vine.
+
+ Here, ground-fast in their native fields,
+ Untempted by the city's gain,
+ The quiet farmer folk remain
+
+ Who bear the pleasant name of Friends,
+ And keep their fathers' gentle ways
+ And simple speech of Bible days;
+
+ In whose neat homesteads woman holds
+ With modest ease her equal place,
+ And wears upon her tranquil face
+
+ The look of one who, merging not
+ Her self-hood in another's will,
+ Is love's and duty's handmaid still.
+
+ Pass with me down the path that winds
+ Through birches to the open land,
+ Where, close upon the river strand
+
+ You mark a cellar, vine o'errun,
+ Above whose wall of loosened stones
+ The sumach lifts its reddening cones,
+
+ And the black nightshade's berries shine,
+ And broad, unsightly burdocks fold
+ The household ruin, century-old.
+
+ Here, in the dim colonial time
+ Of sterner lives and gloomier faith,
+ A woman lived, tradition saith,
+
+ Who wrought her neighbors foul annoy,
+ And witched and plagued the country-side,
+ Till at the hangman's hand she died.
+
+ Sit with me while the westering day
+ Falls slantwise down the quiet vale,
+ And, haply ere yon loitering sail,
+
+ That rounds the upper headland, falls
+ Below Deer Island's pines, or sees
+ Behind it Hawkswood's belt of trees
+
+ Rise black against the sinking sun,
+ My idyl of its days of old,
+ The valley's legend, shall be told.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0051" id="link2H_4_0051">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ II. THE HUSKING.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ It was the pleasant harvest-time,
+ When cellar-bins are closely stowed,
+ And garrets bend beneath their load,
+
+ And the old swallow-haunted barns,&mdash;
+ Brown-gabled, long, and full of seams
+ Through which the rooted sunlight streams,
+
+ And winds blow freshly in, to shake
+ The red plumes of the roosted cocks,
+ And the loose hay-mow's scented locks,
+
+ Are filled with summer's ripened stores,
+ Its odorous grass and barley sheaves,
+ From their low scaffolds to their eaves.
+
+ On Esek Harden's oaken floor,
+ With many an autumn threshing worn,
+ Lay the heaped ears of unhusked corn.
+
+ And thither came young men and maids,
+ Beneath a moon that, large and low,
+ Lit that sweet eve of long ago.
+
+ They took their places; some by chance,
+ And others by a merry voice
+ Or sweet smile guided to their choice.
+
+ How pleasantly the rising moon,
+ Between the shadow of the mows,
+ Looked on them through the great elm-boughs!
+
+ On sturdy boyhood, sun-embrowned,
+ On girlhood with its solid curves
+ Of healthful strength and painless nerves!
+
+ And jests went round, and laughs that made
+ The house-dog answer with his howl,
+ And kept astir the barn-yard fowl;
+
+ And quaint old songs their fathers sung
+ In Derby dales and Yorkshire moors,
+ Ere Norman William trod their shores;
+
+ And tales, whose merry license shook
+ The fat sides of the Saxon thane,
+ Forgetful of the hovering Dane,&mdash;
+
+ Rude plays to Celt and Cimbri known,
+ The charms and riddles that beguiled
+ On Oxus' banks the young world's child,&mdash;
+
+ That primal picture-speech wherein
+ Have youth and maid the story told,
+ So new in each, so dateless old,
+
+ Recalling pastoral Ruth in her
+ Who waited, blushing and demure,
+ The red-ear's kiss of forfeiture.
+
+ But still the sweetest voice was mute
+ That river-valley ever heard
+ From lips of maid or throat of bird;
+
+ For Mabel Martin sat apart,
+ And let the hay-mow's shadow fall
+ Upon the loveliest face of all.
+
+ She sat apart, as one forbid,
+ Who knew that none would condescend
+ To own the Witch-wife's child a friend.
+
+ The seasons scarce had gone their round,
+ Since curious thousands thronged to see
+ Her mother at the gallows-tree;
+
+ And mocked the prison-palsied limbs
+ That faltered on the fatal stairs,
+ And wan lip trembling with its prayers!
+
+ Few questioned of the sorrowing child,
+ Or, when they saw the mother die;
+ Dreamed of the daughter's agony.
+
+ They went up to their homes that day,
+ As men and Christians justified
+ God willed it, and the wretch had died!
+
+ Dear God and Father of us all,
+ Forgive our faith in cruel lies,&mdash;
+ Forgive the blindness that denies!
+
+ Forgive thy creature when he takes,
+ For the all-perfect love Thou art,
+ Some grim creation of his heart.
+
+ Cast down our idols, overturn
+ Our bloody altars; let us see
+ Thyself in Thy humanity!
+
+ Young Mabel from her mother's grave
+ Crept to her desolate hearth-stone,
+ And wrestled with her fate alone;
+
+ With love, and anger, and despair,
+ The phantoms of disordered sense,
+ The awful doubts of Providence!
+
+ Oh, dreary broke the winter days,
+ And dreary fell the winter nights
+ When, one by one, the neighboring lights
+
+ Went out, and human sounds grew still,
+ And all the phantom-peopled dark
+ Closed round her hearth-fire's dying spark.
+
+ And summer days were sad and long,
+ And sad the uncompanioned eyes,
+ And sadder sunset-tinted leaves,
+
+ And Indian Summer's airs of balm;
+ She scarcely felt the soft caress,
+ The beauty died of loneliness!
+
+ The school-boys jeered her as they passed,
+ And, when she sought the house of prayer,
+ Her mother's curse pursued her there.
+
+ And still o'er many a neighboring door
+ She saw the horseshoe's curved charm,
+ To guard against her mother's harm!
+
+ That mother, poor and sick and lame,
+ Who daily, by the old arm-chair,
+ Folded her withered hands in prayer;&mdash;
+
+ Who turned, in Salem's dreary jail,
+ Her worn old Bible o'er and o'er,
+ When her dim eyes could read no more!
+
+ Sore tried and pained, the poor girl kept
+ Her faith, and trusted that her way,
+ So dark, would somewhere meet the day.
+
+ And still her weary wheel went round
+ Day after day, with no relief
+ Small leisure have the poor for grief.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0052" id="link2H_4_0052">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ III. THE CHAMPION.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ So in the shadow Mabel sits;
+ Untouched by mirth she sees and hears,
+ Her smile is sadder than her tears.
+
+ But cruel eyes have found her out,
+ And cruel lips repeat her name,
+ And taunt her with her mother's shame.
+
+ She answered not with railing words,
+ But drew her apron o'er her face,
+ And, sobbing, glided from the place.
+
+ And only pausing at the door,
+ Her sad eyes met the troubled gaze
+ Of one who, in her better days,
+
+ Had been her warm and steady friend,
+ Ere yet her mother's doom had made
+ Even Esek Harden half afraid.
+
+ He felt that mute appeal of tears,
+ And, starting, with an angry frown,
+ Hushed all the wicked murmurs down.
+
+ "Good neighbors mine," he sternly said,
+ "This passes harmless mirth or jest;
+ I brook no insult to my guest.
+
+ "She is indeed her mother's child;
+ But God's sweet pity ministers
+ Unto no whiter soul than hers.
+
+ "Let Goody Martin rest in peace;
+ I never knew her harm a fly,
+ And witch or not, God knows&mdash;not I.
+
+ "I know who swore her life away;
+ And as God lives, I'd not condemn
+ An Indian dog on word of them."
+
+ The broadest lands in all the town,
+ The skill to guide, the power to awe,
+ Were Harden's; and his word was law.
+
+ None dared withstand him to his face,
+ But one sly maiden spake aside
+ "The little witch is evil-eyed!
+
+ "Her mother only killed a cow,
+ Or witched a churn or dairy-pan;
+ But she, forsooth, must charm a man!"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0053" id="link2H_4_0053">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ IV. IN THE SHADOW.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Poor Mabel, homeward turning, passed
+ The nameless terrors of the wood,
+ And saw, as if a ghost pursued,
+
+ Her shadow gliding in the moon;
+ The soft breath of the west-wind gave
+ A chill as from her mother's grave.
+
+ How dreary seemed the silent house!
+ Wide in the moonbeams' ghastly glare
+ Its windows had a dead man's stare!
+
+ And, like a gaunt and spectral hand,
+ The tremulous shadow of a birch
+ Reached out and touched the door's low porch,
+
+ As if to lift its latch; hard by,
+ A sudden warning call she beard,
+ The night-cry of a boding bird.
+
+ She leaned against the door; her face,
+ So fair, so young, so full of pain,
+ White in the moonlight's silver rain.
+
+ The river, on its pebbled rim,
+ Made music such as childhood knew;
+ The door-yard tree was whispered through
+
+ By voices such as childhood's ear
+ Had heard in moonlights long ago;
+ And through the willow-boughs below.
+
+ She saw the rippled waters shine;
+ Beyond, in waves of shade and light,
+ The hills rolled off into the night.
+
+ She saw and heard, but over all
+ A sense of some transforming spell,
+ The shadow of her sick heart fell.
+
+ And still across the wooded space
+ The harvest lights of Harden shone,
+ And song and jest and laugh went on.
+
+ And he, so gentle, true, and strong,
+ Of men the bravest and the best,
+ Had he, too, scorned her with the rest?
+
+ She strove to drown her sense of wrong,
+ And, in her old and simple way,
+ To teach her bitter heart to pray.
+
+ Poor child! the prayer, begun in faith,
+ Grew to a low, despairing cry
+ Of utter misery: "Let me die!
+
+ "Oh! take me from the scornful eyes,
+ And hide me where the cruel speech
+ And mocking finger may not reach!
+
+ "I dare not breathe my mother's name
+ A daughter's right I dare not crave
+ To weep above her unblest grave!
+
+ "Let me not live until my heart,
+ With few to pity, and with none
+ To love me, hardens into stone.
+
+ "O God! have mercy on Thy child,
+ Whose faith in Thee grows weak and small,
+ And take me ere I lose it all!"
+
+ A shadow on the moonlight fell,
+ And murmuring wind and wave became
+ A voice whose burden was her name.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0054" id="link2H_4_0054">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ V. THE BETROTHAL.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Had then God heard her? Had He sent
+ His angel down? In flesh and blood,
+ Before her Esek Harden stood!
+
+ He laid his hand upon her arm
+ "Dear Mabel, this no more shall be;
+ Who scoffs at you must scoff at me.
+
+ "You know rough Esek Harden well;
+ And if he seems no suitor gay,
+ And if his hair is touched with gray,
+
+ "The maiden grown shall never find
+ His heart less warm than when she smiled,
+ Upon his knees, a little child!"
+
+ Her tears of grief were tears of joy,
+ As, folded in his strong embrace,
+ She looked in Esek Harden's face.
+
+ "O truest friend of all'" she said,
+ "God bless you for your kindly thought,
+ And make me worthy of my lot!"
+
+ He led her forth, and, blent in one,
+ Beside their happy pathway ran
+ The shadows of the maid and man.
+
+ He led her through his dewy fields,
+ To where the swinging lanterns glowed,
+ And through the doors the huskers showed.
+
+ "Good friends and neighbors!" Esek said,
+ "I'm weary of this lonely life;
+ In Mabel see my chosen wife!
+
+ "She greets you kindly, one and all;
+ The past is past, and all offence
+ Falls harmless from her innocence.
+
+ "Henceforth she stands no more alone;
+ You know what Esek Harden is;&mdash;
+ He brooks no wrong to him or his.
+
+ "Now let the merriest tales be told,
+ And let the sweetest songs be sung
+ That ever made the old heart young!
+
+ "For now the lost has found a home;
+ And a lone hearth shall brighter burn,
+ As all the household joys return!"
+
+ Oh, pleasantly the harvest-moon,
+ Between the shadow of the mows,
+ Looked on them through the great elm&mdash;boughs!
+
+ On Mabel's curls of golden hair,
+ On Esek's shaggy strength it fell;
+ And the wind whispered, "It is well!"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0055" id="link2H_4_0055">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE PROPHECY OF SAMUEL SEWALL.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The prose version of this prophecy is to be found in Sewall's The New
+ Heaven upon the New Earth, 1697, quoted in Joshua Coffin's History of
+ Newbury. Judge Sewall's father, Henry Sewall, was one of the pioneers of
+ Newbury.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Up and down the village streets
+ Strange are the forms my fancy meets,
+ For the thoughts and things of to-day are hid,
+ And through the veil of a closed lid
+ The ancient worthies I see again
+ I hear the tap of the elder's cane,
+ And his awful periwig I see,
+ And the silver buckles of shoe and knee.
+ Stately and slow, with thoughtful air,
+ His black cap hiding his whitened hair,
+ Walks the Judge of the great Assize,
+ Samuel Sewall the good and wise.
+ His face with lines of firmness wrought,
+ He wears the look of a man unbought,
+ Who swears to his hurt and changes not;
+ Yet, touched and softened nevertheless
+ With the grace of Christian gentleness,
+ The face that a child would climb to kiss!
+ True and tender and brave and just,
+ That man might honor and woman trust.
+
+ Touching and sad, a tale is told,
+ Like a penitent hymn of the Psalmist old,
+ Of the fast which the good man lifelong kept to
+ With a haunting sorrow that never slept,
+ As the circling year brought round the time
+ Of an error that left the sting of crime,
+ When he sat on the bench of the witchcraft courts,
+ With the laws of Moses and Hale's Reports,
+ And spake, in the name of both, the word
+ That gave the witch's neck to the cord,
+ And piled the oaken planks that pressed
+ The feeble life from the warlock's breast!
+ All the day long, from dawn to dawn,
+ His door was bolted, his curtain drawn;
+ No foot on his silent threshold trod,
+ No eye looked on him save that of God,
+ As he baffled the ghosts of the dead with charms
+ Of penitent tears, and prayers, and psalms,
+ And, with precious proofs from the sacred word
+ Of the boundless pity and love of the Lord,
+ His faith confirmed and his trust renewed
+ That the sin of his ignorance, sorely rued,
+ Might be washed away in the mingled flood
+ Of his human sorrow and Christ's dear blood!
+
+ Green forever the memory be
+ Of the Judge of the old Theocracy,
+ Whom even his errors glorified,
+ Like a far-seen, sunlit mountain-side
+ By the cloudy shadows which o'er it glide!
+ Honor and praise to the Puritan
+ Who the halting step of his age outran,
+ And, seeing the infinite worth of man
+ In the priceless gift the Father gave,
+ In the infinite love that stooped to save,
+ Dared not brand his brother a slave
+ "Who doth such wrong," he was wont to say,
+ In his own quaint, picture-loving way,
+ "Flings up to Heaven a hand-grenade
+ Which God shall cast down upon his head!"
+
+ Widely as heaven and hell, contrast
+ That brave old jurist of the past
+ And the cunning trickster and knave of courts
+ Who the holy features of Truth distorts,
+ Ruling as right the will of the strong,
+ Poverty, crime, and weakness wrong;
+ Wide-eared to power, to the wronged and weak
+ Deaf as Egypt's gods of leek;
+ Scoffing aside at party's nod
+ Order of nature and law of God;
+ For whose dabbled ermine respect were waste,
+ Reverence folly, and awe misplaced;
+ Justice of whom 't were vain to seek
+ As from Koordish robber or Syrian Sheik!
+ Oh, leave the wretch to his bribes and sins;
+ Let him rot in the web of lies he spins!
+ To the saintly soul of the early day,
+ To the Christian judge, let us turn and say
+ "Praise and thanks for an honest man!&mdash;
+ Glory to God for the Puritan!"
+
+ I see, far southward, this quiet day,
+ The hills of Newbury rolling away,
+ With the many tints of the season gay,
+ Dreamily blending in autumn mist
+ Crimson, and gold, and amethyst.
+ Long and low, with dwarf trees crowned,
+ Plum Island lies, like a whale aground,
+ A stone's toss over the narrow sound.
+ Inland, as far as the eye can go,
+ The hills curve round like a bended bow;
+ A silver arrow from out them sprung,
+ I see the shine of the Quasycung;
+ And, round and round, over valley and hill,
+ Old roads winding, as old roads will,
+ Here to a ferry, and there to a mill;
+ And glimpses of chimneys and gabled eaves,
+ Through green elm arches and maple leaves,&mdash;
+ Old homesteads sacred to all that can
+ Gladden or sadden the heart of man,
+ Over whose thresholds of oak and stone
+ Life and Death have come and gone
+ There pictured tiles in the fireplace show,
+ Great beams sag from the ceiling low,
+ The dresser glitters with polished wares,
+ The long clock ticks on the foot-worn stairs,
+ And the low, broad chimney shows the crack
+ By the earthquake made a century back.
+ Up from their midst springs the village spire
+ With the crest of its cock in the sun afire;
+ Beyond are orchards and planting lands,
+ And great salt marshes and glimmering sands,
+ And, where north and south the coast-lines run,
+ The blink of the sea in breeze and sun!
+
+ I see it all like a chart unrolled,
+ But my thoughts are full of the past and old,
+ I hear the tales of my boyhood told;
+ And the shadows and shapes of early days
+ Flit dimly by in the veiling haze,
+ With measured movement and rhythmic chime
+ Weaving like shuttles my web of rhyme.
+ I think of the old man wise and good
+ Who once on yon misty hillsides stood,
+ (A poet who never measured rhyme,
+ A seer unknown to his dull-eared time,)
+ And, propped on his staff of age, looked down,
+ With his boyhood's love, on his native town,
+ Where, written, as if on its hills and plains,
+ His burden of prophecy yet remains,
+ For the voices of wood, and wave, and wind
+ To read in the ear of the musing mind:&mdash;
+
+ "As long as Plum Island, to guard the coast
+ As God appointed, shall keep its post;
+ As long as a salmon shall haunt the deep
+ Of Merrimac River, or sturgeon leap;
+ As long as pickerel swift and slim,
+ Or red-backed perch, in Crane Pond swim;
+ As long as the annual sea-fowl know
+ Their time to come and their time to go;
+ As long as cattle shall roam at will
+ The green, grass meadows by Turkey Hill;
+ As long as sheep shall look from the side
+ Of Oldtown Hill on marishes wide,
+ And Parker River, and salt-sea tide;
+ As long as a wandering pigeon shall search
+ The fields below from his white-oak perch,
+ When the barley-harvest is ripe and shorn,
+ And the dry husks fall from the standing corn;
+ As long as Nature shall not grow old,
+ Nor drop her work from her doting hold,
+ And her care for the Indian corn forget,
+ And the yellow rows in pairs to set;&mdash;
+ So long shall Christians here be born,
+ Grow up and ripen as God's sweet corn!&mdash;
+ By the beak of bird, by the breath of frost,
+ Shall never a holy ear be lost,
+ But, husked by Death in the Planter's sight,
+ Be sown again in the fields of light!"
+
+ The Island still is purple with plums,
+ Up the river the salmon comes,
+ The sturgeon leaps, and the wild-fowl feeds
+ On hillside berries and marish seeds,&mdash;
+ All the beautiful signs remain,
+ From spring-time sowing to autumn rain
+ The good man's vision returns again!
+ And let us hope, as well we can,
+ That the Silent Angel who garners man
+ May find some grain as of old lie found
+ In the human cornfield ripe and sound,
+ And the Lord of the Harvest deign to own
+ The precious seed by the fathers sown!
+
+ 1859.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0056" id="link2H_4_0056">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE RED RIPER VOYAGEUR.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ OUT and in the river is winding
+ The links of its long, red chain,
+ Through belts of dusky pine-land
+ And gusty leagues of plain.
+
+ Only, at times, a smoke-wreath
+ With the drifting cloud-rack joins,&mdash;
+ The smoke of the hunting-lodges
+ Of the wild Assiniboins.
+
+ Drearily blows the north-wind
+ From the land of ice and snow;
+ The eyes that look are weary,
+ And heavy the hands that row.
+
+ And with one foot on the water,
+ And one upon the shore,
+ The Angel of Shadow gives warning
+ That day shall be no more.
+
+ Is it the clang of wild-geese?
+ Is it the Indian's yell,
+ That lends to the voice of the north-wind
+ The tones of a far-off bell?
+
+ The voyageur smiles as he listens
+ To the sound that grows apace;
+ Well he knows the vesper ringing
+ Of the bells of St. Boniface.
+
+ The bells of the Roman Mission,
+ That call from their turrets twain,
+ To the boatman on the river,
+ To the hunter on the plain!
+
+ Even so in our mortal journey
+ The bitter north-winds blow,
+ And thus upon life's Red River
+ Our hearts, as oarsmen, row.
+
+ And when the Angel of Shadow
+ Rests his feet on wave and shore,
+ And our eyes grow dim with watching
+ And our hearts faint at the oar,
+
+ Happy is he who heareth
+ The signal of his release
+ In the bells of the Holy City,
+ The chimes of eternal peace!
+
+ 1859
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0057" id="link2H_4_0057">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE PREACHER.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ George Whitefield, the celebrated preacher, died at Newburyport in 1770,
+ and was buried under the church which has since borne his name.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ITS windows flashing to the sky,
+ Beneath a thousand roofs of brown,
+ Far down the vale, my friend and I
+ Beheld the old and quiet town;
+ The ghostly sails that out at sea
+ Flapped their white wings of mystery;
+ The beaches glimmering in the sun,
+ And the low wooded capes that run
+ Into the sea-mist north and south;
+ The sand-bluffs at the river's mouth;
+ The swinging chain-bridge, and, afar,
+ The foam-line of the harbor-bar.
+
+ Over the woods and meadow-lands
+ A crimson-tinted shadow lay,
+ Of clouds through which the setting day
+ Flung a slant glory far away.
+ It glittered on the wet sea-sands,
+ It flamed upon the city's panes,
+ Smote the white sails of ships that wore
+ Outward or in, and glided o'er
+ The steeples with their veering vanes!
+
+ Awhile my friend with rapid search
+ O'erran the landscape. "Yonder spire
+ Over gray roofs, a shaft of fire;
+ What is it, pray?"&mdash;"The Whitefield Church!
+ Walled about by its basement stones,
+ There rest the marvellous prophet's bones."
+ Then as our homeward way we walked,
+ Of the great preacher's life we talked;
+ And through the mystery of our theme
+ The outward glory seemed to stream,
+ And Nature's self interpreted
+ The doubtful record of the dead;
+ And every level beam that smote
+ The sails upon the dark afloat
+ A symbol of the light became,
+ Which touched the shadows of our blame,
+ With tongues of Pentecostal flame.
+
+ Over the roofs of the pioneers
+ Gathers the moss of a hundred years;
+ On man and his works has passed the change
+ Which needs must be in a century's range.
+ The land lies open and warm in the sun,
+ Anvils clamor and mill-wheels run,&mdash;
+ Flocks on the hillsides, herds on the plain,
+ The wilderness gladdened with fruit and grain!
+ But the living faith of the settlers old
+ A dead profession their children hold;
+ To the lust of office and greed of trade
+ A stepping-stone is the altar made.
+
+ The church, to place and power the door,
+ Rebukes the sin of the world no more,
+ Nor sees its Lord in the homeless poor.
+ Everywhere is the grasping hand,
+ And eager adding of land to land;
+ And earth, which seemed to the fathers meant
+ But as a pilgrim's wayside tent,&mdash;
+ A nightly shelter to fold away
+ When the Lord should call at the break of day,&mdash;
+ Solid and steadfast seems to be,
+ And Time has forgotten Eternity!
+
+ But fresh and green from the rotting roots
+ Of primal forests the young growth shoots;
+ From the death of the old the new proceeds,
+ And the life of truth from the rot of creeds
+ On the ladder of God, which upward leads,
+ The steps of progress are human needs.
+ For His judgments still are a mighty deep,
+ And the eyes of His providence never sleep
+ When the night is darkest He gives the morn;
+ When the famine is sorest, the wine and corn!
+
+ In the church of the wilderness Edwards wrought,
+ Shaping his creed at the forge of thought;
+ And with Thor's own hammer welded and bent
+ The iron links of his argument,
+ Which strove to grasp in its mighty span
+ The purpose of God and the fate of man
+ Yet faithful still, in his daily round
+ To the weak, and the poor, and sin-sick found,
+ The schoolman's lore and the casuist's art
+ Drew warmth and life from his fervent heart.
+
+ Had he not seen in the solitudes
+ Of his deep and dark Northampton woods
+ A vision of love about him fall?
+ Not the blinding splendor which fell on Saul,
+ But the tenderer glory that rests on them
+ Who walk in the New Jerusalem,
+ Where never the sun nor moon are known,
+ But the Lord and His love are the light alone
+ And watching the sweet, still countenance
+ Of the wife of his bosom rapt in trance,
+ Had he not treasured each broken word
+ Of the mystical wonder seen and heard;
+ And loved the beautiful dreamer more
+ That thus to the desert of earth she bore
+ Clusters of Eshcol from Canaan's shore?
+
+ As the barley-winnower, holding with pain
+ Aloft in waiting his chaff and grain,
+ Joyfully welcomes the far-off breeze
+ Sounding the pine-tree's slender keys,
+ So he who had waited long to hear
+ The sound of the Spirit drawing near,
+ Like that which the son of Iddo heard
+ When the feet of angels the myrtles stirred,
+ Felt the answer of prayer, at last,
+ As over his church the afflatus passed,
+ Breaking its sleep as breezes break
+ To sun-bright ripples a stagnant lake.
+
+ At first a tremor of silent fear,
+ The creep of the flesh at danger near,
+ A vague foreboding and discontent,
+ Over the hearts of the people went.
+ All nature warned in sounds and signs
+ The wind in the tops of the forest pines
+ In the name of the Highest called to prayer,
+ As the muezzin calls from the minaret stair.
+ Through ceiled chambers of secret sin
+ Sudden and strong the light shone in;
+ A guilty sense of his neighbor's needs
+ Startled the man of title-deeds;
+ The trembling hand of the worldling shook
+ The dust of years from the Holy Book;
+ And the psalms of David, forgotten long,
+ Took the place of the scoffer's song.
+
+ The impulse spread like the outward course
+ Of waters moved by a central force;
+ The tide of spiritual life rolled down
+ From inland mountains to seaboard town.
+
+ Prepared and ready the altar stands
+ Waiting the prophet's outstretched hands
+ And prayer availing, to downward call
+ The fiery answer in view of all.
+ Hearts are like wax in the furnace; who
+ Shall mould, and shape, and cast them anew?
+ Lo! by the Merrimac Whitefield stands
+ In the temple that never was made by hands,&mdash;
+ Curtains of azure, and crystal wall,
+ And dome of the sunshine over all&mdash;
+ A homeless pilgrim, with dubious name
+ Blown about on the winds of fame;
+ Now as an angel of blessing classed,
+ And now as a mad enthusiast.
+ Called in his youth to sound and gauge
+ The moral lapse of his race and age,
+ And, sharp as truth, the contrast draw
+ Of human frailty and perfect law;
+ Possessed by the one dread thought that lent
+ Its goad to his fiery temperament,
+ Up and down the world he went,
+ A John the Baptist crying, Repent!
+
+ No perfect whole can our nature make;
+ Here or there the circle will break;
+ The orb of life as it takes the light
+ On one side leaves the other in night.
+ Never was saint so good and great
+ As to give no chance at St. Peter's gate
+ For the plea of the Devil's advocate.
+ So, incomplete by his being's law,
+ The marvellous preacher had his flaw;
+ With step unequal, and lame with faults,
+ His shade on the path of History halts.
+
+ Wisely and well said the Eastern bard
+ Fear is easy, but love is hard,&mdash;
+ Easy to glow with the Santon's rage,
+ And walk on the Meccan pilgrimage;
+ But he is greatest and best who can
+ Worship Allah by loving man.
+ Thus he,&mdash;to whom, in the painful stress
+ Of zeal on fire from its own excess,
+ Heaven seemed so vast and earth so small
+ That man was nothing, since God was all,&mdash;
+ Forgot, as the best at times have done,
+ That the love of the Lord and of man are one.
+ Little to him whose feet unshod
+ The thorny path of the desert trod,
+ Careless of pain, so it led to God,
+ Seemed the hunger-pang and the poor man's wrong,
+ The weak ones trodden beneath the strong.
+ Should the worm be chooser?&mdash;the clay withstand
+ The shaping will of the potter's hand?
+
+ In the Indian fable Arjoon hears
+ The scorn of a god rebuke his fears
+ "Spare thy pity!" Krishna saith;
+ "Not in thy sword is the power of death!
+ All is illusion,&mdash;loss but seems;
+ Pleasure and pain are only dreams;
+ Who deems he slayeth doth not kill;
+ Who counts as slain is living still.
+ Strike, nor fear thy blow is crime;
+ Nothing dies but the cheats of time;
+ Slain or slayer, small the odds
+ To each, immortal as Indra's gods!"
+
+ So by Savannah's banks of shade,
+ The stones of his mission the preacher laid
+ On the heart of the negro crushed and rent,
+ And made of his blood the wall's cement;
+ Bade the slave-ship speed from coast to coast,
+ Fanned by the wings of the Holy Ghost;
+ And begged, for the love of Christ, the gold
+ Coined from the hearts in its groaning hold.
+ What could it matter, more or less
+ Of stripes, and hunger, and weariness?
+ Living or dying, bond or free,
+ What was time to eternity?
+
+ Alas for the preacher's cherished schemes!
+ Mission and church are now but dreams;
+ Nor prayer nor fasting availed the plan
+ To honor God through the wrong of man.
+ Of all his labors no trace remains
+ Save the bondman lifting his hands in chains.
+ The woof he wove in the righteous warp
+ Of freedom-loving Oglethorpe,
+ Clothes with curses the goodly land,
+ Changes its greenness and bloom to sand;
+ And a century's lapse reveals once more
+ The slave-ship stealing to Georgia's shore.
+ Father of Light! how blind is he
+ Who sprinkles the altar he rears to Thee
+ With the blood and tears of humanity!
+
+ He erred: shall we count His gifts as naught?
+ Was the work of God in him unwrought?
+ The servant may through his deafness err,
+ And blind may be God's messenger;
+ But the Errand is sure they go upon,&mdash;
+ The word is spoken, the deed is done.
+ Was the Hebrew temple less fair and good
+ That Solomon bowed to gods of wood?
+ For his tempted heart and wandering feet,
+ Were the songs of David less pure and sweet?
+ So in light and shadow the preacher went,
+ God's erring and human instrument;
+ And the hearts of the people where he passed
+ Swayed as the reeds sway in the blast,
+ Under the spell of a voice which took
+ In its compass the flow of Siloa's brook,
+ And the mystical chime of the bells of gold
+ On the ephod's hem of the priest of old,&mdash;
+ Now the roll of thunder, and now the awe
+ Of the trumpet heard in the Mount of Law.
+
+ A solemn fear on the listening crowd
+ Fell like the shadow of a cloud.
+ The sailor reeling from out the ships
+ Whose masts stood thick in the river-slips
+ Felt the jest and the curse die on his lips.
+ Listened the fisherman rude and hard,
+ The calker rough from the builder's yard;
+ The man of the market left his load,
+ The teamster leaned on his bending goad,
+ The maiden, and youth beside her, felt
+ Their hearts in a closer union melt,
+ And saw the flowers of their love in bloom
+ Down the endless vistas of life to come.
+ Old age sat feebly brushing away
+ From his ears the scanty locks of gray;
+ And careless boyhood, living the free
+ Unconscious life of bird and tree,
+ Suddenly wakened to a sense
+ Of sin and its guilty consequence.
+ It was as if an angel's voice
+ Called the listeners up for their final choice;
+ As if a strong hand rent apart
+ The veils of sense from soul and heart,
+ Showing in light ineffable
+ The joys of heaven and woes of hell
+ All about in the misty air
+ The hills seemed kneeling in silent prayer;
+ The rustle of leaves, the moaning sedge,
+ The water's lap on its gravelled edge,
+ The wailing pines, and, far and faint,
+ The wood-dove's note of sad complaint,&mdash;
+ To the solemn voice of the preacher lent
+ An undertone as of low lament;
+ And the note of the sea from its sand coast,
+ On the easterly wind, now heard, now lost,
+ Seemed the murmurous sound of the judgment host.
+
+ Yet wise men doubted, and good men wept,
+ As that storm of passion above them swept,
+ And, comet-like, adding flame to flame,
+ The priests of the new Evangel came,&mdash;
+ Davenport, flashing upon the crowd,
+ Charged like summer's electric cloud,
+ Now holding the listener still as death
+ With terrible warnings under breath,
+ Now shouting for joy, as if he viewed
+ The vision of Heaven's beatitude!
+ And Celtic Tennant, his long coat bound
+ Like a monk's with leathern girdle round,
+ Wild with the toss of unshorn hair,
+ And wringing of hands, and, eyes aglare,
+ Groaning under the world's despair!
+ Grave pastors, grieving their flocks to lose,
+ Prophesied to the empty pews
+ That gourds would wither, and mushrooms die,
+ And noisiest fountains run soonest dry,
+ Like the spring that gushed in Newbury Street,
+ Under the tramp of the earthquake's feet,
+ A silver shaft in the air and light,
+ For a single day, then lost in night,
+ Leaving only, its place to tell,
+ Sandy fissure and sulphurous smell.
+ With zeal wing-clipped and white-heat cool,
+ Moved by the spirit in grooves of rule,
+ No longer harried, and cropped, and fleeced,
+ Flogged by sheriff and cursed by priest,
+ But by wiser counsels left at ease
+ To settle quietly on his lees,
+ And, self-concentred, to count as done
+ The work which his fathers well begun,
+ In silent protest of letting alone,
+ The Quaker kept the way of his own,&mdash;
+ A non-conductor among the wires,
+ With coat of asbestos proof to fires.
+ And quite unable to mend his pace
+ To catch the falling manna of grace,
+ He hugged the closer his little store
+ Of faith, and silently prayed for more.
+ And vague of creed and barren of rite,
+ But holding, as in his Master's sight,
+ Act and thought to the inner light,
+ The round of his simple duties walked,
+ And strove to live what the others talked.
+
+ And who shall marvel if evil went
+ Step by step with the good intent,
+ And with love and meekness, side by side,
+ Lust of the flesh and spiritual pride?&mdash;
+ That passionate longings and fancies vain
+ Set the heart on fire and crazed the brain?
+ That over the holy oracles
+ Folly sported with cap and bells?
+ That goodly women and learned men
+ Marvelling told with tongue and pen
+ How unweaned children chirped like birds
+ Texts of Scripture and solemn words,
+ Like the infant seers of the rocky glens
+ In the Puy de Dome of wild Cevennes
+ Or baby Lamas who pray and preach
+ From Tartir cradles in Buddha's speech?
+
+ In the war which Truth or Freedom wages
+ With impious fraud and the wrong of ages,
+ Hate and malice and self-love mar
+ The notes of triumph with painful jar,
+ And the helping angels turn aside
+ Their sorrowing faces the shame to bide.
+ Never on custom's oiled grooves
+ The world to a higher level moves,
+ But grates and grinds with friction hard
+ On granite boulder and flinty shard.
+ The heart must bleed before it feels,
+ The pool be troubled before it heals;
+ Ever by losses the right must gain,
+ Every good have its birth of pain;
+ The active Virtues blush to find
+ The Vices wearing their badge behind,
+ And Graces and Charities feel the fire
+ Wherein the sins of the age expire;
+ The fiend still rends as of old he rent
+ The tortured body from which he went.
+
+ But Time tests all. In the over-drift
+ And flow of the Nile, with its annual gift,
+ Who cares for the Hadji's relics sunk?
+ Who thinks of the drowned-out Coptic monk?
+ The tide that loosens the temple's stones,
+ And scatters the sacred ibis-bones,
+ Drives away from the valley-land
+ That Arab robber, the wandering sand,
+ Moistens the fields that know no rain,
+ Fringes the desert with belts of grain,
+ And bread to the sower brings again.
+ So the flood of emotion deep and strong
+ Troubled the land as it swept along,
+ But left a result of holier lives,
+ Tenderer-mothers and worthier wives.
+ The husband and father whose children fled
+ And sad wife wept when his drunken tread
+ Frightened peace from his roof-tree's shade,
+ And a rock of offence his hearthstone made,
+ In a strength that was not his own began
+ To rise from the brute's to the plane of man.
+ Old friends embraced, long held apart
+ By evil counsel and pride of heart;
+ And penitence saw through misty tears,
+ In the bow of hope on its cloud of fears,
+ The promise of Heaven's eternal years,&mdash;
+ The peace of God for the world's annoy,&mdash;
+ Beauty for ashes, and oil of joy
+ Under the church of Federal Street,
+ Under the tread of its Sabbath feet,
+ Walled about by its basement stones,
+ Lie the marvellous preacher's bones.
+ No saintly honors to them are shown,
+ No sign nor miracle have they known;
+ But he who passes the ancient church
+ Stops in the shade of its belfry-porch,
+ And ponders the wonderful life of him
+ Who lies at rest in that charnel dim.
+ Long shall the traveller strain his eye
+ From the railroad car, as it plunges by,
+ And the vanishing town behind him search
+ For the slender spire of the Whitefield Church;
+ And feel for one moment the ghosts of trade,
+ And fashion, and folly, and pleasure laid,
+ By the thought of that life of pure intent,
+ That voice of warning yet eloquent,
+ Of one on the errands of angels sent.
+ And if where he labored the flood of sin
+ Like a tide from the harbor-bar sets in,
+ And over a life of tune and sense
+ The church-spires lift their vain defence,
+ As if to scatter the bolts of God
+ With the points of Calvin's thunder-rod,&mdash;
+ Still, as the gem of its civic crown,
+ Precious beyond the world's renown,
+ His memory hallows the ancient town!
+
+ 1859.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0058" id="link2H_4_0058">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE TRUCE OF PISCATAQUA.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In the winter of 1675-76, the Eastern Indians, who had been making war
+ upon the New Hampshire settlements, were so reduced in numbers by fighting
+ and famine that they agreed to a peace with Major Waldron at Dover, but
+ the peace was broken in the fall of 1676. The famous chief, Squando, was
+ the principal negotiator on the part of the savages. He had taken up the
+ hatchet to revenge the brutal treatment of his child by drunken white
+ sailors, which caused its death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It not unfrequently happened during the Border wars that young white
+ children were adopted by their Indian captors, and so kindly treated that
+ they were unwilling to leave the free, wild life of the woods; and in some
+ instances they utterly refused to go back with their parents to their old
+ homes and civilization.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ RAZE these long blocks of brick and stone,
+ These huge mill-monsters overgrown;
+ Blot out the humbler piles as well,
+ Where, moved like living shuttles, dwell
+ The weaving genii of the bell;
+ Tear from the wild Cocheco's track
+ The dams that hold its torrents back;
+ And let the loud-rejoicing fall
+ Plunge, roaring, down its rocky wall;
+ And let the Indian's paddle play
+ On the unbridged Piscataqua!
+ Wide over hill and valley spread
+ Once more the forest, dusk and dread,
+ With here and there a clearing cut
+ From the walled shadows round it shut;
+ Each with its farm-house builded rude,
+ By English yeoman squared and hewed,
+ And the grim, flankered block-house bound
+ With bristling palisades around.
+ So, haply shall before thine eyes
+ The dusty veil of centuries rise,
+ The old, strange scenery overlay
+ The tamer pictures of to-day,
+ While, like the actors in a play,
+ Pass in their ancient guise along
+ The figures of my border song
+ What time beside Cocheco's flood
+ The white man and the red man stood,
+ With words of peace and brotherhood;
+ When passed the sacred calumet
+ From lip to lip with fire-draught wet,
+ And, puffed in scorn, the peace-pipe's smoke
+ Through the gray beard of Waldron broke,
+ And Squando's voice, in suppliant plea
+ For mercy, struck the haughty key
+ Of one who held, in any fate,
+ His native pride inviolate!
+
+ "Let your ears be opened wide!
+ He who speaks has never lied.
+ Waldron of Piscataqua,
+ Hear what Squando has to say!
+
+ "Squando shuts his eyes and sees,
+ Far off, Saco's hemlock-trees.
+ In his wigwam, still as stone,
+ Sits a woman all alone,
+
+ "Wampum beads and birchen strands
+ Dropping from her careless hands,
+ Listening ever for the fleet
+ Patter of a dead child's feet!
+
+ "When the moon a year ago
+ Told the flowers the time to blow,
+ In that lonely wigwam smiled
+ Menewee, our little child.
+
+ "Ere that moon grew thin and old,
+ He was lying still and cold;
+ Sent before us, weak and small,
+ When the Master did not call!
+
+ "On his little grave I lay;
+ Three times went and came the day,
+ Thrice above me blazed the noon,
+ Thrice upon me wept the moon.
+
+ "In the third night-watch I heard,
+ Far and low, a spirit-bird;
+ Very mournful, very wild,
+ Sang the totem of my child.
+
+ "'Menewee, poor Menewee,
+ Walks a path he cannot see
+ Let the white man's wigwam light
+ With its blaze his steps aright.
+
+ "'All-uncalled, he dares not show
+ Empty hands to Manito
+ Better gifts he cannot bear
+ Than the scalps his slayers wear.'
+
+ "All the while the totem sang,
+ Lightning blazed and thunder rang;
+ And a black cloud, reaching high,
+ Pulled the white moon from the sky.
+
+ "I, the medicine-man, whose ear
+ All that spirits bear can hear,&mdash;
+ I, whose eyes are wide to see
+ All the things that are to be,&mdash;
+
+ "Well I knew the dreadful signs
+ In the whispers of the pines,
+ In the river roaring loud,
+ In the mutter of the cloud.
+
+ "At the breaking of the day,
+ From the grave I passed away;
+ Flowers bloomed round me, birds sang glad,
+ But my heart was hot and mad.
+
+ "There is rust on Squando's knife,
+ From the warm, red springs of life;
+ On the funeral hemlock-trees
+ Many a scalp the totem sees.
+
+ "Blood for blood! But evermore
+ Squando's heart is sad and sore;
+ And his poor squaw waits at home
+ For the feet that never come!
+
+ "Waldron of Cocheco, hear!
+ Squando speaks, who laughs at fear;
+ Take the captives he has ta'en;
+ Let the land have peace again!"
+
+ As the words died on his tongue,
+ Wide apart his warriors swung;
+ Parted, at the sign he gave,
+ Right and left, like Egypt's wave.
+
+ And, like Israel passing free
+ Through the prophet-charmed sea,
+ Captive mother, wife, and child
+ Through the dusky terror filed.
+
+ One alone, a little maid,
+ Middleway her steps delayed,
+ Glancing, with quick, troubled sight,
+ Round about from red to white.
+
+ Then his hand the Indian laid
+ On the little maiden's head,
+ Lightly from her forehead fair
+ Smoothing back her yellow hair.
+
+ "Gift or favor ask I none;
+ What I have is all my own
+ Never yet the birds have sung,
+ Squando hath a beggar's tongue.'
+
+ "Yet for her who waits at home,
+ For the dead who cannot come,
+ Let the little Gold-hair be
+ In the place of Menewee!
+
+ "Mishanock, my little star!
+ Come to Saco's pines afar;
+ Where the sad one waits at home,
+ Wequashim, my moonlight, come!"
+
+ "What!" quoth Waldron, "leave a child
+ Christian-born to heathens wild?
+ As God lives, from Satan's hand
+ I will pluck her as a brand!"
+
+ "Hear me, white man!" Squando cried;
+ "Let the little one decide.
+ Wequashim, my moonlight, say,
+ Wilt thou go with me, or stay?"
+
+ Slowly, sadly, half afraid,
+ Half regretfully, the maid
+ Owned the ties of blood and race,&mdash;
+ Turned from Squando's pleading face.
+
+ Not a word the Indian spoke,
+ But his wampum chain he broke,
+ And the beaded wonder hung
+ On that neck so fair and young.
+
+ Silence-shod, as phantoms seem
+ In the marches of a dream,
+ Single-filed, the grim array
+ Through the pine-trees wound away.
+
+ Doubting, trembling, sore amazed,
+ Through her tears the young child gazed.
+ "God preserve her!" Waldron said;
+ "Satan hath bewitched the maid!"
+
+ Years went and came. At close of day
+ Singing came a child from play,
+ Tossing from her loose-locked head
+ Gold in sunshine, brown in shade.
+
+ Pride was in the mother's look,
+ But her head she gravely shook,
+ And with lips that fondly smiled
+ Feigned to chide her truant child.
+
+ Unabashed, the maid began
+ "Up and down the brook I ran,
+ Where, beneath the bank so steep,
+ Lie the spotted trout asleep.
+
+ "'Chip!' went squirrel on the wall,
+ After me I heard him call,
+ And the cat-bird on the tree
+ Tried his best to mimic me.
+
+ "Where the hemlocks grew so dark
+ That I stopped to look and hark,
+ On a log, with feather-hat,
+ By the path, an Indian sat.
+
+ "Then I cried, and ran away;
+ But he called, and bade me stay;
+ And his voice was good and mild
+ As my mother's to her child.
+
+ "And he took my wampum chain,
+ Looked and looked it o'er again;
+ Gave me berries, and, beside,
+ On my neck a plaything tied."
+
+ Straight the mother stooped to see
+ What the Indian's gift might be.
+ On the braid of wampum hung,
+ Lo! a cross of silver swung.
+
+ Well she knew its graven sign,
+ Squando's bird and totem pine;
+ And, a mirage of the brain,
+ Flowed her childhood back again.
+
+ Flashed the roof the sunshine through,
+ Into space the walls outgrew;
+ On the Indian's wigwam-mat,
+ Blossom-crowned, again she sat.
+
+ Cool she felt the west-wind blow,
+ In her ear the pines sang low,
+ And, like links from out a chain,
+ Dropped the years of care and pain.
+ From the outward toil and din,
+ From the griefs that gnaw within,
+ To the freedom of the woods
+ Called the birds, and winds, and floods.
+
+ Well, O painful minister!
+ Watch thy flock, but blame not her,
+ If her ear grew sharp to hear
+ All their voices whispering near.
+
+ Blame her not, as to her soul
+ All the desert's glamour stole,
+ That a tear for childhood's loss
+ Dropped upon the Indian's cross.
+
+ When, that night, the Book was read,
+ And she bowed her widowed head,
+ And a prayer for each loved name
+ Rose like incense from a flame,
+
+ With a hope the creeds forbid
+ In her pitying bosom hid,
+ To the listening ear of Heaven
+ Lo! the Indian's name was given.
+
+ 1860.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0059" id="link2H_4_0059">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ MY PLAYMATE.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ THE pines were dark on Ramoth hill,
+ Their song was soft and low;
+ The blossoms in the sweet May wind
+ Were falling like the snow.
+
+ The blossoms drifted at our feet,
+ The orchard birds sang clear;
+ The sweetest and the saddest day
+ It seemed of all the year.
+
+ For, more to me than birds or flowers,
+ My playmate left her home,
+ And took with her the laughing spring,
+ The music and the bloom.
+
+ She kissed the lips of kith and kin,
+ She laid her hand in mine
+ What more could ask the bashful boy
+ Who fed her father's kine?
+
+ She left us in the bloom of May
+ The constant years told o'er
+ Their seasons with as sweet May morns,
+ But she came back no more.
+
+ I walk, with noiseless feet, the round
+ Of uneventful years;
+ Still o'er and o'er I sow the spring
+ And reap the autumn ears.
+
+ She lives where all the golden year
+ Her summer roses blow;
+ The dusky children of the sun
+ Before her come and go.
+
+ There haply with her jewelled hands
+ She smooths her silken gown,&mdash;
+ No more the homespun lap wherein
+ I shook the walnuts down.
+
+ The wild grapes wait us by the brook,
+ The brown nuts on the hill,
+ And still the May-day flowers make sweet
+ The woods of Follymill.
+
+ The lilies blossom in the pond,
+ The bird builds in the tree,
+ The dark pines sing on Ramoth hill
+ The slow song of the sea.
+
+ I wonder if she thinks of them,
+ And how the old time seems,&mdash;
+ If ever the pines of Ramoth wood
+ Are sounding in her dreams.
+
+ I see her face, I hear her voice;
+ Does she remember mine?
+ And what to her is now the boy
+ Who fed her father's kine?
+
+ What cares she that the orioles build
+ For other eyes than ours,&mdash;
+ That other hands with nuts are filled,
+ And other laps with flowers?
+
+ O playmate in the golden time!
+ Our mossy seat is green,
+ Its fringing violets blossom yet,
+ The old trees o'er it lean.
+
+ The winds so sweet with birch and fern
+ A sweeter memory blow;
+ And there in spring the veeries sing
+ The song of long ago.
+
+ And still the pines of Ramoth wood
+ Are moaning like the sea,&mdash;
+
+ The moaning of the sea of change
+ Between myself and thee!
+
+ 1860.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0060" id="link2H_4_0060">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ COBBLER KEEZAR'S VISION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ This ballad was written on the occasion of a Horticultural Festival.
+ Cobbler Keezar was a noted character among the first settlers in the
+ valley of the Merrimac.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The beaver cut his timber
+ With patient teeth that day,
+ The minks were fish-wards, and the crows
+ Surveyors of highway,&mdash;
+
+ When Keezar sat on the hillside
+ Upon his cobbler's form,
+ With a pan of coals on either hand
+ To keep his waxed-ends warm.
+
+ And there, in the golden weather,
+ He stitched and hammered and sung;
+ In the brook he moistened his leather,
+ In the pewter mug his tongue.
+
+ Well knew the tough old Teuton
+ Who brewed the stoutest ale,
+ And he paid the goodwife's reckoning
+ In the coin of song and tale.
+
+ The songs they still are singing
+ Who dress the hills of vine,
+ The tales that haunt the Brocken
+ And whisper down the Rhine.
+
+ Woodsy and wild and lonesome,
+ The swift stream wound away,
+ Through birches and scarlet maples
+ Flashing in foam and spray,&mdash;
+
+ Down on the sharp-horned ledges
+ Plunging in steep cascade,
+ Tossing its white-maned waters
+ Against the hemlock's shade.
+
+ Woodsy and wild and lonesome,
+ East and west and north and south;
+ Only the village of fishers
+ Down at the river's mouth;
+
+ Only here and there a clearing,
+ With its farm-house rude and new,
+ And tree-stumps, swart as Indians,
+ Where the scanty harvest grew.
+
+ No shout of home-bound reapers,
+ No vintage-song he heard,
+ And on the green no dancing feet
+ The merry violin stirred.
+
+ "Why should folk be glum," said Keezar,
+ "When Nature herself is glad,
+ And the painted woods are laughing
+ At the faces so sour and sad?"
+
+ Small heed had the careless cobbler
+ What sorrow of heart was theirs
+ Who travailed in pain with the births of God,
+ And planted a state with prayers,&mdash;
+
+ Hunting of witches and warlocks,
+ Smiting the heathen horde,&mdash;
+ One hand on the mason's trowel,
+ And one on the soldier's sword.
+
+ But give him his ale and cider,
+ Give him his pipe and song,
+ Little he cared for Church or State,
+ Or the balance of right and wrong.
+
+ "T is work, work, work," he muttered,&mdash;
+ "And for rest a snuffle of psalms!"
+ He smote on his leathern apron
+ With his brown and waxen palms.
+
+ "Oh for the purple harvests
+ Of the days when I was young
+ For the merry grape-stained maidens,
+ And the pleasant songs they sung!
+
+ "Oh for the breath of vineyards,
+ Of apples and nuts and wine
+ For an oar to row and a breeze to blow
+ Down the grand old river Rhine!"
+
+ A tear in his blue eye glistened,
+ And dropped on his beard so gray.
+ "Old, old am I," said Keezar,
+ "And the Rhine flows far away!"
+
+ But a cunning man was the cobbler;
+ He could call the birds from the trees,
+ Charm the black snake out of the ledges,
+ And bring back the swarming bees.
+
+ All the virtues of herbs and metals,
+ All the lore of the woods, he knew,
+ And the arts of the Old World mingle
+ With the marvels of the New.
+
+ Well he knew the tricks of magic,
+ And the lapstone on his knee
+ Had the gift of the Mormon's goggles
+ Or the stone of Doctor Dee.
+
+ For the mighty master Agrippa
+ Wrought it with spell and rhyme
+ From a fragment of mystic moonstone
+ In the tower of Nettesheim.
+
+ To a cobbler Minnesinger
+ The marvellous stone gave he,&mdash;
+ And he gave it, in turn, to Keezar,
+ Who brought it over the sea.
+
+ He held up that mystic lapstone,
+ He held it up like a lens,
+ And he counted the long years coming
+ Ey twenties and by tens.
+
+ "One hundred years," quoth Keezar,
+ "And fifty have I told
+ Now open the new before me,
+ And shut me out the old!"
+
+ Like a cloud of mist, the blackness
+ Rolled from the magic stone,
+ And a marvellous picture mingled
+ The unknown and the known.
+
+ Still ran the stream to the river,
+ And river and ocean joined;
+ And there were the bluffs and the blue sea-line,
+ And cold north hills behind.
+
+ But&mdash;the mighty forest was broken
+ By many a steepled town,
+ By many a white-walled farm-house,
+ And many a garner brown.
+
+ Turning a score of mill-wheels,
+ The stream no more ran free;
+ White sails on the winding river,
+ White sails on the far-off sea.
+
+ Below in the noisy village
+ The flags were floating gay,
+ And shone on a thousand faces
+ The light of a holiday.
+
+ Swiftly the rival ploughmen
+ Turned the brown earth from their shares;
+ Here were the farmer's treasures,
+ There were the craftsman's wares.
+
+ Golden the goodwife's butter,
+ Ruby her currant-wine;
+ Grand were the strutting turkeys,
+ Fat were the beeves and swine.
+
+ Yellow and red were the apples,
+ And the ripe pears russet-brown,
+ And the peaches had stolen blushes
+ From the girls who shook them down.
+
+ And with blooms of hill and wildwood,
+ That shame the toil of art,
+ Mingled the gorgeous blossoms
+ Of the garden's tropic heart.
+
+ "What is it I see?" said Keezar
+ "Am I here, or am I there?
+ Is it a fete at Bingen?
+ Do I look on Frankfort fair?
+
+ "But where are the clowns and puppets,
+ And imps with horns and tail?
+ And where are the Rhenish flagons?
+ And where is the foaming ale?
+
+ "Strange things, I know, will happen,&mdash;
+ Strange things the Lord permits;
+ But that droughty folk should be jolly
+ Puzzles my poor old wits.
+
+ "Here are smiling manly faces,
+ And the maiden's step is gay;
+ Nor sad by thinking, nor mad by drinking,
+ Nor mopes, nor fools, are they.
+
+ "Here's pleasure without regretting,
+ And good without abuse,
+ The holiday and the bridal
+ Of beauty and of use.
+
+ "Here's a priest and there is a Quaker,
+ Do the cat and dog agree?
+ Have they burned the stocks for ovenwood?
+ Have they cut down the gallows-tree?
+
+ "Would the old folk know their children?
+ Would they own the graceless town,
+ With never a ranter to worry
+ And never a witch to drown?"
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Loud laughed the cobbler Keezar,
+ Laughed like a school-boy gay;
+ Tossing his arms above him,
+ The lapstone rolled away.
+
+ It rolled down the rugged hillside,
+ It spun like a wheel bewitched,
+ It plunged through the leaning willows,
+ And into the river pitched.
+
+ There, in the deep, dark water,
+ The magic stone lies still,
+ Under the leaning willows
+ In the shadow of the hill.
+
+ But oft the idle fisher
+ Sits on the shadowy bank,
+ And his dreams make marvellous pictures
+ Where the wizard's lapstone sank.
+
+ And still, in the summer twilights,
+ When the river seems to run
+ Out from the inner glory,
+ Warm with the melted sun,
+
+ The weary mill-girl lingers
+ Beside the charmed stream,
+ And the sky and the golden water
+ Shape and color her dream.
+
+ Air wave the sunset gardens,
+ The rosy signals fly;
+ Her homestead beckons from the cloud,
+ And love goes sailing by.
+
+ 1861.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0061" id="link2H_4_0061">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ AMY WENTWORTH
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ TO WILLIAM BRADFORD.
+ </h3>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ As they who watch by sick-beds find relief
+ Unwittingly from the great stress of grief
+ And anxious care, in fantasies outwrought
+ From the hearth's embers flickering low, or caught
+ From whispering wind, or tread of passing feet,
+ Or vagrant memory calling up some sweet
+ Snatch of old song or romance, whence or why
+ They scarcely know or ask,&mdash;so, thou and I,
+ Nursed in the faith that Truth alone is strong
+ In the endurance which outwearies Wrong,
+ With meek persistence baffling brutal force,
+ And trusting God against the universe,&mdash;
+ We, doomed to watch a strife we may not share
+ With other weapons than the patriot's prayer,
+ Yet owning, with full hearts and moistened eyes,
+ The awful beauty of self-sacrifice,
+ And wrung by keenest sympathy for all
+ Who give their loved ones for the living wall
+ 'Twixt law and treason,&mdash;in this evil day
+ May haply find, through automatic play
+ Of pen and pencil, solace to our pain,
+ And hearten others with the strength we gain.
+ I know it has been said our times require
+ No play of art, nor dalliance with the lyre,
+ No weak essay with Fancy's chloroform
+ To calm the hot, mad pulses of the storm,
+ But the stern war-blast rather, such as sets
+ The battle's teeth of serried bayonets,
+ And pictures grim as Vernet's. Yet with these
+ Some softer tints may blend, and milder keys
+ Relieve the storm-stunned ear. Let us keep sweet,
+ If so we may, our hearts, even while we eat
+ The bitter harvest of our own device
+ And half a century's moral cowardice.
+ As Nurnberg sang while Wittenberg defied,
+ And Kranach painted by his Luther's side,
+ And through the war-march of the Puritan
+ The silver stream of Marvell's music ran,
+ So let the household melodies be sung,
+ The pleasant pictures on the wall be hung&mdash;
+ So let us hold against the hosts of night
+ And slavery all our vantage-ground of light.
+ Let Treason boast its savagery, and shake
+ From its flag-folds its symbol rattlesnake,
+ Nurse its fine arts, lay human skins in tan,
+ And carve its pipe-bowls from the bones of man,
+ And make the tale of Fijian banquets dull
+ By drinking whiskey from a loyal skull,&mdash;
+ But let us guard, till this sad war shall cease,
+ (God grant it soon!) the graceful arts of peace
+ No foes are conquered who the victors teach
+ Their vandal manners and barbaric speech.
+
+ And while, with hearts of thankfulness, we bear
+ Of the great common burden our full share,
+ Let none upbraid us that the waves entice
+ Thy sea-dipped pencil, or some quaint device,
+ Rhythmic, and sweet, beguiles my pen away
+ From the sharp strifes and sorrows of to-day.
+ Thus, while the east-wind keen from Labrador
+ Sings it the leafless elms, and from the shore
+ Of the great sea comes the monotonous roar
+ Of the long-breaking surf, and all the sky
+ Is gray with cloud, home-bound and dull, I try
+ To time a simple legend to the sounds
+ Of winds in the woods, and waves on pebbled bounds,&mdash;
+ A song for oars to chime with, such as might
+ Be sung by tired sea-painters, who at night
+ Look from their hemlock camps, by quiet cove
+ Or beach, moon-lighted, on the waves they love.
+ (So hast thou looked, when level sunset lay
+ On the calm bosom of some Eastern bay,
+ And all the spray-moist rocks and waves that rolled
+ Up the white sand-slopes flashed with ruddy gold.)
+ Something it has&mdash;a flavor of the sea,
+ And the sea's freedom&mdash;which reminds of thee.
+ Its faded picture, dimly smiling down
+ From the blurred fresco of the ancient town,
+ I have not touched with warmer tints in vain,
+ If, in this dark, sad year, it steals one thought
+ from pain.
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . . .
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Her fingers shame the ivory keys
+ They dance so light along;
+ The bloom upon her parted lips
+ Is sweeter than the song.
+
+ O perfumed suitor, spare thy smiles!
+ Her thoughts are not of thee;
+ She better loves the salted wind,
+ The voices of the sea.
+
+ Her heart is like an outbound ship
+ That at its anchor swings;
+ The murmur of the stranded shell
+ Is in the song she sings.
+
+ She sings, and, smiling, hears her praise,
+ But dreams the while of one
+ Who watches from his sea-blown deck
+ The icebergs in the sun.
+
+ She questions all the winds that blow,
+ And every fog-wreath dim,
+ And bids the sea-birds flying north
+ Bear messages to him.
+
+ She speeds them with the thanks of men
+ He perilled life to save,
+ And grateful prayers like holy oil
+ To smooth for him the wave.
+
+ Brown Viking of the fishing-smack!
+ Fair toast of all the town!&mdash;
+ The skipper's jerkin ill beseems
+ The lady's silken gown!
+
+ But ne'er shall Amy Wentworth wear
+ For him the blush of shame
+ Who dares to set his manly gifts
+ Against her ancient name.
+
+ The stream is brightest at its spring,
+ And blood is not like wine;
+ Nor honored less than he who heirs
+ Is he who founds a line.
+
+ Full lightly shall the prize be won,
+ If love be Fortune's spur;
+ And never maiden stoops to him
+ Who lifts himself to her.
+
+ Her home is brave in Jaffrey Street,
+ With stately stairways worn
+ By feet of old Colonial knights
+ And ladies gentle-born.
+
+ Still green about its ample porch
+ The English ivy twines,
+ Trained back to show in English oak
+ The herald's carven signs.
+
+ And on her, from the wainscot old,
+ Ancestral faces frown,&mdash;
+ And this has worn the soldier's sword,
+ And that the judge's gown.
+
+ But, strong of will and proud as they,
+ She walks the gallery floor
+ As if she trod her sailor's deck
+ By stormy Labrador.
+
+ The sweetbrier blooms on Kittery-side,
+ And green are Elliot's bowers;
+ Her garden is the pebbled beach,
+ The mosses are her flowers.
+
+ She looks across the harbor-bar
+ To see the white gulls fly;
+ His greeting from the Northern sea
+ Is in their clanging cry.
+
+ She hums a song, and dreams that he,
+ As in its romance old,
+ Shall homeward ride with silken sails
+ And masts of beaten gold!
+
+ Oh, rank is good, and gold is fair,
+ And high and low mate ill;
+ But love has never known a law
+ Beyond its own sweet will!
+
+ 1862.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0062" id="link2H_4_0062">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE COUNTESS.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ TO E. W.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I inscribed this poem to Dr. Elias Weld of Haverhill, Massachusetts, to
+ whose kindness I was much indebted in my boyhood. He was the one
+ cultivated man in the neighborhood. His small but well-chosen library was
+ placed at my disposal. He is the "wise old doctor" of Snow-Bound. Count
+ Francois de Vipart with his cousin Joseph Rochemont de Poyen came to the
+ United States in the early part of the present century. They took up their
+ residence at Rocks Village on the Merrimac, where they both married. The
+ wife of Count Vipart was Mary Ingalls, who as my father remembered her was
+ a very lovely young girl. Her wedding dress, as described by a lady still
+ living, was "pink satin with an overdress of white lace, and white satin
+ slippers." She died in less than a year after her marriage. Her husband
+ returned to his native country. He lies buried in the family tomb of the
+ Viparts at Bordeaux.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ I KNOW not, Time and Space so intervene,
+ Whether, still waiting with a trust serene,
+ Thou bearest up thy fourscore years and ten,
+ Or, called at last, art now Heaven's citizen;
+ But, here or there, a pleasant thought of thee,
+ Like an old friend, all day has been with me.
+ The shy, still boy, for whom thy kindly hand
+ Smoothed his hard pathway to the wonder-land
+ Of thought and fancy, in gray manhood yet
+ Keeps green the memory of his early debt.
+ To-day, when truth and falsehood speak their words
+ Through hot-lipped cannon and the teeth of swords,
+ Listening with quickened heart and ear intent
+ To each sharp clause of that stern argument,
+ I still can hear at times a softer note
+ Of the old pastoral music round me float,
+ While through the hot gleam of our civil strife
+ Looms the green mirage of a simpler life.
+ As, at his alien post, the sentinel
+ Drops the old bucket in the homestead well,
+ And hears old voices in the winds that toss
+ Above his head the live-oak's beard of moss,
+ So, in our trial-time, and under skies
+ Shadowed by swords like Islam's paradise,
+ I wait and watch, and let my fancy stray
+ To milder scenes and youth's Arcadian day;
+ And howsoe'er the pencil dipped in dreams
+ Shades the brown woods or tints the sunset streams,
+ The country doctor in the foreground seems,
+ Whose ancient sulky down the village lanes
+ Dragged, like a war-car, captive ills and pains.
+ I could not paint the scenery of my song,
+ Mindless of one who looked thereon so long;
+ Who, night and day, on duty's lonely round,
+ Made friends o' the woods and rocks, and knew the sound
+ Of each small brook, and what the hillside trees
+ Said to the winds that touched their leafy keys;
+ Who saw so keenly and so well could paint
+ The village-folk, with all their humors quaint,
+ The parson ambling on his wall-eyed roan.
+ Grave and erect, with white hair backward blown;
+ The tough old boatman, half amphibious grown;
+ The muttering witch-wife of the gossip's tale,
+ And the loud straggler levying his blackmail,&mdash;
+ Old customs, habits, superstitions, fears,
+ All that lies buried under fifty years.
+ To thee, as is most fit, I bring my lay,
+ And, grateful, own the debt I cannot pay.
+
+ . . . . . . . . . .
+
+ Over the wooded northern ridge,
+ Between its houses brown,
+ To the dark tunnel of the bridge
+ The street comes straggling down.
+
+ You catch a glimpse, through birch and pine,
+ Of gable, roof, and porch,
+ The tavern with its swinging sign,
+ The sharp horn of the church.
+
+ The river's steel-blue crescent curves
+ To meet, in ebb and flow,
+ The single broken wharf that serves
+ For sloop and gundelow.
+
+ With salt sea-scents along its shores
+ The heavy hay-boats crawl,
+ The long antennae of their oars
+ In lazy rise and fall.
+
+ Along the gray abutment's wall
+ The idle shad-net dries;
+ The toll-man in his cobbler's stall
+ Sits smoking with closed eyes.
+
+ You hear the pier's low undertone
+ Of waves that chafe and gnaw;
+ You start,&mdash;a skipper's horn is blown
+ To raise the creaking draw.
+
+ At times a blacksmith's anvil sounds
+ With slow and sluggard beat,
+ Or stage-coach on its dusty rounds
+ Fakes up the staring street.
+
+ A place for idle eyes and ears,
+ A cobwebbed nook of dreams;
+ Left by the stream whose waves are years
+ The stranded village seems.
+
+ And there, like other moss and rust,
+ The native dweller clings,
+ And keeps, in uninquiring trust,
+ The old, dull round of things.
+
+ The fisher drops his patient lines,
+ The farmer sows his grain,
+ Content to hear the murmuring pines
+ Instead of railroad-train.
+
+ Go where, along the tangled steep
+ That slopes against the west,
+ The hamlet's buried idlers sleep
+ In still profounder rest.
+
+ Throw back the locust's flowery plume,
+ The birch's pale-green scarf,
+ And break the web of brier and bloom
+ From name and epitaph.
+
+ A simple muster-roll of death,
+ Of pomp and romance shorn,
+ The dry, old names that common breath
+ Has cheapened and outworn.
+
+ Yet pause by one low mound, and part
+ The wild vines o'er it laced,
+ And read the words by rustic art
+ Upon its headstone traced.
+
+ Haply yon white-haired villager
+ Of fourscore years can say
+ What means the noble name of her
+ Who sleeps with common clay.
+
+ An exile from the Gascon land
+ Found refuge here and rest,
+ And loved, of all the village band,
+ Its fairest and its best.
+
+ He knelt with her on Sabbath morns,
+ He worshipped through her eyes,
+ And on the pride that doubts and scorns
+ Stole in her faith's surprise.
+
+ Her simple daily life he saw
+ By homeliest duties tried,
+ In all things by an untaught law
+ Of fitness justified.
+
+ For her his rank aside he laid;
+ He took the hue and tone
+ Of lowly life and toil, and made
+ Her simple ways his own.
+
+ Yet still, in gay and careless ease,
+ To harvest-field or dance
+ He brought the gentle courtesies,
+ The nameless grace of France.
+
+ And she who taught him love not less
+ From him she loved in turn
+ Caught in her sweet unconsciousness
+ What love is quick to learn.
+
+ Each grew to each in pleased accord,
+ Nor knew the gazing town
+ If she looked upward to her lord
+ Or he to her looked down.
+
+ How sweet, when summer's day was o'er,
+ His violin's mirth and wail,
+ The walk on pleasant Newbury's shore,
+ The river's moonlit sail!
+
+ Ah! life is brief, though love be long;
+ The altar and the bier,
+ The burial hymn and bridal song,
+ Were both in one short year!
+
+ Her rest is quiet on the hill,
+ Beneath the locust's bloom
+ Far off her lover sleeps as still
+ Within his scutcheoned tomb.
+
+ The Gascon lord, the village maid,
+ In death still clasp their hands;
+ The love that levels rank and grade
+ Unites their severed lands.
+
+ What matter whose the hillside grave,
+ Or whose the blazoned stone?
+ Forever to her western wave
+ Shall whisper blue Garonne!
+
+ O Love!&mdash;so hallowing every soil
+ That gives thy sweet flower room,
+ Wherever, nursed by ease or toil,
+ The human heart takes bloom!&mdash;
+
+ Plant of lost Eden, from the sod
+ Of sinful earth unriven,
+ White blossom of the trees of God
+ Dropped down to us from heaven!
+
+ This tangled waste of mound and stone
+ Is holy for thy sale;
+ A sweetness which is all thy own
+ Breathes out from fern and brake.
+
+ And while ancestral pride shall twine
+ The Gascon's tomb with flowers,
+ Fall sweetly here, O song of mine,
+ With summer's bloom and showers!
+
+ And let the lines that severed seem
+ Unite again in thee,
+ As western wave and Gallic stream
+ Are mingled in one sea!
+
+ 1863.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0063" id="link2H_4_0063">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ AMONG THE HILLS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ This poem, when originally published, was dedicated to Annie Fields, wife
+ of the distinguished publisher, James T. Fields, of Boston, in grateful
+ acknowledgment of the strength and inspiration I have found in her
+ friendship and sympathy. The poem in its first form was entitled The Wife:
+ an Idyl of Bearcamp Water, and appeared in The Atlantic Monthly for
+ January, 1868. When I published the volume Among the Hills, in December of
+ the same year, I expanded the Prelude and filled out also the outlines of
+ the story.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ PRELUDE.
+
+ ALONG the roadside, like the flowers of gold
+ That tawny Incas for their gardens wrought,
+ Heavy with sunshine droops the golden-rod,
+ And the red pennons of the cardinal-flowers
+ Hang motionless upon their upright staves.
+ The sky is hot and hazy, and the wind,
+ Vying-weary with its long flight from the south,
+ Unfelt; yet, closely scanned, yon maple leaf
+ With faintest motion, as one stirs in dreams,
+ Confesses it. The locust by the wall
+ Stabs the noon-silence with his sharp alarm.
+ A single hay-cart down the dusty road
+ Creaks slowly, with its driver fast asleep
+ On the load's top. Against the neighboring hill,
+ Huddled along the stone wall's shady side,
+ The sheep show white, as if a snowdrift still
+ Defied the dog-star. Through the open door
+ A drowsy smell of flowers-gray heliotrope,
+ And white sweet clover, and shy mignonette&mdash;
+ Comes faintly in, and silent chorus lends
+ To the pervading symphony of peace.
+ No time is this for hands long over-worn
+ To task their strength; and (unto Him be praise
+ Who giveth quietness!) the stress and strain
+ Of years that did the work of centuries
+ Have ceased, and we can draw our breath once more
+ Freely and full. So, as yon harvesters
+ Make glad their nooning underneath the elms
+ With tale and riddle and old snatch of song,
+ I lay aside grave themes, and idly turn
+ The leaves of memory's sketch-book, dreaming o'er
+ Old summer pictures of the quiet hills,
+ And human life, as quiet, at their feet.
+
+ And yet not idly all. A farmer's son,
+ Proud of field-lore and harvest craft, and feeling
+ All their fine possibilities, how rich
+ And restful even poverty and toil
+ Become when beauty, harmony, and love
+ Sit at their humble hearth as angels sat
+ At evening in the patriarch's tent, when man
+ Makes labor noble, and his farmer's frock
+ The symbol of a Christian chivalry
+ Tender and just and generous to her
+ Who clothes with grace all duty; still, I know
+ Too well the picture has another side,&mdash;
+ How wearily the grind of toil goes on
+ Where love is wanting, how the eye and ear
+ And heart are starved amidst the plenitude
+ Of nature, and how hard and colorless
+ Is life without an atmosphere. I look
+ Across the lapse of half a century,
+ And call to mind old homesteads, where no flower
+ Told that the spring had come, but evil weeds,
+ Nightshade and rough-leaved burdock in the place
+ Of the sweet doorway greeting of the rose
+ And honeysuckle, where the house walls seemed
+ Blistering in sun, without a tree or vine
+ To cast the tremulous shadow of its leaves
+ Across the curtainless windows, from whose panes
+ Fluttered the signal rags of shiftlessness.
+ Within, the cluttered kitchen-floor, unwashed
+ (Broom-clean I think they called it); the best room
+ Stifling with cellar damp, shut from the air
+ In hot midsummer, bookless, pictureless,
+ Save the inevitable sampler hung
+ Over the fireplace, or a mourning piece,
+ A green-haired woman, peony-cheeked, beneath
+ Impossible willows; the wide-throated hearth
+ Bristling with faded pine-boughs half concealing
+ The piled-up rubbish at the chimney's back;
+ And, in sad keeping with all things about them,
+ Shrill, querulous-women, sour and sullen men,
+ Untidy, loveless, old before their time,
+ With scarce a human interest save their own
+ Monotonous round of small economies,
+ Or the poor scandal of the neighborhood;
+ Blind to the beauty everywhere revealed,
+ Treading the May-flowers with regardless feet;
+ For them the song-sparrow and the bobolink
+ Sang not, nor winds made music in the leaves;
+ For them in vain October's holocaust
+ Burned, gold and crimson, over all the hills,
+ The sacramental mystery of the woods.
+ Church-goers, fearful of the unseen Powers,
+ But grumbling over pulpit-tax and pew-rent,
+ Saving, as shrewd economists, their souls
+ And winter pork with the least possible outlay
+ Of salt and sanctity; in daily life
+ Showing as little actual comprehension
+ Of Christian charity and love and duty,
+ As if the Sermon on the Mount had been
+ Outdated like a last year's almanac
+ Rich in broad woodlands and in half-tilled fields,
+ And yet so pinched and bare and comfortless,
+ The veriest straggler limping on his rounds,
+ The sun and air his sole inheritance,
+ Laughed at a poverty that paid its taxes,
+ And hugged his rags in self-complacency!
+
+ Not such should be the homesteads of a land
+ Where whoso wisely wills and acts may dwell
+ As king and lawgiver, in broad-acred state,
+ With beauty, art, taste, culture, books, to make
+ His hour of leisure richer than a life
+ Of fourscore to the barons of old time,
+ Our yeoman should be equal to his home
+ Set in the fair, green valleys, purple walled,
+ A man to match his mountains, not to creep
+ Dwarfed and abased below them. I would fain
+ In this light way (of which I needs must own
+ With the knife-grinder of whom Canning sings,
+ "Story, God bless you! I have none to tell you!")
+ Invite the eye to see and heart to feel
+ The beauty and the joy within their reach,&mdash;
+ Home, and home loves, and the beatitudes
+ Of nature free to all. Haply in years
+ That wait to take the places of our own,
+ Heard where some breezy balcony looks down
+ On happy homes, or where the lake in the moon
+ Sleeps dreaming of the mountains, fair as Ruth,
+ In the old Hebrew pastoral, at the feet
+ Of Boaz, even this simple lay of mine
+ May seem the burden of a prophecy,
+ Finding its late fulfilment in a change
+ Slow as the oak's growth, lifting manhood up
+ Through broader culture, finer manners, love,
+ And reverence, to the level of the hills.
+
+ O Golden Age, whose light is of the dawn,
+ And not of sunset, forward, not behind,
+ Flood the new heavens and earth, and with thee bring
+ All the old virtues, whatsoever things
+ Are pure and honest and of good repute,
+ But add thereto whatever bard has sung
+ Or seer has told of when in trance and dream
+ They saw the Happy Isles of prophecy
+ Let Justice hold her scale, and Truth divide
+ Between the right and wrong; but give the heart
+ The freedom of its fair inheritance;
+ Let the poor prisoner, cramped and starved so long,
+ At Nature's table feast his ear and eye
+ With joy and wonder; let all harmonies
+ Of sound, form, color, motion, wait upon
+ The princely guest, whether in soft attire
+ Of leisure clad, or the coarse frock of toil,
+ And, lending life to the dead form of faith,
+ Give human nature reverence for the sake
+ Of One who bore it, making it divine
+ With the ineffable tenderness of God;
+ Let common need, the brotherhood of prayer,
+ The heirship of an unknown destiny,
+ The unsolved mystery round about us, make
+ A man more precious than the gold of Ophir.
+ Sacred, inviolate, unto whom all things
+ Should minister, as outward types and signs
+ Of the eternal beauty which fulfils
+ The one great purpose of creation, Love,
+ The sole necessity of Earth and Heaven!
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+ For weeks the clouds had raked the hills
+ And vexed the vales with raining,
+ And all the woods were sad with mist,
+ And all the brooks complaining.
+
+ At last, a sudden night-storm tore
+ The mountain veils asunder,
+ And swept the valleys clean before
+ The besom of the thunder.
+
+ Through Sandwich notch the west-wind sang
+ Good morrow to the cotter;
+ And once again Chocorua's horn
+ Of shadow pierced the water.
+
+ Above his broad lake Ossipee,
+ Once more the sunshine wearing,
+ Stooped, tracing on that silver shield
+ His grim armorial bearing.
+
+ Clear drawn against the hard blue sky,
+ The peaks had winter's keenness;
+ And, close on autumn's frost, the vales
+ Had more than June's fresh greenness.
+
+ Again the sodden forest floors
+ With golden lights were checkered,
+ Once more rejoicing leaves in wind
+ And sunshine danced and flickered.
+
+ It was as if the summer's late
+ Atoning for it's sadness
+ Had borrowed every season's charm
+ To end its days in gladness.
+
+ Rivers of gold-mist flowing down
+ From far celestial fountains,&mdash;
+ The great sun flaming through the rifts
+ Beyond the wall of mountains.
+
+ We paused at last where home-bound cows
+ Brought down the pasture's treasure,
+ And in the barn the rhythmic flails
+ Beat out a harvest measure.
+
+ We heard the night-hawk's sullen plunge,
+ The crow his tree-mates calling
+ The shadows lengthening down the slopes
+ About our feet were falling.
+
+ And through them smote the level sun
+ In broken lines of splendor,
+ Touched the gray rocks and made the green
+ Of the shorn grass more tender.
+
+ The maples bending o'er the gate,
+ Their arch of leaves just tinted
+ With yellow warmth, the golden glow
+ Of coming autumn hinted.
+
+ Keen white between the farm-house showed,
+ And smiled on porch and trellis,
+ The fair democracy of flowers
+ That equals cot and palace.
+
+ And weaving garlands for her dog,
+ 'Twixt chidings and caresses,
+ A human flower of childhood shook
+ The sunshine from her tresses.
+
+ Clear drawn against the hard blue sky,
+ The peaks had winter's keenness;
+ And, close on autumn's frost, the vales
+ Had more than June's fresh greenness.
+
+ Again the sodden forest floors
+ With golden lights were checkered,
+ Once more rejoicing leaves in wind
+ And sunshine danced and flickered.
+
+ It was as if the summer's late
+ Atoning for it's sadness
+ Had borrowed every season's charm
+ To end its days in gladness.
+
+ I call to mind those banded vales
+ Of shadow and of shining,
+ Through which, my hostess at my side,
+ I drove in day's declining.
+
+ We held our sideling way above
+ The river's whitening shallows,
+ By homesteads old, with wide-flung barns
+ Swept through and through by swallows;
+
+ By maple orchards, belts of pine
+ And larches climbing darkly
+ The mountain slopes, and, over all,
+ The great peaks rising starkly.
+
+ You should have seen that long hill-range
+ With gaps of brightness riven,&mdash;
+ How through each pass and hollow streamed
+ The purpling lights of heaven,&mdash;
+
+ On either hand we saw the signs
+ Of fancy and of shrewdness,
+ Where taste had wound its arms of vines
+ Round thrift's uncomely rudeness.
+
+ The sun-brown farmer in his frock
+ Shook hands, and called to Mary
+ Bare-armed, as Juno might, she came,
+ White-aproned from her dairy.
+
+ Her air, her smile, her motions, told
+ Of womanly completeness;
+ A music as of household songs
+ Was in her voice of sweetness.
+
+ Not fair alone in curve and line,
+ But something more and better,
+ The secret charm eluding art,
+ Its spirit, not its letter;&mdash;
+
+ An inborn grace that nothing lacked
+ Of culture or appliance,
+ The warmth of genial courtesy,
+ The calm of self-reliance.
+
+ Before her queenly womanhood
+ How dared our hostess utter
+ The paltry errand of her need
+ To buy her fresh-churned butter?
+
+ She led the way with housewife pride,
+ Her goodly store disclosing,
+ Full tenderly the golden balls
+ With practised hands disposing.
+
+ Then, while along the western hills
+ We watched the changeful glory
+ Of sunset, on our homeward way,
+ I heard her simple story.
+
+ The early crickets sang; the stream
+ Plashed through my friend's narration
+ Her rustic patois of the hills
+ Lost in my free-translation.
+
+ "More wise," she said, "than those who swarm
+ Our hills in middle summer,
+ She came, when June's first roses blow,
+ To greet the early comer.
+
+ "From school and ball and rout she came,
+ The city's fair, pale daughter,
+ To drink the wine of mountain air
+ Beside the Bearcamp Water.
+
+ "Her step grew firmer on the hills
+ That watch our homesteads over;
+ On cheek and lip, from summer fields,
+ She caught the bloom of clover.
+
+ "For health comes sparkling in the streams
+ From cool Chocorua stealing
+ There's iron in our Northern winds;
+ Our pines are trees of healing.
+
+ "She sat beneath the broad-armed elms
+ That skirt the mowing-meadow,
+ And watched the gentle west-wind weave
+ The grass with shine and shadow.
+
+ "Beside her, from the summer heat
+ To share her grateful screening,
+ With forehead bared, the farmer stood,
+ Upon his pitchfork leaning.
+
+ "Framed in its damp, dark locks, his face
+ Had nothing mean or common,&mdash;
+ Strong, manly, true, the tenderness
+ And pride beloved of woman.
+
+ "She looked up, glowing with the health
+ The country air had brought her,
+ And, laughing, said: 'You lack a wife,
+ Your mother lacks a daughter.
+
+ "'To mend your frock and bake your bread
+ You do not need a lady
+ Be sure among these brown old homes
+ Is some one waiting ready,&mdash;
+
+ "'Some fair, sweet girl with skilful hand
+ And cheerful heart for treasure,
+ Who never played with ivory keys,
+ Or danced the polka's measure.'
+
+ "He bent his black brows to a frown,
+ He set his white teeth tightly.
+ ''T is well,' he said, 'for one like you
+ To choose for me so lightly.
+
+ "You think, because my life is rude
+ I take no note of sweetness
+ I tell you love has naught to do
+ With meetness or unmeetness.
+
+ "'Itself its best excuse, it asks
+ No leave of pride or fashion
+ When silken zone or homespun frock
+ It stirs with throbs of passion.
+
+ "'You think me deaf and blind: you bring
+ Your winning graces hither
+ As free as if from cradle-time
+ We two had played together.
+
+ "'You tempt me with your laughing eyes,
+ Your cheek of sundown's blushes,
+ A motion as of waving grain,
+ A music as of thrushes.
+
+ "'The plaything of your summer sport,
+ The spells you weave around me
+ You cannot at your will undo,
+ Nor leave me as you found me.
+
+ "'You go as lightly as you came,
+ Your life is well without me;
+ What care you that these hills will close
+ Like prison-walls about me?
+
+ "'No mood is mine to seek a wife,
+ Or daughter for my mother
+ Who loves you loses in that love
+ All power to love another!
+
+ "'I dare your pity or your scorn,
+ With pride your own exceeding;
+ I fling my heart into your lap
+ Without a word of pleading.'
+
+ "She looked up in his face of pain
+ So archly, yet so tender
+ 'And if I lend you mine,' she said,
+ 'Will you forgive the lender?
+
+ "'Nor frock nor tan can hide the man;
+ And see you not, my farmer,
+ How weak and fond a woman waits
+ Behind this silken armor?
+
+ "'I love you: on that love alone,
+ And not my worth, presuming,
+ Will you not trust for summer fruit
+ The tree in May-day blooming?'
+
+ "Alone the hangbird overhead,
+ His hair-swung cradle straining,
+ Looked down to see love's miracle,&mdash;
+ The giving that is gaining.
+
+ "And so the farmer found a wife,
+ His mother found a daughter
+ There looks no happier home than hers
+ On pleasant Bearcamp Water.
+
+ "Flowers spring to blossom where she walks
+ The careful ways of duty;
+ Our hard, stiff lines of life with her
+ Are flowing curves of beauty.
+
+ "Our homes are cheerier for her sake,
+ Our door-yards brighter blooming,
+ And all about the social air
+ Is sweeter for her coming.
+
+ "Unspoken homilies of peace
+ Her daily life is preaching;
+ The still refreshment of the dew
+ Is her unconscious teaching.
+
+ "And never tenderer hand than hers
+ Unknits the brow of ailing;
+ Her garments to the sick man's ear
+ Have music in their trailing.
+
+ "And when, in pleasant harvest moons,
+ The youthful huskers gather,
+ Or sleigh-drives on the mountain ways
+ Defy the winter weather,&mdash;
+
+ "In sugar-camps, when south and warm
+ The winds of March are blowing,
+ And sweetly from its thawing veins
+ The maple's blood is flowing,&mdash;
+
+ "In summer, where some lilied pond
+ Its virgin zone is baring,
+ Or where the ruddy autumn fire
+ Lights up the apple-paring,&mdash;
+
+ "The coarseness of a ruder time
+ Her finer mirth displaces,
+ A subtler sense of pleasure fills
+ Each rustic sport she graces.
+
+ "Her presence lends its warmth and health
+ To all who come before it.
+ If woman lost us Eden, such
+ As she alone restore it.
+
+ "For larger life and wiser aims
+ The farmer is her debtor;
+ Who holds to his another's heart
+ Must needs be worse or better.
+
+ "Through her his civic service shows
+ A purer-toned ambition;
+ No double consciousness divides
+ The man and politician.
+
+ "In party's doubtful ways he trusts
+ Her instincts to determine;
+ At the loud polls, the thought of her
+ Recalls Christ's Mountain Sermon.
+
+ "He owns her logic of the heart,
+ And wisdom of unreason,
+ Supplying, while he doubts and weighs,
+ The needed word in season.
+
+ "He sees with pride her richer thought,
+ Her fancy's freer ranges;
+ And love thus deepened to respect
+ Is proof against all changes.
+
+ "And if she walks at ease in ways
+ His feet are slow to travel,
+ And if she reads with cultured eyes
+ What his may scarce unravel,
+
+ "Still clearer, for her keener sight
+ Of beauty and of wonder,
+ He learns the meaning of the hills
+ He dwelt from childhood under.
+
+ "And higher, warmed with summer lights,
+ Or winter-crowned and hoary,
+ The ridged horizon lifts for him
+ Its inner veils of glory.
+
+ "He has his own free, bookless lore,
+ The lessons nature taught him,
+ The wisdom which the woods and hills
+ And toiling men have brought him:
+
+ "The steady force of will whereby
+ Her flexile grace seems sweeter;
+ The sturdy counterpoise which makes
+ Her woman's life completer.
+
+ "A latent fire of soul which lacks
+ No breath of love to fan it;
+ And wit, that, like his native brooks,
+ Plays over solid granite.
+
+ "How dwarfed against his manliness
+ She sees the poor pretension,
+ The wants, the aims, the follies, born
+ Of fashion and convention.
+
+ "How life behind its accidents
+ Stands strong and self-sustaining,
+ The human fact transcending all
+ The losing and the gaining.
+
+ "And so in grateful interchange
+ Of teacher and of hearer,
+ Their lives their true distinctness keep
+ While daily drawing nearer.
+
+ "And if the husband or the wife
+ In home's strong light discovers
+ Such slight defaults as failed to meet
+ The blinded eyes of lovers,
+
+ "Why need we care to ask?&mdash;who dreams
+ Without their thorns of roses,
+ Or wonders that the truest steel
+ The readiest spark discloses?
+
+ "For still in mutual sufferance lies
+ The secret of true living;
+ Love scarce is love that never knows
+ The sweetness of forgiving.
+
+ "We send the Squire to General Court,
+ He takes his young wife thither;
+ No prouder man election day
+ Rides through the sweet June weather.
+
+ "He sees with eyes of manly trust
+ All hearts to her inclining;
+ Not less for him his household light
+ That others share its shining."
+
+ Thus, while my hostess spake, there grew
+ Before me, warmer tinted
+ And outlined with a tenderer grace,
+ The picture that she hinted.
+
+ The sunset smouldered as we drove
+ Beneath the deep hill-shadows.
+ Below us wreaths of white fog walked
+ Like ghosts the haunted meadows.
+
+ Sounding the summer night, the stars
+ Dropped down their golden plummets;
+ The pale arc of the Northern lights
+ Rose o'er the mountain summits,
+
+ Until, at last, beneath its bridge,
+ We heard the Bearcamp flowing,
+ And saw across the mapled lawn
+ The welcome home lights glowing.
+
+ And, musing on the tale I heard,
+ 'T were well, thought I, if often
+ To rugged farm-life came the gift
+ To harmonize and soften;
+
+ If more and more we found the troth
+ Of fact and fancy plighted,
+ And culture's charm and labor's strength
+ In rural homes united,&mdash;
+
+ The simple life, the homely hearth,
+ With beauty's sphere surrounding,
+ And blessing toil where toil abounds
+ With graces more abounding.
+
+ 1868.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0064" id="link2H_4_0064">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE DOLE OF JARL THORKELL.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ THE land was pale with famine
+ And racked with fever-pain;
+ The frozen fiords were fishless,
+ The earth withheld her grain.
+
+ Men saw the boding Fylgja
+ Before them come and go,
+ And, through their dreams, the Urdarmoon
+ From west to east sailed slow.
+
+ Jarl Thorkell of Thevera
+ At Yule-time made his vow;
+ On Rykdal's holy Doom-stone
+ He slew to Frey his cow.
+
+ To bounteous Frey he slew her;
+ To Skuld, the younger Norn,
+ Who watches over birth and death,
+ He gave her calf unborn.
+
+ And his little gold-haired daughter
+ Took up the sprinkling-rod,
+ And smeared with blood the temple
+ And the wide lips of the god.
+
+ Hoarse below, the winter water
+ Ground its ice-blocks o'er and o'er;
+ Jets of foam, like ghosts of dead waves,
+ Rose and fell along the shore.
+
+ The red torch of the Jokul,
+ Aloft in icy space,
+ Shone down on the bloody Horg-stones
+ And the statue's carven face.
+
+ And closer round and grimmer
+ Beneath its baleful light
+ The Jotun shapes of mountains
+ Came crowding through the night.
+
+ The gray-haired Hersir trembled
+ As a flame by wind is blown;
+ A weird power moved his white lips,
+ And their voice was not his own.
+
+ "The AEsir thirst!" he muttered;
+ "The gods must have more blood
+ Before the tun shall blossom
+ Or fish shall fill the flood.
+
+ "The AEsir thirst and hunger,
+ And hence our blight and ban;
+ The mouths of the strong gods water
+ For the flesh and blood of man!
+
+ "Whom shall we give the strong ones?
+ Not warriors, sword on thigh;
+ But let the nursling infant
+ And bedrid old man die."
+
+ "So be it!" cried the young men,
+ "There needs nor doubt nor parle."
+ But, knitting hard his red brows,
+ In silence stood the Jarl.
+
+ A sound of woman's weeping
+ At the temple door was heard,
+ But the old men bowed their white heads,
+ And answered not a word.
+
+ Then the Dream-wife of Thingvalla,
+ A Vala young and fair,
+ Sang softly, stirring with her breath
+ The veil of her loose hair.
+
+ She sang: "The winds from Alfheim
+ Bring never sound of strife;
+ The gifts for Frey the meetest
+ Are not of death, but life.
+
+ "He loves the grass-green meadows,
+ The grazing kine's sweet breath;
+ He loathes your bloody Horg-stones,
+ Your gifts that smell of death.
+
+ "No wrong by wrong is righted,
+ No pain is cured by pain;
+ The blood that smokes from Doom-rings
+ Falls back in redder rain.
+
+ "The gods are what you make them,
+ As earth shall Asgard prove;
+ And hate will come of hating,
+ And love will come of love.
+
+ "Make dole of skyr and black bread
+ That old and young may live;
+ And look to Frey for favor
+ When first like Frey you give.
+
+ "Even now o'er Njord's sea-meadows
+ The summer dawn begins
+ The tun shall have its harvest,
+ The fiord its glancing fins."
+
+ Then up and swore Jarl Thorkell
+ "By Gimli and by Hel,
+ O Vala of Thingvalla,
+ Thou singest wise and well!
+
+ "Too dear the AEsir's favors
+ Bought with our children's lives;
+ Better die than shame in living
+ Our mothers and our wives.
+
+ "The full shall give his portion
+ To him who hath most need;
+ Of curdled skyr and black bread,
+ Be daily dole decreed."
+
+ He broke from off his neck-chain
+ Three links of beaten gold;
+ And each man, at his bidding,
+ Brought gifts for young and old.
+
+ Then mothers nursed their children,
+ And daughters fed their sires,
+ And Health sat down with Plenty
+ Before the next Yule fires.
+
+ The Horg-stones stand in Rykdal;
+ The Doom-ring still remains;
+ But the snows of a thousand winters
+ Have washed away the stains.
+
+ Christ ruleth now; the Asir
+ Have found their twilight dim;
+ And, wiser than she dreamed, of old
+ The Vala sang of Him
+
+ 1868.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0065" id="link2H_4_0065">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE TWO RABBINS.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ THE Rabbi Nathan two-score years and ten
+ Walked blameless through the evil world, and then,
+ Just as the almond blossomed in his hair,
+ Met a temptation all too strong to bear,
+ And miserably sinned. So, adding not
+ Falsehood to guilt, he left his seat, and taught
+ No more among the elders, but went out
+ From the great congregation girt about
+ With sackcloth, and with ashes on his head,
+ Making his gray locks grayer. Long he prayed,
+ Smiting his breast; then, as the Book he laid
+ Open before him for the Bath-Col's choice,
+ Pausing to hear that Daughter of a Voice,
+ Behold the royal preacher's words: "A friend
+ Loveth at all times, yea, unto the end;
+ And for the evil day thy brother lives."
+ Marvelling, he said: "It is the Lord who gives
+ Counsel in need. At Ecbatana dwells
+ Rabbi Ben Isaac, who all men excels
+ In righteousness and wisdom, as the trees
+ Of Lebanon the small weeds that the bees
+ Bow with their weight. I will arise, and lay
+ My sins before him."
+
+ And he went his way
+ Barefooted, fasting long, with many prayers;
+ But even as one who, followed unawares,
+ Suddenly in the darkness feels a hand
+ Thrill with its touch his own, and his cheek fanned
+ By odors subtly sweet, and whispers near
+ Of words he loathes, yet cannot choose but hear,
+ So, while the Rabbi journeyed, chanting low
+ The wail of David's penitential woe,
+ Before him still the old temptation came,
+ And mocked him with the motion and the shame
+ Of such desires that, shuddering, he abhorred
+ Himself; and, crying mightily to the Lord
+ To free his soul and cast the demon out,
+ Smote with his staff the blankness round about.
+
+ At length, in the low light of a spent day,
+ The towers of Ecbatana far away
+ Rose on the desert's rim; and Nathan, faint
+ And footsore, pausing where for some dead saint
+ The faith of Islam reared a domed tomb,
+ Saw some one kneeling in the shadow, whom
+ He greeted kindly: "May the Holy One
+ Answer thy prayers, O stranger!" Whereupon
+ The shape stood up with a loud cry, and then,
+ Clasped in each other's arms, the two gray men
+ Wept, praising Him whose gracious providence
+ Made their paths one. But straightway, as the sense
+ Of his transgression smote him, Nathan tore
+ Himself away: "O friend beloved, no more
+ Worthy am I to touch thee, for I came,
+ Foul from my sins, to tell thee all my shame.
+ Haply thy prayers, since naught availeth mine,
+ May purge my soul, and make it white like thine.
+ Pity me, O Ben Isaac, I have sinned!"
+
+ Awestruck Ben Isaac stood. The desert wind
+ Blew his long mantle backward, laying bare
+ The mournful secret of his shirt of hair.
+ "I too, O friend, if not in act," he said,
+ "In thought have verily sinned. Hast thou not read,
+ 'Better the eye should see than that desire
+ Should wander?' Burning with a hidden fire
+ That tears and prayers quench not, I come to thee
+ For pity and for help, as thou to me.
+ Pray for me, O my friend!" But Nathan cried,
+ "Pray thou for me, Ben Isaac!"
+
+ Side by side
+ In the low sunshine by the turban stone
+ They knelt; each made his brother's woe his own,
+ Forgetting, in the agony and stress
+ Of pitying love, his claim of selfishness;
+ Peace, for his friend besought, his own became;
+ His prayers were answered in another's name;
+ And, when at last they rose up to embrace,
+ Each saw God's pardon in his brother's face!
+
+ Long after, when his headstone gathered moss,
+ Traced on the targum-marge of Onkelos
+ In Rabbi Nathan's hand these words were read:
+ "<i>Hope not the cure of sin till Self is dead;
+ Forget it in love's service, and the debt
+ Thou, canst not pay the angels shall forget;
+ Heaven's gate is shut to him who comes alone;
+ Save thou a soul, and it shall save thy own!</i>"
+
+ 1868.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0066" id="link2H_4_0066">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ NOREMBEGA.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Norembega, or Norimbegue, is the name given by early French fishermen and
+ explorers to a fabulous country south of Cape Breton, first discovered by
+ Verrazzani in 1524. It was supposed to have a magnificent city of the same
+ name on a great river, probably the Penobscot. The site of this barbaric
+ city is laid down on a map published at Antwerp in 1570. In 1604 Champlain
+ sailed in search of the Northern Eldorado, twenty-two leagues up the
+ Penobscot from the Isle Haute. He supposed the river to be that of
+ Norembega, but wisely came to the conclusion that those travellers who
+ told of the great city had never seen it. He saw no evidences of anything
+ like civilization, but mentions the finding of a cross, very old and
+ mossy, in the woods.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ THE winding way the serpent takes
+ The mystic water took,
+ From where, to count its beaded lakes,
+ The forest sped its brook.
+
+ A narrow space 'twixt shore and shore,
+ For sun or stars to fall,
+ While evermore, behind, before,
+ Closed in the forest wall.
+
+ The dim wood hiding underneath
+ Wan flowers without a name;
+ Life tangled with decay and death,
+ League after league the same.
+
+ Unbroken over swamp and hill
+ The rounding shadow lay,
+ Save where the river cut at will
+ A pathway to the day.
+
+ Beside that track of air and light,
+ Weak as a child unweaned,
+ At shut of day a Christian knight
+ Upon his henchman leaned.
+
+ The embers of the sunset's fires
+ Along the clouds burned down;
+ "I see," he said, "the domes and spires
+ Of Norembega town."
+
+ "Alack! the domes, O master mine,
+ Are golden clouds on high;
+ Yon spire is but the branchless pine
+ That cuts the evening sky."
+
+ "Oh, hush and hark! What sounds are these
+ But chants and holy hymns?"
+ "Thou hear'st the breeze that stirs the trees
+ Though all their leafy limbs."
+
+ "Is it a chapel bell that fills
+ The air with its low tone?"
+ "Thou hear'st the tinkle of the rills,
+ The insect's vesper drone."
+
+ "The Christ be praised!&mdash;He sets for me
+ A blessed cross in sight!"
+ "Now, nay, 't is but yon blasted tree
+ With two gaunt arms outright!"
+
+ "Be it wind so sad or tree so stark,
+ It mattereth not, my knave;
+ Methinks to funeral hymns I hark,
+ The cross is for my grave!
+
+ "My life is sped; I shall not see
+ My home-set sails again;
+ The sweetest eyes of Normandie
+ Shall watch for me in vain.
+
+ "Yet onward still to ear and eye
+ The baffling marvel calls;
+ I fain would look before I die
+ On Norembega's walls.
+
+ "So, haply, it shall be thy part
+ At Christian feet to lay
+ The mystery of the desert's heart
+ My dead hand plucked away.
+
+ "Leave me an hour of rest; go thou
+ And look from yonder heights;
+ Perchance the valley even now
+ Is starred with city lights."
+
+ The henchman climbed the nearest hill,
+ He saw nor tower nor town,
+ But, through the drear woods, lone and still,
+ The river rolling down.
+
+ He heard the stealthy feet of things
+ Whose shapes he could not see,
+ A flutter as of evil wings,
+ The fall of a dead tree.
+
+ The pines stood black against the moon,
+ A sword of fire beyond;
+ He heard the wolf howl, and the loon
+ Laugh from his reedy pond.
+
+ He turned him back: "O master dear,
+ We are but men misled;
+ And thou hast sought a city here
+ To find a grave instead."
+
+ "As God shall will! what matters where
+ A true man's cross may stand,
+ So Heaven be o'er it here as there
+ In pleasant Norman land?
+
+ "These woods, perchance, no secret hide
+ Of lordly tower and hall;
+ Yon river in its wanderings wide
+ Has washed no city wall;
+
+ "Yet mirrored in the sullen stream
+ The holy stars are given
+ Is Norembega, then, a dream
+ Whose waking is in Heaven?
+
+ "No builded wonder of these lands
+ My weary eyes shall see;
+ A city never made with hands
+ Alone awaiteth me&mdash;
+
+ "'<i>Urbs Syon mystica</i>;' I see
+ Its mansions passing fair,
+ '<i>Condita caelo</i>;' let me be,
+ Dear Lord, a dweller there!"
+
+ Above the dying exile hung
+ The vision of the bard,
+ As faltered on his failing tongue
+ The song of good Bernard.
+
+ The henchman dug at dawn a grave
+ Beneath the hemlocks brown,
+ And to the desert's keeping gave
+ The lord of fief and town.
+
+ Years after, when the Sieur Champlain
+ Sailed up the unknown stream,
+ And Norembega proved again
+ A shadow and a dream,
+
+ He found the Norman's nameless grave
+ Within the hemlock's shade,
+ And, stretching wide its arms to save,
+ The sign that God had made,
+
+ The cross-boughed tree that marked the spot
+ And made it holy ground
+ He needs the earthly city not
+ Who hath the heavenly found.
+
+ 1869.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0067" id="link2H_4_0067">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ MIRIAM.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ TO FREDERICK A. P. BARNARD.
+ </h3>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ THE years are many since, in youth and hope,
+ Under the Charter Oak, our horoscope
+ We drew thick-studded with all favoring stars.
+ Now, with gray beards, and faces seamed with scars
+ From life's hard battle, meeting once again,
+ We smile, half sadly, over dreams so vain;
+ Knowing, at last, that it is not in man
+ Who walketh to direct his steps, or plan
+ His permanent house of life. Alike we loved
+ The muses' haunts, and all our fancies moved
+ To measures of old song. How since that day
+ Our feet have parted from the path that lay
+ So fair before us! Rich, from lifelong search
+ Of truth, within thy Academic porch
+ Thou sittest now, lord of a realm of fact,
+ Thy servitors the sciences exact;
+ Still listening with thy hand on Nature's keys,
+ To hear the Samian's spheral harmonies
+ And rhythm of law. I called from dream and song,
+ Thank God! so early to a strife so long,
+ That, ere it closed, the black, abundant hair
+ Of boyhood rested silver-sown and spare
+ On manhood's temples, now at sunset-chime
+ Tread with fond feet the path of morning time.
+ And if perchance too late I linger where
+ The flowers have ceased to blow, and trees are bare,
+ Thou, wiser in thy choice, wilt scarcely blame
+ The friend who shields his folly with thy name.
+ AMESBURY, 10th mo., 1870.
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+ One Sabbath day my friend and I
+ After the meeting, quietly
+ Passed from the crowded village lanes,
+ White with dry dust for lack of rains,
+ And climbed the neighboring slope, with feet
+ Slackened and heavy from the heat,
+ Although the day was wellnigh done,
+ And the low angle of the sun
+ Along the naked hillside cast
+ Our shadows as of giants vast.
+ We reached, at length, the topmost swell,
+ Whence, either way, the green turf fell
+ In terraces of nature down
+ To fruit-hung orchards, and the town
+ With white, pretenceless houses, tall
+ Church-steeples, and, o'ershadowing all,
+ Huge mills whose windows had the look
+ Of eager eyes that ill could brook
+ The Sabbath rest. We traced the track
+ Of the sea-seeking river back,
+ Glistening for miles above its mouth,
+ Through the long valley to the south,
+ And, looking eastward, cool to view,
+ Stretched the illimitable blue
+ Of ocean, from its curved coast-line;
+ Sombred and still, the warm sunshine
+ Filled with pale gold-dust all the reach
+ Of slumberous woods from hill to beach,&mdash;
+ Slanted on walls of thronged retreats
+ From city toil and dusty streets,
+ On grassy bluff, and dune of sand,
+ And rocky islands miles from land;
+ Touched the far-glancing sails, and showed
+ White lines of foam where long waves flowed
+ Dumb in the distance. In the north,
+ Dim through their misty hair, looked forth
+ The space-dwarfed mountains to the sea,
+ From mystery to mystery!
+
+ So, sitting on that green hill-slope,
+ We talked of human life, its hope
+ And fear, and unsolved doubts, and what
+ It might have been, and yet was not.
+ And, when at last the evening air
+ Grew sweeter for the bells of prayer
+ Ringing in steeples far below,
+ We watched the people churchward go,
+ Each to his place, as if thereon
+ The true shekinah only shone;
+ And my friend queried how it came
+ To pass that they who owned the same
+ Great Master still could not agree
+ To worship Him in company.
+ Then, broadening in his thought, he ran
+ Over the whole vast field of man,&mdash;
+ The varying forms of faith and creed
+ That somehow served the holders' need;
+ In which, unquestioned, undenied,
+ Uncounted millions lived and died;
+ The bibles of the ancient folk,
+ Through which the heart of nations spoke;
+ The old moralities which lent
+ To home its sweetness and content,
+ And rendered possible to bear
+ The life of peoples everywhere
+ And asked if we, who boast of light,
+ Claim not a too exclusive right
+ To truths which must for all be meant,
+ Like rain and sunshine freely sent.
+ In bondage to the letter still,
+ We give it power to cramp and kill,&mdash;
+ To tax God's fulness with a scheme
+ Narrower than Peter's house-top dream,
+ His wisdom and his love with plans
+ Poor and inadequate as man's.
+ It must be that He witnesses
+ Somehow to all men that He is
+ That something of His saving grace
+ Reaches the lowest of the race,
+ Who, through strange creed and rite, may draw
+ The hints of a diviner law.
+ We walk in clearer light;&mdash;but then,
+ Is He not God?&mdash;are they not men?
+ Are His responsibilities
+ For us alone and not for these?
+
+ And I made answer: "Truth is one;
+ And, in all lands beneath the sun,
+ Whoso hath eyes to see may see
+ The tokens of its unity.
+ No scroll of creed its fulness wraps,
+ We trace it not by school-boy maps,
+ Free as the sun and air it is
+ Of latitudes and boundaries.
+ In Vedic verse, in dull Koran,
+ Are messages of good to man;
+ The angels to our Aryan sires
+ Talked by the earliest household fires;
+ The prophets of the elder day,
+ The slant-eyed sages of Cathay,
+ Read not the riddle all amiss
+ Of higher life evolved from this.
+
+ "Nor doth it lessen what He taught,
+ Or make the gospel Jesus brought
+ Less precious, that His lips retold
+ Some portion of that truth of old;
+ Denying not the proven seers,
+ The tested wisdom of the years;
+ Confirming with his own impress
+ The common law of righteousness.
+ We search the world for truth; we cull
+ The good, the pure, the beautiful,
+ From graven stone and written scroll,
+ From all old flower-fields of the soul;
+ And, weary seekers of the best,
+ We come back laden from our quest,
+ To find that all the sages said
+ Is in the Book our mothers read,
+ And all our treasure of old thought
+ In His harmonious fulness wrought
+ Who gathers in one sheaf complete
+ The scattered blades of God's sown wheat,
+ The common growth that maketh good
+ His all-embracing Fatherhood.
+
+ "Wherever through the ages rise
+ The altars of self-sacrifice,
+ Where love its arms has opened wide,
+ Or man for man has calmly died,
+ I see the same white wings outspread
+ That hovered o'er the Master's head!
+ Up from undated time they come,
+ The martyr souls of heathendom,
+ And to His cross and passion bring
+ Their fellowship of suffering.
+ I trace His presence in the blind
+ Pathetic gropings of my kind,&mdash;
+ In prayers from sin and sorrow wrung,
+ In cradle-hymns of life they sung,
+ Each, in its measure, but a part
+ Of the unmeasured Over-Heart;
+ And with a stronger faith confess
+ The greater that it owns the less.
+ Good cause it is for thankfulness
+ That the world-blessing of His life
+ With the long past is not at strife;
+ That the great marvel of His death
+ To the one order witnesseth,
+ No doubt of changeless goodness wakes,
+ No link of cause and sequence breaks,
+ But, one with nature, rooted is
+ In the eternal verities;
+ Whereby, while differing in degree
+ As finite from infinity,
+ The pain and loss for others borne,
+ Love's crown of suffering meekly worn,
+ The life man giveth for his friend
+ Become vicarious in the end;
+ Their healing place in nature take,
+ And make life sweeter for their sake.
+
+ "So welcome I from every source
+ The tokens of that primal Force,
+ Older than heaven itself, yet new
+ As the young heart it reaches to,
+ Beneath whose steady impulse rolls
+ The tidal wave of human souls;
+ Guide, comforter, and inward word,
+ The eternal spirit of the Lord
+ Nor fear I aught that science brings
+ From searching through material things;
+ Content to let its glasses prove,
+ Not by the letter's oldness move,
+ The myriad worlds on worlds that course
+ The spaces of the universe;
+ Since everywhere the Spirit walks
+ The garden of the heart, and talks
+ With man, as under Eden's trees,
+ In all his varied languages.
+ Why mourn above some hopeless flaw
+ In the stone tables of the law,
+ When scripture every day afresh
+ Is traced on tablets of the flesh?
+ By inward sense, by outward signs,
+ God's presence still the heart divines;
+ Through deepest joy of Him we learn,
+ In sorest grief to Him we turn,
+ And reason stoops its pride to share
+ The child-like instinct of a prayer."
+
+ And then, as is my wont, I told
+ A story of the days of old,
+ Not found in printed books,&mdash;in sooth,
+ A fancy, with slight hint of truth,
+ Showing how differing faiths agree
+ In one sweet law of charity.
+ Meanwhile the sky had golden grown,
+ Our faces in its glory shone;
+ But shadows down the valley swept,
+ And gray below the ocean slept,
+ As time and space I wandered o'er
+ To tread the Mogul's marble floor,
+ And see a fairer sunset fall
+ On Jumna's wave and Agra's wall.
+
+ The good Shah Akbar (peace be his alway!)
+ Came forth from the Divan at close of day
+ Bowed with the burden of his many cares,
+ Worn with the hearing of unnumbered prayers,&mdash;
+ Wild cries for justice, the importunate
+ Appeals of greed and jealousy and hate,
+ And all the strife of sect and creed and rite,
+ Santon and Gouroo waging holy fight
+ For the wise monarch, claiming not to be
+ Allah's avenger, left his people free,
+ With a faint hope, his Book scarce justified,
+ That all the paths of faith, though severed wide,
+ O'er which the feet of prayerful reverence passed,
+ Met at the gate of Paradise at last.
+
+ He sought an alcove of his cool hareem,
+ Where, far beneath, he heard the Jumna's stream
+ Lapse soft and low along his palace wall,
+ And all about the cool sound of the fall
+ Of fountains, and of water circling free
+ Through marble ducts along the balcony;
+ The voice of women in the distance sweet,
+ And, sweeter still, of one who, at his feet,
+ Soothed his tired ear with songs of a far land
+ Where Tagus shatters on the salt sea-sand
+ The mirror of its cork-grown hills of drouth
+ And vales of vine, at Lisbon's harbor-mouth.
+
+ The date-palms rustled not; the peepul laid
+ Its topmost boughs against the balustrade,
+ Motionless as the mimic leaves and vines
+ That, light and graceful as the shawl-designs
+ Of Delhi or Umritsir, twined in stone;
+ And the tired monarch, who aside had thrown
+ The day's hard burden, sat from care apart,
+ And let the quiet steal into his heart
+ From the still hour. Below him Agra slept,
+ By the long light of sunset overswept
+ The river flowing through a level land,
+ By mango-groves and banks of yellow sand,
+ Skirted with lime and orange, gay kiosks,
+ Fountains at play, tall minarets of mosques,
+ Fair pleasure-gardens, with their flowering trees
+ Relieved against the mournful cypresses;
+ And, air-poised lightly as the blown sea-foam,
+ The marble wonder of some holy dome
+ Hung a white moonrise over the still wood,
+ Glassing its beauty in a stiller flood.
+
+ Silent the monarch gazed, until the night
+ Swift-falling hid the city from his sight;
+ Then to the woman at his feet he said
+ "Tell me, O Miriam, something thou hast read
+ In childhood of the Master of thy faith,
+ Whom Islam also owns. Our Prophet saith
+ 'He was a true apostle, yea, a Word
+ And Spirit sent before me from the Lord.'
+ Thus the Book witnesseth; and well I know
+ By what thou art, O dearest, it is so.
+ As the lute's tone the maker's hand betrays,
+ The sweet disciple speaks her Master's praise."
+
+ Then Miriam, glad of heart, (for in some sort
+ She cherished in the Moslem's liberal court
+ The sweet traditions of a Christian child;
+ And, through her life of sense, the undefiled
+ And chaste ideal of the sinless One
+ Gazed on her with an eye she might not shun,&mdash;
+ The sad, reproachful look of pity, born
+ Of love that hath no part in wrath or scorn,)
+ Began, with low voice and moist eyes, to tell
+ Of the all-loving Christ, and what befell
+ When the fierce zealots, thirsting for her blood,
+ Dragged to his feet a shame of womanhood.
+ How, when his searching answer pierced within
+ Each heart, and touched the secret of its sin,
+ And her accusers fled his face before,
+ He bade the poor one go and sin no more.
+ And Akbar said, after a moment's thought,
+ "Wise is the lesson by thy prophet taught;
+ Woe unto him who judges and forgets
+ What hidden evil his own heart besets!
+ Something of this large charity I find
+ In all the sects that sever human kind;
+ I would to Allah that their lives agreed
+ More nearly with the lesson of their creed!
+ Those yellow Lamas who at Meerut pray
+ By wind and water power, and love to say
+ 'He who forgiveth not shall, unforgiven,
+ Fail of the rest of Buddha,' and who even
+ Spare the black gnat that stings them, vex my ears
+ With the poor hates and jealousies and fears
+ Nursed in their human hives. That lean, fierce priest
+ Of thy own people, (be his heart increased
+ By Allah's love!) his black robes smelling yet
+ Of Goa's roasted Jews, have I not met
+ Meek-faced, barefooted, crying in the street
+ The saying of his prophet true and sweet,&mdash;
+ 'He who is merciful shall mercy meet!'"
+
+ But, next day, so it chanced, as night began
+ To fall, a murmur through the hareem ran
+ That one, recalling in her dusky face
+ The full-lipped, mild-eyed beauty of a race
+ Known as the blameless Ethiops of Greek song,
+ Plotting to do her royal master wrong,
+ Watching, reproachful of the lingering light,
+ The evening shadows deepen for her flight,
+ Love-guided, to her home in a far land,
+ Now waited death at the great Shah's command.
+ Shapely as that dark princess for whose smile
+ A world was bartered, daughter of the Nile
+ Herself, and veiling in her large, soft eyes
+ The passion and the languor of her skies,
+ The Abyssinian knelt low at the feet
+ Of her stern lord: "O king, if it be meet,
+ And for thy honor's sake," she said, "that I,
+ Who am the humblest of thy slaves, should die,
+ I will not tax thy mercy to forgive.
+ Easier it is to die than to outlive
+ All that life gave me,&mdash;him whose wrong of thee
+ Was but the outcome of his love for me,
+ Cherished from childhood, when, beneath the shade
+ Of templed Axum, side by side we played.
+ Stolen from his arms, my lover followed me
+ Through weary seasons over land and sea;
+ And two days since, sitting disconsolate
+ Within the shadow of the hareem gate,
+ Suddenly, as if dropping from the sky,
+ Down from the lattice of the balcony
+ Fell the sweet song by Tigre's cowherds sung
+ In the old music of his native tongue.
+ He knew my voice, for love is quick of ear,
+ Answering in song.
+
+ This night he waited near
+ To fly with me. The fault was mine alone
+ He knew thee not, he did but seek his own;
+ Who, in the very shadow of thy throne,
+ Sharing thy bounty, knowing all thou art,
+ Greatest and best of men, and in her heart
+ Grateful to tears for favor undeserved,
+ Turned ever homeward, nor one moment swerved
+ From her young love. He looked into my eyes,
+ He heard my voice, and could not otherwise
+ Than he hath done; yet, save one wild embrace
+ When first we stood together face to face,
+ And all that fate had done since last we met
+ Seemed but a dream that left us children yet,
+ He hath not wronged thee nor thy royal bed;
+ Spare him, O king! and slay me in his stead!"
+
+ But over Akbar's brows the frown hung black,
+ And, turning to the eunuch at his back,
+ "Take them," he said, "and let the Jumna's waves
+ Hide both my shame and these accursed slaves!"
+ His loathly length the unsexed bondman bowed
+ "On my head be it!"
+
+ Straightway from a cloud
+ Of dainty shawls and veils of woven mist
+ The Christian Miriam rose, and, stooping, kissed
+ The monarch's hand. Loose down her shoulders bare
+ Swept all the rippled darkness of her hair,
+ Veiling the bosom that, with high, quick swell
+ Of fear and pity, through it rose and fell.
+
+ "Alas!" she cried, "hast thou forgotten quite
+ The words of Him we spake of yesternight?
+ Or thy own prophet's, 'Whoso doth endure
+ And pardon, of eternal life is sure'?
+ O great and good! be thy revenge alone
+ Felt in thy mercy to the erring shown;
+ Let thwarted love and youth their pardon plead,
+ Who sinned but in intent, and not in deed!"
+
+ One moment the strong frame of Akbar shook
+ With the great storm of passion. Then his look
+ Softened to her uplifted face, that still
+ Pleaded more strongly than all words, until
+ Its pride and anger seemed like overblown,
+ Spent clouds of thunder left to tell alone
+ Of strife and overcoming. With bowed head,
+ And smiting on his bosom: "God," he said,
+ "Alone is great, and let His holy name
+ Be honored, even to His servant's shame!
+ Well spake thy prophet, Miriam,&mdash;he alone
+ Who hath not sinned is meet to cast a stone
+ At such as these, who here their doom await,
+ Held like myself in the strong grasp of fate.
+ They sinned through love, as I through love forgive;
+ Take them beyond my realm, but let them live!"
+
+ And, like a chorus to the words of grace,
+ The ancient Fakir, sitting in his place,
+ Motionless as an idol and as grim,
+ In the pavilion Akbar built for him
+ Under the court-yard trees, (for he was wise,
+ Knew Menu's laws, and through his close-shut eyes
+ Saw things far off, and as an open book
+ Into the thoughts of other men could look,)
+ Began, half chant, half howling, to rehearse
+ The fragment of a holy Vedic verse;
+ And thus it ran: "He who all things forgives
+ Conquers himself and all things else, and lives
+ Above the reach of wrong or hate or fear,
+ Calm as the gods, to whom he is most dear."
+
+ Two leagues from Agra still the traveller sees
+ The tomb of Akbar through its cypress-trees;
+ And, near at hand, the marble walls that hide
+ The Christian Begum sleeping at his side.
+ And o'er her vault of burial (who shall tell
+ If it be chance alone or miracle?)
+ The Mission press with tireless hand unrolls
+ The words of Jesus on its lettered scrolls,&mdash;
+ Tells, in all tongues, the tale of mercy o'er,
+ And bids the guilty, "Go and sin no more!"
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+ It now was dew-fall; very still
+ The night lay on the lonely hill,
+ Down which our homeward steps we bent,
+ And, silent, through great silence went,
+ Save that the tireless crickets played
+ Their long, monotonous serenade.
+ A young moon, at its narrowest,
+ Curved sharp against the darkening west;
+ And, momently, the beacon's star,
+ Slow wheeling o'er its rock afar,
+ From out the level darkness shot
+ One instant and again was not.
+ And then my friend spake quietly
+ The thought of both: "Yon crescent see!
+ Like Islam's symbol-moon it gives
+ Hints of the light whereby it lives
+ Somewhat of goodness, something true
+ From sun and spirit shining through
+ All faiths, all worlds, as through the dark
+ Of ocean shines the lighthouse spark,
+ Attests the presence everywhere
+ Of love and providential care.
+ The faith the old Norse heart confessed
+ In one dear name,&mdash;the hopefulest
+ And tenderest heard from mortal lips
+ In pangs of birth or death, from ships
+ Ice-bitten in the winter sea,
+ Or lisped beside a mother's knee,&mdash;
+ The wiser world hath not outgrown,
+ And the All-Father is our own!"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0068" id="link2H_4_0068">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ NAUHAUGHT, THE DEACON.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ NAUHAUGHT, the Indian deacon, who of old
+ Dwelt, poor but blameless, where his narrowing Cape
+ Stretches its shrunk arm out to all the winds
+ And the relentless smiting of the waves,
+ Awoke one morning from a pleasant dream
+ Of a good angel dropping in his hand
+ A fair, broad gold-piece, in the name of God.
+
+ He rose and went forth with the early day
+ Far inland, where the voices of the waves
+ Mellowed and Mingled with the whispering leaves,
+ As, through the tangle of the low, thick woods,
+ He searched his traps. Therein nor beast nor bird
+ He found; though meanwhile in the reedy pools
+ The otter plashed, and underneath the pines
+ The partridge drummed: and as his thoughts went back
+ To the sick wife and little child at home,
+ What marvel that the poor man felt his faith
+ Too weak to bear its burden,&mdash;like a rope
+ That, strand by strand uncoiling, breaks above
+ The hand that grasps it. "Even now, O Lord!
+ Send me," he prayed, "the angel of my dream!
+ Nauhaught is very poor; he cannot wait."
+
+ Even as he spake he heard at his bare feet
+ A low, metallic clink, and, looking down,
+ He saw a dainty purse with disks of gold
+ Crowding its silken net. Awhile he held
+ The treasure up before his eyes, alone
+ With his great need, feeling the wondrous coins
+ Slide through his eager fingers, one by one.
+ So then the dream was true. The angel brought
+ One broad piece only; should he take all these?
+ Who would be wiser, in the blind, dumb woods?
+ The loser, doubtless rich, would scarcely miss
+ This dropped crumb from a table always full.
+ Still, while he mused, he seemed to hear the cry
+ Of a starved child; the sick face of his wife
+ Tempted him. Heart and flesh in fierce revolt
+ Urged the wild license of his savage youth
+ Against his later scruples. Bitter toil,
+ Prayer, fasting, dread of blame, and pitiless eyes
+ To watch his halting,&mdash;had he lost for these
+ The freedom of the woods;&mdash;the hunting-grounds
+ Of happy spirits for a walled-in heaven
+ Of everlasting psalms? One healed the sick
+ Very far off thousands of moons ago
+ Had he not prayed him night and day to come
+ And cure his bed-bound wife? Was there a hell?
+ Were all his fathers' people writhing there&mdash;
+ Like the poor shell-fish set to boil alive&mdash;
+ Forever, dying never? If he kept
+ This gold, so needed, would the dreadful God
+ Torment him like a Mohawk's captive stuck
+ With slow-consuming splinters? Would the saints
+ And the white angels dance and laugh to see him
+ Burn like a pitch-pine torch? His Christian garb
+ Seemed falling from him; with the fear and shame
+ Of Adam naked at the cool of day,
+ He gazed around. A black snake lay in coil
+ On the hot sand, a crow with sidelong eye
+ Watched from a dead bough. All his Indian lore
+ Of evil blending with a convert's faith
+ In the supernal terrors of the Book,
+ He saw the Tempter in the coiling snake
+ And ominous, black-winged bird; and all the while
+ The low rebuking of the distant waves
+ Stole in upon him like the voice of God
+ Among the trees of Eden. Girding up
+ His soul's loins with a resolute hand, he thrust
+ The base thought from him: "Nauhaught, be a man
+ Starve, if need be; but, while you live, look out
+ From honest eyes on all men, unashamed.
+ God help me! I am deacon of the church,
+ A baptized, praying Indian! Should I do
+ This secret meanness, even the barken knots
+ Of the old trees would turn to eyes to see it,
+ The birds would tell of it, and all the leaves
+ Whisper above me: 'Nauhaught is a thief!'
+ The sun would know it, and the stars that hide
+ Behind his light would watch me, and at night
+ Follow me with their sharp, accusing eyes.
+ Yea, thou, God, seest me!" Then Nauhaught drew
+ Closer his belt of leather, dulling thus
+ The pain of hunger, and walked bravely back
+ To the brown fishing-hamlet by the sea;
+ And, pausing at the inn-door, cheerily asked
+ "Who hath lost aught to-day?"
+ "I," said a voice;
+ "Ten golden pieces, in a silken purse,
+ My daughter's handiwork." He looked, and to
+ One stood before him in a coat of frieze,
+ And the glazed hat of a seafaring man,
+ Shrewd-faced, broad-shouldered, with no trace of wings.
+ Marvelling, he dropped within the stranger's hand
+ The silken web, and turned to go his way.
+ But the man said: "A tithe at least is yours;
+ Take it in God's name as an honest man."
+ And as the deacon's dusky fingers closed
+ Over the golden gift, "Yea, in God's name
+ I take it, with a poor man's thanks," he said.
+ So down the street that, like a river of sand,
+ Ran, white in sunshine, to the summer sea,
+ He sought his home singing and praising God;
+ And when his neighbors in their careless way
+ Spoke of the owner of the silken purse&mdash;
+ A Wellfleet skipper, known in every port
+ That the Cape opens in its sandy wall&mdash;
+ He answered, with a wise smile, to himself
+ "I saw the angel where they see a man."
+ 1870.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0069" id="link2H_4_0069">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE SISTERS.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ANNIE and Rhoda, sisters twain,
+ Woke in the night to the sound of rain,
+
+ The rush of wind, the ramp and roar
+ Of great waves climbing a rocky shore.
+
+ Annie rose up in her bed-gown white,
+ And looked out into the storm and night.
+
+ "Hush, and hearken!" she cried in fear,
+ "Hearest thou nothing, sister dear?"
+
+ "I hear the sea, and the plash of rain,
+ And roar of the northeast hurricane.
+
+ "Get thee back to the bed so warm,
+ No good comes of watching a storm.
+
+ "What is it to thee, I fain would know,
+ That waves are roaring and wild winds blow?
+
+ "No lover of thine's afloat to miss
+ The harbor-lights on a night like this."
+
+ "But I heard a voice cry out my name,
+ Up from the sea on the wind it came.
+
+ "Twice and thrice have I heard it call,
+ And the voice is the voice of Estwick Hall!"
+
+ On her pillow the sister tossed her head.
+ "Hall of the Heron is safe," she said.
+
+ "In the tautest schooner that ever swam
+ He rides at anchor in Anisquam.
+
+ "And, if in peril from swamping sea
+ Or lee shore rocks, would he call on thee?"
+
+ But the girl heard only the wind and tide,
+ And wringing her small white hands she cried,
+
+ "O sister Rhoda, there's something wrong;
+ I hear it again, so loud and long.
+
+ "'Annie! Annie!' I hear it call,
+ And the voice is the voice of Estwick Hall!"
+
+ Up sprang the elder, with eyes aflame,
+ "Thou liest! He never would call thy name!
+
+ "If he did, I would pray the wind and sea
+ To keep him forever from thee and me!"
+
+ Then out of the sea blew a dreadful blast;
+ Like the cry of a dying man it passed.
+
+ The young girl hushed on her lips a groan,
+ But through her tears a strange light shone,&mdash;
+
+ The solemn joy of her heart's release
+ To own and cherish its love in peace.
+
+ "Dearest!" she whispered, under breath,
+ "Life was a lie, but true is death.
+
+ "The love I hid from myself away
+ Shall crown me now in the light of day.
+
+ "My ears shall never to wooer list,
+ Never by lover my lips be kissed.
+
+ "Sacred to thee am I henceforth,
+ Thou in heaven and I on earth!"
+
+ She came and stood by her sister's bed
+ "Hall of the Heron is dead!" she said.
+
+ "The wind and the waves their work have done,
+ We shall see him no more beneath the sun.
+
+ "Little will reek that heart of thine,
+ It loved him not with a love like mine.
+
+ "I, for his sake, were he but here,
+ Could hem and 'broider thy bridal gear,
+
+ "Though hands should tremble and eyes be wet,
+ And stitch for stitch in my heart be set.
+
+ "But now my soul with his soul I wed;
+ Thine the living, and mine the dead!"
+
+ 1871.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0070" id="link2H_4_0070">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ MARGUERITE.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ MASSACHUSETTS BAY, 1760.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Upwards of one thousand of the Acadian peasants forcibly taken from their
+ homes on the Gaspereau and Basin of Minas were assigned to the several
+ towns of the Massachusetts colony, the children being bound by the
+ authorities to service or labor.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ THE robins sang in the orchard, the buds into
+ blossoms grew;
+ Little of human sorrow the buds and the robins
+ knew!
+ Sick, in an alien household, the poor French
+ neutral lay;
+ Into her lonesome garret fell the light of the April
+ day,
+ Through the dusty window, curtained by the spider's
+ warp and woof,
+ On the loose-laid floor of hemlock, on oaken ribs
+ of roof,
+ The bedquilt's faded patchwork, the teacups on the
+ stand,
+ The wheel with flaxen tangle, as it dropped from
+ her sick hand.
+
+ What to her was the song of the robin, or warm
+ morning light,
+ As she lay in the trance of the dying, heedless of
+ sound or sight?
+
+ Done was the work of her bands, she had eaten her
+ bitter bread;
+ The world of the alien people lay behind her dim
+ and dead.
+
+ But her soul went back to its child-time; she saw
+ the sun o'erflow
+ With gold the Basin of Minas, and set over
+ Gaspereau;
+
+ The low, bare flats at ebb-tide, the rush of the sea
+ at flood,
+ Through inlet and creek and river, from dike to
+ upland wood;
+
+ The gulls in the red of morning, the fish-hawk's
+ rise and fall,
+ The drift of the fog in moonshine, over the dark
+ coast-wall.
+
+ She saw the face of her mother, she heard the song
+ she sang;
+ And far off, faintly, slowly, the bell for vespers
+ rang.
+
+ By her bed the hard-faced mistress sat, smoothing
+ the wrinkled sheet,
+ Peering into the face, so helpless, and feeling the
+ ice-cold feet.
+
+ With a vague remorse atoning for her greed and
+ long abuse,
+ By care no longer heeded and pity too late for use.
+
+ Up the stairs of the garret softly the son of the
+ mistress stepped,
+ Leaned over the head-board, covering his face with
+ his hands, and wept.
+
+ Outspake the mother, who watched him sharply,
+ with brow a-frown
+ "What! love you the Papist, the beggar, the
+ charge of the town?"
+
+ Be she Papist or beggar who lies here, I know
+ and God knows
+ I love her, and fain would go with her wherever
+ she goes!
+
+ "O mother! that sweet face came pleading, for
+ love so athirst.
+ You saw but the town-charge; I knew her God's
+ angel at first."
+
+ Shaking her gray head, the mistress hushed down
+ a bitter cry;
+ And awed by the silence and shadow of death
+ drawing nigh,
+
+ She murmured a psalm of the Bible; but closer
+ the young girl pressed,
+ With the last of her life in her fingers, the cross
+ to her breast.
+
+ "My son, come away," cried the mother, her voice
+ cruel grown.
+ "She is joined to her idols, like Ephraim; let her
+ alone!"
+
+ But he knelt with his hand on her forehead, his
+ lips to her ear,
+ And he called back the soul that was passing
+ "Marguerite, do you hear?"
+
+ She paused on the threshold of Heaven; love, pity,
+ surprise,
+ Wistful, tender, lit up for an instant the cloud of
+ her eyes.
+
+ With his heart on his lips he kissed her, but never
+ her cheek grew red,
+ And the words the living long for he spake in the
+ ear of the dead.
+
+ And the robins sang in the orchard, where buds to
+ blossoms grew;
+ Of the folded hands and the still face never the
+ robins knew!
+
+ 1871.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0071" id="link2H_4_0071">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE ROBIN.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ MY old Welsh neighbor over the way
+ Crept slowly out in the sun of spring,
+ Pushed from her ears the locks of gray,
+ And listened to hear the robin sing.
+
+ Her grandson, playing at marbles, stopped,
+ And, cruel in sport as boys will be,
+ Tossed a stone at the bird, who hopped
+ From bough to bough in the apple-tree.
+
+ "Nay!" said the grandmother; "have you not heard,
+ My poor, bad boy! of the fiery pit,
+ And how, drop by drop, this merciful bird
+ Carries the water that quenches it?
+
+ "He brings cool dew in his little bill,
+ And lets it fall on the souls of sin
+ You can see the mark on his red breast still
+ Of fires that scorch as he drops it in.
+
+ "My poor Bron rhuddyn! my breast-burned bird,
+ Singing so sweetly from limb to limb,
+ Very dear to the heart of Our Lord
+ Is he who pities the lost like Him!"
+
+ "Amen!" I said to the beautiful myth;
+ "Sing, bird of God, in my heart as well:
+ Each good thought is a drop wherewith
+ To cool and lessen the fires of hell.
+
+ "Prayers of love like rain-drops fall,
+ Tears of pity are cooling dew,
+ And dear to the heart of Our Lord are all
+ Who suffer like Him in the good they do!"
+
+ 1871.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0072" id="link2H_4_0072">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE PENNSYLVANIA PILGRIM.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ INTRODUCTORY NOTE.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ THE beginning of German emigration to America may be traced to the
+ personal influence of William Penn, who in 1677 visited the Continent, and
+ made the acquaintance of an intelligent and highly cultivated circle of
+ Pietists, or Mystics, who, reviving in the seventeenth century the
+ spiritual faith and worship of Tauler and the "Friends of God" in the
+ fourteenth, gathered about the pastor Spener, and the young and beautiful
+ Eleonora Johanna Von Merlau. In this circle originated the Frankfort Land
+ Company, which bought of William Penn, the Governor of Pennsylvania, a
+ tract of land near the new city of Philadelphia. The company's agent in
+ the New World was a rising young lawyer, Francis Daniel Pastorius, son of
+ Judge Pastorius, of Windsheim, who, at the age of seventeen, entered the
+ University of Altorf. He studied law at, Strasburg, Basle, and Jena, and
+ at Ratisbon, the seat of the Imperial Government, obtained a practical
+ knowledge of international polity. Successful in all his examinations and
+ disputations, he received the degree of Doctor of Law at Nuremberg in
+ 1676. In 1679 he was a law-lecturer at Frankfort, where he became deeply
+ interested in the teachings of Dr. Spener. In 1680-81 he travelled in
+ France, England, Ireland, and Italy with his friend Herr Von Rodeck. "I
+ was," he says, "glad to enjoy again the company of my Christian friends,
+ rather than be with Von Rodeck feasting and dancing." In 1683, in company
+ with a small number of German Friends, he emigrated to America, settling
+ upon the Frankfort Company's tract between the Schuylkill and the Delaware
+ rivers. The township was divided into four hamlets, namely, Germantown,
+ Krisheim, Crefield, and Sommerhausen. Soon after his arrival he united
+ himself with the Society of Friends, and became one of its most able and
+ devoted members, as well as the recognized head and lawgiver of the
+ settlement. He married, two years after his arrival, Anneke (Anna),
+ daughter of Dr. Klosterman, of Muhlheim. In the year 1688 he drew up a
+ memorial against slaveholding, which was adopted by the Germantown Friends
+ and sent up to the Monthly Meeting, and thence to the Yearly Meeting at
+ Philadelphia. It is noteworthy as the first protest made by a religious
+ body against Negro Slavery. The original document was discovered in 1844
+ by the Philadelphia antiquarian, Nathan Kite, and published in The Friend
+ (Vol. XVIII. No. 16). It is a bold and direct appeal to the best instincts
+ of the heart. "Have not," he asks, "these negroes as much right to fight
+ for their freedom as you have to keep them slaves?" Under the wise
+ direction of Pastorius, the German-town settlement grew and prospered. The
+ inhabitants planted orchards and vineyards, and surrounded themselves with
+ souvenirs of their old home. A large number of them were linen-weavers, as
+ well as small farmers. The Quakers were the principal sect, but men of all
+ religions were tolerated, and lived together in harmony. In 1692 Richard
+ Frame published, in what he called verse, a Description of Pennsylvania,
+ in which he alludes to the settlement:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "The German town of which I spoke before,
+ Which is at least in length one mile or more,
+ Where lives High German people and Low Dutch,
+ Whose trade in weaving linen cloth is much,
+ &mdash;There grows the flax, as also you may know
+ That from the same they do divide the tow.
+ Their trade suits well their habitation,
+ We find convenience for their occupation."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Pastorius seems to have been on intimate terms with William Penn, Thomas
+ Lloyd, Chief Justice Logan, Thomas Story, and other leading men in the
+ Province belonging to his own religious society, as also with Kelpius, the
+ learned Mystic of the Wissahickon, with the pastor of the Swedes' church,
+ and the leaders of the Mennonites. He wrote a description of Pennsylvania,
+ which was published at Frankfort and Leipsic in 1700 and 1701. His Lives
+ of the Saints, etc., written in German and dedicated to Professor
+ Schurmberg, his old teacher, was published in 1690. He left behind him
+ many unpublished manuscripts covering a very wide range of subjects, most
+ of which are now lost. One huge manuscript folio, entitled Hive Beestock,
+ Melliotropheum Alucar, or Rusca Apium, still remains, containing one
+ thousand pages with about one hundred lines to a page. It is a medley of
+ knowledge and fancy, history, philosophy, and poetry, written in seven
+ languages. A large portion of his poetry is devoted to the pleasures of
+ gardening, the description of flowers, and the care of bees. The following
+ specimen of his punning Latin is addressed to an orchard-pilferer:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Quisquis in haec furtim reptas viridaria nostra
+ Tangere fallaci poma caveto mane,
+ Si non obsequeris faxit Deus omne quod opto,
+ Cum malis nostris ut mala cuncta feras."
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Professor Oswald Seidensticker, to whose papers in Der Deutsche Pioneer
+and that able periodical the Penn Monthly, of Philadelphia, I am
+indebted for many of the foregoing facts in regard to the German
+pilgrims of the New World, thus closes his notice of Pastorius:&mdash;
+"No tombstone, not even a record of burial, indicates where his remains
+have found their last resting-place, and the pardonable desire to
+associate the homage due to this distinguished man with some visible
+memento can not be gratified. There is no reason to suppose that he was
+interred in any other place than the Friends' old burying-ground in
+Germantown, though the fact is not attested by any definite source of
+information. After all, this obliteration of the last trace of his
+earthly existence is but typical of what has overtaken the times which
+he represents; that Germantown which he founded, which saw him live and
+move, is at present but a quaint idyl of the past, almost a myth, barely
+remembered and little cared for by the keener race that has succeeded.
+The Pilgrims of Plymouth have not lacked historian and poet. Justice has
+been done to their faith, courage, and self-sacrifice, and to the mighty
+influence of their endeavors to establish righteousness on the earth.
+The Quaker pilgrims of Pennsylvania, seeking the same object by
+different means, have not been equally fortunate. The power of their
+testimony for truth and holiness, peace and freedom, enforced only by
+what Milton calls "the unresistible might of meekness," has been felt
+through two centuries in the amelioration of penal severities, the
+abolition of slavery, the reform of the erring, the relief of the poor
+and suffering,&mdash;felt, in brief, in every step of human progress. But of
+the men themselves, with the single exception of William Penn, scarcely
+anything is known. Contrasted, from the outset, with the stern,
+aggressive Puritans of New England, they have come to be regarded as
+"a feeble folk," with a personality as doubtful as their unrecorded
+graves. They were not soldiers, like Miles Standish; they had no figure
+so picturesque as Vane, no leader so rashly brave and haughty as
+Endicott. No Cotton Mather wrote their Magnalia; they had no awful drama
+of supernaturalism in which Satan and his angels were actors; and the
+only witch mentioned in their simple annals was a poor old Swedish
+woman, who, on complaint of her countrywomen, was tried and acquitted
+of everything but imbecility and folly. Nothing but common-place offices
+of civility came to pass between them and the Indians; indeed, their
+enemies taunted them with the fact that the savages did not regard them
+as Christians, but just such men as themselves. Yet it must be apparent
+to every careful observer of the progress of American civilization that
+its two principal currents had their sources in the entirely opposite
+directions of the Puritan and Quaker colonies. To use the words of a
+late writer: "The historical forces, with which no others may be
+compared in their influence on the people, have been those of the
+Puritan and the Quaker. The strength of the one was in the confession of
+an invisible Presence, a righteous, eternal Will, which would establish
+righteousness on earth; and thence arose the conviction of a direct
+personal responsibility, which could be tempted by no external splendor
+and could be shaken by no internal agitation, and could not be evaded or
+transferred. The strength of the other was the witness in the human
+spirit to an eternal Word, an Inner Voice which spoke to each alone,
+while yet it spoke to every man; a Light which each was to follow, and
+which yet was the light of the world; and all other voices were silent
+before this, and the solitary path whither it led was more sacred than
+the worn ways of cathedral-aisles." It will be sufficiently apparent to
+the reader that, in the poem which follows, I have attempted nothing
+beyond a study of the life and times of the Pennsylvania colonist,&mdash;a
+simple picture of a noteworthy man and his locality. The colors of my
+sketch are all very sober, toned down to the quiet and dreamy atmosphere
+through which its subject is visible. Whether, in the glare and tumult
+of the present time, such a picture will find favor may well be
+questioned. I only know that it has beguiled for me some hours of
+weariness, and that, whatever may be its measure of public appreciation,
+it has been to me its own reward.
+ J. G. W.
+AMESBURY, 5th mo., 1872.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Hail to posterity!
+ Hail, future men of Germanopolis!
+ Let the young generations yet to be
+ Look kindly upon this.
+ Think how your fathers left their native land,&mdash;
+ Dear German-land! O sacred hearths and homes!&mdash;
+
+ And, where the wild beast roams,
+ In patience planned
+ New forest-homes beyond the mighty sea,
+ There undisturbed and free
+ To live as brothers of one family.
+ What pains and cares befell,
+ What trials and what fears,
+ Remember, and wherein we have done well
+ Follow our footsteps, men of coming years!
+ Where we have failed to do
+ Aright, or wisely live,
+ Be warned by us, the better way pursue,
+ And, knowing we were human, even as you,
+ Pity us and forgive!
+ Farewell, Posterity!
+ Farewell, dear Germany
+ Forevermore farewell!
+
+ (From the Latin of Francis DANIEL PASTORIUS in
+ the Germantown Records. 1688.)
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ PRELUDE.
+
+ I SING the Pilgrim of a softer clime
+ And milder speech than those brave men's who brought
+ To the ice and iron of our winter time
+ A will as firm, a creed as stern, and wrought
+ With one mailed hand, and with the other fought.
+ Simply, as fits my theme, in homely rhyme
+ I sing the blue-eyed German Spener taught,
+ Through whose veiled, mystic faith the Inward Light,
+ Steady and still, an easy brightness, shone,
+ Transfiguring all things in its radiance white.
+ The garland which his meekness never sought
+ I bring him; over fields of harvest sown
+ With seeds of blessing, now to ripeness grown,
+ I bid the sower pass before the reapers' sight.
+
+ . . . . . . . . . .
+
+ Never in tenderer quiet lapsed the day
+ From Pennsylvania's vales of spring away,
+ Where, forest-walled, the scattered hamlets lay
+
+ Along the wedded rivers. One long bar
+ Of purple cloud, on which the evening star
+ Shone like a jewel on a scimitar,
+
+ Held the sky's golden gateway. Through the deep
+ Hush of the woods a murmur seemed to creep,
+ The Schuylkill whispering in a voice of sleep.
+
+ All else was still. The oxen from their ploughs
+ Rested at last, and from their long day's browse
+ Came the dun files of Krisheim's home-bound cows.
+
+ And the young city, round whose virgin zone
+ The rivers like two mighty arms were thrown,
+ Marked by the smoke of evening fires alone,
+
+ Lay in the distance, lovely even then
+ With its fair women and its stately men
+ Gracing the forest court of William Penn,
+
+ Urban yet sylvan; in its rough-hewn frames
+ Of oak and pine the dryads held their claims,
+ And lent its streets their pleasant woodland names.
+
+ Anna Pastorius down the leafy lane
+ Looked city-ward, then stooped to prune again
+ Her vines and simples, with a sigh of pain.
+
+ For fast the streaks of ruddy sunset paled
+ In the oak clearing, and, as daylight failed,
+ Slow, overhead, the dusky night-birds sailed.
+
+ Again she looked: between green walls of shade,
+ With low-bent head as if with sorrow weighed,
+ Daniel Pastorius slowly came and said,
+
+ "God's peace be with thee, Anna!" Then he stood
+ Silent before her, wrestling with the mood
+ Of one who sees the evil and not good.
+
+ "What is it, my Pastorius?" As she spoke,
+ A slow, faint smile across his features broke,
+ Sadder than tears. "Dear heart," he said, "our folk
+
+ "Are even as others. Yea, our goodliest Friends
+ Are frail; our elders have their selfish ends,
+ And few dare trust the Lord to make amends
+
+ "For duty's loss. So even our feeble word
+ For the dumb slaves the startled meeting heard
+ As if a stone its quiet waters stirred;
+
+ "And, as the clerk ceased reading, there began
+ A ripple of dissent which downward ran
+ In widening circles, as from man to man.
+
+ "Somewhat was said of running before sent,
+ Of tender fear that some their guide outwent,
+ Troublers of Israel. I was scarce intent
+
+ "On hearing, for behind the reverend row
+ Of gallery Friends, in dumb and piteous show,
+ I saw, methought, dark faces full of woe.
+
+ "And, in the spirit, I was taken where
+ They toiled and suffered; I was made aware
+ Of shame and wrath and anguish and despair!
+
+ "And while the meeting smothered our poor plea
+ With cautious phrase, a Voice there seemed to be,
+ As ye have done to these ye do to me!'
+
+ "So it all passed; and the old tithe went on
+ Of anise, mint, and cumin, till the sun
+ Set, leaving still the weightier work undone.
+
+ "Help, for the good man faileth! Who is strong,
+ If these be weak? Who shall rebuke the wrong,
+ If these consent? How long, O Lord! how long!"
+
+ He ceased; and, bound in spirit with the bound,
+ With folded arms, and eyes that sought the ground,
+ Walked musingly his little garden round.
+
+ About him, beaded with the falling dew,
+ Rare plants of power and herbs of healing grew,
+ Such as Van Helmont and Agrippa knew.
+
+ For, by the lore of Gorlitz' gentle sage,
+ With the mild mystics of his dreamy age
+ He read the herbal signs of nature's page,
+
+ As once he heard in sweet Von Merlau's' bowers
+ Fair as herself, in boyhood's happy hours,
+ The pious Spener read his creed in flowers.
+
+ "The dear Lord give us patience!" said his wife,
+ Touching with finger-tip an aloe, rife
+ With leaves sharp-pointed like an Aztec knife
+
+ Or Carib spear, a gift to William Penn
+ From the rare gardens of John Evelyn,
+ Brought from the Spanish Main by merchantmen.
+
+ "See this strange plant its steady purpose hold,
+ And, year by year, its patient leaves unfold,
+ Till the young eyes that watched it first are old.
+
+ "But some time, thou hast told me, there shall come
+ A sudden beauty, brightness, and perfume,
+ The century-moulded bud shall burst in bloom.
+
+ "So may the seed which hath been sown to-day
+ Grow with the years, and, after long delay,
+ Break into bloom, and God's eternal Yea!
+
+ "Answer at last the patient prayers of them
+ Who now, by faith alone, behold its stem
+ Crowned with the flowers of Freedom's diadem.
+
+ "Meanwhile, to feel and suffer, work and wait,
+ Remains for us. The wrong indeed is great,
+ But love and patience conquer soon or late."
+
+ "Well hast thou said, my Anna!" Tenderer
+ Than youth's caress upon the head of her
+ Pastorius laid his hand. "Shall we demur
+
+ "Because the vision tarrieth? In an hour
+ We dream not of, the slow-grown bud may flower,
+ And what was sown in weakness rise in power!"
+
+ Then through the vine-draped door whose legend read,
+ "Procul este profani!" Anna led
+ To where their child upon his little bed
+
+ Looked up and smiled. "Dear heart," she said, "if we
+ Must bearers of a heavy burden be,
+ Our boy, God willing, yet the day shall see
+
+ "When from the gallery to the farthest seat,
+ Slave and slave-owner shall no longer meet,
+ But all sit equal at the Master's feet."
+
+ On the stone hearth the blazing walnut block
+ Set the low walls a-glimmer, showed the cock
+ Rebuking Peter on the Van Wyck clock,
+
+ Shone on old tomes of law and physic, side
+ By side with Fox and Belimen, played at hide
+ And seek with Anna, midst her household pride
+
+ Of flaxen webs, and on the table, bare
+ Of costly cloth or silver cup, but where,
+ Tasting the fat shads of the Delaware,
+
+ The courtly Penn had praised the goodwife's cheer,
+ And quoted Horace o'er her home brewed beer,
+ Till even grave Pastorius smiled to hear.
+
+ In such a home, beside the Schuylkill's wave,
+ He dwelt in peace with God and man, and gave
+ Food to the poor and shelter to the slave.
+
+ For all too soon the New World's scandal shamed
+ The righteous code by Penn and Sidney framed,
+ And men withheld the human rights they claimed.
+
+ And slowly wealth and station sanction lent,
+ And hardened avarice, on its gains intent,
+ Stifled the inward whisper of dissent.
+
+ Yet all the while the burden rested sore
+ On tender hearts. At last Pastorius bore
+ Their warning message to the Church's door
+
+ In God's name; and the leaven of the word
+ Wrought ever after in the souls who heard,
+ And a dead conscience in its grave-clothes stirred
+
+ To troubled life, and urged the vain excuse
+ Of Hebrew custom, patriarchal use,
+ Good in itself if evil in abuse.
+
+ Gravely Pastorius listened, not the less
+ Discerning through the decent fig-leaf dress
+ Of the poor plea its shame of selfishness.
+
+ One Scripture rule, at least, was unforgot;
+ He hid the outcast, and betrayed him not;
+ And, when his prey the human hunter sought,
+
+ He scrupled not, while Anna's wise delay
+ And proffered cheer prolonged the master's stay,
+ To speed the black guest safely on his way.
+
+ Yet, who shall guess his bitter grief who lends
+ His life to some great cause, and finds his friends
+ Shame or betray it for their private ends?
+
+ How felt the Master when his chosen strove
+ In childish folly for their seats above;
+ And that fond mother, blinded by her love,
+
+ Besought him that her sons, beside his throne,
+ Might sit on either hand? Amidst his own
+ A stranger oft, companionless and lone,
+
+ God's priest and prophet stands. The martyr's pain
+ Is not alone from scourge and cell and chain;
+ Sharper the pang when, shouting in his train,
+
+ His weak disciples by their lives deny
+ The loud hosannas of their daily cry,
+ And make their echo of his truth a lie.
+
+ His forest home no hermit's cell he found,
+ Guests, motley-minded, drew his hearth around,
+ And held armed truce upon its neutral ground.
+
+ There Indian chiefs with battle-bows unstrung,
+ Strong, hero-limbed, like those whom Homer sung,
+ Pastorius fancied, when the world was young,
+
+ Came with their tawny women, lithe and tall,
+ Like bronzes in his friend Von Rodeck's hall,
+ Comely, if black, and not unpleasing all.
+
+ There hungry folk in homespun drab and gray
+ Drew round his board on Monthly Meeting day,
+ Genial, half merry in their friendly way.
+
+ Or, haply, pilgrims from the Fatherland,
+ Weak, timid, homesick, slow to understand
+ The New World's promise, sought his helping hand.
+
+ Or painful Kelpius from his hermit den
+ By Wissahickon, maddest of good men,
+ Dreamed o'er the Chiliast dreams of Petersen.
+
+ Deep in the woods, where the small river slid
+ Snake-like in shade, the Helmstadt Mystic hid,
+ Weird as a wizard, over arts forbid,
+
+ Reading the books of Daniel and of John,
+ And Behmen's Morning-Redness, through the Stone
+ Of Wisdom, vouchsafed to his eyes alone,
+
+ Whereby he read what man ne'er read before,
+ And saw the visions man shall see no more,
+ Till the great angel, striding sea and shore,
+
+ Shall bid all flesh await, on land or ships,
+ The warning trump of the Apocalypse,
+ Shattering the heavens before the dread eclipse.
+
+ Or meek-eyed Mennonist his bearded chin
+ Leaned o'er the gate; or Ranter, pure within,
+ Aired his perfection in a world of sin.
+
+ Or, talking of old home scenes, Op der Graaf
+ Teased the low back-log with his shodden staff,
+ Till the red embers broke into a laugh
+
+ And dance of flame, as if they fain would cheer
+ The rugged face, half tender, half austere,
+ Touched with the pathos of a homesick tear!
+
+ Or Sluyter, saintly familist, whose word
+ As law the Brethren of the Manor heard,
+ Announced the speedy terrors of the Lord,
+
+ And turned, like Lot at Sodom, from his race,
+ Above a wrecked world with complacent face
+ Riding secure upon his plank of grace!
+
+ Haply, from Finland's birchen groves exiled,
+ Manly in thought, in simple ways a child,
+ His white hair floating round his visage mild,
+
+ The Swedish pastor sought the Quaker's door,
+ Pleased from his neighbor's lips to hear once more
+ His long-disused and half-forgotten lore.
+
+ For both could baffle Babel's lingual curse,
+ And speak in Bion's Doric, and rehearse
+ Cleanthes' hymn or Virgil's sounding verse.
+
+ And oft Pastorius and the meek old man
+ Argued as Quaker and as Lutheran,
+ Ending in Christian love, as they began.
+
+ With lettered Lloyd on pleasant morns he strayed
+ Where Sommerhausen over vales of shade
+ Looked miles away, by every flower delayed,
+
+ Or song of bird, happy and free with one
+ Who loved, like him, to let his memory run
+ Over old fields of learning, and to sun
+
+ Himself in Plato's wise philosophies,
+ And dream with Philo over mysteries
+ Whereof the dreamer never finds the keys;
+
+ To touch all themes of thought, nor weakly stop
+ For doubt of truth, but let the buckets drop
+ Deep down and bring the hidden waters up
+
+ For there was freedom in that wakening time
+ Of tender souls; to differ was not crime;
+ The varying bells made up the perfect chime.
+
+ On lips unlike was laid the altar's coal,
+ The white, clear light, tradition-colored, stole
+ Through the stained oriel of each human soul.
+
+ Gathered from many sects, the Quaker brought
+ His old beliefs, adjusting to the thought
+ That moved his soul the creed his fathers taught.
+
+ One faith alone, so broad that all mankind
+ Within themselves its secret witness find,
+ The soul's communion with the Eternal Mind,
+
+ The Spirit's law, the Inward Rule and Guide,
+ Scholar and peasant, lord and serf, allied,
+ The polished Penn and Cromwell's Ironside.
+
+ As still in Hemskerck's Quaker Meeting, face
+ By face in Flemish detail, we may trace
+ How loose-mouthed boor and fine ancestral grace
+
+ Sat in close contrast,&mdash;the clipt-headed churl,
+ Broad market-dame, and simple serving-girl
+ By skirt of silk and periwig in curl
+
+ For soul touched soul; the spiritual treasure-trove
+ Made all men equal, none could rise above
+ Nor sink below that level of God's love.
+
+ So, with his rustic neighbors sitting down,
+ The homespun frock beside the scholar's gown,
+ Pastorius to the manners of the town
+
+ Added the freedom of the woods, and sought
+ The bookless wisdom by experience taught,
+ And learned to love his new-found home, while not
+
+ Forgetful of the old; the seasons went
+ Their rounds, and somewhat to his spirit lent
+ Of their own calm and measureless content.
+
+ Glad even to tears, he heard the robin sing
+ His song of welcome to the Western spring,
+ And bluebird borrowing from the sky his wing.
+
+ And when the miracle of autumn came,
+ And all the woods with many-colored flame
+ Of splendor, making summer's greenness tame,
+
+ Burned, unconsumed, a voice without a sound
+ Spake to him from each kindled bush around,
+ And made the strange, new landscape holy ground
+
+ And when the bitter north-wind, keen and swift,
+ Swept the white street and piled the dooryard drift,
+ He exercised, as Friends might say, his gift
+
+ Of verse, Dutch, English, Latin, like the hash
+ Of corn and beans in Indian succotash;
+ Dull, doubtless, but with here and there a flash
+
+ Of wit and fine conceit,&mdash;the good man's play
+ Of quiet fancies, meet to while away
+ The slow hours measuring off an idle day.
+
+ At evening, while his wife put on her look
+ Of love's endurance, from its niche he took
+ The written pages of his ponderous book.
+
+ And read, in half the languages of man,
+ His "Rusca Apium," which with bees began,
+ And through the gamut of creation ran.
+
+ Or, now and then, the missive of some friend
+ In gray Altorf or storied Nurnberg penned
+ Dropped in upon him like a guest to spend
+
+ The night beneath his roof-tree. Mystical
+ The fair Von Merlau spake as waters fall
+ And voices sound in dreams, and yet withal
+
+ Human and sweet, as if each far, low tone,
+ Over the roses of her gardens blown
+ Brought the warm sense of beauty all her own.
+
+ Wise Spener questioned what his friend could trace
+ Of spiritual influx or of saving grace
+ In the wild natures of the Indian race.
+
+ And learned Schurmberg, fain, at times, to look
+ From Talmud, Koran, Veds, and Pentateuch,
+ Sought out his pupil in his far-off nook,
+
+ To query with him of climatic change,
+ Of bird, beast, reptile, in his forest range,
+ Of flowers and fruits and simples new and strange.
+
+ And thus the Old and New World reached their hands
+ Across the water, and the friendly lands
+ Talked with each other from their severed strands.
+
+ Pastorius answered all: while seed and root
+ Sent from his new home grew to flower and fruit
+ Along the Rhine and at the Spessart's foot;
+
+ And, in return, the flowers his boyhood knew
+ Smiled at his door, the same in form and hue,
+ And on his vines the Rhenish clusters grew.
+
+ No idler he; whoever else might shirk,
+ He set his hand to every honest work,&mdash;
+ Farmer and teacher, court and meeting clerk.
+
+ Still on the town seal his device is found,
+ Grapes, flax, and thread-spool on a trefoil ground,
+ With "Vinum, Linum et Textrinum" wound.
+
+ One house sufficed for gospel and for law,
+ Where Paul and Grotius, Scripture text and saw,
+ Assured the good, and held the rest in awe.
+
+ Whatever legal maze he wandered through,
+ He kept the Sermon on the Mount in view,
+ And justice always into mercy grew.
+
+ No whipping-post he needed, stocks, nor jail,
+ Nor ducking-stool; the orchard-thief grew pale
+ At his rebuke, the vixen ceased to rail,
+
+ The usurer's grasp released the forfeit land;
+ The slanderer faltered at the witness-stand,
+ And all men took his counsel for command.
+
+ Was it caressing air, the brooding love
+ Of tenderer skies than German land knew of,
+ Green calm below, blue quietness above,
+
+ Still flow of water, deep repose of wood
+ That, with a sense of loving Fatherhood
+ And childlike trust in the Eternal Good,
+
+ Softened all hearts, and dulled the edge of hate,
+ Hushed strife, and taught impatient zeal to wait
+ The slow assurance of the better state?
+
+ Who knows what goadings in their sterner way
+ O'er jagged ice, relieved by granite gray,
+ Blew round the men of Massachusetts Bay?
+
+ What hate of heresy the east-wind woke?
+ What hints of pitiless power and terror spoke
+ In waves that on their iron coast-line broke?
+
+ Be it as it may: within the Land of Penn
+ The sectary yielded to the citizen,
+ And peaceful dwelt the many-creeded men.
+
+ Peace brooded over all. No trumpet stung
+ The air to madness, and no steeple flung
+ Alarums down from bells at midnight rung.
+
+ The land slept well. The Indian from his face
+ Washed all his war-paint off, and in the place
+ Of battle-marches sped the peaceful chase,
+
+ Or wrought for wages at the white man's side,&mdash;
+ Giving to kindness what his native pride
+ And lazy freedom to all else denied.
+
+ And well the curious scholar loved the old
+ Traditions that his swarthy neighbors told
+ By wigwam-fires when nights were growing cold,
+
+ Discerned the fact round which their fancy drew
+ Its dreams, and held their childish faith more true
+ To God and man than half the creeds he knew.
+
+ The desert blossomed round him; wheat-fields rolled
+ Beneath the warm wind waves of green and gold;
+ The planted ear returned its hundred-fold.
+
+ Great clusters ripened in a warmer sun
+ Than that which by the Rhine stream shines upon
+ The purpling hillsides with low vines o'errun.
+
+ About each rustic porch the humming-bird
+ Tried with light bill, that scarce a petal stirred,
+ The Old World flowers to virgin soil transferred;
+
+ And the first-fruits of pear and apple, bending
+ The young boughs down, their gold and russet blending,
+ Made glad his heart, familiar odors lending
+
+ To the fresh fragrance of the birch and pine,
+ Life-everlasting, bay, and eglantine,
+ And all the subtle scents the woods combine.
+
+ Fair First-Day mornings, steeped in summer calm,
+ Warm, tender, restful, sweet with woodland balm,
+ Came to him, like some mother-hallowed psalm
+
+ To the tired grinder at the noisy wheel
+ Of labor, winding off from memory's reel
+ A golden thread of music. With no peal
+
+ Of bells to call them to the house of praise,
+ The scattered settlers through green forest-ways
+ Walked meeting-ward. In reverent amaze
+
+ The Indian trapper saw them, from the dim
+ Shade of the alders on the rivulet's rim,
+ Seek the Great Spirit's house to talk with Him.
+
+ There, through the gathered stillness multiplied
+ And made intense by sympathy, outside
+ The sparrows sang, and the gold-robin cried,
+
+ A-swing upon his elm. A faint perfume
+ Breathed through the open windows of the room
+ From locust-trees, heavy with clustered bloom.
+
+ Thither, perchance, sore-tried confessors came,
+ Whose fervor jail nor pillory could tame,
+ Proud of the cropped ears meant to be their shame,
+
+ Men who had eaten slavery's bitter bread
+ In Indian isles; pale women who had bled
+ Under the hangman's lash, and bravely said
+
+ God's message through their prison's iron bars;
+ And gray old soldier-converts, seamed with scars
+ From every stricken field of England's wars.
+
+ Lowly before the Unseen Presence knelt
+ Each waiting heart, till haply some one felt
+ On his moved lips the seal of silence melt.
+
+ Or, without spoken words, low breathings stole
+ Of a diviner life from soul to soul,
+ Baptizing in one tender thought the whole.
+
+ When shaken hands announced the meeting o'er,
+ The friendly group still lingered at the door,
+ Greeting, inquiring, sharing all the store
+
+ Of weekly tidings. Meanwhile youth and maid
+ Down the green vistas of the woodland strayed,
+ Whispered and smiled and oft their feet delayed.
+
+ Did the boy's whistle answer back the thrushes?
+ Did light girl laughter ripple through the bushes,
+ As brooks make merry over roots and rushes?
+
+ Unvexed the sweet air seemed. Without a wound
+ The ear of silence heard, and every sound
+ Its place in nature's fine accordance found.
+
+ And solemn meeting, summer sky and wood,
+ Old kindly faces, youth and maidenhood
+ Seemed, like God's new creation, very good!
+
+ And, greeting all with quiet smile and word,
+ Pastorius went his way. The unscared bird
+ Sang at his side; scarcely the squirrel stirred
+
+ At his hushed footstep on the mossy sod;
+ And, wheresoe'er the good man looked or trod,
+ He felt the peace of nature and of God.
+
+ His social life wore no ascetic form,
+ He loved all beauty, without fear of harm,
+ And in his veins his Teuton blood ran warm.
+
+ Strict to himself, of other men no spy,
+ He made his own no circuit-judge to try
+ The freer conscience of his neighbors by.
+
+ With love rebuking, by his life alone,
+ Gracious and sweet, the better way was shown,
+ The joy of one, who, seeking not his own,
+
+ And faithful to all scruples, finds at last
+ The thorns and shards of duty overpast,
+ And daily life, beyond his hope's forecast,
+
+ Pleasant and beautiful with sight and sound,
+ And flowers upspringing in its narrow round,
+ And all his days with quiet gladness crowned.
+
+ He sang not; but, if sometimes tempted strong,
+ He hummed what seemed like Altorf's Burschen-song;
+ His good wife smiled, and did not count it wrong.
+
+ For well he loved his boyhood's brother band;
+ His Memory, while he trod the New World's strand,
+ A double-ganger walked the Fatherland!
+
+ If, when on frosty Christmas eves the light
+ Shone on his quiet hearth, he missed the sight
+ Of Yule-log, Tree, and Christ-child all in white;
+
+ And closed his eyes, and listened to the sweet
+ Old wait-songs sounding down his native street,
+ And watched again the dancers' mingling feet;
+
+ Yet not the less, when once the vision passed,
+ He held the plain and sober maxims fast
+ Of the dear Friends with whom his lot was cast.
+
+ Still all attuned to nature's melodies,
+ He loved the bird's song in his dooryard trees,
+ And the low hum of home-returning bees;
+
+ The blossomed flax, the tulip-trees in bloom
+ Down the long street, the beauty and perfume
+ Of apple-boughs, the mingling light and gloom
+
+ Of Sommerhausen's woodlands, woven through
+ With sun&mdash;threads; and the music the wind drew,
+ Mournful and sweet, from leaves it overblew.
+
+ And evermore, beneath this outward sense,
+ And through the common sequence of events,
+ He felt the guiding hand of Providence
+
+ Reach out of space. A Voice spake in his ear,
+ And to all other voices far and near
+ Died at that whisper, full of meanings clear.
+
+ The Light of Life shone round him; one by one
+ The wandering lights, that all-misleading run,
+ Went out like candles paling in the sun.
+
+ That Light he followed, step by step, where'er
+ It led, as in the vision of the seer
+ The wheels moved as the spirit in the clear
+
+ And terrible crystal moved, with all their eyes
+ Watching the living splendor sink or rise,
+ Its will their will, knowing no otherwise.
+
+ Within himself he found the law of right,
+ He walked by faith and not the letter's sight,
+ And read his Bible by the Inward Light.
+
+ And if sometimes the slaves of form and rule,
+ Frozen in their creeds like fish in winter's pool,
+ Tried the large tolerance of his liberal school,
+
+ His door was free to men of every name,
+ He welcomed all the seeking souls who came,
+ And no man's faith he made a cause of blame.
+
+ But best he loved in leisure hours to see
+ His own dear Friends sit by him knee to knee,
+ In social converse, genial, frank, and free.
+
+ There sometimes silence (it were hard to tell
+ Who owned it first) upon the circle fell,
+ Hushed Anna's busy wheel, and laid its spell
+
+ On the black boy who grimaced by the hearth,
+ To solemnize his shining face of mirth;
+ Only the old clock ticked amidst the dearth
+
+ Of sound; nor eye was raised nor hand was stirred
+ In that soul-sabbath, till at last some word
+ Of tender counsel or low prayer was heard.
+
+ Then guests, who lingered but farewell to say
+ And take love's message, went their homeward way;
+ So passed in peace the guileless Quaker's day.
+
+ His was the Christian's unsung Age of Gold,
+ A truer idyl than the bards have told
+ Of Arno's banks or Arcady of old.
+
+ Where still the Friends their place of burial keep,
+ And century-rooted mosses o'er it creep,
+ The Nurnberg scholar and his helpmeet sleep.
+
+ And Anna's aloe? If it flowered at last
+ In Bartram's garden, did John Woolman cast
+ A glance upon it as he meekly passed?
+
+ And did a secret sympathy possess
+ That tender soul, and for the slave's redress
+ Lend hope, strength, patience? It were vain to
+ guess.
+
+ Nay, were the plant itself but mythical,
+ Set in the fresco of tradition's wall
+ Like Jotham's bramble, mattereth not at all.
+
+ Enough to know that, through the winter's frost
+ And summer's heat, no seed of truth is lost,
+ And every duty pays at last its cost.
+
+ For, ere Pastorius left the sun and air,
+ God sent the answer to his life-long prayer;
+ The child was born beside the Delaware,
+
+ Who, in the power a holy purpose lends,
+ Guided his people unto nobler ends,
+ And left them worthier of the name of Friends.
+
+ And to! the fulness of the time has come,
+ And over all the exile's Western home,
+ From sea to sea the flowers of freedom bloom!
+
+ And joy-bells ring, and silver trumpets blow;
+ But not for thee, Pastorius! Even so
+ The world forgets, but the wise angels know.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0073" id="link2H_4_0073">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ KING VOLMER AND ELSIE.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ AFTER THE DANISH OF CHRISTIAN WINTER.
+ </h3>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ WHERE, over heathen doom-rings and gray stones
+ of the Horg,
+ In its little Christian city stands the church of
+ Vordingborg,
+ In merry mood King Volmer sat, forgetful of his
+ power,
+ As idle as the Goose of Gold that brooded on his
+ tower.
+
+ Out spake the King to Henrik, his young and faithful
+ squire
+ "Dar'st trust thy little Elsie, the maid of thy
+ desire?"
+ "Of all the men in Denmark she loveth only me
+ As true to me is Elsie as thy Lily is to thee."
+
+ Loud laughed the king: "To-morrow shall bring
+ another day,
+ When I myself will test her; she will not say me
+ nay."
+ Thereat the lords and gallants, that round about
+ him stood,
+ Wagged all their heads in concert and smiled as
+ courtiers should.
+
+ The gray lark sings o'er Vordingborg, and on the
+ ancient town
+ From the tall tower of Valdemar the Golden Goose
+ looks down;
+ The yellow grain is waving in the pleasant wind of
+ morn,
+ The wood resounds with cry of hounds and blare
+ of hunter's horn.
+
+ In the garden of her father little Elsie sits and
+ spins,
+ And, singing with the early birds, her daily task,
+ begins.
+ Gay tulips bloom and sweet mint curls around her
+ garden-bower,
+ But she is sweeter than the mint and fairer than
+ the flower.
+
+ About her form her kirtle blue clings lovingly, and,
+ white
+ As snow, her loose sleeves only leave her small,
+ round wrists in sight;
+ Below, the modest petticoat can only half conceal
+ The motion of the lightest foot that ever turned a
+ wheel.
+
+ The cat sits purring at her side, bees hum in
+ sunshine warm;
+ But, look! she starts, she lifts her face, she shades
+ it with her arm.
+ And, hark! a train of horsemen, with sound of
+ dog and horn,
+ Come leaping o'er the ditches, come trampling
+ down the corn!
+
+ Merrily rang the bridle-reins, and scarf and plume
+ streamed gay,
+ As fast beside her father's gate the riders held
+ their way;
+ And one was brave in scarlet cloak, with golden
+ spur on heel,
+ And, as he checked his foaming steed, the maiden
+ checked her wheel.
+
+ "All hail among thy roses, the fairest rose to me!
+ For weary months in secret my heart has longed for
+ thee!"
+ What noble knight was this? What words for
+ modest maiden's ear?
+ She dropped a lowly courtesy of bashfulness and
+ fear.
+
+ She lifted up her spinning-wheel; she fain would
+ seek the door,
+ Trembling in every limb, her cheek with blushes
+ crimsoned o'er.
+ "Nay, fear me not," the rider said, "I offer heart
+ and hand,
+ Bear witness these good Danish knights who round
+ about me stand.
+
+ "I grant you time to think of this, to answer as
+ you may,
+ For to-morrow, little Elsie, shall bring another day."
+ He spake the old phrase slyly as, glancing round
+ his train,
+ He saw his merry followers seek to hide their
+ smiles in vain.
+
+ "The snow of pearls I'll scatter in your curls of
+ golden hair,
+ I'll line with furs the velvet of the kirtle that you
+ wear;
+ All precious gems shall twine your neck; and in
+ a chariot gay
+ You shall ride, my little Elsie, behind four steeds
+ of gray.
+
+ "And harps shall sound, and flutes shall play, and
+ brazen lamps shall glow;
+ On marble floors your feet shall weave the dances
+ to and fro.
+ At frosty eventide for us the blazing hearth shall
+ shine,
+ While, at our ease, we play at draughts, and drink
+ the blood-red wine."
+
+ Then Elsie raised her head and met her wooer face
+ to face;
+ A roguish smile shone in her eye and on her lip
+ found place.
+ Back from her low white forehead the curls of
+ gold she threw,
+ And lifted up her eyes to his, steady and clear and
+ blue.
+
+ "I am a lowly peasant, and you a gallant knight;
+ I will not trust a love that soon may cool and turn
+ to slight.
+ If you would wed me henceforth be a peasant, not
+ a lord;
+ I bid you hang upon the wall your tried and trusty
+ sword."
+
+ "To please you, Elsie, I will lay keen Dynadel
+ away,
+ And in its place will swing the scythe and mow
+ your father's hay."
+ "Nay, but your gallant scarlet cloak my eyes can
+ never bear;
+ A Vadmal coat, so plain and gray, is all that you
+ must wear."
+
+ "Well, Vadmal will I wear for you," the rider
+ gayly spoke,
+ "And on the Lord's high altar I'll lay my scarlet
+ cloak."
+ "But mark," she said, "no stately horse my peasant
+ love must ride,
+ A yoke of steers before the plough is all that he
+ must guide."
+
+ The knight looked down upon his steed: "Well,
+ let him wander free
+ No other man must ride the horse that has been
+ backed by me.
+ Henceforth I'll tread the furrow and to my oxen
+ talk,
+ If only little Elsie beside my plough will walk."
+
+ "You must take from out your cellar cask of wine
+ and flask and can;
+ The homely mead I brew you may serve a peasant.
+ man."
+ "Most willingly, fair Elsie, I'll drink that mead
+ of thine,
+ And leave my minstrel's thirsty throat to drain
+ my generous wine."
+
+ "Now break your shield asunder, and shatter sign
+ and boss,
+ Unmeet for peasant-wedded arms, your knightly
+ knee across.
+ And pull me down your castle from top to basement
+ wall,
+ And let your plough trace furrows in the ruins of
+ your hall!"
+
+ Then smiled he with a lofty pride; right well at
+ last he knew
+ The maiden of the spinning-wheel was to her troth.
+ plight true.
+ "Ah, roguish little Elsie! you act your part full
+ well
+ You know that I must bear my shield and in my
+ castle dwell!
+
+ "The lions ramping on that shield between the
+ hearts aflame
+ Keep watch o'er Denmark's honor, and guard her
+ ancient name.
+
+ "For know that I am Volmer; I dwell in yonder
+ towers,
+ Who ploughs them ploughs up Denmark, this
+ goodly home of ours'.
+
+ "I tempt no more, fair Elsie! your heart I know
+ is true;
+ Would God that all our maidens were good and
+ pure as you!
+ Well have you pleased your monarch, and he shall
+ well repay;
+ God's peace! Farewell! To-morrow will bring
+ another day!"
+
+ He lifted up his bridle hand, he spurred his good
+ steed then,
+ And like a whirl-blast swept away with all his
+ gallant men.
+ The steel hoofs beat the rocky path; again on
+ winds of morn
+ The wood resounds with cry of hounds and blare
+ of hunter's horn.
+
+ "Thou true and ever faithful!" the listening
+ Henrik cried;
+ And, leaping o'er the green hedge, he stood by
+ Elsie's side.
+ None saw the fond embracing, save, shining from
+ afar,
+ The Golden Goose that watched them from the
+ tower of Valdemar.
+
+ O darling girls of Denmark! of all the flowers
+ that throng
+ Her vales of spring the fairest, I sing for you my
+ song.
+ No praise as yours so bravely rewards the singer's
+ skill;
+ Thank God! of maids like Elsie the land has
+ plenty still!
+
+ 1872.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0074" id="link2H_4_0074">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE THREE BELLS.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ BENEATH the low-hung night cloud
+ That raked her splintering mast
+ The good ship settled slowly,
+ The cruel leak gained fast.
+
+ Over the awful ocean
+ Her signal guns pealed out.
+ Dear God! was that Thy answer
+ From the horror round about?
+
+ A voice came down the wild wind,
+ "Ho! ship ahoy!" its cry
+ "Our stout Three Bells of Glasgow
+ Shall lay till daylight by!"
+
+ Hour after hour crept slowly,
+ Yet on the heaving swells
+ Tossed up and down the ship-lights,
+ The lights of the Three Bells!
+
+ And ship to ship made signals,
+ Man answered back to man,
+ While oft, to cheer and hearten,
+ The Three Bells nearer ran;
+
+ And the captain from her taffrail
+ Sent down his hopeful cry
+ "Take heart! Hold on!" he shouted;
+ "The Three Bells shall lay by!"
+
+ All night across the waters
+ The tossing lights shone clear;
+ All night from reeling taffrail
+ The Three Bells sent her cheer.
+
+ And when the dreary watches
+ Of storm and darkness passed,
+ Just as the wreck lurched under,
+ All souls were saved at last.
+
+ Sail on, Three Bells, forever,
+ In grateful memory sail!
+ Ring on, Three Bells of rescue,
+ Above the wave and gale!
+
+ Type of the Love eternal,
+ Repeat the Master's cry,
+ As tossing through our darkness
+ The lights of God draw nigh!
+
+ 1872.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0075" id="link2H_4_0075">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ JOHN UNDERHILL.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ A SCORE of years had come and gone
+ Since the Pilgrims landed on Plymouth stone,
+ When Captain Underhill, bearing scars
+ From Indian ambush and Flemish wars,
+ Left three-hilled Boston and wandered down,
+ East by north, to Cocheco town.
+
+ With Vane the younger, in counsel sweet,
+ He had sat at Anna Hutchinson's feet,
+ And, when the bolt of banishment fell
+ On the head of his saintly oracle,
+ He had shared her ill as her good report,
+ And braved the wrath of the General Court.
+
+ He shook from his feet as he rode away
+ The dust of the Massachusetts Bay.
+ The world might bless and the world might ban,
+ What did it matter the perfect man,
+ To whom the freedom of earth was given,
+ Proof against sin, and sure of heaven?
+
+ He cheered his heart as he rode along
+ With screed of Scripture and holy song,
+ Or thought how he rode with his lances free
+ By the Lower Rhine and the Zuyder-Zee,
+ Till his wood-path grew to a trodden road,
+ And Hilton Point in the distance showed.
+
+ He saw the church with the block-house nigh,
+ The two fair rivers, the flakes thereby,
+ And, tacking to windward, low and crank,
+ The little shallop from Strawberry Bank;
+ And he rose in his stirrups and looked abroad
+ Over land and water, and praised the Lord.
+
+ Goodly and stately and grave to see,
+ Into the clearing's space rode he,
+ With the sun on the hilt of his sword in sheath,
+ And his silver buckles and spurs beneath,
+ And the settlers welcomed him, one and all,
+ From swift Quampeagan to Gonic Fall.
+
+ And he said to the elders: "Lo, I come
+ As the way seemed open to seek a home.
+ Somewhat the Lord hath wrought by my hands
+ In the Narragansett and Netherlands,
+ And if here ye have work for a Christian man,
+ I will tarry, and serve ye as best I can.
+
+ "I boast not of gifts, but fain would own
+ The wonderful favor God hath shown,
+ The special mercy vouchsafed one day
+ On the shore of Narragansett Bay,
+ As I sat, with my pipe, from the camp aside,
+ And mused like Isaac at eventide.
+
+ "A sudden sweetness of peace I found,
+ A garment of gladness wrapped me round;
+ I felt from the law of works released,
+ The strife of the flesh and spirit ceased,
+ My faith to a full assurance grew,
+ And all I had hoped for myself I knew.
+
+ "Now, as God appointeth, I keep my way,
+ I shall not stumble, I shall not stray;
+ He hath taken away my fig-leaf dress,
+ I wear the robe of His righteousness;
+ And the shafts of Satan no more avail
+ Than Pequot arrows on Christian mail."
+
+ "Tarry with us," the settlers cried,
+ "Thou man of God, as our ruler and guide."
+ And Captain Underhill bowed his head.
+ "The will of the Lord be done!" he said.
+ And the morrow beheld him sitting down
+ In the ruler's seat in Cocheco town.
+
+ And he judged therein as a just man should;
+ His words were wise and his rule was good;
+ He coveted not his neighbor's land,
+ From the holding of bribes he shook his hand;
+ And through the camps of the heathen ran
+ A wholesome fear of the valiant man.
+
+ But the heart is deceitful, the good Book saith,
+ And life hath ever a savor of death.
+ Through hymns of triumph the tempter calls,
+ And whoso thinketh he standeth falls.
+ Alas! ere their round the seasons ran,
+ There was grief in the soul of the saintly man.
+
+ The tempter's arrows that rarely fail
+ Had found the joints of his spiritual mail;
+ And men took note of his gloomy air,
+ The shame in his eye, the halt in his prayer,
+ The signs of a battle lost within,
+ The pain of a soul in the coils of sin.
+
+ Then a whisper of scandal linked his name
+ With broken vows and a life of blame;
+ And the people looked askance on him
+ As he walked among them sullen and grim,
+ Ill at ease, and bitter of word,
+ And prompt of quarrel with hand or sword.
+
+ None knew how, with prayer and fasting still,
+ He strove in the bonds of his evil will;
+ But he shook himself like Samson at length,
+ And girded anew his loins of strength,
+ And bade the crier go up and down
+ And call together the wondering town.
+
+ Jeer and murmur and shaking of head
+ Ceased as he rose in his place and said
+ "Men, brethren, and fathers, well ye know
+ How I came among you a year ago,
+ Strong in the faith that my soul was freed
+ From sin of feeling, or thought, or deed.
+
+ "I have sinned, I own it with grief and shame,
+ But not with a lie on my lips I came.
+ In my blindness I verily thought my heart
+ Swept and garnished in every part.
+ He chargeth His angels with folly; He sees
+ The heavens unclean. Was I more than these?
+
+ "I urge no plea. At your feet I lay
+ The trust you gave me, and go my way.
+ Hate me or pity me, as you will,
+ The Lord will have mercy on sinners still;
+ And I, who am chiefest, say to all,
+ Watch and pray, lest ye also fall."
+
+ No voice made answer: a sob so low
+ That only his quickened ear could know
+ Smote his heart with a bitter pain,
+ As into the forest he rode again,
+ And the veil of its oaken leaves shut down
+ On his latest glimpse of Cocheco town.
+
+ Crystal-clear on the man of sin
+ The streams flashed up, and the sky shone in;
+ On his cheek of fever the cool wind blew,
+ The leaves dropped on him their tears of dew,
+ And angels of God, in the pure, sweet guise
+ Of flowers, looked on him with sad surprise.
+
+ Was his ear at fault that brook and breeze
+ Sang in their saddest of minor keys?
+ What was it the mournful wood-thrush said?
+ What whispered the pine-trees overhead?
+ Did he hear the Voice on his lonely way
+ That Adam heard in the cool of day?
+
+ Into the desert alone rode he,
+ Alone with the Infinite Purity;
+ And, bowing his soul to its tender rebuke,
+ As Peter did to the Master's look,
+ He measured his path with prayers of pain
+ For peace with God and nature again.
+
+ And in after years to Cocheco came
+ The bruit of a once familiar name;
+ How among the Dutch of New Netherlands,
+ From wild Danskamer to Haarlem sands,
+ A penitent soldier preached the Word,
+ And smote the heathen with Gideon's sword!
+
+ And the heart of Boston was glad to hear
+ How he harried the foe on the long frontier,
+ And heaped on the land against him barred
+ The coals of his generous watch and ward.
+ Frailest and bravest! the Bay State still
+ Counts with her worthies John Underhill.
+
+ 1873.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0076" id="link2H_4_0076">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CONDUCTOR BRADLEY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ A railway conductor who lost his life in an accident on a Connecticut
+ railway, May 9, 1873.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ CONDUCTOR BRADLEY, (always may his name
+ Be said with reverence!) as the swift doom came,
+ Smitten to death, a crushed and mangled frame,
+
+ Sank, with the brake he grasped just where he stood
+ To do the utmost that a brave man could,
+ And die, if needful, as a true man should.
+
+ Men stooped above him; women dropped their tears
+ On that poor wreck beyond all hopes or fears,
+ Lost in the strength and glory of his years.
+
+ What heard they? Lo! the ghastly lips of pain,
+ Dead to all thought save duty's, moved again
+ "Put out the signals for the other train!"
+
+ No nobler utterance since the world began
+ From lips of saint or martyr ever ran,
+ Electric, through the sympathies of man.
+
+ Ah me! how poor and noteless seem to this
+ The sick-bed dramas of self-consciousness,
+ Our sensual fears of pain and hopes of bliss!
+
+ Oh, grand, supreme endeavor! Not in vain
+ That last brave act of failing tongue and brain
+ Freighted with life the downward rushing train,
+
+ Following the wrecked one, as wave follows wave,
+ Obeyed the warning which the dead lips gave.
+ Others he saved, himself he could not save.
+
+ Nay, the lost life was saved. He is not dead
+ Who in his record still the earth shall tread
+ With God's clear aureole shining round his head.
+
+ We bow as in the dust, with all our pride
+ Of virtue dwarfed the noble deed beside.
+ God give us grace to live as Bradley died!
+
+ 1873.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0077" id="link2H_4_0077">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE WITCH OF WENHAM.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The house is still standing in Danvers, Mass., where, it is said, a
+ suspected witch was confined overnight in the attic, which was bolted
+ fast. In the morning when the constable came to take her to Salem for
+ trial she was missing, although the door was still bolted. Her escape was
+ doubtless aided by her friends, but at the time it was attributed to
+ Satanic interference.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ I.
+
+ ALONG Crane River's sunny slopes
+ Blew warm the winds of May,
+ And over Naumkeag's ancient oaks
+ The green outgrew the gray.
+
+ The grass was green on Rial-side,
+ The early birds at will
+ Waked up the violet in its dell,
+ The wind-flower on its hill.
+
+ "Where go you, in your Sunday coat,
+ Son Andrew, tell me, pray."
+ For striped perch in Wenham Lake
+ I go to fish to-day."
+
+ "Unharmed of thee in Wenham Lake
+ The mottled perch shall be
+ A blue-eyed witch sits on the bank
+ And weaves her net for thee.
+
+ "She weaves her golden hair; she sings
+ Her spell-song low and faint;
+ The wickedest witch in Salem jail
+ Is to that girl a saint."
+
+ "Nay, mother, hold thy cruel tongue;
+ God knows," the young man cried,
+ "He never made a whiter soul
+ Than hers by Wenham side.
+
+ "She tends her mother sick and blind,
+ And every want supplies;
+ To her above the blessed Book
+ She lends her soft blue eyes.
+
+ "Her voice is glad with holy songs,
+ Her lips are sweet with prayer;
+ Go where you will, in ten miles round
+ Is none more good and fair."
+
+ "Son Andrew, for the love of God
+ And of thy mother, stay!"
+ She clasped her hands, she wept aloud,
+ But Andrew rode away.
+
+ "O reverend sir, my Andrew's soul
+ The Wenham witch has caught;
+ She holds him with the curled gold
+ Whereof her snare is wrought.
+
+ "She charms him with her great blue eyes,
+ She binds him with her hair;
+ Oh, break the spell with holy words,
+ Unbind him with a prayer!"
+
+ "Take heart," the painful preacher said,
+ "This mischief shall not be;
+ The witch shall perish in her sins
+ And Andrew shall go free.
+
+ "Our poor Ann Putnam testifies
+ She saw her weave a spell,
+ Bare-armed, loose-haired, at full of moon,
+ Around a dried-up well.
+
+ "'Spring up, O well!' she softly sang
+ The Hebrew's old refrain
+ (For Satan uses Bible words),
+ Till water flowed a-main.
+
+ "And many a goodwife heard her speak
+ By Wenham water words
+ That made the buttercups take wings
+ And turn to yellow birds.
+
+ "They say that swarming wild bees seek
+ The hive at her command;
+ And fishes swim to take their food
+ From out her dainty hand.
+
+ "Meek as she sits in meeting-time,
+ The godly minister
+ Notes well the spell that doth compel
+ The young men's eyes to her.
+
+ "The mole upon her dimpled chin
+ Is Satan's seal and sign;
+ Her lips are red with evil bread
+ And stain of unblest wine.
+
+ "For Tituba, my Indian, saith
+ At Quasycung she took
+ The Black Man's godless sacrament
+ And signed his dreadful book.
+
+ "Last night my sore-afflicted child
+ Against the young witch cried.
+ To take her Marshal Herrick rides
+ Even now to Wenham side."
+
+ The marshal in his saddle sat,
+ His daughter at his knee;
+ "I go to fetch that arrant witch,
+ Thy fair playmate," quoth he.
+
+ "Her spectre walks the parsonage,
+ And haunts both hall and stair;
+ They know her by the great blue eyes
+ And floating gold of hair."
+
+ "They lie, they lie, my father dear!
+ No foul old witch is she,
+ But sweet and good and crystal-pure
+ As Wenham waters be."
+
+ "I tell thee, child, the Lord hath set
+ Before us good and ill,
+ And woe to all whose carnal loves
+ Oppose His righteous will.
+
+ "Between Him and the powers of hell
+ Choose thou, my child, to-day
+ No sparing hand, no pitying eye,
+ When God commands to slay!"
+
+ He went his way; the old wives shook
+ With fear as he drew nigh;
+ The children in the dooryards held
+ Their breath as he passed by.
+
+ Too well they knew the gaunt gray horse
+ The grim witch-hunter rode
+ The pale Apocalyptic beast
+ By grisly Death bestrode.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ II.
+
+ Oh, fair the face of Wenham Lake
+ Upon the young girl's shone,
+ Her tender mouth, her dreaming eyes,
+ Her yellow hair outblown.
+
+ By happy youth and love attuned
+ To natural harmonies,
+ The singing birds, the whispering wind,
+ She sat beneath the trees.
+
+ Sat shaping for her bridal dress
+ Her mother's wedding gown,
+ When lo! the marshal, writ in hand,
+ From Alford hill rode down.
+
+ His face was hard with cruel fear,
+ He grasped the maiden's hands
+ "Come with me unto Salem town,
+ For so the law commands!"
+
+ "Oh, let me to my mother say
+ Farewell before I go!"
+ He closer tied her little hands
+ Unto his saddle bow.
+
+ "Unhand me," cried she piteously,
+ "For thy sweet daughter's sake."
+ "I'll keep my daughter safe," he said,
+ "From the witch of Wenham Lake."
+
+ "Oh, leave me for my mother's sake,
+ She needs my eyes to see."
+ "Those eyes, young witch, the crows shall peck
+ From off the gallows-tree."
+
+ He bore her to a farm-house old,
+ And up its stairway long,
+ And closed on her the garret-door
+ With iron bolted strong.
+
+ The day died out, the night came down
+ Her evening prayer she said,
+ While, through the dark, strange faces seemed
+ To mock her as she prayed.
+
+ The present horror deepened all
+ The fears her childhood knew;
+ The awe wherewith the air was filled
+ With every breath she drew.
+
+ And could it be, she trembling asked,
+ Some secret thought or sin
+ Had shut good angels from her heart
+ And let the bad ones in?
+
+ Had she in some forgotten dream
+ Let go her hold on Heaven,
+ And sold herself unwittingly
+ To spirits unforgiven?
+
+ Oh, weird and still the dark hours passed;
+ No human sound she heard,
+ But up and down the chimney stack
+ The swallows moaned and stirred.
+
+ And o'er her, with a dread surmise
+ Of evil sight and sound,
+ The blind bats on their leathern wings
+ Went wheeling round and round.
+
+ Low hanging in the midnight sky
+ Looked in a half-faced moon.
+ Was it a dream, or did she hear
+ Her lover's whistled tune?
+
+ She forced the oaken scuttle back;
+ A whisper reached her ear
+ "Slide down the roof to me," it said,
+ "So softly none may hear."
+
+ She slid along the sloping roof
+ Till from its eaves she hung,
+ And felt the loosened shingles yield
+ To which her fingers clung.
+
+ Below, her lover stretched his hands
+ And touched her feet so small;
+ "Drop down to me, dear heart," he said,
+ "My arms shall break the fall."
+
+ He set her on his pillion soft,
+ Her arms about him twined;
+ And, noiseless as if velvet-shod,
+ They left the house behind.
+
+ But when they reached the open way,
+ Full free the rein he cast;
+ Oh, never through the mirk midnight
+ Rode man and maid more fast.
+
+ Along the wild wood-paths they sped,
+ The bridgeless streams they swam;
+ At set of moon they passed the Bass,
+ At sunrise Agawam.
+
+ At high noon on the Merrimac
+ The ancient ferryman
+ Forgot, at times, his idle oars,
+ So fair a freight to scan.
+
+ And when from off his grounded boat
+ He saw them mount and ride,
+ "God keep her from the evil eye,
+ And harm of witch!" he cried.
+
+ The maiden laughed, as youth will laugh
+ At all its fears gone by;
+ "He does not know," she whispered low,
+ "A little witch am I."
+
+ All day he urged his weary horse,
+ And, in the red sundown,
+ Drew rein before a friendly door
+ In distant Berwick town.
+
+ A fellow-feeling for the wronged
+ The Quaker people felt;
+ And safe beside their kindly hearths
+ The hunted maiden dwelt,
+
+ Until from off its breast the land
+ The haunting horror threw,
+ And hatred, born of ghastly dreams,
+ To shame and pity grew.
+
+ Sad were the year's spring morns, and sad
+ Its golden summer day,
+ But blithe and glad its withered fields,
+ And skies of ashen gray;
+
+ For spell and charm had power no more,
+ The spectres ceased to roam,
+ And scattered households knelt again
+ Around the hearths of home.
+
+ And when once more by Beaver Dam
+ The meadow-lark outsang,
+ And once again on all the hills
+ The early violets sprang,
+
+ And all the windy pasture slopes
+ Lay green within the arms
+ Of creeks that bore the salted sea
+ To pleasant inland farms,
+
+ The smith filed off the chains he forged,
+ The jail-bolts backward fell;
+ And youth and hoary age came forth
+ Like souls escaped from hell.
+
+ 1877
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0078" id="link2H_4_0078">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ KING SOLOMON AND THE ANTS
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ OUT from Jerusalem
+ The king rode with his great
+ War chiefs and lords of state,
+ And Sheba's queen with them;
+
+ Comely, but black withal,
+ To whom, perchance, belongs
+ That wondrous Song of songs,
+ Sensuous and mystical,
+
+ Whereto devout souls turn
+ In fond, ecstatic dream,
+ And through its earth-born theme
+ The Love of loves discern.
+
+ Proud in the Syrian sun,
+ In gold and purple sheen,
+ The dusky Ethiop queen
+ Smiled on King Solomon.
+
+ Wisest of men, he knew
+ The languages of all
+ The creatures great or small
+ That trod the earth or flew.
+
+ Across an ant-hill led
+ The king's path, and he heard
+ Its small folk, and their word
+ He thus interpreted:
+
+ "Here comes the king men greet
+ As wise and good and just,
+ To crush us in the dust
+ Under his heedless feet."
+
+ The great king bowed his head,
+ And saw the wide surprise
+ Of the Queen of Sheba's eyes
+ As he told her what they said.
+
+ "O king!" she whispered sweet,
+ "Too happy fate have they
+ Who perish in thy way
+ Beneath thy gracious feet!
+
+ "Thou of the God-lent crown,
+ Shall these vile creatures dare
+ Murmur against thee where
+ The knees of kings kneel down?"
+
+ "Nay," Solomon replied,
+ "The wise and strong should seek
+ The welfare of the weak,"
+ And turned his horse aside.
+
+ His train, with quick alarm,
+ Curved with their leader round
+ The ant-hill's peopled mound,
+ And left it free from harm.
+
+ The jewelled head bent low;
+ "O king!" she said, "henceforth
+ The secret of thy worth
+ And wisdom well I know.
+
+ "Happy must be the State
+ Whose ruler heedeth more
+ The murmurs of the poor
+ Than flatteries of the great."
+
+ 1877.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0079" id="link2H_4_0079">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ IN THE "OLD SOUTH."
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ On the 8th of July, 1677, Margaret Brewster with four other Friends went
+ into the South Church in time of meeting, "in sack-cloth, with ashes upon
+ her head, barefoot, and her face blackened," and delivered "a warning from
+ the great God of Heaven and Earth to the Rulers and Magistrates of
+ Boston." For the offence she was sentenced to be "whipped at a cart's tail
+ up and down the Town, with twenty lashes."
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ SHE came and stood in the Old South Church,
+ A wonder and a sign,
+ With a look the old-time sibyls wore,
+ Half-crazed and half-divine.
+
+ Save the mournful sackcloth about her wound,
+ Unclothed as the primal mother,
+ With limbs that trembled and eyes that blazed
+ With a fire she dare not smother.
+
+ Loose on her shoulders fell her hair,
+ With sprinkled ashes gray;
+ She stood in the broad aisle strange and weird
+ As a soul at the judgment day.
+
+ And the minister paused in his sermon's midst,
+ And the people held their breath,
+ For these were the words the maiden spoke
+ Through lips as the lips of death:
+
+ "Thus saith the Lord, with equal feet
+ All men my courts shall tread,
+ And priest and ruler no more shall eat
+ My people up like bread!
+
+ "Repent! repent! ere the Lord shall speak
+ In thunder and breaking seals
+ Let all souls worship Him in the way
+ His light within reveals."
+
+ She shook the dust from her naked feet,
+ And her sackcloth closer drew,
+ And into the porch of the awe-hushed church
+ She passed like a ghost from view.
+
+ They whipped her away at the tail o' the cart
+ Through half the streets of the town,
+ But the words she uttered that day nor fire
+ Could burn nor water drown.
+
+ And now the aisles of the ancient church
+ By equal feet are trod,
+ And the bell that swings in its belfry rings
+ Freedom to worship God!
+
+ And now whenever a wrong is done
+ It thrills the conscious walls;
+ The stone from the basement cries aloud
+ And the beam from the timber calls.
+
+ There are steeple-houses on every hand,
+ And pulpits that bless and ban,
+ And the Lord will not grudge the single church
+ That is set apart for man.
+
+ For in two commandments are all the law
+ And the prophets under the sun,
+ And the first is last and the last is first,
+ And the twain are verily one.
+
+ So, long as Boston shall Boston be,
+ And her bay-tides rise and fall,
+ Shall freedom stand in the Old South Church
+ And plead for the rights of all!
+
+ 1877.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0080" id="link2H_4_0080">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE HENCHMAN.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ MY lady walks her morning round,
+ My lady's page her fleet greyhound,
+ My lady's hair the fond winds stir,
+ And all the birds make songs for her.
+
+ Her thrushes sing in Rathburn bowers,
+ And Rathburn side is gay with flowers;
+ But ne'er like hers, in flower or bird,
+ Was beauty seen or music heard.
+
+ The distance of the stars is hers;
+ The least of all her worshippers,
+ The dust beneath her dainty heel,
+ She knows not that I see or feel.
+
+ Oh, proud and calm!&mdash;she cannot know
+ Where'er she goes with her I go;
+ Oh, cold and fair!&mdash;she cannot guess
+ I kneel to share her hound's caress!
+
+ Gay knights beside her hunt and hawk,
+ I rob their ears of her sweet talk;
+ Her suitors come from east and west,
+ I steal her smiles from every guest.
+
+ Unheard of her, in loving words,
+ I greet her with the song of birds;
+ I reach her with her green-armed bowers,
+ I kiss her with the lips of flowers.
+
+ The hound and I are on her trail,
+ The wind and I uplift her veil;
+ As if the calm, cold moon she were,
+ And I the tide, I follow her.
+
+ As unrebuked as they, I share
+ The license of the sun and air,
+ And in a common homage hide
+ My worship from her scorn and pride.
+
+ World-wide apart, and yet so near,
+ I breathe her charmed atmosphere,
+ Wherein to her my service brings
+ The reverence due to holy things.
+
+ Her maiden pride, her haughty name,
+ My dumb devotion shall not shame;
+ The love that no return doth crave
+ To knightly levels lifts the slave,
+
+ No lance have I, in joust or fight,
+ To splinter in my lady's sight
+ But, at her feet, how blest were I
+ For any need of hers to die!
+
+ 1877.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0081" id="link2H_4_0081">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE DEAD FEAST OF THE KOL-FOLK.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ E. B. Tylor in his Primitive Culture, chapter xii., gives an account of
+ the reverence paid the dead by the Kol tribes of Chota Nagpur, Assam.
+ "When a Ho or Munda," he says, "has been burned on the funeral pile,
+ collected morsels of his bones are carried in procession with a solemn,
+ ghostly, sliding step, keeping time to the deep-sounding drum, and when
+ the old woman who carries the bones on her bamboo tray lowers it from time
+ to time, then girls who carry pitchers and brass vessels mournfully
+ reverse them to show that they are empty; thus the remains are taken to
+ visit every house in the village, and every dwelling of a friend or
+ relative for miles, and the inmates come out to mourn and praise the
+ goodness of the departed; the bones are carried to all the dead man's
+ favorite haunts, to the fields he cultivated, to the grove he planted, to
+ the threshing-floor where he worked, to the village dance-room where he
+ made merry. At last they are taken to the grave, and buried in an earthen
+ vase upon a store of food, covered with one of those huge stone slabs
+ which European visitors wonder at in the districts of the aborigines of
+ India." In the Journal of the Asiatic Society, Bengal, vol. ix., p. 795,
+ is a Ho dirge.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ WE have opened the door,
+ Once, twice, thrice!
+ We have swept the floor,
+ We have boiled the rice.
+ Come hither, come hither!
+ Come from the far lands,
+ Come from the star lands,
+ Come as before!
+ We lived long together,
+ We loved one another;
+ Come back to our life.
+ Come father, come mother,
+ Come sister and brother,
+ Child, husband, and wife,
+ For you we are sighing.
+ Come take your old places,
+ Come look in our faces,
+ The dead on the dying,
+ Come home!
+
+ We have opened the door,
+ Once, twice, thrice!
+ We have kindled the coals,
+ And we boil the rice
+ For the feast of souls.
+ Come hither, come hither!
+ Think not we fear you,
+ Whose hearts are so near you.
+ Come tenderly thought on,
+ Come all unforgotten,
+ Come from the shadow-lands,
+ From the dim meadow-lands
+ Where the pale grasses bend
+ Low to our sighing.
+ Come father, come mother,
+ Come sister and brother,
+ Come husband and friend,
+ The dead to the dying,
+ Come home!
+
+ We have opened the door
+ You entered so oft;
+ For the feast of souls
+ We have kindled the coals,
+ And we boil the rice soft.
+ Come you who are dearest
+ To us who are nearest,
+ Come hither, come hither,
+ From out the wild weather;
+ The storm clouds are flying,
+ The peepul is sighing;
+ Come in from the rain.
+ Come father, come mother,
+ Come sister and brother,
+ Come husband and lover,
+ Beneath our roof-cover.
+ Look on us again,
+ The dead on the dying,
+ Come home!
+
+ We have opened the door!
+ For the feast of souls
+ We have kindled the coals
+ We may kindle no more!
+ Snake, fever, and famine,
+ The curse of the Brahmin,
+ The sun and the dew,
+ They burn us, they bite us,
+ They waste us and smite us;
+ Our days are but few
+ In strange lands far yonder
+ To wonder and wander
+ We hasten to you.
+ List then to our sighing,
+ While yet we are here
+ Nor seeing nor hearing,
+ We wait without fearing,
+ To feel you draw near.
+ O dead, to the dying
+ Come home!
+
+ 1879.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0082" id="link2H_4_0082">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE KHAN'S DEVIL.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ THE Khan came from Bokhara town
+ To Hamza, santon of renown.
+
+ "My head is sick, my hands are weak;
+ Thy help, O holy man, I seek."
+
+ In silence marking for a space
+ The Khan's red eyes and purple face,
+
+ Thick voice, and loose, uncertain tread,
+ "Thou hast a devil!" Hamza said.
+
+ "Allah forbid!" exclaimed the Khan.
+ Rid me of him at once, O man!"
+
+ "Nay," Hamza said, "no spell of mine
+ Can slay that cursed thing of thine.
+
+ "Leave feast and wine, go forth and drink
+ Water of healing on the brink
+
+ "Where clear and cold from mountain snows,
+ The Nahr el Zeben downward flows.
+
+ "Six moons remain, then come to me;
+ May Allah's pity go with thee!"
+
+ Awestruck, from feast and wine the Khan
+ Went forth where Nahr el Zeben ran.
+
+ Roots were his food, the desert dust
+ His bed, the water quenched his thirst;
+
+ And when the sixth moon's scimetar
+ Curved sharp above the evening star,
+
+ He sought again the santon's door,
+ Not weak and trembling as before,
+
+ But strong of limb and clear of brain;
+ "Behold," he said, "the fiend is slain."
+
+ "Nay," Hamza answered, "starved and drowned,
+ The curst one lies in death-like swound.
+
+ "But evil breaks the strongest gyves,
+ And jins like him have charmed lives.
+
+ "One beaker of the juice of grape
+ May call him up in living shape.
+
+ "When the red wine of Badakshan
+ Sparkles for thee, beware, O Khan,
+
+ "With water quench the fire within,
+ And drown each day thy devilkin!"
+
+ Thenceforth the great Khan shunned the cup
+ As Shitan's own, though offered up,
+
+ With laughing eyes and jewelled hands,
+ By Yarkand's maids and Samarcand's.
+
+ And, in the lofty vestibule
+ Of the medress of Kaush Kodul,
+
+ The students of the holy law
+ A golden-lettered tablet saw,
+
+ With these words, by a cunning hand,
+ Graved on it at the Khan's command:
+
+ "In Allah's name, to him who hath
+ A devil, Khan el Hamed saith,
+
+ "Wisely our Prophet cursed the vine
+ The fiend that loves the breath of wine,
+
+ "No prayer can slay, no marabout
+ Nor Meccan dervis can drive out.
+
+ "I, Khan el Hamed, know the charm
+ That robs him of his power to harm.
+
+ "Drown him, O Islam's child! the spell
+ To save thee lies in tank and well!"
+
+ 1879.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0083" id="link2H_4_0083">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE KING'S MISSIVE.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ 1661.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ This ballad, originally written for The Memorial History of Boston,
+ describes, with pardonable poetic license, a memorable incident in the
+ annals of the city. The interview between Shattuck and the Governor took
+ place, I have since learned, in the residence of the latter, and not in
+ the Council Chamber. The publication of the ballad led to some discussion
+ as to the historical truthfulness of the picture, but I have seen no
+ reason to rub out any of the figures or alter the lines and colors.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ UNDER the great hill sloping bare
+ To cove and meadow and Common lot,
+ In his council chamber and oaken chair,
+ Sat the worshipful Governor Endicott.
+ A grave, strong man, who knew no peer
+ In the pilgrim land, where he ruled in fear
+ Of God, not man, and for good or ill
+ Held his trust with an iron will.
+
+ He had shorn with his sword the cross from out
+ The flag, and cloven the May-pole down,
+ Harried the heathen round about,
+ And whipped the Quakers from town to town.
+ Earnest and honest, a man at need
+ To burn like a torch for his own harsh creed,
+ He kept with the flaming brand of his zeal
+ The gate of the holy common weal.
+
+ His brow was clouded, his eye was stern,
+ With a look of mingled sorrow and wrath;
+ "Woe's me!" he murmured: "at every turn
+ The pestilent Quakers are in my path!
+ Some we have scourged, and banished some,
+ Some hanged, more doomed, and still they come,
+ Fast as the tide of yon bay sets in,
+ Sowing their heresy's seed of sin.
+
+ "Did we count on this? Did we leave behind
+ The graves of our kin, the comfort and ease
+ Of our English hearths and homes, to find
+ Troublers of Israel such as these?
+ Shall I spare? Shall I pity them? God forbid!
+ I will do as the prophet to Agag did
+ They come to poison the wells of the Word,
+ I will hew them in pieces before the Lord!"
+
+ The door swung open, and Rawson the clerk
+ Entered, and whispered under breath,
+ "There waits below for the hangman's work
+ A fellow banished on pain of death&mdash;
+ Shattuck, of Salem, unhealed of the whip,
+ Brought over in Master Goldsmith's ship
+ At anchor here in a Christian port,
+ With freight of the devil and all his sort!"
+
+ Twice and thrice on the chamber floor
+ Striding fiercely from wall to wall,
+ "The Lord do so to me and more,"
+ The Governor cried, "if I hang not all!
+ Bring hither the Quaker." Calm, sedate,
+ With the look of a man at ease with fate,
+ Into that presence grim and dread
+ Came Samuel Shattuck, with hat on head.
+
+ "Off with the knave's hat!" An angry hand
+ Smote down the offence; but the wearer said,
+ With a quiet smile, "By the king's command
+ I bear his message and stand in his stead."
+ In the Governor's hand a missive he laid
+ With the royal arms on its seal displayed,
+ And the proud man spake as he gazed thereat,
+ Uncovering, "Give Mr. Shattuck his hat."
+
+ He turned to the Quaker, bowing low,&mdash;
+ "The king commandeth your friends' release;
+ Doubt not he shall be obeyed, although
+ To his subjects' sorrow and sin's increase.
+ What he here enjoineth, John Endicott,
+ His loyal servant, questioneth not.
+ You are free! God grant the spirit you own
+ May take you from us to parts unknown."
+
+ So the door of the jail was open cast,
+ And, like Daniel, out of the lion's den
+ Tender youth and girlhood passed,
+ With age-bowed women and gray-locked men.
+ And the voice of one appointed to die
+ Was lifted in praise and thanks on high,
+ And the little maid from New Netherlands
+ Kissed, in her joy, the doomed man's hands.
+
+ And one, whose call was to minister
+ To the souls in prison, beside him went,
+ An ancient woman, bearing with her
+ The linen shroud for his burial meant.
+ For she, not counting her own life dear,
+ In the strength of a love that cast out fear,
+ Had watched and served where her brethren died,
+ Like those who waited the cross beside.
+
+ One moment they paused on their way to look
+ On the martyr graves by the Common side,
+ And much scourged Wharton of Salem took
+ His burden of prophecy up and cried
+ "Rest, souls of the valiant! Not in vain
+ Have ye borne the Master's cross of pain;
+ Ye have fought the fight, ye are victors crowned,
+ With a fourfold chain ye have Satan bound!"
+
+ The autumn haze lay soft and still
+ On wood and meadow and upland farms;
+ On the brow of Snow Hill the great windmill
+ Slowly and lazily swung its arms;
+ Broad in the sunshine stretched away,
+ With its capes and islands, the turquoise bay;
+ And over water and dusk of pines
+ Blue hills lifted their faint outlines.
+
+ The topaz leaves of the walnut glowed,
+ The sumach added its crimson fleck,
+ And double in air and water showed
+ The tinted maples along the Neck;
+ Through frost flower clusters of pale star-mist,
+ And gentian fringes of amethyst,
+ And royal plumes of golden-rod,
+ The grazing cattle on Centry trod.
+
+ But as they who see not, the Quakers saw
+ The world about them; they only thought
+ With deep thanksgiving and pious awe
+ On the great deliverance God had wrought.
+ Through lane and alley the gazing town
+ Noisily followed them up and down;
+ Some with scoffing and brutal jeer,
+ Some with pity and words of cheer.
+
+ One brave voice rose above the din.
+ Upsall, gray with his length of days,
+ Cried from the door of his Red Lion Inn
+ "Men of Boston, give God the praise
+ No more shall innocent blood call down
+ The bolts of wrath on your guilty town.
+ The freedom of worship, dear to you,
+ Is dear to all, and to all is due.
+
+ "I see the vision of days to come,
+ When your beautiful City of the Bay
+ Shall be Christian liberty's chosen home,
+ And none shall his neighbor's rights gainsay.
+ The varying notes of worship shall blend
+ And as one great prayer to God ascend,
+ And hands of mutual charity raise
+ Walls of salvation and gates of praise."
+
+ So passed the Quakers through Boston town,
+ Whose painful ministers sighed to see
+ The walls of their sheep-fold falling down,
+ And wolves of heresy prowling free.
+ But the years went on, and brought no wrong;
+ With milder counsels the State grew strong,
+ As outward Letter and inward Light
+ Kept the balance of truth aright.
+
+ The Puritan spirit perishing not,
+ To Concord's yeomen the signal sent,
+ And spake in the voice of the cannon-shot
+ That severed the chains of a continent.
+ With its gentler mission of peace and good-will
+ The thought of the Quaker is living still,
+ And the freedom of soul he prophesied
+ Is gospel and law where the martyrs died.
+
+ 1880.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0084" id="link2H_4_0084">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VALUATION.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ THE old Squire said, as he stood by his gate,
+ And his neighbor, the Deacon, went by,
+ "In spite of my bank stock and real estate,
+ You are better off, Deacon, than I.
+
+ "We're both growing old, and the end's drawing near,
+ You have less of this world to resign,
+ But in Heaven's appraisal your assets, I fear,
+ Will reckon up greater than mine.
+
+ "They say I am rich, but I'm feeling so poor,
+ I wish I could swap with you even
+ The pounds I have lived for and laid up in store
+ For the shillings and pence you have given."
+
+ "Well, Squire," said the Deacon, with shrewd
+ common sense,
+ While his eye had a twinkle of fun,
+ "Let your pounds take the way of my shillings
+ and pence,
+ And the thing can be easily done!"
+
+ 1880.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0085" id="link2H_4_0085">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ RABBI ISHMAEL.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ "Rabbi Ishmael Ben Elisha said, Once, I entered into the Holy of Holies
+ (as High Priest) to burn incense, when I saw Aktriel (the Divine Crown)
+ Jah, Lord of Hosts, sitting upon a throne, high and lifted up, who said
+ unto me, 'Ishmael, my son, bless me.' I answered, 'May it please Thee to
+ make Thy compassion prevail over Thine anger; may it be revealed above Thy
+ other attributes; mayest Thou deal with Thy children according to it, and
+ not according to the strict measure of judgment.' It seemed to me that He
+ bowed His head, as though to answer Amen to my blessing."&mdash; Talmud
+ (Beraehoth, I. f. 6. b.)
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ THE Rabbi Ishmael, with the woe and sin
+ Of the world heavy upon him, entering in
+ The Holy of Holies, saw an awful Face
+ With terrible splendor filling all the place.
+ "O Ishmael Ben Elisha!" said a voice,
+ "What seekest thou? What blessing is thy choice?"
+ And, knowing that he stood before the Lord,
+ Within the shadow of the cherubim,
+ Wide-winged between the blinding light and him,
+ He bowed himself, and uttered not a word,
+ But in the silence of his soul was prayer
+ "O Thou Eternal! I am one of all,
+ And nothing ask that others may not share.
+ Thou art almighty; we are weak and small,
+ And yet Thy children: let Thy mercy spare!"
+ Trembling, he raised his eyes, and in the place
+ Of the insufferable glory, lo! a face
+ Of more than mortal tenderness, that bent
+ Graciously down in token of assent,
+ And, smiling, vanished! With strange joy elate,
+ The wondering Rabbi sought the temple's gate.
+ Radiant as Moses from the Mount, he stood
+ And cried aloud unto the multitude
+ "O Israel, hear! The Lord our God is good!
+ Mine eyes have seen his glory and his grace;
+ Beyond his judgments shall his love endure;
+ The mercy of the All Merciful is sure!"
+
+ 1881.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0086" id="link2H_4_0086">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE ROCK-TOMB OF BRADORE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ H. Y. Hind, in Explorations in the Interior of the Labrador Peninsula (ii.
+ 166) mentions the finding of a rock tomb near the little fishing port of
+ Bradore, with the inscription upon it which is given in the poem.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ A DREAR and desolate shore!
+ Where no tree unfolds its leaves,
+ And never the spring wind weaves
+ Green grass for the hunter's tread;
+ A land forsaken and dead,
+ Where the ghostly icebergs go
+ And come with the ebb and flow
+ Of the waters of Bradore!
+
+ A wanderer, from a land
+ By summer breezes fanned,
+ Looked round him, awed, subdued,
+ By the dreadful solitude,
+ Hearing alone the cry
+ Of sea-birds clanging by,
+ The crash and grind of the floe,
+ Wail of wind and wash of tide.
+ "O wretched land!" he cried,
+ "Land of all lands the worst,
+ God forsaken and curst!
+ Thy gates of rock should show
+ The words the Tuscan seer
+ Read in the Realm of Woe
+ Hope entereth not here!"
+
+ Lo! at his feet there stood
+ A block of smooth larch wood,
+ Waif of some wandering wave,
+ Beside a rock-closed cave
+ By Nature fashioned for a grave;
+ Safe from the ravening bear
+ And fierce fowl of the air,
+ Wherein to rest was laid
+ A twenty summers' maid,
+ Whose blood had equal share
+ Of the lands of vine and snow,
+ Half French, half Eskimo.
+ In letters uneffaced,
+ Upon the block were traced
+ The grief and hope of man,
+ And thus the legend ran
+ "We loved her!
+ Words cannot tell how well!
+ We loved her!
+ God loved her!
+ And called her home to peace and rest.
+ We love her."
+
+ The stranger paused and read.
+ "O winter land!" he said,
+ "Thy right to be I own;
+ God leaves thee not alone.
+ And if thy fierce winds blow
+ Over drear wastes of rock and snow,
+ And at thy iron gates
+ The ghostly iceberg waits,
+ Thy homes and hearts are dear.
+ Thy sorrow o'er thy sacred dust
+ Is sanctified by hope and trust;
+ God's love and man's are here.
+ And love where'er it goes
+ Makes its own atmosphere;
+ Its flowers of Paradise
+ Take root in the eternal ice,
+ And bloom through Polar snows!"
+
+ 1881.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0087" id="link2H_4_0087">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE BAY OF SEVEN ISLANDS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The volume in which "The Bay of Seven Islands" was published was dedicated
+ to the late Edwin Percy Whipple, to whom more than to any other person I
+ was indebted for public recognition as one worthy of a place in American
+ literature, at a time when it required a great degree of courage to urge
+ such a claim for a pro-scribed abolitionist. Although younger than I, he
+ had gained the reputation of a brilliant essayist, and was regarded as the
+ highest American authority in criticism. His wit and wisdom enlivened a
+ small literary circle of young men including Thomas Starr King, the
+ eloquent preacher, and Daniel N. Haskell of the Daily Transcript, who
+ gathered about our common friend dames T. Fields at the Old Corner
+ Bookstore. The poem which gave title to the volume I inscribed to my
+ friend and neighbor Harriet Prescott Spofford, whose poems have lent a new
+ interest to our beautiful river-valley.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ From the green Amesbury hill which bears the name
+ Of that half mythic ancestor of mine
+ Who trod its slopes two hundred years ago,
+ Down the long valley of the Merrimac,
+ Midway between me and the river's mouth,
+ I see thy home, set like an eagle's nest
+ Among Deer Island's immemorial pines,
+ Crowning the crag on which the sunset breaks
+ Its last red arrow. Many a tale and song,
+ Which thou hast told or sung, I call to mind,
+ Softening with silvery mist the woods and hills,
+ The out-thrust headlands and inreaching bays
+ Of our northeastern coast-line, trending where
+ The Gulf, midsummer, feels the chill blockade
+ Of icebergs stranded at its northern gate.
+
+ To thee the echoes of the Island Sound
+ Answer not vainly, nor in vain the moan
+ Of the South Breaker prophesying storm.
+ And thou hast listened, like myself, to men
+ Sea-periled oft where Anticosti lies
+ Like a fell spider in its web of fog,
+ Or where the Grand Bank shallows with the wrecks
+ Of sunken fishers, and to whom strange isles
+ And frost-rimmed bays and trading stations seem
+ Familiar as Great Neck and Kettle Cove,
+ Nubble and Boon, the common names of home.
+ So let me offer thee this lay of mine,
+ Simple and homely, lacking much thy play
+ Of color and of fancy. If its theme
+ And treatment seem to thee befitting youth
+ Rather than age, let this be my excuse
+ It has beguiled some heavy hours and called
+ Some pleasant memories up; and, better still,
+ Occasion lent me for a kindly word
+ To one who is my neighbor and my friend.
+
+ 1883.
+
+ . . . . . . . . . .
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The skipper sailed out of the harbor mouth,
+ Leaving the apple-bloom of the South
+ For the ice of the Eastern seas,
+ In his fishing schooner Breeze.
+
+ Handsome and brave and young was he,
+ And the maids of Newbury sighed to see
+ His lessening white sail fall
+ Under the sea's blue wall.
+
+ Through the Northern Gulf and the misty screen
+ Of the isles of Mingan and Madeleine,
+ St. Paul's and Blanc Sablon,
+ The little Breeze sailed on,
+
+ Backward and forward, along the shore
+ Of lorn and desolate Labrador,
+ And found at last her way
+ To the Seven Islands Bay.
+
+ The little hamlet, nestling below
+ Great hills white with lingering snow,
+ With its tin-roofed chapel stood
+ Half hid in the dwarf spruce wood;
+
+ Green-turfed, flower-sown, the last outpost
+ Of summer upon the dreary coast,
+ With its gardens small and spare,
+ Sad in the frosty air.
+
+ Hard by where the skipper's schooner lay,
+ A fisherman's cottage looked away
+ Over isle and bay, and behind
+ On mountains dim-defined.
+
+ And there twin sisters, fair and young,
+ Laughed with their stranger guest, and sung
+ In their native tongue the lays
+ Of the old Provencal days.
+
+ Alike were they, save the faint outline
+ Of a scar on Suzette's forehead fine;
+ And both, it so befell,
+ Loved the heretic stranger well.
+
+ Both were pleasant to look upon,
+ But the heart of the skipper clave to one;
+ Though less by his eye than heart
+ He knew the twain apart.
+
+ Despite of alien race and creed,
+ Well did his wooing of Marguerite speed;
+ And the mother's wrath was vain
+ As the sister's jealous pain.
+
+ The shrill-tongued mistress her house forbade,
+ And solemn warning was sternly said
+ By the black-robed priest, whose word
+ As law the hamlet heard.
+
+ But half by voice and half by signs
+ The skipper said, "A warm sun shines
+ On the green-banked Merrimac;
+ Wait, watch, till I come back.
+
+ "And when you see, from my mast head,
+ The signal fly of a kerchief red,
+ My boat on the shore shall wait;
+ Come, when the night is late."
+
+ Ah! weighed with childhood's haunts and friends,
+ And all that the home sky overbends,
+ Did ever young love fail
+ To turn the trembling scale?
+
+ Under the night, on the wet sea sands,
+ Slowly unclasped their plighted hands
+ One to the cottage hearth,
+ And one to his sailor's berth.
+
+ What was it the parting lovers heard?
+ Nor leaf, nor ripple, nor wing of bird,
+ But a listener's stealthy tread
+ On the rock-moss, crisp and dead.
+
+ He weighed his anchor, and fished once more
+ By the black coast-line of Labrador;
+ And by love and the north wind driven,
+ Sailed back to the Islands Seven.
+
+ In the sunset's glow the sisters twain
+ Saw the Breeze come sailing in again;
+ Said Suzette, "Mother dear,
+ The heretic's sail is here."
+
+ "Go, Marguerite, to your room, and hide;
+ Your door shall be bolted!" the mother cried:
+ While Suzette, ill at ease,
+ Watched the red sign of the Breeze.
+
+ At midnight, down to the waiting skiff
+ She stole in the shadow of the cliff;
+ And out of the Bay's mouth ran
+ The schooner with maid and man.
+
+ And all night long, on a restless bed,
+ Her prayers to the Virgin Marguerite said
+ And thought of her lover's pain
+ Waiting for her in vain.
+
+ Did he pace the sands? Did he pause to hear
+ The sound of her light step drawing near?
+ And, as the slow hours passed,
+ Would he doubt her faith at last?
+
+ But when she saw through the misty pane,
+ The morning break on a sea of rain,
+ Could even her love avail
+ To follow his vanished sail?
+
+ Meantime the Breeze, with favoring wind,
+ Left the rugged Moisic hills behind,
+ And heard from an unseen shore
+ The falls of Manitou roar.
+
+ On the morrow's morn, in the thick, gray weather
+ They sat on the reeling deck together,
+ Lover and counterfeit,
+ Of hapless Marguerite.
+
+ With a lover's hand, from her forehead fair
+ He smoothed away her jet-black hair.
+ What was it his fond eyes met?
+ The scar of the false Suzette!
+
+ Fiercely he shouted: "Bear away
+ East by north for Seven Isles Bay!"
+ The maiden wept and prayed,
+ But the ship her helm obeyed.
+
+ Once more the Bay of the Isles they found
+ They heard the bell of the chapel sound,
+ And the chant of the dying sung
+ In the harsh, wild Indian tongue.
+
+ A feeling of mystery, change, and awe
+ Was in all they heard and all they saw
+ Spell-bound the hamlet lay
+ In the hush of its lonely bay.
+
+ And when they came to the cottage door,
+ The mother rose up from her weeping sore,
+ And with angry gestures met
+ The scared look of Suzette.
+
+ "Here is your daughter," the skipper said;
+ "Give me the one I love instead."
+ But the woman sternly spake;
+ "Go, see if the dead will wake!"
+
+ He looked. Her sweet face still and white
+ And strange in the noonday taper light,
+ She lay on her little bed,
+ With the cross at her feet and head.
+
+ In a passion of grief the strong man bent
+ Down to her face, and, kissing it, went
+ Back to the waiting Breeze,
+ Back to the mournful seas.
+
+ Never again to the Merrimac
+ And Newbury's homes that bark came back.
+ Whether her fate she met
+ On the shores of Carraquette,
+
+ Miscou, or Tracadie, who can say?
+ But even yet at Seven Isles Bay
+ Is told the ghostly tale
+ Of a weird, unspoken sail,
+
+ In the pale, sad light of the Northern day
+ Seen by the blanketed Montagnais,
+ Or squaw, in her small kyack,
+ Crossing the spectre's track.
+
+ On the deck a maiden wrings her hands;
+ Her likeness kneels on the gray coast sands;
+ One in her wild despair,
+ And one in the trance of prayer.
+
+ She flits before no earthly blast,
+ The red sign fluttering from her mast,
+ Over the solemn seas,
+ The ghost of the schooner Breeze!
+
+ 1882.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0088" id="link2H_4_0088">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE WISHING BRIDGE.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ AMONG the legends sung or said
+ Along our rocky shore,
+ The Wishing Bridge of Marblehead
+ May well be sung once more.
+
+ An hundred years ago (so ran
+ The old-time story) all
+ Good wishes said above its span
+ Would, soon or late, befall.
+
+ If pure and earnest, never failed
+ The prayers of man or maid
+ For him who on the deep sea sailed,
+ For her at home who stayed.
+
+ Once thither came two girls from school,
+ And wished in childish glee
+ And one would be a queen and rule,
+ And one the world would see.
+
+ Time passed; with change of hopes and fears,
+ And in the self-same place,
+ Two women, gray with middle years,
+ Stood, wondering, face to face.
+
+ With wakened memories, as they met,
+ They queried what had been
+ "A poor man's wife am I, and yet,"
+ Said one, "I am a queen.
+
+ "My realm a little homestead is,
+ Where, lacking crown and throne,
+ I rule by loving services
+ And patient toil alone."
+
+ The other said: "The great world lies
+ Beyond me as it lay;
+ O'er love's and duty's boundaries
+ My feet may never stray.
+
+ "I see but common sights of home,
+ Its common sounds I hear,
+ My widowed mother's sick-bed room
+ Sufficeth for my sphere.
+
+ "I read to her some pleasant page
+ Of travel far and wide,
+ And in a dreamy pilgrimage
+ We wander side by side.
+
+ "And when, at last, she falls asleep,
+ My book becomes to me
+ A magic glass: my watch I keep,
+ But all the world I see.
+
+ "A farm-wife queen your place you fill,
+ While fancy's privilege
+ Is mine to walk the earth at will,
+ Thanks to the Wishing Bridge."
+
+ "Nay, leave the legend for the truth,"
+ The other cried, "and say
+ God gives the wishes of our youth,
+ But in His own best way!"
+
+ 1882.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0089" id="link2H_4_0089">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ HOW THE WOMEN WENT FROM DOVER.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The following is a copy of the warrant issued by Major Waldron, of Dover,
+ in 1662. The Quakers, as was their wont, prophesied against him, and saw,
+ as they supposed, the fulfilment of their prophecy when, many years after,
+ he was killed by the Indians.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ To the constables of Dover, Hampton, Salisbury, Newbury, Rowley,
+ Ipswich, Wenham, Lynn, Boston, Roxbury, Dedham, and until these
+ vagabond Quakers are carried out of this jurisdiction. You, and
+ every one of you, are required, in the King's Majesty's name, to
+ take these vagabond Quakers, Anne Colman, Mary Tomkins, and Alice
+ Ambrose, and make them fast to the cart's tail, and driving the
+ cart through your several towns, to whip them upon their naked
+ backs not exceeding ten stripes apiece on each of them, in each
+ town; and so to convey them from constable to constable till they
+ are out of this jurisdiction, as you will answer it at your peril;
+ and this shall be your warrant.
+ RICHARD WALDRON.
+ Dated at Dover, December 22, 1662.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ This warrant was executed only in Dover and Hampton. At Salisbury the
+ constable refused to obey it. He was sustained by the town's people, who
+ were under the influence of Major Robert Pike, the leading man in the
+ lower valley of the Merrimac, who stood far in advance of his time, as an
+ advocate of religious freedom, and an opponent of ecclesiastical
+ authority. He had the moral courage to address an able and manly letter to
+ the court at Salem, remonstrating against the witchcraft trials.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ THE tossing spray of Cocheco's fall
+ Hardened to ice on its rocky wall,
+ As through Dover town in the chill, gray dawn,
+ Three women passed, at the cart-tail drawn!
+
+ Bared to the waist, for the north wind's grip
+ And keener sting of the constable's whip,
+ The blood that followed each hissing blow
+ Froze as it sprinkled the winter snow.
+
+ Priest and ruler, boy and maid
+ Followed the dismal cavalcade;
+ And from door and window, open thrown,
+ Looked and wondered gaffer and crone.
+
+ "God is our witness," the victims cried,
+ We suffer for Him who for all men died;
+ The wrong ye do has been done before,
+ We bear the stripes that the Master bore!
+
+ And thou, O Richard Waldron, for whom
+ We hear the feet of a coming doom,
+ On thy cruel heart and thy hand of wrong
+ Vengeance is sure, though it tarry long.
+
+ "In the light of the Lord, a flame we see
+ Climb and kindle a proud roof-tree;
+ And beneath it an old man lying dead,
+ With stains of blood on his hoary head."
+
+ "Smite, Goodman Hate-Evil!&mdash;harder still!"
+ The magistrate cried, "lay on with a will!
+ Drive out of their bodies the Father of Lies,
+ Who through them preaches and prophesies!"
+
+ So into the forest they held their way,
+ By winding river and frost-rimmed bay,
+ Over wind-swept hills that felt the beat
+ Of the winter sea at their icy feet.
+
+ The Indian hunter, searching his traps,
+ Peered stealthily through the forest gaps;
+ And the outlying settler shook his head,&mdash;
+ "They're witches going to jail," he said.
+
+ At last a meeting-house came in view;
+ A blast on his horn the constable blew;
+ And the boys of Hampton cried up and down,
+ "The Quakers have come!" to the wondering town.
+
+ From barn and woodpile the goodman came;
+ The goodwife quitted her quilting frame,
+ With her child at her breast; and, hobbling slow,
+ The grandam followed to see the show.
+
+ Once more the torturing whip was swung,
+ Once more keen lashes the bare flesh stung.
+ "Oh, spare! they are bleeding!"' a little maid cried,
+ And covered her face the sight to hide.
+
+ A murmur ran round the crowd: "Good folks,"
+ Quoth the constable, busy counting the strokes,
+ "No pity to wretches like these is due,
+ They have beaten the gospel black and blue!"
+
+ Then a pallid woman, in wild-eyed fear,
+ With her wooden noggin of milk drew near.
+ "Drink, poor hearts!" a rude hand smote
+ Her draught away from a parching throat.
+
+ "Take heed," one whispered, "they'll take your cow
+ For fines, as they took your horse and plough,
+ And the bed from under you." "Even so,"
+ She said; "they are cruel as death, I know."
+
+ Then on they passed, in the waning day,
+ Through Seabrook woods, a weariful way;
+ By great salt meadows and sand-hills bare,
+ And glimpses of blue sea here and there.
+
+ By the meeting-house in Salisbury town,
+ The sufferers stood, in the red sundown,
+ Bare for the lash! O pitying Night,
+ Drop swift thy curtain and hide the sight.
+
+ With shame in his eye and wrath on his lip
+ The Salisbury constable dropped his whip.
+ "This warrant means murder foul and red;
+ Cursed is he who serves it," he said.
+
+ "Show me the order, and meanwhile strike
+ A blow at your peril!" said Justice Pike.
+ Of all the rulers the land possessed,
+ Wisest and boldest was he and best.
+
+ He scoffed at witchcraft; the priest he met
+ As man meets man; his feet he set
+ Beyond his dark age, standing upright,
+ Soul-free, with his face to the morning light.
+
+ He read the warrant: "These convey
+ From our precincts; at every town on the way
+ Give each ten lashes." "God judge the brute!
+ I tread his order under my foot!
+
+ "Cut loose these poor ones and let them go;
+ Come what will of it, all men shall know
+ No warrant is good, though backed by the Crown,
+ For whipping women in Salisbury town!"
+
+ The hearts of the villagers, half released
+ From creed of terror and rule of priest,
+ By a primal instinct owned the right
+ Of human pity in law's despite.
+
+ For ruth and chivalry only slept,
+ His Saxon manhood the yeoman kept;
+ Quicker or slower, the same blood ran
+ In the Cavalier and the Puritan.
+
+ The Quakers sank on their knees in praise
+ And thanks. A last, low sunset blaze
+ Flashed out from under a cloud, and shed
+ A golden glory on each bowed head.
+
+ The tale is one of an evil time,
+ When souls were fettered and thought was crime,
+ And heresy's whisper above its breath
+ Meant shameful scourging and bonds and death!
+
+ What marvel, that hunted and sorely tried,
+ Even woman rebuked and prophesied,
+ And soft words rarely answered back
+ The grim persuasion of whip and rack.
+
+ If her cry from the whipping-post and jail
+ Pierced sharp as the Kenite's driven nail,
+ O woman, at ease in these happier days,
+ Forbear to judge of thy sister's ways!
+
+ How much thy beautiful life may owe
+ To her faith and courage thou canst not know,
+ Nor how from the paths of thy calm retreat
+ She smoothed the thorns with her bleeding feet.
+
+ 1883.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0090" id="link2H_4_0090">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ SAINT GREGORY'S GUEST.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ A TALE for Roman guides to tell
+ To careless, sight-worn travellers still,
+ Who pause beside the narrow cell
+ Of Gregory on the Caelian Hill.
+
+ One day before the monk's door came
+ A beggar, stretching empty palms,
+ Fainting and fast-sick, in the name
+ Of the Most Holy asking alms.
+
+ And the monk answered, "All I have
+ In this poor cell of mine I give,
+ The silver cup my mother gave;
+ In Christ's name take thou it, and live."
+
+ Years passed; and, called at last to bear
+ The pastoral crook and keys of Rome,
+ The poor monk, in Saint Peter's chair,
+ Sat the crowned lord of Christendom.
+
+ "Prepare a feast," Saint Gregory cried,
+ "And let twelve beggars sit thereat."
+ The beggars came, and one beside,
+ An unknown stranger, with them sat.
+
+ "I asked thee not," the Pontiff spake,
+ "O stranger; but if need be thine,
+ I bid thee welcome, for the sake
+ Of Him who is thy Lord and mine."
+
+ A grave, calm face the stranger raised,
+ Like His who on Gennesaret trod,
+ Or His on whom the Chaldeans gazed,
+ Whose form was as the Son of God.
+
+ "Know'st thou," he said, "thy gift of old?"
+ And in the hand he lifted up
+ The Pontiff marvelled to behold
+ Once more his mother's silver cup.
+
+ "Thy prayers and alms have risen, and bloom
+ Sweetly among the flowers of heaven.
+ I am The Wonderful, through whom
+ Whate'er thou askest shall be given."
+
+ He spake and vanished. Gregory fell
+ With his twelve guests in mute accord
+ Prone on their faces, knowing well
+ Their eyes of flesh had seen the Lord.
+
+ The old-time legend is not vain;
+ Nor vain thy art, Verona's Paul,
+ Telling it o'er and o'er again
+ On gray Vicenza's frescoed wall.
+
+ Still wheresoever pity shares
+ Its bread with sorrow, want, and sin,
+ And love the beggar's feast prepares,
+ The uninvited Guest comes in.
+
+ Unheard, because our ears are dull,
+ Unseen, because our eyes are dim,
+ He walks our earth, The Wonderful,
+ And all good deeds are done to Him.
+
+ 1883.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0091" id="link2H_4_0091">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ BIRCHBROOK MILL.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ A NOTELESS stream, the Birchbrook runs
+ Beneath its leaning trees;
+ That low, soft ripple is its own,
+ That dull roar is the sea's.
+
+ Of human signs it sees alone
+ The distant church spire's tip,
+ And, ghost-like, on a blank of gray,
+ The white sail of a ship.
+
+ No more a toiler at the wheel,
+ It wanders at its will;
+ Nor dam nor pond is left to tell
+ Where once was Birchbrook mill.
+
+ The timbers of that mill have fed
+ Long since a farmer's fires;
+ His doorsteps are the stones that ground
+ The harvest of his sires.
+
+ Man trespassed here; but Nature lost
+ No right of her domain;
+ She waited, and she brought the old
+ Wild beauty back again.
+
+ By day the sunlight through the leaves
+ Falls on its moist, green sod,
+ And wakes the violet bloom of spring
+ And autumn's golden-rod.
+
+ Its birches whisper to the wind,
+ The swallow dips her wings
+ In the cool spray, and on its banks
+ The gray song-sparrow sings.
+
+ But from it, when the dark night falls,
+ The school-girl shrinks with dread;
+ The farmer, home-bound from his fields,
+ Goes by with quickened tread.
+
+ They dare not pause to hear the grind
+ Of shadowy stone on stone;
+ The plashing of a water-wheel
+ Where wheel there now is none.
+
+ Has not a cry of pain been heard
+ Above the clattering mill?
+ The pawing of an unseen horse,
+ Who waits his mistress still?
+
+ Yet never to the listener's eye
+ Has sight confirmed the sound;
+ A wavering birch line marks alone
+ The vacant pasture ground.
+
+ No ghostly arms fling up to heaven
+ The agony of prayer;
+ No spectral steed impatient shakes
+ His white mane on the air.
+
+ The meaning of that common dread
+ No tongue has fitly told;
+ The secret of the dark surmise
+ The brook and birches hold.
+
+ What nameless horror of the past
+ Broods here forevermore?
+ What ghost his unforgiven sin
+ Is grinding o'er and o'er?
+
+ Does, then, immortal memory play
+ The actor's tragic part,
+ Rehearsals of a mortal life
+ And unveiled human heart?
+
+ God's pity spare a guilty soul
+ That drama of its ill,
+ And let the scenic curtain fall
+ On Birchbrook's haunted mill
+
+ 1884.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0092" id="link2H_4_0092">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE TWO ELIZABETHS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Read at the unveiling of the bust of Elizabeth Fry at the Friends' School,
+ Providence, R. I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A. D. 1209.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ AMIDST Thuringia's wooded hills she dwelt,
+ A high-born princess, servant of the poor,
+ Sweetening with gracious words the food she dealt
+ To starving throngs at Wartburg's blazoned door.
+
+ A blinded zealot held her soul in chains,
+ Cramped the sweet nature that he could not kill,
+ Scarred her fair body with his penance-pains,
+ And gauged her conscience by his narrow will.
+
+ God gave her gifts of beauty and of grace,
+ With fast and vigil she denied them all;
+ Unquestioning, with sad, pathetic face,
+ She followed meekly at her stern guide's call.
+
+ So drooped and died her home-blown rose of bliss
+ In the chill rigor of a discipline
+ That turned her fond lips from her children's kiss,
+ And made her joy of motherhood a sin.
+
+ To their sad level by compassion led,
+ One with the low and vile herself she made,
+ While thankless misery mocked the hand that fed,
+ And laughed to scorn her piteous masquerade.
+
+ But still, with patience that outwearied hate,
+ She gave her all while yet she had to give;
+ And then her empty hands, importunate,
+ In prayer she lifted that the poor might live.
+
+ Sore pressed by grief, and wrongs more hard to bear,
+ And dwarfed and stifled by a harsh control,
+ She kept life fragrant with good deeds and prayer,
+ And fresh and pure the white flower of her soul.
+
+ Death found her busy at her task: one word
+ Alone she uttered as she paused to die,
+ "Silence!"&mdash;then listened even as one who heard
+ With song and wing the angels drawing nigh!
+
+ Now Fra Angelico's roses fill her hands,
+ And, on Murillo's canvas, Want and Pain
+ Kneel at her feet. Her marble image stands
+ Worshipped and crowned in Marburg's holy fane.
+
+ Yea, wheresoe'er her Church its cross uprears,
+ Wide as the world her story still is told;
+ In manhood's reverence, woman's prayers and tears,
+ She lives again whose grave is centuries old.
+
+ And still, despite the weakness or the blame
+ Of blind submission to the blind, she hath
+ A tender place in hearts of every name,
+ And more than Rome owns Saint Elizabeth!
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ A. D. 1780.
+
+ Slow ages passed: and lo! another came,
+ An English matron, in whose simple faith
+ Nor priestly rule nor ritual had claim,
+ A plain, uncanonized Elizabeth.
+
+ No sackcloth robe, nor ashen-sprinkled hair,
+ Nor wasting fast, nor scourge, nor vigil long,
+ Marred her calm presence. God had made her fair,
+ And she could do His goodly work no wrong.
+
+ Their yoke is easy and their burden light
+ Whose sole confessor is the Christ of God;
+ Her quiet trust and faith transcending sight
+ Smoothed to her feet the difficult paths she trod.
+
+ And there she walked, as duty bade her go,
+ Safe and unsullied as a cloistered nun,
+ Shamed with her plainness Fashion's gaudy show,
+ And overcame the world she did not shun.
+
+ In Earlham's bowers, in Plashet's liberal hall,
+ In the great city's restless crowd and din,
+ Her ear was open to the Master's call,
+ And knew the summons of His voice within.
+
+ Tender as mother, beautiful as wife,
+ Amidst the throngs of prisoned crime she stood
+ In modest raiment faultless as her life,
+ The type of England's worthiest womanhood.
+
+ To melt the hearts that harshness turned to stone
+ The sweet persuasion of her lips sufficed,
+ And guilt, which only hate and fear had known,
+ Saw in her own the pitying love of Christ.
+
+ So wheresoe'er the guiding Spirit went
+ She followed, finding every prison cell
+ It opened for her sacred as a tent
+ Pitched by Gennesaret or by Jacob's well.
+
+ And Pride and Fashion felt her strong appeal,
+ And priest and ruler marvelled as they saw
+ How hand in hand went wisdom with her zeal,
+ And woman's pity kept the bounds of law.
+
+ She rests in God's peace; but her memory stirs
+ The air of earth as with an angel's wings,
+ And warms and moves the hearts of men like hers,
+ The sainted daughter of Hungarian kings.
+
+ United now, the Briton and the Hun,
+ Each, in her own time, faithful unto death,
+ Live sister souls! in name and spirit one,
+ Thuringia's saint and our Elizabeth!
+
+ 1885.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0093" id="link2H_4_0093">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ REQUITAL.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ As Islam's Prophet, when his last day drew
+ Nigh to its close, besought all men to say
+ Whom he had wronged, to whom he then should pay
+ A debt forgotten, or for pardon sue,
+ And, through the silence of his weeping friends,
+ A strange voice cried: "Thou owest me a debt,"
+ "Allah be praised!" he answered. "Even yet
+ He gives me power to make to thee amends.
+ O friend! I thank thee for thy timely word."
+ So runs the tale. Its lesson all may heed,
+ For all have sinned in thought, or word, or deed,
+ Or, like the Prophet, through neglect have erred.
+ All need forgiveness, all have debts to pay
+ Ere the night cometh, while it still is day.
+
+ 1885.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0094" id="link2H_4_0094">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE HOMESTEAD.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ AGAINST the wooded hills it stands,
+ Ghost of a dead home, staring through
+ Its broken lights on wasted lands
+ Where old-time harvests grew.
+
+ Unploughed, unsown, by scythe unshorn,
+ The poor, forsaken farm-fields lie,
+ Once rich and rife with golden corn
+ And pale green breadths of rye.
+
+ Of healthful herb and flower bereft,
+ The garden plot no housewife keeps;
+ Through weeds and tangle only left,
+ The snake, its tenant, creeps.
+
+ A lilac spray, still blossom-clad,
+ Sways slow before the empty rooms;
+ Beside the roofless porch a sad
+ Pathetic red rose blooms.
+
+ His track, in mould and dust of drouth,
+ On floor and hearth the squirrel leaves,
+ And in the fireless chimney's mouth
+ His web the spider weaves.
+
+ The leaning barn, about to fall,
+ Resounds no more on husking eves;
+ No cattle low in yard or stall,
+ No thresher beats his sheaves.
+
+ So sad, so drear! It seems almost
+ Some haunting Presence makes its sign;
+ That down yon shadowy lane some ghost
+ Might drive his spectral kine!
+
+ O home so desolate and lorn!
+ Did all thy memories die with thee?
+ Were any wed, were any born,
+ Beneath this low roof-tree?
+
+ Whose axe the wall of forest broke,
+ And let the waiting sunshine through?
+ What goodwife sent the earliest smoke
+ Up the great chimney flue?
+
+ Did rustic lovers hither come?
+ Did maidens, swaying back and forth
+ In rhythmic grace, at wheel and loom,
+ Make light their toil with mirth?
+
+ Did child feet patter on the stair?
+ Did boyhood frolic in the snow?
+ Did gray age, in her elbow chair,
+ Knit, rocking to and fro?
+
+ The murmuring brook, the sighing breeze,
+ The pine's slow whisper, cannot tell;
+ Low mounds beneath the hemlock-trees
+ Keep the home secrets well.
+
+ Cease, mother-land, to fondly boast
+ Of sons far off who strive and thrive,
+ Forgetful that each swarming host
+ Must leave an emptier hive.
+
+ O wanderers from ancestral soil,
+ Leave noisome mill and chaffering store:
+ Gird up your loins for sturdier toil,
+ And build the home once more!
+
+ Come back to bayberry-scented slopes,
+ And fragrant fern, and ground-nut vine;
+ Breathe airs blown over holt and copse
+ Sweet with black birch and pine.
+
+ What matter if the gains are small
+ That life's essential wants supply?
+ Your homestead's title gives you all
+ That idle wealth can buy.
+
+ All that the many-dollared crave,
+ The brick-walled slaves of 'Change and mart,
+ Lawns, trees, fresh air, and flowers, you have,
+ More dear for lack of art.
+
+ Your own sole masters, freedom-willed,
+ With none to bid you go or stay,
+ Till the old fields your fathers tilled,
+ As manly men as they!
+
+ With skill that spares your toiling hands,
+ And chemic aid that science brings,
+ Reclaim the waste and outworn lands,
+ And reign thereon as kings
+
+ 1886.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0095" id="link2H_4_0095">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ HOW THE ROBIN CAME.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ AN ALGONQUIN LEGEND.
+ </h3>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ HAPPY young friends, sit by me,
+ Under May's blown apple-tree,
+ While these home-birds in and out
+ Through the blossoms flit about.
+ Hear a story, strange and old,
+ By the wild red Indians told,
+ How the robin came to be:
+
+ Once a great chief left his son,&mdash;
+ Well-beloved, his only one,&mdash;
+ When the boy was well-nigh grown,
+ In the trial-lodge alone.
+ Left for tortures long and slow
+ Youths like him must undergo,
+ Who their pride of manhood test,
+ Lacking water, food, and rest.
+
+ Seven days the fast he kept,
+ Seven nights he never slept.
+ Then the young boy, wrung with pain,
+ Weak from nature's overstrain,
+ Faltering, moaned a low complaint
+ "Spare me, father, for I faint!"
+ But the chieftain, haughty-eyed,
+ Hid his pity in his pride.
+ "You shall be a hunter good,
+ Knowing never lack of food;
+ You shall be a warrior great,
+ Wise as fox and strong as bear;
+ Many scalps your belt shall wear,
+ If with patient heart you wait
+ Bravely till your task is done.
+ Better you should starving die
+ Than that boy and squaw should cry
+ Shame upon your father's son!"
+
+ When next morn the sun's first rays
+ Glistened on the hemlock sprays,
+ Straight that lodge the old chief sought,
+ And boiled sainp and moose meat brought.
+ "Rise and eat, my son!" he said.
+ Lo, he found the poor boy dead!
+
+ As with grief his grave they made,
+ And his bow beside him laid,
+ Pipe, and knife, and wampum-braid,
+ On the lodge-top overhead,
+ Preening smooth its breast of red
+ And the brown coat that it wore,
+ Sat a bird, unknown before.
+ And as if with human tongue,
+ "Mourn me not," it said, or sung;
+ "I, a bird, am still your son,
+ Happier than if hunter fleet,
+ Or a brave, before your feet
+ Laying scalps in battle won.
+ Friend of man, my song shall cheer
+ Lodge and corn-land; hovering near,
+ To each wigwam I shall bring
+ Tidings of the corning spring;
+ Every child my voice shall know
+ In the moon of melting snow,
+ When the maple's red bud swells,
+ And the wind-flower lifts its bells.
+ As their fond companion
+ Men shall henceforth own your son,
+ And my song shall testify
+ That of human kin am I."
+
+ Thus the Indian legend saith
+ How, at first, the robin came
+ With a sweeter life from death,
+ Bird for boy, and still the same.
+ If my young friends doubt that this
+ Is the robin's genesis,
+ Not in vain is still the myth
+ If a truth be found therewith
+ Unto gentleness belong
+ Gifts unknown to pride and wrong;
+ Happier far than hate is praise,&mdash;
+ He who sings than he who slays.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0096" id="link2H_4_0096">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ BANISHED FROM MASSACHUSETTS.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ 1660.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ On a painting by E. A. Abbey. The General Court of Massachusetts enacted
+ Oct. 19, 1658, that "any person or persons of the cursed sect of Quakers"
+ should, on conviction of the same, be banished, on pain of death, from the
+ jurisdiction of the common-wealth.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ OVER the threshold of his pleasant home
+ Set in green clearings passed the exiled Friend,
+ In simple trust, misdoubting not the end.
+ "Dear heart of mine!" he said, "the time has come
+ To trust the Lord for shelter." One long gaze
+ The goodwife turned on each familiar thing,&mdash;
+ The lowing kine, the orchard blossoming,
+ The open door that showed the hearth-fire's blaze,&mdash;
+ And calmly answered, "Yes, He will provide."
+ Silent and slow they crossed the homestead's bound,
+ Lingering the longest by their child's grave-mound.
+ "Move on, or stay and hang!" the sheriff cried.
+ They left behind them more than home or land,
+ And set sad faces to an alien strand.
+
+ Safer with winds and waves than human wrath,
+ With ravening wolves than those whose zeal for God
+ Was cruelty to man, the exiles trod
+ Drear leagues of forest without guide or path,
+ Or launching frail boats on the uncharted sea,
+ Round storm-vexed capes, whose teeth of granite ground
+ The waves to foam, their perilous way they wound,
+ Enduring all things so their souls were free.
+ Oh, true confessors, shaming them who did
+ Anew the wrong their Pilgrim Fathers bore
+ For you the Mayflower spread her sail once more,
+ Freighted with souls, to all that duty bid
+ Faithful as they who sought an unknown land,
+ O'er wintry seas, from Holland's Hook of Sand!
+
+ So from his lost home to the darkening main,
+ Bodeful of storm, stout Macy held his way,
+ And, when the green shore blended with the gray,
+ His poor wife moaned: "Let us turn back again."
+ "Nay, woman, weak of faith, kneel down," said he,
+ And say thy prayers: the Lord himself will steer;
+ And led by Him, nor man nor devils I fear!
+ So the gray Southwicks, from a rainy sea,
+ Saw, far and faint, the loom of land, and gave
+ With feeble voices thanks for friendly ground
+ Whereon to rest their weary feet, and found
+ A peaceful death-bed and a quiet grave
+ Where, ocean-walled, and wiser than his age,
+ The lord of Shelter scorned the bigot's rage.
+ Aquidneck's isle, Nantucket's lonely shores,
+ And Indian-haunted Narragansett saw
+ The way-worn travellers round their camp-fire draw,
+ Or heard the plashing of their weary oars.
+ And every place whereon they rested grew
+ Happier for pure and gracious womanhood,
+ And men whose names for stainless honor stood,
+ Founders of States and rulers wise and true.
+ The Muse of history yet shall make amends
+ To those who freedom, peace, and justice taught,
+ Beyond their dark age led the van of thought,
+ And left unforfeited the name of Friends.
+ O mother State, how foiled was thy design
+ The gain was theirs, the loss alone was thine.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0097" id="link2H_4_0097">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE BROWN DWARF OF RUGEN.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The hint of this ballad is found in Arndt's Murchen, Berlin, 1816. The
+ ballad appeared first in St. Nicholas, whose young readers were advised,
+ while smiling at the absurd superstition, to remember that bad
+ companionship and evil habits, desires, and passions are more to be
+ dreaded now than the Elves and Trolls who frightened the children of past
+ ages.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ THE pleasant isle of Rugen looks the Baltic water o'er,
+ To the silver-sanded beaches of the Pomeranian
+ shore;
+
+ And in the town of Rambin a little boy and maid
+ Plucked the meadow-flowers together and in the
+ sea-surf played.
+
+ Alike were they in beauty if not in their degree
+ He was the Amptman's first-born, the miller's
+ child was she.
+
+ Now of old the isle of Rugen was full of Dwarfs
+ and Trolls,
+ The brown-faced little Earth-men, the people without
+ souls;
+
+ And for every man and woman in Rugen's island
+ found
+ Walking in air and sunshine, a Troll was
+ underground.
+
+ It chanced the little maiden, one morning, strolled
+ away
+ Among the haunted Nine Hills, where the elves
+ and goblins play.
+
+ That day, in barley-fields below, the harvesters had
+ known
+ Of evil voices in the air, and heard the small horns
+ blown.
+
+ She came not back; the search for her in field and
+ wood was vain
+ They cried her east, they cried her west, but she
+ came not again.
+
+ "She's down among the Brown Dwarfs," said the
+ dream-wives wise and old,
+ And prayers were made, and masses said, and
+ Rambin's church bell tolled.
+
+ Five years her father mourned her; and then John
+ Deitrich said
+ "I will find my little playmate, be she alive or
+ dead."
+
+ He watched among the Nine Hills, he heard the
+ Brown Dwarfs sing,
+ And saw them dance by moonlight merrily in a
+ ring.
+
+ And when their gay-robed leader tossed up his cap
+ of red,
+ Young Deitrich caught it as it fell, and thrust it
+ on his head.
+
+ The Troll came crouching at his feet and wept for
+ lack of it.
+ "Oh, give me back my magic cap, for your great
+ head unfit!"
+
+ "Nay," Deitrich said; "the Dwarf who throws his
+ charmed cap away,
+ Must serve its finder at his will, and for his folly
+ pay.
+
+ "You stole my pretty Lisbeth, and hid her in the
+ earth;
+ And you shall ope the door of glass and let me
+ lead her forth."
+
+ "She will not come; she's one of us; she's
+ mine!" the Brown Dwarf said;
+ The day is set, the cake is baked, to-morrow we
+ shall wed."
+
+ "The fell fiend fetch thee!" Deitrich cried, "and
+ keep thy foul tongue still.
+ Quick! open, to thy evil world, the glass door of
+ the hill!"
+
+ The Dwarf obeyed; and youth and Troll down, the
+ long stair-way passed,
+ And saw in dim and sunless light a country strange
+ and vast.
+
+ Weird, rich, and wonderful, he saw the elfin
+ under-land,&mdash;
+ Its palaces of precious stones, its streets of golden
+ sand.
+
+ He came unto a banquet-hall with tables richly
+ spread,
+ Where a young maiden served to him the red wine
+ and the bread.
+
+ How fair she seemed among the Trolls so ugly and
+ so wild!
+ Yet pale and very sorrowful, like one who never
+ smiled!
+
+ Her low, sweet voice, her gold-brown hair, her tender
+ blue eyes seemed
+ Like something he had seen elsewhere or some.
+ thing he had dreamed.
+
+ He looked; he clasped her in his arms; he knew
+ the long-lost one;
+ "O Lisbeth! See thy playmate&mdash;I am the
+ Amptman's son!"
+
+ She leaned her fair head on his breast, and through
+ her sobs she spoke
+ "Oh, take me from this evil place, and from the
+ elfin folk,
+
+ "And let me tread the grass-green fields and smell
+ the flowers again,
+ And feel the soft wind on my cheek and hear the
+ dropping rain!
+
+ "And oh, to hear the singing bird, the rustling of
+ the tree,
+ The lowing cows, the bleat of sheep, the voices of
+ the sea;
+
+ "And oh, upon my father's knee to sit beside the
+ door,
+ And hear the bell of vespers ring in Rambin
+ church once more!"
+
+ He kissed her cheek, he kissed her lips; the Brown
+ Dwarf groaned to see,
+ And tore his tangled hair and ground his long
+ teeth angrily.
+
+ But Deitrich said: "For five long years this tender
+ Christian maid
+ Has served you in your evil world and well must
+ she be paid!
+
+ "Haste!&mdash;hither bring me precious gems, the
+ richest in your store;
+ Then when we pass the gate of glass, you'll take
+ your cap once more."
+
+ No choice was left the baffled Troll, and, murmuring,
+ he obeyed,
+ And filled the pockets of the youth and apron of
+ the maid.
+
+ They left the dreadful under-land and passed the
+ gate of glass;
+ They felt the sunshine's warm caress, they trod the
+ soft, green grass.
+
+ And when, beneath, they saw the Dwarf stretch up
+ to them his brown
+ And crooked claw-like fingers, they tossed his red
+ cap down.
+
+ Oh, never shone so bright a sun, was never sky so
+ blue,
+ As hand in hand they homeward walked the pleasant
+ meadows through!
+
+ And never sang the birds so sweet in Rambin's
+ woods before,
+ And never washed the waves so soft along the Baltic
+ shore;
+
+ And when beneath his door-yard trees the father
+ met his child,
+ The bells rung out their merriest peal, the folks
+ with joy ran wild.
+</pre>
+
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diff --git a/old/wit0810.txt b/old/wit0810.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f3ccf6c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/wit0810.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,14689 @@
+Project Gutenberg EBook, Narrative and Legendary Poems, Complete
+Volume I., The Works of Whittier: Narrative and Legendary Poems
+#12 in our series by John Greenleaf Whittier
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
+copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing
+this or any other Project Gutenberg eBook.
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+Please read the "legal small print," and other information about the
+eBook and Project Gutenberg at the bottom of this file. Included is
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+
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+**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts**
+
+**EBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
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+*****These EBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers*****
+
+
+
+Title: Narrative and Legendary Poems, Complete
+ Volume I., The Works of Whittier
+
+Author: John Greenleaf Whittier
+
+Release Date: Dec, 2005 [EBook #9567]
+[This file was first posted on October 2, 2003]
+[Last updated on February 9, 2007]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+
+
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, NARRATIVE POEMS, COMPLETE ***
+
+
+
+
+This eBook was produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE COMPLETE WORKS OF JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER
+
+
+ VOLUME I.
+
+ NARRATIVE AND LEGENDARY
+
+ POEMS
+
+ BY
+ JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER
+
+
+
+PUBLISHERS' ADVERTISEMENT
+
+The Standard Library Edition of Mr. Whittier's writings comprises his
+poetical and prose works as re-arranged and thoroughly revised by
+himself or with his cooperation. Mr. Whittier has supplied such
+additional information regarding the subject and occasion of certain
+poems as may be stated in brief head-notes, and this edition has been
+much enriched by the poet's personal comment. So far as practicable the
+dates of publication of the various articles have been given, and since
+these were originally published soon after composition, the dates of
+their first appearance have been taken as determining the time at which
+they were written. At the request of the Publishers, Mr. Whittier has
+allowed his early poems, discarded from previous collections, to be
+placed, in the general order of their appearance, in an appendix to the
+final volume of poems. By this means the present edition is made so
+complete and retrospective that students of the poet's career will
+always find the most abundant material for their purpose. The Publishers
+congratulate themselves and the public that the careful attention which
+Mr. Whittier has been able to give to this revision of his works has
+resulted in so comprehensive and well-adjusted a collection.
+
+The portraits prefixed to the several volumes have been chosen with a
+view to illustrating successive periods in the poet's life. The
+original sources and dates are indicated in each case.
+
+
+
+
+NARRATIVE AND LEGENDARY POEMS.
+
+
+CONTENTS:
+
+THE VAUDOIS TEACHER
+THE FEMALE MARTYR
+EXTRACT FROM "A NEW ENGLAND LEGEND"
+THE DEMON OF THE STUDY
+THE FOUNTAIN
+PENTUCKET
+THE NORSEMEN
+FUNERAL TREE OF THE SOKOKIS
+ST JOHN
+THE CYPRESS-TREE OF CEYLON
+THE EXILES
+THE KNIGHT OF ST JOHN
+CASSANDRA SOUTHWICK
+THE NEW WIFE AND THE OLD
+
+THE BRIDAL OF PENNACOOK
+ I. THE MERRIMAC
+ II. THE BASHABA
+ III. THE DAUGHTER
+ IV. THE WEDDING
+ V. THE NEW HOME
+ VI. AT PENNACOOK
+ VII. THE DEPARTURE
+ VIII. SONG OF INDIAN WOMEN
+
+BARCLAY OF URY
+THE ANGELS OF BUENA VISTA
+THE LEGEND OF ST MARK
+KATHLEEN
+THE WELL OF LOCH MAREE
+THE CHAPEL OF THE HERMITS
+TAULER
+THE HERMIT OF THE THEBAID
+THE GARRISON OF CAPE ANN
+THE GIFT OF TRITEMIUS
+SKIPPER IRESON'S RIDE
+THE SYCAMORES
+THE PIPES AT LUCKNOW
+TELLING THE BEES
+THE SWAN SONG OF PARSON AVERY
+THE DOUBLE-HEADED SNAKE OF NEWBURY
+
+MABEL MARTIN: A HARVEST IDYL
+ PROEM
+ I. THE RIVER VALLEY
+ II. THE HUSKING
+ III. THE WITCH'S DAUGHTER
+ IV. THE CHAMPION
+ V. IN THE SHADOW
+ VI. THE BETROTHAL
+
+THE PROPHECY OF SAMUEL SEWALL
+THE RED RIVER VOYAGEUR
+THE PREACHER
+THE TRUCE OF PISCATAQUA
+MY PLAYMATE
+COBBLER KEEZAR'S VISION
+AMY WENTWORTH
+THE COUNTESS
+
+AMONG THE HILLS
+ PRELUDE
+ AMONG THE HILLS
+
+THE DOLE OF JARL THORKELL
+THE TWO RABBINS
+NOREMBEGA
+MIRIAM
+MAUD MULLER
+MARY GARVIN
+THE RANGER
+NAUHAUGHT, THE DEACON
+THE SISTERS
+MARGUERITE
+THE ROBIN
+
+THE PENNSYLVANIA PILGRIM
+ INTRODUCTORY NOTE
+ PRELUDE
+ THE PENNSYLVANIA PILGRIM
+
+KING VOLMER AND ELSIE
+THE THREE BELLS
+JOHN UNDERHILL
+CONDUCTOR BRADLEY
+THE WITCH OF WENHAM
+KING SOLOMON AND THE ANTS
+IN THE "OLD SOUTH"
+THE HENCHMAN
+THE DEAD FEAST OF THE KOL-FOLK
+THE KHAN'S DEVIL
+THE KING'S MISSIVE
+VALUATION
+RABBI ISHMAEL
+THE ROCK-TOMB OF BRADORE
+
+THE BAY OF SEVEN ISLANDS
+ To H P S
+ THE BAY OF SEVEN ISLANDS
+
+THE WISHING BRIDGE
+HOW THE WOMEN WENT FROM DOVER
+ST GREGORY'S GUEST
+CONTENTS
+BIRCHBROOK MILL
+THE TWO ELIZABETHS
+REQUITAL
+THE HOMESTEAD
+HOW THE ROBIN CAME
+BANISHED FROM MASSACHUSETTS
+THE BROWN DWARF OF RUGEN
+
+
+
+
+NOTE.-The portrait prefixed to this volume was etched by
+S. A. Schoff, in 1888, after a painting by Bass Otis, a pupil of
+Gilbert Stuart, made in the winter of 1836-1837.
+
+
+
+
+PROEM
+
+I LOVE the old melodious lays
+Which softly melt the ages through,
+The songs of Spenser's golden days,
+Arcadian Sidney's silvery phrase,
+Sprinkling our noon of time with freshest morning dew.
+
+Yet, vainly in my quiet hours
+To breathe their marvellous notes I try;
+I feel them, as the leaves and flowers
+In silence feel the dewy showers,
+And drink with glad, still lips the blessing of the sky.
+
+The rigor of a frozen clime,
+The harshness of an untaught ear,
+The jarring words of one whose rhyme
+Beat often Labor's hurried time,
+Or Duty's rugged march through storm and strife, are here.
+
+Of mystic beauty, dreamy grace,
+No rounded art the lack supplies;
+Unskilled the subtle lines to trace,
+Or softer shades of Nature's face,
+I view her common forms with unanointed eyes.
+
+Nor mine the seer-like power to show
+The secrets of the heart and mind;
+To drop the plummet-line below
+Our common world of joy and woe,
+A more intense despair or brighter hope to find.
+
+Yet here at least an earnest sense
+Of human right and weal is shown;
+A hate of tyranny intense,
+And hearty in its vehemence,
+As if my brother's pain and sorrow were my own.
+
+O Freedom! if to me belong
+Nor mighty Milton's gift divine,
+Nor Marvell's wit and graceful song,
+Still with a love as deep and strong
+As theirs, I lay, like them, my best gifts on thy shrine.
+
+AMESBURY, 11th mo., 1847.
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+The edition of my poems published in 1857 contained the following note
+by way of preface:--
+
+"In these volumes, for the first time, a complete collection of my
+poetical writings has been made. While it is satisfactory to know that
+these scattered children of my brain have found a home, I cannot but
+regret that I have been unable, by reason of illness, to give that
+attention to their revision and arrangement, which respect for the
+opinions of others and my own afterthought and experience demand.
+
+"That there are pieces in this collection which I would 'willingly let
+die,' I am free to confess. But it is now too late to disown them, and I
+must submit to the inevitable penalty of poetical as well as other sins.
+There are others, intimately connected with the author's life and times,
+which owe their tenacity of vitality to the circumstances under which
+they were written, and the events by which they were suggested.
+
+"The long poem of Mogg Megone was in a great measure composed in early
+life; and it is scarcely necessary to say that its subject is not such
+as the writer would have chosen at any subsequent period."
+
+After a lapse of thirty years since the above was written, I have been
+requested by my publishers to make some preparation for a new and
+revised edition of my poems. I cannot flatter myself that I have added
+much to the interest of the work beyond the correction of my own errors
+and those of the press, with the addition of a few heretofore
+unpublished pieces, and occasional notes of explanation which seemed
+necessary. I have made an attempt to classify the poems under a few
+general heads, and have transferred the long poem of Mogg Megone to the
+Appendix, with other specimens of my earlier writings. I have endeavored
+to affix the dates of composition or publication as far as possible.
+
+In looking over these poems I have not been unmindful of occasional
+prosaic lines and verbal infelicities, but at this late day I have
+neither strength nor patience to undertake their correction.
+
+Perhaps a word of explanation may be needed in regard to a class of
+poems written between the years 1832 and 1865. Of their defects from an
+artistic point of view it is not necessary to speak. They were the
+earnest and often vehement expression of the writer's thought and
+feeling at critical periods in the great conflict between Freedom and
+Slavery. They were written with no expectation that they would survive
+the occasions which called them forth: they were protests, alarm
+signals, trumpet-calls to action, words wrung from the writer's heart,
+forged at white heat, and of course lacking the finish and careful
+word-selection which reflection and patient brooding over them might
+have given. Such as they are, they belong to the history of the
+Anti-Slavery movement, and may serve as way-marks of its progress. If
+their language at times seems severe and harsh, the monstrous wrong of
+Slavery which provoked it must be its excuse, if any is needed. In
+attacking it, we did not measure our words. "It is," said Garrison,
+"a waste of politeness to be courteous to the devil." But in truth the
+contest was, in a great measure, an impersonal one,--hatred of slavery
+and not of slave-masters.
+
+ "No common wrong provoked our zeal,
+ The silken gauntlet which is thrown
+ In such a quarrel rings like steel."
+
+Even Thomas Jefferson, in his terrible denunciation of Slavery in the
+Notes on Virginia, says "It is impossible to be temperate and pursue the
+subject of Slavery." After the great contest was over, no class of the
+American people were more ready, with kind words and deprecation of
+harsh retaliation, to welcome back the revolted States than the
+Abolitionists; and none have since more heartily rejoiced at the fast
+increasing prosperity of the South.
+
+Grateful for the measure of favor which has been accorded to my
+writings, I leave this edition with the public. It contains all that I
+care to re-publish, and some things which, had the matter of choice been
+left solely to myself, I should have omitted.
+ J. G. W.
+
+
+
+
+
+NARRATIVE AND LEGENDARY POEMS
+
+THE VAUDOIS TEACHER.
+
+This poem was suggested by the account given of the manner which the
+Waldenses disseminated their principles among the Catholic gentry. They
+gained access to the house through their occupation as peddlers of
+silks, jewels, and trinkets. "Having disposed of some of their goods,"
+it is said by a writer who quotes the inquisitor Rainerus Sacco, "they
+cautiously intimated that they had commodities far more valuable than
+these, inestimable jewels, which they would show if they could be
+protected from the clergy. They would then give their purchasers a Bible
+or Testament; and thereby many were deluded into heresy." The poem,
+under the title Le Colporteur Vaudois, was translated into French by
+Professor G. de Felice, of Montauban, and further naturalized by
+Professor Alexandre Rodolphe Vinet, who quoted it in his lectures on
+French literature, afterwards published. It became familiar in this form
+to the Waldenses, who adopted it as a household poem. An American
+clergyman, J. C. Fletcher, frequently heard it when he was a student,
+about the year 1850, in the theological seminary at Geneva, Switzerland,
+but the authorship of the poem was unknown to those who used it.
+Twenty-five years later, Mr. Fletcher, learning the name of the author,
+wrote to the moderator of the Waldensian synod at La Tour, giving the
+information. At the banquet which closed the meeting of the synod, the
+moderator announced the fact, and was instructed in the name of the
+Waldensian church to write to me a letter of thanks. My letter, written
+in reply, was translated into Italian and printed throughout Italy.
+
+"O LADY fair, these silks of mine
+ are beautiful and rare,--
+The richest web of the Indian loom, which beauty's
+ queen might wear;
+And my pearls are pure as thy own fair neck, with whose
+ radiant light they vie;
+I have brought them with me a weary way,--will my
+ gentle lady buy?"
+
+The lady smiled on the worn old man through the
+ dark and clustering curls
+Which veiled her brow, as she bent to view his
+ silks and glittering pearls;
+And she placed their price in the old man's hand
+ and lightly turned away,
+But she paused at the wanderer's earnest call,--
+ "My gentle lady, stay!
+
+"O lady fair, I have yet a gem which a purer
+ lustre flings,
+Than the diamond flash of the jewelled crown on
+ the lofty brow of kings;
+A wonderful pearl of exceeding price, whose virtue
+ shall not decay,
+Whose light shall be as a spell to thee and a
+ blessing on thy way!"
+
+The lady glanced at the mirroring steel where her
+ form of grace was seen,
+Where her eye shone clear, and her dark locks
+ waved their clasping pearls between;
+"Bring forth thy pearl of exceeding worth, thou
+ traveller gray and old,
+And name the price of thy precious gem, and my
+ page shall count thy gold."
+
+The cloud went off from the pilgrim's brow, as a
+ small and meagre book,
+Unchased with gold or gem of cost, from his
+ folding robe he took!
+"Here, lady fair, is the pearl of price, may it prove
+ as such to thee
+Nay, keep thy gold--I ask it not, for the word of
+ God is free!"
+
+The hoary traveller went his way, but the gift he
+ left behind
+Hath had its pure and perfect work on that high-
+ born maiden's mind,
+And she hath turned from the pride of sin to the
+ lowliness of truth,
+And given her human heart to God in its beautiful
+ hour of youth
+
+And she hath left the gray old halls, where an evil
+ faith had power,
+The courtly knights of her father's train, and the
+ maidens of her bower;
+And she hath gone to the Vaudois vales by lordly
+ feet untrod,
+Where the poor and needy of earth are rich in the
+ perfect love of God!
+1830.
+
+
+
+
+THE FEMALE MARTYR.
+
+Mary G-----, aged eighteen, a "Sister of Charity," died in one of our
+Atlantic cities, during the prevalence of the Indian cholera, while
+in voluntary attendance upon the sick.
+
+
+"BRING out your dead!" The midnight street
+Heard and gave back the hoarse, low call;
+Harsh fell the tread of hasty feet,
+Glanced through the dark the coarse white sheet,
+Her coffin and her pall.
+"What--only one!" the brutal hack-man said,
+As, with an oath, he spurned away the dead.
+
+How sunk the inmost hearts of all,
+As rolled that dead-cart slowly by,
+With creaking wheel and harsh hoof-fall!
+The dying turned him to the wall,
+To hear it and to die!
+Onward it rolled; while oft its driver stayed,
+And hoarsely clamored, "Ho! bring out your dead."
+
+It paused beside the burial-place;
+"Toss in your load!" and it was done.
+With quick hand and averted face,
+Hastily to the grave's embrace
+They cast them, one by one,
+Stranger and friend, the evil and the just,
+Together trodden in the churchyard dust.
+
+And thou, young martyr! thou wast there;
+No white-robed sisters round thee trod,
+Nor holy hymn, nor funeral prayer
+Rose through the damp and noisome air,
+Giving thee to thy God;
+Nor flower, nor cross, nor hallowed taper gave
+Grace to the dead, and beauty to the grave!
+
+Yet, gentle sufferer! there shall be,
+In every heart of kindly feeling,
+A rite as holy paid to thee
+As if beneath the convent-tree
+Thy sisterhood were kneeling,
+At vesper hours, like sorrowing angels, keeping
+Their tearful watch around thy place of sleeping.
+
+For thou wast one in whom the light
+Of Heaven's own love was kindled well;
+Enduring with a martyr's might,
+Through weary day and wakeful night,
+Far more than words may tell
+Gentle, and meek, and lowly, and unknown,
+Thy mercies measured by thy God alone!
+
+Where manly hearts were failing, where
+The throngful street grew foul with death,
+O high-souled martyr! thou wast there,
+Inhaling, from the loathsome air,
+Poison with every breath.
+Yet shrinking not from offices of dread
+For the wrung dying, and the unconscious dead.
+
+And, where the sickly taper shed
+Its light through vapors, damp, confined,
+Hushed as a seraph's fell thy tread,
+A new Electra by the bed
+Of suffering human-kind!
+Pointing the spirit, in its dark dismay,
+To that pure hope which fadeth not away.
+
+Innocent teacher of the high
+And holy mysteries of Heaven!
+How turned to thee each glazing eye,
+In mute and awful sympathy,
+As thy low prayers were given;
+And the o'er-hovering Spoiler wore, the while,
+An angel's features, a deliverer's smile!
+
+A blessed task! and worthy one
+Who, turning from the world, as thou,
+Before life's pathway had begun
+To leave its spring-time flower and sun,
+Had sealed her early vow;
+Giving to God her beauty and her youth,
+Her pure affections and her guileless truth.
+
+Earth may not claim thee. Nothing here
+Could be for thee a meet reward;
+Thine is a treasure far more dear
+Eye hath not seen it, nor the ear
+Of living mortal heard
+The joys prepared, the promised bliss above,
+The holy presence of Eternal Love!
+
+Sleep on in peace. The earth has not
+A nobler name than thine shall be.
+The deeds by martial manhood wrought,
+The lofty energies of thought,
+The fire of poesy,
+These have but frail and fading honors; thine
+Shall Time unto Eternity consign.
+
+Yea, and when thrones shall crumble down,
+And human pride and grandeur fall,
+The herald's line of long renown,
+The mitre and the kingly crown,--
+Perishing glories all!
+The pure devotion of thy generous heart
+Shall live in Heaven, of which it was a part.
+1833.
+
+
+
+
+EXTRACT FROM "A NEW ENGLAND LEGEND."
+(Originally a part of the author's Moll Pitcher.)
+
+How has New England's romance fled,
+Even as a vision of the morning!
+Its rites foredone, its guardians dead,
+Its priestesses, bereft of dread,
+Waking the veriest urchin's scorning!
+Gone like the Indian wizard's yell
+And fire-dance round the magic rock,
+Forgotten like the Druid's spell
+At moonrise by his holy oak!
+No more along the shadowy glen
+Glide the dim ghosts of murdered men;
+No more the unquiet churchyard dead
+Glimpse upward from their turfy bed,
+Startling the traveller, late and lone;
+As, on some night of starless weather,
+They silently commune together,
+Each sitting on his own head-stone
+The roofless house, decayed, deserted,
+Its living tenants all departed,
+No longer rings with midnight revel
+Of witch, or ghost, or goblin evil;
+No pale blue flame sends out its flashes
+Through creviced roof and shattered sashes!
+The witch-grass round the hazel spring
+May sharply to the night-air sing,
+But there no more shall withered hags
+Refresh at ease their broomstick nags,
+Or taste those hazel-shadowed waters
+As beverage meet for Satan's daughters;
+No more their mimic tones be heard,
+The mew of cat, the chirp of bird,
+Shrill blending with the hoarser laughter
+Of the fell demon following after!
+The cautious goodman nails no more
+A horseshoe on his outer door,
+Lest some unseemly hag should fit
+To his own mouth her bridle-bit;
+The goodwife's churn no more refuses
+Its wonted culinary uses
+Until, with heated needle burned,
+The witch has to her place returned!
+Our witches are no longer old
+And wrinkled beldames, Satan-sold,
+But young and gay and laughing creatures,
+With the heart's sunshine on their features;
+Their sorcery--the light which dances
+Where the raised lid unveils its glances;
+Or that low-breathed and gentle tone,
+The music of Love's twilight hours,
+Soft, dream-like, as a fairy's moan
+Above her nightly closing flowers,
+Sweeter than that which sighed of yore
+Along the charmed Ausonian shore!
+Even she, our own weird heroine,
+Sole Pythoness of ancient Lynn,'
+Sleeps calmly where the living laid her;
+And the wide realm of sorcery,
+Left by its latest mistress free,
+Hath found no gray and skilled invader.
+So--perished Albion's "glammarye,"
+With him in Melrose Abbey sleeping,
+His charmed torch beside his knee,
+That even the dead himself might see
+The magic scroll within his keeping.
+And now our modern Yankee sees
+Nor omens, spells, nor mysteries;
+And naught above, below, around,
+Of life or death, of sight or sound,
+Whate'er its nature, form, or look,
+Excites his terror or surprise,
+All seeming to his knowing eyes
+Familiar as his "catechise,"
+Or "Webster's Spelling-Book."
+1833.
+
+
+
+
+THE DEMON OF THE STUDY.
+
+THE Brownie sits in the Scotchman's room,
+And eats his meat and drinks his ale,
+And beats the maid with her unused broom,
+And the lazy lout with his idle flail;
+But he sweeps the floor and threshes the corn,
+And hies him away ere the break of dawn.
+
+The shade of Denmark fled from the sun,
+And the Cocklane ghost from the barn-loft cheer,
+The fiend of Faust was a faithful one,
+Agrippa's demon wrought in fear,
+And the devil of Martin Luther sat
+By the stout monk's side in social chat.
+
+The Old Man of the Sea, on the neck of him
+Who seven times crossed the deep,
+Twined closely each lean and withered limb,
+Like the nightmare in one's sleep.
+But he drank of the wine, and Sindbad cast
+The evil weight from his back at last.
+
+But the demon that cometh day by day
+To my quiet room and fireside nook,
+Where the casement light falls dim and gray
+On faded painting and ancient book,
+Is a sorrier one than any whose names
+Are chronicled well by good King James.
+
+No bearer of burdens like Caliban,
+No runner of errands like Ariel,
+He comes in the shape of a fat old man,
+Without rap of knuckle or pull of bell;
+And whence he comes, or whither he goes,
+I know as I do of the wind which blows.
+
+A stout old man with a greasy hat
+Slouched heavily down to his dark, red nose,
+And two gray eyes enveloped in fat,
+Looking through glasses with iron bows.
+Read ye, and heed ye, and ye who can,
+Guard well your doors from that old man!
+
+He comes with a careless "How d' ye do?"
+And seats himself in my elbow-chair;
+And my morning paper and pamphlet new
+Fall forthwith under his special care,
+And he wipes his glasses and clears his throat,
+And, button by button, unfolds his coat.
+
+And then he reads from paper and book,
+In a low and husky asthmatic tone,
+With the stolid sameness of posture and look
+Of one who reads to himself alone;
+And hour after hour on my senses come
+That husky wheeze and that dolorous hum.
+
+The price of stocks, the auction sales,
+The poet's song and the lover's glee,
+The horrible murders, the seaboard gales,
+The marriage list, and the jeu d'esprit,
+All reach my ear in the self-same tone,--
+I shudder at each, but the fiend reads on!
+
+Oh, sweet as the lapse of water at noon
+O'er the mossy roots of some forest tree,
+The sigh of the wind in the woods of June,
+Or sound of flutes o'er a moonlight sea,
+Or the low soft music, perchance, which seems
+To float through the slumbering singer's dreams,
+
+So sweet, so dear is the silvery tone,
+Of her in whose features I sometimes look,
+As I sit at eve by her side alone,
+And we read by turns, from the self-same book,
+Some tale perhaps of the olden time,
+Some lover's romance or quaint old rhyme.
+
+Then when the story is one of woe,--
+Some prisoner's plaint through his dungeon-bar,
+Her blue eye glistens with tears, and low
+Her voice sinks down like a moan afar;
+And I seem to hear that prisoner's wail,
+And his face looks on me worn and pale.
+
+And when she reads some merrier song,
+Her voice is glad as an April bird's,
+And when the tale is of war and wrong,
+A trumpet's summons is in her words,
+And the rush of the hosts I seem to hear,
+And see the tossing of plume and spear!
+
+Oh, pity me then, when, day by day,
+The stout fiend darkens my parlor door;
+And reads me perchance the self-same lay
+Which melted in music, the night before,
+From lips as the lips of Hylas sweet,
+And moved like twin roses which zephyrs meet!
+
+I cross my floor with a nervous tread,
+I whistle and laugh and sing and shout,
+I flourish my cane above his head,
+And stir up the fire to roast him out;
+I topple the chairs, and drum on the pane,
+And press my hands on my ears, in vain!
+
+I've studied Glanville and James the wise,
+And wizard black-letter tomes which treat
+Of demons of every name and size
+Which a Christian man is presumed to meet,
+But never a hint and never a line
+Can I find of a reading fiend like mine.
+
+I've crossed the Psalter with Brady and Tate,
+And laid the Primer above them all,
+I've nailed a horseshoe over the grate,
+And hung a wig to my parlor wall
+Once worn by a learned Judge, they say,
+At Salem court in the witchcraft day!
+
+"Conjuro te, sceleratissime,
+Abire ad tuum locum!"--still
+Like a visible nightmare he sits by me,--
+The exorcism has lost its skill;
+And I hear again in my haunted room
+The husky wheeze and the dolorous hum!
+
+Ah! commend me to Mary Magdalen
+With her sevenfold plagues, to the wandering Jew,
+To the terrors which haunted Orestes when
+The furies his midnight curtains drew,
+But charm him off, ye who charm him can,
+That reading demon, that fat old man!
+1835.
+
+
+
+
+THE FOUNTAIN.
+
+On the declivity of a hill in Salisbury, Essex County, is a fountain of
+clear water, gushing from the very roots of a venerable oak. It is about
+two miles from the junction of the Powow River with the Merrimac.
+
+TRAVELLER! on thy journey toiling
+By the swift Powow,
+With the summer sunshine falling
+On thy heated brow,
+Listen, while all else is still,
+To the brooklet from the hill.
+
+Wild and sweet the flowers are blowing
+By that streamlet's side,
+And a greener verdure showing
+Where its waters glide,
+Down the hill-slope murmuring on,
+Over root and mossy stone.
+
+Where yon oak his broad arms flingeth
+O'er the sloping hill,
+Beautiful and freshly springeth
+That soft-flowing rill,
+Through its dark roots wreathed and bare,
+Gushing up to sun and air.
+
+Brighter waters sparkled never
+In that magic well,
+Of whose gift of life forever
+Ancient legends tell,
+In the lonely desert wasted,
+And by mortal lip untasted.
+
+Waters which the proud Castilian
+Sought with longing eyes,
+Underneath the bright pavilion
+Of the Indian skies,
+Where his forest pathway lay
+Through the blooms of Florida.
+
+Years ago a lonely stranger,
+With the dusky brow
+Of the outcast forest-ranger,
+Crossed the swift Powow,
+And betook him to the rill
+And the oak upon the hill.
+
+O'er his face of moody sadness
+For an instant shone
+Something like a gleam of gladness,
+As he stooped him down
+To the fountain's grassy side,
+And his eager thirst supplied.
+
+With the oak its shadow throwing
+O'er his mossy seat,
+And the cool, sweet waters flowing
+Softly at his feet,
+Closely by the fountain's rim
+That lone Indian seated him.
+
+Autumn's earliest frost had given
+To the woods below
+Hues of beauty, such as heaven
+Lendeth to its bow;
+And the soft breeze from the west
+Scarcely broke their dreamy rest.
+
+Far behind was Ocean striving
+With his chains of sand;
+Southward, sunny glimpses giving,
+'Twixt the swells of land,
+Of its calm and silvery track,
+Rolled the tranquil Merrimac.
+
+Over village, wood, and meadow
+Gazed that stranger man,
+Sadly, till the twilight shadow
+Over all things ran,
+Save where spire and westward pane
+Flashed the sunset back again.
+
+Gazing thus upon the dwelling
+Of his warrior sires,
+Where no lingering trace was telling
+Of their wigwam fires,
+Who the gloomy thoughts might know
+Of that wandering child of woe?
+
+Naked lay, in sunshine glowing,
+Hills that once had stood
+Down their sides the shadows throwing
+Of a mighty wood,
+Where the deer his covert kept,
+And the eagle's pinion swept!
+
+Where the birch canoe had glided
+Down the swift Powow,
+Dark and gloomy bridges strided
+Those clear waters now;
+And where once the beaver swam,
+Jarred the wheel and frowned the dam.
+
+For the wood-bird's merry singing,
+And the hunter's cheer,
+Iron clang and hammer's ringing
+Smote upon his ear;
+And the thick and sullen smoke
+From the blackened forges broke.
+
+Could it be his fathers ever
+Loved to linger here?
+These bare hills, this conquered river,--
+Could they hold them dear,
+With their native loveliness
+Tamed and tortured into this?
+
+Sadly, as the shades of even
+Gathered o'er the hill,
+While the western half of heaven
+Blushed with sunset still,
+From the fountain's mossy seat
+Turned the Indian's weary feet.
+
+Year on year hath flown forever,
+But he came no more
+To the hillside on the river
+Where he came before.
+But the villager can tell
+Of that strange man's visit well.
+
+And the merry children, laden
+With their fruits or flowers,
+Roving boy and laughing maiden,
+In their school-day hours,
+Love the simple tale to tell
+Of the Indian and his well.
+1837
+
+
+
+
+PENTUCKET.
+
+The village of Haverhill, on the Merrimac, called by the Indians
+Pentucket, was for nearly seventeen years a frontier town, and during
+thirty years endured all the horrors of savage warfare. In the year
+1708, a combined body of French and Indians, under the command of De
+Chaillons, and Hertel de Rouville, the famous and bloody sacker of
+Deerfield, made an attack upon the village, which at that time contained
+only thirty houses. Sixteen of the villagers were massacred, and a still
+larger number made prisoners. About thirty of the enemy also fell, among
+them Hertel de Rouville. The minister of the place, Benjamin Rolfe, was
+killed by a shot through his own door. In a paper entitled The Border
+War of 1708, published in my collection of Recreations and Miscellanies,
+I have given a prose narrative of the surprise of Haverhill.
+
+
+How sweetly on the wood-girt town
+The mellow light of sunset shone!
+Each small, bright lake, whose waters still
+Mirror the forest and the hill,
+Reflected from its waveless breast
+The beauty of a cloudless west,
+Glorious as if a glimpse were given
+Within the western gates of heaven,
+Left, by the spirit of the star
+Of sunset's holy hour, ajar!
+
+Beside the river's tranquil flood
+The dark and low-walled dwellings stood,
+Where many a rood of open land
+Stretched up and down on either hand,
+With corn-leaves waving freshly green
+The thick and blackened stumps between.
+Behind, unbroken, deep and dread,
+The wild, untravelled forest spread,
+Back to those mountains, white and cold,
+Of which the Indian trapper told,
+Upon whose summits never yet
+Was mortal foot in safety set.
+
+Quiet and calm without a fear,
+Of danger darkly lurking near,
+The weary laborer left his plough,
+The milkmaid carolled by her cow;
+From cottage door and household hearth
+Rose songs of praise, or tones of mirth.
+
+At length the murmur died away,
+And silence on that village lay.
+--So slept Pompeii, tower and hall,
+Ere the quick earthquake swallowed all,
+Undreaming of the fiery fate
+Which made its dwellings desolate.
+
+Hours passed away. By moonlight sped
+The Merrimac along his bed.
+Bathed in the pallid lustre, stood
+Dark cottage-wall and rock and wood,
+Silent, beneath that tranquil beam,
+As the hushed grouping of a dream.
+Yet on the still air crept a sound,
+No bark of fox, nor rabbit's bound,
+Nor stir of wings, nor waters flowing,
+Nor leaves in midnight breezes blowing.
+
+Was that the tread of many feet,
+Which downward from the hillside beat?
+What forms were those which darkly stood
+Just on the margin of the wood?--
+Charred tree-stumps in the moonlight dim,
+Or paling rude, or leafless limb?
+No,--through the trees fierce eyeballs glowed,
+Dark human forms in moonshine showed,
+Wild from their native wilderness,
+With painted limbs and battle-dress.
+
+A yell the dead might wake to hear
+Swelled on the night air, far and clear;
+Then smote the Indian tomahawk
+On crashing door and shattering lock;
+
+Then rang the rifle-shot, and then
+The shrill death-scream of stricken men,--
+Sank the red axe in woman's brain,
+And childhood's cry arose in vain.
+Bursting through roof and window came,
+Red, fast, and fierce, the kindled flame,
+And blended fire and moonlight glared
+On still dead men and scalp-knives bared.
+
+The morning sun looked brightly through
+The river willows, wet with dew.
+No sound of combat filled the air,
+No shout was heard, nor gunshot there;
+Yet still the thick and sullen smoke
+From smouldering ruins slowly broke;
+And on the greensward many a stain,
+And, here and there, the mangled slain,
+Told how that midnight bolt had sped
+Pentucket, on thy fated head.
+
+Even now the villager can tell
+Where Rolfe beside his hearthstone fell,
+Still show the door of wasting oak,
+Through which the fatal death-shot broke,
+And point the curious stranger where
+De Rouville's corse lay grim and bare;
+Whose hideous head, in death still feared,
+Bore not a trace of hair or beard;
+And still, within the churchyard ground,
+Heaves darkly up the ancient mound,
+Whose grass-grown surface overlies
+The victims of that sacrifice.
+1838.
+
+
+
+
+THE NORSEMEN.
+
+In the early part of the present century, a fragment of a statue, rudely
+chiselled from dark gray stone, was found in the town of Bradford, on
+the Merrimac. Its origin must be left entirely to conjecture. The fact
+that the ancient Northmen visited the north-east coast of North America
+and probably New England, some centuries before the discovery of the
+western world by Columbus, is very generally admitted.
+
+GIFT from the cold and silent Past!
+A relic to the present cast,
+Left on the ever-changing strand
+Of shifting and unstable sand,
+Which wastes beneath the steady chime
+And beating of the waves of Time!
+Who from its bed of primal rock
+First wrenched thy dark, unshapely block?
+Whose hand, of curious skill untaught,
+Thy rude and savage outline wrought?
+
+The waters of my native stream
+Are glancing in the sun's warm beam;
+From sail-urged keel and flashing oar
+The circles widen to its shore;
+And cultured field and peopled town
+Slope to its willowed margin down.
+Yet, while this morning breeze is bringing
+The home-life sound of school-bells ringing,
+And rolling wheel, and rapid jar
+Of the fire-winged and steedless car,
+And voices from the wayside near
+Come quick and blended on my ear,--
+A spell is in this old gray stone,
+My thoughts are with the Past alone!
+
+A change!--The steepled town no more
+Stretches along the sail-thronged shore;
+Like palace-domes in sunset's cloud,
+Fade sun-gilt spire and mansion proud
+Spectrally rising where they stood,
+I see the old, primeval wood;
+Dark, shadow-like, on either hand
+I see its solemn waste expand;
+It climbs the green and cultured hill,
+It arches o'er the valley's rill,
+And leans from cliff and crag to throw
+Its wild arms o'er the stream below.
+Unchanged, alone, the same bright river
+Flows on, as it will flow forever
+I listen, and I hear the low
+Soft ripple where its waters go;
+I hear behind the panther's cry,
+The wild-bird's scream goes thrilling by,
+And shyly on the river's brink
+The deer is stooping down to drink.
+
+But hark!--from wood and rock flung back,
+What sound comes up the Merrimac?
+What sea-worn barks are those which throw
+The light spray from each rushing prow?
+Have they not in the North Sea's blast
+Bowed to the waves the straining mast?
+Their frozen sails the low, pale sun
+Of Thule's night has shone upon;
+Flapped by the sea-wind's gusty sweep
+Round icy drift, and headland steep.
+Wild Jutland's wives and Lochlin's daughters
+Have watched them fading o'er the waters,
+Lessening through driving mist and spray,
+Like white-winged sea-birds on their way!
+
+Onward they glide,--and now I view
+Their iron-armed and stalwart crew;
+Joy glistens in each wild blue eye,
+Turned to green earth and summer sky.
+Each broad, seamed breast has cast aside
+Its cumbering vest of shaggy hide;
+Bared to the sun and soft warm air,
+Streams back the Norsemen's yellow hair.
+I see the gleam of axe and spear,
+The sound of smitten shields I hear,
+Keeping a harsh and fitting time
+To Saga's chant, and Runic rhyme;
+Such lays as Zetland's Scald has sung,
+His gray and naked isles among;
+Or muttered low at midnight hour
+Round Odin's mossy stone of power.
+The wolf beneath the Arctic moon
+Has answered to that startling rune;
+The Gael has heard its stormy swell,
+The light Frank knows its summons well;
+Iona's sable-stoled Culdee
+Has heard it sounding o'er the sea,
+And swept, with hoary beard and hair,
+His altar's foot in trembling prayer.
+
+'T is past,--the 'wildering vision dies
+In darkness on my dreaming eyes
+The forest vanishes in air,
+Hill-slope and vale lie starkly bare;
+I hear the common tread of men,
+And hum of work-day life again;
+
+The mystic relic seems alone
+A broken mass of common stone;
+And if it be the chiselled limb
+Of Berserker or idol grim,
+A fragment of Valhalla's Thor,
+The stormy Viking's god of War,
+Or Praga of the Runic lay,
+Or love-awakening Siona,
+I know not,--for no graven line,
+Nor Druid mark, nor Runic sign,
+Is left me here, by which to trace
+Its name, or origin, or place.
+Yet, for this vision of the Past,
+This glance upon its darkness cast,
+My spirit bows in gratitude
+Before the Giver of all good,
+Who fashioned so the human mind,
+That, from the waste of Time behind,
+A simple stone, or mound of earth,
+Can summon the departed forth;
+Quicken the Past to life again,
+The Present lose in what hath been,
+And in their primal freshness show
+The buried forms of long ago.
+As if a portion of that Thought
+By which the Eternal will is wrought,
+Whose impulse fills anew with breath
+The frozen solitude of Death,
+To mortal mind were sometimes lent,
+To mortal musings sometimes sent,
+To whisper-even when it seems
+But Memory's fantasy of dreams--
+Through the mind's waste of woe and sin,
+Of an immortal origin!
+1841.
+
+
+
+
+FUNERAL TREE OF THE SOKOKIS.
+
+Polan, chief of the Sokokis Indians of the country between Agamenticus
+and Casco Bay, was killed at Windham on Sebago Lake in the spring of
+1756. After the whites had retired, the surviving Indians "swayed" or
+bent down a young tree until its roots were upturned, placed the body of
+their chief beneath it, then released the tree, which, in springing back
+to its old position, covered the grave. The Sokokis were early converts
+to the Catholic faith. Most of them, prior to the year 1756, had removed
+to the French settlements on the St. Francois.
+
+AROUND Sebago's lonely lake
+There lingers not a breeze to break
+The mirror which its waters make.
+
+The solemn pines along its shore,
+The firs which hang its gray rocks o'er,
+Are painted on its glassy floor.
+
+The sun looks o'er, with hazy eye,
+The snowy mountain-tops which lie
+Piled coldly up against the sky.
+
+Dazzling and white! save where the bleak,
+Wild winds have bared some splintering peak,
+Or snow-slide left its dusky streak.
+
+Yet green are Saco's banks below,
+And belts of spruce and cedar show,
+Dark fringing round those cones of snow.
+
+The earth hath felt the breath of spring,
+Though yet on her deliverer's wing
+The lingering frosts of winter cling.
+
+Fresh grasses fringe the meadow-brooks,
+And mildly from its sunny nooks
+The blue eye of the violet looks.
+
+And odors from the springing grass,
+The sweet birch and the sassafras,
+Upon the scarce-felt breezes pass.
+
+Her tokens of renewing care
+Hath Nature scattered everywhere,
+In bud and flower, and warmer air.
+
+But in their hour of bitterness,
+What reek the broken Sokokis,
+Beside their slaughtered chief, of this?
+
+The turf's red stain is yet undried,
+Scarce have the death-shot echoes died
+Along Sebago's wooded side;
+
+And silent now the hunters stand,
+Grouped darkly, where a swell of land
+Slopes upward from the lake's white sand.
+
+Fire and the axe have swept it bare,
+Save one lone beech, unclosing there
+Its light leaves in the vernal air.
+
+With grave, cold looks, all sternly mute,
+They break the damp turf at its foot,
+And bare its coiled and twisted root.
+
+They heave the stubborn trunk aside,
+The firm roots from the earth divide,--
+The rent beneath yawns dark and wide.
+
+And there the fallen chief is laid,
+In tasselled garb of skins arrayed,
+And girded with his wampum-braid.
+
+The silver cross he loved is pressed
+Beneath the heavy arms, which rest
+Upon his scarred and naked breast.
+
+'T is done: the roots are backward sent,
+The beechen-tree stands up unbent,
+The Indian's fitting monument!
+
+When of that sleeper's broken race
+Their green and pleasant dwelling-place,
+Which knew them once, retains no trace;
+
+Oh, long may sunset's light be shed
+As now upon that beech's head,
+A green memorial of the dead!
+
+There shall his fitting requiem be,
+In northern winds, that, cold and free,
+Howl nightly in that funeral tree.
+
+To their wild wail the waves which break
+Forever round that lonely lake
+A solemn undertone shall make!
+
+And who shall deem the spot unblest,
+Where Nature's younger children rest,
+Lulled on their sorrowing mother's breast?
+
+Deem ye that mother loveth less
+These bronzed forms of the wilderness
+She foldeth in her long caress?
+
+As sweet o'er them her wild-flowers blow,
+As if with fairer hair and brow
+The blue-eyed Saxon slept below.
+
+What though the places of their rest
+No priestly knee hath ever pressed,--
+No funeral rite nor prayer hath blessed?
+
+What though the bigot's ban be there,
+And thoughts of wailing and despair,
+And cursing in the place of prayer.
+
+Yet Heaven hath angels watching round
+The Indian's lowliest forest-mound,--
+And they have made it holy ground.
+
+There ceases man's frail judgment; all
+His powerless bolts of cursing fall
+Unheeded on that grassy pall.
+
+O peeled and hunted and reviled,
+Sleep on, dark tenant of the wild!
+Great Nature owns her simple child!
+
+And Nature's God, to whom alone
+The secret of the heart is known,--
+The hidden language traced thereon;
+
+Who from its many cumberings
+Of form and creed, and outward things,
+To light the naked spirit brings;
+
+Not with our partial eye shall scan,
+Not with our pride and scorn shall ban,
+The spirit of our brother man!
+1841.
+
+
+
+
+ST. JOHN.
+
+The fierce rivalry between Charles de La Tour, a Protestant, and
+D'Aulnay Charnasy, a Catholic, for the possession of Acadia, forms one
+of the most romantic passages in the history of the New World. La Tour
+received aid in several instances from the Puritan colony of
+Massachusetts. During one of his voyages for the purpose of obtaining
+arms and provisions for his establishment at St. John, his castle was
+attacked by D'Aulnay, and successfully defended by its high-spirited
+mistress. A second attack however followed in the fourth month, 1647,
+when D'Aulnay was successful, and the garrison was put to the sword.
+Lady La Tour languished a few days in the hands of her enemy, and then
+died of grief.
+
+"To the winds give our banner!
+Bear homeward again!"
+Cried the Lord of Acadia,
+Cried Charles of Estienne;
+From the prow of his shallop
+He gazed, as the sun,
+From its bed in the ocean,
+Streamed up the St. John.
+
+O'er the blue western waters
+That shallop had passed,
+Where the mists of Penobscot
+Clung damp on her mast.
+St. Saviour had looked
+On the heretic sail,
+As the songs of the Huguenot
+Rose on the gale.
+
+The pale, ghostly fathers
+Remembered her well,
+And had cursed her while passing,
+With taper and bell;
+But the men of Monhegan,
+Of Papists abhorred,
+Had welcomed and feasted
+The heretic Lord.
+
+They had loaded his shallop
+With dun-fish and ball,
+With stores for his larder,
+And steel for his wall.
+Pemaquid, from her bastions
+And turrets of stone,
+Had welcomed his coming
+With banner and gun.
+
+And the prayers of the elders
+Had followed his way,
+As homeward he glided,
+Down Pentecost Bay.
+Oh, well sped La Tour
+For, in peril and pain,
+His lady kept watch,
+For his coming again.
+
+O'er the Isle of the Pheasant
+The morning sun shone,
+On the plane-trees which shaded
+The shores of St. John.
+"Now, why from yon battlements
+Speaks not my love!
+Why waves there no banner
+My fortress above?"
+
+Dark and wild, from his deck
+St. Estienne gazed about,
+On fire-wasted dwellings,
+And silent redoubt;
+From the low, shattered walls
+Which the flame had o'errun,
+There floated no banner,
+There thundered no gun!
+
+But beneath the low arch
+Of its doorway there stood
+A pale priest of Rome,
+In his cloak and his hood.
+With the bound of a lion,
+La Tour sprang to land,
+On the throat of the Papist
+He fastened his hand.
+
+"Speak, son of the Woman
+Of scarlet and sin!
+What wolf has been prowling
+My castle within?"
+From the grasp of the soldier
+The Jesuit broke,
+Half in scorn, half in sorrow,
+He smiled as he spoke:
+
+"No wolf, Lord of Estienne,
+Has ravaged thy hall,
+But thy red-handed rival,
+With fire, steel, and ball!
+On an errand of mercy
+I hitherward came,
+While the walls of thy castle
+Yet spouted with flame.
+
+"Pentagoet's dark vessels
+Were moored in the bay,
+Grim sea-lions, roaring
+Aloud for their prey."
+"But what of my lady?"
+Cried Charles of Estienne.
+"On the shot-crumbled turret
+Thy lady was seen:
+
+"Half-veiled in the smoke-cloud,
+Her hand grasped thy pennon,
+While her dark tresses swayed
+In the hot breath of cannon!
+But woe to the heretic,
+Evermore woe!
+When the son of the church
+And the cross is his foe!
+
+"In the track of the shell,
+In the path of the ball,
+Pentagoet swept over
+The breach of the wall!
+Steel to steel, gun to gun,
+One moment,--and then
+Alone stood the victor,
+Alone with his men!
+
+"Of its sturdy defenders,
+Thy lady alone
+Saw the cross-blazoned banner
+Float over St. John."
+"Let the dastard look to it!"
+Cried fiery Estienne,
+"Were D'Aulnay King Louis,
+I'd free her again!"
+
+"Alas for thy lady!
+No service from thee
+Is needed by her
+Whom the Lord hath set free;
+Nine days, in stern silence,
+Her thraldom she bore,
+But the tenth morning came,
+And Death opened her door!"
+
+As if suddenly smitten
+La Tour staggered back;
+His hand grasped his sword-hilt,
+His forehead grew black.
+He sprang on the deck
+Of his shallop again.
+"We cruise now for vengeance!
+Give way!" cried Estienne.
+
+"Massachusetts shall hear
+Of the Huguenot's wrong,
+And from island and creekside
+Her fishers shall throng!
+Pentagoet shall rue
+What his Papists have done,
+When his palisades echo
+The Puritan's gun!"
+
+Oh, the loveliest of heavens
+Hung tenderly o'er him,
+There were waves in the sunshine,
+And green isles before him:
+But a pale hand was beckoning
+The Huguenot on;
+And in blackness and ashes
+Behind was St. John!
+1841
+
+
+
+
+THE CYPRESS-TREE OF CEYLON.
+
+Ibn Batuta, the celebrated Mussulman traveller of the fourteenth
+century, speaks of a cypress-tree in Ceylon, universally held sacred by
+the natives, the leaves of which were said to fall only at certain
+intervals, and he who had the happiness to find and eat one of them was
+restored, at once, to youth and vigor. The traveller saw several
+venerable Jogees, or saints, sitting silent and motionless under the
+tree, patiently awaiting the falling of a leaf.
+
+THEY sat in silent watchfulness
+The sacred cypress-tree about,
+And, from beneath old wrinkled brows,
+Their failing eyes looked out.
+
+Gray Age and Sickness waiting there
+Through weary night and lingering day,--
+Grim as the idols at their side,
+And motionless as they.
+
+Unheeded in the boughs above
+The song of Ceylon's birds was sweet;
+Unseen of them the island flowers
+Bloomed brightly at their feet.
+
+O'er them the tropic night-storm swept,
+The thunder crashed on rock and hill;
+The cloud-fire on their eyeballs blazed,
+Yet there they waited still!
+
+What was the world without to them?
+The Moslem's sunset-call, the dance
+Of Ceylon's maids, the passing gleam
+Of battle-flag and lance?
+
+They waited for that falling leaf
+Of which the wandering Jogees sing:
+Which lends once more to wintry age
+The greenness of its spring.
+
+Oh, if these poor and blinded ones
+In trustful patience wait to feel
+O'er torpid pulse and failing limb
+A youthful freshness steal;
+
+Shall we, who sit beneath that Tree
+Whose healing leaves of life are shed,
+In answer to the breath of prayer,
+Upon the waiting head;
+
+Not to restore our failing forms,
+And build the spirit's broken shrine,
+But on the fainting soul to shed
+A light and life divine--
+
+Shall we grow weary in our watch,
+And murmur at the long delay?
+Impatient of our Father's time
+And His appointed way?
+
+Or shall the stir of outward things
+Allure and claim the Christian's eye,
+When on the heathen watcher's ear
+Their powerless murmurs die?
+
+Alas! a deeper test of faith
+Than prison cell or martyr's stake,
+The self-abasing watchfulness
+Of silent prayer may make.
+
+We gird us bravely to rebuke
+Our erring brother in the wrong,--
+And in the ear of Pride and Power
+Our warning voice is strong.
+
+Easier to smite with Peter's sword
+Than "watch one hour" in humbling prayer.
+Life's "great things," like the Syrian lord,
+Our hearts can do and dare.
+
+But oh! we shrink from Jordan's side,
+From waters which alone can save;
+
+And murmur for Abana's banks
+And Pharpar's brighter wave.
+
+O Thou, who in the garden's shade
+Didst wake Thy weary ones again,
+Who slumbered at that fearful hour
+Forgetful of Thy pain;
+
+Bend o'er us now, as over them,
+And set our sleep-bound spirits free,
+Nor leave us slumbering in the watch
+Our souls should keep with Thee!
+1841
+
+
+
+
+THE EXILES.
+
+The incidents upon which the following ballad has its foundation
+about the year 1660. Thomas Macy was one of the first, if not the first
+white settler of Nantucket. The career of Macy is briefly but carefully
+outlined in James S. Pike's The New Puritan.
+
+THE goodman sat beside his door
+One sultry afternoon,
+With his young wife singing at his side
+An old and goodly tune.
+
+A glimmer of heat was in the air,--
+The dark green woods were still;
+And the skirts of a heavy thunder-cloud
+Hung over the western hill.
+
+Black, thick, and vast arose that cloud
+Above the wilderness,
+
+As some dark world from upper air
+Were stooping over this.
+
+At times the solemn thunder pealed,
+And all was still again,
+Save a low murmur in the air
+Of coming wind and rain.
+
+Just as the first big rain-drop fell,
+A weary stranger came,
+And stood before the farmer's door,
+With travel soiled and lame.
+
+Sad seemed he, yet sustaining hope
+Was in his quiet glance,
+And peace, like autumn's moonlight, clothed
+His tranquil countenance,--
+
+A look, like that his Master wore
+In Pilate's council-hall:
+It told of wrongs, but of a love
+Meekly forgiving all.
+
+"Friend! wilt thou give me shelter here?"
+The stranger meekly said;
+And, leaning on his oaken staff,
+The goodman's features read.
+
+"My life is hunted,--evil men
+Are following in my track;
+The traces of the torturer's whip
+Are on my aged back;
+
+"And much, I fear, 't will peril thee
+Within thy doors to take
+A hunted seeker of the Truth,
+Oppressed for conscience' sake."
+
+Oh, kindly spoke the goodman's wife,
+"Come in, old man!" quoth she,
+"We will not leave thee to the storm,
+Whoever thou mayst be."
+
+Then came the aged wanderer in,
+And silent sat him down;
+While all within grew dark as night
+Beneath the storm-cloud's frown.
+
+But while the sudden lightning's blaze
+Filled every cottage nook,
+And with the jarring thunder-roll
+The loosened casements shook,
+
+A heavy tramp of horses' feet
+Came sounding up the lane,
+And half a score of horse, or more,
+Came plunging through the rain.
+
+"Now, Goodman Macy, ope thy door,--
+We would not be house-breakers;
+A rueful deed thou'st done this day,
+In harboring banished Quakers."
+
+Out looked the cautious goodman then,
+With much of fear and awe,
+For there, with broad wig drenched with rain
+The parish priest he saw.
+
+Open thy door, thou wicked man,
+And let thy pastor in,
+And give God thanks, if forty stripes
+Repay thy deadly sin."
+
+"What seek ye?" quoth the goodman;
+"The stranger is my guest;
+He is worn with toil and grievous wrong,--
+Pray let the old man rest."
+
+"Now, out upon thee, canting knave!"
+And strong hands shook the door.
+"Believe me, Macy," quoth the priest,
+"Thou 'lt rue thy conduct sore."
+
+Then kindled Macy's eye of fire
+"No priest who walks the earth,
+Shall pluck away the stranger-guest
+Made welcome to my hearth."
+
+Down from his cottage wall he caught
+The matchlock, hotly tried
+At Preston-pans and Marston-moor,
+By fiery Ireton's side;
+
+Where Puritan, and Cavalier,
+With shout and psalm contended;
+And Rupert's oath, and Cromwell's prayer,
+With battle-thunder blended.
+
+Up rose the ancient stranger then
+"My spirit is not free
+To bring the wrath and violence
+Of evil men on thee;
+
+"And for thyself, I pray forbear,
+Bethink thee of thy Lord,
+Who healed again the smitten ear,
+And sheathed His follower's sword.
+
+"I go, as to the slaughter led.
+Friends of the poor, farewell!"
+Beneath his hand the oaken door
+Back on its hinges fell.
+
+"Come forth, old graybeard, yea and nay,"
+The reckless scoffers cried,
+As to a horseman's saddle-bow
+The old man's arms were tied.
+
+And of his bondage hard and long
+In Boston's crowded jail,
+Where suffering woman's prayer was heard,
+With sickening childhood's wail,
+
+It suits not with our tale to tell;
+Those scenes have passed away;
+Let the dim shadows of the past
+Brood o'er that evil day.
+
+"Ho, sheriff!" quoth the ardent priest,
+"Take Goodman Macy too;
+The sin of this day's heresy
+His back or purse shall rue."
+
+"Now, goodwife, haste thee!" Macy cried.
+She caught his manly arm;
+Behind, the parson urged pursuit,
+With outcry and alarm.
+
+Ho! speed the Macys, neck or naught,--
+The river-course was near;
+The plashing on its pebbled shore
+Was music to their ear.
+
+A gray rock, tasselled o'er with birch,
+Above the waters hung,
+And at its base, with every wave,
+A small light wherry swung.
+
+A leap--they gain the boat--and there
+The goodman wields his oar;
+"Ill luck betide them all," he cried,
+"The laggards on the shore."
+
+Down through the crashing underwood,
+The burly sheriff came:--
+"Stand, Goodman Macy, yield thyself;
+Yield in the King's own name."
+
+"Now out upon thy hangman's face!"
+Bold Macy answered then,--
+"Whip women, on the village green,
+But meddle not with men."
+
+The priest came panting to the shore,
+His grave cocked hat was gone;
+Behind him, like some owl's nest, hung
+His wig upon a thorn.
+
+"Come back,--come back!" the parson cried,
+"The church's curse beware."
+"Curse, an' thou wilt," said Macy, "but
+Thy blessing prithee spare."
+
+"Vile scoffer!" cried the baffled priest,
+"Thou 'lt yet the gallows see."
+"Who's born to be hanged will not be drowned,"
+Quoth Macy, merrily;
+
+"And so, sir sheriff and priest, good-by!"
+He bent him to his oar,
+And the small boat glided quietly
+From the twain upon the shore.
+
+Now in the west, the heavy clouds
+Scattered and fell asunder,
+While feebler came the rush of rain,
+And fainter growled the thunder.
+
+And through the broken clouds, the sun
+Looked out serene and warm,
+Painting its holy symbol-light
+Upon the passing storm.
+
+Oh, beautiful! that rainbow span,
+O'er dim Crane-neck was bended;
+One bright foot touched the eastern hills,
+And one with ocean blended.
+
+By green Pentucket's southern'slope
+The small boat glided fast;
+The watchers of the Block-house saw
+The strangers as they passed.
+
+That night a stalwart garrison
+Sat shaking in their shoes,
+To hear the dip of Indian oars,
+The glide of birch canoes.
+
+The fisher-wives of Salisbury--
+The men were all away--
+Looked out to see the stranger oar
+Upon their waters play.
+
+Deer-Island's rocks and fir-trees threw
+Their sunset-shadows o'er them,
+And Newbury's spire and weathercock
+Peered o'er the pines before them.
+
+Around the Black Rocks, on their left,
+The marsh lay broad and green;
+And on their right, with dwarf shrubs crowned,
+Plum Island's hills were seen.
+
+With skilful hand and wary eye
+The harbor-bar was crossed;
+A plaything of the restless wave,
+The boat on ocean tossed.
+
+The glory of the sunset heaven
+On land and water lay;
+On the steep hills of Agawam,
+On cape, and bluff, and bay.
+
+They passed the gray rocks of Cape Ann,
+And Gloucester's harbor-bar;
+The watch-fire of the garrison
+Shone like a setting star.
+
+How brightly broke the morning
+On Massachusetts Bay!
+Blue wave, and bright green island,
+Rejoicing in the day.
+
+On passed the bark in safety
+Round isle and headland steep;
+No tempest broke above them,
+No fog-cloud veiled the deep.
+
+Far round the bleak and stormy Cape
+The venturous Macy passed,
+And on Nantucket's naked isle
+Drew up his boat at last.
+
+And how, in log-built cabin,
+They braved the rough sea-weather;
+And there, in peace and quietness,
+Went down life's vale together;
+
+How others drew around them,
+And how their fishing sped,
+Until to every wind of heaven
+Nantucket's sails were spread;
+
+How pale Want alternated
+With Plenty's golden smile;
+Behold, is it not written
+In the annals of the isle?
+
+And yet that isle remaineth
+A refuge of the free,
+As when true-hearted Macy
+Beheld it from the sea.
+
+Free as the winds that winnow
+Her shrubless hills of sand,
+Free as the waves that batter
+Along her yielding land.
+
+Than hers, at duty's summons,
+No loftier spirit stirs,
+Nor falls o'er human suffering
+A readier tear then hers.
+
+God bless the sea-beat island!
+And grant forevermore,
+That charity and freedom dwell
+As now upon her shore!
+1841.
+
+
+
+
+THE KNIGHT OF ST. JOHN.
+
+ERE down yon blue Carpathian hills
+The sun shall sink again,
+Farewell to life and all its ills,
+Farewell to cell and chain!
+
+These prison shades are dark and cold,
+But, darker far than they,
+The shadow of a sorrow old
+Is on my heart alway.
+
+For since the day when Warkworth wood
+Closed o'er my steed, and I,
+An alien from my name and blood,
+A weed cast out to die,--
+
+When, looking back in sunset light,
+I saw her turret gleam,
+And from its casement, far and white,
+Her sign of farewell stream,
+
+Like one who, from some desert shore,
+Doth home's green isles descry,
+And, vainly longing, gazes o'er
+The waste of wave and sky;
+
+So from the desert of my fate
+I gaze across the past;
+Forever on life's dial-plate
+The shade is backward cast!
+
+I've wandered wide from shore to shore,
+I've knelt at many a shrine;
+And bowed me to the rocky floor
+Where Bethlehem's tapers shine;
+
+And by the Holy Sepulchre
+I've pledged my knightly sword
+To Christ, His blessed Church, and her,
+The Mother of our Lord.
+
+Oh, vain the vow, and vain the strife!
+How vain do all things seem!
+My soul is in the past, and life
+To-day is but a dream.
+
+In vain the penance strange and long,
+And hard for flesh to bear;
+The prayer, the fasting, and the thong,
+And sackcloth shirt of hair.
+
+The eyes of memory will not sleep,
+Its ears are open still;
+And vigils with the past they keep
+Against my feeble will.
+
+And still the loves and joys of old
+Do evermore uprise;
+I see the flow of locks of gold,
+The shine of loving eyes!
+
+Ah me! upon another's breast
+Those golden locks recline;
+I see upon another rest
+The glance that once was mine.
+
+"O faithless priest! O perjured knight!"
+I hear the Master cry;
+"Shut out the vision from thy sight,
+Let Earth and Nature die.
+
+"The Church of God is now thy spouse,
+And thou the bridegroom art;
+Then let the burden of thy vows
+Crush down thy human heart!"
+
+In vain! This heart its grief must know,
+Till life itself hath ceased,
+And falls beneath the self-same blow
+The lover and the priest!
+
+O pitying Mother! souls of light,
+And saints and martyrs old!
+Pray for a weak and sinful knight,
+A suffering man uphold.
+
+Then let the Paynim work his will,
+And death unbind my chain,
+Ere down yon blue Carpathian hill
+The sun shall fall again.
+1843
+
+
+
+CASSANDRA SOUTHWICK.
+In 1658 two young persons, son and daughter of Lawrence Smithwick of
+Salem, who had himself been imprisoned and deprived of nearly all his
+property for having entertained Quakers at his house, were fined for
+non-attendance at church. They being unable to pay the fine, the General
+Court issued an order empowering "the Treasurer of the County to sell
+the said persons to any of the English nation of Virginia or Barbadoes,
+to answer said fines." An attempt was made to carry this order into
+execution, but no shipmaster was found willing to convey them to the
+West Indies.
+
+To the God of all sure mercies let my blessing rise
+to-day,
+From the scoffer and the cruel He hath plucked
+the spoil away;
+Yea, He who cooled the furnace around the faithful
+three,
+And tamed the Chaldean lions, hath set His hand-
+maid free!
+Last night I saw the sunset melt through my prison
+bars,
+Last night across my damp earth-floor fell the pale
+gleam of stars;
+In the coldness and the darkness all through the
+long night-time,
+My grated casement whitened with autumn's early
+rime.
+Alone, in that dark sorrow, hour after hour crept
+by;
+Star after star looked palely in and sank adown
+the sky;
+No sound amid night's stillness, save that which
+seemed to be
+The dull and heavy beating of the pulses of the sea;
+
+All night I sat unsleeping, for I knew that on the
+morrow
+The ruler and the cruel priest would mock me in
+my sorrow,
+Dragged to their place of market, and bargained
+for and sold,
+Like a lamb before the shambles, like a heifer
+from the fold!
+
+Oh, the weakness of the flesh was there, the
+shrinking and the shame;
+And the low voice of the Tempter like whispers to
+me came:
+"Why sit'st thou thus forlornly," the wicked
+murmur said,
+"Damp walls thy bower of beauty, cold earth thy
+maiden bed?
+
+"Where be the smiling faces, and voices soft and
+sweet,
+Seen in thy father's dwelling, heard in the pleasant
+street?
+Where be the youths whose glances, the summer
+Sabbath through,
+Turned tenderly and timidly unto thy father's pew?
+
+
+"Why sit'st thou here, Cassandra?-Bethink
+thee with what mirth
+Thy happy schoolmates gather around the warm
+bright hearth;
+How the crimson shadows tremble on foreheads
+white and fair,
+On eyes of merry girlhood, half hid in golden hair.
+
+"Not for thee the hearth-fire brightens, not for
+thee kind words are spoken,
+Not for thee the nuts of Wenham woods by laughing
+boys are broken;
+No first-fruits of the orchard within thy lap are
+laid,
+For thee no flowers of autumn the youthful hunters
+braid.
+
+"O weak, deluded maiden!--by crazy fancies
+led,
+With wild and raving railers an evil path to tread;
+To leave a wholesome worship, and teaching pure
+and sound,
+And mate with maniac women, loose-haired and
+sackcloth bound,--
+
+"Mad scoffers of the priesthood; who mock at
+things divine,
+Who rail against the pulpit, and holy bread and
+wine;
+Sore from their cart-tail scourgings, and from the
+pillory lame,
+Rejoicing in their wretchedness, and glorying in
+their shame.
+
+"And what a fate awaits thee!--a sadly toiling
+slave,
+Dragging the slowly lengthening chain of bondage
+to the grave!
+Think of thy woman's nature, subdued in hopeless
+thrall,
+The easy prey of any, the scoff and scorn of all!"
+
+Oh, ever as the Tempter spoke, and feeble Nature's
+fears
+Wrung drop by drop the scalding flow of unavailing
+tears,
+I wrestled down the evil thoughts, and strove in
+silent prayer,
+To feel, O Helper of the weak! that Thou indeed
+wert there!
+
+I thought of Paul and Silas, within Philippi's cell,
+And how from Peter's sleeping limbs the prison
+shackles fell,
+Till I seemed to hear the trailing of an angel's
+robe of white,
+And to feel a blessed presence invisible to sight.
+
+Bless the Lord for all his mercies!--for the peace
+and love I felt,
+Like dew of Hermon's holy hill, upon my spirit
+melt;
+When "Get behind me, Satan!" was the language
+of my heart,
+And I felt the Evil Tempter with all his doubts
+depart.
+
+Slow broke the gray cold morning; again the sunshine
+fell,
+Flecked with the shade of bar and grate within
+my lonely cell;
+The hoar-frost melted on the wall, and upward
+from the street
+Came careless laugh and idle word, and tread of
+passing feet.
+
+At length the heavy bolts fell back, my door was
+open cast,
+And slowly at the sheriff's side, up the long street
+I passed;
+I heard the murmur round me, and felt, but dared
+not see,
+How, from every door and window, the people
+gazed on me.
+
+And doubt and fear fell on me, shame burned upon
+my cheek,
+Swam earth and sky around me, my trembling
+limbs grew weak:
+"O Lord! support thy handmaid; and from her
+soul cast out
+The fear of man, which brings a snare, the weakness
+and the doubt."
+
+Then the dreary shadows scattered, like a cloud in
+morning's breeze,
+And a low deep voice within me seemed whispering
+words like these:
+"Though thy earth be as the iron, and thy heaven
+a brazen wall,
+Trust still His loving-kindness whose power is over
+all."
+
+We paused at length, where at my feet the sunlit
+waters broke
+On glaring reach of shining beach, and shingly
+wall of rock;
+The merchant-ships lay idly there, in hard clear
+lines on high,
+Tracing with rope and slender spar their network
+on the sky.
+
+And there were ancient citizens, cloak-wrapped
+and grave and cold,
+And grim and stout sea-captains with faces bronzed
+and old,
+And on his horse, with Rawson, his cruel clerk at
+hand,
+Sat dark and haughty Endicott, the ruler of the
+land.
+
+And poisoning with his evil words the ruler's ready
+ear,
+The priest leaned o'er his saddle, with laugh and
+scoff and jeer;
+It stirred my soul, and from my lips the seal of
+silence broke,
+As if through woman's weakness a warning spirit
+spoke.
+
+I cried, "The Lord rebuke thee, thou smiter of the
+meek,
+Thou robber of the righteous, thou trampler of
+the weak!
+Go light the dark, cold hearth-stones,--go turn
+the prison lock
+Of the poor hearts thou hast hunted, thou wolf
+amid the flock!"
+
+Dark lowered the brows of Endicott, and with a
+deeper red
+O'er Rawson's wine-empurpled cheek the flush of
+anger spread;
+"Good people," quoth the white-lipped priest,
+"heed not her words so wild,
+Her Master speaks within her,--the Devil owns
+his child!"
+
+But gray heads shook, and young brows knit, the
+while the sheriff read
+That law the wicked rulers against the poor have
+made,
+Who to their house of Rimmon and idol priesthood
+bring
+No bended knee of worship, nor gainful offering.
+
+Then to the stout sea-captains the sheriff, turning,
+said,--
+"Which of ye, worthy seamen, will take this
+Quaker maid?
+In the Isle of fair Barbadoes, or on Virginia's
+shore,
+You may hold her at a higher price than Indian
+girl or Moor."
+
+Grim and silent stood the captains; and when
+again he cried,
+"Speak out, my worthy seamen!"--no voice, no
+sign replied;
+But I felt a hard hand press my own, and kind
+words met my ear,--
+"God bless thee, and preserve thee, my gentle girl
+and dear!"
+
+A weight seemed lifted from my heart, a pitying
+friend was nigh,--
+I felt it in his hard, rough hand, and saw it in his
+eye;
+And when again the sheriff spoke, that voice, so
+kind to me,
+Growled back its stormy answer like the roaring
+of the sea,--
+
+"Pile my ship with bars of silver, pack with coins
+of Spanish gold,
+From keel-piece up to deck-plank, the roomage of
+her hold,
+By the living God who made me!--I would sooner
+in your bay
+Sink ship and crew and cargo, than bear this child
+away!"
+
+"Well answered, worthy captain, shame on their
+cruel laws!"
+Ran through the crowd in murmurs loud the people's
+just applause.
+"Like the herdsman of Tekoa, in Israel of old,
+Shall we see the poor and righteous again for
+silver sold?"
+
+I looked on haughty Endicott; with weapon half-
+way drawn,
+Swept round the throng his lion glare of bitter hate
+and scorn;
+Fiercely he drew his bridle-rein, and turned in
+silence back,
+And sneering priest and baffled clerk rode
+murmuring in his track.
+
+Hard after them the sheriff looked, in bitterness of
+soul;
+Thrice smote his staff upon the ground, and
+crushed his parchment roll.
+"Good friends," he said, "since both have fled,
+the ruler and the priest,
+Judge ye, if from their further work I be not well
+released."
+
+Loud was the cheer which, full and clear, swept
+round the silent bay,
+As, with kind words and kinder looks, he bade me
+go my way;
+For He who turns the courses of the streamlet of
+the glen,
+And the river of great waters, had turned the
+hearts of men.
+
+Oh, at that hour the very earth seemed changed
+beneath my eye,
+A holier wonder round me rose the blue walls of
+the sky,
+A lovelier light on rock and hill and stream and
+woodland lay,
+And softer lapsed on sunnier sands the waters of
+the bay.
+
+Thanksgiving to the Lord of life! to Him all
+praises be,
+Who from the hands of evil men hath set his hand-
+maid free;
+All praise to Him before whose power the mighty
+are afraid,
+Who takes the crafty in the snare which for the
+poor is laid!
+
+Sing, O my soul, rejoicingly, on evening's twilight
+calm
+Uplift the loud thanksgiving, pour forth the grateful
+psalm;
+Let all dear hearts with me rejoice, as did the
+saints of old,
+When of the Lord's good angel the rescued Peter
+told.
+
+And weep and howl, ye evil priests and mighty
+men of wrong,
+The Lord shall smite the proud, and lay His hand
+upon the strong.
+Woe to the wicked rulers in His avenging hour!
+Woe to the wolves who seek the flocks to raven
+and devour!
+
+But let the humble ones arise, the poor in heart
+be glad,
+And let the mourning ones again with robes of
+praise be clad.
+For He who cooled the furnace, and smoothed the
+stormy wave,
+And tamed the Chaldean lions, is mighty still to
+save!
+1843.
+
+
+
+
+THE NEW WIFE AND THE OLD.
+
+The following ballad is founded upon one of the marvellous legends
+connected with the famous General ----, of Hampton, New Hampshire,
+who was regarded by his neighbors as a Yankee Faust, in league with
+the adversary. I give the story, as I heard it when a child, from a
+venerable family visitant.
+
+
+DARK the halls, and cold the feast,
+Gone the bridemaids, gone the priest.
+All is over, all is done,
+Twain of yesterday are one!
+Blooming girl and manhood gray,
+Autumn in the arms of May!
+
+Hushed within and hushed without,
+Dancing feet and wrestlers' shout;
+Dies the bonfire on the hill;
+All is dark and all is still,
+Save the starlight, save the breeze
+Moaning through the graveyard trees,
+And the great sea-waves below,
+Pulse of the midnight beating slow.
+
+From the brief dream of a bride
+She hath wakened, at his side.
+With half-uttered shriek and start,--
+Feels she not his beating heart?
+And the pressure of his arm,
+And his breathing near and warm?
+
+Lightly from the bridal bed
+Springs that fair dishevelled head,
+And a feeling, new, intense,
+Half of shame, half innocence,
+Maiden fear and wonder speaks
+Through her lips and changing cheeks.
+
+From the oaken mantel glowing,
+Faintest light the lamp is throwing
+On the mirror's antique mould,
+High-backed chair, and wainscot old,
+And, through faded curtains stealing,
+His dark sleeping face revealing.
+
+Listless lies the strong man there,
+Silver-streaked his careless hair;
+Lips of love have left no trace
+On that hard and haughty face;
+And that forehead's knitted thought
+Love's soft hand hath not unwrought.
+
+"Yet," she sighs, "he loves me well,
+More than these calm lips will tell.
+Stooping to my lowly state,
+He hath made me rich and great,
+And I bless him, though he be
+Hard and stern to all save me!"
+
+While she speaketh, falls the light
+O'er her fingers small and white;
+Gold and gem, and costly ring
+Back the timid lustre fling,--
+Love's selectest gifts, and rare,
+His proud hand had fastened there.
+
+Gratefully she marks the glow
+From those tapering lines of snow;
+Fondly o'er the sleeper bending
+His black hair with golden blending,
+In her soft and light caress,
+Cheek and lip together press.
+
+Ha!--that start of horror! why
+That wild stare and wilder cry,
+Full of terror, full of pain?
+Is there madness in her brain?
+Hark! that gasping, hoarse and low,
+"Spare me,--spare me,--let me go!"
+
+God have mercy!--icy cold
+Spectral hands her own enfold,
+Drawing silently from them
+Love's fair gifts of gold and gem.
+"Waken! save me!" still as death
+At her side he slumbereth.
+
+Ring and bracelet all are gone,
+And that ice-cold hand withdrawn;
+But she hears a murmur low,
+Full of sweetness, full of woe,
+Half a sigh and half a moan
+"Fear not! give the dead her own!"
+
+Ah!--the dead wife's voice she knows!
+That cold hand whose pressure froze,
+Once in warmest life had borne
+Gem and band her own hath worn.
+"Wake thee! wake thee!" Lo, his eyes
+Open with a dull surprise.
+
+In his arms the strong man folds her,
+Closer to his breast he holds her;
+Trembling limbs his own are meeting,
+And he feels her heart's quick beating
+"Nay, my dearest, why this fear?"
+"Hush!" she saith, "the dead is here!"
+
+"Nay, a dream,--an idle dream."
+But before the lamp's pale gleam
+Tremblingly her hand she raises.
+There no more the diamond blazes,
+Clasp of pearl, or ring of gold,--
+"Ah!" she sighs, "her hand was cold!"
+
+Broken words of cheer he saith,
+But his dark lip quivereth,
+And as o'er the past he thinketh,
+From his young wife's arms he shrinketh;
+Can those soft arms round him lie,
+Underneath his dead wife's eye?
+
+She her fair young head can rest
+Soothed and childlike on his breast,
+And in trustful innocence
+Draw new strength and courage thence;
+He, the proud man, feels within
+But the cowardice of sin!
+
+She can murmur in her thought
+Simple prayers her mother taught,
+And His blessed angels call,
+Whose great love is over all;
+He, alone, in prayerless pride,
+Meets the dark Past at her side!
+
+One, who living shrank with dread
+From his look, or word, or tread,
+Unto whom her early grave
+Was as freedom to the slave,
+Moves him at this midnight hour,
+With the dead's unconscious power!
+
+Ah, the dead, the unforgot!
+From their solemn homes of thought,
+Where the cypress shadows blend
+Darkly over foe and friend,
+Or in love or sad rebuke,
+Back upon the living look.
+
+And the tenderest ones and weakest,
+Who their wrongs have borne the meekest,
+Lifting from those dark, still places,
+Sweet and sad-remembered faces,
+O'er the guilty hearts behind
+An unwitting triumph find.
+1843
+
+
+
+
+THE BRIDAL OF PENNACOOK.
+
+
+Winnepurkit, otherwise called George, Sachem of Saugus, married a
+daughter of Passaconaway, the great Pennacook chieftain, in 1662. The
+wedding took place at Pennacook (now Concord, N. H.), and the ceremonies
+closed with a great feast. According to the usages of the chiefs,
+Passaconaway ordered a select number of his men to accompany the
+newly-married couple to the dwelling of the husband, where in turn there
+was another great feast. Some time after, the wife of Winnepurkit
+expressing a desire to visit her father's house was permitted to go,
+accompanied by a brave escort of her husband's chief men. But when she
+wished to return, her father sent a messenger to Saugus, informing her
+husband, and asking him to come and take her away. He returned for
+answer that he had escorted his wife to her father's house in a style
+that became a chief, and that now if she wished to return, her father
+must send her back, in the same way. This Passaconaway refused to do,
+and it is said that here terminated the connection of his daughter with
+the Saugus chief.--Vide MORTON'S New Canaan.
+
+
+WE had been wandering for many days
+Through the rough northern country. We had seen
+The sunset, with its bars of purple cloud,
+Like a new heaven, shine upward from the lake
+Of Winnepiseogee; and had felt
+The sunrise breezes, midst the leafy isles
+Which stoop their summer beauty to the lips
+Of the bright waters. We had checked our steeds,
+Silent with wonder, where the mountain wall
+Is piled to heaven; and, through the narrow rift
+Of the vast rocks, against whose rugged feet
+Beats the mad torrent with perpetual roar,
+Where noonday is as twilight, and the wind
+Comes burdened with the everlasting moan
+Of forests and of far-off waterfalls,
+We had looked upward where the summer sky,
+Tasselled with clouds light-woven by the sun,
+Sprung its blue arch above the abutting crags
+O'er-roofing the vast portal of the land
+Beyond the wall of mountains. We had passed
+The high source of the Saco; and bewildered
+In the dwarf spruce-belts of the Crystal Hills,
+Had heard above us, like a voice in the cloud,
+The horn of Fabyan sounding; and atop
+Of old Agioochook had seen the mountains'
+Piled to the northward, shagged with wood, and thick
+As meadow mole-hills,--the far sea of Casco,
+A white gleam on the horizon of the east;
+Fair lakes, embosomed in the woods and hills;
+Moosehillock's mountain range, and Kearsarge
+Lifting his granite forehead to the sun!
+
+And we had rested underneath the oaks
+Shadowing the bank, whose grassy spires are shaken
+By the perpetual beating of the falls
+Of the wild Ammonoosuc. We had tracked
+The winding Pemigewasset, overhung
+By beechen shadows, whitening down its rocks,
+Or lazily gliding through its intervals,
+From waving rye-fields sending up the gleam
+Of sunlit waters. We had seen the moon
+Rising behind Umbagog's eastern pines,
+Like a great Indian camp-fire; and its beams
+At midnight spanning with a bridge of silver
+The Merrimac by Uncanoonuc's falls.
+
+There were five souls of us whom travel's chance
+Had thrown together in these wild north hills
+A city lawyer, for a month escaping
+From his dull office, where the weary eye
+Saw only hot brick walls and close thronged streets;
+Briefless as yet, but with an eye to see
+Life's sunniest side, and with a heart to take
+Its chances all as godsends; and his brother,
+Pale from long pulpit studies, yet retaining
+The warmth and freshness of a genial heart,
+Whose mirror of the beautiful and true,
+In Man and Nature, was as yet undimmed
+By dust of theologic strife, or breath
+Of sect, or cobwebs of scholastic lore;
+Like a clear crystal calm of water, taking
+The hue and image of o'erleaning flowers,
+Sweet human faces, white clouds of the noon,
+Slant starlight glimpses through the dewy leaves,
+And tenderest moonrise. 'T was, in truth, a study,
+To mark his spirit, alternating between
+A decent and professional gravity
+And an irreverent mirthfulness, which often
+Laughed in the face of his divinity,
+Plucked off the sacred ephod, quite unshrined
+The oracle, and for the pattern priest
+Left us the man. A shrewd, sagacious merchant,
+To whom the soiled sheet found in Crawford's inn,
+Giving the latest news of city stocks
+And sales of cotton, had a deeper meaning
+Than the great presence of the awful mountains
+Glorified by the sunset; and his daughter,
+A delicate flower on whom had blown too long
+Those evil winds, which, sweeping from the ice
+And winnowing the fogs of Labrador,
+Shed their cold blight round Massachusetts Bay,
+With the same breath which stirs Spring's opening leaves
+And lifts her half-formed flower-bell on its stem,
+Poisoning our seaside atmosphere.
+
+It chanced that as we turned upon our homeward way,
+A drear northeastern storm came howling up
+The valley of the Saco; and that girl
+Who had stood with us upon Mount Washington,
+Her brown locks ruffled by the wind which whirled
+In gusts around its sharp, cold pinnacle,
+Who had joined our gay trout-fishing in the streams
+Which lave that giant's feet; whose laugh was heard
+Like a bird's carol on the sunrise breeze
+Which swelled our sail amidst the lake's green islands,
+Shrank from its harsh, chill breath, and visibly drooped
+Like a flower in the frost. So, in that quiet inn
+Which looks from Conway on the mountains piled
+Heavily against the horizon of the north,
+Like summer thunder-clouds, we made our home
+And while the mist hung over dripping hills,
+And the cold wind-driven rain-drops all day long
+Beat their sad music upon roof and pane,
+We strove to cheer our gentle invalid.
+
+The lawyer in the pauses of the storm
+Went angling down the Saco, and, returning,
+Recounted his adventures and mishaps;
+Gave us the history of his scaly clients,
+Mingling with ludicrous yet apt citations
+Of barbarous law Latin, passages
+From Izaak Walton's Angler, sweet and fresh
+As the flower-skirted streams of Staffordshire,
+Where, under aged trees, the southwest wind
+Of soft June mornings fanned the thin, white hair
+Of the sage fisher. And, if truth be told,
+Our youthful candidate forsook his sermons,
+His commentaries, articles and creeds,
+For the fair page of human loveliness,
+The missal of young hearts, whose sacred text
+Is music, its illumining, sweet smiles.
+He sang the songs she loved; and in his low,
+Deep, earnest voice, recited many a page
+Of poetry, the holiest, tenderest lines
+Of the sad bard of Olney, the sweet songs,
+Simple and beautiful as Truth and Nature,
+Of him whose whitened locks on Rydal Mount
+Are lifted yet by morning breezes blowing
+From the green hills, immortal in his lays.
+And for myself, obedient to her wish,
+I searched our landlord's proffered library,--
+A well-thumbed Bunyan, with its nice wood pictures
+Of scaly fiends and angels not unlike them;
+Watts' unmelodious psalms; Astrology's
+Last home, a musty pile of almanacs,
+And an old chronicle of border wars
+And Indian history. And, as I read
+A story of the marriage of the Chief
+Of Saugus to the dusky Weetamoo,
+Daughter of Passaconaway, who dwelt
+In the old time upon the Merrimac,
+Our fair one, in the playful exercise
+Of her prerogative,--the right divine
+Of youth and beauty,--bade us versify
+The legend, and with ready pencil sketched
+Its plan and outlines, laughingly assigning
+To each his part, and barring our excuses
+With absolute will. So, like the cavaliers
+Whose voices still are heard in the Romance
+Of silver-tongued Boccaccio, on the banks
+Of Arno, with soft tales of love beguiling
+The ear of languid beauty, plague-exiled
+From stately Florence, we rehearsed our rhymes
+To their fair auditor, and shared by turns
+Her kind approval and her playful censure.
+
+It may be that these fragments owe alone
+To the fair setting of their circumstances,--
+The associations of time, scene, and audience,--
+Their place amid the pictures which fill up
+The chambers of my memory. Yet I trust
+That some, who sigh, while wandering in thought,
+Pilgrims of Romance o'er the olden world,
+That our broad land,--our sea-like lakes and mountains
+Piled to the clouds, our rivers overhung
+By forests which have known no other change
+For ages than the budding and the fall
+Of leaves, our valleys lovelier than those
+Which the old poets sang of,--should but figure
+On the apocryphal chart of speculation
+As pastures, wood-lots, mill-sites, with the privileges,
+Rights, and appurtenances, which make up
+A Yankee Paradise, unsung, unknown,
+To beautiful tradition; even their names,
+Whose melody yet lingers like the last
+Vibration of the red man's requiem,
+Exchanged for syllables significant,
+Of cotton-mill and rail-car, will look kindly
+Upon this effort to call up the ghost
+Of our dim Past, and listen with pleased ear
+To the responses of the questioned Shade.
+
+I. THE MERRIMAC.
+O child of that white-crested mountain whose
+springs
+Gush forth in the shade of the cliff-eagle's
+wings,
+Down whose slopes to the lowlands thy wild waters
+shine,
+Leaping gray walls of rock, flashing through the
+dwarf pine;
+From that cloud-curtained cradle so cold and so
+lone,
+From the arms of that wintry-locked mother of
+stone,
+By hills hung with forests, through vales wide and
+free,
+Thy mountain-born brightness glanced down to the
+sea.
+
+No bridge arched thy waters save that where the
+trees
+Stretched their long arms above thee and kissed in
+the breeze:
+No sound save the lapse of the waves on thy
+shores,
+The plunging of otters, the light dip of oars.
+
+Green-tufted, oak-shaded, by Amoskeag's fall
+Thy twin Uncanoonucs rose stately and tall,
+Thy Nashua meadows lay green and unshorn,
+And the hills of Pentucket were tasselled with
+corn.
+But thy Pennacook valley was fairer than these,
+And greener its grasses and taller its trees,
+Ere the sound of an axe in the forest had rung,
+Or the mower his scythe in the meadows had
+swung.
+
+In their sheltered repose looking out from the
+wood
+The bark-builded wigwams of Pennacook stood;
+There glided the corn-dance, the council-fire shone,
+And against the red war-post the hatchet was
+thrown.
+
+There the old smoked in silence their pipes, and
+the young
+To the pike and the white-perch their baited lines
+flung;
+There the boy shaped his arrows, and there the
+shy maid
+Wove her many-hued baskets and bright wampum
+braid.
+
+O Stream of the Mountains! if answer of thine
+Could rise from thy waters to question of mine,
+Methinks through the din of thy thronged banks
+a moan
+Of sorrow would swell for the days which have
+gone.
+
+Not for thee the dull jar of the loom and the wheel,
+The gliding of shuttles, the ringing of steel;
+But that old voice of waters, of bird and of breeze,
+The dip of the wild-fowl, the rustling of trees.
+
+
+II. THE BASHABA.
+Lift we the twilight curtains of the Past,
+And, turning from familiar sight and sound,
+Sadly and full of reverence let us cast
+A glance upon Tradition's shadowy ground,
+Led by the few pale lights which, glimmering round
+That dim, strange land of Eld, seem dying fast;
+And that which history gives not to the eye,
+The faded coloring of Time's tapestry,
+Let Fancy, with her dream-dipped brush, supply.
+
+Roof of bark and walls of pine,
+Through whose chinks the sunbeams shine,
+Tracing many a golden line
+On the ample floor within;
+Where, upon that earth-floor stark,
+Lay the gaudy mats of bark,
+With the bear's hide, rough and dark,
+And the red-deer's skin.
+
+Window-tracery, small and slight,
+Woven of the willow white,
+Lent a dimly checkered light;
+And the night-stars glimmered down,
+Where the lodge-fire's heavy smoke,
+Slowly through an opening broke,
+In the low roof, ribbed with oak,
+Sheathed with hemlock brown.
+
+Gloomed behind the changeless shade
+By the solemn pine-wood made;
+Through the rugged palisade,
+In the open foreground planted,
+Glimpses came of rowers rowing,
+Stir of leaves and wild-flowers blowing,
+Steel-like gleams of water flowing,
+In the sunlight slanted.
+
+Here the mighty Bashaba
+Held his long-unquestioned sway,
+From the White Hills, far away,
+To the great sea's sounding shore;
+Chief of chiefs, his regal word
+All the river Sachems heard,
+At his call the war-dance stirred,
+Or was still once more.
+
+There his spoils of chase and war,
+Jaw of wolf and black bear's paw,
+Panther's skin and eagle's claw,
+Lay beside his axe and bow;
+And, adown the roof-pole hung,
+Loosely on a snake-skin strung,
+In the smoke his scalp-locks swung
+Grimly to and fro.
+
+Nightly down the river going,
+Swifter was the hunter's rowing,
+When he saw that lodge-fire, glowing
+O'er the waters still and red;
+And the squaw's dark eye burned brighter,
+And she drew her blanket tighter,
+As, with quicker step and lighter,
+From that door she fled.
+
+For that chief had magic skill,
+And a Panisee's dark will,
+Over powers of good and ill,
+Powers which bless and powers which ban;
+Wizard lord of Pennacook,
+Chiefs upon their war-path shook,
+When they met the steady look
+Of that wise dark man.
+
+Tales of him the gray squaw told,
+When the winter night-wind cold
+Pierced her blanket's thickest fold,
+And her fire burned low and small,
+Till the very child abed,
+Drew its bear-skin over bead,
+Shrinking from the pale lights shed
+On the trembling wall.
+
+All the subtle spirits hiding
+Under earth or wave, abiding
+In the caverned rock, or riding
+Misty clouds or morning breeze;
+Every dark intelligence,
+Secret soul, and influence
+Of all things which outward sense
+Feels, or bears, or sees,--
+
+These the wizard's skill confessed,
+At his bidding banned or blessed,
+Stormful woke or lulled to rest
+Wind and cloud, and fire and flood;
+Burned for him the drifted snow,
+Bade through ice fresh lilies blow,
+And the leaves of summer grow
+Over winter's wood!
+
+Not untrue that tale of old!
+Now, as then, the wise and bold
+All the powers of Nature hold
+Subject to their kingly will;
+From the wondering crowds ashore,
+Treading life's wild waters o'er,
+As upon a marble floor,
+Moves the strong man still.
+
+Still, to such, life's elements
+With their sterner laws dispense,
+And the chain of consequence
+Broken in their pathway lies;
+Time and change their vassals making,
+Flowers from icy pillows waking,
+Tresses of the sunrise shaking
+Over midnight skies.
+Still, to th' earnest soul, the sun
+Rests on towered Gibeon,
+And the moon of Ajalon
+Lights the battle-grounds of life;
+To his aid the strong reverses
+Hidden powers and giant forces,
+And the high stars, in their courses,
+Mingle in his strife!
+
+
+III. THE DAUGHTER.
+The soot-black brows of men, the yell
+Of women thronging round the bed,
+The tinkling charm of ring and shell,
+The Powah whispering o'er the dead!
+
+All these the Sachem's home had known,
+When, on her journey long and wild
+To the dim World of Souls, alone,
+In her young beauty passed the mother of his child.
+
+Three bow-shots from the Sachem's dwelling
+They laid her in the walnut shade,
+Where a green hillock gently swelling
+Her fitting mound of burial made.
+There trailed the vine in summer hours,
+The tree-perched squirrel dropped his shell,--
+On velvet moss and pale-hued flowers,
+Woven with leaf and spray, the softened sunshine fell!
+
+The Indian's heart is hard and cold,
+It closes darkly o'er its care,
+And formed in Nature's sternest mould,
+Is slow to feel, and strong to bear.
+The war-paint on the Sachem's face,
+Unwet with tears, shone fierce and red,
+And still, in battle or in chase,
+Dry leaf and snow-rime crisped beneath his
+foremost tread.
+
+Yet when her name was heard no more,
+And when the robe her mother gave,
+And small, light moccasin she wore,
+Had slowly wasted on her grave,
+Unmarked of him the dark maids sped
+Their sunset dance and moonlit play;
+No other shared his lonely bed,
+No other fair young head upon his bosom lay.
+
+A lone, stern man. Yet, as sometimes
+The tempest-smitten tree receives
+From one small root the sap which climbs
+Its topmost spray and crowning leaves,
+So from his child the Sachem drew
+A life of Love and Hope, and felt
+His cold and rugged nature through
+The softness and the warmth of her young
+being melt.
+
+A laugh which in the woodland rang
+Bemocking April's gladdest bird,--
+A light and graceful form which sprang
+To meet him when his step was heard,--
+Eyes by his lodge-fire flashing dark,
+Small fingers stringing bead and shell
+Or weaving mats of bright-hued bark,--
+With these the household-god [3] had graced
+his wigwam well.
+
+Child of the forest! strong and free,
+Slight-robed, with loosely flowing hair,
+She swam the lake or climbed the tree,
+Or struck the flying bird in air.
+O'er the heaped drifts of winter's moon
+Her snow-shoes tracked the hunter's way;
+And dazzling in the summer noon
+The blade of her light oar threw off its shower
+of spray!
+
+Unknown to her the rigid rule,
+The dull restraint, the chiding frown,
+The weary torture of the school,
+The taming of wild nature down.
+Her only lore, the legends told
+Around the hunter's fire at night;
+Stars rose and set, and seasons rolled,
+Flowers bloomed and snow-flakes fell, unquestioned
+in her sight.
+
+Unknown to her the subtle skill
+With which the artist-eye can trace
+In rock and tree and lake and hill
+The outlines of divinest grace;
+Unknown the fine soul's keen unrest,
+Which sees, admires, yet yearns alway;
+Too closely on her mother's breast
+To note her smiles of love the child of Nature lay!
+
+It is enough for such to be
+Of common, natural things a part,
+To feel, with bird and stream and tree,
+The pulses of the same great heart;
+But we, from Nature long exiled,
+In our cold homes of Art and Thought
+Grieve like the stranger-tended child,
+Which seeks its mother's arms, and sees but feels
+them not.
+
+The garden rose may richly bloom
+In cultured soil and genial air,
+To cloud the light of Fashion's room
+Or droop in Beauty's midnight hair;
+In lonelier grace, to sun and dew
+The sweetbrier on the hillside shows
+Its single leaf and fainter hue,
+Untrained and wildly free, yet still a sister rose!
+
+Thus o'er the heart of Weetamoo
+Their mingling shades of joy and ill
+The instincts of her nature threw;
+The savage was a woman still.
+Midst outlines dim of maiden schemes,
+Heart-colored prophecies of life,
+Rose on the ground of her young dreams
+The light of a new home, the lover and the wife.
+
+
+IV. THE WEDDING.
+Cool and dark fell the autumn night,
+But the Bashaba's wigwam glowed with light,
+For down from its roof, by green withes hung,
+Flaring and smoking the pine-knots swung.
+
+And along the river great wood-fires
+Shot into the night their long, red spires,
+Showing behind the tall, dark wood,
+Flashing before on the sweeping flood.
+
+In the changeful wind, with shimmer and shade,
+Now high, now low, that firelight played,
+On tree-leaves wet with evening dews,
+On gliding water and still canoes.
+
+The trapper that night on Turee's brook,
+And the weary fisher on Contoocook,
+Saw over the marshes, and through the pine,
+And down on the river, the dance-lights shine.
+For the Saugus Sachem had come to woo
+The Bashaba's daughter Weetamoo,
+And laid at her father's feet that night
+His softest furs and wampum white.
+
+From the Crystal Hills to the far southeast
+The river Sagamores came to the feast;
+And chiefs whose homes the sea-winds shook
+Sat down on the mats of Pennacook.
+
+They came from Sunapee's shore of rock,
+From the snowy sources of Snooganock,
+And from rough Coos whose thick woods shake
+Their pine-cones in Umbagog Lake.
+
+From Ammonoosuc's mountain pass,
+Wild as his home, came Chepewass;
+And the Keenomps of the bills which throw
+Their shade on the Smile of Manito.
+
+With pipes of peace and bows unstrung,
+Glowing with paint came old and young,
+In wampum and furs and feathers arrayed,
+To the dance and feast the Bashaba made.
+
+Bird of the air and beast of the field,
+All which the woods and the waters yield,
+On dishes of birch and hemlock piled,
+Garnished and graced that banquet wild.
+
+Steaks of the brown bear fat and large
+From the rocky slopes of the Kearsarge;
+Delicate trout from Babboosuck brook,
+And salmon speared in the Contoocook;
+
+Squirrels which fed where nuts fell thick
+in the gravelly bed of the Otternic;
+And small wild-hens in reed-snares caught
+from the banks of Sondagardee brought;
+
+Pike and perch from the Suncook taken,
+Nuts from the trees of the Black Hills shaken,
+Cranberries picked in the Squamscot bog,
+And grapes from the vines of Piscataquog:
+
+And, drawn from that great stone vase which stands
+In the river scooped by a spirit's hands,[4]
+Garnished with spoons of shell and horn,
+Stood the birchen dishes of smoking corn.
+
+Thus bird of the air and beast of the field,
+All which the woods and the waters yield,
+Furnished in that olden day
+The bridal feast of the Bashaba.
+
+And merrily when that feast was done
+On the fire-lit green the dance begun,
+With squaws' shrill stave, and deeper hum
+Of old men beating the Indian drum.
+
+Painted and plumed, with scalp-locks flowing,
+And red arms tossing and black eyes glowing,
+Now in the light and now in the shade
+Around the fires the dancers played.
+
+The step was quicker, the song more shrill,
+And the beat of the small drums louder still
+Whenever within the circle drew
+The Saugus Sachem and Weetamoo.
+
+The moons of forty winters had shed
+Their snow upon that chieftain's head,
+And toil and care and battle's chance
+Had seamed his hard, dark countenance.
+
+A fawn beside the bison grim,--
+Why turns the bride's fond eye on him,
+In whose cold look is naught beside
+The triumph of a sullen pride?
+
+Ask why the graceful grape entwines
+The rough oak with her arm of vines;
+And why the gray rock's rugged cheek
+The soft lips of the mosses seek.
+
+Why, with wise instinct, Nature seems
+To harmonize her wide extremes,
+Linking the stronger with the weak,
+The haughty with the soft and meek!
+
+
+V. THE NEW HOME.
+A wild and broken landscape, spiked with firs,
+Roughening the bleak horizon's northern edge;
+Steep, cavernous hillsides, where black hemlock
+spurs
+And sharp, gray splinters of the wind-swept
+ledge
+Pierced the thin-glazed ice, or bristling rose,
+Where the cold rim of the sky sunk down upon
+the snows.
+
+And eastward cold, wide marshes stretched away,
+Dull, dreary flats without a bush or tree,
+O'er-crossed by icy creeks, where twice a day
+Gurgled the waters of the moon-struck sea;
+And faint with distance came the stifled roar,
+The melancholy lapse of waves on that low shore.
+
+No cheerful village with its mingling smokes,
+No laugh of children wrestling in the snow,
+No camp-fire blazing through the hillside oaks,
+No fishers kneeling on the ice below;
+Yet midst all desolate things of sound and view,
+Through the long winter moons smiled dark-eyed
+Weetamoo.
+
+Her heart had found a home; and freshly all
+Its beautiful affections overgrew
+Their rugged prop. As o'er some granite wall
+Soft vine-leaves open to the moistening dew
+And warm bright sun, the love of that young wife
+Found on a hard cold breast the dew and warmth
+of life.
+
+The steep, bleak hills, the melancholy shore,
+The long, dead level of the marsh between,
+A coloring of unreal beauty wore
+Through the soft golden mist of young love seen.
+For o'er those hills and from that dreary plain,
+Nightly she welcomed home her hunter chief again.
+
+No warmth of heart, no passionate burst of feeling,
+Repaid her welcoming smile and parting kiss,
+No fond and playful dalliance half concealing,
+Under the guise of mirth, its tenderness;
+
+But, in their stead, the warrior's settled pride,
+And vanity's pleased smile with homage satisfied.
+
+Enough for Weetamoo, that she alone
+Sat on his mat and slumbered at his side;
+That he whose fame to her young ear had flown
+Now looked upon her proudly as his bride;
+That he whose name the Mohawk trembling heard
+Vouchsafed to her at times a kindly look or word.
+
+For she had learned the maxims of her race,
+Which teach the woman to become a slave,
+And feel herself the pardonless disgrace
+Of love's fond weakness in the wise and brave,--
+The scandal and the shame which they incur,
+Who give to woman all which man requires of her.
+
+So passed the winter moons. The sun at last
+Broke link by link the frost chain of the rills,
+And the warm breathings of the southwest passed
+Over the hoar rime of the Saugus hills;
+The gray and desolate marsh grew green once more,
+And the birch-tree's tremulous shade fell round the
+Sachem's door.
+
+Then from far Pennacook swift runners came,
+With gift and greeting for the Saugus chief;
+Beseeching him in the great Sachem's name,
+That, with the coming of the flower and leaf,
+The song of birds, the warm breeze and the rain,
+Young Weetamoo might greet her lonely sire again.
+
+And Winnepurkit called his chiefs together,
+And a grave council in his wigwam met,
+Solemn and brief in words, considering whether
+The rigid rules of forest etiquette
+Permitted Weetamoo once more to look
+Upon her father's face and green-banked
+Pennacook.
+
+With interludes of pipe-smoke and strong water,
+The forest sages pondered, and at length,
+Concluded in a body to escort her
+Up to her father's home of pride and strength,
+Impressing thus on Pennacook a sense
+Of Winnepurkit's power and regal consequence.
+
+So through old woods which Aukeetamit's[5] hand,
+A soft and many-shaded greenness lent,
+Over high breezy hills, and meadow land
+Yellow with flowers, the wild procession went,
+Till, rolling down its wooded banks between,
+A broad, clear, mountain stream, the Merrimac
+was seen.
+
+The hunter leaning on his bow undrawn,
+The fisher lounging on the pebbled shores,
+Squaws in the clearing dropping the seed-corn,
+Young children peering through the wigwam doors,
+Saw with delight, surrounded by her train
+Of painted Saugus braves, their Weetamoo again.
+
+
+VI. AT PENNACOOK.
+The hills are dearest which our childish feet
+Have climbed the earliest; and the streams most sweet
+Are ever those at which our young lips drank,
+Stooped to their waters o'er the grassy bank.
+
+Midst the cold dreary sea-watch, Home's hearth-light
+Shines round the helmsman plunging through the night;
+And still, with inward eye, the traveller sees
+In close, dark, stranger streets his native trees.
+
+The home-sick dreamer's brow is nightly fanned
+By breezes whispering of his native land,
+And on the stranger's dim and dying eye
+The soft, sweet pictures of his childhood lie.
+
+Joy then for Weetamoo, to sit once more
+A child upon her father's wigwam floor!
+Once more with her old fondness to beguile
+From his cold eye the strange light of a smile.
+
+The long, bright days of summer swiftly passed,
+The dry leaves whirled in autumn's rising blast,
+And evening cloud and whitening sunrise rime
+Told of the coming of the winter-time.
+
+But vainly looked, the while, young Weetamoo,
+Down the dark river for her chief's canoe;
+No dusky messenger from Saugus brought
+The grateful tidings which the young wife sought.
+
+At length a runner from her father sent,
+To Winnepurkit's sea-cooled wigwam went
+"Eagle of Saugus,--in the woods the dove
+Mourns for the shelter of thy wings of love."
+
+But the dark chief of Saugus turned aside
+In the grim anger of hard-hearted pride;
+"I bore her as became a chieftain's daughter,
+Up to her home beside the gliding water.
+
+If now no more a mat for her is found
+Of all which line her father's wigwam round,
+Let Pennacook call out his warrior train,
+And send her back with wampum gifts again."
+
+The baffled runner turned upon his track,
+Bearing the words of Winnepurkit back.
+"Dog of the Marsh," cried Pennacook, "no more
+Shall child of mine sit on his wigwam floor.
+
+"Go, let him seek some meaner squaw to spread
+The stolen bear-skin of his beggar's bed;
+Son of a fish-hawk! let him dig his clams
+For some vile daughter of the Agawams,
+
+"Or coward Nipmucks! may his scalp dry black
+In Mohawk smoke, before I send her back."
+He shook his clenched hand towards the ocean wave,
+While hoarse assent his listening council gave.
+
+Alas poor bride! can thy grim sire impart
+His iron hardness to thy woman's heart?
+Or cold self-torturing pride like his atone
+For love denied and life's warm beauty flown?
+
+On Autumn's gray and mournful grave the snow
+Hung its white wreaths; with stifled voice and low
+The river crept, by one vast bridge o'er-crossed,
+Built by the boar-locked artisan of Frost.
+
+And many a moon in beauty newly born
+Pierced the red sunset with her silver horn,
+Or, from the east, across her azure field
+Rolled the wide brightness of her full-orbed shield.
+
+Yet Winnepurkit came not,--on the mat
+Of the scorned wife her dusky rival sat;
+And he, the while, in Western woods afar,
+Urged the long chase, or trod the path of war.
+
+Dry up thy tears, young daughter of a chief!
+Waste not on him the sacredness of grief;
+Be the fierce spirit of thy sire thine own,
+His lips of scorning, and his heart of stone.
+
+What heeds the warrior of a hundred fights,
+The storm-worn watcher through long hunting nights,
+Cold, crafty, proud of woman's weak distress,
+Her home-bound grief and pining loneliness?
+
+
+VII. THE DEPARTURE.
+The wild March rains had fallen fast and long
+The snowy mountains of the North among,
+Making each vale a watercourse, each hill
+Bright with the cascade of some new-made rill.
+
+Gnawed by the sunbeams, softened by the rain,
+Heaved underneath by the swollen current's strain,
+The ice-bridge yielded, and the Merrimac
+Bore the huge ruin crashing down its track.
+
+On that strong turbid water, a small boat
+Guided by one weak hand was seen to float;
+Evil the fate which loosed it from the shore,
+Too early voyager with too frail an oar!
+
+Down the vexed centre of that rushing tide,
+The thick huge ice-blocks threatening either side,
+The foam-white rocks of Amoskeag in view,
+With arrowy swiftness sped that light canoe.
+
+The trapper, moistening his moose's meat
+On the wet bank by Uncanoonuc's feet,
+Saw the swift boat flash down the troubled stream;
+Slept he, or waked he? was it truth or dream?
+
+The straining eye bent fearfully before,
+The small hand clenching on the useless oar,
+The bead-wrought blanket trailing o'er the water--
+He knew them all--woe for the Sachem's daughter!
+
+Sick and aweary of her lonely life,
+Heedless of peril, the still faithful wife
+Had left her mother's grave, her father's door,
+To seek the wigwam of her chief once more.
+
+Down the white rapids like a sear leaf whirled,
+On the sharp rocks and piled-up ices hurled,
+Empty and broken, circled the canoe
+In the vexed pool below--but where was Weetamoo.
+
+
+VIII. SONG OF INDIAN WOMEN.
+The Dark eye has left us,
+The Spring-bird has flown;
+On the pathway of spirits
+She wanders alone.
+The song of the wood-dove has died on our shore
+Mat wonck kunna-monee![6] We hear it no more!
+
+O dark water Spirit
+We cast on thy wave
+These furs which may never
+Hang over her grave;
+Bear down to the lost one the robes that she wore
+Mat wonck kunna-monee! We see her no more!
+
+Of the strange land she walks in
+No Powah has told:
+It may burn with the sunshine,
+Or freeze with the cold.
+Let us give to our lost one the robes that she wore:
+Mat wonck kunna-monee! We see her no more!
+
+The path she is treading
+Shall soon be our own;
+Each gliding in shadow
+Unseen and alone!
+In vain shall we call on the souls gone before:
+Mat wonck kunna-monee! They hear us no more!
+
+O mighty Sowanna![7]
+Thy gateways unfold,
+From thy wigwam of sunset
+Lift curtains of gold!
+
+Take home the poor Spirit whose journey is o'er
+Mat wonck kunna-monee! We see her no more!
+
+So sang the Children of the Leaves beside
+The broad, dark river's coldly flowing tide;
+Now low, now harsh, with sob-like pause and swell,
+On the high wind their voices rose and fell.
+Nature's wild music,--sounds of wind-swept trees,
+The scream of birds, the wailing of the breeze,
+The roar of waters, steady, deep, and strong,--
+Mingled and murmured in that farewell song.
+1844.
+
+
+
+
+BARCLAY OF URY.
+
+Among the earliest converts to the doctrines of Friends in Scotland was
+Barclay of Ury, an old and distinguished soldier, who had fought under
+Gustavus Adolphus, in Germany. As a Quaker, he became the object of
+persecution and abuse at the hands of the magistrates and the populace.
+None bore the indignities of the mob with greater patience and nobleness
+of soul than this once proud gentleman and soldier. One of his friends,
+on an occasion of uncommon rudeness, lamented that he should be treated
+so harshly in his old age who had been so honored before. "I find more
+satisfaction," said Barclay, "as well as honor, in being thus insulted
+for my religious principles, than when, a few years ago, it was usual
+for the magistrates, as I passed the city of Aberdeen, to meet me on the
+road and conduct me to public entertainment in their hall, and then
+escort me out again, to gain my favor."
+
+Up the streets of Aberdeen,
+By the kirk and college green,
+Rode the Laird of Ury;
+Close behind him, close beside,
+Foul of mouth and evil-eyed,
+Pressed the mob in fury.
+
+Flouted him the drunken churl,
+Jeered at him the serving-girl,
+Prompt to please her master;
+And the begging carlin, late
+Fed and clothed at Ury's gate,
+Cursed him as he passed her.
+
+Yet, with calm and stately mien,
+Up the streets of Aberdeen
+Came he slowly riding;
+And, to all he saw and heard,
+Answering not with bitter word,
+Turning not for chiding.
+
+Came a troop with broadswords swinging,
+Bits and bridles sharply ringing,
+Loose and free and froward;
+Quoth the foremost, "Ride him down!
+Push him! prick him! through the town
+Drive the Quaker coward!"
+
+But from out the thickening crowd
+Cried a sudden voice and loud
+"Barclay! Ho! a Barclay!"
+And the old man at his side
+Saw a comrade, battle tried,
+Scarred and sunburned darkly;
+
+Who with ready weapon bare,
+Fronting to the troopers there,
+Cried aloud: "God save us,
+Call ye coward him who stood
+Ankle deep in Lutzen's blood,
+With the brave Gustavus?"
+
+"Nay, I do not need thy sword,
+Comrade mine," said Ury's lord;
+"Put it up, I pray thee
+Passive to His holy will,
+Trust I in my Master still,
+Even though He slay me.
+
+"Pledges of thy love and faith,
+Proved on many a field of death,
+Not by me are needed."
+Marvelled much that henchman bold,
+That his laird, so stout of old,
+Now so meekly pleaded.
+
+"Woe's the day!" he sadly said,
+With a slowly shaking head,
+And a look of pity;
+"Ury's honest lord reviled,
+Mock of knave and sport of child,
+In his own good city.
+
+"Speak the word, and, master mine,
+As we charged on Tilly's[8] line,
+And his Walloon lancers,
+Smiting through their midst we'll teach
+Civil look and decent speech
+To these boyish prancers!"
+
+"Marvel not, mine ancient friend,
+Like beginning, like the end:"
+Quoth the Laird of Ury;
+"Is the sinful servant more
+Than his gracious Lord who bore
+Bonds and stripes in Jewry?
+
+"Give me joy that in His name
+I can bear, with patient frame,
+All these vain ones offer;
+While for them He suffereth long,
+Shall I answer wrong with wrong,
+Scoffing with the scoffer?
+
+"Happier I, with loss of all,
+Hunted, outlawed, held in thrall,
+With few friends to greet me,
+Than when reeve and squire were seen,
+Riding out from Aberdeen,
+With bared heads to meet me.
+
+"When each goodwife, o'er and o'er,
+Blessed me as I passed her door;
+And the snooded daughter,
+Through her casement glancing down,
+Smiled on him who bore renown
+From red fields of slaughter.
+
+"Hard to feel the stranger's scoff,
+Hard the old friend's falling off,
+Hard to learn forgiving;
+But the Lord His own rewards,
+And His love with theirs accords,
+Warm and fresh and living.
+
+"Through this dark and stormy night
+Faith beholds a feeble light
+Up the blackness streaking;
+Knowing God's own time is best,
+In a patient hope I rest
+For the full day-breaking!"
+
+So the Laird of Ury said,
+Turning slow his horse's head
+Towards the Tolbooth prison,
+Where, through iron gates, he heard
+Poor disciples of the Word
+Preach of Christ arisen!
+
+Not in vain, Confessor old,
+Unto us the tale is told
+Of thy day of trial;
+Every age on him who strays
+From its broad and beaten ways
+Pours its seven-fold vial.
+
+Happy he whose inward ear
+Angel comfortings can hear,
+O'er the rabble's laughter;
+And while Hatred's fagots burn,
+Glimpses through the smoke discern
+Of the good hereafter.
+
+Knowing this, that never yet
+Share of Truth was vainly set
+In the world's wide fallow;
+After hands shall sow the seed,
+After hands from hill and mead
+Reap the harvests yellow.
+
+Thus, with somewhat of the Seer,
+Must the moral pioneer
+From the Future borrow;
+Clothe the waste with dreams of grain,
+And, on midnight's sky of rain,
+Paint the golden morrow!
+
+
+
+
+THE ANGELS OF BUENA VISTA.
+
+A letter-writer from Mexico during the Mexican war, when detailing some
+of the incidents at the terrible fight of Buena Vista, mentioned that
+Mexican women were seen hovering near the field of death, for the
+purpose of giving aid and succor to the wounded. One poor woman was
+found surrounded by the maimed and suffering of both armies, ministering
+to the wants of Americans as well as Mexicans, with impartial
+tenderness.
+
+SPEAK and tell us, our Ximena, looking northward
+far away,
+O'er the camp of the invaders, o'er the Mexican
+array,
+Who is losing? who is winning? are they far or
+come they near?
+Look abroad, and tell us, sister, whither rolls the
+storm we hear.
+Down the hills of Angostura still the storm of
+battle rolls;
+Blood is flowing, men are dying; God have mercy
+on their souls!
+"Who is losing? who is winning?" Over hill
+and over plain,
+I see but smoke of cannon clouding through the
+mountain rain.
+
+Holy Mother! keep our brothers! Look, Ximena,
+look once more.
+"Still I see the fearful whirlwind rolling darkly
+as before,
+Bearing on, in strange confusion, friend and foeman,
+foot and horse,
+Like some wild and troubled torrent sweeping
+down its mountain course."
+
+Look forth once more, Ximena! "Ah! the smoke
+has rolled away;
+And I see the Northern rifles gleaming down the
+ranks of gray.
+Hark! that sudden blast of bugles! there the troop
+of Minon wheels;
+There the Northern horses thunder, with the cannon
+at their heels.
+
+"Jesu, pity I how it thickens I now retreat and
+now advance!
+Bight against the blazing cannon shivers Puebla's
+charging lance!
+Down they go, the brave young riders; horse and
+foot together fall;
+Like a ploughshare in the fallow, through them
+ploughs the Northern ball."
+
+Nearer came the storm and nearer, rolling fast and
+frightful on!
+Speak, Ximena, speak and tell us, who has lost,
+and who has won?
+Alas! alas! I know not; friend and foe together
+fall,
+O'er the dying rush the living: pray, my sisters,
+for them all!
+
+"Lo! the wind the smoke is lifting. Blessed
+Mother, save my brain!
+I can see the wounded crawling slowly out from
+heaps of slain.
+Now they stagger, blind and bleeding; now they
+fall, and strive to rise;
+Hasten, sisters, haste and save them, lest they die
+before our eyes!
+
+"O my hearts love! O my dear one! lay thy
+poor head on my knee;
+Dost thou know the lips that kiss thee? Canst
+thou hear me? canst thou see?
+O my husband, brave and gentle! O my Bernal,
+look once more
+On the blessed cross before thee! Mercy!
+all is o'er!"
+
+Dry thy tears, my poor Ximena; lay thy dear one
+down to rest;
+Let his hands be meekly folded, lay the cross upon
+his breast;
+Let his dirge be sung hereafter, and his funeral
+masses said;
+To-day, thou poor bereaved one, the living ask thy
+aid.
+
+Close beside her, faintly moaning, fair and young,
+a soldier lay,
+Torn with shot and pierced with lances, bleeding
+slow his life away;
+But, as tenderly before him the lorn Ximena knelt,
+She saw the Northern eagle shining on his pistol-
+belt.
+
+With a stifled cry of horror straight she turned
+away her head;
+With a sad and bitter feeling looked she back upon
+her dead;
+But she heard the youth's low moaning, and his
+struggling breath of pain,
+And she raised the cooling water to his parching
+lips again.
+
+Whispered low the dying soldier, pressed her hand
+and faintly smiled;
+Was that pitying face his mother's? did she watch
+beside her child?
+All his stranger words with meaning her woman's
+heart supplied;
+With her kiss upon his forehead, "Mother!"
+murmured he, and died!
+
+"A bitter curse upon them, poor boy, who led thee
+forth,
+From some gentle, sad-eyed mother, weeping, lonely,
+in the North!"
+Spake the mournful Mexic woman, as she laid him
+with her dead,
+And turned to soothe the living, and bind the
+wounds which bled.
+
+"Look forth once more, Ximena!" Like a cloud
+before the wind
+Rolls the battle down the mountains, leaving blood
+and death behind;
+Ah! they plead in vain for mercy; in the dust the
+wounded strive;
+"Hide your faces, holy angels! O thou Christ of
+God, forgive!"
+
+Sink, O Night, among thy mountains! let the cool,
+gray shadows fall;
+Dying brothers, fighting demons, drop thy curtain
+over all!
+Through the thickening winter twilight, wide apart
+the battle rolled,
+In its sheath the sabre rested, and the cannon's
+lips grew cold.
+
+But the noble Mexic women still their holy task
+pursued,
+Through that long, dark night of sorrow, worn and
+faint and lacking food.
+Over weak and suffering brothers, with a tender
+care they hung,
+And the dying foeman blessed them in a strange
+and Northern tongue.
+
+Not wholly lost, O Father! is this evil world of
+ours;
+Upward, through its blood and ashes, spring afresh
+the Eden flowers;
+From its smoking hell of battle, Love and Pity
+send their prayer,
+And still thy white-winged angels hover dimly in
+our air!
+1847.
+
+
+
+
+THE LEGEND OF ST. MARK.
+
+"This legend [to which my attention was called by my friend Charles
+Sumner], is the subject of a celebrated picture by Tintoretto, of which
+Mr. Rogers possesses the original sketch. The slave lies on the ground,
+amid a crowd of spectators, who look on, animated by all the various
+emotions of sympathy, rage, terror; a woman, in front, with a child in
+her arms, has always been admired for the lifelike vivacity of her
+attitude and expression. The executioner holds up the broken implements;
+St. Mark, with a headlong movement, seems to rush down from heaven in
+haste to save his worshipper. The dramatic grouping in this picture is
+wonderful; the coloring, in its gorgeous depth and harmony, is, in Mr.
+Rogers's sketch, finer than in the picture."--MRS. JAMESON'S Sacred and
+Legendary Art, I. 154.
+
+THE day is closing dark and cold,
+With roaring blast and sleety showers;
+And through the dusk the lilacs wear
+The bloom of snow, instead of flowers.
+
+I turn me from the gloom without,
+To ponder o'er a tale of old;
+A legend of the age of Faith,
+By dreaming monk or abbess told.
+
+On Tintoretto's canvas lives
+That fancy of a loving heart,
+In graceful lines and shapes of power,
+And hues immortal as his art.
+
+In Provence (so the story runs)
+There lived a lord, to whom, as slave,
+A peasant-boy of tender years
+The chance of trade or conquest gave.
+
+Forth-looking from the castle tower,
+Beyond the hills with almonds dark,
+The straining eye could scarce discern
+The chapel of the good St. Mark.
+
+And there, when bitter word or fare
+The service of the youth repaid,
+By stealth, before that holy shrine,
+For grace to bear his wrong, he prayed.
+
+The steed stamped at the castle gate,
+The boar-hunt sounded on the hill;
+Why stayed the Baron from the chase,
+With looks so stern, and words so ill?
+
+"Go, bind yon slave! and let him learn,
+By scath of fire and strain of cord,
+How ill they speed who give dead saints
+The homage due their living lord!"
+
+They bound him on the fearful rack,
+When, through the dungeon's vaulted dark,
+He saw the light of shining robes,
+And knew the face of good St. Mark.
+
+Then sank the iron rack apart,
+The cords released their cruel clasp,
+The pincers, with their teeth of fire,
+Fell broken from the torturer's grasp.
+
+And lo! before the Youth and Saint,
+Barred door and wall of stone gave way;
+And up from bondage and the night
+They passed to freedom and the day!
+
+O dreaming monk! thy tale is true;
+O painter! true thy pencil's art;
+in tones of hope and prophecy,
+Ye whisper to my listening heart!
+
+Unheard no burdened heart's appeal
+Moans up to God's inclining ear;
+Unheeded by his tender eye,
+Falls to the earth no sufferer's tear.
+
+For still the Lord alone is God
+The pomp and power of tyrant man
+Are scattered at his lightest breath,
+Like chaff before the winnower's fan.
+
+Not always shall the slave uplift
+His heavy hands to Heaven in vain.
+God's angel, like the good St. Mark,
+Comes shining down to break his chain!
+
+O weary ones! ye may not see
+Your helpers in their downward flight;
+Nor hear the sound of silver wings
+Slow beating through the hush of night!
+
+But not the less gray Dothan shone,
+With sunbright watchers bending low,
+That Fear's dim eye beheld alone
+The spear-heads of the Syrian foe.
+
+There are, who, like the Seer of old,
+Can see the helpers God has sent,
+And how life's rugged mountain-side
+Is white with many an angel tent!
+
+They hear the heralds whom our Lord
+Sends down his pathway to prepare;
+And light, from others hidden, shines
+On their high place of faith and prayer.
+
+Let such, for earth's despairing ones,
+Hopeless, yet longing to be free,
+Breathe once again the Prophet's prayer
+"Lord, ope their eyes, that they may see!"
+1849.
+
+
+
+
+KATHLEEN.
+
+This ballad was originally published in my prose work, Leaves from
+Margaret Smith's Journal, as the song of a wandering Milesian
+schoolmaster. In the seventeenth century, slavery in the New World was
+by no means confined to the natives of Africa. Political offenders and
+criminals were transported by the British government to the plantations
+of Barbadoes and Virginia, where they were sold like cattle in the
+market. Kidnapping of free and innocent white persons was practised to a
+considerable extent in the seaports of the United Kingdom.
+
+O NORAH, lay your basket down,
+And rest your weary hand,
+And come and hear me sing a song
+Of our old Ireland.
+
+There was a lord of Galaway,
+A mighty lord was he;
+And he did wed a second wife,
+A maid of low degree.
+
+But he was old, and she was young,
+And so, in evil spite,
+She baked the black bread for his kin,
+And fed her own with white.
+
+She whipped the maids and starved the kern,
+And drove away the poor;
+"Ah, woe is me!" the old lord said,
+"I rue my bargain sore!"
+
+This lord he had a daughter fair,
+Beloved of old and young,
+And nightly round the shealing-fires
+Of her the gleeman sung.
+
+"As sweet and good is young Kathleen
+As Eve before her fall;"
+So sang the harper at the fair,
+So harped he in the hall.
+
+"Oh, come to me, my daughter dear!
+Come sit upon my knee,
+For looking in your face, Kathleen,
+Your mother's own I see!"
+
+He smoothed and smoothed her hair away,
+He kissed her forehead fair;
+"It is my darling Mary's brow,
+It is my darling's hair!"
+
+Oh, then spake up the angry dame,
+"Get up, get up," quoth she,
+"I'll sell ye over Ireland,
+I'll sell ye o'er the sea!"
+
+She clipped her glossy hair away,
+That none her rank might know;
+She took away her gown of silk,
+And gave her one of tow,
+
+And sent her down to Limerick town
+And to a seaman sold
+This daughter of an Irish lord
+For ten good pounds in gold.
+
+The lord he smote upon his breast,
+And tore his beard so gray;
+But he was old, and she was young,
+And so she had her way.
+
+Sure that same night the Banshee howled
+To fright the evil dame,
+And fairy folks, who loved Kathleen,
+With funeral torches came.
+
+She watched them glancing through the trees,
+And glimmering down the hill;
+They crept before the dead-vault door,
+And there they all stood still!
+
+"Get up, old man! the wake-lights shine!"
+"Ye murthering witch," quoth he,
+"So I'm rid of your tongue, I little care
+If they shine for you or me."
+
+"Oh, whoso brings my daughter back,
+My gold and land shall have!"
+Oh, then spake up his handsome page,
+"No gold nor land I crave!
+
+"But give to me your daughter dear,
+Give sweet Kathleen to me,
+Be she on sea or be she on land,
+I'll bring her back to thee."
+
+"My daughter is a lady born,
+And you of low degree,
+But she shall be your bride the day
+You bring her back to me."
+
+He sailed east, he sailed west,
+And far and long sailed he,
+Until he came to Boston town,
+Across the great salt sea.
+
+"Oh, have ye seen the young Kathleen,
+The flower of Ireland?
+Ye'll know her by her eyes so blue,
+And by her snow-white hand!"
+
+Out spake an ancient man, "I know
+The maiden whom ye mean;
+I bought her of a Limerick man,
+And she is called Kathleen.
+
+"No skill hath she in household work,
+Her hands are soft and white,
+Yet well by loving looks and ways
+She doth her cost requite."
+
+So up they walked through Boston town,
+And met a maiden fair,
+A little basket on her arm
+So snowy-white and bare.
+
+"Come hither, child, and say hast thou
+This young man ever seen?"
+They wept within each other's arms,
+The page and young Kathleen.
+
+"Oh give to me this darling child,
+And take my purse of gold."
+"Nay, not by me," her master said,
+"Shall sweet Kathleen be sold.
+
+"We loved her in the place of one
+The Lord hath early ta'en;
+But, since her heart's in Ireland,
+We give her back again!"
+
+Oh, for that same the saints in heaven
+For his poor soul shall pray,
+And Mary Mother wash with tears
+His heresies away.
+
+Sure now they dwell in Ireland;
+As you go up Claremore
+Ye'll see their castle looking down
+The pleasant Galway shore.
+
+And the old lord's wife is dead and gone,
+And a happy man is he,
+For he sits beside his own Kathleen,
+With her darling on his knee.
+1849.
+
+
+
+
+THE WELL OF LOCH MAREE
+
+Pennant, in his Voyage to the Hebrides, describes the holy well of Loch
+Maree, the waters of which were supposed to effect a miraculous cure of
+melancholy, trouble, and insanity.
+
+CALM on the breast of Loch Maree
+A little isle reposes;
+A shadow woven of the oak
+And willow o'er it closes.
+
+Within, a Druid's mound is seen,
+Set round with stony warders;
+A fountain, gushing through the turf,
+Flows o'er its grassy borders.
+
+And whoso bathes therein his brow,
+With care or madness burning,
+Feels once again his healthful thought
+And sense of peace returning.
+
+O restless heart and fevered brain,
+Unquiet and unstable,
+That holy well of Loch Maree
+Is more than idle fable!
+
+Life's changes vex, its discords stun,
+Its glaring sunshine blindeth,
+And blest is he who on his way
+That fount of healing findeth!
+
+The shadows of a humbled will
+And contrite heart are o'er it;
+Go read its legend, "TRUST IN GOD,"
+On Faith's white stones before it.
+1850.
+
+
+
+
+THE CHAPEL OF THE HERMITS.
+
+The incident upon which this poem is based is related in a note to
+Bernardin Henri Saint Pierre's Etudes de la Nature. "We arrived at the
+habitation of the Hermits a little before they sat down to their table,
+and while they were still at church. J. J. Rousseau proposed to me to
+offer up our devotions. The hermits were reciting the Litanies of
+Providence, which are remarkably beautiful. After we had addressed our
+prayers to God, and the hermits were proceeding to the refectory,
+Rousseau said to me, with his heart overflowing, 'At this moment I
+experience what is said in the gospel: Where two or three are gathered
+together in my name, there am I in the midst of them. There is here a
+feeling of peace and happiness which penetrates the soul.' I said, 'If
+Finelon had lived, you would have been a Catholic.' He exclaimed, with
+tears in his eyes, 'Oh, if Finelon were alive, I would struggle to get
+into his service, even as a lackey!'" In my sketch of Saint Pierre, it
+will be seen that I have somewhat antedated the period of his old age.
+At that time he was not probably more than fifty. In describing him, I
+have by no means exaggerated his own history of his mental condition at
+the period of the story. In the fragmentary Sequel to his Studies of
+Nature, he thus speaks of himself: "The ingratitude of those of whom I
+had deserved kindness, unexpected family misfortunes, the total loss of
+my small patrimony through enterprises solely undertaken for the benefit
+of my country, the debts under which I lay oppressed, the blasting of
+all my hopes,--these combined calamities made dreadful inroads upon my
+health and reason. . . . I found it impossible to continue in a room
+where there was company, especially if the doors were shut. I could not
+even cross an alley in a public garden, if several persons had got
+together in it. When alone, my malady subsided. I felt myself likewise
+at ease in places where I saw children only. At the sight of any one
+walking up to the place where I was, I felt my whole frame agitated, and
+retired. I often said to myself, 'My sole study has been to merit well
+of mankind; why do I fear them?'"
+
+He attributes his improved health of mind and body to the counsels of
+his friend, J. J. Rousseau. "I renounced," says he, "my books. I threw
+my eyes upon the works of nature, which spake to all my senses a
+language which neither time nor nations have it in their power to alter.
+Thenceforth my histories and my journals were the herbage of the fields
+and meadows. My thoughts did not go forth painfully after them, as in
+the case of human systems; but their thoughts, under a thousand engaging
+forms, quietly sought me. In these I studied, without effort, the laws
+of that Universal Wisdom which had surrounded me from the cradle, but on
+which heretofore I had bestowed little attention."
+
+Speaking of Rousseau, he says: "I derived inexpressible satisfaction
+from his society. What I prized still more than his genius was his
+probity. He was one of the few literary characters, tried in the furnace
+of affliction, to whom you could, with perfect security, confide your
+most secret thoughts. . . . Even when he deviated, and became the victim
+of himself or of others, he could forget his own misery in devotion to
+the welfare of mankind. He was uniformly the advocate of the miserable.
+There might be inscribed on his tomb these affecting words from that
+Book of which he carried always about him some select passages, during
+the last years of his life: 'His sins, which are many, are forgiven, for
+he loved much.'"
+
+"I DO believe, and yet, in grief,
+I pray for help to unbelief;
+For needful strength aside to lay
+The daily cumberings of my way.
+
+"I 'm sick at heart of craft and cant,
+Sick of the crazed enthusiast's rant,
+Profession's smooth hypocrisies,
+And creeds of iron, and lives of ease.
+
+"I ponder o'er the sacred word,
+I read the record of our Lord;
+And, weak and troubled, envy them
+Who touched His seamless garment's hem;
+
+"Who saw the tears of love He wept
+Above the grave where Lazarus slept;
+And heard, amidst the shadows dim
+Of Olivet, His evening hymn.
+
+"How blessed the swineherd's low estate,
+The beggar crouching at the gate,
+The leper loathly and abhorred,
+Whose eyes of flesh beheld the Lord!
+
+"O sacred soil His sandals pressed!
+Sweet fountains of His noonday rest!
+O light and air of Palestine,
+Impregnate with His life divine!
+
+"Oh, bear me thither! Let me look
+On Siloa's pool, and Kedron's brook;
+Kneel at Gethsemane, and by
+Gennesaret walk, before I die!
+
+"Methinks this cold and northern night
+Would melt before that Orient light;
+And, wet by Hermon's dew and rain,
+My childhood's faith revive again!"
+
+So spake my friend, one autumn day,
+Where the still river slid away
+Beneath us, and above the brown
+Red curtains of the woods shut down.
+
+Then said I,--for I could not brook
+The mute appealing of his look,--
+"I, too, am weak, and faith is small,
+And blindness happeneth unto all.
+
+"Yet, sometimes glimpses on my sight,
+Through present wrong, the eternal right;
+And, step by step, since time began,
+I see the steady gain of man;
+
+"That all of good the past hath had
+Remains to make our own time glad,
+Our common daily life divine,
+And every land a Palestine.
+
+"Thou weariest of thy present state;
+What gain to thee time's holiest date?
+The doubter now perchance had been
+As High Priest or as Pilate then!
+
+"What thought Chorazin's scribes? What faith
+In Him had Nain and Nazareth?
+Of the few followers whom He led
+One sold Him,--all forsook and fled.
+
+"O friend! we need nor rock nor sand,
+Nor storied stream of Morning-Land;
+The heavens are glassed in Merrimac,--
+What more could Jordan render back?
+
+"We lack but open eye and ear
+To find the Orient's marvels here;
+The still small voice in autumn's hush,
+Yon maple wood the burning bush.
+
+"For still the new transcends the old,
+In signs and tokens manifold;
+Slaves rise up men; the olive waves,
+With roots deep set in battle graves!
+
+"Through the harsh noises of our day
+A low, sweet prelude finds its way;
+Through clouds of doubt, and creeds of fear,
+A light is breaking, calm and clear.
+
+"That song of Love, now low and far,
+Erelong shall swell from star to star!
+That light, the breaking day, which tips
+The golden-spired Apocalypse!"
+
+Then, when my good friend shook his head,
+And, sighing, sadly smiled, I said:
+"Thou mind'st me of a story told
+In rare Bernardin's leaves of gold."
+
+And while the slanted sunbeams wove
+The shadows of the frost-stained grove,
+And, picturing all, the river ran
+O'er cloud and wood, I thus began:--
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+In Mount Valerien's chestnut wood
+The Chapel of the Hermits stood;
+And thither, at the close of day,
+Came two old pilgrims, worn and gray.
+
+One, whose impetuous youth defied
+The storms of Baikal's wintry side,
+And mused and dreamed where tropic day
+Flamed o'er his lost Virginia's bay.
+
+His simple tale of love and woe
+All hearts had melted, high or low;--
+A blissful pain, a sweet distress,
+Immortal in its tenderness.
+
+Yet, while above his charmed page
+Beat quick the young heart of his age,
+He walked amidst the crowd unknown,
+A sorrowing old man, strange and lone.
+
+A homeless, troubled age,--the gray
+Pale setting of a weary day;
+Too dull his ear for voice of praise,
+Too sadly worn his brow for bays.
+
+Pride, lust of power and glory, slept;
+Yet still his heart its young dream kept,
+And, wandering like the deluge-dove,
+Still sought the resting-place of love.
+
+And, mateless, childless, envied more
+The peasant's welcome from his door
+By smiling eyes at eventide,
+Than kingly gifts or lettered pride.
+
+Until, in place of wife and child,
+All-pitying Nature on him smiled,
+And gave to him the golden keys
+To all her inmost sanctities.
+
+Mild Druid of her wood-paths dim!
+She laid her great heart bare to him,
+Its loves and sweet accords;--he saw
+The beauty of her perfect law.
+
+The language of her signs lie knew,
+What notes her cloudy clarion blew;
+The rhythm of autumn's forest dyes,
+The hymn of sunset's painted skies.
+
+And thus he seemed to hear the song
+Which swept, of old, the stars along;
+And to his eyes the earth once more
+Its fresh and primal beauty wore.
+
+Who sought with him, from summer air,
+And field and wood, a balm for care;
+And bathed in light of sunset skies
+His tortured nerves and weary eyes?
+
+His fame on all the winds had flown;
+His words had shaken crypt and throne;
+Like fire, on camp and court and cell
+They dropped, and kindled as they fell.
+
+Beneath the pomps of state, below
+The mitred juggler's masque and show,
+A prophecy, a vague hope, ran
+His burning thought from man to man.
+
+For peace or rest too well he saw
+The fraud of priests, the wrong of law,
+And felt how hard, between the two,
+Their breath of pain the millions drew.
+
+A prophet-utterance, strong and wild,
+The weakness of an unweaned child,
+A sun-bright hope for human-kind,
+And self-despair, in him combined.
+
+He loathed the false, yet lived not true
+To half the glorious truths he knew;
+The doubt, the discord, and the sin,
+He mourned without, he felt within.
+
+Untrod by him the path he showed,
+Sweet pictures on his easel glowed
+Of simple faith, and loves of home,
+And virtue's golden days to come.
+
+But weakness, shame, and folly made
+The foil to all his pen portrayed;
+Still, where his dreamy splendors shone,
+The shadow of himself was thrown.
+
+Lord, what is man, whose thought, at times,
+Up to Thy sevenfold brightness climbs,
+While still his grosser instinct clings
+To earth, like other creeping things!
+
+So rich in words, in acts so mean;
+So high, so low; chance-swung between
+The foulness of the penal pit
+And Truth's clear sky, millennium-lit!
+
+Vain, pride of star-lent genius!--vain,
+Quick fancy and creative brain,
+Unblest by prayerful sacrifice,
+Absurdly great, or weakly wise!
+
+Midst yearnings for a truer life,
+Without were fears, within was strife;
+And still his wayward act denied
+The perfect good for which he sighed.
+
+The love he sent forth void returned;
+The fame that crowned him scorched and burned,
+Burning, yet cold and drear and lone,--
+A fire-mount in a frozen zone!
+
+Like that the gray-haired sea-king passed,[9]
+Seen southward from his sleety mast,
+About whose brows of changeless frost
+A wreath of flame the wild winds tossed.
+
+Far round the mournful beauty played
+Of lambent light and purple shade,
+Lost on the fixed and dumb despair
+Of frozen earth and sea and air!
+
+A man apart, unknown, unloved
+By those whose wrongs his soul had moved,
+He bore the ban of Church and State,
+The good man's fear, the bigot's hate!
+
+Forth from the city's noise and throng,
+Its pomp and shame, its sin and wrong,
+The twain that summer day had strayed
+To Mount Valerien's chestnut shade.
+
+To them the green fields and the wood
+Lent something of their quietude,
+And golden-tinted sunset seemed
+Prophetical of all they dreamed.
+
+The hermits from their simple cares
+The bell was calling home to prayers,
+And, listening to its sound, the twain
+Seemed lapped in childhood's trust again.
+
+Wide open stood the chapel door;
+A sweet old music, swelling o'er
+Low prayerful murmurs, issued thence,--
+The Litanies of Providence!
+
+Then Rousseau spake: "Where two or three
+In His name meet, He there will be!"
+And then, in silence, on their knees
+They sank beneath the chestnut-trees.
+
+As to the blind returning light,
+As daybreak to the Arctic night,
+Old faith revived; the doubts of years
+Dissolved in reverential tears.
+
+That gush of feeling overpast,
+"Ah me!" Bernardin sighed at last,
+I would thy bitterest foes could see
+Thy heart as it is seen of me!
+
+"No church of God hast thou denied;
+Thou hast but spurned in scorn aside
+A bare and hollow counterfeit,
+Profaning the pure name of it!
+
+"With dry dead moss and marish weeds
+His fire the western herdsman feeds,
+And greener from the ashen plain
+The sweet spring grasses rise again.
+
+"Nor thunder-peal nor mighty wind
+Disturb the solid sky behind;
+And through the cloud the red bolt rends
+The calm, still smile of Heaven descends.
+
+"Thus through the world, like bolt and blast,
+And scourging fire, thy words have passed.
+Clouds break,--the steadfast heavens remain;
+Weeds burn,--the ashes feed the grain!
+
+"But whoso strives with wrong may find
+Its touch pollute, its darkness blind;
+And learn, as latent fraud is shown
+In others' faith, to doubt his own.
+
+"With dream and falsehood, simple trust
+And pious hope we tread in dust;
+Lost the calm faith in goodness,--lost
+The baptism of the Pentecost!
+
+"Alas!--the blows for error meant
+Too oft on truth itself are spent,
+As through the false and vile and base
+Looks forth her sad, rebuking face.
+
+"Not ours the Theban's charmed life;
+We come not scathless from the strife!
+The Python's coil about us clings,
+The trampled Hydra bites and stings!
+
+"Meanwhile, the sport of seeming chance,
+The plastic shapes of circumstance,
+What might have been we fondly guess,
+If earlier born, or tempted less.
+
+"And thou, in these wild, troubled days,
+Misjudged alike in blame and praise,
+Unsought and undeserved the same
+The skeptic's praise, the bigot's blame;--
+
+"I cannot doubt, if thou hadst been
+Among the highly favored men
+Who walked on earth with Fenelon,
+He would have owned thee as his son;
+
+"And, bright with wings of cherubim
+Visibly waving over him,
+Seen through his life, the Church had seemed
+All that its old confessors dreamed."
+
+"I would have been," Jean Jaques replied,
+"The humblest servant at his side,
+Obscure, unknown, content to see
+How beautiful man's life may be!
+
+"Oh, more than thrice-blest relic, more
+Than solemn rite or sacred lore,
+The holy life of one who trod
+The foot-marks of the Christ of God!
+
+"Amidst a blinded world he saw
+The oneness of the Dual law;
+That Heaven's sweet peace on Earth began,
+And God was loved through love of man.
+
+"He lived the Truth which reconciled
+The strong man Reason, Faith the child;
+In him belief and act were one,
+The homilies of duty done!"
+
+So speaking, through the twilight gray
+The two old pilgrims went their way.
+What seeds of life that day were sown,
+The heavenly watchers knew alone.
+
+Time passed, and Autumn came to fold
+Green Summer in her brown and gold;
+Time passed, and Winter's tears of snow
+Dropped on the grave-mound of Rousseau.
+
+"The tree remaineth where it fell,
+The pained on earth is pained in hell!"
+So priestcraft from its altars cursed
+The mournful doubts its falsehood nursed.
+
+Ah! well of old the Psalmist prayed,
+"Thy hand, not man's, on me be laid!"
+Earth frowns below, Heaven weeps above,
+And man is hate, but God is love!
+
+No Hermits now the wanderer sees,
+Nor chapel with its chestnut-trees;
+A morning dream, a tale that's told,
+The wave of change o'er all has rolled.
+
+Yet lives the lesson of that day;
+And from its twilight cool and gray
+Comes up a low, sad whisper, "Make
+The truth thine own, for truth's own sake.
+
+"Why wait to see in thy brief span
+Its perfect flower and fruit in man?
+No saintly touch can save; no balm
+Of healing hath the martyr's palm.
+
+"Midst soulless forms, and false pretence
+Of spiritual pride and pampered sense,
+A voice saith, 'What is that to thee?
+Be true thyself, and follow Me!
+
+"In days when throne and altar heard
+The wanton's wish, the bigot's word,
+And pomp of state and ritual show
+Scarce hid the loathsome death below,--
+
+"Midst fawning priests and courtiers foul,
+The losel swarm of crown and cowl,
+White-robed walked Francois Fenelon,
+Stainless as Uriel in the sun!
+
+"Yet in his time the stake blazed red,
+The poor were eaten up like bread
+Men knew him not; his garment's hem
+No healing virtue had for them.
+
+"Alas! no present saint we find;
+The white cymar gleams far behind,
+Revealed in outline vague, sublime,
+Through telescopic mists of time!
+
+"Trust not in man with passing breath,
+But in the Lord, old Scripture saith;
+The truth which saves thou mayst not blend
+With false professor, faithless friend.
+
+"Search thine own heart. What paineth thee
+In others in thyself may be;
+All dust is frail, all flesh is weak;
+Be thou the true man thou dost seek!
+
+"Where now with pain thou treadest, trod
+The whitest of the saints of God!
+To show thee where their feet were set,
+the light which led them shineth yet.
+
+"The footprints of the life divine,
+Which marked their path, remain in thine;
+And that great Life, transfused in theirs,
+Awaits thy faith, thy love, thy prayers!"
+
+A lesson which I well may heed,
+A word of fitness to my need;
+So from that twilight cool and gray
+Still saith a voice, or seems to say.
+
+We rose, and slowly homeward turned,
+While down the west the sunset burned;
+And, in its light, hill, wood, and tide,
+And human forms seemed glorified.
+
+The village homes transfigured stood,
+And purple bluffs, whose belting wood
+Across the waters leaned to hold
+The yellow leaves like lamps of hold.
+
+Then spake my friend: "Thy words are true;
+Forever old, forever new,
+These home-seen splendors are the same
+Which over Eden's sunsets came.
+
+"To these bowed heavens let wood and hill
+Lift voiceless praise and anthem still;
+Fall, warm with blessing, over them,
+Light of the New Jerusalem!
+
+"Flow on, sweet river, like the stream
+Of John's Apocalyptic dream
+This mapled ridge shall Horeb be,
+Yon green-banked lake our Galilee!
+
+"Henceforth my heart shall sigh no more
+For olden time and holier shore;
+God's love and blessing, then and there,
+Are now and here and everywhere."
+1851.
+
+
+
+
+TAULER.
+
+TAULER, the preacher, walked, one autumn day,
+Without the walls of Strasburg, by the Rhine,
+Pondering the solemn Miracle of Life;
+As one who, wandering in a starless night,
+Feels momently the jar of unseen waves,
+And hears the thunder of an unknown sea,
+Breaking along an unimagined shore.
+
+And as he walked he prayed. Even the same
+Old prayer with which, for half a score of years,
+Morning, and noon, and evening, lip and heart
+Had groaned: "Have pity upon me, Lord!
+Thou seest, while teaching others, I am blind.
+Send me a man who can direct my steps!"
+
+Then, as he mused, he heard along his path
+A sound as of an old man's staff among
+The dry, dead linden-leaves; and, looking up,
+He saw a stranger, weak, and poor, and old.
+
+"Peace be unto thee, father!" Tauler said,
+"God give thee a good day!" The old man raised
+Slowly his calm blue eyes. "I thank thee, son;
+But all my days are good, and none are ill."
+
+Wondering thereat, the preacher spake again,
+"God give thee happy life." The old man smiled,
+"I never am unhappy."
+
+ Tauler laid
+His hand upon the stranger's coarse gray sleeve
+"Tell me, O father, what thy strange words mean.
+Surely man's days are evil, and his life
+Sad as the grave it leads to." "Nay, my son,
+Our times are in God's hands, and all our days
+Are as our needs; for shadow as for sun,
+For cold as heat, for want as wealth, alike
+Our thanks are due, since that is best which is;
+And that which is not, sharing not His life,
+Is evil only as devoid of good.
+And for the happiness of which I spake,
+I find it in submission to his will,
+And calm trust in the holy Trinity
+Of Knowledge, Goodness, and Almighty Power."
+
+Silently wondering, for a little space,
+Stood the great preacher; then he spake as one
+Who, suddenly grappling with a haunting thought
+Which long has followed, whispering through the dark
+Strange terrors, drags it, shrieking, into light
+"What if God's will consign thee hence to Hell?"
+
+"Then," said the stranger, cheerily, "be it so.
+What Hell may be I know not; this I know,--
+I cannot lose the presence of the Lord.
+One arm, Humility, takes hold upon
+His dear Humanity; the other, Love,
+Clasps his Divinity. So where I go
+He goes; and better fire-walled Hell with Him
+Than golden-gated Paradise without."
+
+Tears sprang in Tauler's eyes. A sudden light,
+Like the first ray which fell on chaos, clove
+Apart the shadow wherein he had walked
+Darkly at noon. And, as the strange old man
+Went his slow way, until his silver hair
+Set like the white moon where the hills of vine
+Slope to the Rhine, he bowed his head and said
+"My prayer is answered. God hath sent the man
+Long sought, to teach me, by his simple trust,
+Wisdom the weary schoolmen never knew."
+
+So, entering with a changed and cheerful step
+The city gates, he saw, far down the street,
+A mighty shadow break the light of noon,
+Which tracing backward till its airy lines
+Hardened to stony plinths, he raised his eyes
+O'er broad facade and lofty pediment,
+O'er architrave and frieze and sainted niche,
+Up the stone lace-work chiselled by the wise
+Erwin of Steinbach, dizzily up to where
+In the noon-brightness the great Minster's tower,
+Jewelled with sunbeams on its mural crown,
+Rose like a visible prayer. "Behold!" he said,
+"The stranger's faith made plain before mine eyes.
+As yonder tower outstretches to the earth
+The dark triangle of its shade alone
+When the clear day is shining on its top,
+So, darkness in the pathway of Man's life
+Is but the shadow of God's providence,
+By the great Sun of Wisdom cast thereon;
+And what is dark below is light in Heaven."
+1853.
+
+
+
+
+THE HERMIT OF THE THEBAID.
+
+O STRONG, upwelling prayers of faith,
+From inmost founts of life ye start,--
+The spirit's pulse, the vital breath
+Of soul and heart!
+
+From pastoral toil, from traffic's din,
+Alone, in crowds, at home, abroad,
+Unheard of man, ye enter in
+The ear of God.
+
+Ye brook no forced and measured tasks,
+Nor weary rote, nor formal chains;
+The simple heart, that freely asks
+In love, obtains.
+
+For man the living temple is
+The mercy-seat and cherubim,
+And all the holy mysteries,
+He bears with him.
+
+And most avails the prayer of love,
+Which, wordless, shapes itself in needs,
+And wearies Heaven for naught above
+Our common needs.
+
+Which brings to God's all-perfect will
+That trust of His undoubting child
+Whereby all seeming good and ill
+Are reconciled.
+
+And, seeking not for special signs
+Of favor, is content to fall
+Within the providence which shines
+And rains on all.
+
+Alone, the Thebaid hermit leaned
+At noontime o'er the sacred word.
+Was it an angel or a fiend
+Whose voice be heard?
+
+It broke the desert's hush of awe,
+A human utterance, sweet and mild;
+And, looking up, the hermit saw
+A little child.
+
+A child, with wonder-widened eyes,
+O'erawed and troubled by the sight
+Of hot, red sands, and brazen skies,
+And anchorite.
+
+"'What dost thou here, poor man? No shade
+Of cool, green palms, nor grass, nor well,
+Nor corn, nor vines." The hermit said
+"With God I dwell.
+
+"Alone with Him in this great calm,
+I live not by the outward sense;
+My Nile his love, my sheltering palm
+His providence."
+
+The child gazed round him. "Does God live
+Here only?--where the desert's rim
+Is green with corn, at morn and eve,
+We pray to Him.
+
+"My brother tills beside the Nile
+His little field; beneath the leaves
+My sisters sit and spin, the while
+My mother weaves.
+
+"And when the millet's ripe heads fall,
+And all the bean-field hangs in pod,
+My mother smiles, and, says that all
+Are gifts from God."
+
+Adown the hermit's wasted cheeks
+Glistened the flow of human tears;
+"Dear Lord!" he said, "Thy angel speaks,
+Thy servant hears."
+
+Within his arms the child he took,
+And thought of home and life with men;
+And all his pilgrim feet forsook
+Returned again.
+
+The palmy shadows cool and long,
+The eyes that smiled through lavish locks,
+Home's cradle-hymn and harvest-song,
+And bleat of flocks.
+
+"O child!" he said, "thou teachest me
+There is no place where God is not;
+That love will make, where'er it be,
+A holy spot."
+
+He rose from off the desert sand,
+And, leaning on his staff of thorn,
+Went with the young child hand in hand,
+Like night with morn.
+
+They crossed the desert's burning line,
+And heard the palm-tree's rustling fan,
+The Nile-bird's cry, the low of kine,
+And voice of man.
+
+Unquestioning, his childish guide
+He followed, as the small hand led
+To where a woman, gentle-eyed,
+Her distaff fed.
+
+She rose, she clasped her truant boy,
+She thanked the stranger with her eyes;
+The hermit gazed in doubt and joy
+And dumb surprise.
+
+And to!--with sudden warmth and light
+A tender memory thrilled his frame;
+New-born, the world-lost anchorite
+A man became.
+
+"O sister of El Zara's race,
+Behold me!--had we not one mother?"
+She gazed into the stranger's face
+"Thou art my brother!"
+
+"And when to share our evening meal,
+She calls the stranger at the door,
+She says God fills the hands that deal
+Food to the poor."
+
+"O kin of blood! Thy life of use
+And patient trust is more than mine;
+And wiser than the gray recluse
+This child of thine.
+
+"For, taught of him whom God hath sent,
+That toil is praise, and love is prayer,
+I come, life's cares and pains content
+With thee to share."
+
+Even as his foot the threshold crossed,
+The hermit's better life began;
+Its holiest saint the Thebaid lost,
+And found a man!
+1854.
+
+
+
+
+MAUD MULLER.
+
+The recollection of some descendants of a Hessian deserter in the
+Revolutionary war bearing the name of Muller doubtless suggested the
+somewhat infelicitous title of a New England idyl. The poem had no real
+foundation in fact, though a hint of it may have been found in recalling
+an incident, trivial in itself, of a journey on the picturesque Maine
+seaboard with my sister some years before it was written. We had stopped
+to rest our tired horse under the shade of an apple-tree, and refresh
+him with water from a little brook which rippled through the stone wall
+across the road. A very beautiful young girl in scantest summer attire
+was at work in the hay-field, and as we talked with her we noticed that
+she strove to hide her bare feet by raking hay over them, blushing as
+she did so, through the tan of her cheek and neck.
+
+MAUD MULLER on a summer's day,
+Raked the meadow sweet with hay.
+
+Beneath her torn hat glowed the wealth
+Of simple beauty and rustic-health.
+
+Singing, she wrought, and her merry glee
+The mock-bird echoed from his tree.
+
+But when she glanced to the far-off town,
+White from its hill-slope looking down,
+
+The sweet song died, and a vague unrest
+And a nameless longing filled her breast,--
+
+A wish, that she hardly dared to own,
+For something better than she had known.
+
+The Judge rode slowly down the lane,
+Smoothing his horse's chestnut mane.
+
+He drew his bridle in the shade
+Of the apple-trees, to greet the maid,
+
+And asked a draught from the spring that flowed
+Through the meadow across the road.
+
+She stooped where the cool spring bubbled up,
+And filled for him her small tin cup,
+
+And blushed as she gave it, looking down
+On her feet so bare, and her tattered gown.
+
+"Thanks!" said the Judge; "a sweeter draught
+From a fairer hand was never quaffed."
+
+He spoke of the grass and flowers and trees,
+Of the singing birds and the humming bees;
+
+Then talked of the haying, and wondered whether
+The cloud in the west would bring foul weather.
+
+And Maud forgot her brier-torn gown,
+And her graceful ankles bare and brown;
+
+And listened, while a pleased surprise
+Looked from her long-lashed hazel eyes.
+
+At last, like one who for delay
+Seeks a vain excuse, he rode away.
+
+Maud Muller looked and sighed: "Ah me!
+That I the Judge's bride might be!
+
+"He would dress me up in silks so fine,
+And praise and toast me at his wine.
+
+"My father should wear a broadcloth coat;
+My brother should sail a painted boat.
+
+"I'd dress my mother so grand and gay,
+And the baby should have a new toy each day.
+
+"And I 'd feed the hungry and clothe the poor,
+And all should bless me who left our door."
+
+The Judge looked back as he climbed the hill,
+And saw Maud Muller standing still.
+
+A form more fair, a face more sweet,
+Ne'er hath it been my lot to meet.
+
+"And her modest answer and graceful air
+Show her wise and good as she is fair.
+
+"Would she were mine, and I to-day,
+Like her, a harvester of hay;
+
+"No doubtful balance of rights and wrongs,
+Nor weary lawyers with endless tongues,
+
+"But low of cattle and song of birds,
+And health and quiet and loving words."
+
+But he thought of his sisters, proud and cold,
+And his mother, vain of her rank and gold.
+
+So, closing his heart, the Judge rode on,
+And Maud was left in the field alone.
+
+But the lawyers smiled that afternoon,
+When he hummed in court an old love-tune;
+
+And the young girl mused beside the well
+Till the rain on the unraked clover fell.
+
+He wedded a wife of richest dower,
+Who lived for fashion, as he for power.
+
+Yet oft, in his marble hearth's bright glow,
+He watched a picture come and go;
+
+And sweet Maud Muller's hazel eyes
+Looked out in their innocent surprise.
+
+Oft, when the wine in his glass was red,
+He longed for the wayside well instead;
+
+And closed his eyes on his garnished rooms
+To dream of meadows and clover-blooms.
+
+And the proud man sighed, with a secret pain,
+"Ah, that I were free again!
+
+"Free as when I rode that day,
+Where the barefoot maiden raked her hay."
+
+She wedded a man unlearned and poor,
+And many children played round her door.
+
+But care and sorrow, and childbirth pain,
+Left their traces on heart and brain.
+
+And oft, when the summer sun shone hot
+On the new-mown hay in the meadow lot,
+
+And she heard the little spring brook fall
+Over the roadside, through the wall,
+
+In the shade of the apple-tree again
+She saw a rider draw his rein.
+
+And, gazing down with timid grace,
+She felt his pleased eyes read her face.
+
+Sometimes her narrow kitchen walls
+Stretched away into stately halls;
+
+The weary wheel to a spinnet turned,
+The tallow candle an astral burned,
+
+And for him who sat by the chimney lug,
+Dozing and grumbling o'er pipe and mug,
+
+A manly form at her side she saw,
+And joy was duty and love was law.
+
+Then she took up her burden of life again,
+Saying only, "It might have been."
+
+Alas for maiden, alas for Judge,
+For rich repiner and household drudge!
+
+God pity them both! and pity us all,
+Who vainly the dreams of youth recall.
+
+For of all sad words of tongue or pen,
+The saddest are these: "It might have been!"
+
+Ah, well! for us all some sweet hope lies
+Deeply buried from human eyes;
+
+And, in the hereafter, angels may
+Roll the stone from its grave away!
+1854.
+
+
+
+
+MARY GARVIN.
+FROM the heart of Waumbek Methna, from the
+lake that never fails,
+Falls the Saco in the green lap of Conway's
+intervales;
+There, in wild and virgin freshness, its waters
+foam and flow,
+As when Darby Field first saw them, two hundred
+years ago.
+
+But, vexed in all its seaward course with bridges,
+dams, and mills,
+How changed is Saco's stream, how lost its freedom
+of the hills,
+Since travelled Jocelyn, factor Vines, and stately
+Champernoon
+Heard on its banks the gray wolf's howl, the trumpet
+of the loon!
+
+With smoking axle hot with speed, with steeds of
+fire and steam,
+Wide-waked To-day leaves Yesterday behind him
+like a dream.
+Still, from the hurrying train of Life, fly backward
+far and fast
+The milestones of the fathers, the landmarks of
+the past.
+
+But human hearts remain unchanged: the sorrow
+and the sin,
+The loves and hopes and fears of old, are to our
+own akin;
+
+And if, in tales our fathers told, the songs our
+mothers sung,
+Tradition wears a snowy beard, Romance is always
+young.
+
+O sharp-lined man of traffic, on Saco's banks today!
+O mill-girl watching late and long the shuttle's
+restless play!
+Let, for the once, a listening ear the working hand
+beguile,
+And lend my old Provincial tale, as suits, a tear or
+smile!
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+The evening gun had sounded from gray Fort
+Mary's walls;
+Through the forest, like a wild beast, roared and
+plunged the Saco's' falls.
+
+And westward on the sea-wind, that damp and
+gusty grew,
+Over cedars darkening inland the smokes of Spurwink
+blew.
+
+On the hearth of Farmer Garvin, blazed the crackling
+walnut log;
+Right and left sat dame and goodman, and between
+them lay the dog,
+
+Head on paws, and tail slow wagging, and beside
+him on her mat,
+Sitting drowsy in the firelight, winked and purred
+the mottled cat.
+
+"Twenty years!" said Goodman Garvin, speaking
+sadly, under breath,
+And his gray head slowly shaking, as one who
+speaks of death.
+
+The goodwife dropped her needles: "It is twenty
+years to-day,
+Since the Indians fell on Saco, and stole our child
+away."
+
+Then they sank into the silence, for each knew
+the other's thought,
+Of a great and common sorrow, and words were,
+needed not.
+
+"Who knocks?" cried Goodman Garvin. The
+door was open thrown;
+On two strangers, man and maiden, cloaked and
+furred, the fire-light shone.
+
+One with courteous gesture lifted the bear-skin
+from his head;
+"Lives here Elkanah Garvin?" "I am he," the
+goodman said.
+
+"Sit ye down, and dry and warm ye, for the night
+is chill with rain."
+And the goodwife drew the settle, and stirred the
+fire amain.
+
+The maid unclasped her cloak-hood, the firelight
+glistened fair
+In her large, moist eyes, and over soft folds of
+dark brown hair.
+
+Dame Garvin looked upon her: "It is Mary's self
+I see!"
+"Dear heart!" she cried, "now tell me, has my
+child come back to me?"
+
+"My name indeed is Mary," said the stranger sobbing
+wild;
+"Will you be to me a mother? I am Mary Garvin's child!"
+
+"She sleeps by wooded Simcoe, but on her dying
+day
+She bade my father take me to her kinsfolk far
+away.
+
+"And when the priest besought her to do me no
+such wrong,
+She said, 'May God forgive me! I have closed
+my heart too long.'
+
+"'When I hid me from my father, and shut out
+my mother's call,
+I sinned against those dear ones, and the Father
+of us all.
+
+"'Christ's love rebukes no home-love, breaks no
+tie of kin apart;
+Better heresy in doctrine, than heresy of heart.
+
+"'Tell me not the Church must censure: she who
+wept the Cross beside
+Never made her own flesh strangers, nor the claims
+of blood denied;
+
+"'And if she who wronged her parents, with her
+child atones to them,
+Earthly daughter, Heavenly Mother! thou at least
+wilt not condemn!'
+
+"So, upon her death-bed lying, my blessed mother
+spake;
+As we come to do her bidding, So receive us for her
+sake."
+
+"God be praised!" said Goodwife Garvin, "He taketh,
+and He gives;
+He woundeth, but He healeth; in her child our
+daughter lives!"
+
+"Amen!" the old man answered, as he brushed a
+tear away,
+And, kneeling by his hearthstone, said, with reverence,
+"Let us pray."
+
+All its Oriental symbols, and its Hebrew pararphrase,
+Warm with earnest life and feeling, rose his prayer
+of love and praise.
+
+But he started at beholding, as he rose from off
+his knee,
+The stranger cross his forehead with the sign of
+Papistrie.
+
+"What is this?" cried Farmer Garvin. "Is an English
+Christian's home
+A chapel or a mass-house, that you make the sign
+of Rome?"
+
+Then the young girl knelt beside him, kissed his
+trembling hand, and cried:
+Oh, forbear to chide my father; in that faith my
+mother died!
+
+"On her wooden cross at Simcoe the dews and
+sunshine fall,
+As they fall on Spurwink's graveyard; and the
+dear God watches all!"
+
+The old man stroked the fair head that rested on
+his knee;
+"Your words, dear child," he answered, "are God's
+rebuke to me.
+
+"Creed and rite perchance may differ, yet our
+faith and hope be one.
+Let me be your father's father, let him be to me
+a son."
+
+When the horn, on Sabbath morning, through the
+still and frosty air,
+From Spurwink, Pool, and Black Point, called to
+sermon and to prayer,
+
+To the goodly house of worship, where, in order
+due and fit,
+As by public vote directed, classed and ranked the
+people sit;
+
+Mistress first and goodwife after, clerkly squire
+before the clown,
+"From the brave coat, lace-embroidered, to the gray
+frock, shading down;"
+
+From the pulpit read the preacher, "Goodman
+Garvin and his wife
+Fain would thank the Lord, whose kindness has
+followed them through life,
+
+"For the great and crowning mercy, that their
+daughter, from the wild,
+Where she rests (they hope in God's peace), has
+sent to them her child;
+
+"And the prayers of all God's people they ask,
+that they may prove
+Not unworthy, through their weakness, of such
+special proof of love."
+
+As the preacher prayed, uprising, the aged couple
+stood,
+And the fair Canadian also, in her modest maiden-
+hood.
+
+Thought the elders, grave and doubting, "She is
+Papist born and bred;"
+Thought the young men, "'T is an angel in Mary
+Garvin's stead!"
+
+
+
+
+THE RANGER.
+
+Originally published as Martha Mason; a Song of the Old
+French War.
+
+ROBERT RAWLIN!--Frosts were falling
+When the ranger's horn was calling
+Through the woods to Canada.
+
+Gone the winter's sleet and snowing,
+Gone the spring-time's bud and blowing,
+Gone the summer's harvest mowing,
+And again the fields are gray.
+Yet away, he's away!
+Faint and fainter hope is growing
+In the hearts that mourn his stay.
+
+Where the lion, crouching high on
+Abraham's rock with teeth of iron,
+Glares o'er wood and wave away,
+Faintly thence, as pines far sighing,
+Or as thunder spent and dying,
+Come the challenge and replying,
+Come the sounds of flight and fray.
+Well-a-day! Hope and pray!
+Some are living, some are lying
+In their red graves far away.
+
+Straggling rangers, worn with dangers,
+Homeward faring, weary strangers
+Pass the farm-gate on their way;
+Tidings of the dead and living,
+Forest march and ambush, giving,
+Till the maidens leave their weaving,
+And the lads forget their play.
+"Still away, still away!"
+Sighs a sad one, sick with grieving,
+"Why does Robert still delay!"
+
+Nowhere fairer, sweeter, rarer,
+Does the golden-locked fruit bearer
+Through his painted woodlands stray,
+Than where hillside oaks and beeches
+Overlook the long, blue reaches,
+Silver coves and pebbled beaches,
+And green isles of Casco Bay;
+Nowhere day, for delay,
+With a tenderer look beseeches,
+"Let me with my charmed earth stay."
+
+On the grain-lands of the mainlands
+Stands the serried corn like train-bands,
+Plume and pennon rustling gay;
+Out at sea, the islands wooded,
+Silver birches, golden-hooded,
+Set with maples, crimson-blooded,
+White sea-foam and sand-hills gray,
+Stretch away, far away.
+Dim and dreamy, over-brooded
+By the hazy autumn day.
+
+Gayly chattering to the clattering
+Of the brown nuts downward pattering,
+Leap the squirrels, red and gray.
+On the grass-land, on the fallow,
+Drop the apples, red and yellow;
+Drop the russet pears and mellow,
+Drop the red leaves all the day.
+And away, swift away,
+Sun and cloud, o'er hill and hollow
+Chasing, weave their web of play.
+
+"Martha Mason, Martha Mason,
+Prithee tell us of the reason
+Why you mope at home to-day
+Surely smiling is not sinning;
+Leave, your quilling, leave your spinning;
+What is all your store of linen,
+If your heart is never gay?
+Come away, come away!
+Never yet did sad beginning
+Make the task of life a play."
+
+Overbending, till she's blending
+With the flaxen skein she's tending
+Pale brown tresses smoothed away
+From her face of patient sorrow,
+Sits she, seeking but to borrow,
+From the trembling hope of morrow,
+Solace for the weary day.
+"Go your way, laugh and play;
+Unto Him who heeds the sparrow
+And the lily, let me pray."
+
+"With our rally, rings the valley,--
+Join us!" cried the blue-eyed Nelly;
+"Join us!" cried the laughing May,
+"To the beach we all are going,
+And, to save the task of rowing,
+West by north the wind is blowing,
+Blowing briskly down the bay
+Come away, come away!
+Time and tide are swiftly flowing,
+Let us take them while we may!
+
+"Never tell us that you'll fail us,
+Where the purple beach-plum mellows
+On the bluffs so wild and gray.
+Hasten, for the oars are falling;
+Hark, our merry mates are calling;
+Time it is that we were all in,
+Singing tideward down the bay!"
+"Nay, nay, let me stay;
+Sore and sad for Robert Rawlin
+Is my heart," she said, "to-day."
+
+"Vain your calling for Rob Rawlin
+Some red squaw his moose-meat's broiling,
+Or some French lass, singing gay;
+Just forget as he's forgetting;
+What avails a life of fretting?
+If some stars must needs be setting,
+Others rise as good as they."
+"Cease, I pray; go your way!"
+Martha cries, her eyelids wetting;
+"Foul and false the words you say!"
+
+"Martha Mason, hear to reason!--
+Prithee, put a kinder face on!"
+"Cease to vex me," did she say;
+"Better at his side be lying,
+With the mournful pine-trees sighing,
+And the wild birds o'er us crying,
+Than to doubt like mine a prey;
+While away, far away,
+Turns my heart, forever trying
+Some new hope for each new day.
+
+"When the shadows veil the meadows,
+And the sunset's golden ladders
+Sink from twilight's walls of gray,--
+From the window of my dreaming,
+I can see his sickle gleaming,
+Cheery-voiced, can hear him teaming
+Down the locust-shaded way;
+But away, swift away,
+Fades the fond, delusive seeming,
+And I kneel again to pray.
+
+"When the growing dawn is showing,
+And the barn-yard cock is crowing,
+And the horned moon pales away
+From a dream of him awaking,
+Every sound my heart is making
+Seems a footstep of his taking;
+Then I hush the thought, and say,
+'Nay, nay, he's away!'
+Ah! my heart, my heart is breaking
+For the dear one far away."
+
+Look up, Martha! worn and swarthy,
+Glows a face of manhood worthy
+"Robert!" "Martha!" all they say.
+O'er went wheel and reel together,
+Little cared the owner whither;
+Heart of lead is heart of feather,
+Noon of night is noon of day!
+Come away, come away!
+When such lovers meet each other,
+Why should prying idlers stay?
+
+Quench the timber's fallen embers,
+Quench the recd leaves in December's
+Hoary rime and chilly spray.
+
+But the hearth shall kindle clearer,
+Household welcomes sound sincerer,
+Heart to loving heart draw nearer,
+When the bridal bells shall say:
+"Hope and pray, trust alway;
+Life is sweeter, love is dearer,
+For the trial and delay!"
+1856.
+
+
+
+
+THE GARRISON OF CAPE ANN.
+
+FROM the hills of home forth looking, far beneath
+the tent-like span
+Of the sky, I see the white gleam of the headland
+of Cape Ann.
+Well I know its coves and beaches to the ebb-tide
+glimmering down,
+And the white-walled hamlet children of its ancient
+fishing town.
+
+Long has passed the summer morning, and its
+memory waxes old,
+When along yon breezy headlands with a pleasant
+friend I strolled.
+Ah! the autumn sun is shining, and the ocean
+wind blows cool,
+And the golden-rod and aster bloom around thy
+grave, Rantoul!
+
+With the memory of that morning by the summer
+sea I blend
+A wild and wondrous story, by the younger Mather
+penned,
+In that quaint Magnalia Christi, with all strange
+and marvellous things,
+Heaped up huge and undigested, like the chaos
+Ovid sings.
+
+Dear to me these far, faint glimpses of the dual
+life of old,
+Inward, grand with awe and reverence; outward,
+mean and coarse and cold;
+Gleams of mystic beauty playing over dull and
+vulgar clay,
+Golden-threaded fancies weaving in a web of
+hodden gray.
+
+The great eventful Present hides the Past; but
+through the din
+Of its loud life hints and echoes from the life
+behind steal in;
+And the lore of homeland fireside, and the legendary
+rhyme,
+Make the task of duty lighter which the true man
+owes his time.
+
+So, with something of the feeling which the Covenanter
+knew,
+When with pious chisel wandering Scotland's
+moorland graveyards through,
+From the graves of old traditions I part the black-
+berry-vines,
+Wipe the moss from off the headstones, and retouch
+the faded lines.
+
+Where the sea-waves back and forward, hoarse
+with rolling pebbles, ran,
+The garrison-house stood watching on the gray
+rocks of Cape Ann;
+On its windy site uplifting gabled roof and palisade,
+And rough walls of unhewn timber with the moonlight
+overlaid.
+
+On his slow round walked the sentry, south and
+eastward looking forth
+O'er a rude and broken coast-line, white with
+breakers stretching north,--
+Wood and rock and gleaming sand-drift, jagged
+capes, with bush and tree,
+Leaning inland from the smiting of the wild and
+gusty sea.
+
+Before the deep-mouthed chimney, dimly lit by
+dying brands,
+Twenty soldiers sat and waited, with their muskets
+in their hands;
+On the rough-hewn oaken table the venison haunch
+was shared,
+And the pewter tankard circled slowly round from
+beard to beard.
+
+Long they sat and talked together,--talked of
+wizards Satan-sold;
+Of all ghostly sights and noises,--signs and wonders
+manifold;
+Of the spectre-ship of Salem, with the dead men
+in her shrouds,
+Sailing sheer above the water, in the loom of morning
+clouds;
+
+Of the marvellous valley hidden in the depths of
+Gloucester woods,
+Full of plants that love the summer,--blooms of
+warmer latitudes;
+Where the Arctic birch is braided by the tropic's
+flowery vines,
+And the white magnolia-blossoms star the twilight
+of the pines!
+
+But their voices sank yet lower, sank to husky
+tones of fear,
+As they spake of present tokens of the powers of
+evil near;
+Of a spectral host, defying stroke of steel and aim
+of gun;
+Never yet was ball to slay them in the mould of
+mortals run.
+
+Thrice, with plumes and flowing scalp-locks, from
+the midnight wood they came,--
+Thrice around the block-house marching, met, unharmed,
+its volleyed flame;
+Then, with mocking laugh and gesture, sunk in
+earth or lost in air,
+All the ghostly wonder vanished, and the moonlit
+sands lay bare.
+
+Midnight came; from out the forest moved a
+dusky mass that soon
+Grew to warriors, plumed and painted, grimly
+marching in the moon.
+"Ghosts or witches," said the captain, "thus I foil
+the Evil One!"
+And he rammed a silver button, from his doublet,
+down his gun.
+
+Once again the spectral horror moved the guarded
+wall about;
+Once again the levelled muskets through the palisades
+flashed out,
+With that deadly aim the squirrel on his tree-top
+might not shun,
+Nor the beach-bird seaward flying with his slant
+wing to the sun.
+
+Like the idle rain of summer sped the harmless
+shower of lead.
+With a laugh of fierce derision, once again the
+phantoms fled;
+Once again, without a shadow on the sands the
+moonlight lay,
+And the white smoke curling through it drifted
+slowly down the bay!
+
+"God preserve us!" said the captain; "never
+mortal foes were there;
+They have vanished with their leader, Prince and
+Power of the air!
+Lay aside your useless weapons; skill and prowess
+naught avail;
+They who do the Devil's service wear their master's
+coat of mail!"
+
+So the night grew near to cock-crow, when again
+a warning call
+Roused the score of weary soldiers watching round
+the dusky hall
+And they looked to flint and priming, and they
+longed for break of day;
+But the captain closed his Bible: "Let us cease
+from man, and pray!"
+
+To the men who went before us, all the unseen
+powers seemed near,
+And their steadfast strength of courage struck its
+roots in holy fear.
+Every hand forsook the musket, every head was
+bowed and bare,
+Every stout knee pressed the flag-stones, as the
+captain led in prayer.
+
+Ceased thereat the mystic marching of the spectres
+round the wall,
+But a sound abhorred, unearthly, smote the ears
+and hearts of all,--
+Howls of rage and shrieks of anguish! Never
+after mortal man
+Saw the ghostly leaguers marching round the
+block-house of Cape Ann.
+
+So to us who walk in summer through the cool and
+sea-blown town,
+From the childhood of its people comes the solemn
+legend down.
+Not in vain the ancient fiction, in whose moral
+lives the youth
+And the fitness and the freshness of an undecaying
+truth.
+
+Soon or late to all our dwellings come the spectres
+of the mind,
+Doubts and fears and dread forebodings, in the
+darkness undefined;
+Round us throng the grim projections of the heart
+and of the brain,
+And our pride of strength is weakness, and the
+cunning hand is vain.
+
+In the dark we cry like children; and no answer
+from on high
+Breaks the crystal spheres of silence, and no white
+wings downward fly;
+But the heavenly help we pray for comes to faith,
+and not to sight,
+And our prayers themselves drive backward all the
+spirits of the night!
+1857.
+
+
+
+
+THE GIFT OF TRITEMIUS.
+
+TRITEMIUS of Herbipolis, one day,
+While kneeling at the altar's foot to pray,
+Alone with God, as was his pious choice,
+Heard from without a miserable voice,
+A sound which seemed of all sad things to tell,
+As of a lost soul crying out of hell.
+
+Thereat the Abbot paused; the chain whereby
+His thoughts went upward broken by that cry;
+And, looking from the casement, saw below
+A wretched woman, with gray hair a-flow,
+And withered hands held up to him, who cried
+For alms as one who might not be denied.
+
+She cried, "For the dear love of Him who gave
+His life for ours, my child from bondage save,--
+My beautiful, brave first-born, chained with slaves
+In the Moor's galley, where the sun-smit waves
+Lap the white walls of Tunis!"--"What I can
+I give," Tritemius said, "my prayers."--"O man
+Of God!" she cried, for grief had made her bold,
+"Mock me not thus; I ask not prayers, but gold.
+Words will not serve me, alms alone suffice;
+Even while I speak perchance my first-born dies."
+
+"Woman!" Tritemius answered, "from our door
+None go unfed, hence are we always poor;
+A single soldo is our only store.
+Thou hast our prayers;--what can we give thee
+more?"
+
+"Give me," she said, "the silver candlesticks
+On either side of the great crucifix.
+God well may spare them on His errands sped,
+Or He can give you golden ones instead."
+
+Then spake Tritemius, "Even as thy word,
+Woman, so be it! (Our most gracious Lord,
+Who loveth mercy more than sacrifice,
+Pardon me if a human soul I prize
+Above the gifts upon his altar piled!
+Take what thou askest, and redeem thy child."
+
+But his hand trembled as the holy alms
+He placed within the beggar's eager palms;
+And as she vanished down the linden shade,
+He bowed his head and for forgiveness prayed.
+So the day passed, and when the twilight came
+He woke to find the chapel all aflame,
+And, dumb with grateful wonder, to behold
+Upon the altar candlesticks of gold!
+1857.
+
+
+
+
+SKIPPER IRESON'S RIDE.
+
+In the valuable and carefully prepared History of Marblehead, published
+in 1879 by Samuel Roads, Jr., it is stated that the crew of Captain
+Ireson, rather than himself, were responsible for the abandonment of the
+disabled vessel. To screen themselves they charged their captain with
+the crime. In view of this the writer of the ballad addressed the
+following letter to the historian:--
+
+OAK KNOLL, DANVERS, 5 mo. 18, 1880.
+MY DEAR FRIEND: I heartily thank thee for a copy of thy History of
+Marblehead. I have read it with great interest and think good use has
+been made of the abundant material. No town in Essex County has a record
+more honorable than Marblehead; no one has done more to develop the
+industrial interests of our New England seaboard, and certainly none
+have given such evidence of self-sacrificing patriotism. I am glad the
+story of it has been at last told, and told so well. I have now no doubt
+that thy version of Skipper Ireson's ride is the correct one. My verse
+was founded solely on a fragment of rhyme which I heard from one of my
+early schoolmates, a native of Marblehead. I supposed the story to which
+it referred dated back at least a century. I knew nothing of the
+participators, and the narrative of the ballad was pure fancy. I am glad
+for the sake of truth and justice that the real facts are given in thy
+book. I certainly would not knowingly do injustice to any one, dead or
+living.
+
+I am very truly thy friend,
+JOHN G. WHITTIER.
+
+
+OF all the rides since, the birth of time,
+Told in story or sung in rhyme,--
+On Apuleius's Golden Ass,
+Or one-eyed Calendar's horse of brass;
+Witch astride of a human back,
+Islam's prophet on Al-Borak,--
+The strangest ride that ever was sped
+Was Ireson's, out from Marblehead!
+Old Floyd Ireson, for his hard heart,
+Tarred and feathered and carried in a cart
+By the women of Marblehead!
+Body of turkey, head of owl,
+Wings a-droop like a rained-on fowl,
+Feathered and ruffled in every part,
+Skipper Ireson stood in the cart.
+Scores of women, old and young,
+Strong of muscle, and glib of tongue,
+Pushed and pulled up the rocky lane,
+Shouting and singing the shrill refrain
+"Here's Flud Oirson, fur his horrd horrt,
+Torr'd an' futherr'd an' corr'd in a corrt
+By the women o' Morble'ead!"
+
+Wrinkled scolds with hands on hips,
+Girls in bloom of cheek and lips,
+Wild-eyed, free-limbed, such as chase
+Bacchus round some antique vase,
+Brief of skirt, with ankles bare,
+Loose of kerchief and loose of hair,
+With conch-shells blowing and fish-horns' twang,
+Over and over the Manads sang
+"Here's Flud Oirson, fur his horrd horrt,
+Torr'd an' futherr'd an dorr'd in a corrt
+By the women o' Morble'ead!"
+
+Small pity for him!--He sailed away
+From a leaking ship, in Chaleur Bay,--
+Sailed away from a sinking wreck,
+With his own town's-people on her deck!
+"Lay by! lay by!" they called to him.
+Back he answered, "Sink or swim!
+Brag of your catch of fish again!"
+And off he sailed through the fog and rain!
+Old Floyd Ireson, for his hard heart,
+Tarred and feathered and carried in a cart
+By the women of Marblehead!
+
+Fathoms deep in dark Chaleur
+That wreck shall lie forevermore.
+Mother and sister, wife and maid,
+Looked from the rocks of Marblehead
+Over the moaning and rainy sea,--
+Looked for the coming that might not be!
+What did the winds and the sea-birds say
+Of the cruel captain who sailed away?--
+Old Floyd Ireson, for his hard heart,
+Tarred and feathered and carried in a cart
+By the women of Marblehead!
+
+Through the street, on either side,
+Up flew windows, doors swung wide;
+Sharp-tongued spinsters, old wives gray,
+Treble lent the fish-horn's bray.
+Sea-worn grandsires, cripple-bound,
+Hulks of old sailors run aground,
+Shook head, and fist, and hat, and cane,
+And cracked with curses the hoarse refrain
+"Here's Flud Oirson, fur his horrd horrt,
+Torr'd an' futherr'd an' corr'd in a corrt
+By the women o''Morble'ead!"
+
+Sweetly along the Salem road
+Bloom of orchard and lilac showed.
+Little the wicked skipper knew
+Of the fields so green and the sky so blue.
+Riding there in his sorry trim,
+Like to Indian idol glum and grim,
+Scarcely he seemed the sound to hear
+Of voices shouting, far and near
+"Here's Flud Oirson, fur his horrd horrt,
+Torr'd an' futherr'd an' corr'd in a corrt
+By the women o' Morble'ead!"
+
+"Hear me, neighbors!" at last he cried,--
+"What to me is this noisy ride?
+What is the shame that clothes the skin
+To the nameless horror that lives within?
+Waking or sleeping, I see a wreck,
+And hear a cry from a reeling deck!
+Hate me and curse me,--I only dread
+The hand of God and the face of the dead!"
+Said old Floyd Ireson, for his hard heart,
+Tarred and feathered and carried in a cart
+By the women of Marblehead!
+
+Then the wife of the skipper lost at sea
+Said, "God has touched him! why should we?"
+Said an old wife mourning her only son,
+"Cut the rogue's tether and let him run!"
+So with soft relentings and rude excuse,
+Half scorn, half pity, they cut him loose,
+And gave him a cloak to hide him in,
+And left him alone with his shame and sin.
+Poor Floyd Ireson, for his hard heart,
+Tarred and feathered and carried in a cart
+By the women of Marblehead!
+1857.
+
+
+
+
+THE SYCAMORES.
+
+Hugh Tallant was the first Irish resident of Haverhill, Mass. He planted
+the button-wood trees on the bank of the river below the village in the
+early part of the seventeenth century. Unfortunately this noble avenue
+is now nearly destroyed.
+
+IN the outskirts of the village,
+On the river's winding shores,
+Stand the Occidental plane-trees,
+Stand the ancient sycamores.
+
+One long century hath been numbered,
+And another half-way told,
+Since the rustic Irish gleeman
+Broke for them the virgin mould.
+
+Deftly set to Celtic music,
+At his violin's sound they grew,
+Through the moonlit eves of summer,
+Making Amphion's fable true.
+
+Rise again, then poor Hugh Tallant
+Pass in jerkin green along,
+With thy eyes brimful of laughter,
+And thy mouth as full of song.
+
+Pioneer of Erin's outcasts,
+With his fiddle and his pack;
+Little dreamed the village Saxons
+Of the myriads at his back.
+
+How he wrought with spade and fiddle,
+Delved by day and sang by night,
+With a hand that never wearied,
+And a heart forever light,--
+
+Still the gay tradition mingles
+With a record grave and drear,
+Like the rollic air of Cluny,
+With the solemn march of Mear.
+
+When the box-tree, white with blossoms,
+Made the sweet May woodlands glad,
+And the Aronia by the river
+Lighted up the swarming shad,
+
+And the bulging nets swept shoreward,
+With their silver-sided haul,
+Midst the shouts of dripping fishers,
+He was merriest of them all.
+
+When, among the jovial huskers,
+Love stole in at Labor's side,
+With the lusty airs of England,
+Soft his Celtic measures vied.
+
+Songs of love and wailing lyke--wake,
+And the merry fair's carouse;
+Of the wild Red Fox of Erin
+And the Woman of Three Cows,
+
+By the blazing hearths of winter,
+Pleasant seemed his simple tales,
+Midst the grimmer Yorkshire legends
+And the mountain myths of Wales.
+
+How the souls in Purgatory
+Scrambled up from fate forlorn,
+On St. Eleven's sackcloth ladder,
+Slyly hitched to Satan's horn.
+
+Of the fiddler who at Tara
+Played all night to ghosts of kings;
+Of the brown dwarfs, and the fairies
+Dancing in their moorland rings.
+
+Jolliest of our birds of singing,
+Best he loved the Bob-o-link.
+"Hush!" he 'd say, "the tipsy fairies
+Hear the little folks in drink!"
+
+Merry-faced, with spade and fiddle,
+Singing through the ancient town,
+Only this, of poor Hugh Tallant,
+Hath Tradition handed down.
+
+Not a stone his grave discloses;
+But if yet his spirit walks,
+'T is beneath the trees he planted,
+And when Bob-o-Lincoln talks;
+
+Green memorials of the gleeman I
+Linking still the river-shores,
+With their shadows cast by sunset,
+Stand Hugh Tallant's sycamores!
+
+When the Father of his Country
+Through the north-land riding came,
+And the roofs were starred with banners,
+And the steeples rang acclaim,--
+
+When each war-scarred Continental,
+Leaving smithy, mill, and farm,
+Waved his rusted sword in welcome,
+And shot off his old king's arm,--
+
+Slowly passed that August Presence
+Down the thronged and shouting street;
+Village girls as white as angels,
+Scattering flowers around his feet.
+
+Midway, where the plane-tree's shadow
+Deepest fell, his rein he drew
+On his stately head, uncovered,
+Cool and soft the west-wind blew.
+
+And he stood up in his stirrups,
+Looking up and looking down
+On the hills of Gold and Silver
+Rimming round the little town,--
+
+On the river, full of sunshine,
+To the lap of greenest vales
+Winding down from wooded headlands,
+Willow-skirted, white with sails.
+
+And he said, the landscape sweeping
+Slowly with his ungloved hand,
+"I have seen no prospect fairer
+In this goodly Eastern land."
+
+Then the bugles of his escort
+Stirred to life the cavalcade
+And that head, so bare and stately,
+Vanished down the depths of shade.
+
+Ever since, in town and farm-house,
+Life has had its ebb and flow;
+Thrice hath passed the human harvest
+To its garner green and low.
+
+But the trees the gleeman planted,
+Through the changes, changeless stand;
+As the marble calm of Tadmor
+Mocks the desert's shifting sand.
+
+Still the level moon at rising
+Silvers o'er each stately shaft;
+Still beneath them, half in shadow,
+Singing, glides the pleasure craft;
+
+Still beneath them, arm-enfolded,
+Love and Youth together stray;
+While, as heart to heart beats faster,
+More and more their feet delay.
+
+Where the ancient cobbler, Keezar,
+On the open hillside wrought,
+Singing, as he drew his stitches,
+Songs his German masters taught,
+
+Singing, with his gray hair floating
+Round his rosy ample face,--
+Now a thousand Saxon craftsmen
+Stitch and hammer in his place.
+
+All the pastoral lanes so grassy
+Now are Traffic's dusty streets;
+From the village, grown a city,
+Fast the rural grace retreats.
+
+But, still green, and tall, and stately,
+On the river's winding shores,
+Stand the Occidental plane-trees,
+Stand, Hugh Taliant's sycamores.
+1857.
+
+
+
+
+THE PIPES AT LUCKNOW.
+
+An incident of the Sepoy mutiny.
+
+PIPES of the misty moorlands,
+Voice of the glens and hills;
+The droning of the torrents,
+The treble of the rills!
+Not the braes of broom and heather,
+Nor the mountains dark with rain,
+Nor maiden bower, nor border tower,
+Have heard your sweetest strain!
+
+Dear to the Lowland reaper,
+And plaided mountaineer,--
+To the cottage and the castle
+The Scottish pipes are dear;--
+Sweet sounds the ancient pibroch
+O'er mountain, loch, and glade;
+But the sweetest of all music
+The pipes at Lucknow played.
+
+Day by day the Indian tiger
+Louder yelled, and nearer crept;
+Round and round the jungle-serpent
+Near and nearer circles swept.
+"Pray for rescue, wives and mothers,--
+Pray to-day!" the soldier said;
+"To-morrow, death's between us
+And the wrong and shame we dread."
+
+Oh, they listened, looked, and waited,
+Till their hope became despair;
+And the sobs of low bewailing
+Filled the pauses of their prayer.
+Then up spake a Scottish maiden,
+With her ear unto the ground
+"Dinna ye hear it?--dinna ye hear it?
+The pipes o' Havelock sound!"
+
+Hushed the wounded man his groaning;
+Hushed the wife her little ones;
+Alone they heard the drum-roll
+And the roar of Sepoy guns.
+But to sounds of home and childhood
+The Highland ear was true;--
+As her mother's cradle-crooning
+The mountain pipes she knew.
+
+Like the march of soundless music
+Through the vision of the seer,
+More of feeling than of hearing,
+Of the heart than of the ear,
+She knew the droning pibroch,
+She knew the Campbell's call
+"Hark! hear ye no' MacGregor's,
+The grandest o' them all!"
+
+Oh, they listened, dumb and breathless,
+And they caught the sound at last;
+Faint and far beyond the Goomtee
+Rose and fell the piper's blast
+Then a burst of wild thanksgiving
+Mingled woman's voice and man's;
+"God be praised!--the march of Havelock!
+The piping of the clans!"
+
+Louder, nearer, fierce as vengeance,
+Sharp and shrill as swords at strife,
+Came the wild MacGregor's clan-call,
+Stinging all the air to life.
+But when the far-off dust-cloud
+To plaided legions grew,
+Full tenderly and blithesomely
+The pipes of rescue blew!
+
+Round the silver domes of Lucknow,
+Moslem mosque and Pagan shrine,
+Breathed the air to Britons dearest,
+The air of Auld Lang Syne.
+O'er the cruel roll of war-drums
+Rose that sweet and homelike strain;
+And the tartan clove the turban,
+As the Goomtee cleaves the plain.
+
+Dear to the corn-land reaper
+And plaided mountaineer,--
+To the cottage and the castle
+The piper's song is dear.
+Sweet sounds the Gaelic pibroch
+O'er mountain, glen, and glade;
+But the sweetest of all music
+The Pipes at Lucknow played!
+1858.
+
+
+
+
+TELLING THE BEES.
+
+A remarkable custom, brought from the Old Country, formerly prevailed
+in the rural districts of New England. On the death of a member of the
+family, the bees were at once informed of the event, and their hives
+dressed in mourning. This ceremonial was supposed to be necessary to
+prevent the swarms from leaving their hives and seeking a new home.
+
+HERE is the place; right over the hill
+Runs the path I took;
+You can see the gap in the old wall still,
+And the stepping-stones in the shallow brook.
+
+There is the house, with the gate red-barred,
+And the poplars tall;
+And the barn's brown length, and the cattle-yard,
+And the white horns tossing above the wall.
+
+There are the beehives ranged in the sun;
+And down by the brink
+Of the brook are her poor flowers, weed-o'errun,
+Pansy and daffodil, rose and pink.
+
+A year has gone, as the tortoise goes,
+Heavy and slow;
+And the same rose blooms, and the same sun glows,
+And the same brook sings of a year ago.
+
+There's the same sweet clover-smell in the breeze;
+And the June sun warm
+Tangles his wings of fire in the trees,
+Setting, as then, over Fernside farm.
+
+I mind me how with a lover's care
+From my Sunday coat
+I brushed off the burrs, and smoothed my hair,
+And cooled at the brookside my brow and
+throat.
+
+Since we parted, a month had passed,--
+To love, a year;
+Down through the beeches I looked at last
+On the little red gate and the well-sweep near.
+
+I can see it all now,--the slantwise rain
+Of light through the leaves,
+The sundown's blaze on her window-pane,
+The bloom of her roses under the eaves.
+
+Just the same as a month before,--
+The house and the trees,
+The barn's brown gable, the vine by the door,--
+Nothing changed but the hives of bees.
+
+Before them, under the garden wall,
+Forward and back,
+Went drearily singing the chore-girl small,
+Draping each hive with a shred of black.
+
+Trembling, I listened: the summer sun
+Had the chill of snow;
+For I knew she was telling the bees of one
+Gone on the journey we all must go.
+
+Then I said to myself, "My Mary weeps
+For the dead to-day;
+Haply her blind old grandsire sleeps
+The fret and the pain of his age away."
+
+But her dog whined low; on the doorway sill,
+With his cane to his chin,
+The old man sat; and the chore-girl still
+Sung to the bees stealing out and in.
+
+And the song she was singing ever since
+In my ear sounds on:--
+"Stay at home, pretty bees, fly not hence!
+Mistress Mary is dead and gone!"
+1858.
+
+
+
+
+THE SWAN SONG OF PARSON AVERY.
+
+In Young's Chronicles of Massachusetts Bay front 1623 to 1636 may be
+found Anthony Thacher's Narrative of his Shipwreck. Thacher was Avery's
+companion and survived to tell the tale. Mather's Magnalia, III. 2,
+gives further Particulars of Parson Avery's End, and suggests the title
+of the poem.
+
+WHEN the reaper's task was ended, and the
+summer wearing late,
+Parson Avery sailed from Newbury, with his wife
+and children eight,
+Dropping down the river-harbor in the shallop
+"Watch and Wait."
+
+Pleasantly lay the clearings in the mellow summer-
+morn,
+With the newly planted orchards dropping their
+fruits first-born,
+And the home-roofs like brown islands amid a sea
+of corn.
+
+Broad meadows reached out 'seaward the tided
+creeks between,
+And hills rolled wave-like inland, with oaks and
+walnuts green;--
+A fairer home, a--goodlier land, his eyes had never
+seen.
+
+Yet away sailed Parson Avery, away where duty led,
+And the voice of God seemed calling, to break the
+living bread
+To the souls of fishers starving on the rocks of
+Marblehead.
+
+All day they sailed: at nightfall the pleasant land-
+breeze died,
+The blackening sky, at midnight, its starry lights
+denied,
+And far and low the thunder of tempest prophesied.
+
+Blotted out were all the coast-lines, gone were rock,
+and wood, and sand;
+Grimly anxious stood the skipper with the rudder
+in his hand,
+And questioned of the darkness what was sea and
+what was land.
+
+And the preacher heard his dear ones, nestled
+round him, weeping sore,
+"Never heed, my little children! Christ is walking
+on before;
+To the pleasant land of heaven, where the sea shall
+be no more."
+
+All at once the great cloud parted, like a curtain
+drawn aside,
+To let down the torch of lightning on the terror
+far and wide;
+And the thunder and the whirlwind together smote
+the tide.
+
+There was wailing in the shallop, woman's wail
+and man's despair,
+A crash of breaking timbers on the rocks so sharp
+and bare,
+And, through it all, the murmur of Father Avery's
+prayer.
+
+From his struggle in the darkness with the wild
+waves and the blast,
+On a rock, where every billow broke above him as
+it passed,
+Alone, of all his household, the man of God was
+cast.
+
+There a comrade heard him praying, in the pause
+of wave and wind
+"All my own have gone before me, and I linger
+just behind;
+Not for life I ask, but only for the rest Thy
+ransomed find!
+
+"In this night of death I challenge the promise of
+Thy word!--
+Let me see the great salvation of which mine ears
+have heard!--
+Let me pass from hence forgiven, through the
+grace of Christ, our Lord!
+
+"In the baptism of these waters wash white my
+every sin,
+And let me follow up to Thee my household and
+my kin!
+Open the sea-gate of Thy heaven, and let me enter
+in!"
+
+When the Christian sings his death-song, all the
+listening heavens draw near,
+And the angels, leaning over the walls of crystal,
+hear
+How the notes so faint and broken swell to music
+in God's ear.
+
+The ear of God was open to His servant's last
+request;
+As the strong wave swept him downward the sweet
+hymn upward pressed,
+And the soul of Father Avery went, singing, to its
+rest.
+
+There was wailing on the mainland, from the rocks
+of Marblehead;
+In the stricken church of Newbury the notes of
+prayer were read;
+And long, by board and hearthstone, the living
+mourned the dead.
+
+And still the fishers outbound, or scudding from
+the squall,
+With grave and reverent faces, the ancient tale
+recall,
+When they see the white waves breaking on the
+Rock of Avery's Fall!
+1808.
+
+
+
+
+THE DOUBLE-HEADED SNAKE OF NEWBURY.
+
+"Concerning ye Amphisbaena, as soon as I received your commands, I made
+diligent inquiry: . . . he assures me yt it had really two heads, one
+at each end; two mouths, two stings or tongues."--REV. CHRISTOPHER
+TOPPAN to COTTON MATHER.
+
+FAR away in the twilight time
+Of every people, in every clime,
+Dragons and griffins and monsters dire,
+Born of water, and air, and fire,
+Or nursed, like the Python, in the mud
+And ooze of the old Deucalion flood,
+Crawl and wriggle and foam with rage,
+Through dusk tradition and ballad age.
+So from the childhood of Newbury town
+And its time of fable the tale comes down
+Of a terror which haunted bush and brake,
+The Amphisbaena, the Double Snake!
+
+Thou who makest the tale thy mirth,
+Consider that strip of Christian earth
+On the desolate shore of a sailless sea,
+Full of terror and mystery,
+Half redeemed from the evil hold
+Of the wood so dreary, and dark, and old,
+Which drank with its lips of leaves the dew
+When Time was young, and the world was new,
+And wove its shadows with sun and moon,
+Ere the stones of Cheops were squared and hewn.
+Think of the sea's dread monotone,
+Of the mournful wail from the pine-wood blown,
+Of the strange, vast splendors that lit the North,
+Of the troubled throes of the quaking earth,
+And the dismal tales the Indian told,
+Till the settler's heart at his hearth grew cold,
+And he shrank from the tawny wizard boasts,
+And the hovering shadows seemed full of ghosts,
+And above, below, and on every side,
+The fear of his creed seemed verified;--
+And think, if his lot were now thine own,
+To grope with terrors nor named nor known,
+How laxer muscle and weaker nerve
+And a feebler faith thy need might serve;
+And own to thyself the wonder more
+That the snake had two heads, and not a score!
+
+Whether he lurked in the Oldtown fen
+Or the gray earth-flax of the Devil's Den,
+Or swam in the wooded Artichoke,
+Or coiled by the Northman's Written Rock,
+Nothing on record is left to show;
+Only the fact that he lived, we know,
+And left the cast of a double head
+In the scaly mask which he yearly shed.
+For he carried a head where his tail should be,
+And the two, of course, could never agree,
+But wriggled about with main and might,
+Now to the left and now to the right;
+Pulling and twisting this way and that,
+Neither knew what the other was at.
+
+A snake with two beads, lurking so near!
+Judge of the wonder, guess at the fear!
+Think what ancient gossips might say,
+Shaking their heads in their dreary way,
+Between the meetings on Sabbath-day!
+How urchins, searching at day's decline
+The Common Pasture for sheep or kine,
+The terrible double-ganger heard
+In leafy rustle or whir of bird!
+Think what a zest it gave to the sport,
+In berry-time, of the younger sort,
+As over pastures blackberry-twined,
+Reuben and Dorothy lagged behind,
+And closer and closer, for fear of harm,
+The maiden clung to her lover's arm;
+And how the spark, who was forced to stay,
+By his sweetheart's fears, till the break of day,
+Thanked the snake for the fond delay.
+
+Far and wide the tale was told,
+Like a snowball growing while it rolled.
+The nurse hushed with it the baby's cry;
+And it served, in the worthy minister's eye,
+To paint the primitive serpent by.
+Cotton Mather came galloping down
+All the way to Newbury town,
+With his eyes agog and his ears set wide,
+And his marvellous inkhorn at his side;
+Stirring the while in the shallow pool
+Of his brains for the lore he learned at school,
+To garnish the story, with here a streak
+Of Latin, and there another of Greek
+And the tales he heard and the notes he took,
+Behold! are they not in his Wonder-Book?
+
+Stories, like dragons, are hard to kill.
+If the snake does not, the tale runs still
+In Byfield Meadows, on Pipestave Hill.
+And still, whenever husband and wife
+Publish the shame of their daily strife,
+And, with mad cross-purpose, tug and strain
+At either end of the marriage-chain,
+The gossips say, with a knowing shake
+Of their gray heads, "Look at the Double Snake
+One in body and two in will,
+The Amphisbaena is living still!"
+1859.
+
+
+
+
+MABEL MARTIN.
+
+A HARVEST IDYL.
+
+Susanna Martin, an aged woman of Amesbury, Mass., was tried and executed
+for the alleged crime of witchcraft. Her home was in what is now known
+as Pleasant Valley on the Merrimac, a little above the old Ferry way,
+where, tradition says, an attempt was made to assassinate Sir Edmund
+Andros on his way to Falmouth (afterward Portland) and Pemaquid, which
+was frustrated by a warning timely given. Goody Martin was the only
+woman hanged on the north side of the Merrimac during the dreadful
+delusion. The aged wife of Judge Bradbury who lived on the other side of
+the Powow River was imprisoned and would have been put to death but for
+the collapse of the hideous persecution.
+
+The substance of the poem which follows was published under the name of
+The Witch's Daughter, in The National Era in 1857. In 1875 my publishers
+desired to issue it with illustrations, and I then enlarged it and
+otherwise altered it to its present form. The principal addition was in
+the verses which constitute Part I.
+
+
+PROEM.
+I CALL the old time back: I bring my lay
+in tender memory of the summer day
+When, where our native river lapsed away,
+
+We dreamed it over, while the thrushes made
+Songs of their own, and the great pine-trees laid
+On warm noonlights the masses of their shade.
+
+And she was with us, living o'er again
+Her life in ours, despite of years and pain,--
+The Autumn's brightness after latter rain.
+
+Beautiful in her holy peace as one
+Who stands, at evening, when the work is done,
+Glorified in the setting of the sun!
+
+Her memory makes our common landscape seem
+Fairer than any of which painters dream;
+Lights the brown hills and sings in every stream;
+
+For she whose speech was always truth's pure gold
+Heard, not unpleased, its simple legends told,
+And loved with us the beautiful and old.
+
+
+I. THE RIVER VALLEY.
+Across the level tableland,
+A grassy, rarely trodden way,
+With thinnest skirt of birchen spray
+
+And stunted growth of cedar, leads
+To where you see the dull plain fall
+Sheer off, steep-slanted, ploughed by all
+
+The seasons' rainfalls. On its brink
+The over-leaning harebells swing,
+With roots half bare the pine-trees cling;
+
+And, through the shadow looking west,
+You see the wavering river flow
+Along a vale, that far below
+
+Holds to the sun, the sheltering hills
+And glimmering water-line between,
+Broad fields of corn and meadows green,
+
+And fruit-bent orchards grouped around
+The low brown roofs and painted eaves,
+And chimney-tops half hid in leaves.
+
+No warmer valley hides behind
+Yon wind-scourged sand-dunes, cold and bleak;
+No fairer river comes to seek
+
+The wave-sung welcome of the sea,
+Or mark the northmost border line
+Of sun-loved growths of nut and vine.
+
+Here, ground-fast in their native fields,
+Untempted by the city's gain,
+The quiet farmer folk remain
+
+Who bear the pleasant name of Friends,
+And keep their fathers' gentle ways
+And simple speech of Bible days;
+
+In whose neat homesteads woman holds
+With modest ease her equal place,
+And wears upon her tranquil face
+
+The look of one who, merging not
+Her self-hood in another's will,
+Is love's and duty's handmaid still.
+
+Pass with me down the path that winds
+Through birches to the open land,
+Where, close upon the river strand
+
+You mark a cellar, vine o'errun,
+Above whose wall of loosened stones
+The sumach lifts its reddening cones,
+
+And the black nightshade's berries shine,
+And broad, unsightly burdocks fold
+The household ruin, century-old.
+
+Here, in the dim colonial time
+Of sterner lives and gloomier faith,
+A woman lived, tradition saith,
+
+Who wrought her neighbors foul annoy,
+And witched and plagued the country-side,
+Till at the hangman's hand she died.
+
+Sit with me while the westering day
+Falls slantwise down the quiet vale,
+And, haply ere yon loitering sail,
+
+That rounds the upper headland, falls
+Below Deer Island's pines, or sees
+Behind it Hawkswood's belt of trees
+
+Rise black against the sinking sun,
+My idyl of its days of old,
+The valley's legend, shall be told.
+
+
+II. THE HUSKING.
+It was the pleasant harvest-time,
+When cellar-bins are closely stowed,
+And garrets bend beneath their load,
+
+And the old swallow-haunted barns,--
+Brown-gabled, long, and full of seams
+Through which the rooted sunlight streams,
+
+And winds blow freshly in, to shake
+The red plumes of the roosted cocks,
+And the loose hay-mow's scented locks,
+
+Are filled with summer's ripened stores,
+Its odorous grass and barley sheaves,
+From their low scaffolds to their eaves.
+
+On Esek Harden's oaken floor,
+With many an autumn threshing worn,
+Lay the heaped ears of unhusked corn.
+
+And thither came young men and maids,
+Beneath a moon that, large and low,
+Lit that sweet eve of long ago.
+
+They took their places; some by chance,
+And others by a merry voice
+Or sweet smile guided to their choice.
+
+How pleasantly the rising moon,
+Between the shadow of the mows,
+Looked on them through the great elm-boughs!
+
+On sturdy boyhood, sun-embrowned,
+On girlhood with its solid curves
+Of healthful strength and painless nerves!
+
+And jests went round, and laughs that made
+The house-dog answer with his howl,
+And kept astir the barn-yard fowl;
+
+And quaint old songs their fathers sung
+In Derby dales and Yorkshire moors,
+Ere Norman William trod their shores;
+
+And tales, whose merry license shook
+The fat sides of the Saxon thane,
+Forgetful of the hovering Dane,--
+
+Rude plays to Celt and Cimbri known,
+The charms and riddles that beguiled
+On Oxus' banks the young world's child,--
+
+That primal picture-speech wherein
+Have youth and maid the story told,
+So new in each, so dateless old,
+
+Recalling pastoral Ruth in her
+Who waited, blushing and demure,
+The red-ear's kiss of forfeiture.
+
+But still the sweetest voice was mute
+That river-valley ever heard
+From lips of maid or throat of bird;
+
+For Mabel Martin sat apart,
+And let the hay-mow's shadow fall
+Upon the loveliest face of all.
+
+She sat apart, as one forbid,
+Who knew that none would condescend
+To own the Witch-wife's child a friend.
+
+The seasons scarce had gone their round,
+Since curious thousands thronged to see
+Her mother at the gallows-tree;
+
+And mocked the prison-palsied limbs
+That faltered on the fatal stairs,
+And wan lip trembling with its prayers!
+
+Few questioned of the sorrowing child,
+Or, when they saw the mother die;
+Dreamed of the daughter's agony.
+
+They went up to their homes that day,
+As men and Christians justified
+God willed it, and the wretch had died!
+
+Dear God and Father of us all,
+Forgive our faith in cruel lies,--
+Forgive the blindness that denies!
+
+Forgive thy creature when he takes,
+For the all-perfect love Thou art,
+Some grim creation of his heart.
+
+Cast down our idols, overturn
+Our bloody altars; let us see
+Thyself in Thy humanity!
+
+Young Mabel from her mother's grave
+Crept to her desolate hearth-stone,
+And wrestled with her fate alone;
+
+With love, and anger, and despair,
+The phantoms of disordered sense,
+The awful doubts of Providence!
+
+Oh, dreary broke the winter days,
+And dreary fell the winter nights
+When, one by one, the neighboring lights
+
+Went out, and human sounds grew still,
+And all the phantom-peopled dark
+Closed round her hearth-fire's dying spark.
+
+And summer days were sad and long,
+And sad the uncompanioned eyes,
+And sadder sunset-tinted leaves,
+
+And Indian Summer's airs of balm;
+She scarcely felt the soft caress,
+The beauty died of loneliness!
+
+The school-boys jeered her as they passed,
+And, when she sought the house of prayer,
+Her mother's curse pursued her there.
+
+And still o'er many a neighboring door
+She saw the horseshoe's curved charm,
+To guard against her mother's harm!
+
+That mother, poor and sick and lame,
+Who daily, by the old arm-chair,
+Folded her withered hands in prayer;--
+
+Who turned, in Salem's dreary jail,
+Her worn old Bible o'er and o'er,
+When her dim eyes could read no more!
+
+Sore tried and pained, the poor girl kept
+Her faith, and trusted that her way,
+So dark, would somewhere meet the day.
+
+And still her weary wheel went round
+Day after day, with no relief
+Small leisure have the poor for grief.
+
+
+IV. THE CHAMPION.
+So in the shadow Mabel sits;
+Untouched by mirth she sees and hears,
+Her smile is sadder than her tears.
+
+But cruel eyes have found her out,
+And cruel lips repeat her name,
+And taunt her with her mother's shame.
+
+She answered not with railing words,
+But drew her apron o'er her face,
+And, sobbing, glided from the place.
+
+And only pausing at the door,
+Her sad eyes met the troubled gaze
+Of one who, in her better days,
+
+Had been her warm and steady friend,
+Ere yet her mother's doom had made
+Even Esek Harden half afraid.
+
+He felt that mute appeal of tears,
+And, starting, with an angry frown,
+Hushed all the wicked murmurs down.
+
+"Good neighbors mine," he sternly said,
+"This passes harmless mirth or jest;
+I brook no insult to my guest.
+
+"She is indeed her mother's child;
+But God's sweet pity ministers
+Unto no whiter soul than hers.
+
+"Let Goody Martin rest in peace;
+I never knew her harm a fly,
+And witch or not, God knows--not I.
+
+"I know who swore her life away;
+And as God lives, I'd not condemn
+An Indian dog on word of them."
+
+The broadest lands in all the town,
+The skill to guide, the power to awe,
+Were Harden's; and his word was law.
+
+None dared withstand him to his face,
+But one sly maiden spake aside
+"The little witch is evil-eyed!
+
+"Her mother only killed a cow,
+Or witched a churn or dairy-pan;
+But she, forsooth, must charm a man!"
+
+
+V. IN THE SHADOW.
+Poor Mabel, homeward turning, passed
+The nameless terrors of the wood,
+And saw, as if a ghost pursued,
+
+Her shadow gliding in the moon;
+The soft breath of the west-wind gave
+A chill as from her mother's grave.
+
+How dreary seemed the silent house!
+Wide in the moonbeams' ghastly glare
+Its windows had a dead man's stare!
+
+And, like a gaunt and spectral hand,
+The tremulous shadow of a birch
+Reached out and touched the door's low porch,
+
+As if to lift its latch; hard by,
+A sudden warning call she beard,
+The night-cry of a boding bird.
+
+She leaned against the door; her face,
+So fair, so young, so full of pain,
+White in the moonlight's silver rain.
+
+The river, on its pebbled rim,
+Made music such as childhood knew;
+The door-yard tree was whispered through
+
+By voices such as childhood's ear
+Had heard in moonlights long ago;
+And through the willow-boughs below.
+
+She saw the rippled waters shine;
+Beyond, in waves of shade and light,
+The hills rolled off into the night.
+
+She saw and heard, but over all
+A sense of some transforming spell,
+The shadow of her sick heart fell.
+
+And still across the wooded space
+The harvest lights of Harden shone,
+And song and jest and laugh went on.
+
+And he, so gentle, true, and strong,
+Of men the bravest and the best,
+Had he, too, scorned her with the rest?
+
+She strove to drown her sense of wrong,
+And, in her old and simple way,
+To teach her bitter heart to pray.
+
+Poor child! the prayer, begun in faith,
+Grew to a low, despairing cry
+Of utter misery: "Let me die!
+
+"Oh! take me from the scornful eyes,
+And hide me where the cruel speech
+And mocking finger may not reach!
+
+"I dare not breathe my mother's name
+A daughter's right I dare not crave
+To weep above her unblest grave!
+
+"Let me not live until my heart,
+With few to pity, and with none
+To love me, hardens into stone.
+
+"O God! have mercy on Thy child,
+Whose faith in Thee grows weak and small,
+And take me ere I lose it all!"
+
+A shadow on the moonlight fell,
+And murmuring wind and wave became
+A voice whose burden was her name.
+
+
+VI. THE BETROTHAL.
+Had then God heard her? Had He sent
+His angel down? In flesh and blood,
+Before her Esek Harden stood!
+
+He laid his hand upon her arm
+"Dear Mabel, this no more shall be;
+Who scoffs at you must scoff at me.
+
+"You know rough Esek Harden well;
+And if he seems no suitor gay,
+And if his hair is touched with gray,
+
+"The maiden grown shall never find
+His heart less warm than when she smiled,
+Upon his knees, a little child!"
+
+Her tears of grief were tears of joy,
+As, folded in his strong embrace,
+She looked in Esek Harden's face.
+
+"O truest friend of all'" she said,
+"God bless you for your kindly thought,
+And make me worthy of my lot!"
+
+He led her forth, and, blent in one,
+Beside their happy pathway ran
+The shadows of the maid and man.
+
+He led her through his dewy fields,
+To where the swinging lanterns glowed,
+And through the doors the huskers showed.
+
+"Good friends and neighbors!" Esek said,
+"I'm weary of this lonely life;
+In Mabel see my chosen wife!
+
+"She greets you kindly, one and all;
+The past is past, and all offence
+Falls harmless from her innocence.
+
+"Henceforth she stands no more alone;
+You know what Esek Harden is;--
+He brooks no wrong to him or his.
+
+"Now let the merriest tales be told,
+And let the sweetest songs be sung
+That ever made the old heart young!
+
+"For now the lost has found a home;
+And a lone hearth shall brighter burn,
+As all the household joys return!"
+
+Oh, pleasantly the harvest-moon,
+Between the shadow of the mows,
+Looked on them through the great elm--boughs!
+
+On Mabel's curls of golden hair,
+On Esek's shaggy strength it fell;
+And the wind whispered, "It is well!"
+
+
+
+
+THE PROPHECY OF SAMUEL SEWALL.
+
+The prose version of this prophecy is to be found in Sewall's The New
+Heaven upon the New Earth, 1697, quoted in Joshua Coffin's History of
+Newbury. Judge Sewall's father, Henry Sewall, was one of the pioneers
+of Newbury.
+
+UP and down the village streets
+Strange are the forms my fancy meets,
+For the thoughts and things of to-day are hid,
+And through the veil of a closed lid
+The ancient worthies I see again
+I hear the tap of the elder's cane,
+And his awful periwig I see,
+And the silver buckles of shoe and knee.
+Stately and slow, with thoughtful air,
+His black cap hiding his whitened hair,
+Walks the Judge of the great Assize,
+Samuel Sewall the good and wise.
+His face with lines of firmness wrought,
+He wears the look of a man unbought,
+Who swears to his hurt and changes not;
+Yet, touched and softened nevertheless
+With the grace of Christian gentleness,
+The face that a child would climb to kiss!
+True and tender and brave and just,
+That man might honor and woman trust.
+
+Touching and sad, a tale is told,
+Like a penitent hymn of the Psalmist old,
+Of the fast which the good man lifelong kept to
+With a haunting sorrow that never slept,
+As the circling year brought round the time
+Of an error that left the sting of crime,
+When he sat on the bench of the witchcraft courts,
+With the laws of Moses and Hale's Reports,
+And spake, in the name of both, the word
+That gave the witch's neck to the cord,
+And piled the oaken planks that pressed
+The feeble life from the warlock's breast!
+All the day long, from dawn to dawn,
+His door was bolted, his curtain drawn;
+No foot on his silent threshold trod,
+No eye looked on him save that of God,
+As he baffled the ghosts of the dead with charms
+Of penitent tears, and prayers, and psalms,
+And, with precious proofs from the sacred word
+Of the boundless pity and love of the Lord,
+His faith confirmed and his trust renewed
+That the sin of his ignorance, sorely rued,
+Might be washed away in the mingled flood
+Of his human sorrow and Christ's dear blood!
+
+Green forever the memory be
+Of the Judge of the old Theocracy,
+Whom even his errors glorified,
+Like a far-seen, sunlit mountain-side
+By the cloudy shadows which o'er it glide I
+Honor and praise to the Puritan
+Who the halting step of his age outran,
+And, seeing the infinite worth of man
+In the priceless gift the Father gave,
+In the infinite love that stooped to save,
+Dared not brand his brother a slave
+"Who doth such wrong," he was wont to say,
+In his own quaint, picture-loving way,
+"Flings up to Heaven a hand-grenade
+Which God shall cast down upon his head!"
+
+Widely as heaven and hell, contrast
+That brave old jurist of the past
+And the cunning trickster and knave of courts
+Who the holy features of Truth distorts,
+Ruling as right the will of the strong,
+Poverty, crime, and weakness wrong;
+Wide-eared to power, to the wronged and weak
+Deaf as Egypt's gods of leek;
+Scoffing aside at party's nod
+Order of nature and law of God;
+For whose dabbled ermine respect were waste,
+Reverence folly, and awe misplaced;
+Justice of whom 't were vain to seek
+As from Koordish robber or Syrian Sheik!
+Oh, leave the wretch to his bribes and sins;
+Let him rot in the web of lies he spins!
+To the saintly soul of the early day,
+To the Christian judge, let us turn and say
+"Praise and thanks for an honest man!--
+Glory to God for the Puritan!"
+
+I see, far southward, this quiet day,
+The hills of Newbury rolling away,
+With the many tints of the season gay,
+Dreamily blending in autumn mist
+Crimson, and gold, and amethyst.
+Long and low, with dwarf trees crowned,
+Plum Island lies, like a whale aground,
+A stone's toss over the narrow sound.
+Inland, as far as the eye can go,
+The hills curve round like a bended bow;
+A silver arrow from out them sprung,
+I see the shine of the Quasycung;
+And, round and round, over valley and hill,
+Old roads winding, as old roads will,
+Here to a ferry, and there to a mill;
+And glimpses of chimneys and gabled eaves,
+Through green elm arches and maple leaves,--
+Old homesteads sacred to all that can
+Gladden or sadden the heart of man,
+Over whose thresholds of oak and stone
+Life and Death have come and gone
+There pictured tiles in the fireplace show,
+Great beams sag from the ceiling low,
+The dresser glitters with polished wares,
+The long clock ticks on the foot-worn stairs,
+And the low, broad chimney shows the crack
+By the earthquake made a century back.
+Up from their midst springs the village spire
+With the crest of its cock in the sun afire;
+Beyond are orchards and planting lands,
+And great salt marshes and glimmering sands,
+And, where north and south the coast-lines run,
+The blink of the sea in breeze and sun!
+
+I see it all like a chart unrolled,
+But my thoughts are full of the past and old,
+I hear the tales of my boyhood told;
+And the shadows and shapes of early days
+Flit dimly by in the veiling haze,
+With measured movement and rhythmic chime
+Weaving like shuttles my web of rhyme.
+I think of the old man wise and good
+Who once on yon misty hillsides stood,
+(A poet who never measured rhyme,
+A seer unknown to his dull-eared time,)
+And, propped on his staff of age, looked down,
+With his boyhood's love, on his native town,
+Where, written, as if on its hills and plains,
+His burden of prophecy yet remains,
+For the voices of wood, and wave, and wind
+To read in the ear of the musing mind:--
+
+"As long as Plum Island, to guard the coast
+As God appointed, shall keep its post;
+As long as a salmon shall haunt the deep
+Of Merrimac River, or sturgeon leap;
+As long as pickerel swift and slim,
+Or red-backed perch, in Crane Pond swim;
+As long as the annual sea-fowl know
+Their time to come and their time to go;
+As long as cattle shall roam at will
+The green, grass meadows by Turkey Hill;
+As long as sheep shall look from the side
+Of Oldtown Hill on marishes wide,
+And Parker River, and salt-sea tide;
+As long as a wandering pigeon shall search
+The fields below from his white-oak perch,
+When the barley-harvest is ripe and shorn,
+And the dry husks fall from the standing corn;
+As long as Nature shall not grow old,
+Nor drop her work from her doting hold,
+And her care for the Indian corn forget,
+And the yellow rows in pairs to set;--
+So long shall Christians here be born,
+Grow up and ripen as God's sweet corn!--
+By the beak of bird, by the breath of frost,
+Shall never a holy ear be lost,
+But, husked by Death in the Planter's sight,
+Be sown again in the fields of light!"
+
+The Island still is purple with plums,
+Up the river the salmon comes,
+The sturgeon leaps, and the wild-fowl feeds
+On hillside berries and marish seeds,--
+All the beautiful signs remain,
+From spring-time sowing to autumn rain
+The good man's vision returns again!
+And let us hope, as well we can,
+That the Silent Angel who garners man
+May find some grain as of old lie found
+In the human cornfield ripe and sound,
+And the Lord of the Harvest deign to own
+The precious seed by the fathers sown!
+1859.
+
+
+
+
+THE RED RIPER VOYAGEUR.
+
+OUT and in the river is winding
+The links of its long, red chain,
+Through belts of dusky pine-land
+And gusty leagues of plain.
+
+Only, at times, a smoke-wreath
+With the drifting cloud-rack joins,--
+The smoke of the hunting-lodges
+Of the wild Assiniboins.
+
+Drearily blows the north-wind
+From the land of ice and snow;
+The eyes that look are weary,
+And heavy the hands that row.
+
+And with one foot on the water,
+And one upon the shore,
+The Angel of Shadow gives warning
+That day shall be no more.
+
+Is it the clang of wild-geese?
+Is it the Indian's yell,
+That lends to the voice of the north-wind
+The tones of a far-off bell?
+
+The voyageur smiles as he listens
+To the sound that grows apace;
+Well he knows the vesper ringing
+Of the bells of St. Boniface.
+
+The bells of the Roman Mission,
+That call from their turrets twain,
+To the boatman on the river,
+To the hunter on the plain!
+
+Even so in our mortal journey
+The bitter north-winds blow,
+And thus upon life's Red River
+Our hearts, as oarsmen, row.
+
+And when the Angel of Shadow
+Rests his feet on wave and shore,
+And our eyes grow dim with watching
+And our hearts faint at the oar,
+
+Happy is he who heareth
+The signal of his release
+In the bells of the Holy City,
+The chimes of eternal peace!
+1859
+
+
+
+
+THE PREACHER.
+
+George Whitefield, the celebrated preacher, died at Newburyport in 1770,
+and was buried under the church which has since borne his name.
+
+ITS windows flashing to the sky,
+Beneath a thousand roofs of brown,
+Far down the vale, my friend and I
+Beheld the old and quiet town;
+The ghostly sails that out at sea
+Flapped their white wings of mystery;
+The beaches glimmering in the sun,
+And the low wooded capes that run
+Into the sea-mist north and south;
+The sand-bluffs at the river's mouth;
+The swinging chain-bridge, and, afar,
+The foam-line of the harbor-bar.
+
+Over the woods and meadow-lands
+A crimson-tinted shadow lay,
+Of clouds through which the setting day
+Flung a slant glory far away.
+It glittered on the wet sea-sands,
+It flamed upon the city's panes,
+Smote the white sails of ships that wore
+Outward or in, and glided o'er
+The steeples with their veering vanes!
+
+Awhile my friend with rapid search
+O'erran the landscape. "Yonder spire
+Over gray roofs, a shaft of fire;
+What is it, pray?"--"The Whitefield Church!
+Walled about by its basement stones,
+There rest the marvellous prophet's bones."
+Then as our homeward way we walked,
+Of the great preacher's life we talked;
+And through the mystery of our theme
+The outward glory seemed to stream,
+And Nature's self interpreted
+The doubtful record of the dead;
+And every level beam that smote
+The sails upon the dark afloat
+A symbol of the light became,
+Which touched the shadows of our blame,
+With tongues of Pentecostal flame.
+
+Over the roofs of the pioneers
+Gathers the moss of a hundred years;
+On man and his works has passed the change
+Which needs must be in a century's range.
+The land lies open and warm in the sun,
+Anvils clamor and mill-wheels run,--
+Flocks on the hillsides, herds on the plain,
+The wilderness gladdened with fruit and grain!
+But the living faith of the settlers old
+A dead profession their children hold;
+To the lust of office and greed of trade
+A stepping-stone is the altar made.
+
+The church, to place and power the door,
+Rebukes the sin of the world no more,
+Nor sees its Lord in the homeless poor.
+Everywhere is the grasping hand,
+And eager adding of land to land;
+And earth, which seemed to the fathers meant
+But as a pilgrim's wayside tent,--
+A nightly shelter to fold away
+When the Lord should call at the break of day,--
+Solid and steadfast seems to be,
+And Time has forgotten Eternity!
+
+But fresh and green from the rotting roots
+Of primal forests the young growth shoots;
+From the death of the old the new proceeds,
+And the life of truth from the rot of creeds
+On the ladder of God, which upward leads,
+The steps of progress are human needs.
+For His judgments still are a mighty deep,
+And the eyes of His providence never sleep
+When the night is darkest He gives the morn;
+When the famine is sorest, the wine and corn!
+
+In the church of the wilderness Edwards wrought,
+Shaping his creed at the forge of thought;
+And with Thor's own hammer welded and bent
+The iron links of his argument,
+Which strove to grasp in its mighty span
+The purpose of God and the fate of man
+Yet faithful still, in his daily round
+To the weak, and the poor, and sin-sick found,
+The schoolman's lore and the casuist's art
+Drew warmth and life from his fervent heart.
+
+Had he not seen in the solitudes
+Of his deep and dark Northampton woods
+A vision of love about him fall?
+Not the blinding splendor which fell on Saul,
+But the tenderer glory that rests on them
+Who walk in the New Jerusalem,
+Where never the sun nor moon are known,
+But the Lord and His love are the light alone
+And watching the sweet, still countenance
+Of the wife of his bosom rapt in trance,
+Had he not treasured each broken word
+Of the mystical wonder seen and heard;
+And loved the beautiful dreamer more
+That thus to the desert of earth she bore
+Clusters of Eshcol from Canaan's shore?
+
+As the barley-winnower, holding with pain
+Aloft in waiting his chaff and grain,
+Joyfully welcomes the far-off breeze
+Sounding the pine-tree's slender keys,
+So he who had waited long to hear
+The sound of the Spirit drawing near,
+Like that which the son of Iddo heard
+When the feet of angels the myrtles stirred,
+Felt the answer of prayer, at last,
+As over his church the afflatus passed,
+Breaking its sleep as breezes break
+To sun-bright ripples a stagnant lake.
+
+At first a tremor of silent fear,
+The creep of the flesh at danger near,
+A vague foreboding and discontent,
+Over the hearts of the people went.
+All nature warned in sounds and signs
+The wind in the tops of the forest pines
+In the name of the Highest called to prayer,
+As the muezzin calls from the minaret stair.
+Through ceiled chambers of secret sin
+Sudden and strong the light shone in;
+A guilty sense of his neighbor's needs
+Startled the man of title-deeds;
+The trembling hand of the worldling shook
+The dust of years from the Holy Book;
+And the psalms of David, forgotten long,
+Took the place of the scoffer's song.
+
+The impulse spread like the outward course
+Of waters moved by a central force;
+The tide of spiritual life rolled down
+From inland mountains to seaboard town.
+
+Prepared and ready the altar stands
+Waiting the prophet's outstretched hands
+And prayer availing, to downward call
+The fiery answer in view of all.
+Hearts are like wax in the furnace; who
+Shall mould, and shape, and cast them anew?
+Lo! by the Merrimac Whitefield stands
+In the temple that never was made by hands,--
+Curtains of azure, and crystal wall,
+And dome of the sunshine over all--
+A homeless pilgrim, with dubious name
+Blown about on the winds of fame;
+Now as an angel of blessing classed,
+And now as a mad enthusiast.
+Called in his youth to sound and gauge
+The moral lapse of his race and age,
+And, sharp as truth, the contrast draw
+Of human frailty and perfect law;
+Possessed by the one dread thought that lent
+Its goad to his fiery temperament,
+Up and down the world he went,
+A John the Baptist crying, Repent!
+
+No perfect whole can our nature make;
+Here or there the circle will break;
+The orb of life as it takes the light
+On one side leaves the other in night.
+Never was saint so good and great
+As to give no chance at St. Peter's gate
+For the plea of the Devil's advocate.
+So, incomplete by his being's law,
+The marvellous preacher had his flaw;
+With step unequal, and lame with faults,
+His shade on the path of History halts.
+
+Wisely and well said the Eastern bard
+Fear is easy, but love is hard,--
+Easy to glow with the Santon's rage,
+And walk on the Meccan pilgrimage;
+But he is greatest and best who can
+Worship Allah by loving man.
+Thus he,--to whom, in the painful stress
+Of zeal on fire from its own excess,
+Heaven seemed so vast and earth so small
+That man was nothing, since God was all,--
+Forgot, as the best at times have done,
+That the love of the Lord and of man are one.
+Little to him whose feet unshod
+The thorny path of the desert trod,
+Careless of pain, so it led to God,
+Seemed the hunger-pang and the poor man's wrong,
+The weak ones trodden beneath the strong.
+Should the worm be chooser?--the clay withstand
+The shaping will of the potter's hand?
+
+In the Indian fable Arjoon hears
+The scorn of a god rebuke his fears
+"Spare thy pity!" Krishna saith;
+"Not in thy sword is the power of death!
+All is illusion,--loss but seems;
+Pleasure and pain are only dreams;
+Who deems he slayeth doth not kill;
+Who counts as slain is living still.
+Strike, nor fear thy blow is crime;
+Nothing dies but the cheats of time;
+Slain or slayer, small the odds
+To each, immortal as Indra's gods!"
+
+So by Savannah's banks of shade,
+The stones of his mission the preacher laid
+On the heart of the negro crushed and rent,
+And made of his blood the wall's cement;
+Bade the slave-ship speed from coast to coast,
+Fanned by the wings of the Holy Ghost;
+And begged, for the love of Christ, the gold
+Coined from the hearts in its groaning hold.
+What could it matter, more or less
+Of stripes, and hunger, and weariness?
+Living or dying, bond or free,
+What was time to eternity?
+
+Alas for the preacher's cherished schemes!
+Mission and church are now but dreams;
+Nor prayer nor fasting availed the plan
+To honor God through the wrong of man.
+Of all his labors no trace remains
+Save the bondman lifting his hands in chains.
+The woof he wove in the righteous warp
+Of freedom-loving Oglethorpe,
+Clothes with curses the goodly land,
+Changes its greenness and bloom to sand;
+And a century's lapse reveals once more
+The slave-ship stealing to Georgia's shore.
+Father of Light! how blind is he
+Who sprinkles the altar he rears to Thee
+With the blood and tears of humanity!
+
+He erred: shall we count His gifts as naught?
+Was the work of God in him unwrought?
+The servant may through his deafness err,
+And blind may be God's messenger;
+But the Errand is sure they go upon,--
+The word is spoken, the deed is done.
+Was the Hebrew temple less fair and good
+That Solomon bowed to gods of wood?
+For his tempted heart and wandering feet,
+Were the songs of David less pure and sweet?
+So in light and shadow the preacher went,
+God's erring and human instrument;
+And the hearts of the people where he passed
+Swayed as the reeds sway in the blast,
+Under the spell of a voice which took
+In its compass the flow of Siloa's brook,
+And the mystical chime of the bells of gold
+On the ephod's hem of the priest of old,--
+Now the roll of thunder, and now the awe
+Of the trumpet heard in the Mount of Law.
+
+A solemn fear on the listening crowd
+Fell like the shadow of a cloud.
+The sailor reeling from out the ships
+Whose masts stood thick in the river-slips
+Felt the jest and the curse die on his lips.
+Listened the fisherman rude and hard,
+The calker rough from the builder's yard;
+The man of the market left his load,
+The teamster leaned on his bending goad,
+The maiden, and youth beside her, felt
+Their hearts in a closer union melt,
+And saw the flowers of their love in bloom
+Down the endless vistas of life to come.
+Old age sat feebly brushing away
+From his ears the scanty locks of gray;
+And careless boyhood, living the free
+Unconscious life of bird and tree,
+Suddenly wakened to a sense
+Of sin and its guilty consequence.
+It was as if an angel's voice
+Called the listeners up for their final choice;
+As if a strong hand rent apart
+The veils of sense from soul and heart,
+Showing in light ineffable
+The joys of heaven and woes of hell
+All about in the misty air
+The hills seemed kneeling in silent prayer;
+The rustle of leaves, the moaning sedge,
+The water's lap on its gravelled edge,
+The wailing pines, and, far and faint,
+The wood-dove's note of sad complaint,--
+To the solemn voice of the preacher lent
+An undertone as of low lament;
+And the note of the sea from its sand coast,
+On the easterly wind, now heard, now lost,
+Seemed the murmurous sound of the judgment host.
+
+Yet wise men doubted, and good men wept,
+As that storm of passion above them swept,
+And, comet-like, adding flame to flame,
+The priests of the new Evangel came,--
+Davenport, flashing upon the crowd,
+Charged like summer's electric cloud,
+Now holding the listener still as death
+With terrible warnings under breath,
+Now shouting for joy, as if he viewed
+The vision of Heaven's beatitude!
+And Celtic Tennant, his long coat bound
+Like a monk's with leathern girdle round,
+Wild with the toss of unshorn hair,
+And wringing of hands, and, eyes aglare,
+Groaning under the world's despair!
+Grave pastors, grieving their flocks to lose,
+Prophesied to the empty pews
+That gourds would wither, and mushrooms die,
+And noisiest fountains run soonest dry,
+Like the spring that gushed in Newbury Street,
+Under the tramp of the earthquake's feet,
+A silver shaft in the air and light,
+For a single day, then lost in night,
+Leaving only, its place to tell,
+Sandy fissure and sulphurous smell.
+With zeal wing-clipped and white-heat cool,
+Moved by the spirit in grooves of rule,
+No longer harried, and cropped, and fleeced,
+Flogged by sheriff and cursed by priest,
+But by wiser counsels left at ease
+To settle quietly on his lees,
+And, self-concentred, to count as done
+The work which his fathers well begun,
+In silent protest of letting alone,
+The Quaker kept the way of his own,--
+A non-conductor among the wires,
+With coat of asbestos proof to fires.
+And quite unable to mend his pace
+To catch the falling manna of grace,
+He hugged the closer his little store
+Of faith, and silently prayed for more.
+And vague of creed and barren of rite,
+But holding, as in his Master's sight,
+Act and thought to the inner light,
+The round of his simple duties walked,
+And strove to live what the others talked.
+
+And who shall marvel if evil went
+Step by step with the good intent,
+And with love and meekness, side by side,
+Lust of the flesh and spiritual pride?--
+That passionate longings and fancies vain
+Set the heart on fire and crazed the brain?
+That over the holy oracles
+Folly sported with cap and bells?
+That goodly women and learned men
+Marvelling told with tongue and pen
+How unweaned children chirped like birds
+Texts of Scripture and solemn words,
+Like the infant seers of the rocky glens
+In the Puy de Dome of wild Cevennes
+Or baby Lamas who pray and preach
+From Tartir cradles in Buddha's speech?
+
+In the war which Truth or Freedom wages
+With impious fraud and the wrong of ages,
+Hate and malice and self-love mar
+The notes of triumph with painful jar,
+And the helping angels turn aside
+Their sorrowing faces the shame to bide.
+Never on custom's oiled grooves
+The world to a higher level moves,
+But grates and grinds with friction hard
+On granite boulder and flinty shard.
+The heart must bleed before it feels,
+The pool be troubled before it heals;
+Ever by losses the right must gain,
+Every good have its birth of pain;
+The active Virtues blush to find
+The Vices wearing their badge behind,
+And Graces and Charities feel the fire
+Wherein the sins of the age expire;
+The fiend still rends as of old he rent
+The tortured body from which he went.
+
+But Time tests all. In the over-drift
+And flow of the Nile, with its annual gift,
+Who cares for the Hadji's relics sunk?
+Who thinks of the drowned-out Coptic monk?
+The tide that loosens the temple's stones,
+And scatters the sacred ibis-bones,
+Drives away from the valley-land
+That Arab robber, the wandering sand,
+Moistens the fields that know no rain,
+Fringes the desert with belts of grain,
+And bread to the sower brings again.
+So the flood of emotion deep and strong
+Troubled the land as it swept along,
+But left a result of holier lives,
+Tenderer-mothers and worthier wives.
+The husband and father whose children fled
+And sad wife wept when his drunken tread
+Frightened peace from his roof-tree's shade,
+And a rock of offence his hearthstone made,
+In a strength that was not his own began
+To rise from the brute's to the plane of man.
+Old friends embraced, long held apart
+By evil counsel and pride of heart;
+And penitence saw through misty tears,
+In the bow of hope on its cloud of fears,
+The promise of Heaven's eternal years,--
+The peace of God for the world's annoy,--
+Beauty for ashes, and oil of joy
+Under the church of Federal Street,
+Under the tread of its Sabbath feet,
+Walled about by its basement stones,
+Lie the marvellous preacher's bones.
+No saintly honors to them are shown,
+No sign nor miracle have they known;
+But he who passes the ancient church
+Stops in the shade of its belfry-porch,
+And ponders the wonderful life of him
+Who lies at rest in that charnel dim.
+Long shall the traveller strain his eye
+From the railroad car, as it plunges by,
+And the vanishing town behind him search
+For the slender spire of the Whitefield Church;
+And feel for one moment the ghosts of trade,
+And fashion, and folly, and pleasure laid,
+By the thought of that life of pure intent,
+That voice of warning yet eloquent,
+Of one on the errands of angels sent.
+And if where he labored the flood of sin
+Like a tide from the harbor-bar sets in,
+And over a life of tune and sense
+The church-spires lift their vain defence,
+As if to scatter the bolts of God
+With the points of Calvin's thunder-rod,--
+Still, as the gem of its civic crown,
+Precious beyond the world's renown,
+His memory hallows the ancient town!
+1859.
+
+
+
+
+THE TRUCE OF PISCATAQUA.
+
+In the winter of 1675-76, the Eastern Indians, who had been making war
+upon the New Hampshire settlements, were so reduced in numbers by
+fighting and famine that they agreed to a peace with Major Waldron at
+Dover, but the peace was broken in the fall of 1676. The famous chief,
+Squando, was the principal negotiator on the part of the savages. He had
+taken up the hatchet to revenge the brutal treatment of his child by
+drunken white sailors, which caused its death.
+
+It not unfrequently happened during the Border wars that young white
+children were adopted by their Indian captors, and so kindly treated
+that they were unwilling to leave the free, wild life of the woods; and
+in some instances they utterly refused to go back with their parents to
+their old homes and civilization.
+
+RAZE these long blocks of brick and stone,
+These huge mill-monsters overgrown;
+Blot out the humbler piles as well,
+Where, moved like living shuttles, dwell
+The weaving genii of the bell;
+Tear from the wild Cocheco's track
+The dams that hold its torrents back;
+And let the loud-rejoicing fall
+Plunge, roaring, down its rocky wall;
+And let the Indian's paddle play
+On the unbridged Piscataqua!
+Wide over hill and valley spread
+Once more the forest, dusk and dread,
+With here and there a clearing cut
+From the walled shadows round it shut;
+Each with its farm-house builded rude,
+By English yeoman squared and hewed,
+And the grim, flankered block-house bound
+With bristling palisades around.
+So, haply shall before thine eyes
+The dusty veil of centuries rise,
+The old, strange scenery overlay
+The tamer pictures of to-day,
+While, like the actors in a play,
+Pass in their ancient guise along
+The figures of my border song
+What time beside Cocheco's flood
+The white man and the red man stood,
+With words of peace and brotherhood;
+When passed the sacred calumet
+From lip to lip with fire-draught wet,
+And, puffed in scorn, the peace-pipe's smoke
+Through the gray beard of Waldron broke,
+And Squando's voice, in suppliant plea
+For mercy, struck the haughty key
+Of one who held, in any fate,
+His native pride inviolate!
+
+"Let your ears be opened wide!
+He who speaks has never lied.
+Waldron of Piscataqua,
+Hear what Squando has to say!
+
+"Squando shuts his eyes and sees,
+Far off, Saco's hemlock-trees.
+In his wigwam, still as stone,
+Sits a woman all alone,
+
+"Wampum beads and birchen strands
+Dropping from her careless hands,
+Listening ever for the fleet
+Patter of a dead child's feet!
+
+"When the moon a year ago
+Told the flowers the time to blow,
+In that lonely wigwam smiled
+Menewee, our little child.
+
+"Ere that moon grew thin and old,
+He was lying still and cold;
+Sent before us, weak and small,
+When the Master did not call!
+
+"On his little grave I lay;
+Three times went and came the day,
+Thrice above me blazed the noon,
+Thrice upon me wept the moon.
+
+"In the third night-watch I heard,
+Far and low, a spirit-bird;
+Very mournful, very wild,
+Sang the totem of my child.
+
+"'Menewee, poor Menewee,
+Walks a path he cannot see
+Let the white man's wigwam light
+With its blaze his steps aright.
+
+"'All-uncalled, he dares not show
+Empty hands to Manito
+Better gifts he cannot bear
+Than the scalps his slayers wear.'
+
+"All the while the totem sang,
+Lightning blazed and thunder rang;
+And a black cloud, reaching high,
+Pulled the white moon from the sky.
+
+"I, the medicine-man, whose ear
+All that spirits bear can hear,--
+I, whose eyes are wide to see
+All the things that are to be,--
+
+"Well I knew the dreadful signs
+In the whispers of the pines,
+In the river roaring loud,
+In the mutter of the cloud.
+
+"At the breaking of the day,
+From the grave I passed away;
+Flowers bloomed round me, birds sang glad,
+But my heart was hot and mad.
+
+"There is rust on Squando's knife,
+From the warm, red springs of life;
+On the funeral hemlock-trees
+Many a scalp the totem sees.
+
+"Blood for blood! But evermore
+Squando's heart is sad and sore;
+And his poor squaw waits at home
+For the feet that never come!
+
+"Waldron of Cocheco, hear!
+Squando speaks, who laughs at fear;
+Take the captives he has ta'en;
+Let the land have peace again!"
+
+As the words died on his tongue,
+Wide apart his warriors swung;
+Parted, at the sign he gave,
+Right and left, like Egypt's wave.
+
+And, like Israel passing free
+Through the prophet-charmed sea,
+Captive mother, wife, and child
+Through the dusky terror filed.
+
+One alone, a little maid,
+Middleway her steps delayed,
+Glancing, with quick, troubled sight,
+Round about from red to white.
+
+Then his hand the Indian laid
+On the little maiden's head,
+Lightly from her forehead fair
+Smoothing back her yellow hair.
+
+"Gift or favor ask I none;
+What I have is all my own
+Never yet the birds have sung,
+Squando hath a beggar's tongue.'
+
+"Yet for her who waits at home,
+For the dead who cannot come,
+Let the little Gold-hair be
+In the place of Menewee!
+
+"Mishanock, my little star!
+Come to Saco's pines afar;
+Where the sad one waits at home,
+Wequashim, my moonlight, come!"
+
+"What!" quoth Waldron, "leave a child
+Christian-born to heathens wild?
+As God lives, from Satan's hand
+I will pluck her as a brand!"
+
+"Hear me, white man!" Squando cried;
+"Let the little one decide.
+Wequashim, my moonlight, say,
+Wilt thou go with me, or stay?"
+
+Slowly, sadly, half afraid,
+Half regretfully, the maid
+Owned the ties of blood and race,--
+Turned from Squando's pleading face.
+
+Not a word the Indian spoke,
+But his wampum chain he broke,
+And the beaded wonder hung
+On that neck so fair and young.
+
+Silence-shod, as phantoms seem
+In the marches of a dream,
+Single-filed, the grim array
+Through the pine-trees wound away.
+
+Doubting, trembling, sore amazed,
+Through her tears the young child gazed.
+"God preserve her!" Waldron said;
+"Satan hath bewitched the maid!"
+
+Years went and came. At close of day
+Singing came a child from play,
+Tossing from her loose-locked head
+Gold in sunshine, brown in shade.
+
+Pride was in the mother's look,
+But her head she gravely shook,
+And with lips that fondly smiled
+Feigned to chide her truant child.
+
+Unabashed, the maid began
+"Up and down the brook I ran,
+Where, beneath the bank so steep,
+Lie the spotted trout asleep.
+
+"'Chip!' went squirrel on the wall,
+After me I heard him call,
+And the cat-bird on the tree
+Tried his best to mimic me.
+
+"Where the hemlocks grew so dark
+That I stopped to look and hark,
+On a log, with feather-hat,
+By the path, an Indian sat.
+
+"Then I cried, and ran away;
+But he called, and bade me stay;
+And his voice was good and mild
+As my mother's to her child.
+
+"And he took my wampum chain,
+Looked and looked it o'er again;
+Gave me berries, and, beside,
+On my neck a plaything tied."
+
+Straight the mother stooped to see
+What the Indian's gift might be.
+On the braid of wampum hung,
+Lo! a cross of silver swung.
+
+Well she knew its graven sign,
+Squando's bird and totem pine;
+And, a mirage of the brain,
+Flowed her childhood back again.
+
+Flashed the roof the sunshine through,
+Into space the walls outgrew;
+On the Indian's wigwam-mat,
+Blossom-crowned, again she sat.
+
+Cool she felt the west-wind blow,
+In her ear the pines sang low,
+And, like links from out a chain,
+Dropped the years of care and pain.
+From the outward toil and din,
+From the griefs that gnaw within,
+To the freedom of the woods
+Called the birds, and winds, and floods.
+
+Well, O painful minister!
+Watch thy flock, but blame not her,
+If her ear grew sharp to hear
+All their voices whispering near.
+
+Blame her not, as to her soul
+All the desert's glamour stole,
+That a tear for childhood's loss
+Dropped upon the Indian's cross.
+
+When, that night, the Book was read,
+And she bowed her widowed head,
+And a prayer for each loved name
+Rose like incense from a flame,
+
+With a hope the creeds forbid
+In her pitying bosom hid,
+To the listening ear of Heaven
+Lo! the Indian's name was given.
+1860.
+
+
+
+
+MY PLAYMATE.
+
+THE pines were dark on Ramoth hill,
+Their song was soft and low;
+The blossoms in the sweet May wind
+Were falling like the snow.
+
+The blossoms drifted at our feet,
+The orchard birds sang clear;
+The sweetest and the saddest day
+It seemed of all the year.
+
+For, more to me than birds or flowers,
+My playmate left her home,
+And took with her the laughing spring,
+The music and the bloom.
+
+She kissed the lips of kith and kin,
+She laid her hand in mine
+What more could ask the bashful boy
+Who fed her father's kine?
+
+She left us in the bloom of May
+The constant years told o'er
+Their seasons with as sweet May morns,
+But she came back no more.
+
+I walk, with noiseless feet, the round
+Of uneventful years;
+Still o'er and o'er I sow the spring
+And reap the autumn ears.
+
+She lives where all the golden year
+Her summer roses blow;
+The dusky children of the sun
+Before her come and go.
+
+There haply with her jewelled hands
+She smooths her silken gown,--
+No more the homespun lap wherein
+I shook the walnuts down.
+
+The wild grapes wait us by the brook,
+The brown nuts on the hill,
+And still the May-day flowers make sweet
+The woods of Follymill.
+
+The lilies blossom in the pond,
+The bird builds in the tree,
+The dark pines sing on Ramoth hill
+The slow song of the sea.
+
+I wonder if she thinks of them,
+And how the old time seems,--
+If ever the pines of Ramoth wood
+Are sounding in her dreams.
+
+I see her face, I hear her voice;
+Does she remember mine?
+And what to her is now the boy
+Who fed her father's kine?
+
+What cares she that the orioles build
+For other eyes than ours,--
+That other hands with nuts are filled,
+And other laps with flowers?
+
+O playmate in the golden time!
+Our mossy seat is green,
+Its fringing violets blossom yet,
+The old trees o'er it lean.
+
+The winds so sweet with birch and fern
+A sweeter memory blow;
+And there in spring the veeries sing
+The song of long ago.
+
+And still the pines of Ramoth wood
+Are moaning like the sea,--
+
+The moaning of the sea of change
+Between myself and thee!
+1860.
+
+
+
+
+COBBLER KEEZAR'S VISION.
+
+This ballad was written on the occasion of a Horticultural Festival.
+Cobbler Keezar was a noted character among the first settlers in the
+valley of the Merrimac.
+
+THE beaver cut his timber
+With patient teeth that day,
+The minks were fish-wards, and the crows
+Surveyors of highway,--
+
+When Keezar sat on the hillside
+Upon his cobbler's form,
+With a pan of coals on either hand
+To keep his waxed-ends warm.
+
+And there, in the golden weather,
+He stitched and hammered and sung;
+In the brook he moistened his leather,
+In the pewter mug his tongue.
+
+Well knew the tough old Teuton
+Who brewed the stoutest ale,
+And he paid the goodwife's reckoning
+In the coin of song and tale.
+
+The songs they still are singing
+Who dress the hills of vine,
+The tales that haunt the Brocken
+And whisper down the Rhine.
+
+Woodsy and wild and lonesome,
+The swift stream wound away,
+Through birches and scarlet maples
+Flashing in foam and spray,--
+
+Down on the sharp-horned ledges
+Plunging in steep cascade,
+Tossing its white-maned waters
+Against the hemlock's shade.
+
+Woodsy and wild and lonesome,
+East and west and north and south;
+Only the village of fishers
+Down at the river's mouth;
+
+Only here and there a clearing,
+With its farm-house rude and new,
+And tree-stumps, swart as Indians,
+Where the scanty harvest grew.
+
+No shout of home-bound reapers,
+No vintage-song he heard,
+And on the green no dancing feet
+The merry violin stirred.
+
+"Why should folk be glum," said Keezar,
+"When Nature herself is glad,
+And the painted woods are laughing
+At the faces so sour and sad?"
+
+Small heed had the careless cobbler
+What sorrow of heart was theirs
+Who travailed in pain with the births of God,
+And planted a state with prayers,--
+
+Hunting of witches and warlocks,
+Smiting the heathen horde,--
+One hand on the mason's trowel,
+And one on the soldier's sword.
+
+But give him his ale and cider,
+Give him his pipe and song,
+Little he cared for Church or State,
+Or the balance of right and wrong.
+
+"T is work, work, work," he muttered,--
+"And for rest a snuffle of psalms!"
+He smote on his leathern apron
+With his brown and waxen palms.
+
+"Oh for the purple harvests
+Of the days when I was young
+For the merry grape-stained maidens,
+And the pleasant songs they sung!
+
+"Oh for the breath of vineyards,
+Of apples and nuts and wine
+For an oar to row and a breeze to blow
+Down the grand old river Rhine!"
+
+A tear in his blue eye glistened,
+And dropped on his beard so gray.
+"Old, old am I," said Keezar,
+"And the Rhine flows far away!"
+
+But a cunning man was the cobbler;
+He could call the birds from the trees,
+Charm the black snake out of the ledges,
+And bring back the swarming bees.
+
+All the virtues of herbs and metals,
+All the lore of the woods, he knew,
+And the arts of the Old World mingle
+With the marvels of the New.
+
+Well he knew the tricks of magic,
+And the lapstone on his knee
+Had the gift of the Mormon's goggles
+Or the stone of Doctor Dee.[11]
+
+For the mighty master Agrippa
+Wrought it with spell and rhyme
+From a fragment of mystic moonstone
+In the tower of Nettesheim.
+
+To a cobbler Minnesinger
+The marvellous stone gave he,--
+And he gave it, in turn, to Keezar,
+Who brought it over the sea.
+
+He held up that mystic lapstone,
+He held it up like a lens,
+And he counted the long years coming
+Ey twenties and by tens.
+
+"One hundred years," quoth Keezar,
+"And fifty have I told
+Now open the new before me,
+And shut me out the old!"
+
+Like a cloud of mist, the blackness
+Rolled from the magic stone,
+And a marvellous picture mingled
+The unknown and the known.
+
+Still ran the stream to the river,
+And river and ocean joined;
+And there were the bluffs and the blue sea-line,
+And cold north hills behind.
+
+But--the mighty forest was broken
+By many a steepled town,
+By many a white-walled farm-house,
+And many a garner brown.
+
+Turning a score of mill-wheels,
+The stream no more ran free;
+White sails on the winding river,
+White sails on the far-off sea.
+
+Below in the noisy village
+The flags were floating gay,
+And shone on a thousand faces
+The light of a holiday.
+
+Swiftly the rival ploughmen
+Turned the brown earth from their shares;
+Here were the farmer's treasures,
+There were the craftsman's wares.
+
+Golden the goodwife's butter,
+Ruby her currant-wine;
+Grand were the strutting turkeys,
+Fat were the beeves and swine.
+
+Yellow and red were the apples,
+And the ripe pears russet-brown,
+And the peaches had stolen blushes
+From the girls who shook them down.
+
+And with blooms of hill and wildwood,
+That shame the toil of art,
+Mingled the gorgeous blossoms
+Of the garden's tropic heart.
+
+"What is it I see?" said Keezar
+"Am I here, or ant I there?
+Is it a fete at Bingen?
+Do I look on Frankfort fair?
+
+"But where are the clowns and puppets,
+And imps with horns and tail?
+And where are the Rhenish flagons?
+And where is the foaming ale?
+
+"Strange things, I know, will happen,--
+Strange things the Lord permits;
+But that droughty folk should be jolly
+Puzzles my poor old wits.
+
+"Here are smiling manly faces,
+And the maiden's step is gay;
+Nor sad by thinking, nor mad by drinking,
+Nor mopes, nor fools, are they.
+
+"Here's pleasure without regretting,
+And good without abuse,
+The holiday and the bridal
+Of beauty and of use.
+
+"Here's a priest and there is a Quaker,
+Do the cat and dog agree?
+Have they burned the stocks for ovenwood?
+Have they cut down the gallows-tree?
+
+"Would the old folk know their children?
+Would they own the graceless town,
+With never a ranter to worry
+And never a witch to drown?"
+
+
+Loud laughed the cobbler Keezar,
+Laughed like a school-boy gay;
+Tossing his arms above him,
+The lapstone rolled away.
+
+It rolled down the rugged hillside,
+It spun like a wheel bewitched,
+It plunged through the leaning willows,
+And into the river pitched.
+
+There, in the deep, dark water,
+The magic stone lies still,
+Under the leaning willows
+In the shadow of the hill.
+
+But oft the idle fisher
+Sits on the shadowy bank,
+And his dreams make marvellous pictures
+Where the wizard's lapstone sank.
+
+And still, in the summer twilights,
+When the river seems to run
+Out from the inner glory,
+Warm with the melted sun,
+
+The weary mill-girl lingers
+Beside the charmed stream,
+And the sky and the golden water
+Shape and color her dream.
+
+Air wave the sunset gardens,
+The rosy signals fly;
+Her homestead beckons from the cloud,
+And love goes sailing by.
+1861.
+
+
+
+
+AMY WENTWORTH
+
+TO WILLIAM BRADFORD.
+
+As they who watch by sick-beds find relief
+Unwittingly from the great stress of grief
+And anxious care, in fantasies outwrought
+From the hearth's embers flickering low, or caught
+From whispering wind, or tread of passing feet,
+Or vagrant memory calling up some sweet
+Snatch of old song or romance, whence or why
+They scarcely know or ask,--so, thou and I,
+Nursed in the faith that Truth alone is strong
+In the endurance which outwearies Wrong,
+With meek persistence baffling brutal force,
+And trusting God against the universe,--
+We, doomed to watch a strife we may not share
+With other weapons than the patriot's prayer,
+Yet owning, with full hearts and moistened eyes,
+The awful beauty of self-sacrifice,
+And wrung by keenest sympathy for all
+Who give their loved ones for the living wall
+'Twixt law and treason,--in this evil day
+May haply find, through automatic play
+Of pen and pencil, solace to our pain,
+And hearten others with the strength we gain.
+I know it has been said our times require
+No play of art, nor dalliance with the lyre,
+No weak essay with Fancy's chloroform
+To calm the hot, mad pulses of the storm,
+But the stern war-blast rather, such as sets
+The battle's teeth of serried bayonets,
+And pictures grim as Vernet's. Yet with these
+Some softer tints may blend, and milder keys
+Relieve the storm-stunned ear. Let us keep sweet,
+If so we may, our hearts, even while we eat
+The bitter harvest of our own device
+And half a century's moral cowardice.
+As Nurnberg sang while Wittenberg defied,
+And Kranach painted by his Luther's side,
+And through the war-march of the Puritan
+The silver stream of Marvell's music ran,
+So let the household melodies be sung,
+The pleasant pictures on the wall be hung--
+So let us hold against the hosts of night
+And slavery all our vantage-ground of light.
+Let Treason boast its savagery, and shake
+From its flag-folds its symbol rattlesnake,
+Nurse its fine arts, lay human skins in tan,
+And carve its pipe-bowls from the bones of man,
+And make the tale of Fijian banquets dull
+By drinking whiskey from a loyal skull,--
+But let us guard, till this sad war shall cease,
+(God grant it soon!) the graceful arts of peace
+No foes are conquered who the victors teach
+Their vandal manners and barbaric speech.
+
+And while, with hearts of thankfulness, we bear
+Of the great common burden our full share,
+Let none upbraid us that the waves entice
+Thy sea-dipped pencil, or some quaint device,
+Rhythmic, and sweet, beguiles my pen away
+From the sharp strifes and sorrows of to-day.
+Thus, while the east-wind keen from Labrador
+Sings it the leafless elms, and from the shore
+Of the great sea comes the monotonous roar
+Of the long-breaking surf, and all the sky
+Is gray with cloud, home-bound and dull, I try
+To time a simple legend to the sounds
+Of winds in the woods, and waves on pebbled bounds,--
+A song for oars to chime with, such as might
+Be sung by tired sea-painters, who at night
+Look from their hemlock camps, by quiet cove
+Or beach, moon-lighted, on the waves they love.
+(So hast thou looked, when level sunset lay
+On the calm bosom of some Eastern bay,
+And all the spray-moist rocks and waves that rolled
+Up the white sand-slopes flashed with ruddy gold.)
+Something it has--a flavor of the sea,
+And the sea's freedom--which reminds of thee.
+Its faded picture, dimly smiling down
+From the blurred fresco of the ancient town,
+I have not touched with warmer tints in vain,
+If, in this dark, sad year, it steals one thought
+from pain.
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+
+Her fingers shame the ivory keys
+They dance so light along;
+The bloom upon her parted lips
+Is sweeter than the song.
+
+O perfumed suitor, spare thy smiles!
+Her thoughts are not of thee;
+She better loves the salted wind,
+The voices of the sea.
+
+Her heart is like an outbound ship
+That at its anchor swings;
+The murmur of the stranded shell
+Is in the song she sings.
+
+She sings, and, smiling, hears her praise,
+But dreams the while of one
+Who watches from his sea-blown deck
+The icebergs in the sun.
+
+She questions all the winds that blow,
+And every fog-wreath dim,
+And bids the sea-birds flying north
+Bear messages to him.
+
+She speeds them with the thanks of men
+He perilled life to save,
+And grateful prayers like holy oil
+To smooth for him the wave.
+
+Brown Viking of the fishing-smack!
+Fair toast of all the town!--
+The skipper's jerkin ill beseems
+The lady's silken gown!
+
+But ne'er shall Amy Wentworth wear
+For him the blush of shame
+Who dares to set his manly gifts
+Against her ancient name.
+
+The stream is brightest at its spring,
+And blood is not like wine;
+Nor honored less than he who heirs
+Is he who founds a line.
+
+Full lightly shall the prize be won,
+If love be Fortune's spur;
+And never maiden stoops to him
+Who lifts himself to her.
+
+Her home is brave in Jaffrey Street,
+With stately stairways worn
+By feet of old Colonial knights
+And ladies gentle-born.
+
+Still green about its ample porch
+The English ivy twines,
+Trained back to show in English oak
+The herald's carven signs.
+
+And on her, from the wainscot old,
+Ancestral faces frown,--
+And this has worn the soldier's sword,
+And that the judge's gown.
+
+But, strong of will and proud as they,
+She walks the gallery floor
+As if she trod her sailor's deck
+By stormy Labrador.
+
+The sweetbrier blooms on Kittery-side,
+And green are Elliot's bowers;
+Her garden is the pebbled beach,
+The mosses are her flowers.
+
+She looks across the harbor-bar
+To see the white gulls fly;
+His greeting from the Northern sea
+Is in their clanging cry.
+
+She hums a song, and dreams that he,
+As in its romance old,
+Shall homeward ride with silken sails
+And masts of beaten gold!
+
+Oh, rank is good, and gold is fair,
+And high and low mate ill;
+But love has never known a law
+Beyond its own sweet will!
+1862.
+
+
+
+
+THE COUNTESS.
+TO E. W.
+
+I inscribed this poem to Dr. Elias Weld of Haverhill, Massachusetts,
+to whose kindness I was much indebted in my boyhood. He was the one
+cultivated man in the neighborhood. His small but well-chosen library
+was placed at my disposal. He is the "wise old doctor" of Snow-Bound.
+Count Francois de Vipart with his cousin Joseph Rochemont de Poyen came
+to the United States in the early part of the present century. They took
+up their residence at Rocks Village on the Merrimac, where they both
+married. The wife of Count Vipart was Mary Ingalls, who as my father
+remembered her was a very lovely young girl. Her wedding dress, as
+described by a lady still living, was "pink satin with an overdress of
+white lace, and white satin slippers." She died in less than a year
+after her marriage. Her husband returned to his native country. He lies
+buried in the family tomb of the Viparts at Bordeaux.
+
+I KNOW not, Time and Space so intervene,
+Whether, still waiting with a trust serene,
+Thou bearest up thy fourscore years and ten,
+Or, called at last, art now Heaven's citizen;
+But, here or there, a pleasant thought of thee,
+Like an old friend, all day has been with me.
+The shy, still boy, for whom thy kindly hand
+Smoothed his hard pathway to the wonder-land
+Of thought and fancy, in gray manhood yet
+Keeps green the memory of his early debt.
+To-day, when truth and falsehood speak their words
+Through hot-lipped cannon and the teeth of swords,
+Listening with quickened heart and ear intent
+To each sharp clause of that stern argument,
+I still can hear at times a softer note
+Of the old pastoral music round me float,
+While through the hot gleam of our civil strife
+Looms the green mirage of a simpler life.
+As, at his alien post, the sentinel
+Drops the old bucket in the homestead well,
+And hears old voices in the winds that toss
+Above his head the live-oak's beard of moss,
+So, in our trial-time, and under skies
+Shadowed by swords like Islam's paradise,
+I wait and watch, and let my fancy stray
+To milder scenes and youth's Arcadian day;
+And howsoe'er the pencil dipped in dreams
+Shades the brown woods or tints the sunset streams,
+The country doctor in the foreground seems,
+Whose ancient sulky down the village lanes
+Dragged, like a war-car, captive ills and pains.
+I could not paint the scenery of my song,
+Mindless of one who looked thereon so long;
+Who, night and day, on duty's lonely round,
+Made friends o' the woods and rocks, and knew the sound
+Of each small brook, and what the hillside trees
+Said to the winds that touched their leafy keys;
+Who saw so keenly and so well could paint
+The village-folk, with all their humors quaint,
+The parson ambling on his wall-eyed roan.
+Grave and erect, with white hair backward blown;
+The tough old boatman, half amphibious grown;
+The muttering witch-wife of the gossip's tale,
+And the loud straggler levying his blackmail,--
+Old customs, habits, superstitions, fears,
+All that lies buried under fifty years.
+To thee, as is most fit, I bring my lay,
+And, grateful, own the debt I cannot pay.
+
+ . . . . . . . . . .
+
+Over the wooded northern ridge,
+Between its houses brown,
+To the dark tunnel of the bridge
+The street comes straggling down.
+
+You catch a glimpse, through birch and pine,
+Of gable, roof, and porch,
+The tavern with its swinging sign,
+The sharp horn of the church.
+
+The river's steel-blue crescent curves
+To meet, in ebb and flow,
+The single broken wharf that serves
+For sloop and gundelow.
+
+With salt sea-scents along its shores
+The heavy hay-boats crawl,
+The long antennae of their oars
+In lazy rise and fall.
+
+Along the gray abutment's wall
+The idle shad-net dries;
+The toll-man in his cobbler's stall
+Sits smoking with closed eyes.
+
+You hear the pier's low undertone
+Of waves that chafe and gnaw;
+You start,--a skipper's horn is blown
+To raise the creaking draw.
+
+At times a blacksmith's anvil sounds
+With slow and sluggard beat,
+Or stage-coach on its dusty rounds
+Fakes up the staring street.
+
+A place for idle eyes and ears,
+A cobwebbed nook of dreams;
+Left by the stream whose waves are years
+The stranded village seems.
+
+And there, like other moss and rust,
+The native dweller clings,
+And keeps, in uninquiring trust,
+The old, dull round of things.
+
+The fisher drops his patient lines,
+The farmer sows his grain,
+Content to hear the murmuring pines
+Instead of railroad-train.
+
+Go where, along the tangled steep
+That slopes against the west,
+The hamlet's buried idlers sleep
+In still profounder rest.
+
+Throw back the locust's flowery plume,
+The birch's pale-green scarf,
+And break the web of brier and bloom
+From name and epitaph.
+
+A simple muster-roll of death,
+Of pomp and romance shorn,
+The dry, old names that common breath
+Has cheapened and outworn.
+
+Yet pause by one low mound, and part
+The wild vines o'er it laced,
+And read the words by rustic art
+Upon its headstone traced.
+
+Haply yon white-haired villager
+Of fourscore years can say
+What means the noble name of her
+Who sleeps with common clay.
+
+An exile from the Gascon land
+Found refuge here and rest,
+And loved, of all the village band,
+Its fairest and its best.
+
+He knelt with her on Sabbath morns,
+He worshipped through her eyes,
+And on the pride that doubts and scorns
+Stole in her faith's surprise.
+
+Her simple daily life he saw
+By homeliest duties tried,
+In all things by an untaught law
+Of fitness justified.
+
+For her his rank aside he laid;
+He took the hue and tone
+Of lowly life and toil, and made
+Her simple ways his own.
+
+Yet still, in gay and careless ease,
+To harvest-field or dance
+He brought the gentle courtesies,
+The nameless grace of France.
+
+And she who taught him love not less
+From him she loved in turn
+Caught in her sweet unconsciousness
+What love is quick to learn.
+
+Each grew to each in pleased accord,
+Nor knew the gazing town
+If she looked upward to her lord
+Or he to her looked down.
+
+How sweet, when summer's day was o'er,
+His violin's mirth and wail,
+The walk on pleasant Newbury's shore,
+The river's moonlit sail!
+
+Ah! life is brief, though love be long;
+The altar and the bier,
+The burial hymn and bridal song,
+Were both in one short year!
+
+Her rest is quiet on the hill,
+Beneath the locust's bloom
+Far off her lover sleeps as still
+Within his scutcheoned tomb.
+
+The Gascon lord, the village maid,
+In death still clasp their hands;
+The love that levels rank and grade
+Unites their severed lands.
+
+What matter whose the hillside grave,
+Or whose the blazoned stone?
+Forever to her western wave
+Shall whisper blue Garonne!
+
+O Love!--so hallowing every soil
+That gives thy sweet flower room,
+Wherever, nursed by ease or toil,
+The human heart takes bloom!--
+
+Plant of lost Eden, from the sod
+Of sinful earth unriven,
+White blossom of the trees of God
+Dropped down to us from heaven!
+
+This tangled waste of mound and stone
+Is holy for thy sale;
+A sweetness which is all thy own
+Breathes out from fern and brake.
+
+And while ancestral pride shall twine
+The Gascon's tomb with flowers,
+Fall sweetly here, O song of mine,
+With summer's bloom and showers!
+
+And let the lines that severed seem
+Unite again in thee,
+As western wave and Gallic stream
+Are mingled in one sea!
+1863.
+
+
+
+
+AMONG THE HILLS
+
+This poem, when originally published, was dedicated to Annie Fields,
+wife of the distinguished publisher, James T. Fields, of Boston, in
+grateful acknowledgment of the strength and inspiration I have found in
+her friendship and sympathy. The poem in its first form was entitled The
+Wife: an Idyl of Bearcamp Water, and appeared in The Atlantic Monthly
+for January, 1868. When I published the volume Among the Hills, in
+December of the same year, I expanded the Prelude and filled out also
+the outlines of the story.
+
+
+PRELUDE.
+
+ALONG the roadside, like the flowers of gold
+That tawny Incas for their gardens wrought,
+Heavy with sunshine droops the golden-rod,
+And the red pennons of the cardinal-flowers
+Hang motionless upon their upright staves.
+The sky is hot and hazy, and the wind,
+Vying-weary with its long flight from the south,
+Unfelt; yet, closely scanned, yon maple leaf
+With faintest motion, as one stirs in dreams,
+Confesses it. The locust by the wall
+Stabs the noon-silence with his sharp alarm.
+A single hay-cart down the dusty road
+Creaks slowly, with its driver fast asleep
+On the load's top. Against the neighboring hill,
+Huddled along the stone wall's shady side,
+The sheep show white, as if a snowdrift still
+Defied the dog-star. Through the open door
+A drowsy smell of flowers-gray heliotrope,
+And white sweet clover, and shy mignonette--
+Comes faintly in, and silent chorus lends
+To the pervading symphony of peace.
+No time is this for hands long over-worn
+To task their strength; and (unto Him be praise
+Who giveth quietness!) the stress and strain
+Of years that did the work of centuries
+Have ceased, and we can draw our breath once more
+Freely and full. So, as yon harvesters
+Make glad their nooning underneath the elms
+With tale and riddle and old snatch of song,
+I lay aside grave themes, and idly turn
+The leaves of memory's sketch-book, dreaming o'er
+Old summer pictures of the quiet hills,
+And human life, as quiet, at their feet.
+
+And yet not idly all. A farmer's son,
+Proud of field-lore and harvest craft, and feeling
+All their fine possibilities, how rich
+And restful even poverty and toil
+Become when beauty, harmony, and love
+Sit at their humble hearth as angels sat
+At evening in the patriarch's tent, when man
+Makes labor noble, and his farmer's frock
+The symbol of a Christian chivalry
+Tender and just and generous to her
+Who clothes with grace all duty; still, I know
+Too well the picture has another side,--
+How wearily the grind of toil goes on
+Where love is wanting, how the eye and ear
+And heart are starved amidst the plenitude
+Of nature, and how hard and colorless
+Is life without an atmosphere. I look
+Across the lapse of half a century,
+And call to mind old homesteads, where no flower
+Told that the spring had come, but evil weeds,
+Nightshade and rough-leaved burdock in the place
+Of the sweet doorway greeting of the rose
+And honeysuckle, where the house walls seemed
+Blistering in sun, without a tree or vine
+To cast the tremulous shadow of its leaves
+Across the curtainless windows, from whose panes
+Fluttered the signal rags of shiftlessness.
+Within, the cluttered kitchen-floor, unwashed
+(Broom-clean I think they called it); the best room
+Stifling with cellar damp, shut from the air
+In hot midsummer, bookless, pictureless,
+Save the inevitable sampler hung
+Over the fireplace, or a mourning piece,
+A green-haired woman, peony-cheeked, beneath
+Impossible willows; the wide-throated hearth
+Bristling with faded pine-boughs half concealing
+The piled-up rubbish at the chimney's back;
+And, in sad keeping with all things about them,
+Shrill, querulous-women, sour and sullen men,
+Untidy, loveless, old before their time,
+With scarce a human interest save their own
+Monotonous round of small economies,
+Or the poor scandal of the neighborhood;
+Blind to the beauty everywhere revealed,
+Treading the May-flowers with regardless feet;
+For them the song-sparrow and the bobolink
+Sang not, nor winds made music in the leaves;
+For them in vain October's holocaust
+Burned, gold and crimson, over all the hills,
+The sacramental mystery of the woods.
+Church-goers, fearful of the unseen Powers,
+But grumbling over pulpit-tax and pew-rent,
+Saving, as shrewd economists, their souls
+And winter pork with the least possible outlay
+Of salt and sanctity; in daily life
+Showing as little actual comprehension
+Of Christian charity and love and duty,
+As if the Sermon on the Mount had been
+Outdated like a last year's almanac
+Rich in broad woodlands and in half-tilled fields,
+And yet so pinched and bare and comfortless,
+The veriest straggler limping on his rounds,
+The sun and air his sole inheritance,
+Laughed at a poverty that paid its taxes,
+And hugged his rags in self-complacency!
+
+Not such should be the homesteads of a land
+Where whoso wisely wills and acts may dwell
+As king and lawgiver, in broad-acred state,
+With beauty, art, taste, culture, books, to make
+His hour of leisure richer than a life
+Of fourscore to the barons of old time,
+Our yeoman should be equal to his home
+Set in the fair, green valleys, purple walled,
+A man to match his mountains, not to creep
+Dwarfed and abased below them. I would fain
+In this light way (of which I needs must own
+With the knife-grinder of whom Canning sings,
+"Story, God bless you! I have none to tell you!")
+Invite the eye to see and heart to feel
+The beauty and the joy within their reach,--
+Home, and home loves, and the beatitudes
+Of nature free to all. Haply in years
+That wait to take the places of our own,
+Heard where some breezy balcony looks down
+On happy homes, or where the lake in the moon
+Sleeps dreaming of the mountains, fair as Ruth,
+In the old Hebrew pastoral, at the feet
+Of Boaz, even this simple lay of mine
+May seem the burden of a prophecy,
+Finding its late fulfilment in a change
+Slow as the oak's growth, lifting manhood up
+Through broader culture, finer manners, love,
+And reverence, to the level of the hills.
+
+O Golden Age, whose light is of the dawn,
+And not of sunset, forward, not behind,
+Flood the new heavens and earth, and with thee bring
+All the old virtues, whatsoever things
+Are pure and honest and of good repute,
+But add thereto whatever bard has sung
+Or seer has told of when in trance and dream
+They saw the Happy Isles of prophecy
+Let Justice hold her scale, and Truth divide
+Between the right and wrong; but give the heart
+The freedom of its fair inheritance;
+Let the poor prisoner, cramped and starved so long,
+At Nature's table feast his ear and eye
+With joy and wonder; let all harmonies
+Of sound, form, color, motion, wait upon
+The princely guest, whether in soft attire
+Of leisure clad, or the coarse frock of toil,
+And, lending life to the dead form of faith,
+Give human nature reverence for the sake
+Of One who bore it, making it divine
+With the ineffable tenderness of God;
+Let common need, the brotherhood of prayer,
+The heirship of an unknown destiny,
+The unsolved mystery round about us, make
+A man more precious than the gold of Ophir.
+Sacred, inviolate, unto whom all things
+Should minister, as outward types and signs
+Of the eternal beauty which fulfils
+The one great purpose of creation, Love,
+The sole necessity of Earth and Heaven!
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+For weeks the clouds had raked the hills
+And vexed the vales with raining,
+And all the woods were sad with mist,
+And all the brooks complaining.
+
+At last, a sudden night-storm tore
+The mountain veils asunder,
+And swept the valleys clean before
+The besom of the thunder.
+
+Through Sandwich notch the west-wind sang
+Good morrow to the cotter;
+And once again Chocorua's horn
+Of shadow pierced the water.
+
+Above his broad lake Ossipee,
+Once more the sunshine wearing,
+Stooped, tracing on that silver shield
+His grim armorial bearing.
+
+Clear drawn against the hard blue sky,
+The peaks had winter's keenness;
+And, close on autumn's frost, the vales
+Had more than June's fresh greenness.
+
+Again the sodden forest floors
+With golden lights were checkered,
+Once more rejoicing leaves in wind
+And sunshine danced and flickered.
+
+It was as if the summer's late
+Atoning for it's sadness
+Had borrowed every season's charm
+To end its days in gladness.
+
+Rivers of gold-mist flowing down
+From far celestial fountains,--
+The great sun flaming through the rifts
+Beyond the wall of mountains.
+
+We paused at last where home-bound cows
+Brought down the pasture's treasure,
+And in the barn the rhythmic flails
+Beat out a harvest measure.
+
+We heard the night-hawk's sullen plunge,
+The crow his tree-mates calling
+The shadows lengthening down the slopes
+About our feet were falling.
+
+And through them smote the level sun
+In broken lines of splendor,
+Touched the gray rocks and made the green
+Of the shorn grass more tender.
+
+The maples bending o'er the gate,
+Their arch of leaves just tinted
+With yellow warmth, the golden glow
+Of coming autumn hinted.
+
+Keen white between the farm-house showed,
+And smiled on porch and trellis,
+The fair democracy of flowers
+That equals cot and palace.
+
+And weaving garlands for her dog,
+'Twixt chidings and caresses,
+A human flower of childhood shook
+The sunshine from her tresses.
+
+Clear drawn against the hard blue sky,
+The peaks had winter's keenness;
+And, close on autumn's frost, the vales
+Had more than June's fresh greenness.
+
+Again the sodden forest floors
+With golden lights were checkered,
+Once more rejoicing leaves in wind
+And sunshine danced and flickered.
+
+It was as if the summer's late
+Atoning for it's sadness
+Had borrowed every season's charm
+To end its days in gladness.
+
+I call to mind those banded vales
+Of shadow and of shining,
+Through which, my hostess at my side,
+I drove in day's declining.
+
+We held our sideling way above
+The river's whitening shallows,
+By homesteads old, with wide-flung barns
+Swept through and through by swallows;
+
+By maple orchards, belts of pine
+And larches climbing darkly
+The mountain slopes, and, over all,
+The great peaks rising starkly.
+
+You should have seen that long hill-range
+With gaps of brightness riven,--
+How through each pass and hollow streamed
+The purpling lights of heaven,--
+
+On either hand we saw the signs
+Of fancy and of shrewdness,
+Where taste had wound its arms of vines
+Round thrift's uncomely rudeness.
+
+The sun-brown farmer in his frock
+Shook hands, and called to Mary
+Bare-armed, as Juno might, she came,
+White-aproned from her dairy.
+
+Her air, her smile, her motions, told
+Of womanly completeness;
+A music as of household songs
+Was in her voice of sweetness.
+
+Not fair alone in curve and line,
+But something more and better,
+The secret charm eluding art,
+Its spirit, not its letter;--
+
+An inborn grace that nothing lacked
+Of culture or appliance,
+The warmth of genial courtesy,
+The calm of self-reliance.
+
+Before her queenly womanhood
+How dared our hostess utter
+The paltry errand of her need
+To buy her fresh-churned butter?
+
+She led the way with housewife pride,
+Her goodly store disclosing,
+Full tenderly the golden balls
+With practised hands disposing.
+
+Then, while along the western hills
+We watched the changeful glory
+Of sunset, on our homeward way,
+I heard her simple story.
+
+The early crickets sang; the stream
+Plashed through my friend's narration
+Her rustic patois of the hills
+Lost in my free-translation.
+
+"More wise," she said, "than those who swarm
+Our hills in middle summer,
+She came, when June's first roses blow,
+To greet the early comer.
+
+"From school and ball and rout she came,
+The city's fair, pale daughter,
+To drink the wine of mountain air
+Beside the Bearcamp Water.
+
+"Her step grew firmer on the hills
+That watch our homesteads over;
+On cheek and lip, from summer fields,
+She caught the bloom of clover.
+
+"For health comes sparkling in the streams
+From cool Chocorua stealing
+There's iron in our Northern winds;
+Our pines are trees of healing.
+
+"She sat beneath the broad-armed elms
+That skirt the mowing-meadow,
+And watched the gentle west-wind weave
+The grass with shine and shadow.
+
+"Beside her, from the summer heat
+To share her grateful screening,
+With forehead bared, the farmer stood,
+Upon his pitchfork leaning.
+
+"Framed in its damp, dark locks, his face
+Had nothing mean or common,--
+Strong, manly, true, the tenderness
+And pride beloved of woman.
+
+"She looked up, glowing with the health
+The country air had brought her,
+And, laughing, said: 'You lack a wife,
+Your mother lacks a daughter.
+
+"'To mend your frock and bake your bread
+You do not need a lady
+Be sure among these brown old homes
+Is some one waiting ready,--
+
+"'Some fair, sweet girl with skilful hand
+And cheerful heart for treasure,
+Who never played with ivory keys,
+Or danced the polka's measure.'
+
+"He bent his black brows to a frown,
+He set his white teeth tightly.
+''T is well,' he said, 'for one like you
+To choose for me so lightly.
+
+"You think, because my life is rude
+I take no note of sweetness
+I tell you love has naught to do
+With meetness or unmeetness.
+
+"'Itself its best excuse, it asks
+No leave of pride or fashion
+When silken zone or homespun frock
+It stirs with throbs of passion.
+
+"'You think me deaf and blind: you bring
+Your winning graces hither
+As free as if from cradle-time
+We two had played together.
+
+"'You tempt me with your laughing eyes,
+Your cheek of sundown's blushes,
+A motion as of waving grain,
+A music as of thrushes.
+
+"'The plaything of your summer sport,
+The spells you weave around me
+You cannot at your will undo,
+Nor leave me as you found me.
+
+"'You go as lightly as you came,
+Your life is well without me;
+What care you that these hills will close
+Like prison-walls about me?
+
+"'No mood is mine to seek a wife,
+Or daughter for my mother
+Who loves you loses in that love
+All power to love another!
+
+"'I dare your pity or your scorn,
+With pride your own exceeding;
+I fling my heart into your lap
+Without a word of pleading.'
+
+"She looked up in his face of pain
+So archly, yet so tender
+'And if I lend you mine,' she said,
+'Will you forgive the lender?
+
+"'Nor frock nor tan can hide the man;
+And see you not, my farmer,
+How weak and fond a woman waits
+Behind this silken armor?
+
+"'I love you: on that love alone,
+And not my worth, presuming,
+Will you not trust for summer fruit
+The tree in May-day blooming?'
+
+"Alone the hangbird overhead,
+His hair-swung cradle straining,
+Looked down to see love's miracle,--
+The giving that is gaining.
+
+"And so the farmer found a wife,
+His mother found a daughter
+There looks no happier home than hers
+On pleasant Bearcamp Water.
+
+"Flowers spring to blossom where she walks
+The careful ways of duty;
+Our hard, stiff lines of life with her
+Are flowing curves of beauty.
+
+"Our homes are cheerier for her sake,
+Our door-yards brighter blooming,
+And all about the social air
+Is sweeter for her coming.
+
+"Unspoken homilies of peace
+Her daily life is preaching;
+The still refreshment of the dew
+Is her unconscious teaching.
+
+"And never tenderer hand than hers
+Unknits the brow of ailing;
+Her garments to the sick man's ear
+Have music in their trailing.
+
+"And when, in pleasant harvest moons,
+The youthful huskers gather,
+Or sleigh-drives on the mountain ways
+Defy the winter weather,--
+
+"In sugar-camps, when south and warm
+The winds of March are blowing,
+And sweetly from its thawing veins
+The maple's blood is flowing,--
+
+"In summer, where some lilied pond
+Its virgin zone is baring,
+Or where the ruddy autumn fire
+Lights up the apple-paring,--
+
+"The coarseness of a ruder time
+Her finer mirth displaces,
+A subtler sense of pleasure fills
+Each rustic sport she graces.
+
+"Her presence lends its warmth and health
+To all who come before it.
+If woman lost us Eden, such
+As she alone restore it.
+
+"For larger life and wiser aims
+The farmer is her debtor;
+Who holds to his another's heart
+Must needs be worse or better.
+
+"Through her his civic service shows
+A purer-toned ambition;
+No double consciousness divides
+The man and politician.
+
+"In party's doubtful ways he trusts
+Her instincts to determine;
+At the loud polls, the thought of her
+Recalls Christ's Mountain Sermon.
+
+"He owns her logic of the heart,
+And wisdom of unreason,
+Supplying, while he doubts and weighs,
+The needed word in season.
+
+"He sees with pride her richer thought,
+Her fancy's freer ranges;
+And love thus deepened to respect
+Is proof against all changes.
+
+"And if she walks at ease in ways
+His feet are slow to travel,
+And if she reads with cultured eyes
+What his may scarce unravel,
+
+"Still clearer, for her keener sight
+Of beauty and of wonder,
+He learns the meaning of the hills
+He dwelt from childhood under.
+
+"And higher, warmed with summer lights,
+Or winter-crowned and hoary,
+The ridged horizon lifts for him
+Its inner veils of glory.
+
+"He has his own free, bookless lore,
+The lessons nature taught him,
+The wisdom which the woods and hills
+And toiling men have brought him:
+
+"The steady force of will whereby
+Her flexile grace seems sweeter;
+The sturdy counterpoise which makes
+Her woman's life completer.
+
+"A latent fire of soul which lacks
+No breath of love to fan it;
+And wit, that, like his native brooks,
+Plays over solid granite.
+
+"How dwarfed against his manliness
+She sees the poor pretension,
+The wants, the aims, the follies, born
+Of fashion and convention.
+
+"How life behind its accidents
+Stands strong and self-sustaining,
+The human fact transcending all
+The losing and the gaining.
+
+"And so in grateful interchange
+Of teacher and of hearer,
+Their lives their true distinctness keep
+While daily drawing nearer.
+
+"And if the husband or the wife
+In home's strong light discovers
+Such slight defaults as failed to meet
+The blinded eyes of lovers,
+
+"Why need we care to ask?--who dreams
+Without their thorns of roses,
+Or wonders that the truest steel
+The readiest spark discloses?
+
+"For still in mutual sufferance lies
+The secret of true living;
+Love scarce is love that never knows
+The sweetness of forgiving.
+
+"We send the Squire to General Court,
+He takes his young wife thither;
+No prouder man election day
+Rides through the sweet June weather.
+
+"He sees with eyes of manly trust
+All hearts to her inclining;
+Not less for him his household light
+That others share its shining."
+
+Thus, while my hostess spake, there grew
+Before me, warmer tinted
+And outlined with a tenderer grace,
+The picture that she hinted.
+
+The sunset smouldered as we drove
+Beneath the deep hill-shadows.
+Below us wreaths of white fog walked
+Like ghosts the haunted meadows.
+
+Sounding the summer night, the stars
+Dropped down their golden plummets;
+The pale arc of the Northern lights
+Rose o'er the mountain summits,
+
+Until, at last, beneath its bridge,
+We heard the Bearcamp flowing,
+And saw across the mapled lawn
+The welcome home lights glowing.
+
+And, musing on the tale I heard,
+'T were well, thought I, if often
+To rugged farm-life came the gift
+To harmonize and soften;
+
+If more and more we found the troth
+Of fact and fancy plighted,
+And culture's charm and labor's strength
+In rural homes united,--
+
+The simple life, the homely hearth,
+With beauty's sphere surrounding,
+And blessing toil where toil abounds
+With graces more abounding.
+1868.
+
+
+
+
+THE DOLE OF JARL THORKELL.
+
+THE land was pale with famine
+And racked with fever-pain;
+The frozen fiords were fishless,
+The earth withheld her grain.
+
+Men saw the boding Fylgja
+Before them come and go,
+And, through their dreams, the Urdarmoon
+From west to east sailed slow.
+
+Jarl Thorkell of Thevera
+At Yule-time made his vow;
+On Rykdal's holy Doom-stone
+He slew to Frey his cow.
+
+To bounteous Frey he slew her;
+To Skuld, the younger Norn,
+Who watches over birth and death,
+He gave her calf unborn.
+
+And his little gold-haired daughter
+Took up the sprinkling-rod,
+And smeared with blood the temple
+And the wide lips of the god.
+
+Hoarse below, the winter water
+Ground its ice-blocks o'er and o'er;
+Jets of foam, like ghosts of dead waves,
+Rose and fell along the shore.
+
+The red torch of the Jokul,
+Aloft in icy space,
+Shone down on the bloody Horg-stones
+And the statue's carven face.
+
+And closer round and grimmer
+Beneath its baleful light
+The Jotun shapes of mountains
+Came crowding through the night.
+
+The gray-haired Hersir trembled
+As a flame by wind is blown;
+A weird power moved his white lips,
+And their voice was not his own.
+
+"The AEsir thirst!" he muttered;
+"The gods must have more blood
+Before the tun shall blossom
+Or fish shall fill the flood.
+
+"The AEsir thirst and hunger,
+And hence our blight and ban;
+The mouths of the strong gods water
+For the flesh and blood of man!
+
+"Whom shall we give the strong ones?
+Not warriors, sword on thigh;
+But let the nursling infant
+And bedrid old man die."
+
+"So be it!" cried the young men,
+"There needs nor doubt nor parle."
+But, knitting hard his red brows,
+In silence stood the Jarl.
+
+A sound of woman's weeping
+At the temple door was heard,
+But the old men bowed their white heads,
+And answered not a word.
+
+Then the Dream-wife of Thingvalla,
+A Vala young and fair,
+Sang softly, stirring with her breath
+The veil of her loose hair.
+
+She sang: "The winds from Alfheim
+Bring never sound of strife;
+The gifts for Frey the meetest
+Are not of death, but life.
+
+"He loves the grass-green meadows,
+The grazing kine's sweet breath;
+He loathes your bloody Horg-stones,
+Your gifts that smell of death.
+
+"No wrong by wrong is righted,
+No pain is cured by pain;
+The blood that smokes from Doom-rings
+Falls back in redder rain.
+
+"The gods are what you make them,
+As earth shall Asgard prove;
+And hate will come of hating,
+And love will come of love.
+
+"Make dole of skyr and black bread
+That old and young may live;
+And look to Frey for favor
+When first like Frey you give.
+
+"Even now o'er Njord's sea-meadows
+The summer dawn begins
+The tun shall have its harvest,
+The fiord its glancing fins."
+
+Then up and swore Jarl Thorkell
+"By Gimli and by Hel,
+O Vala of Thingvalla,
+Thou singest wise and well!
+
+"Too dear the AEsir's favors
+Bought with our children's lives;
+Better die than shame in living
+Our mothers and our wives.
+
+"The full shall give his portion
+To him who hath most need;
+Of curdled skyr and black bread,
+Be daily dole decreed."
+
+He broke from off his neck-chain
+Three links of beaten gold;
+And each man, at his bidding,
+Brought gifts for young and old.
+
+Then mothers nursed their children,
+And daughters fed their sires,
+And Health sat down with Plenty
+Before the next Yule fires.
+
+The Horg-stones stand in Rykdal;
+The Doom-ring still remains;
+But the snows of a thousand winters
+Have washed away the stains.
+
+Christ ruleth now; the Asir
+Have found their twilight dim;
+And, wiser than she dreamed, of old
+The Vala sang of Him
+1868.
+
+
+
+
+THE TWO RABBINS.
+
+THE Rabbi Nathan two-score years and ten
+Walked blameless through the evil world, and then,
+Just as the almond blossomed in his hair,
+Met a temptation all too strong to bear,
+And miserably sinned. So, adding not
+Falsehood to guilt, he left his seat, and taught
+No more among the elders, but went out
+From the great congregation girt about
+With sackcloth, and with ashes on his head,
+Making his gray locks grayer. Long he prayed,
+Smiting his breast; then, as the Book he laid
+Open before him for the Bath-Col's choice,
+Pausing to hear that Daughter of a Voice,
+Behold the royal preacher's words: "A friend
+Loveth at all times, yea, unto the end;
+And for the evil day thy brother lives."
+Marvelling, he said: "It is the Lord who gives
+Counsel in need. At Ecbatana dwells
+Rabbi Ben Isaac, who all men excels
+In righteousness and wisdom, as the trees
+Of Lebanon the small weeds that the bees
+Bow with their weight. I will arise, and lay
+My sins before him."
+
+ And he went his way
+Barefooted, fasting long, with many prayers;
+But even as one who, followed unawares,
+Suddenly in the darkness feels a hand
+Thrill with its touch his own, and his cheek fanned
+By odors subtly sweet, and whispers near
+Of words he loathes, yet cannot choose but hear,
+So, while the Rabbi journeyed, chanting low
+The wail of David's penitential woe,
+Before him still the old temptation came,
+And mocked him with the motion and the shame
+Of such desires that, shuddering, he abhorred
+Himself; and, crying mightily to the Lord
+To free his soul and cast the demon out,
+Smote with his staff the blankness round about.
+
+At length, in the low light of a spent day,
+The towers of Ecbatana far away
+Rose on the desert's rim; and Nathan, faint
+And footsore, pausing where for some dead saint
+The faith of Islam reared a domed tomb,
+Saw some one kneeling in the shadow, whom
+He greeted kindly: "May the Holy One
+Answer thy prayers, O stranger!" Whereupon
+The shape stood up with a loud cry, and then,
+Clasped in each other's arms, the two gray men
+Wept, praising Him whose gracious providence
+Made their paths one. But straightway, as the sense
+Of his transgression smote him, Nathan tore
+Himself away: "O friend beloved, no more
+Worthy am I to touch thee, for I came,
+Foul from my sins, to tell thee all my shame.
+Haply thy prayers, since naught availeth mine,
+May purge my soul, and make it white like thine.
+Pity me, O Ben Isaac, I have sinned!"
+
+Awestruck Ben Isaac stood. The desert wind
+Blew his long mantle backward, laying bare
+The mournful secret of his shirt of hair.
+"I too, O friend, if not in act," he said,
+"In thought have verily sinned. Hast thou not read,
+'Better the eye should see than that desire
+Should wander?' Burning with a hidden fire
+That tears and prayers quench not, I come to thee
+For pity and for help, as thou to me.
+Pray for me, O my friend!" But Nathan cried,
+"Pray thou for me, Ben Isaac!"
+
+ Side by side
+In the low sunshine by the turban stone
+They knelt; each made his brother's woe his own,
+Forgetting, in the agony and stress
+Of pitying love, his claim of selfishness;
+Peace, for his friend besought, his own became;
+His prayers were answered in another's name;
+And, when at last they rose up to embrace,
+Each saw God's pardon in his brother's face!
+
+Long after, when his headstone gathered moss,
+Traced on the targum-marge of Onkelos
+In Rabbi Nathan's hand these words were read:
+"_Hope not the cure of sin till Self is dead;
+Forget it in love's service, and the debt
+Thou, canst not pay the angels shall forget;
+Heaven's gate is shut to him who comes alone;
+Save thou a soul, and it shall save thy own!_"
+1868.
+
+
+
+
+NOREMBEGA.
+
+Norembega, or Norimbegue, is the name given by early French fishermen
+and explorers to a fabulous country south of Cape Breton, first
+discovered by Verrazzani in 1524. It was supposed to have a magnificent
+city of the same name on a great river, probably the Penobscot. The site
+of this barbaric city is laid down on a map published at Antwerp in
+1570. In 1604 Champlain sailed in search of the Northern Eldorado,
+twenty-two leagues up the Penobscot from the Isle Haute. He supposed the
+river to be that of Norembega, but wisely came to the conclusion that
+those travellers who told of the great city had never seen it. He saw no
+evidences of anything like civilization, but mentions the finding of a
+cross, very old and mossy, in the woods.
+
+THE winding way the serpent takes
+The mystic water took,
+From where, to count its beaded lakes,
+The forest sped its brook.
+
+A narrow space 'twixt shore and shore,
+For sun or stars to fall,
+While evermore, behind, before,
+Closed in the forest wall.
+
+The dim wood hiding underneath
+Wan flowers without a name;
+Life tangled with decay and death,
+League after league the same.
+
+Unbroken over swamp and hill
+The rounding shadow lay,
+Save where the river cut at will
+A pathway to the day.
+
+Beside that track of air and light,
+Weak as a child unweaned,
+At shut of day a Christian knight
+Upon his henchman leaned.
+
+The embers of the sunset's fires
+Along the clouds burned down;
+"I see," he said, "the domes and spires
+Of Norembega town."
+
+"Alack! the domes, O master mine,
+Are golden clouds on high;
+Yon spire is but the branchless pine
+That cuts the evening sky."
+
+"Oh, hush and hark! What sounds are these
+But chants and holy hymns?"
+"Thou hear'st the breeze that stirs the trees
+Though all their leafy limbs."
+
+"Is it a chapel bell that fills
+The air with its low tone?"
+"Thou hear'st the tinkle of the rills,
+The insect's vesper drone."
+
+"The Christ be praised!--He sets for me
+A blessed cross in sight!"
+"Now, nay, 't is but yon blasted tree
+With two gaunt arms outright!"
+
+"Be it wind so sad or tree so stark,
+It mattereth not, my knave;
+Methinks to funeral hymns I hark,
+The cross is for my grave!
+
+"My life is sped; I shall not see
+My home-set sails again;
+The sweetest eyes of Normandie
+Shall watch for me in vain.
+
+"Yet onward still to ear and eye
+The baffling marvel calls;
+I fain would look before I die
+On Norembega's walls.
+
+"So, haply, it shall be thy part
+At Christian feet to lay
+The mystery of the desert's heart
+My dead hand plucked away.
+
+"Leave me an hour of rest; go thou
+And look from yonder heights;
+Perchance the valley even now
+Is starred with city lights."
+
+The henchman climbed the nearest hill,
+He saw nor tower nor town,
+But, through the drear woods, lone and still,
+The river rolling down.
+
+He heard the stealthy feet of things
+Whose shapes he could not see,
+A flutter as of evil wings,
+The fall of a dead tree.
+
+The pines stood black against the moon,
+A sword of fire beyond;
+He heard the wolf howl, and the loon
+Laugh from his reedy pond.
+
+He turned him back: "O master dear,
+We are but men misled;
+And thou hast sought a city here
+To find a grave instead."
+
+"As God shall will! what matters where
+A true man's cross may stand,
+So Heaven be o'er it here as there
+In pleasant Norman land?
+
+"These woods, perchance, no secret hide
+Of lordly tower and hall;
+Yon river in its wanderings wide
+Has washed no city wall;
+
+"Yet mirrored in the sullen stream
+The holy stars are given
+Is Norembega, then, a dream
+Whose waking is in Heaven?
+
+"No builded wonder of these lands
+My weary eyes shall see;
+A city never made with hands
+Alone awaiteth me--
+
+"'_Urbs Syon mystica_;' I see
+Its mansions passing fair,
+'_Condita caelo_;' let me be,
+Dear Lord, a dweller there!"
+
+Above the dying exile hung
+The vision of the bard,
+As faltered on his failing tongue
+The song of good Bernard.
+
+The henchman dug at dawn a grave
+Beneath the hemlocks brown,
+And to the desert's keeping gave
+The lord of fief and town.
+
+Years after, when the Sieur Champlain
+Sailed up the unknown stream,
+And Norembega proved again
+A shadow and a dream,
+
+He found the Norman's nameless grave
+Within the hemlock's shade,
+And, stretching wide its arms to save,
+The sign that God had made,
+
+The cross-boughed tree that marked the spot
+And made it holy ground
+He needs the earthly city not
+Who hath the heavenly found.
+1869.
+
+
+
+
+MIRIAM.
+
+TO FREDERICK A. P. BARNARD.
+
+THE years are many since, in youth and hope,
+Under the Charter Oak, our horoscope
+We drew thick-studded with all favoring stars.
+Now, with gray beards, and faces seamed with scars
+From life's hard battle, meeting once again,
+We smile, half sadly, over dreams so vain;
+Knowing, at last, that it is not in man
+Who walketh to direct his steps, or plan
+His permanent house of life. Alike we loved
+The muses' haunts, and all our fancies moved
+To measures of old song. How since that day
+Our feet have parted from the path that lay
+So fair before us! Rich, from lifelong search
+Of truth, within thy Academic porch
+Thou sittest now, lord of a realm of fact,
+Thy servitors the sciences exact;
+Still listening with thy hand on Nature's keys,
+To hear the Samian's spheral harmonies
+And rhythm of law. I called from dream and song,
+Thank God! so early to a strife so long,
+That, ere it closed, the black, abundant hair
+Of boyhood rested silver-sown and spare
+On manhood's temples, now at sunset-chime
+Tread with fond feet the path of morning time.
+And if perchance too late I linger where
+The flowers have ceased to blow, and trees are bare,
+Thou, wiser in thy choice, wilt scarcely blame
+The friend who shields his folly with thy name.
+AMESBURY, 10th mo., 1870.
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+One Sabbath day my friend and I
+After the meeting, quietly
+Passed from the crowded village lanes,
+White with dry dust for lack of rains,
+And climbed the neighboring slope, with feet
+Slackened and heavy from the heat,
+Although the day was wellnigh done,
+And the low angle of the sun
+Along the naked hillside cast
+Our shadows as of giants vast.
+We reached, at length, the topmost swell,
+Whence, either way, the green turf fell
+In terraces of nature down
+To fruit-hung orchards, and the town
+With white, pretenceless houses, tall
+Church-steeples, and, o'ershadowing all,
+Huge mills whose windows had the look
+Of eager eyes that ill could brook
+The Sabbath rest. We traced the track
+Of the sea-seeking river back,
+Glistening for miles above its mouth,
+Through the long valley to the south,
+And, looking eastward, cool to view,
+Stretched the illimitable blue
+Of ocean, from its curved coast-line;
+Sombred and still, the warm sunshine
+Filled with pale gold-dust all the reach
+Of slumberous woods from hill to beach,--
+Slanted on walls of thronged retreats
+From city toil and dusty streets,
+On grassy bluff, and dune of sand,
+And rocky islands miles from land;
+Touched the far-glancing sails, and showed
+White lines of foam where long waves flowed
+Dumb in the distance. In the north,
+Dim through their misty hair, looked forth
+The space-dwarfed mountains to the sea,
+From mystery to mystery!
+
+So, sitting on that green hill-slope,
+We talked of human life, its hope
+And fear, and unsolved doubts, and what
+It might have been, and yet was not.
+And, when at last the evening air
+Grew sweeter for the bells of prayer
+Ringing in steeples far below,
+We watched the people churchward go,
+Each to his place, as if thereon
+The true shekinah only shone;
+And my friend queried how it came
+To pass that they who owned the same
+Great Master still could not agree
+To worship Him in company.
+Then, broadening in his thought, he ran
+Over the whole vast field of man,--
+The varying forms of faith and creed
+That somehow served the holders' need;
+In which, unquestioned, undenied,
+Uncounted millions lived and died;
+The bibles of the ancient folk,
+Through which the heart of nations spoke;
+The old moralities which lent
+To home its sweetness and content,
+And rendered possible to bear
+The life of peoples everywhere
+And asked if we, who boast of light,
+Claim not a too exclusive right
+To truths which must for all be meant,
+Like rain and sunshine freely sent.
+In bondage to the letter still,
+We give it power to cramp and kill,--
+To tax God's fulness with a scheme
+Narrower than Peter's house-top dream,
+His wisdom and his love with plans
+Poor and inadequate as man's.
+It must be that He witnesses
+Somehow to all men that He is
+That something of His saving grace
+Reaches the lowest of the race,
+Who, through strange creed and rite, may draw
+The hints of a diviner law.
+We walk in clearer light;--but then,
+Is He not God?--are they not men?
+Are His responsibilities
+For us alone and not for these?
+
+And I made answer: "Truth is one;
+And, in all lands beneath the sun,
+Whoso hath eyes to see may see
+The tokens of its unity.
+No scroll of creed its fulness wraps,
+We trace it not by school-boy maps,
+Free as the sun and air it is
+Of latitudes and boundaries.
+In Vedic verse, in dull Koran,
+Are messages of good to man;
+The angels to our Aryan sires
+Talked by the earliest household fires;
+The prophets of the elder day,
+The slant-eyed sages of Cathay,
+Read not the riddle all amiss
+Of higher life evolved from this.
+
+"Nor doth it lessen what He taught,
+Or make the gospel Jesus brought
+Less precious, that His lips retold
+Some portion of that truth of old;
+Denying not the proven seers,
+The tested wisdom of the years;
+Confirming with his own impress
+The common law of righteousness.
+We search the world for truth; we cull
+The good, the pure, the beautiful,
+From graven stone and written scroll,
+From all old flower-fields of the soul;
+And, weary seekers of the best,
+We come back laden from our quest,
+To find that all the sages said
+Is in the Book our mothers read,
+And all our treasure of old thought
+In His harmonious fulness wrought
+Who gathers in one sheaf complete
+The scattered blades of God's sown wheat,
+The common growth that maketh good
+His all-embracing Fatherhood.
+
+"Wherever through the ages rise
+The altars of self-sacrifice,
+Where love its arms has opened wide,
+Or man for man has calmly died,
+I see the same white wings outspread
+That hovered o'er the Master's head!
+Up from undated time they come,
+The martyr souls of heathendom,
+And to His cross and passion bring
+Their fellowship of suffering.
+I trace His presence in the blind
+Pathetic gropings of my kind,--
+In prayers from sin and sorrow wrung,
+In cradle-hymns of life they sung,
+Each, in its measure, but a part
+Of the unmeasured Over-Heart;
+And with a stronger faith confess
+The greater that it owns the less.
+Good cause it is for thankfulness
+That the world-blessing of His life
+With the long past is not at strife;
+That the great marvel of His death
+To the one order witnesseth,
+No doubt of changeless goodness wakes,
+No link of cause and sequence breaks,
+But, one with nature, rooted is
+In the eternal verities;
+Whereby, while differing in degree
+As finite from infinity,
+The pain and loss for others borne,
+Love's crown of suffering meekly worn,
+The life man giveth for his friend
+Become vicarious in the end;
+Their healing place in nature take,
+And make life sweeter for their sake.
+
+"So welcome I from every source
+The tokens of that primal Force,
+Older than heaven itself, yet new
+As the young heart it reaches to,
+Beneath whose steady impulse rolls
+The tidal wave of human souls;
+Guide, comforter, and inward word,
+The eternal spirit of the Lord
+Nor fear I aught that science brings
+From searching through material things;
+Content to let its glasses prove,
+Not by the letter's oldness move,
+The myriad worlds on worlds that course
+The spaces of the universe;
+Since everywhere the Spirit walks
+The garden of the heart, and talks
+With man, as under Eden's trees,
+In all his varied languages.
+Why mourn above some hopeless flaw
+In the stone tables of the law,
+When scripture every day afresh
+Is traced on tablets of the flesh?
+By inward sense, by outward signs,
+God's presence still the heart divines;
+Through deepest joy of Him we learn,
+In sorest grief to Him we turn,
+And reason stoops its pride to share
+The child-like instinct of a prayer."
+
+And then, as is my wont, I told
+A story of the days of old,
+Not found in printed books,--in sooth,
+A fancy, with slight hint of truth,
+Showing how differing faiths agree
+In one sweet law of charity.
+Meanwhile the sky had golden grown,
+Our faces in its glory shone;
+But shadows down the valley swept,
+And gray below the ocean slept,
+As time and space I wandered o'er
+To tread the Mogul's marble floor,
+And see a fairer sunset fall
+On Jumna's wave and Agra's wall.
+
+The good Shah Akbar (peace be his alway!)
+Came forth from the Divan at close of day
+Bowed with the burden of his many cares,
+Worn with the hearing of unnumbered prayers,--
+Wild cries for justice, the importunate
+Appeals of greed and jealousy and hate,
+And all the strife of sect and creed and rite,
+Santon and Gouroo waging holy fight
+For the wise monarch, claiming not to be
+Allah's avenger, left his people free,
+With a faint hope, his Book scarce justified,
+That all the paths of faith, though severed wide,
+O'er which the feet of prayerful reverence passed,
+Met at the gate of Paradise at last.
+
+He sought an alcove of his cool hareem,
+Where, far beneath, he heard the Jumna's stream
+Lapse soft and low along his palace wall,
+And all about the cool sound of the fall
+Of fountains, and of water circling free
+Through marble ducts along the balcony;
+The voice of women in the distance sweet,
+And, sweeter still, of one who, at his feet,
+Soothed his tired ear with songs of a far land
+Where Tagus shatters on the salt sea-sand
+The mirror of its cork-grown hills of drouth
+And vales of vine, at Lisbon's harbor-mouth.
+
+The date-palms rustled not; the peepul laid
+Its topmost boughs against the balustrade,
+Motionless as the mimic leaves and vines
+That, light and graceful as the shawl-designs
+Of Delhi or Umritsir, twined in stone;
+And the tired monarch, who aside had thrown
+The day's hard burden, sat from care apart,
+And let the quiet steal into his heart
+From the still hour. Below him Agra slept,
+By the long light of sunset overswept
+The river flowing through a level land,
+By mango-groves and banks of yellow sand,
+Skirted with lime and orange, gay kiosks,
+Fountains at play, tall minarets of mosques,
+Fair pleasure-gardens, with their flowering trees
+Relieved against the mournful cypresses;
+And, air-poised lightly as the blown sea-foam,
+The marble wonder of some holy dome
+Hung a white moonrise over the still wood,
+Glassing its beauty in a stiller flood.
+
+Silent the monarch gazed, until the night
+Swift-falling hid the city from his sight;
+Then to the woman at his feet he said
+"Tell me, O Miriam, something thou hast read
+In childhood of the Master of thy faith,
+Whom Islam also owns. Our Prophet saith
+'He was a true apostle, yea, a Word
+And Spirit sent before me from the Lord.'
+Thus the Book witnesseth; and well I know
+By what thou art, O dearest, it is so.
+As the lute's tone the maker's hand betrays,
+The sweet disciple speaks her Master's praise."
+
+Then Miriam, glad of heart, (for in some sort
+She cherished in the Moslem's liberal court
+The sweet traditions of a Christian child;
+And, through her life of sense, the undefiled
+And chaste ideal of the sinless One
+Gazed on her with an eye she might not shun,--
+The sad, reproachful look of pity, born
+Of love that hath no part in wrath or scorn,)
+Began, with low voice and moist eyes, to tell
+Of the all-loving Christ, and what befell
+When the fierce zealots, thirsting for her blood,
+Dragged to his feet a shame of womanhood.
+How, when his searching answer pierced within
+Each heart, and touched the secret of its sin,
+And her accusers fled his face before,
+He bade the poor one go and sin no more.
+And Akbar said, after a moment's thought,
+"Wise is the lesson by thy prophet taught;
+Woe unto him who judges and forgets
+What hidden evil his own heart besets!
+Something of this large charity I find
+In all the sects that sever human kind;
+I would to Allah that their lives agreed
+More nearly with the lesson of their creed!
+Those yellow Lamas who at Meerut pray
+By wind and water power, and love to say
+'He who forgiveth not shall, unforgiven,
+Fail of the rest of Buddha,' and who even
+Spare the black gnat that stings them, vex my ears
+With the poor hates and jealousies and fears
+Nursed in their human hives. That lean, fierce priest
+Of thy own people, (be his heart increased
+By Allah's love!) his black robes smelling yet
+Of Goa's roasted Jews, have I not met
+Meek-faced, barefooted, crying in the street
+The saying of his prophet true and sweet,--
+'He who is merciful shall mercy meet!'"
+
+But, next day, so it chanced, as night began
+To fall, a murmur through the hareem ran
+That one, recalling in her dusky face
+The full-lipped, mild-eyed beauty of a race
+Known as the blameless Ethiops of Greek song,
+Plotting to do her royal master wrong,
+Watching, reproachful of the lingering light,
+The evening shadows deepen for her flight,
+Love-guided, to her home in a far land,
+Now waited death at the great Shah's command.
+Shapely as that dark princess for whose smile
+A world was bartered, daughter of the Nile
+Herself, and veiling in her large, soft eyes
+The passion and the languor of her skies,
+The Abyssinian knelt low at the feet
+Of her stern lord: "O king, if it be meet,
+And for thy honor's sake," she said, "that I,
+Who am the humblest of thy slaves, should die,
+I will not tax thy mercy to forgive.
+Easier it is to die than to outlive
+All that life gave me,--him whose wrong of thee
+Was but the outcome of his love for me,
+Cherished from childhood, when, beneath the shade
+Of templed Axum, side by side we played.
+Stolen from his arms, my lover followed me
+Through weary seasons over land and sea;
+And two days since, sitting disconsolate
+Within the shadow of the hareem gate,
+Suddenly, as if dropping from the sky,
+Down from the lattice of the balcony
+Fell the sweet song by Tigre's cowherds sung
+In the old music of his native tongue.
+He knew my voice, for love is quick of ear,
+Answering in song.
+
+ This night he waited near
+To fly with me. The fault was mine alone
+He knew thee not, he did but seek his own;
+Who, in the very shadow of thy throne,
+Sharing thy bounty, knowing all thou art,
+Greatest and best of men, and in her heart
+Grateful to tears for favor undeserved,
+Turned ever homeward, nor one moment swerved
+From her young love. He looked into my eyes,
+He heard my voice, and could not otherwise
+Than he hath done; yet, save one wild embrace
+When first we stood together face to face,
+And all that fate had done since last we met
+Seemed but a dream that left us children yet,
+He hath not wronged thee nor thy royal bed;
+Spare him, O king! and slay me in his stead!"
+
+But over Akbar's brows the frown hung black,
+And, turning to the eunuch at his back,
+"Take them," he said, "and let the Jumna's waves
+Hide both my shame and these accursed slaves!"
+His loathly length the unsexed bondman bowed
+"On my head be it!"
+
+ Straightway from a cloud
+Of dainty shawls and veils of woven mist
+The Christian Miriam rose, and, stooping, kissed
+The monarch's hand. Loose down her shoulders bare
+Swept all the rippled darkness of her hair,
+Veiling the bosom that, with high, quick swell
+Of fear and pity, through it rose and fell.
+
+"Alas!" she cried, "hast thou forgotten quite
+The words of Him we spake of yesternight?
+Or thy own prophet's, 'Whoso doth endure
+And pardon, of eternal life is sure'?
+O great and good! be thy revenge alone
+Felt in thy mercy to the erring shown;
+Let thwarted love and youth their pardon plead,
+Who sinned but in intent, and not in deed!"
+
+One moment the strong frame of Akbar shook
+With the great storm of passion. Then his look
+Softened to her uplifted face, that still
+Pleaded more strongly than all words, until
+Its pride and anger seemed like overblown,
+Spent clouds of thunder left to tell alone
+Of strife and overcoming. With bowed head,
+And smiting on his bosom: "God," he said,
+"Alone is great, and let His holy name
+Be honored, even to His servant's shame!
+Well spake thy prophet, Miriam,--he alone
+Who hath not sinned is meet to cast a stone
+At such as these, who here their doom await,
+Held like myself in the strong grasp of fate.
+They sinned through love, as I through love forgive;
+Take them beyond my realm, but let them live!"
+
+And, like a chorus to the words of grace,
+The ancient Fakir, sitting in his place,
+Motionless as an idol and as grim,
+In the pavilion Akbar built for him
+Under the court-yard trees, (for he was wise,
+Knew Menu's laws, and through his close-shut eyes
+Saw things far off, and as an open book
+Into the thoughts of other men could look,)
+Began, half chant, half howling, to rehearse
+The fragment of a holy Vedic verse;
+And thus it ran: "He who all things forgives
+Conquers himself and all things else, and lives
+Above the reach of wrong or hate or fear,
+Calm as the gods, to whom he is most dear."
+
+Two leagues from Agra still the traveller sees
+The tomb of Akbar through its cypress-trees;
+And, near at hand, the marble walls that hide
+The Christian Begum sleeping at his side.
+And o'er her vault of burial (who shall tell
+If it be chance alone or miracle?)
+The Mission press with tireless hand unrolls
+The words of Jesus on its lettered scrolls,--
+Tells, in all tongues, the tale of mercy o'er,
+And bids the guilty, "Go and sin no more!"
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+It now was dew-fall; very still
+The night lay on the lonely hill,
+Down which our homeward steps we bent,
+And, silent, through great silence went,
+Save that the tireless crickets played
+Their long, monotonous serenade.
+A young moon, at its narrowest,
+Curved sharp against the darkening west;
+And, momently, the beacon's star,
+Slow wheeling o'er its rock afar,
+From out the level darkness shot
+One instant and again was not.
+And then my friend spake quietly
+The thought of both: "Yon crescent see!
+Like Islam's symbol-moon it gives
+Hints of the light whereby it lives
+Somewhat of goodness, something true
+From sun and spirit shining through
+All faiths, all worlds, as through the dark
+Of ocean shines the lighthouse spark,
+Attests the presence everywhere
+Of love and providential care.
+The faith the old Norse heart confessed
+In one dear name,--the hopefulest
+And tenderest heard from mortal lips
+In pangs of birth or death, from ships
+Ice-bitten in the winter sea,
+Or lisped beside a mother's knee,--
+The wiser world hath not outgrown,
+And the All-Father is our own!"
+
+
+
+
+NAUHAUGHT, THE DEACON.
+
+NAUHAUGHT, the Indian deacon, who of old
+Dwelt, poor but blameless, where his narrowing Cape
+Stretches its shrunk arm out to all the winds
+And the relentless smiting of the waves,
+Awoke one morning from a pleasant dream
+Of a good angel dropping in his hand
+A fair, broad gold-piece, in the name of God.
+
+He rose and went forth with the early day
+Far inland, where the voices of the waves
+Mellowed and Mingled with the whispering leaves,
+As, through the tangle of the low, thick woods,
+He searched his traps. Therein nor beast nor bird
+He found; though meanwhile in the reedy pools
+The otter plashed, and underneath the pines
+The partridge drummed: and as his thoughts went back
+To the sick wife and little child at home,
+What marvel that the poor man felt his faith
+Too weak to bear its burden,--like a rope
+That, strand by strand uncoiling, breaks above
+The hand that grasps it. "Even now, O Lord!
+Send me," he prayed, "the angel of my dream!
+Nauhaught is very poor; he cannot wait."
+
+Even as he spake he heard at his bare feet
+A low, metallic clink, and, looking down,
+He saw a dainty purse with disks of gold
+Crowding its silken net. Awhile he held
+The treasure up before his eyes, alone
+With his great need, feeling the wondrous coins
+Slide through his eager fingers, one by one.
+So then the dream was true. The angel brought
+One broad piece only; should he take all these?
+Who would be wiser, in the blind, dumb woods?
+The loser, doubtless rich, would scarcely miss
+This dropped crumb from a table always full.
+Still, while he mused, he seemed to hear the cry
+Of a starved child; the sick face of his wife
+Tempted him. Heart and flesh in fierce revolt
+Urged the wild license of his savage youth
+Against his later scruples. Bitter toil,
+Prayer, fasting, dread of blame, and pitiless eyes
+To watch his halting,--had he lost for these
+The freedom of the woods;--the hunting-grounds
+Of happy spirits for a walled-in heaven
+Of everlasting psalms? One healed the sick
+Very far off thousands of moons ago
+Had he not prayed him night and day to come
+And cure his bed-bound wife? Was there a hell?
+Were all his fathers' people writhing there--
+Like the poor shell-fish set to boil alive--
+Forever, dying never? If he kept
+This gold, so needed, would the dreadful God
+Torment him like a Mohawk's captive stuck
+With slow-consuming splinters? Would the saints
+And the white angels dance and laugh to see him
+Burn like a pitch-pine torch? His Christian garb
+Seemed falling from him; with the fear and shame
+Of Adam naked at the cool of day,
+He gazed around. A black snake lay in coil
+On the hot sand, a crow with sidelong eye
+Watched from a dead bough. All his Indian lore
+Of evil blending with a convert's faith
+In the supernal terrors of the Book,
+He saw the Tempter in the coiling snake
+And ominous, black-winged bird; and all the while
+The low rebuking of the distant waves
+Stole in upon him like the voice of God
+Among the trees of Eden. Girding up
+His soul's loins with a resolute hand, he thrust
+The base thought from him: "Nauhaught, be a man
+Starve, if need be; but, while you live, look out
+From honest eyes on all men, unashamed.
+God help me! I am deacon of the church,
+A baptized, praying Indian! Should I do
+This secret meanness, even the barken knots
+Of the old trees would turn to eyes to see it,
+The birds would tell of it, and all the leaves
+Whisper above me: 'Nauhaught is a thief!'
+The sun would know it, and the stars that hide
+Behind his light would watch me, and at night
+Follow me with their sharp, accusing eyes.
+Yea, thou, God, seest me!" Then Nauhaught drew
+Closer his belt of leather, dulling thus
+The pain of hunger, and walked bravely back
+To the brown fishing-hamlet by the sea;
+And, pausing at the inn-door, cheerily asked
+"Who hath lost aught to-day?"
+"I," said a voice;
+"Ten golden pieces, in a silken purse,
+My daughter's handiwork." He looked, and to
+One stood before him in a coat of frieze,
+And the glazed hat of a seafaring man,
+Shrewd-faced, broad-shouldered, with no trace of wings.
+Marvelling, he dropped within the stranger's hand
+The silken web, and turned to go his way.
+But the man said: "A tithe at least is yours;
+Take it in God's name as an honest man."
+And as the deacon's dusky fingers closed
+Over the golden gift, "Yea, in God's name
+I take it, with a poor man's thanks," he said.
+So down the street that, like a river of sand,
+Ran, white in sunshine, to the summer sea,
+He sought his home singing and praising God;
+And when his neighbors in their careless way
+Spoke of the owner of the silken purse--
+A Wellfleet skipper, known in every port
+That the Cape opens in its sandy wall--
+He answered, with a wise smile, to himself
+"I saw the angel where they see a man."
+1870.
+
+
+
+THE SISTERS.
+
+ANNIE and Rhoda, sisters twain,
+Woke in the night to the sound of rain,
+
+The rush of wind, the ramp and roar
+Of great waves climbing a rocky shore.
+
+Annie rose up in her bed-gown white,
+And looked out into the storm and night.
+
+"Hush, and hearken!" she cried in fear,
+"Hearest thou nothing, sister dear?"
+
+"I hear the sea, and the plash of rain,
+And roar of the northeast hurricane.
+
+"Get thee back to the bed so warm,
+No good comes of watching a storm.
+
+"What is it to thee, I fain would know,
+That waves are roaring and wild winds blow?
+
+"No lover of thine's afloat to miss
+The harbor-lights on a night like this."
+
+"But I heard a voice cry out my name,
+Up from the sea on the wind it came.
+
+"Twice and thrice have I heard it call,
+And the voice is the voice of Estwick Hall!"
+
+On her pillow the sister tossed her head.
+"Hall of the Heron is safe," she said.
+
+"In the tautest schooner that ever swam
+He rides at anchor in Anisquam.
+
+"And, if in peril from swamping sea
+Or lee shore rocks, would he call on thee?"
+
+But the girl heard only the wind and tide,
+And wringing her small white hands she cried,
+
+"O sister Rhoda, there's something wrong;
+I hear it again, so loud and long.
+
+"'Annie! Annie!' I hear it call,
+And the voice is the voice of Estwick Hall!"
+
+Up sprang the elder, with eyes aflame,
+"Thou liest! He never would call thy name!
+
+"If he did, I would pray the wind and sea
+To keep him forever from thee and me!"
+
+Then out of the sea blew a dreadful blast;
+Like the cry of a dying man it passed.
+
+The young girl hushed on her lips a groan,
+But through her tears a strange light shone,--
+
+The solemn joy of her heart's release
+To own and cherish its love in peace.
+
+"Dearest!" she whispered, under breath,
+"Life was a lie, but true is death.
+
+"The love I hid from myself away
+Shall crown me now in the light of day.
+
+"My ears shall never to wooer list,
+Never by lover my lips be kissed.
+
+"Sacred to thee am I henceforth,
+Thou in heaven and I on earth!"
+
+She came and stood by her sister's bed
+"Hall of the Heron is dead!" she said.
+
+"The wind and the waves their work have done,
+We shall see him no more beneath the sun.
+
+"Little will reek that heart of thine,
+It loved him not with a love like mine.
+
+"I, for his sake, were he but here,
+Could hem and 'broider thy bridal gear,
+
+"Though hands should tremble and eyes be wet,
+And stitch for stitch in my heart be set.
+
+"But now my soul with his soul I wed;
+Thine the living, and mine the dead!"
+1871.
+
+
+
+
+MARGUERITE.
+
+MASSACHUSETTS BAY, 1760.
+
+Upwards of one thousand of the Acadian peasants forcibly taken from
+their homes on the Gaspereau and Basin of Minas were assigned to the
+several towns of the Massachusetts colony, the children being bound by
+the authorities to service or labor.
+
+THE robins sang in the orchard, the buds into
+blossoms grew;
+Little of human sorrow the buds and the robins
+knew!
+Sick, in an alien household, the poor French
+neutral lay;
+Into her lonesome garret fell the light of the April
+day,
+Through the dusty window, curtained by the spider's
+warp and woof,
+On the loose-laid floor of hemlock, on oaken ribs
+of roof,
+The bedquilt's faded patchwork, the teacups on the
+stand,
+The wheel with flaxen tangle, as it dropped from
+her sick hand.
+
+What to her was the song of the robin, or warm
+morning light,
+As she lay in the trance of the dying, heedless of
+sound or sight?
+
+Done was the work of her bands, she had eaten her
+bitter bread;
+The world of the alien people lay behind her dim
+and dead.
+
+But her soul went back to its child-time; she saw
+the sun o'erflow
+With gold the Basin of Minas, and set over
+Gaspereau;
+
+The low, bare flats at ebb-tide, the rush of the sea
+at flood,
+Through inlet and creek and river, from dike to
+upland wood;
+
+The gulls in the red of morning, the fish-hawk's
+rise and fall,
+The drift of the fog in moonshine, over the dark
+coast-wall.
+
+She saw the face of her mother, she heard the song
+she sang;
+And far off, faintly, slowly, the bell for vespers
+rang.
+
+By her bed the hard-faced mistress sat, smoothing
+the wrinkled sheet,
+Peering into the face, so helpless, and feeling the
+ice-cold feet.
+
+With a vague remorse atoning for her greed and
+long abuse,
+By care no longer heeded and pity too late for use.
+
+Up the stairs of the garret softly the son of the
+mistress stepped,
+Leaned over the head-board, covering his face with
+his hands, and wept.
+
+Outspake the mother, who watched him sharply,
+with brow a-frown
+"What! love you the Papist, the beggar, the
+charge of the town?"
+
+Be she Papist or beggar who lies here, I know
+and God knows
+I love her, and fain would go with her wherever
+she goes!
+
+"O mother! that sweet face came pleading, for
+love so athirst.
+You saw but the town-charge; I knew her God's
+angel at first."
+
+Shaking her gray head, the mistress hushed down
+a bitter cry;
+And awed by the silence and shadow of death
+drawing nigh,
+
+She murmured a psalm of the Bible; but closer
+the young girl pressed,
+With the last of her life in her fingers, the cross
+to her breast.
+
+"My son, come away," cried the mother, her voice
+cruel grown.
+"She is joined to her idols, like Ephraim; let her
+alone!"
+
+But he knelt with his hand on her forehead, his
+lips to her ear,
+And he called back the soul that was passing
+"Marguerite, do you hear?"
+
+She paused on the threshold of Heaven; love, pity,
+surprise,
+Wistful, tender, lit up for an instant the cloud of
+her eyes.
+
+With his heart on his lips he kissed her, but never
+her cheek grew red,
+And the words the living long for he spake in the
+ear of the dead.
+
+And the robins sang in the orchard, where buds to
+blossoms grew;
+Of the folded hands and the still face never the
+robins knew!
+1871.
+
+
+
+
+THE ROBIN.
+MY old Welsh neighbor over the way
+Crept slowly out in the sun of spring,
+Pushed from her ears the locks of gray,
+And listened to hear the robin sing.
+
+Her grandson, playing at marbles, stopped,
+And, cruel in sport as boys will be,
+Tossed a stone at the bird, who hopped
+From bough to bough in the apple-tree.
+
+"Nay!" said the grandmother; "have you not heard,
+My poor, bad boy! of the fiery pit,
+And how, drop by drop, this merciful bird
+Carries the water that quenches it?
+
+"He brings cool dew in his little bill,
+And lets it fall on the souls of sin
+You can see the mark on his red breast still
+Of fires that scorch as he drops it in.
+
+"My poor Bron rhuddyn! my breast-burned bird,
+Singing so sweetly from limb to limb,
+Very dear to the heart of Our Lord
+Is he who pities the lost like Him!"
+
+"Amen!" I said to the beautiful myth;
+"Sing, bird of God, in my heart as well:
+Each good thought is a drop wherewith
+To cool and lessen the fires of hell.
+
+"Prayers of love like rain-drops fall,
+Tears of pity are cooling dew,
+And dear to the heart of Our Lord are all
+Who suffer like Him in the good they do!"
+1871.
+
+
+
+
+THE PENNSYLVANIA PILGRIM.
+
+INTRODUCTORY NOTE.
+
+THE beginning of German emigration to America may be traced to the
+personal influence of William Penn, who in 1677 visited the Continent,
+and made the acquaintance of an intelligent and highly cultivated circle
+of Pietists, or Mystics, who, reviving in the seventeenth century the
+spiritual faith and worship of Tauler and the "Friends of God" in the
+fourteenth, gathered about the pastor Spener, and the young and
+beautiful Eleonora Johanna Von Merlau. In this circle originated the
+Frankfort Land Company, which bought of William Penn, the Governor of
+Pennsylvania, a tract of land near the new city of Philadelphia. The
+company's agent in the New World was a rising young lawyer, Francis
+Daniel Pastorius, son of Judge Pastorius, of Windsheim, who, at the age
+of seventeen, entered the University of Altorf. He studied law at,
+Strasburg, Basle, and Jena, and at Ratisbon, the seat of the Imperial
+Government, obtained a practical knowledge of international polity.
+Successful in all his examinations and disputations, he received the
+degree of Doctor of Law at Nuremberg in 1676. In 1679 he was a
+law-lecturer at Frankfort, where he became deeply interested in the
+teachings of Dr. Spener. In 1680-81 he travelled in France, England,
+Ireland, and Italy with his friend Herr Von Rodeck. "I was," he says,
+"glad to enjoy again the company of my Christian friends, rather than be
+with Von Rodeck feasting and dancing." In 1683, in company with a small
+number of German Friends, he emigrated to America, settling upon the
+Frankfort Company's tract between the Schuylkill and the Delaware
+rivers. The township was divided into four hamlets, namely, Germantown,
+Krisheim, Crefield, and Sommerhausen. Soon after his arrival he united
+himself with the Society of Friends, and became one of its most able and
+devoted members, as well as the recognized head and lawgiver of the
+settlement. He married, two years after his arrival, Anneke (Anna),
+daughter of Dr. Klosterman, of Muhlheim. In the year 1688 he drew up a
+memorial against slaveholding, which was adopted by the Germantown
+Friends and sent up to the Monthly Meeting, and thence to the Yearly
+Meeting at Philadelphia. It is noteworthy as the first protest made by
+a religious body against Negro Slavery. The original document was
+discovered in 1844 by the Philadelphia antiquarian, Nathan Kite, and
+published in The Friend (Vol. XVIII. No. 16). It is a bold and direct
+appeal to the best instincts of the heart. "Have not," he asks, "these
+negroes as much right to fight for their freedom as you have to keep
+them slaves?" Under the wise direction of Pastorius, the German-town
+settlement grew and prospered. The inhabitants planted orchards and
+vineyards, and surrounded themselves with souvenirs of their old home.
+A large number of them were linen-weavers, as well as small farmers.
+The Quakers were the principal sect, but men of all religions were
+tolerated, and lived together in harmony. In 1692 Richard Frame
+published, in what he called verse, a Description of Pennsylvania, in
+which he alludes to the settlement:--
+
+ "The German town of which I spoke before,
+ Which is at least in length one mile or more,
+ Where lives High German people and Low Dutch,
+ Whose trade in weaving linen cloth is much,
+ --There grows the flax, as also you may know
+ That from the same they do divide the tow.
+ Their trade suits well their habitation,
+ We find convenience for their occupation."
+
+Pastorius seems to have been on intimate terms with William Penn, Thomas
+Lloyd, Chief Justice Logan, Thomas Story, and other leading men in the
+Province belonging to his own religious society, as also with Kelpius,
+the learned Mystic of the Wissahickon, with the pastor of the Swedes'
+church, and the leaders of the Mennonites. He wrote a description of
+Pennsylvania, which was published at Frankfort and Leipsic in 1700 and
+1701. His Lives of the Saints, etc., written in German and dedicated to
+Professor Schurmberg, his old teacher, was published in 1690. He left
+behind him many unpublished manuscripts covering a very wide range of
+subjects, most of which are now lost. One huge manuscript folio,
+entitled Hive Beestock, Melliotropheum Alucar, or Rusca Apium, still
+remains, containing one thousand pages with about one hundred lines to a
+page. It is a medley of knowledge and fancy, history, philosophy, and
+poetry, written in seven languages. A large portion of his poetry is
+devoted to the pleasures of gardening, the description of flowers, and
+the care of bees. The following specimen of his punning Latin is
+addressed to an orchard-pilferer:--
+
+ "Quisquis in haec furtim reptas viridaria nostra
+ Tangere fallaci poma caveto mane,
+ Si non obsequeris faxit Deus omne quod opto,
+ Cum malis nostris ut mala cuncta feras."
+
+Professor Oswald Seidensticker, to whose papers in Der Deutsche Pioneer
+and that able periodical the Penn Monthly, of Philadelphia, I am
+indebted for many of the foregoing facts in regard to the German
+pilgrims of the New World, thus closes his notice of Pastorius:--
+"No tombstone, not even a record of burial, indicates where his remains
+have found their last resting-place, and the pardonable desire to
+associate the homage due to this distinguished man with some visible
+memento can not be gratified. There is no reason to suppose that he was
+interred in any other place than the Friends' old burying-ground in
+Germantown, though the fact is not attested by any definite source of
+information. After all, this obliteration of the last trace of his
+earthly existence is but typical of what has overtaken the times which
+he represents; that Germantown which he founded, which saw him live and
+move, is at present but a quaint idyl of the past, almost a myth, barely
+remembered and little cared for by the keener race that has succeeded.
+The Pilgrims of Plymouth have not lacked historian and poet. Justice has
+been done to their faith, courage, and self-sacrifice, and to the mighty
+influence of their endeavors to establish righteousness on the earth.
+The Quaker pilgrims of Pennsylvania, seeking the same object by
+different means, have not been equally fortunate. The power of their
+testimony for truth and holiness, peace and freedom, enforced only by
+what Milton calls "the unresistible might of meekness," has been felt
+through two centuries in the amelioration of penal severities, the
+abolition of slavery, the reform of the erring, the relief of the poor
+and suffering,--felt, in brief, in every step of human progress. But of
+the men themselves, with the single exception of William Penn, scarcely
+anything is known. Contrasted, from the outset, with the stern,
+aggressive Puritans of New England, they have come to be regarded as
+"a feeble folk," with a personality as doubtful as their unrecorded
+graves. They were not soldiers, like Miles Standish; they had no figure
+so picturesque as Vane, no leader so rashly brave and haughty as
+Endicott. No Cotton Mather wrote their Magnalia; they had no awful drama
+of supernaturalism in which Satan and his angels were actors; and the
+only witch mentioned in their simple annals was a poor old Swedish
+woman, who, on complaint of her countrywomen, was tried and acquitted
+of everything but imbecility and folly. Nothing but common-place offices
+of civility came to pass between them and the Indians; indeed, their
+enemies taunted them with the fact that the savages did not regard them
+as Christians, but just such men as themselves. Yet it must be apparent
+to every careful observer of the progress of American civilization that
+its two principal currents had their sources in the entirely opposite
+directions of the Puritan and Quaker colonies. To use the words of a
+late writer: [1] "The historical forces, with which no others may be
+compared in their influence on the people, have been those of the
+Puritan and the Quaker. The strength of the one was in the confession of
+an invisible Presence, a righteous, eternal Will, which would establish
+righteousness on earth; and thence arose the conviction of a direct
+personal responsibility, which could be tempted by no external splendor
+and could be shaken by no internal agitation, and could not be evaded or
+transferred. The strength of the other was the witness in the human
+spirit to an eternal Word, an Inner Voice which spoke to each alone,
+while yet it spoke to every man; a Light which each was to follow, and
+which yet was the light of the world; and all other voices were silent
+before this, and the solitary path whither it led was more sacred than
+the worn ways of cathedral-aisles." It will be sufficiently apparent to
+the reader that, in the poem which follows, I have attempted nothing
+beyond a study of the life and times of the Pennsylvania colonist,--a
+simple picture of a noteworthy man and his locality. The colors of my
+sketch are all very sober, toned down to the quiet and dreamy atmosphere
+through which its subject is visible. Whether, in the glare and tumult
+of the present time, such a picture will find favor may well be
+questioned. I only know that it has beguiled for me some hours of
+weariness, and that, whatever may be its measure of public appreciation,
+it has been to me its own reward."
+ J. G. W.
+AMESBURY, 5th mo., 1872.
+
+
+HAIL to posterity!
+Hail, future men of Germanopolis!
+Let the young generations yet to be
+Look kindly upon this.
+Think how your fathers left their native land,--
+Dear German-land! O sacred hearths and homes!--
+
+And, where the wild beast roams,
+In patience planned
+New forest-homes beyond the mighty sea,
+There undisturbed and free
+To live as brothers of one family.
+What pains and cares befell,
+What trials and what fears,
+Remember, and wherein we have done well
+Follow our footsteps, men of coming years!
+Where we have failed to do
+Aright, or wisely live,
+Be warned by us, the better way pursue,
+And, knowing we were human, even as you,
+Pity us and forgive!
+Farewell, Posterity!
+Farewell, dear Germany
+Forevermore farewell!
+
+[From the Latin of Francis DANIEL PASTORIUS in
+the Germantown Records. 1688.]
+
+
+
+
+PRELUDE.
+I SING the Pilgrim of a softer clime
+And milder speech than those brave men's who brought
+To the ice and iron of our winter time
+A will as firm, a creed as stern, and wrought
+With one mailed hand, and with the other fought.
+Simply, as fits my theme, in homely rhyme
+I sing the blue-eyed German Spener taught,
+Through whose veiled, mystic faith the Inward Light,
+Steady and still, an easy brightness, shone,
+Transfiguring all things in its radiance white.
+The garland which his meekness never sought
+I bring him; over fields of harvest sown
+With seeds of blessing, now to ripeness grown,
+I bid the sower pass before the reapers' sight.
+
+ . . . . . . . . . .
+
+Never in tenderer quiet lapsed the day
+From Pennsylvania's vales of spring away,
+Where, forest-walled, the scattered hamlets lay
+
+Along the wedded rivers. One long bar
+Of purple cloud, on which the evening star
+Shone like a jewel on a scimitar,
+
+Held the sky's golden gateway. Through the deep
+Hush of the woods a murmur seemed to creep,
+The Schuylkill whispering in a voice of sleep.
+
+All else was still. The oxen from their ploughs
+Rested at last, and from their long day's browse
+Came the dun files of Krisheim's home-bound cows.
+
+And the young city, round whose virgin zone
+The rivers like two mighty arms were thrown,
+Marked by the smoke of evening fires alone,
+
+Lay in the distance, lovely even then
+With its fair women and its stately men
+Gracing the forest court of William Penn,
+
+Urban yet sylvan; in its rough-hewn frames
+Of oak and pine the dryads held their claims,
+And lent its streets their pleasant woodland names.
+
+Anna Pastorius down the leafy lane
+Looked city-ward, then stooped to prune again
+Her vines and simples, with a sigh of pain.
+
+For fast the streaks of ruddy sunset paled
+In the oak clearing, and, as daylight failed,
+Slow, overhead, the dusky night-birds sailed.
+
+Again she looked: between green walls of shade,
+With low-bent head as if with sorrow weighed,
+Daniel Pastorius slowly came and said,
+
+"God's peace be with thee, Anna!" Then he stood
+Silent before her, wrestling with the mood
+Of one who sees the evil and not good.
+
+"What is it, my Pastorius?" As she spoke,
+A slow, faint smile across his features broke,
+Sadder than tears. "Dear heart," he said, "our folk
+
+"Are even as others. Yea, our goodliest Friends
+Are frail; our elders have their selfish ends,
+And few dare trust the Lord to make amends
+
+"For duty's loss. So even our feeble word
+For the dumb slaves the startled meeting heard
+As if a stone its quiet waters stirred;
+
+"And, as the clerk ceased reading, there began
+A ripple of dissent which downward ran
+In widening circles, as from man to man.
+
+"Somewhat was said of running before sent,
+Of tender fear that some their guide outwent,
+Troublers of Israel. I was scarce intent
+
+"On hearing, for behind the reverend row
+Of gallery Friends, in dumb and piteous show,
+I saw, methought, dark faces full of woe.
+
+"And, in the spirit, I was taken where
+They toiled and suffered; I was made aware
+Of shame and wrath and anguish and despair!
+
+"And while the meeting smothered our poor plea
+With cautious phrase, a Voice there seemed to be,
+As ye have done to these ye do to me!'
+
+"So it all passed; and the old tithe went on
+Of anise, mint, and cumin, till the sun
+Set, leaving still the weightier work undone.
+
+"Help, for the good man faileth! Who is strong,
+If these be weak? Who shall rebuke the wrong,
+If these consent? How long, O Lord! how long!"
+
+He ceased; and, bound in spirit with the bound,
+With folded arms, and eyes that sought the ground,
+Walked musingly his little garden round.
+
+About him, beaded with the falling dew,
+Rare plants of power and herbs of healing grew,
+Such as Van Helmont and Agrippa knew.
+
+For, by the lore of Gorlitz' gentle sage,
+With the mild mystics of his dreamy age
+He read the herbal signs of nature's page,
+
+As once he heard in sweet Von Merlau's' bowers
+Fair as herself, in boyhood's happy hours,
+The pious Spener read his creed in flowers.
+
+"The dear Lord give us patience!" said his wife,
+Touching with finger-tip an aloe, rife
+With leaves sharp-pointed like an Aztec knife
+
+Or Carib spear, a gift to William Penn
+From the rare gardens of John Evelyn,
+Brought from the Spanish Main by merchantmen.
+
+"See this strange plant its steady purpose hold,
+And, year by year, its patient leaves unfold,
+Till the young eyes that watched it first are old.
+
+"But some time, thou hast told me, there shall come
+A sudden beauty, brightness, and perfume,
+The century-moulded bud shall burst in bloom.
+
+"So may the seed which hath been sown to-day
+Grow with the years, and, after long delay,
+Break into bloom, and God's eternal Yea!
+
+"Answer at last the patient prayers of them
+Who now, by faith alone, behold its stem
+Crowned with the flowers of Freedom's diadem.
+
+"Meanwhile, to feel and suffer, work and wait,
+Remains for us. The wrong indeed is great,
+But love and patience conquer soon or late."
+
+"Well hast thou said, my Anna!" Tenderer
+Than youth's caress upon the head of her
+Pastorius laid his hand. "Shall we demur
+
+"Because the vision tarrieth? In an hour
+We dream not of, the slow-grown bud may flower,
+And what was sown in weakness rise in power!"
+
+Then through the vine-draped door whose legend read,
+"Procul este profani!" Anna led
+To where their child upon his little bed
+
+Looked up and smiled. "Dear heart," she said, "if we
+Must bearers of a heavy burden be,
+Our boy, God willing, yet the day shall see
+
+"When from the gallery to the farthest seat,
+Slave and slave-owner shall no longer meet,
+But all sit equal at the Master's feet."
+
+On the stone hearth the blazing walnut block
+Set the low walls a-glimmer, showed the cock
+Rebuking Peter on the Van Wyck clock,
+
+Shone on old tomes of law and physic, side
+By side with Fox and Belimen, played at hide
+And seek with Anna, midst her household pride
+
+Of flaxen webs, and on the table, bare
+Of costly cloth or silver cup, but where,
+Tasting the fat shads of the Delaware,
+
+The courtly Penn had praised the goodwife's cheer,
+And quoted Horace o'er her home brewed beer,
+Till even grave Pastorius smiled to hear.
+
+In such a home, beside the Schuylkill's wave,
+He dwelt in peace with God and man, and gave
+Food to the poor and shelter to the slave.
+
+For all too soon the New World's scandal shamed
+The righteous code by Penn and Sidney framed,
+And men withheld the human rights they claimed.
+
+And slowly wealth and station sanction lent,
+And hardened avarice, on its gains intent,
+Stifled the inward whisper of dissent.
+
+Yet all the while the burden rested sore
+On tender hearts. At last Pastorius bore
+Their warning message to the Church's door
+
+In God's name; and the leaven of the word
+Wrought ever after in the souls who heard,
+And a dead conscience in its grave-clothes stirred
+
+To troubled life, and urged the vain excuse
+Of Hebrew custom, patriarchal use,
+Good in itself if evil in abuse.
+
+Gravely Pastorius listened, not the less
+Discerning through the decent fig-leaf dress
+Of the poor plea its shame of selfishness.
+
+One Scripture rule, at least, was unforgot;
+He hid the outcast, and betrayed him not;
+And, when his prey the human hunter sought,
+
+He scrupled not, while Anna's wise delay
+And proffered cheer prolonged the master's stay,
+To speed the black guest safely on his way.
+
+Yet, who shall guess his bitter grief who lends
+His life to some great cause, and finds his friends
+Shame or betray it for their private ends?
+
+How felt the Master when his chosen strove
+In childish folly for their seats above;
+And that fond mother, blinded by her love,
+
+Besought him that her sons, beside his throne,
+Might sit on either hand? Amidst his own
+A stranger oft, companionless and lone,
+
+God's priest and prophet stands. The martyr's pain
+Is not alone from scourge and cell and chain;
+Sharper the pang when, shouting in his train,
+
+His weak disciples by their lives deny
+The loud hosannas of their daily cry,
+And make their echo of his truth a lie.
+
+His forest home no hermit's cell he found,
+Guests, motley-minded, drew his hearth around,
+And held armed truce upon its neutral ground.
+
+There Indian chiefs with battle-bows unstrung,
+Strong, hero-limbed, like those whom Homer sung,
+Pastorius fancied, when the world was young,
+
+Came with their tawny women, lithe and tall,
+Like bronzes in his friend Von Rodeck's hall,
+Comely, if black, and not unpleasing all.
+
+There hungry folk in homespun drab and gray
+Drew round his board on Monthly Meeting day,
+Genial, half merry in their friendly way.
+
+Or, haply, pilgrims from the Fatherland,
+Weak, timid, homesick, slow to understand
+The New World's promise, sought his helping hand.
+
+Or painful Kelpius [13] from his hermit den
+By Wissahickon, maddest of good men,
+Dreamed o'er the Chiliast dreams of Petersen.
+
+Deep in the woods, where the small river slid
+Snake-like in shade, the Helmstadt Mystic hid,
+Weird as a wizard, over arts forbid,
+
+Reading the books of Daniel and of John,
+And Behmen's Morning-Redness, through the Stone
+Of Wisdom, vouchsafed to his eyes alone,
+
+Whereby he read what man ne'er read before,
+And saw the visions man shall see no more,
+Till the great angel, striding sea and shore,
+
+Shall bid all flesh await, on land or ships,
+The warning trump of the Apocalypse,
+Shattering the heavens before the dread eclipse.
+
+Or meek-eyed Mennonist his bearded chin
+Leaned o'er the gate; or Ranter, pure within,
+Aired his perfection in a world of sin.
+
+Or, talking of old home scenes, Op der Graaf
+Teased the low back-log with his shodden staff,
+Till the red embers broke into a laugh
+
+And dance of flame, as if they fain would cheer
+The rugged face, half tender, half austere,
+Touched with the pathos of a homesick tear!
+
+Or Sluyter, [14] saintly familist, whose word
+As law the Brethren of the Manor heard,
+Announced the speedy terrors of the Lord,
+
+And turned, like Lot at Sodom, from his race,
+Above a wrecked world with complacent face
+Riding secure upon his plank of grace!
+
+Haply, from Finland's birchen groves exiled,
+Manly in thought, in simple ways a child,
+His white hair floating round his visage mild,
+
+The Swedish pastor sought the Quaker's door,
+Pleased from his neighbor's lips to hear once more
+His long-disused and half-forgotten lore.
+
+For both could baffle Babel's lingual curse,
+And speak in Bion's Doric, and rehearse
+Cleanthes' hymn or Virgil's sounding verse.
+
+And oft Pastorius and the meek old man
+Argued as Quaker and as Lutheran,
+Ending in Christian love, as they began.
+
+With lettered Lloyd on pleasant morns he strayed
+Where Sommerhausen over vales of shade
+Looked miles away, by every flower delayed,
+
+Or song of bird, happy and free with one
+Who loved, like him, to let his memory run
+Over old fields of learning, and to sun
+
+Himself in Plato's wise philosophies,
+And dream with Philo over mysteries
+Whereof the dreamer never finds the keys;
+
+To touch all themes of thought, nor weakly stop
+For doubt of truth, but let the buckets drop
+Deep down and bring the hidden waters up [15]
+
+For there was freedom in that wakening time
+Of tender souls; to differ was not crime;
+The varying bells made up the perfect chime.
+
+On lips unlike was laid the altar's coal,
+The white, clear light, tradition-colored, stole
+Through the stained oriel of each human soul.
+
+Gathered from many sects, the Quaker brought
+His old beliefs, adjusting to the thought
+That moved his soul the creed his fathers taught.
+
+One faith alone, so broad that all mankind
+Within themselves its secret witness find,
+The soul's communion with the Eternal Mind,
+
+The Spirit's law, the Inward Rule and Guide,
+Scholar and peasant, lord and serf, allied,
+The polished Penn and Cromwell's Ironside.
+
+As still in Hemskerck's Quaker Meeting, [16] face
+By face in Flemish detail, we may trace
+How loose-mouthed boor and fine ancestral grace
+
+Sat in close contrast,--the clipt-headed churl,
+Broad market-dame, and simple serving-girl
+By skirt of silk and periwig in curl
+
+For soul touched soul; the spiritual treasure-trove
+Made all men equal, none could rise above
+Nor sink below that level of God's love.
+
+So, with his rustic neighbors sitting down,
+The homespun frock beside the scholar's gown,
+Pastorius to the manners of the town
+
+Added the freedom of the woods, and sought
+The bookless wisdom by experience taught,
+And learned to love his new-found home, while not
+
+Forgetful of the old; the seasons went
+Their rounds, and somewhat to his spirit lent
+Of their own calm and measureless content.
+
+Glad even to tears, he heard the robin sing
+His song of welcome to the Western spring,
+And bluebird borrowing from the sky his wing.
+
+And when the miracle of autumn came,
+And all the woods with many-colored flame
+Of splendor, making summer's greenness tame,
+
+Burned, unconsumed, a voice without a sound
+Spake to him from each kindled bush around,
+And made the strange, new landscape holy ground
+
+And when the bitter north-wind, keen and swift,
+Swept the white street and piled the dooryard drift,
+He exercised, as Friends might say, his gift
+
+Of verse, Dutch, English, Latin, like the hash
+Of corn and beans in Indian succotash;
+Dull, doubtless, but with here and there a flash
+
+Of wit and fine conceit,--the good man's play
+Of quiet fancies, meet to while away
+The slow hours measuring off an idle day.
+
+At evening, while his wife put on her look
+Of love's endurance, from its niche he took
+The written pages of his ponderous book.
+
+And read, in half the languages of man,
+His "Rusca Apium," which with bees began,
+And through the gamut of creation ran.
+
+Or, now and then, the missive of some friend
+In gray Altorf or storied Nurnberg penned
+Dropped in upon him like a guest to spend
+
+The night beneath his roof-tree. Mystical
+The fair Von Merlau spake as waters fall
+And voices sound in dreams, and yet withal
+
+Human and sweet, as if each far, low tone,
+Over the roses of her gardens blown
+Brought the warm sense of beauty all her own.
+
+Wise Spener questioned what his friend could trace
+Of spiritual influx or of saving grace
+In the wild natures of the Indian race.
+
+And learned Schurmberg, fain, at times, to look
+From Talmud, Koran, Veds, and Pentateuch,
+Sought out his pupil in his far-off nook,
+
+To query with him of climatic change,
+Of bird, beast, reptile, in his forest range,
+Of flowers and fruits and simples new and strange.
+
+And thus the Old and New World reached their hands
+Across the water, and the friendly lands
+Talked with each other from their severed strands.
+
+Pastorius answered all: while seed and root
+Sent from his new home grew to flower and fruit
+Along the Rhine and at the Spessart's foot;
+
+And, in return, the flowers his boyhood knew
+Smiled at his door, the same in form and hue,
+And on his vines the Rhenish clusters grew.
+
+No idler he; whoever else might shirk,
+He set his hand to every honest work,--
+Farmer and teacher, court and meeting clerk.
+
+Still on the town seal his device is found,
+Grapes, flax, and thread-spool on a trefoil ground,
+With "Vinum, Linum et Textrinum" wound.
+
+One house sufficed for gospel and for law,
+Where Paul and Grotius, Scripture text and saw,
+Assured the good, and held the rest in awe.
+
+Whatever legal maze he wandered through,
+He kept the Sermon on the Mount in view,
+And justice always into mercy grew.
+
+No whipping-post he needed, stocks, nor jail,
+Nor ducking-stool; the orchard-thief grew pale
+At his rebuke, the vixen ceased to rail,
+
+The usurer's grasp released the forfeit land;
+The slanderer faltered at the witness-stand,
+And all men took his counsel for command.
+
+Was it caressing air, the brooding love
+Of tenderer skies than German land knew of,
+Green calm below, blue quietness above,
+
+Still flow of water, deep repose of wood
+That, with a sense of loving Fatherhood
+And childlike trust in the Eternal Good,
+
+Softened all hearts, and dulled the edge of hate,
+Hushed strife, and taught impatient zeal to wait
+The slow assurance of the better state?
+
+Who knows what goadings in their sterner way
+O'er jagged ice, relieved by granite gray,
+Blew round the men of Massachusetts Bay?
+
+What hate of heresy the east-wind woke?
+What hints of pitiless power and terror spoke
+In waves that on their iron coast-line broke?
+
+Be it as it may: within the Land of Penn
+The sectary yielded to the citizen,
+And peaceful dwelt the many-creeded men.
+
+Peace brooded over all. No trumpet stung
+The air to madness, and no steeple flung
+Alarums down from bells at midnight rung.
+
+The land slept well. The Indian from his face
+Washed all his war-paint off, and in the place
+Of battle-marches sped the peaceful chase,
+
+Or wrought for wages at the white man's side,--
+Giving to kindness what his native pride
+And lazy freedom to all else denied.
+
+And well the curious scholar loved the old
+Traditions that his swarthy neighbors told
+By wigwam-fires when nights were growing cold,
+
+Discerned the fact round which their fancy drew
+Its dreams, and held their childish faith more true
+To God and man than half the creeds he knew.
+
+The desert blossomed round him; wheat-fields rolled
+Beneath the warm wind waves of green and gold;
+The planted ear returned its hundred-fold.
+
+Great clusters ripened in a warmer sun
+Than that which by the Rhine stream shines upon
+The purpling hillsides with low vines o'errun.
+
+About each rustic porch the humming-bird
+Tried with light bill, that scarce a petal stirred,
+The Old World flowers to virgin soil transferred;
+
+And the first-fruits of pear and apple, bending
+The young boughs down, their gold and russet blending,
+Made glad his heart, familiar odors lending
+
+To the fresh fragrance of the birch and pine,
+Life-everlasting, bay, and eglantine,
+And all the subtle scents the woods combine.
+
+Fair First-Day mornings, steeped in summer calm,
+Warm, tender, restful, sweet with woodland balm,
+Came to him, like some mother-hallowed psalm
+
+To the tired grinder at the noisy wheel
+Of labor, winding off from memory's reel
+A golden thread of music. With no peal
+
+Of bells to call them to the house of praise,
+The scattered settlers through green forest-ways
+Walked meeting-ward. In reverent amaze
+
+The Indian trapper saw them, from the dim
+Shade of the alders on the rivulet's rim,
+Seek the Great Spirit's house to talk with Him.
+
+There, through the gathered stillness multiplied
+And made intense by sympathy, outside
+The sparrows sang, and the gold-robin cried,
+
+A-swing upon his elm. A faint perfume
+Breathed through the open windows of the room
+From locust-trees, heavy with clustered bloom.
+
+Thither, perchance, sore-tried confessors came,
+Whose fervor jail nor pillory could tame,
+Proud of the cropped ears meant to be their shame,
+
+Men who had eaten slavery's bitter bread
+In Indian isles; pale women who had bled
+Under the hangman's lash, and bravely said
+
+God's message through their prison's iron bars;
+And gray old soldier-converts, seamed with scars
+From every stricken field of England's wars.
+
+Lowly before the Unseen Presence knelt
+Each waiting heart, till haply some one felt
+On his moved lips the seal of silence melt.
+
+Or, without spoken words, low breathings stole
+Of a diviner life from soul to soul,
+Baptizing in one tender thought the whole.
+
+When shaken hands announced the meeting o'er,
+The friendly group still lingered at the door,
+Greeting, inquiring, sharing all the store
+
+Of weekly tidings. Meanwhile youth and maid
+Down the green vistas of the woodland strayed,
+Whispered and smiled and oft their feet delayed.
+
+Did the boy's whistle answer back the thrushes?
+Did light girl laughter ripple through the bushes,
+As brooks make merry over roots and rushes?
+
+Unvexed the sweet air seemed. Without a wound
+The ear of silence heard, and every sound
+Its place in nature's fine accordance found.
+
+And solemn meeting, summer sky and wood,
+Old kindly faces, youth and maidenhood
+Seemed, like God's new creation, very good!
+
+And, greeting all with quiet smile and word,
+Pastorius went his way. The unscared bird
+Sang at his side; scarcely the squirrel stirred
+
+At his hushed footstep on the mossy sod;
+And, wheresoe'er the good man looked or trod,
+He felt the peace of nature and of God.
+
+His social life wore no ascetic form,
+He loved all beauty, without fear of harm,
+And in his veins his Teuton blood ran warm.
+
+Strict to himself, of other men no spy,
+He made his own no circuit-judge to try
+The freer conscience of his neighbors by.
+
+With love rebuking, by his life alone,
+Gracious and sweet, the better way was shown,
+The joy of one, who, seeking not his own,
+
+And faithful to all scruples, finds at last
+The thorns and shards of duty overpast,
+And daily life, beyond his hope's forecast,
+
+Pleasant and beautiful with sight and sound,
+And flowers upspringing in its narrow round,
+And all his days with quiet gladness crowned.
+
+He sang not; but, if sometimes tempted strong,
+He hummed what seemed like Altorf's Burschen-song;
+His good wife smiled, and did not count it wrong.
+
+For well he loved his boyhood's brother band;
+His Memory, while he trod the New World's strand,
+A double-ganger walked the Fatherland
+
+If, when on frosty Christmas eves the light
+Shone on his quiet hearth, he missed the sight
+Of Yule-log, Tree, and Christ-child all in white;
+
+And closed his eyes, and listened to the sweet
+Old wait-songs sounding down his native street,
+And watched again the dancers' mingling feet;
+
+Yet not the less, when once the vision passed,
+He held the plain and sober maxims fast
+Of the dear Friends with whom his lot was cast.
+
+Still all attuned to nature's melodies,
+He loved the bird's song in his dooryard trees,
+And the low hum of home-returning bees;
+
+The blossomed flax, the tulip-trees in bloom
+Down the long street, the beauty and perfume
+Of apple-boughs, the mingling light and gloom
+
+Of Sommerhausen's woodlands, woven through
+With sun--threads; and the music the wind drew,
+Mournful and sweet, from leaves it overblew.
+
+And evermore, beneath this outward sense,
+And through the common sequence of events,
+He felt the guiding hand of Providence
+
+Reach out of space. A Voice spake in his ear,
+And to all other voices far and near
+Died at that whisper, full of meanings clear.
+
+The Light of Life shone round him; one by one
+The wandering lights, that all-misleading run,
+Went out like candles paling in the sun.
+
+That Light he followed, step by step, where'er
+It led, as in the vision of the seer
+The wheels moved as the spirit in the clear
+
+And terrible crystal moved, with all their eyes
+Watching the living splendor sink or rise,
+Its will their will, knowing no otherwise.
+
+Within himself he found the law of right,
+He walked by faith and not the letter's sight,
+And read his Bible by the Inward Light.
+
+And if sometimes the slaves of form and rule,
+Frozen in their creeds like fish in winter's pool,
+Tried the large tolerance of his liberal school,
+
+His door was free to men of every name,
+He welcomed all the seeking souls who came,
+And no man's faith he made a cause of blame.
+
+But best he loved in leisure hours to see
+His own dear Friends sit by him knee to knee,
+In social converse, genial, frank, and free.
+
+There sometimes silence (it were hard to tell
+Who owned it first) upon the circle fell,
+Hushed Anna's busy wheel, and laid its spell
+
+On the black boy who grimaced by the hearth,
+To solemnize his shining face of mirth;
+Only the old clock ticked amidst the dearth
+
+Of sound; nor eye was raised nor hand was stirred
+In that soul-sabbath, till at last some word
+Of tender counsel or low prayer was heard.
+
+Then guests, who lingered but farewell to say
+And take love's message, went their homeward way;
+So passed in peace the guileless Quaker's day.
+
+His was the Christian's unsung Age of Gold,
+A truer idyl than the bards have told
+Of Arno's banks or Arcady of old.
+
+Where still the Friends their place of burial keep,
+And century-rooted mosses o'er it creep,
+The Nurnberg scholar and his helpmeet sleep.
+
+And Anna's aloe? If it flowered at last
+In Bartram's garden, did John Woolman cast
+A glance upon it as he meekly passed?
+
+And did a secret sympathy possess
+That tender soul, and for the slave's redress
+Lend hope, strength, patience? It were vain to
+guess.
+
+Nay, were the plant itself but mythical,
+Set in the fresco of tradition's wall
+Like Jotham's bramble, mattereth not at all.
+
+Enough to know that, through the winter's frost
+And summer's heat, no seed of truth is lost,
+And every duty pays at last its cost.
+
+For, ere Pastorius left the sun and air,
+God sent the answer to his life-long prayer;
+The child was born beside the Delaware,
+
+Who, in the power a holy purpose lends,
+Guided his people unto nobler ends,
+And left them worthier of the name of Friends.
+
+And to! the fulness of the time has come,
+And over all the exile's Western home,
+From sea to sea the flowers of freedom bloom!
+
+And joy-bells ring, and silver trumpets blow;
+But not for thee, Pastorius! Even so
+The world forgets, but the wise angels know.
+
+
+
+
+KING VOLMER AND ELSIE.
+AFTER THE DANISH OF CHRISTIAN WINTER.
+
+WHERE, over heathen doom-rings and gray stones
+of the Horg,
+In its little Christian city stands the church of
+Vordingborg,
+In merry mood King Volmer sat, forgetful of his
+power,
+As idle as the Goose of Gold that brooded on his
+tower.
+
+Out spake the King to Henrik, his young and faithful
+squire
+"Dar'st trust thy little Elsie, the maid of thy
+desire?"
+"Of all the men in Denmark she loveth only me
+As true to me is Elsie as thy Lily is to thee."
+
+Loud laughed the king: "To-morrow shall bring
+another day, [18]
+When I myself will test her; she will not say me
+nay."
+Thereat the lords and gallants, that round about
+him stood,
+Wagged all their heads in concert and smiled as
+courtiers should.
+
+The gray lark sings o'er Vordingborg, and on the
+ancient town
+From the tall tower of Valdemar the Golden Goose
+looks down;
+The yellow grain is waving in the pleasant wind of
+morn,
+The wood resounds with cry of hounds and blare
+of hunter's horn.
+
+In the garden of her father little Elsie sits and
+spins,
+And, singing with the early birds, her daily task,
+begins.
+Gay tulips bloom and sweet mint curls around her
+garden-bower,
+But she is sweeter than the mint and fairer than
+the flower.
+
+About her form her kirtle blue clings lovingly, and,
+white
+As snow, her loose sleeves only leave her small,
+round wrists in sight;
+Below, the modest petticoat can only half conceal
+The motion of the lightest foot that ever turned a
+wheel.
+
+The cat sits purring at her side, bees hum in
+sunshine warm;
+But, look! she starts, she lifts her face, she shades
+it with her arm.
+And, hark! a train of horsemen, with sound of
+dog and horn,
+Come leaping o'er the ditches, come trampling
+down the corn!
+
+Merrily rang the bridle-reins, and scarf and plume
+streamed gay,
+As fast beside her father's gate the riders held
+their way;
+And one was brave in scarlet cloak, with golden
+spur on heel,
+And, as he checked his foaming steed, the maiden
+checked her wheel.
+
+"All hail among thy roses, the fairest rose to me!
+For weary months in secret my heart has longed for
+thee!"
+What noble knight was this? What words for
+modest maiden's ear?
+She dropped a lowly courtesy of bashfulness and
+fear.
+
+She lifted up her spinning-wheel; she fain would
+seek the door,
+Trembling in every limb, her cheek with blushes
+crimsoned o'er.
+"Nay, fear me not," the rider said, "I offer heart
+and hand,
+Bear witness these good Danish knights who round
+about me stand.
+
+"I grant you time to think of this, to answer as
+you may,
+For to-morrow, little Elsie, shall bring another day."
+He spake the old phrase slyly as, glancing round
+his train,
+He saw his merry followers seek to hide their
+smiles in vain.
+
+"The snow of pearls I'll scatter in your curls of
+golden hair,
+I'll line with furs the velvet of the kirtle that you
+wear;
+All precious gems shall twine your neck; and in
+a chariot gay
+You shall ride, my little Elsie, behind four steeds
+of gray.
+
+"And harps shall sound, and flutes shall play, and
+brazen lamps shall glow;
+On marble floors your feet shall weave the dances
+to and fro.
+At frosty eventide for us the blazing hearth shall
+shine,
+While, at our ease, we play at draughts, and drink
+the blood-red wine."
+
+Then Elsie raised her head and met her wooer face
+to face;
+A roguish smile shone in her eye and on her lip
+found place.
+Back from her low white forehead the curls of
+gold she threw,
+And lifted up her eyes to his, steady and clear and
+blue.
+
+"I am a lowly peasant, and you a gallant knight;
+I will not trust a love that soon may cool and turn
+to slight.
+If you would wed me henceforth be a peasant, not
+a lord;
+I bid you hang upon the wall your tried and trusty
+sword."
+
+"To please you, Elsie, I will lay keen Dynadel
+away,
+And in its place will swing the scythe and mow
+your father's hay."
+"Nay, but your gallant scarlet cloak my eyes can
+never bear;
+A Vadmal coat, so plain and gray, is all that you
+must wear."
+
+"Well, Vadmal will I wear for you," the rider
+gayly spoke,
+"And on the Lord's high altar I'll lay my scarlet
+cloak."
+"But mark," she said, "no stately horse my peasant
+love must ride,
+A yoke of steers before the plough is all that he
+must guide."
+
+The knight looked down upon his steed: "Well,
+let him wander free
+No other man must ride the horse that has been
+backed by me.
+Henceforth I'll tread the furrow and to my oxen
+talk,
+If only little Elsie beside my plough will walk."
+
+"You must take from out your cellar cask of wine
+and flask and can;
+The homely mead I brew you may serve a peasant.
+man."
+"Most willingly, fair Elsie, I'll drink that mead
+of thine,
+And leave my minstrel's thirsty throat to drain
+my generous wine."
+
+"Now break your shield asunder, and shatter sign
+and boss,
+Unmeet for peasant-wedded arms, your knightly
+knee across.
+And pull me down your castle from top to basement
+wall,
+And let your plough trace furrows in the ruins of
+your hall!"
+
+Then smiled he with a lofty pride; right well at
+last he knew
+The maiden of the spinning-wheel was to her troth.
+plight true.
+"Ah, roguish little Elsie! you act your part full
+well
+You know that I must bear my shield and in my
+castle dwell!
+
+"The lions ramping on that shield between the
+hearts aflame
+Keep watch o'er Denmark's honor, and guard her
+ancient name.
+
+"For know that I am Volmer; I dwell in yonder
+towers,
+Who ploughs them ploughs up Denmark, this
+goodly home of ours'.
+
+"I tempt no more, fair Elsie! your heart I know
+is true;
+Would God that all our maidens were good and
+pure as you!
+Well have you pleased your monarch, and he shall
+well repay;
+God's peace! Farewell! To-morrow will bring
+another day!"
+
+He lifted up his bridle hand, he spurred his good
+steed then,
+And like a whirl-blast swept away with all his
+gallant men.
+The steel hoofs beat the rocky path; again on
+winds of morn
+The wood resounds with cry of hounds and blare
+of hunter's horn.
+
+"Thou true and ever faithful!" the listening
+Henrik cried;
+And, leaping o'er the green hedge, he stood by
+Elsie's side.
+None saw the fond embracing, save, shining from
+afar,
+The Golden Goose that watched them from the
+tower of Valdemar.
+
+O darling girls of Denmark! of all the flowers
+that throng
+Her vales of spring the fairest, I sing for you my
+song.
+No praise as yours so bravely rewards the singer's
+skill;
+Thank God! of maids like Elsie the land has
+plenty still!
+1872.
+
+
+
+
+THE THREE BELLS.
+
+BENEATH the low-hung night cloud
+That raked her splintering mast
+The good ship settled slowly,
+The cruel leak gained fast.
+
+Over the awful ocean
+Her signal guns pealed out.
+Dear God! was that Thy answer
+From the horror round about?
+
+A voice came down the wild wind,
+"Ho! ship ahoy!" its cry
+"Our stout Three Bells of Glasgow
+Shall lay till daylight by!"
+
+Hour after hour crept slowly,
+Yet on the heaving swells
+Tossed up and down the ship-lights,
+The lights of the Three Bells!
+
+And ship to ship made signals,
+Man answered back to man,
+While oft, to cheer and hearten,
+The Three Bells nearer ran;
+
+And the captain from her taffrail
+Sent down his hopeful cry
+"Take heart! Hold on!" he shouted;
+"The Three Bells shall lay by!"
+
+All night across the waters
+The tossing lights shone clear;
+All night from reeling taffrail
+The Three Bells sent her cheer.
+
+And when the dreary watches
+Of storm and darkness passed,
+Just as the wreck lurched under,
+All souls were saved at last.
+
+Sail on, Three Bells, forever,
+In grateful memory sail!
+Ring on, Three Bells of rescue,
+Above the wave and gale!
+
+Type of the Love eternal,
+Repeat the Master's cry,
+As tossing through our darkness
+The lights of God draw nigh!
+1872.
+
+
+
+
+JOHN UNDERHILL.
+
+A SCORE of years had come and gone
+Since the Pilgrims landed on Plymouth stone,
+When Captain Underhill, bearing scars
+From Indian ambush and Flemish wars,
+Left three-hilled Boston and wandered down,
+East by north, to Cocheco town.
+
+With Vane the younger, in counsel sweet,
+He had sat at Anna Hutchinson's feet,
+And, when the bolt of banishment fell
+On the head of his saintly oracle,
+He had shared her ill as her good report,
+And braved the wrath of the General Court.
+
+He shook from his feet as he rode away
+The dust of the Massachusetts Bay.
+The world might bless and the world might ban,
+What did it matter the perfect man,
+To whom the freedom of earth was given,
+Proof against sin, and sure of heaven?
+
+He cheered his heart as he rode along
+With screed of Scripture and holy song,
+Or thought how he rode with his lances free
+By the Lower Rhine and the Zuyder-Zee,
+Till his wood-path grew to a trodden road,
+And Hilton Point in the distance showed.
+
+He saw the church with the block-house nigh,
+The two fair rivers, the flakes thereby,
+And, tacking to windward, low and crank,
+The little shallop from Strawberry Bank;
+And he rose in his stirrups and looked abroad
+Over land and water, and praised the Lord.
+
+Goodly and stately and grave to see,
+Into the clearing's space rode he,
+With the sun on the hilt of his sword in sheath,
+And his silver buckles and spurs beneath,
+And the settlers welcomed him, one and all,
+From swift Quampeagan to Gonic Fall.
+
+And he said to the elders: "Lo, I come
+As the way seemed open to seek a home.
+Somewhat the Lord hath wrought by my hands
+In the Narragansett and Netherlands,
+And if here ye have work for a Christian man,
+I will tarry, and serve ye as best I can.
+
+"I boast not of gifts, but fain would own
+The wonderful favor God hath shown,
+The special mercy vouchsafed one day
+On the shore of Narragansett Bay,
+As I sat, with my pipe, from the camp aside,
+And mused like Isaac at eventide.
+
+"A sudden sweetness of peace I found,
+A garment of gladness wrapped me round;
+I felt from the law of works released,
+The strife of the flesh and spirit ceased,
+My faith to a full assurance grew,
+And all I had hoped for myself I knew.
+
+"Now, as God appointeth, I keep my way,
+I shall not stumble, I shall not stray;
+He hath taken away my fig-leaf dress,
+I wear the robe of His righteousness;
+And the shafts of Satan no more avail
+Than Pequot arrows on Christian mail."
+
+"Tarry with us," the settlers cried,
+"Thou man of God, as our ruler and guide."
+And Captain Underhill bowed his head.
+"The will of the Lord be done!" he said.
+And the morrow beheld him sitting down
+In the ruler's seat in Cocheco town.
+
+And he judged therein as a just man should;
+His words were wise and his rule was good;
+He coveted not his neighbor's land,
+From the holding of bribes he shook his hand;
+And through the camps of the heathen ran
+A wholesome fear of the valiant man.
+
+But the heart is deceitful, the good Book saith,
+And life hath ever a savor of death.
+Through hymns of triumph the tempter calls,
+And whoso thinketh he standeth falls.
+Alas! ere their round the seasons ran,
+There was grief in the soul of the saintly man.
+
+The tempter's arrows that rarely fail
+Had found the joints of his spiritual mail;
+And men took note of his gloomy air,
+The shame in his eye, the halt in his prayer,
+The signs of a battle lost within,
+The pain of a soul in the coils of sin.
+
+Then a whisper of scandal linked his name
+With broken vows and a life of blame;
+And the people looked askance on him
+As he walked among them sullen and grim,
+Ill at ease, and bitter of word,
+And prompt of quarrel with hand or sword.
+
+None knew how, with prayer and fasting still,
+He strove in the bonds of his evil will;
+But he shook himself like Samson at length,
+And girded anew his loins of strength,
+And bade the crier go up and down
+And call together the wondering town.
+
+Jeer and murmur and shaking of head
+Ceased as he rose in his place and said
+"Men, brethren, and fathers, well ye know
+How I came among you a year ago,
+Strong in the faith that my soul was freed
+From sin of feeling, or thought, or deed.
+
+"I have sinned, I own it with grief and shame,
+But not with a lie on my lips I came.
+In my blindness I verily thought my heart
+Swept and garnished in every part.
+He chargeth His angels with folly; He sees
+The heavens unclean. Was I more than these?
+
+"I urge no plea. At your feet I lay
+The trust you gave me, and go my way.
+Hate me or pity me, as you will,
+The Lord will have mercy on sinners still;
+And I, who am chiefest, say to all,
+Watch and pray, lest ye also fall."
+
+No voice made answer: a sob so low
+That only his quickened ear could know
+Smote his heart with a bitter pain,
+As into the forest he rode again,
+And the veil of its oaken leaves shut down
+On his latest glimpse of Cocheco town.
+
+Crystal-clear on the man of sin
+The streams flashed up, and the sky shone in;
+On his cheek of fever the cool wind blew,
+The leaves dropped on him their tears of dew,
+And angels of God, in the pure, sweet guise
+Of flowers, looked on him with sad surprise.
+
+Was his ear at fault that brook and breeze
+Sang in their saddest of minor keys?
+What was it the mournful wood-thrush said?
+What whispered the pine-trees overhead?
+Did he hear the Voice on his lonely way
+That Adam heard in the cool of day?
+
+Into the desert alone rode he,
+Alone with the Infinite Purity;
+And, bowing his soul to its tender rebuke,
+As Peter did to the Master's look,
+He measured his path with prayers of pain
+For peace with God and nature again.
+
+And in after years to Cocheco came
+The bruit of a once familiar name;
+How among the Dutch of New Netherlands,
+From wild Danskamer to Haarlem sands,
+A penitent soldier preached the Word,
+And smote the heathen with Gideon's sword!
+
+And the heart of Boston was glad to hear
+How he harried the foe on the long frontier,
+And heaped on the land against him barred
+The coals of his generous watch and ward.
+Frailest and bravest! the Bay State still
+Counts with her worthies John Underhill.
+1873.
+
+
+
+
+CONDUCTOR BRADLEY.
+
+A railway conductor who lost his life in an accident on a Connecticut
+railway, May 9, 1873.
+
+
+CONDUCTOR BRADLEY, (always may his name
+Be said with reverence!) as the swift doom came,
+Smitten to death, a crushed and mangled frame,
+
+Sank, with the brake he grasped just where he stood
+To do the utmost that a brave man could,
+And die, if needful, as a true man should.
+
+Men stooped above him; women dropped their tears
+On that poor wreck beyond all hopes or fears,
+Lost in the strength and glory of his years.
+
+What heard they? Lo! the ghastly lips of pain,
+Dead to all thought save duty's, moved again
+"Put out the signals for the other train!"
+
+No nobler utterance since the world began
+From lips of saint or martyr ever ran,
+Electric, through the sympathies of man.
+
+Ah me! how poor and noteless seem to this
+The sick-bed dramas of self-consciousness,
+Our sensual fears of pain and hopes of bliss!
+
+Oh, grand, supreme endeavor! Not in vain
+That last brave act of failing tongue and brain
+Freighted with life the downward rushing train,
+
+Following the wrecked one, as wave follows wave,
+Obeyed the warning which the dead lips gave.
+Others he saved, himself he could not save.
+
+Nay, the lost life was saved. He is not dead
+Who in his record still the earth shall tread
+With God's clear aureole shining round his head.
+
+We bow as in the dust, with all our pride
+Of virtue dwarfed the noble deed beside.
+God give us grace to live as Bradley died!
+1873.
+
+
+
+
+THE WITCH OF WENHAM.
+
+The house is still standing in Danvers, Mass., where, it is said, a
+suspected witch was confined overnight in the attic, which was bolted
+fast. In the morning when the constable came to take her to Salem for
+trial she was missing, although the door was still bolted. Her escape
+was doubtless aided by her friends, but at the time it was attributed
+to Satanic interference.
+
+
+I.
+
+ALONG Crane River's sunny slopes
+Blew warm the winds of May,
+And over Naumkeag's ancient oaks
+The green outgrew the gray.
+
+The grass was green on Rial-side,
+The early birds at will
+Waked up the violet in its dell,
+The wind-flower on its hill.
+
+"Where go you, in your Sunday coat,
+Son Andrew, tell me, pray."
+For striped perch in Wenham Lake
+I go to fish to-day."
+
+"Unharmed of thee in Wenham Lake
+The mottled perch shall be
+A blue-eyed witch sits on the bank
+And weaves her net for thee.
+
+"She weaves her golden hair; she sings
+Her spell-song low and faint;
+The wickedest witch in Salem jail
+Is to that girl a saint."
+
+"Nay, mother, hold thy cruel tongue;
+God knows," the young man cried,
+"He never made a whiter soul
+Than hers by Wenham side.
+
+"She tends her mother sick and blind,
+And every want supplies;
+To her above the blessed Book
+She lends her soft blue eyes.
+
+"Her voice is glad with holy songs,
+Her lips are sweet with prayer;
+Go where you will, in ten miles round
+Is none more good and fair."
+
+"Son Andrew, for the love of God
+And of thy mother, stay!"
+She clasped her hands, she wept aloud,
+But Andrew rode away.
+
+"O reverend sir, my Andrew's soul
+The Wenham witch has caught;
+She holds him with the curled gold
+Whereof her snare is wrought.
+
+"She charms him with her great blue eyes,
+She binds him with her hair;
+Oh, break the spell with holy words,
+Unbind him with a prayer!"
+
+"Take heart," the painful preacher said,
+"This mischief shall not be;
+The witch shall perish in her sins
+And Andrew shall go free.
+
+"Our poor Ann Putnam testifies
+She saw her weave a spell,
+Bare-armed, loose-haired, at full of moon,
+Around a dried-up well.
+
+"'Spring up, O well!' she softly sang
+The Hebrew's old refrain
+(For Satan uses Bible words),
+Till water flowed a-main.
+
+"And many a goodwife heard her speak
+By Wenham water words
+That made the buttercups take wings
+And turn to yellow birds.
+
+"They say that swarming wild bees seek
+The hive at her command;
+And fishes swim to take their food
+From out her dainty hand.
+
+"Meek as she sits in meeting-time,
+The godly minister
+Notes well the spell that doth compel
+The young men's eyes to her.
+
+"The mole upon her dimpled chin
+Is Satan's seal and sign;
+Her lips are red with evil bread
+And stain of unblest wine.
+
+"For Tituba, my Indian, saith
+At Quasycung she took
+The Black Man's godless sacrament
+And signed his dreadful book.
+
+"Last night my sore-afflicted child
+Against the young witch cried.
+To take her Marshal Herrick rides
+Even now to Wenham side."
+
+The marshal in his saddle sat,
+His daughter at his knee;
+"I go to fetch that arrant witch,
+Thy fair playmate," quoth he.
+
+"Her spectre walks the parsonage,
+And haunts both hall and stair;
+They know her by the great blue eyes
+And floating gold of hair."
+
+"They lie, they lie, my father dear!
+No foul old witch is she,
+But sweet and good and crystal-pure
+As Wenham waters be."
+
+"I tell thee, child, the Lord hath set
+Before us good and ill,
+And woe to all whose carnal loves
+Oppose His righteous will.
+
+"Between Him and the powers of hell
+Choose thou, my child, to-day
+No sparing hand, no pitying eye,
+When God commands to slay!"
+
+He went his way; the old wives shook
+With fear as he drew nigh;
+The children in the dooryards held
+Their breath as he passed by.
+
+Too well they knew the gaunt gray horse
+The grim witch-hunter rode
+The pale Apocalyptic beast
+By grisly Death bestrode.
+
+
+
+II.
+
+Oh, fair the face of Wenham Lake
+Upon the young girl's shone,
+Her tender mouth, her dreaming eyes,
+Her yellow hair outblown.
+
+By happy youth and love attuned
+To natural harmonies,
+The singing birds, the whispering wind,
+She sat beneath the trees.
+
+Sat shaping for her bridal dress
+Her mother's wedding gown,
+When lo! the marshal, writ in hand,
+From Alford hill rode down.
+
+His face was hard with cruel fear,
+He grasped the maiden's hands
+"Come with me unto Salem town,
+For so the law commands!"
+
+"Oh, let me to my mother say
+Farewell before I go!"
+He closer tied her little hands
+Unto his saddle bow.
+
+"Unhand me," cried she piteously,
+"For thy sweet daughter's sake."
+"I'll keep my daughter safe," he said,
+"From the witch of Wenham Lake."
+
+"Oh, leave me for my mother's sake,
+She needs my eyes to see."
+"Those eyes, young witch, the crows shall peck
+From off the gallows-tree."
+
+He bore her to a farm-house old,
+And up its stairway long,
+And closed on her the garret-door
+With iron bolted strong.
+
+The day died out, the night came down
+Her evening prayer she said,
+While, through the dark, strange faces seemed
+To mock her as she prayed.
+
+The present horror deepened all
+The fears her childhood knew;
+The awe wherewith the air was filled
+With every breath she drew.
+
+And could it be, she trembling asked,
+Some secret thought or sin
+Had shut good angels from her heart
+And let the bad ones in?
+
+Had she in some forgotten dream
+Let go her hold on Heaven,
+And sold herself unwittingly
+To spirits unforgiven?
+
+Oh, weird and still the dark hours passed;
+No human sound she heard,
+But up and down the chimney stack
+The swallows moaned and stirred.
+
+And o'er her, with a dread surmise
+Of evil sight and sound,
+The blind bats on their leathern wings
+Went wheeling round and round.
+
+Low hanging in the midnight sky
+Looked in a half-faced moon.
+Was it a dream, or did she hear
+Her lover's whistled tune?
+
+She forced the oaken scuttle back;
+A whisper reached her ear
+"Slide down the roof to me," it said,
+"So softly none may hear."
+
+She slid along the sloping roof
+Till from its eaves she hung,
+And felt the loosened shingles yield
+To which her fingers clung.
+
+Below, her lover stretched his hands
+And touched her feet so small;
+"Drop down to me, dear heart," he said,
+"My arms shall break the fall."
+
+He set her on his pillion soft,
+Her arms about him twined;
+And, noiseless as if velvet-shod,
+They left the house behind.
+
+But when they reached the open way,
+Full free the rein he cast;
+Oh, never through the mirk midnight
+Rode man and maid more fast.
+
+Along the wild wood-paths they sped,
+The bridgeless streams they swam;
+At set of moon they passed the Bass,
+At sunrise Agawam.
+
+At high noon on the Merrimac
+The ancient ferryman
+Forgot, at times, his idle oars,
+So fair a freight to scan.
+
+And when from off his grounded boat
+He saw them mount and ride,
+"God keep her from the evil eye,
+And harm of witch!" he cried.
+
+The maiden laughed, as youth will laugh
+At all its fears gone by;
+"He does not know," she whispered low,
+"A little witch am I."
+
+All day he urged his weary horse,
+And, in the red sundown,
+Drew rein before a friendly door
+In distant Berwick town.
+
+A fellow-feeling for the wronged
+The Quaker people felt;
+And safe beside their kindly hearths
+The hunted maiden dwelt,
+
+Until from off its breast the land
+The haunting horror threw,
+And hatred, born of ghastly dreams,
+To shame and pity grew.
+
+Sad were the year's spring morns, and sad
+Its golden summer day,
+But blithe and glad its withered fields,
+And skies of ashen gray;
+
+For spell and charm had power no more,
+The spectres ceased to roam,
+And scattered households knelt again
+Around the hearths of home.
+
+And when once more by Beaver Dam
+The meadow-lark outsang,
+And once again on all the hills
+The early violets sprang,
+
+And all the windy pasture slopes
+Lay green within the arms
+Of creeks that bore the salted sea
+To pleasant inland farms,
+
+The smith filed off the chains he forged,
+The jail-bolts backward fell;
+And youth and hoary age came forth
+Like souls escaped from hell.
+1877
+
+
+
+
+KING SOLOMON AND THE ANTS
+
+OUT from Jerusalem
+The king rode with his great
+War chiefs and lords of state,
+And Sheba's queen with them;
+
+Comely, but black withal,
+To whom, perchance, belongs
+That wondrous Song of songs,
+Sensuous and mystical,
+
+Whereto devout souls turn
+In fond, ecstatic dream,
+And through its earth-born theme
+The Love of loves discern.
+
+Proud in the Syrian sun,
+In gold and purple sheen,
+The dusky Ethiop queen
+Smiled on King Solomon.
+
+Wisest of men, he knew
+The languages of all
+The creatures great or small
+That trod the earth or flew.
+
+Across an ant-hill led
+The king's path, and he heard
+Its small folk, and their word
+He thus interpreted:
+
+"Here comes the king men greet
+As wise and good and just,
+To crush us in the dust
+Under his heedless feet."
+
+The great king bowed his head,
+And saw the wide surprise
+Of the Queen of Sheba's eyes
+As he told her what they said.
+
+"O king!" she whispered sweet,
+"Too happy fate have they
+Who perish in thy way
+Beneath thy gracious feet!
+
+"Thou of the God-lent crown,
+Shall these vile creatures dare
+Murmur against thee where
+The knees of kings kneel down?"
+
+"Nay," Solomon replied,
+"The wise and strong should seek
+The welfare of the weak,"
+And turned his horse aside.
+
+His train, with quick alarm,
+Curved with their leader round
+The ant-hill's peopled mound,
+And left it free from harm.
+
+The jewelled head bent low;
+"O king!" she said, "henceforth
+The secret of thy worth
+And wisdom well I know.
+
+"Happy must be the State
+Whose ruler heedeth more
+The murmurs of the poor
+Than flatteries of the great."
+1877.
+
+
+
+
+
+IN THE "OLD SOUTH."
+
+On the 8th of July, 1677, Margaret Brewster with four other Friends
+went into the South Church in time of meeting, "in sack-cloth, with
+ashes upon her head, barefoot, and her face blackened," and delivered
+"a warning from the great God of Heaven and Earth to the Rulers and
+Magistrates of Boston." For the offence she was sentenced to be "whipped
+at a cart's tail up and down the Town, with twenty lashes."
+
+SHE came and stood in the Old South Church,
+A wonder and a sign,
+With a look the old-time sibyls wore,
+Half-crazed and half-divine.
+
+Save the mournful sackcloth about her wound,
+Unclothed as the primal mother,
+With limbs that trembled and eyes that blazed
+With a fire she dare not smother.
+
+Loose on her shoulders fell her hair,
+With sprinkled ashes gray;
+She stood in the broad aisle strange and weird
+As a soul at the judgment day.
+
+And the minister paused in his sermon's midst,
+And the people held their breath,
+For these were the words the maiden spoke
+Through lips as the lips of death:
+
+"Thus saith the Lord, with equal feet
+All men my courts shall tread,
+And priest and ruler no more shall eat
+My people up like bread!
+
+"Repent! repent! ere the Lord shall speak
+In thunder and breaking seals
+Let all souls worship Him in the way
+His light within reveals."
+
+She shook the dust from her naked feet,
+And her sackcloth closer drew,
+And into the porch of the awe-hushed church
+She passed like a ghost from view.
+
+They whipped her away at the tail o' the cart
+Through half the streets of the town,
+But the words she uttered that day nor fire
+Could burn nor water drown.
+
+And now the aisles of the ancient church
+By equal feet are trod,
+And the bell that swings in its belfry rings
+Freedom to worship God!
+
+And now whenever a wrong is done
+It thrills the conscious walls;
+The stone from the basement cries aloud
+And the beam from the timber calls.
+
+There are steeple-houses on every hand,
+And pulpits that bless and ban,
+And the Lord will not grudge the single church
+That is set apart for man.
+
+For in two commandments are all the law
+And the prophets under the sun,
+And the first is last and the last is first,
+And the twain are verily one.
+
+So, long as Boston shall Boston be,
+And her bay-tides rise and fall,
+Shall freedom stand in the Old South Church
+And plead for the rights of all!
+1877.
+
+
+
+
+THE HENCHMAN.
+
+MY lady walks her morning round,
+My lady's page her fleet greyhound,
+My lady's hair the fond winds stir,
+And all the birds make songs for her.
+
+Her thrushes sing in Rathburn bowers,
+And Rathburn side is gay with flowers;
+But ne'er like hers, in flower or bird,
+Was beauty seen or music heard.
+
+The distance of the stars is hers;
+The least of all her worshippers,
+The dust beneath her dainty heel,
+She knows not that I see or feel.
+
+Oh, proud and calm!--she cannot know
+Where'er she goes with her I go;
+Oh, cold and fair!--she cannot guess
+I kneel to share her hound's caress!
+
+Gay knights beside her hunt and hawk,
+I rob their ears of her sweet talk;
+Her suitors come from east and west,
+I steal her smiles from every guest.
+
+Unheard of her, in loving words,
+I greet her with the song of birds;
+I reach her with her green-armed bowers,
+I kiss her with the lips of flowers.
+
+The hound and I are on her trail,
+The wind and I uplift her veil;
+As if the calm, cold moon she were,
+And I the tide, I follow her.
+
+As unrebuked as they, I share
+The license of the sun and air,
+And in a common homage hide
+My worship from her scorn and pride.
+
+World-wide apart, and yet so near,
+I breathe her charmed atmosphere,
+Wherein to her my service brings
+The reverence due to holy things.
+
+Her maiden pride, her haughty name,
+My dumb devotion shall not shame;
+The love that no return doth crave
+To knightly levels lifts the slave,
+
+No lance have I, in joust or fight,
+To splinter in my lady's sight
+But, at her feet, how blest were I
+For any need of hers to die!
+1877.
+
+
+
+
+THE DEAD FEAST OF THE KOL-FOLK.
+
+E. B. Tylor in his Primitive Culture, chapter xii., gives an account of
+the reverence paid the dead by the Kol tribes of Chota Nagpur, Assam.
+"When a Ho or Munda," he says, "has been burned on the funeral pile,
+collected morsels of his bones are carried in procession with a solemn,
+ghostly, sliding step, keeping time to the deep-sounding drum, and when
+the old woman who carries the bones on her bamboo tray lowers it from
+time to time, then girls who carry pitchers and brass vessels mournfully
+reverse them to show that they are empty; thus the remains are taken to
+visit every house in the village, and every dwelling of a friend or
+relative for miles, and the inmates come out to mourn and praise the
+goodness of the departed; the bones are carried to all the dead man's
+favorite haunts, to the fields he cultivated, to the grove he planted,
+to the threshing-floor where he worked, to the village dance-room where
+he made merry. At last they are taken to the grave, and buried in an
+earthen vase upon a store of food, covered with one of those huge stone
+slabs which European visitors wonder at in the districts of the
+aborigines of India." In the Journal of the Asiatic Society, Bengal,
+vol. ix., p. 795, is a Ho dirge.
+
+
+WE have opened the door,
+Once, twice, thrice!
+We have swept the floor,
+We have boiled the rice.
+Come hither, come hither!
+Come from the far lands,
+Come from the star lands,
+Come as before!
+We lived long together,
+We loved one another;
+Come back to our life.
+Come father, come mother,
+Come sister and brother,
+Child, husband, and wife,
+For you we are sighing.
+Come take your old places,
+Come look in our faces,
+The dead on the dying,
+Come home!
+
+We have opened the door,
+Once, twice, thrice!
+We have kindled the coals,
+And we boil the rice
+For the feast of souls.
+Come hither, come hither!
+Think not we fear you,
+Whose hearts are so near you.
+Come tenderly thought on,
+Come all unforgotten,
+Come from the shadow-lands,
+From the dim meadow-lands
+Where the pale grasses bend
+Low to our sighing.
+Come father, come mother,
+Come sister and brother,
+Come husband and friend,
+The dead to the dying,
+Come home!
+
+We have opened the door
+You entered so oft;
+For the feast of souls
+We have kindled the coals,
+And we boil the rice soft.
+Come you who are dearest
+To us who are nearest,
+Come hither, come hither,
+From out the wild weather;
+The storm clouds are flying,
+The peepul is sighing;
+Come in from the rain.
+Come father, come mother,
+Come sister and brother,
+Come husband and lover,
+Beneath our roof-cover.
+Look on us again,
+The dead on the dying,
+Come home!
+
+We have opened the door!
+For the feast of souls
+We have kindled the coals
+We may kindle no more!
+Snake, fever, and famine,
+The curse of the Brahmin,
+The sun and the dew,
+They burn us, they bite us,
+They waste us and smite us;
+Our days are but few
+In strange lands far yonder
+To wonder and wander
+We hasten to you.
+List then to our sighing,
+While yet we are here
+Nor seeing nor hearing,
+We wait without fearing,
+To feel you draw near.
+O dead, to the dying
+Come home!
+1879.
+
+
+
+
+THE KHAN'S DEVIL.
+THE Khan came from Bokhara town
+To Hamza, santon of renown.
+
+"My head is sick, my hands are weak;
+Thy help, O holy man, I seek."
+
+In silence marking for a space
+The Khan's red eyes and purple face,
+
+Thick voice, and loose, uncertain tread,
+"Thou hast a devil!" Hamza said.
+
+"Allah forbid!" exclaimed the Khan.
+Rid me of him at once, O man!"
+
+"Nay," Hamza said, "no spell of mine
+Can slay that cursed thing of thine.
+
+"Leave feast and wine, go forth and drink
+Water of healing on the brink
+
+"Where clear and cold from mountain snows,
+The Nahr el Zeben downward flows.
+
+"Six moons remain, then come to me;
+May Allah's pity go with thee!"
+
+Awestruck, from feast and wine the Khan
+Went forth where Nahr el Zeben ran.
+
+Roots were his food, the desert dust
+His bed, the water quenched his thirst;
+
+And when the sixth moon's scimetar
+Curved sharp above the evening star,
+
+He sought again the santon's door,
+Not weak and trembling as before,
+
+But strong of limb and clear of brain;
+"Behold," he said, "the fiend is slain."
+
+"Nay," Hamza answered, "starved and drowned,
+The curst one lies in death-like swound.
+
+"But evil breaks the strongest gyves,
+And jins like him have charmed lives.
+
+"One beaker of the juice of grape
+May call him up in living shape.
+
+"When the red wine of Badakshan
+Sparkles for thee, beware, O Khan,
+
+"With water quench the fire within,
+And drown each day thy devilkin!"
+
+Thenceforth the great Khan shunned the cup
+As Shitan's own, though offered up,
+
+With laughing eyes and jewelled hands,
+By Yarkand's maids and Samarcand's.
+
+And, in the lofty vestibule
+Of the medress of Kaush Kodul,
+
+The students of the holy law
+A golden-lettered tablet saw,
+
+With these words, by a cunning hand,
+Graved on it at the Khan's command:
+
+"In Allah's name, to him who hath
+A devil, Khan el Hamed saith,
+
+"Wisely our Prophet cursed the vine
+The fiend that loves the breath of wine,
+
+"No prayer can slay, no marabout
+Nor Meccan dervis can drive out.
+
+"I, Khan el Hamed, know the charm
+That robs him of his power to harm.
+
+"Drown him, O Islam's child! the spell
+To save thee lies in tank and well!"
+1879.
+
+
+
+
+THE KING'S MISSIVE.
+1661.
+
+This ballad, originally written for The Memorial History of Boston,
+describes, with pardonable poetic license, a memorable incident in the
+annals of the city. The interview between Shattuck and the Governor took
+place, I have since learned, in the residence of the latter, and not
+in the Council Chamber. The publication of the ballad led to some
+discussion as to the historical truthfulness of the picture, but I have
+seen no reason to rub out any of the figures or alter the lines and
+colors.
+
+
+UNDER the great hill sloping bare
+To cove and meadow and Common lot,
+In his council chamber and oaken chair,
+Sat the worshipful Governor Endicott.
+A grave, strong man, who knew no peer
+In the pilgrim land, where he ruled in fear
+Of God, not man, and for good or ill
+Held his trust with an iron will.
+
+He had shorn with his sword the cross from out
+The flag, and cloven the May-pole down,
+Harried the heathen round about,
+And whipped the Quakers from town to town.
+Earnest and honest, a man at need
+To burn like a torch for his own harsh creed,
+He kept with the flaming brand of his zeal
+The gate of the holy common weal.
+
+His brow was clouded, his eye was stern,
+With a look of mingled sorrow and wrath;
+"Woe's me!" he murmured: "at every turn
+The pestilent Quakers are in my path!
+Some we have scourged, and banished some,
+Some hanged, more doomed, and still they come,
+Fast as the tide of yon bay sets in,
+Sowing their heresy's seed of sin.
+
+"Did we count on this? Did we leave behind
+The graves of our kin, the comfort and ease
+Of our English hearths and homes, to find
+Troublers of Israel such as these?
+Shall I spare? Shall I pity them? God forbid!
+I will do as the prophet to Agag did
+They come to poison the wells of the Word,
+I will hew them in pieces before the Lord!"
+
+The door swung open, and Rawson the clerk
+Entered, and whispered under breath,
+"There waits below for the hangman's work
+A fellow banished on pain of death--
+Shattuck, of Salem, unhealed of the whip,
+Brought over in Master Goldsmith's ship
+At anchor here in a Christian port,
+With freight of the devil and all his sort!"
+
+Twice and thrice on the chamber floor
+Striding fiercely from wall to wall,
+"The Lord do so to me and more,"
+The Governor cried, "if I hang not all!
+Bring hither the Quaker." Calm, sedate,
+With the look of a man at ease with fate,
+Into that presence grim and dread
+Came Samuel Shattuck, with hat on head.
+
+"Off with the knave's hat!" An angry hand
+Smote down the offence; but the wearer said,
+With a quiet smile, "By the king's command
+I bear his message and stand in his stead."
+In the Governor's hand a missive he laid
+With the royal arms on its seal displayed,
+And the proud man spake as he gazed thereat,
+Uncovering, "Give Mr. Shattuck his hat."
+
+He turned to the Quaker, bowing low,--
+"The king commandeth your friends' release;
+Doubt not he shall be obeyed, although
+To his subjects' sorrow and sin's increase.
+What he here enjoineth, John Endicott,
+His loyal servant, questioneth not.
+You are free! God grant the spirit you own
+May take you from us to parts unknown."
+
+So the door of the jail was open cast,
+And, like Daniel, out of the lion's den
+Tender youth and girlhood passed,
+With age-bowed women and gray-locked men.
+And the voice of one appointed to die
+Was lifted in praise and thanks on high,
+And the little maid from New Netherlands
+Kissed, in her joy, the doomed man's hands.
+
+And one, whose call was to minister
+To the souls in prison, beside him went,
+An ancient woman, bearing with her
+The linen shroud for his burial meant.
+For she, not counting her own life dear,
+In the strength of a love that cast out fear,
+Had watched and served where her brethren died,
+Like those who waited the cross beside.
+
+One moment they paused on their way to look
+On the martyr graves by the Common side,
+And much scourged Wharton of Salem took
+His burden of prophecy up and cried
+"Rest, souls of the valiant! Not in vain
+Have ye borne the Master's cross of pain;
+Ye have fought the fight, ye are victors crowned,
+With a fourfold chain ye have Satan bound!"
+
+The autumn haze lay soft and still
+On wood and meadow and upland farms;
+On the brow of Snow Hill the great windmill
+Slowly and lazily swung its arms;
+Broad in the sunshine stretched away,
+With its capes and islands, the turquoise bay;
+And over water and dusk of pines
+Blue hills lifted their faint outlines.
+
+The topaz leaves of the walnut glowed,
+The sumach added its crimson fleck,
+And double in air and water showed
+The tinted maples along the Neck;
+Through frost flower clusters of pale star-mist,
+And gentian fringes of amethyst,
+And royal plumes of golden-rod,
+The grazing cattle on Centry trod.
+
+But as they who see not, the Quakers saw
+The world about them; they only thought
+With deep thanksgiving and pious awe
+On the great deliverance God had wrought.
+Through lane and alley the gazing town
+Noisily followed them up and down;
+Some with scoffing and brutal jeer,
+Some with pity and words of cheer.
+
+One brave voice rose above the din.
+Upsall, gray with his length of days,
+Cried from the door of his Red Lion Inn
+"Men of Boston, give God the praise
+No more shall innocent blood call down
+The bolts of wrath on your guilty town.
+The freedom of worship, dear to you,
+Is dear to all, and to all is due.
+
+"I see the vision of days to come,
+When your beautiful City of the Bay
+Shall be Christian liberty's chosen home,
+And none shall his neighbor's rights gainsay.
+The varying notes of worship shall blend
+And as one great prayer to God ascend,
+And hands of mutual charity raise
+Walls of salvation and gates of praise."
+
+So passed the Quakers through Boston town,
+Whose painful ministers sighed to see
+The walls of their sheep-fold falling down,
+And wolves of heresy prowling free.
+But the years went on, and brought no wrong;
+With milder counsels the State grew strong,
+As outward Letter and inward Light
+Kept the balance of truth aright.
+
+The Puritan spirit perishing not,
+To Concord's yeomen the signal sent,
+And spake in the voice of the cannon-shot
+That severed the chains of a continent.
+With its gentler mission of peace and good-will
+The thought of the Quaker is living still,
+And the freedom of soul he prophesied
+Is gospel and law where the martyrs died.
+1880.
+
+
+
+
+VALUATION.
+
+THE old Squire said, as he stood by his gate,
+And his neighbor, the Deacon, went by,
+"In spite of my bank stock and real estate,
+You are better off, Deacon, than I.
+
+"We're both growing old, and the end's drawing near,
+You have less of this world to resign,
+But in Heaven's appraisal your assets, I fear,
+Will reckon up greater than mine.
+
+"They say I am rich, but I'm feeling so poor,
+I wish I could swap with you even
+The pounds I have lived for and laid up in store
+For the shillings and pence you have given."
+
+"Well, Squire," said the Deacon, with shrewd
+common sense,
+While his eye had a twinkle of fun,
+"Let your pounds take the way of my shillings
+and pence,
+And the thing can be easily done!"
+1880.
+
+
+
+
+RABBI ISHMAEL.
+
+"Rabbi Ishmael Ben Elisha said, Once, I entered into the Holy of Holies
+[as High Priest] to burn incense, when I saw Aktriel [the Divine Crown]
+Jah, Lord of Hosts, sitting upon a throne, high and lifted up, who said
+unto me, 'Ishmael, my son, bless me.' I answered, 'May it please Thee to
+make Thy compassion prevail over Thine anger; may it be revealed above
+Thy other attributes; mayest Thou deal with Thy children according to
+it, and not according to the strict measure of judgment.' It seemed to
+me that He bowed His head, as though to answer Amen to my blessing."--
+Talmud (Beraehoth, I. f. 6. b.)
+
+
+THE Rabbi Ishmael, with the woe and sin
+Of the world heavy upon him, entering in
+The Holy of Holies, saw an awful Face
+With terrible splendor filling all the place.
+"O Ishmael Ben Elisha!" said a voice,
+"What seekest thou? What blessing is thy choice?"
+And, knowing that he stood before the Lord,
+Within the shadow of the cherubim,
+Wide-winged between the blinding light and him,
+He bowed himself, and uttered not a word,
+But in the silence of his soul was prayer
+"O Thou Eternal! I am one of all,
+And nothing ask that others may not share.
+Thou art almighty; we are weak and small,
+And yet Thy children: let Thy mercy spare!"
+Trembling, he raised his eyes, and in the place
+Of the insufferable glory, lo! a face
+Of more than mortal tenderness, that bent
+Graciously down in token of assent,
+And, smiling, vanished! With strange joy elate,
+The wondering Rabbi sought the temple's gate.
+Radiant as Moses from the Mount, he stood
+And cried aloud unto the multitude
+"O Israel, hear! The Lord our God is good!
+Mine eyes have seen his glory and his grace;
+Beyond his judgments shall his love endure;
+The mercy of the All Merciful is sure!"
+1881.
+
+
+
+
+THE ROCK-TOMB OF BRADORE.
+
+H. Y. Hind, in Explorations in the Interior of the Labrador Peninsula
+(ii. 166) mentions the finding of a rock tomb near the little fishing
+port of Bradore, with the inscription upon it which is given in the
+poem.
+
+A DREAR and desolate shore!
+Where no tree unfolds its leaves,
+And never the spring wind weaves
+Green grass for the hunter's tread;
+A land forsaken and dead,
+Where the ghostly icebergs go
+And come with the ebb and flow
+Of the waters of Bradore!
+
+A wanderer, from a land
+By summer breezes fanned,
+Looked round him, awed, subdued,
+By the dreadful solitude,
+Hearing alone the cry
+Of sea-birds clanging by,
+The crash and grind of the floe,
+Wail of wind and wash of tide.
+"O wretched land!" he cried,
+"Land of all lands the worst,
+God forsaken and curst!
+Thy gates of rock should show
+The words the Tuscan seer
+Read in the Realm of Woe
+Hope entereth not here!"
+
+Lo! at his feet there stood
+A block of smooth larch wood,
+Waif of some wandering wave,
+Beside a rock-closed cave
+By Nature fashioned for a grave;
+Safe from the ravening bear
+And fierce fowl of the air,
+Wherein to rest was laid
+A twenty summers' maid,
+Whose blood had equal share
+Of the lands of vine and snow,
+Half French, half Eskimo.
+In letters uneffaced,
+Upon the block were traced
+The grief and hope of man,
+And thus the legend ran
+"We loved her!
+Words cannot tell how well!
+We loved her!
+God loved her!
+And called her home to peace and rest.
+We love her."
+
+The stranger paused and read.
+"O winter land!" he said,
+"Thy right to be I own;
+God leaves thee not alone.
+And if thy fierce winds blow
+Over drear wastes of rock and snow,
+And at thy iron gates
+The ghostly iceberg waits,
+Thy homes and hearts are dear.
+Thy sorrow o'er thy sacred dust
+Is sanctified by hope and trust;
+God's love and man's are here.
+And love where'er it goes
+Makes its own atmosphere;
+Its flowers of Paradise
+Take root in the eternal ice,
+And bloom through Polar snows!"
+1881.
+
+
+
+
+THE BAY OF SEVEN ISLANDS.
+
+The volume in which "The Bay of Seven Islands" was published was
+dedicated to the late Edwin Percy Whipple, to whom more than to any
+other person I was indebted for public recognition as one worthy of a
+place in American literature, at a time when it required a great degree
+of courage to urge such a claim for a pro-scribed abolitionist. Although
+younger than I, he had gained the reputation of a brilliant essayist,
+and was regarded as the highest American authority in criticism. His wit
+and wisdom enlivened a small literary circle of young men including
+Thomas Starr King, the eloquent preacher, and Daniel N. Haskell of the
+Daily Transcript, who gathered about our common friend dames T. Fields
+at the Old Corner Bookstore. The poem which gave title to the volume I
+inscribed to my friend and neighbor Harriet Prescott Spofford, whose
+poems have lent a new interest to our beautiful river-valley.
+
+FROM the green Amesbury hill which bears the name
+Of that half mythic ancestor of mine
+Who trod its slopes two hundred years ago,
+Down the long valley of the Merrimac,
+Midway between me and the river's mouth,
+I see thy home, set like an eagle's nest
+Among Deer Island's immemorial pines,
+Crowning the crag on which the sunset breaks
+Its last red arrow. Many a tale and song,
+Which thou bast told or sung, I call to mind,
+Softening with silvery mist the woods and hills,
+The out-thrust headlands and inreaching bays
+Of our northeastern coast-line, trending where
+The Gulf, midsummer, feels the chill blockade
+Of icebergs stranded at its northern gate.
+
+To thee the echoes of the Island Sound
+Answer not vainly, nor in vain the moan
+Of the South Breaker prophesying storm.
+And thou hast listened, like myself, to men
+Sea-periled oft where Anticosti lies
+Like a fell spider in its web of fog,
+Or where the Grand Bank shallows with the wrecks
+Of sunken fishers, and to whom strange isles
+And frost-rimmed bays and trading stations seem
+Familiar as Great Neck and Kettle Cove,
+Nubble and Boon, the common names of home.
+So let me offer thee this lay of mine,
+Simple and homely, lacking much thy play
+Of color and of fancy. If its theme
+And treatment seem to thee befitting youth
+Rather than age, let this be my excuse
+It has beguiled some heavy hours and called
+Some pleasant memories up; and, better still,
+Occasion lent me for a kindly word
+To one who is my neighbor and my friend.
+1883.
+
+ . . . . . . . . . .
+
+The skipper sailed out of the harbor mouth,
+Leaving the apple-bloom of the South
+For the ice of the Eastern seas,
+In his fishing schooner Breeze.
+
+Handsome and brave and young was he,
+And the maids of Newbury sighed to see
+His lessening white sail fall
+Under the sea's blue wall.
+
+Through the Northern Gulf and the misty screen
+Of the isles of Mingan and Madeleine,
+St. Paul's and Blanc Sablon,
+The little Breeze sailed on,
+
+Backward and forward, along the shore
+Of lorn and desolate Labrador,
+And found at last her way
+To the Seven Islands Bay.
+
+The little hamlet, nestling below
+Great hills white with lingering snow,
+With its tin-roofed chapel stood
+Half hid in the dwarf spruce wood;
+
+Green-turfed, flower-sown, the last outpost
+Of summer upon the dreary coast,
+With its gardens small and spare,
+Sad in the frosty air.
+
+Hard by where the skipper's schooner lay,
+A fisherman's cottage looked away
+Over isle and bay, and behind
+On mountains dim-defined.
+
+And there twin sisters, fair and young,
+Laughed with their stranger guest, and sung
+In their native tongue the lays
+Of the old Provencal days.
+
+Alike were they, save the faint outline
+Of a scar on Suzette's forehead fine;
+And both, it so befell,
+Loved the heretic stranger well.
+
+Both were pleasant to look upon,
+But the heart of the skipper clave to one;
+Though less by his eye than heart
+He knew the twain apart.
+
+Despite of alien race and creed,
+Well did his wooing of Marguerite speed;
+And the mother's wrath was vain
+As the sister's jealous pain.
+
+The shrill-tongued mistress her house forbade,
+And solemn warning was sternly said
+By the black-robed priest, whose word
+As law the hamlet heard.
+
+But half by voice and half by signs
+The skipper said, "A warm sun shines
+On the green-banked Merrimac;
+Wait, watch, till I come back.
+
+"And when you see, from my mast head,
+The signal fly of a kerchief red,
+My boat on the shore shall wait;
+Come, when the night is late."
+
+Ah! weighed with childhood's haunts and friends,
+And all that the home sky overbends,
+Did ever young love fail
+To turn the trembling scale?
+
+Under the night, on the wet sea sands,
+Slowly unclasped their plighted hands
+One to the cottage hearth,
+And one to his sailor's berth.
+
+What was it the parting lovers heard?
+Nor leaf, nor ripple, nor wing of bird,
+But a listener's stealthy tread
+On the rock-moss, crisp and dead.
+
+He weighed his anchor, and fished once more
+By the black coast-line of Labrador;
+And by love and the north wind driven,
+Sailed back to the Islands Seven.
+
+In the sunset's glow the sisters twain
+Saw the Breeze come sailing in again;
+Said Suzette, "Mother dear,
+The heretic's sail is here."
+
+"Go, Marguerite, to your room, and hide;
+Your door shall be bolted!" the mother cried:
+While Suzette, ill at ease,
+Watched the red sign of the Breeze.
+
+At midnight, down to the waiting skiff
+She stole in the shadow of the cliff;
+And out of the Bay's mouth ran
+The schooner with maid and man.
+
+And all night long, on a restless bed,
+Her prayers to the Virgin Marguerite said
+And thought of her lover's pain
+Waiting for her in vain.
+
+Did he pace the sands? Did he pause to hear
+The sound of her light step drawing near?
+And, as the slow hours passed,
+Would he doubt her faith at last?
+
+But when she saw through the misty pane,
+The morning break on a sea of rain,
+Could even her love avail
+To follow his vanished sail?
+
+Meantime the Breeze, with favoring wind,
+Left the rugged Moisic hills behind,
+And heard from an unseen shore
+The falls of Manitou roar.
+
+On the morrow's morn, in the thick, gray weather
+They sat on the reeling deck together,
+Lover and counterfeit,
+Of hapless Marguerite.
+
+With a lover's hand, from her forehead fair
+He smoothed away her jet-black hair.
+What was it his fond eyes met?
+The scar of the false Suzette!
+
+Fiercely he shouted: "Bear away
+East by north for Seven Isles Bay!"
+The maiden wept and prayed,
+But the ship her helm obeyed.
+
+Once more the Bay of the Isles they found
+They heard the bell of the chapel sound,
+And the chant of the dying sung
+In the harsh, wild Indian tongue.
+
+A feeling of mystery, change, and awe
+Was in all they heard and all they saw
+Spell-bound the hamlet lay
+In the hush of its lonely bay.
+
+And when they came to the cottage door,
+The mother rose up from her weeping sore,
+And with angry gestures met
+The scared look of Suzette.
+
+"Here is your daughter," the skipper said;
+"Give me the one I love instead."
+But the woman sternly spake;
+"Go, see if the dead will wake!"
+
+He looked. Her sweet face still and white
+And strange in the noonday taper light,
+She lay on her little bed,
+With the cross at her feet and head.
+
+In a passion of grief the strong man bent
+Down to her face, and, kissing it, went
+Back to the waiting Breeze,
+Back to the mournful seas.
+
+Never again to the Merrimac
+And Newbury's homes that bark came back.
+Whether her fate she met
+On the shores of Carraquette,
+
+Miscou, or Tracadie, who can say?
+But even yet at Seven Isles Bay
+Is told the ghostly tale
+Of a weird, unspoken sail,
+
+In the pale, sad light of the Northern day
+Seen by the blanketed Montagnais,
+Or squaw, in her small kyack,
+Crossing the spectre's track.
+
+On the deck a maiden wrings her hands;
+Her likeness kneels on the gray coast sands;
+One in her wild despair,
+And one in the trance of prayer.
+
+She flits before no earthly blast,
+The red sign fluttering from her mast,
+Over the solemn seas,
+The ghost of the schooner Breeze!
+1882.
+
+
+
+
+THE WISHING BRIDGE.
+
+AMONG the legends sung or said
+Along our rocky shore,
+The Wishing Bridge of Marblehead
+May well be sung once more.
+
+An hundred years ago (so ran
+The old-time story) all
+Good wishes said above its span
+Would, soon or late, befall.
+
+If pure and earnest, never failed
+The prayers of man or maid
+For him who on the deep sea sailed,
+For her at home who stayed.
+
+Once thither came two girls from school,
+And wished in childish glee
+And one would be a queen and rule,
+And one the world would see.
+
+Time passed; with change of hopes and fears,
+And in the self-same place,
+Two women, gray with middle years,
+Stood, wondering, face to face.
+
+With wakened memories, as they met,
+They queried what had been
+"A poor man's wife am I, and yet,"
+Said one, "I am a queen.
+
+"My realm a little homestead is,
+Where, lacking crown and throne,
+I rule by loving services
+And patient toil alone."
+
+The other said: "The great world lies
+Beyond me as it lay;
+O'er love's and duty's boundaries
+My feet may never stray.
+
+"I see but common sights of home,
+Its common sounds I hear,
+My widowed mother's sick-bed room
+Sufficeth for my sphere.
+
+"I read to her some pleasant page
+Of travel far and wide,
+And in a dreamy pilgrimage
+We wander side by side.
+
+"And when, at last, she falls asleep,
+My book becomes to me
+A magic glass: my watch I keep,
+But all the world I see.
+
+"A farm-wife queen your place you fill,
+While fancy's privilege
+Is mine to walk the earth at will,
+Thanks to the Wishing Bridge."
+
+"Nay, leave the legend for the truth,"
+The other cried, "and say
+God gives the wishes of our youth,
+But in His own best way!"
+1882.
+
+
+
+
+HOW THE WOMEN WENT FROM DOVER.
+
+The following is a copy of the warrant issued by Major Waldron, of
+Dover, in 1662. The Quakers, as was their wont, prophesied against him,
+and saw, as they supposed, the fulfilment of their prophecy when, many
+years after, he was killed by the Indians.
+
+ To the constables of Dover, Hampton, Salisbury, Newbury, Rowley,
+ Ipswich, Wenham, Lynn, Boston, Roxbury, Dedham, and until these
+ vagabond Quakers are carried out of this jurisdiction. You, and
+ every one of you, are required, in the King's Majesty's name, to
+ take these vagabond Quakers, Anne Colman, Mary Tomkins, and Alice
+ Ambrose, and make them fast to the cart's tail, and driving the
+ cart through your several towns, to whip them upon their naked
+ backs not exceeding ten stripes apiece on each of them, in each
+ town; and so to convey them from constable to constable till they
+ are out of this jurisdiction, as you will answer it at your peril;
+ and this shall be your warrant.
+ RICHARD WALDRON.
+ Dated at Dover, December 22, 1662.
+
+This warrant was executed only in Dover and Hampton. At Salisbury the
+constable refused to obey it. He was sustained by the town's people, who
+were under the influence of Major Robert Pike, the leading man in the
+lower valley of the Merrimac, who stood far in advance of his time, as
+an advocate of religious freedom, and an opponent of ecclesiastical
+authority. He had the moral courage to address an able and manly letter
+to the court at Salem, remonstrating against the witchcraft trials.
+
+
+THE tossing spray of Cocheco's fall
+Hardened to ice on its rocky wall,
+As through Dover town in the chill, gray dawn,
+Three women passed, at the cart-tail drawn!
+
+Bared to the waist, for the north wind's grip
+And keener sting of the constable's whip,
+The blood that followed each hissing blow
+Froze as it sprinkled the winter snow.
+
+Priest and ruler, boy and maid
+Followed the dismal cavalcade;
+And from door and window, open thrown,
+Looked and wondered gaffer and crone.
+
+"God is our witness," the victims cried,
+We suffer for Him who for all men died;
+The wrong ye do has been done before,
+We bear the stripes that the Master bore!
+
+And thou, O Richard Waldron, for whom
+We hear the feet of a coming doom,
+On thy cruel heart and thy hand of wrong
+Vengeance is sure, though it tarry long.
+
+"In the light of the Lord, a flame we see
+Climb and kindle a proud roof-tree;
+And beneath it an old man lying dead,
+With stains of blood on his hoary head."
+
+"Smite, Goodman Hate-Evil!--harder still!"
+The magistrate cried, "lay on with a will!
+Drive out of their bodies the Father of Lies,
+Who through them preaches and prophesies!"
+
+So into the forest they held their way,
+By winding river and frost-rimmed bay,
+Over wind-swept hills that felt the beat
+Of the winter sea at their icy feet.
+
+The Indian hunter, searching his traps,
+Peered stealthily through the forest gaps;
+And the outlying settler shook his head,--
+"They're witches going to jail," he said.
+
+At last a meeting-house came in view;
+A blast on his horn the constable blew;
+And the boys of Hampton cried up and down,
+"The Quakers have come!" to the wondering town.
+
+From barn and woodpile the goodman came;
+The goodwife quitted her quilting frame,
+With her child at her breast; and, hobbling slow,
+The grandam followed to see the show.
+
+Once more the torturing whip was swung,
+Once more keen lashes the bare flesh stung.
+"Oh, spare! they are bleeding!"' a little maid cried,
+And covered her face the sight to hide.
+
+A murmur ran round the crowd: "Good folks,"
+Quoth the constable, busy counting the strokes,
+"No pity to wretches like these is due,
+They have beaten the gospel black and blue!"
+
+Then a pallid woman, in wild-eyed fear,
+With her wooden noggin of milk drew near.
+"Drink, poor hearts!" a rude hand smote
+Her draught away from a parching throat.
+
+"Take heed," one whispered, "they'll take your cow
+For fines, as they took your horse and plough,
+And the bed from under you." "Even so,"
+She said; "they are cruel as death, I know."
+
+Then on they passed, in the waning day,
+Through Seabrook woods, a weariful way;
+By great salt meadows and sand-hills bare,
+And glimpses of blue sea here and there.
+
+By the meeting-house in Salisbury town,
+The sufferers stood, in the red sundown,
+Bare for the lash! O pitying Night,
+Drop swift thy curtain and hide the sight.
+
+With shame in his eye and wrath on his lip
+The Salisbury constable dropped his whip.
+"This warrant means murder foul and red;
+Cursed is he who serves it," he said.
+
+"Show me the order, and meanwhile strike
+A blow at your peril!" said Justice Pike.
+Of all the rulers the land possessed,
+Wisest and boldest was he and best.
+
+He scoffed at witchcraft; the priest he met
+As man meets man; his feet he set
+Beyond his dark age, standing upright,
+Soul-free, with his face to the morning light.
+
+He read the warrant: "These convey
+From our precincts; at every town on the way
+Give each ten lashes." "God judge the brute!
+I tread his order under my foot!
+
+"Cut loose these poor ones and let them go;
+Come what will of it, all men shall know
+No warrant is good, though backed by the Crown,
+For whipping women in Salisbury town!"
+
+The hearts of the villagers, half released
+From creed of terror and rule of priest,
+By a primal instinct owned the right
+Of human pity in law's despite.
+
+For ruth and chivalry only slept,
+His Saxon manhood the yeoman kept;
+Quicker or slower, the same blood ran
+In the Cavalier and the Puritan.
+
+The Quakers sank on their knees in praise
+And thanks. A last, low sunset blaze
+Flashed out from under a cloud, and shed
+A golden glory on each bowed head.
+
+The tale is one of an evil time,
+When souls were fettered and thought was crime,
+And heresy's whisper above its breath
+Meant shameful scourging and bonds and death!
+
+What marvel, that hunted and sorely tried,
+Even woman rebuked and prophesied,
+And soft words rarely answered back
+The grim persuasion of whip and rack.
+
+If her cry from the whipping-post and jail
+Pierced sharp as the Kenite's driven nail,
+O woman, at ease in these happier days,
+Forbear to judge of thy sister's ways!
+
+How much thy beautiful life may owe
+To her faith and courage thou canst not know,
+Nor how from the paths of thy calm retreat
+She smoothed the thorns with her bleeding feet.
+1883.
+
+
+
+
+SAINT GREGORY'S GUEST.
+
+A TALE for Roman guides to tell
+To careless, sight-worn travellers still,
+Who pause beside the narrow cell
+Of Gregory on the Caelian Hill.
+
+One day before the monk's door came
+A beggar, stretching empty palms,
+Fainting and fast-sick, in the name
+Of the Most Holy asking alms.
+
+And the monk answered, "All I have
+In this poor cell of mine I give,
+The silver cup my mother gave;
+In Christ's name take thou it, and live."
+
+Years passed; and, called at last to bear
+The pastoral crook and keys of Rome,
+The poor monk, in Saint Peter's chair,
+Sat the crowned lord of Christendom.
+
+"Prepare a feast," Saint Gregory cried,
+"And let twelve beggars sit thereat."
+The beggars came, and one beside,
+An unknown stranger, with them sat.
+
+"I asked thee not," the Pontiff spake,
+"O stranger; but if need be thine,
+I bid thee welcome, for the sake
+Of Him who is thy Lord and mine."
+
+A grave, calm face the stranger raised,
+Like His who on Gennesaret trod,
+Or His on whom the Chaldeans gazed,
+Whose form was as the Son of God.
+
+"Know'st thou," he said, "thy gift of old?"
+And in the hand he lifted up
+The Pontiff marvelled to behold
+Once more his mother's silver cup.
+
+"Thy prayers and alms have risen, and bloom
+Sweetly among the flowers of heaven.
+I am The Wonderful, through whom
+Whate'er thou askest shall be given."
+
+He spake and vanished. Gregory fell
+With his twelve guests in mute accord
+Prone on their faces, knowing well
+Their eyes of flesh had seen the Lord.
+
+The old-time legend is not vain;
+Nor vain thy art, Verona's Paul,
+Telling it o'er and o'er again
+On gray Vicenza's frescoed wall.
+
+Still wheresoever pity shares
+Its bread with sorrow, want, and sin,
+And love the beggar's feast prepares,
+The uninvited Guest comes in.
+
+Unheard, because our ears are dull,
+Unseen, because our eyes are dim,
+He walks our earth, The Wonderful,
+And all good deeds are done to Him.
+1883.
+
+
+
+
+BIRCHBROOK MILL.
+
+A NOTELESS stream, the Birchbrook runs
+Beneath its leaning trees;
+That low, soft ripple is its own,
+That dull roar is the sea's.
+
+Of human signs it sees alone
+The distant church spire's tip,
+And, ghost-like, on a blank of gray,
+The white sail of a ship.
+
+No more a toiler at the wheel,
+It wanders at its will;
+Nor dam nor pond is left to tell
+Where once was Birchbrook mill.
+
+The timbers of that mill have fed
+Long since a farmer's fires;
+His doorsteps are the stones that ground
+The harvest of his sires.
+
+Man trespassed here; but Nature lost
+No right of her domain;
+She waited, and she brought the old
+Wild beauty back again.
+
+By day the sunlight through the leaves
+Falls on its moist, green sod,
+And wakes the violet bloom of spring
+And autumn's golden-rod.
+
+Its birches whisper to the wind,
+The swallow dips her wings
+In the cool spray, and on its banks
+The gray song-sparrow sings.
+
+But from it, when the dark night falls,
+The school-girl shrinks with dread;
+The farmer, home-bound from his fields,
+Goes by with quickened tread.
+
+They dare not pause to hear the grind
+Of shadowy stone on stone;
+The plashing of a water-wheel
+Where wheel there now is none.
+
+Has not a cry of pain been heard
+Above the clattering mill?
+The pawing of an unseen horse,
+Who waits his mistress still?
+
+Yet never to the listener's eye
+Has sight confirmed the sound;
+A wavering birch line marks alone
+The vacant pasture ground.
+
+No ghostly arms fling up to heaven
+The agony of prayer;
+No spectral steed impatient shakes
+His white mane on the air.
+
+The meaning of that common dread
+No tongue has fitly told;
+The secret of the dark surmise
+The brook and birches hold.
+
+What nameless horror of the past
+Broods here forevermore?
+What ghost his unforgiven sin
+Is grinding o'er and o'er?
+
+Does, then, immortal memory play
+The actor's tragic part,
+Rehearsals of a mortal life
+And unveiled human heart?
+
+God's pity spare a guilty soul
+That drama of its ill,
+And let the scenic curtain fall
+On Birchbrook's haunted mill
+1884.
+
+
+
+
+THE TWO ELIZABETHS.
+Read at the unveiling of the bust of Elizabeth Fry at the Friends'
+School, Providence, R. I.
+
+A. D. 1209.
+
+AMIDST Thuringia's wooded hills she dwelt,
+A high-born princess, servant of the poor,
+Sweetening with gracious words the food she dealt
+To starving throngs at Wartburg's blazoned door.
+
+A blinded zealot held her soul in chains,
+Cramped the sweet nature that he could not kill,
+Scarred her fair body with his penance-pains,
+And gauged her conscience by his narrow will.
+
+God gave her gifts of beauty and of grace,
+With fast and vigil she denied them all;
+Unquestioning, with sad, pathetic face,
+She followed meekly at her stern guide's call.
+
+So drooped and died her home-blown rose of bliss
+In the chill rigor of a discipline
+That turned her fond lips from her children's kiss,
+And made her joy of motherhood a sin.
+
+To their sad level by compassion led,
+One with the low and vile herself she made,
+While thankless misery mocked the hand that fed,
+And laughed to scorn her piteous masquerade.
+
+But still, with patience that outwearied hate,
+She gave her all while yet she had to give;
+And then her empty hands, importunate,
+In prayer she lifted that the poor might live.
+
+Sore pressed by grief, and wrongs more hard to bear,
+And dwarfed and stifled by a harsh control,
+She kept life fragrant with good deeds and prayer,
+And fresh and pure the white flower of her soul.
+
+Death found her busy at her task: one word
+Alone she uttered as she paused to die,
+"Silence!"--then listened even as one who heard
+With song and wing the angels drawing nigh!
+
+Now Fra Angelico's roses fill her hands,
+And, on Murillo's canvas, Want and Pain
+Kneel at her feet. Her marble image stands
+Worshipped and crowned in Marburg's holy fane.
+
+Yea, wheresoe'er her Church its cross uprears,
+Wide as the world her story still is told;
+In manhood's reverence, woman's prayers and tears,
+She lives again whose grave is centuries old.
+
+And still, despite the weakness or the blame
+Of blind submission to the blind, she hath
+A tender place in hearts of every name,
+And more than Rome owns Saint Elizabeth!
+
+
+
+A. D. 1780.
+
+Slow ages passed: and lo! another came,
+An English matron, in whose simple faith
+Nor priestly rule nor ritual had claim,
+A plain, uncanonized Elizabeth.
+
+No sackcloth robe, nor ashen-sprinkled hair,
+Nor wasting fast, nor scourge, nor vigil long,
+Marred her calm presence. God had made her fair,
+And she could do His goodly work no wrong.
+
+Their yoke is easy and their burden light
+Whose sole confessor is the Christ of God;
+Her quiet trust and faith transcending sight
+Smoothed to her feet the difficult paths she trod.
+
+And there she walked, as duty bade her go,
+Safe and unsullied as a cloistered nun,
+Shamed with her plainness Fashion's gaudy show,
+And overcame the world she did not shun.
+
+In Earlham's bowers, in Plashet's liberal hall,
+In the great city's restless crowd and din,
+Her ear was open to the Master's call,
+And knew the summons of His voice within.
+
+Tender as mother, beautiful as wife,
+Amidst the throngs of prisoned crime she stood
+In modest raiment faultless as her life,
+The type of England's worthiest womanhood.
+
+To melt the hearts that harshness turned to stone
+The sweet persuasion of her lips sufficed,
+And guilt, which only hate and fear had known,
+Saw in her own the pitying love of Christ.
+
+So wheresoe'er the guiding Spirit went
+She followed, finding every prison cell
+It opened for her sacred as a tent
+Pitched by Gennesaret or by Jacob's well.
+
+And Pride and Fashion felt her strong appeal,
+And priest and ruler marvelled as they saw
+How hand in hand went wisdom with her zeal,
+And woman's pity kept the bounds of law.
+
+She rests in God's peace; but her memory stirs
+The air of earth as with an angel's wings,
+And warms and moves the hearts of men like hers,
+The sainted daughter of Hungarian kings.
+
+United now, the Briton and the Hun,
+Each, in her own time, faithful unto death,
+Live sister souls! in name and spirit one,
+Thuringia's saint and our Elizabeth!
+1885.
+
+
+
+
+REQUITAL.
+
+As Islam's Prophet, when his last day drew
+Nigh to its close, besought all men to say
+Whom he had wronged, to whom he then should pay
+A debt forgotten, or for pardon sue,
+And, through the silence of his weeping friends,
+A strange voice cried: "Thou owest me a debt,"
+"Allah be praised!" he answered. "Even yet
+He gives me power to make to thee amends.
+O friend! I thank thee for thy timely word."
+So runs the tale. Its lesson all may heed,
+For all have sinned in thought, or word, or deed,
+Or, like the Prophet, through neglect have erred.
+All need forgiveness, all have debts to pay
+Ere the night cometh, while it still is day.
+1885.
+
+
+
+
+THE HOMESTEAD.
+
+AGAINST the wooded hills it stands,
+Ghost of a dead home, staring through
+Its broken lights on wasted lands
+Where old-time harvests grew.
+
+Unploughed, unsown, by scythe unshorn,
+The poor, forsaken farm-fields lie,
+Once rich and rife with golden corn
+And pale green breadths of rye.
+
+Of healthful herb and flower bereft,
+The garden plot no housewife keeps;
+Through weeds and tangle only left,
+The snake, its tenant, creeps.
+
+A lilac spray, still blossom-clad,
+Sways slow before the empty rooms;
+Beside the roofless porch a sad
+Pathetic red rose blooms.
+
+His track, in mould and dust of drouth,
+On floor and hearth the squirrel leaves,
+And in the fireless chimney's mouth
+His web the spider weaves.
+
+The leaning barn, about to fall,
+Resounds no more on husking eves;
+No cattle low in yard or stall,
+No thresher beats his sheaves.
+
+So sad, so drear! It seems almost
+Some haunting Presence makes its sign;
+That down yon shadowy lane some ghost
+Might drive his spectral kine!
+
+O home so desolate and lorn!
+Did all thy memories die with thee?
+Were any wed, were any born,
+Beneath this low roof-tree?
+
+Whose axe the wall of forest broke,
+And let the waiting sunshine through?
+What goodwife sent the earliest smoke
+Up the great chimney flue?
+
+Did rustic lovers hither come?
+Did maidens, swaying back and forth
+In rhythmic grace, at wheel and loom,
+Make light their toil with mirth?
+
+Did child feet patter on the stair?
+Did boyhood frolic in the snow?
+Did gray age, in her elbow chair,
+Knit, rocking to and fro?
+
+The murmuring brook, the sighing breeze,
+The pine's slow whisper, cannot tell;
+Low mounds beneath the hemlock-trees
+Keep the home secrets well.
+
+Cease, mother-land, to fondly boast
+Of sons far off who strive and thrive,
+Forgetful that each swarming host
+Must leave an emptier hive.
+
+O wanderers from ancestral soil,
+Leave noisome mill and chaffering store:
+Gird up your loins for sturdier toil,
+And build the home once more!
+
+Come back to bayberry-scented slopes,
+And fragrant fern, and ground-nut vine;
+Breathe airs blown over holt and copse
+Sweet with black birch and pine.
+
+What matter if the gains are small
+That life's essential wants supply?
+Your homestead's title gives you all
+That idle wealth can buy.
+
+All that the many-dollared crave,
+The brick-walled slaves of 'Change and mart,
+Lawns, trees, fresh air, and flowers, you have,
+More dear for lack of art.
+
+Your own sole masters, freedom-willed,
+With none to bid you go or stay,
+Till the old fields your fathers tilled,
+As manly men as they!
+
+With skill that spares your toiling hands,
+And chemic aid that science brings,
+Reclaim the waste and outworn lands,
+And reign thereon as kings
+1886.
+
+
+
+
+HOW THE ROBIN CAME.
+
+AN ALGONQUIN LEGEND.
+
+HAPPY young friends, sit by me,
+Under May's blown apple-tree,
+While these home-birds in and out
+Through the blossoms flit about.
+Hear a story, strange and old,
+By the wild red Indians told,
+How the robin came to be:
+
+Once a great chief left his son,--
+Well-beloved, his only one,--
+When the boy was well-nigh grown,
+In the trial-lodge alone.
+Left for tortures long and slow
+Youths like him must undergo,
+Who their pride of manhood test,
+Lacking water, food, and rest.
+
+Seven days the fast he kept,
+Seven nights he never slept.
+Then the young boy, wrung with pain,
+Weak from nature's overstrain,
+Faltering, moaned a low complaint
+"Spare me, father, for I faint!"
+But the chieftain, haughty-eyed,
+Hid his pity in his pride.
+"You shall be a hunter good,
+Knowing never lack of food;
+You shall be a warrior great,
+Wise as fox and strong as bear;
+Many scalps your belt shall wear,
+If with patient heart you wait
+Bravely till your task is done.
+Better you should starving die
+Than that boy and squaw should cry
+Shame upon your father's son!"
+
+When next morn the sun's first rays
+Glistened on the hemlock sprays,
+Straight that lodge the old chief sought,
+And boiled sainp and moose meat brought.
+"Rise and eat, my son!" he said.
+Lo, he found the poor boy dead!
+
+As with grief his grave they made,
+And his bow beside him laid,
+Pipe, and knife, and wampum-braid,
+On the lodge-top overhead,
+Preening smooth its breast of red
+And the brown coat that it wore,
+Sat a bird, unknown before.
+And as if with human tongue,
+"Mourn me not," it said, or sung;
+"I, a bird, am still your son,
+Happier than if hunter fleet,
+Or a brave, before your feet
+Laying scalps in battle won.
+Friend of man, my song shall cheer
+Lodge and corn-land; hovering near,
+To each wigwam I shall bring
+Tidings of the corning spring;
+Every child my voice shall know
+In the moon of melting snow,
+When the maple's red bud swells,
+And the wind-flower lifts its bells.
+As their fond companion
+Men shall henceforth own your son,
+And my song shall testify
+That of human kin am I."
+
+Thus the Indian legend saith
+How, at first, the robin came
+With a sweeter life from death,
+Bird for boy, and still the same.
+If my young friends doubt that this
+Is the robin's genesis,
+Not in vain is still the myth
+If a truth be found therewith
+Unto gentleness belong
+Gifts unknown to pride and wrong;
+Happier far than hate is praise,--
+He who sings than he who slays.
+
+
+
+
+BANISHED FROM MASSACHUSETTS.
+
+1660.
+
+On a painting by E. A. Abbey. The General Court of Massachusetts enacted
+Oct. 19, 1658, that "any person or persons of the cursed sect of
+Quakers" should, on conviction of the same, be banished, on pain
+of death, from the jurisdiction of the common-wealth.
+
+
+OVER the threshold of his pleasant home
+Set in green clearings passed the exiled Friend,
+In simple trust, misdoubting not the end.
+"Dear heart of mine!" he said, "the time has come
+To trust the Lord for shelter." One long gaze
+The goodwife turned on each familiar thing,--
+The lowing kine, the orchard blossoming,
+The open door that showed the hearth-fire's blaze,--
+And calmly answered, "Yes, He will provide."
+Silent and slow they crossed the homestead's bound,
+Lingering the longest by their child's grave-mound.
+"Move on, or stay and hang!" the sheriff cried.
+They left behind them more than home or land,
+And set sad faces to an alien strand.
+
+Safer with winds and waves than human wrath,
+With ravening wolves than those whose zeal for God
+Was cruelty to man, the exiles trod
+Drear leagues of forest without guide or path,
+Or launching frail boats on the uncharted sea,
+Round storm-vexed capes, whose teeth of granite ground
+The waves to foam, their perilous way they wound,
+Enduring all things so their souls were free.
+Oh, true confessors, shaming them who did
+Anew the wrong their Pilgrim Fathers bore
+For you the Mayflower spread her sail once more,
+Freighted with souls, to all that duty bid
+Faithful as they who sought an unknown land,
+O'er wintry seas, from Holland's Hook of Sand!
+
+So from his lost home to the darkening main,
+Bodeful of storm, stout Macy held his way,
+And, when the green shore blended with the gray,
+His poor wife moaned: "Let us turn back again."
+"Nay, woman, weak of faith, kneel down," said he,
+And say thy prayers: the Lord himself will steer;
+And led by Him, nor man nor devils I fear!
+So the gray Southwicks, from a rainy sea,
+Saw, far and faint, the loom of land, and gave
+With feeble voices thanks for friendly ground
+Whereon to rest their weary feet, and found
+A peaceful death-bed and a quiet grave
+Where, ocean-walled, and wiser than his age,
+The lord of Shelter scorned the bigot's rage.
+Aquidneck's isle, Nantucket's lonely shores,
+And Indian-haunted Narragansett saw
+The way-worn travellers round their camp-fire draw,
+Or heard the plashing of their weary oars.
+And every place whereon they rested grew
+Happier for pure and gracious womanhood,
+And men whose names for stainless honor stood,
+Founders of States and rulers wise and true.
+The Muse of history yet shall make amends
+To those who freedom, peace, and justice taught,
+Beyond their dark age led the van of thought,
+And left unforfeited the name of Friends.
+O mother State, how foiled was thy design
+The gain was theirs, the loss alone was thine.
+
+
+
+
+THE BROWN DWARF OF RUGEN.
+
+The hint of this ballad is found in Arndt's Miirchen, Berlin, 1816. The
+ballad appeared first in St. Nicholas, whose young readers were advised,
+while smiling at the absurd superstition, to remember that bad
+companionship and evil habits, desires, and passions are more to be
+dreaded now than the Elves and Trolls who frightened the children of
+past ages.
+
+
+THE pleasant isle of Rugen looks the Baltic water o'er,
+To the silver-sanded beaches of the Pomeranian
+shore;
+
+And in the town of Rambin a little boy and maid
+Plucked the meadow-flowers together and in the
+sea-surf played.
+
+Alike were they in beauty if not in their degree
+He was the Amptman's first-born, the miller's
+child was she.
+
+Now of old the isle of Rugen was full of Dwarfs
+and Trolls,
+The brown-faced little Earth-men, the people without
+souls;
+
+And for every man and woman in Rugen's island
+found
+Walking in air and sunshine, a Troll was
+underground.
+
+It chanced the little maiden, one morning, strolled
+away
+Among the haunted Nine Hills, where the elves
+and goblins play.
+
+That day, in barley-fields below, the harvesters had
+known
+Of evil voices in the air, and heard the small horns
+blown.
+
+She came not back; the search for her in field and
+wood was vain
+They cried her east, they cried her west, but she
+came not again.
+
+"She's down among the Brown Dwarfs," said the
+dream-wives wise and old,
+And prayers were made, and masses said, and
+Rambin's church bell tolled.
+
+Five years her father mourned her; and then John
+Deitrich said
+"I will find my little playmate, be she alive or
+dead."
+
+He watched among the Nine Hills, he heard the
+Brown Dwarfs sing,
+And saw them dance by moonlight merrily in a
+ring.
+
+And when their gay-robed leader tossed up his cap
+of red,
+Young Deitrich caught it as it fell, and thrust it
+on his head.
+
+The Troll came crouching at his feet and wept for
+lack of it.
+"Oh, give me back my magic cap, for your great
+head unfit!"
+
+"Nay," Deitrich said; "the Dwarf who throws his
+charmed cap away,
+Must serve its finder at his will, and for his folly
+pay.
+
+"You stole my pretty Lisbeth, and hid her in the
+earth;
+And you shall ope the door of glass and let me
+lead her forth."
+
+"She will not come; she's one of us; she's
+mine!" the Brown Dwarf said;
+The day is set, the cake is baked, to-morrow we
+shall wed."
+
+"The fell fiend fetch thee!" Deitrich cried, "and
+keep thy foul tongue still.
+Quick! open, to thy evil world, the glass door of
+the hill!"
+
+The Dwarf obeyed; and youth and Troll down, the
+long stair-way passed,
+And saw in dim and sunless light a country strange
+and vast.
+
+Weird, rich, and wonderful, he saw the elfin
+under-land,--
+Its palaces of precious stones, its streets of golden
+sand.
+
+He came unto a banquet-hall with tables richly
+spread,
+Where a young maiden served to him the red wine
+and the bread.
+
+How fair she seemed among the Trolls so ugly and
+so wild!
+Yet pale and very sorrowful, like one who never
+smiled!
+
+Her low, sweet voice, her gold-brown hair, her tender
+blue eyes seemed
+Like something he had seen elsewhere or some.
+thing he had dreamed.
+
+He looked; he clasped her in his arms; he knew
+the long-lost one;
+"O Lisbeth! See thy playmate--I am the
+Amptman's son!"
+
+She leaned her fair head on his breast, and through
+her sobs she spoke
+"Oh, take me from this evil place, and from the
+elfin folk,
+
+"And let me tread the grass-green fields and smell
+the flowers again,
+And feel the soft wind on my cheek and hear the
+dropping rain!
+
+"And oh, to hear the singing bird, the rustling of
+the tree,
+The lowing cows, the bleat of sheep, the voices of
+the sea;
+
+"And oh, upon my father's knee to sit beside the
+door,
+And hear the bell of vespers ring in Rambin
+church once more!"
+
+He kissed her cheek, he kissed her lips; the Brown
+Dwarf groaned to see,
+And tore his tangled hair and ground his long
+teeth angrily.
+
+But Deitrich said: "For five long years this tender
+Christian maid
+Has served you in your evil world and well must
+she be paid!
+
+"Haste!--hither bring me precious gems, the
+richest in your store;
+Then when we pass the gate of glass, you'll take
+your cap once more."
+
+No choice was left the baffled Troll, and, murmuring,
+he obeyed,
+And filled the pockets of the youth and apron of
+the maid.
+
+They left the dreadful under-land and passed the
+gate of glass;
+They felt the sunshine's warm caress, they trod the
+soft, green grass.
+
+And when, beneath, they saw the Dwarf stretch up
+to them his brown
+And crooked claw-like fingers, they tossed his red
+cap down.
+
+Oh, never shone so bright a sun, was never sky so
+blue,
+As hand in hand they homeward walked the pleasant
+meadows through!
+
+And never sang the birds so sweet in Rambin's
+woods before,
+And never washed the waves so soft along the Baltic
+shore;
+
+And when beneath his door-yard trees the father
+met his child,
+The bells rung out their merriest peal, the folks
+with joy ran wild.
+
+
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, NARRATIVE POEMS, COMPLETE ***
+By John Greenleaf Whittier
+
+******* This file should be named wit0810.txt or wit0810.zip ********
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