-. ■■■..■ ; LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. shelf ----- g f^ UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. CAREY'S POETICAL W0RKS, S3 INCLUDING A SELECTION OF POEMS BY HIS DAUGHTER, HELENA M. CAREY. 9FQ0 / ^co' f '- APR 25 1888 COHOES, N. Y. : .1. & M. WALLACE, PUBLISHERS. 1888. -p<^ ) a ^ C s Entered according to Act of Congress in year 1 888, by PATRICK CAREY, In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington, D.C. INTRODUCTION. BY A FRIEND OF THE AUTHOR. There is a charm in the friendship and com- panionship of a man of poetic temperament. The charm is all the greater to the prosaic citi- zen, who, while he enjoys the reading of poetry, cannot clearly comprehend the mental develop- ment, which ereates the beautiful imagery which delights him. In the friendship and companionship of Patrick Carey, I have found the charm of which I speak. I confess that in my busy work-a-day-life, I have had little time to dream as do the poets ; and less time to enjoy, as I feel I could, the sweet and soothing influence of poetic creations. But I have read the poems written by Patrick Carey, and with many of the thousands of readers, of the daily and weekly newspapers, I have admired them. 11 INTRODUCTION. Before I knew the author [ could picture the man. All his poems reflect his character. They show in the first place the cultured gen- tleman, tine-strung, highly imaginative. The man whose ideals are high, and whose aspira- tions are noble. His writings breathe in every line a love of truth and justice; a deep-rooted affection for the lovely, but woeful land of his birth ; and a devotion, all too rare in this indif- ferent age, to the Church of Christ. The success which he has achieved has been pleasing to me, as it has been to many; for in the popular recognition his talents as a poet has received, I have found, — and all his friends have found — a triumph, for a true and loyal Irishman; expatriated because of his intense, and perhaps indiscreet devotion to his native land. The Irishman who can read the patriotic poems printed in this book, and not exult in his heart, that here in free America, one able to sing the glories of Erin has found a refuge and a home ; has never been swayed by the tender thoughts, which our poet has clothed in such beautiful language. Knowing my friend as I know him, I fear that what I have said will not find favor in his eyes. At first, too modest to write a preface for his own book, he asked me as one of his INTRODUCTION. Ill friends and admirers, to pen a few lines by way of introduction. That I have done in my own poor way, would that I could do more. Whatever of merit lies in the poems, is left to the judgment of the reader. The sentiments they voice I know are sincere. Of the mere mechanical excellences of the poems, (and mechanical excellences seem to count for a great deal in modern verse,) the eritics must be the judges. William C. Cozier. Troy, N". Y., March 1st, 1888. THE AUTHOR'S PREFACE. In presenting the following collection of poems to the intelligent and critical judgment of the American people, I feel I have under- taken a task, which, while elevated and refined, falls far short of the ideal for which it was in- tended. But, though their poetic merits may not reach the standard of critical taste, nor their profound depths alarm the superficial thinker, yet their purity and modesty, will, I trust, com- mend themselves to the guardians of such kin- dred virtues, as jewels more inestimable, than the cultured thought, more elaborately clothed, or more insidiously portrayed. The subjects of many of the poems are of the most edifying nature, — purely Christian in spirit and tone ; and directly appealing to the warmest sympathies of our nature. If other- wise excellent, out of the Ten Thousand lines herein printed, there is not one I would elimi- AUTHOR S PREFACE. V nate, as offensive to the most refined taste. The same Christian spirit pervades my daugh- ter's poems, for whom, more earnestly than for myself, I would ask generous criticism. Amid the galaxy of bright stars, that now, more than ever, in the Literature of this coun- try, adorns its sky; I am more willing to ad- mire their glory, than to emulate their fame ; content that I have performed my part, to the best of my poor ability. An Irishman by birth and instincts, and an exile through coercion, is it to be wondered at that I should nurture and preserve an undying- hatred for the tyrannical power that grinds my country under its despotic heel, and treats my countrymen as though they had no right to exist in any part of the world, much less their native land. To any one whom I have offended hy my writings and hostility to this inhuman government, and who is so base as not to sympathize with the cause of Freedom, I would say in the title of Charles Reade's novel : " Put Yourself in His Place," and ask, " Would I be more forgiving?" I have been the recipient of many kind words and encouragements from my patrons and the Press; which I shall ever treasure with the keenest sense of gratitude and pride ; among these is the following criticism from the Oath* VI AUTHOR S PREFACE. olic Weekly of December 11th, 1887, on the Discovery of America, to the writer of which I am deeply grateful ; "We shall publish next week a poem entitled the "The Discovery of America," written by Patrick Carey of Cohoes, whose poems of late, in the Catholic Weekly, have attracted such extended notice. Mr. Carey's latest and most ambitious effort, teems with striking metaphors, clothed in beautiful and appropriate language- The narrative is historically faithful; and the prosaic details of the work are so inter- woven with poetic sentiments; that the poem as a whole, satisfies the most exacting taste. "The Discovery of Ameri- ca " is a well written poem, and of itself, is sufficient to es- tablish Mr. Carey's reputation. We bespeak for it the com- Tnendation of critical readers." I have little more to acid, than to thank my kind patrons for their generous appreciation and support of my humble efforts, to some of whom, more than to myself, I shall owe what- ever success the future may bring. Patrick Carey. Cohoes, K Y., March 1st, 1888. TABLE OF CONTENTS. MISCELLANEOUS. Page Address to the Sea, ....... 36 Address to the Sun, . . . . . 177 A Drop of Water, ' . .66 A Lingering Lover, . . . . . . 165 Ambition, ........ 95 America, ........ 15 A Picture of Life, ....... 35 April, 145 Andersonville, . . . . . . . .21 Boreas, ........ 74 Charleston, ......... 27 Columbus, ........ 82 Carrier's New Years Greeting, . . . . .132 Cohoes, ........ 158 Cohoes in Rhyme, ....... 161 Christmas Memories, ...... 179 Damon and Phyntias, ...... 86 December, ........ 42 Decoration Day, ....... 29 Decoration Day, — an ode, ..... 120 Defeat of the Galatea, ...... 32 Defeat of the Thistle, 33 Defeat, 110 Vlll TABLE OF CONTENTS. February, . . . . . . . . 143 Fourth of July, 184 Freedom's Barriers, ...... 81 Friendship, 88 God Is Light, ....... 47 Had I My Life to Live Again, ..... 79 Halloween, 108 Harsh Words, 106 Home, ........ 75 Hope Deferred, ....... 166 It Looks Like Spring, . . . . . . 115 June, ......... 147 Love of Land, ....... 92 Labor Day's Song, ....... 140 Labor's Remonstrance, . . . . . 170 May, 89 Memory, 130 Memorial Day, ■ • - • ■ . . 142 Moore's Visit to Cohoes, ..... 68 Morning, 40 Music, ........ 56 Nature's Lessons, ....... 64 Night, 134 Old Grimes, 156 Polaris, 94 Purity, 102 Shadows and Light, . . . . • . 45 Shattered Hopes Continued, . . . . 166 Song of Liberty, ....... 104 Sunshine and Cloud, . . . . . .155 The Discovery of America, ..... 1 The Grave of De Soto, . . . . . .17 TABLE OF CONTENTS. IX Thanksgiving, ....... 19 The Bartholdi Statue, 25 The Press, ....... 38 To a Sea Shell, ....... 43 To a Caged Eagle, ...... 48 The Uncertainty of Life, ...... 50 The Seasons, ....... 51 To a Robin, ........ 54 The River Set Free, ...... 57 The Shipwreck, . . . . . . .58 The Soldier's Grave, ...... 60 The Song Bird, 62 The Toiler, 70 The Poet's Lament, • • • • • .71 Thanksgiving Reflections, ..... 77 To The Moon, 84 The Rainhow, ....... 91 The Captured Flags, ...... 93 The Months, 97 To The Planet Jupiter, . . . . • .101 The Rejected Poem, . . . . • • 103 To The Muse, Ill The Song of Labor, . • • • • • 113 To a Star, . . . , 117 The Diver, 121 The Wonders of God, 123 The Battlefield, 126 The Sparrow, • • • • • • • ' • 137 The Violet, • 146 The Meeting of the Rivers, ..... 149 Truth, 153 The Torn Poem, 154 The Turkey's Soliloquy, ..... 167 The Tornado, 173 Time's Ledger, ....... 175 The Mother's Lament, • • • • • .181 The Lover's Quarrel, ...... 187 X TABLE OF CONTENTS. Venus, 172 Washington, 119 Wiggins, ........ 150 Winter, ........ 65 Winter's Specters, • • • • • • -183 POEMS ON IRELAND. A Jubilee Scene in Bantry Bay, .... 227 Aileen, . . 299 An Irish Exile's Jubilee Ode, .... 240 Aspiration, ........ 303 Beauteous Kathleen. ...... 296 Defiance, ........ 265 Erin Aroon, • • . • • . . 291 Erin Go Bragh, 225 Evelyn's Hair, . . . . . • • 211 Extei'mination, not Coercion, ..... 269 Forster — In Memoriam, ..... 264 Freedom's Hybrid, 290 In Memory of Thomas Moore, .... 244 Ireland, 208 Ireland's Devotion and Destiny, .... 230 Jubilee Reflections, • • • • • • -258 Kathleen, 285 Last Hours of Robert Emmet, ..... 206 Liberty's Martyrs, • • • ■ • ■ 216 Love of Land, ....... 238 My Native Land, 236 O'Driscoll's Daughter, ...... 248 On Robert Emmet's Speech, .... 189 On Tennyson's Jubilee Ode, ..... 253 TABLE OF CONTENTS. XI 272 267 283 288 On Tennyson's Colonial Ode, • On the Queen's Speech, Remembrance, ■ Shattered Hopes, St. Patrick's Day, 246 St. Patrick's Day Redivivi, 276 The Friends of Boyhood's Da>s, • » 221 The Exile's Last Gaze, 223 The Mitchelstown Horror, The Arrest of Father Keller, • • • • -274 The Exile's Song, 281 The Boycott, 287 The Lost Bottle, 297 The Union Jack, 293 To My Mother, 279 To James Clarence Mangan, .... :! Tullamore, ■■.••" Tyranny's Curse, 218 256 RELIGIOUS POEMS. A Christmas Carol, • A Legend, Benevolence, Casting the Stone, Christ Before Pilate, ■ ... Christmas Night, 308 ,, ,, .... 306 Death, ■ Easter Sunday, ■ Easter Thoughts, In Memoriam, • In Memory of a Friend, Life in Death, 340 309 350 316 313 322 341 343 351 Xll TABLE OF CONTENTS. On the Death of a Friend, ..... 348 Prayer, ......... 315 The Presence of God, ...... 305 The Palm — Palm Sunday, ..... 318 The Agony, 319 The Seven Dolors, • • • • • • • 32G The Via Dolorosa, ...... 328 The Crucifixion, ....... 333 The Resurrection, ...... 337 The Ascension, ....... 345 The Descent of the Holy Ghost, .... 347 Who'll Roll Pack the Stone, 312 HELENA M. CAREY'S POEMS. Affection's Memorials, ...... 399 A Fourth of July Song, 391 Autumn Leaves, ...... 390 Boyhood's Freaks, ....... 394 Death's Souvenir, ...... 370 Devotion's Hymn, ....... 372 Easter Song, ....... 367 Farewell to Eilleen, 402 Farewell to May, . . • ' • • • 381 Gathering Lilies, ....... 392 In Memory, ■ 400 Ireland's Evergreens, ...... 377 Joy 365 Jane, ......... 382 Memory of Departed Worth. . . . . 358 TABLE OF CONTENTS. Xlll New Years Day. ....... 362 November, ....... 403 October, 360 October's Glories, • • • • • • 391 On the Death of a Friend, 397 Pity, 366 Regret, ......... 363 The Soldier's Grave, ...... 356 The Shamrock, 376 The May Lily, 379 The Light of God, 383 The Resurrection of Natuie, .... 393 The Snow, 404 Thanksgiving Musings, ..... 374 Thoughts, ........ 388 To the Muse. 355 To Sister Nellie, 369 What the Star Saw, 384 Youth's Memories, ....... 386 CAREY'S POETICAL WORKS. -:o: THE DISCOVERY OF AMERICA. Eberia's sun rose clear and bright Flooding fair Palos in his light. Then stretching onward to the West Silvered the foam on Ocean's breast: That untried Ocean, vast, unknown, Xow 1 dazed beneath his fiery zone; That untried Ocean, soon the scene ( )f man's unconquerable mein ; Of man's indomitable will, As godlike as his power and skill ; That untried Ocean soon shall glow, With pregnant sail as white as snow : That untried Ocean soon shall hear, The glorious sound of song and cheer : Shall mark the highway of the earth, Predestined at Creation's birth ! THE DISCOVERY But what great captain can we find, With grasp of will and force of mind. Whose daring would the vast explore From Tarik's wave to western shore, And plow those seas, ne'er plowed before. Already "midst the throng we see, Moving along in majesty, A stately form, erect and fair, With brow of Jove and snowy hair: Determination in his eye, And high resolve to dare, or die ; — ' Tis he of men the truly brave, Who now tempts fortune and the wave, ' lis he, Columbus, great and blest, Who seeks Cathay by sailing west. And now a hymn of praise is sung ! To Him whose name rests on each tongue ! For priests and laymen now unite, To praise the God of Love and Light ; To ask His blessing and His care For those who now the Ocean dare. Three caravels at mooring lay Whose snowy sail adorns the bay — Rude in construction — tempting winds, The argosies of daring minds ; Not e'en the Argonauts of old Who sought the fabled Fleece ot Gold, OF AMERICA. Embarked for Colchis with such pride, As they who now would tempt the tide. The daring hand now reach the shore, Their much loved captain gone before; Their children, wives, and freinds are met, With anguished hearts and deep regret ; Their tearful eyes the vast explore, And call up fears ne'er felt before ; Beyond the trackless ocean lies Kissing the rim of western skies ; Behind the beauteous land of Spain Thrice blessed is Isabella's reign — That glorious queen of fair Castile, The vanquisher of Boabidil. But oh ! for him the great Genoese, Whose tears are shed, who dares accuse The enterprise whose glory shed, Its lustre on a monarch's head. And now the parting hour draws nigh When tender hearts must say good-bye ; When loving wish and earnest prayer, Will sanctity the morning air ! When every feeling of the heart Is centered in those words — we part, With earth's fair hopes forever thrown Upon the breast of the unknown. (), what a theme for poet's pen This noble quest of daring men ; THE' DISCOVERY' ( >, what a theme on which to write, To snatch a gleam from Nature's light : To paint in burning' words of tire, The mind that planned this bold desire ; But vain the effort, vain the thought, The mind is lost in what it sought. The caravels are set, and now, They face the west with sullen prow : The morning's sun behind them lies Kissing the rim of western skies ; Their captain in the first is seen, The Sancta Maria — Ocean's Queen — ■ Presage of Hope's expectancy — Protectress of the land and sea! The anguished moan of grief and pain. The earnest eye whose vivid strain, Would hold the shadows growing dim Beside the dark horizon's rim ; Those fading shadows soon shall lave Their gull-like breasts in western wave ; Shall leave behind a hallowed name — The everlasting wreath of fame. Look to the east, ere yet the wave, Shall roll above Hispania's grave : Look to the east, where Palos lies, Nestled beneath cerulean skies ; Look to the east, where sorrowing friends, Cndistinet utow,— indistinct blends OF AMERICA. With that last glance you e'er may gain Of "Europe's Queen,"— " Fair Sunny Spain/ Look! look again, the sea and sky Are met, and now brave hearts good-bye. Around, before, north, south, east, west. God's bound'ries on the Ocean rest ; His mercies now are thine to save The daring hearts that tempt His wave : Are thine thro' danger and thro' ill, The creatures of His Sovereign Will. Alas ! for man's stability On God's fair earth or boundless sea. T^he very courage he'd evoke Ere tested is too often broke ; 80 was it now when Palos grew Indistinct o'er the waters blue ; 80 was it, when with tearful grief They gazed their last on Teneritte ; Whose fiery cone, far reaching gave A lurid glow to eastern wave. And now, the last known land is passed. And countless fears come crowding fast ; The unexplored, uncertain, lies Unbroken 'neath the saffron skies, "Whose beauteous tints the west adorn, The reflex of the weeping morn: Whilst Hesperus, with silver crest, Lights up the arch, that bounds the west,— 6 THE DISCOVERY The star of hope whose beck'ning ray N"ow cheers them on their trackless way' The night comes down upon that sea In all her dreaded panoply, Shadowing the heart with horrid fears, And forcing hack the coward tears, — Mistress of Thought, whose shadows roll, Across the mirror of the soul ! Mistress of Thought, whose silence brings, Our life before the King of Kings !' The terrors, which their fears awoke, Were quieted, as morning broke ; That August morning — weeping balm — Xow rose o'er ocean sweet and calm ; Now saw the blazing orb of day Rise in the east with fiery ray ; Light up the arching dome that erst Had hung in gloom o'er ocean's breast. Soft was the influence it threw Over that grim, rebellious crew, Whose furtive glance and pallid cheek Indexed the fears their tongues would speak Whose longing eyes now sweep the main, To catch in thought, one glance of Spain ; To wish them safely back once more, With loving friends, by Palos shore. But where is he whose genius gave A soul to silence and the wave V OF AMERICA. We find him filled with hope and cheer, A light that shines o'er doubt and fear ; We find him ere the morning's spent, As Abram praying 'fore his tent ; His god-like purpose glowing there — A sacrifice of love and prayer. We find him hopeful, radiant now, As though the laurels pressed his brow. He says, " My men, why do you fear ? A glorious land is drawing near ; The Indian islands of those seas, Are richer than Hesperides ; Are rich in gold and precious stones, That gleam beneath their fiery zones, With cities grander, prouder still, Than is Granada or Seville ; Than is Cordova or Madrid, Twixt loftier hills, and mountains hid ; Then follow me, those riches share, The sea and sky look bright and fair, — Be of stout heart, a glorious day, Shall beam when God lights up the way! ' The weary days, so long between, Dawned on one unvarying scene — Monotonously drear and lone, As sea-birds' cry, or ocean's moan; The morning came and saw the west, A darkened band 'gainst ocean pressed — THE DISCOVERY The evening robed in autumn hue Its royal tints o'er ocean threw. A month had passed in doubt and fear : That fancy lengthened to a year; Faint signs of land came floating past, The harbingers of Hope at last, Grasses and sea-weed, dark and green, Now crest the wave with welcome sheen; Strange birds flew past on tireless wing, Whose presence there, glad tidings bring — Fair doves of promise, hope and rest Now dip their wing in ocean's breast. Anon the cry of land is heard — That thrilling cry the bosom stirred ; That cry long seething thro' the brain, Now links its hopes with home and Spain : Electric, as the lightning's dart, It tires the pnlses of the heart ; Electric, as the quest it sought, It swiftly flies on wings of thought. But soon, alas ! that word of cheer Shall fall in gloom upon the ear ; A dark ning cloud the mirage gave That loomed beyond the distant wave ; — False, fleeting cloud, thy gloomy brow But shatters hope and courage now — The. Dead Sea apple of the eye, That comes as sin our hearts to try. OF AMERICA. Dissatisfaction, long suppressed. In open murmers was expressed ; Their promised dream of wealth and fame, The glory of the Spaniard's name, Were but the coinage of the brain, The broken link of reasons chain. Such were the thoughts that filled them now, That sent the shadows to each brow, That augured ill for him who bore, Their trusting hearts from Palos shore ; Such were the thoughts their hearts now burn To kill their chief, then homeward turn, And so avert a nameless grave, Unknown, unmarked, "neath ocean's wave. All suspecting, — vet secure, Within a heart, as brave as pure ; The hopeful captain of that band Still firmly gave the fixed command, Nor questioned the averted eye That met his gaze, as they passed by, — A mightier Hand was his to save, The author of the sky and wave. And now a branch with berries red, Like Angel's wings o'er Hope outspread — The olive branch of peace and love Xow crest the wave, as Xoah's dove ; The silent messenger that bore Glad tidings from a distant shore ! 10 THE^ DISCOVERY Next grasses fresh from river's side Whose undulations glint the tide, Now drift along on ocean's hreast, A grateful offering from the west ; A paddle dropped from careless hand Next thrills them as magician's wand, Inspires their hearts with hope and cheer, That now at last the land is near. Once more the night, on ehon wing, Pier shadows o'er the ocean fling ! (Shuts out mercy from the view, That lately o'er the waters flew ! Once more fair hope is doomed to sleep Upon the bosom of the deep ; Not so the soul of him, whose eye Now scans the gloom of western sky, Whose fancy brings the land e'en now Beside the dim horizon's brow. So sure is he the morning's light Will bring the much-sought land in sight ; •So sure is he of this surprise, He offers him a costly prize, Who first with penetrating eye Will thro' the gloom the land descry. 'Tis ten o'clock, when lo ! a light Is seen to pierce the vault of night ; Its feeble ray comes from the west, And glimmers o'er the Ocean's breast; OF AMERICA. 11 In doubt Columbus calls his mate To verify the will of fate ; His joyous eyes behold it too, And then the long expectant crew ; It disappears, then gleams once more. As tho' it lit some distant shore ; Supremely blest, that ray so dear, That comes as joy, their hearts to cheer ! And now in expectation bright They waited for the morning's light ; That glorious morning, fair, sublime, The fairest offering of Time ; Shall roll across the Ocean's face, As Mercy from the seat of Grace ! That glorious morning bright and clear With joyous vision shall appear; Shall break o'er lands supremely blest, Whose outlines now loom in the west. A warning gun is fired, and now, The land is seen from Pinta's bow — The fastest vessel of the three, That sailed across that mighty sea ; 'Tis two o'clock, the gloomy shore, The daring mind would fain explore; But caution rules, with sober sway, And waits the near approach of day. Did ever sun in glory rise, With brighter beams to glad the eyes ? 12 ' THE DISCOVERY Did ever heart with wilder joy, Mark the radiance of the sky? Ah ! no, to them, the Orient ne'er Looked half so beautiful and fair. That morning dawned with rosy smile, On what appeared a beauteous isle, Clothed with verdure and with trees — As orchards of Hesperides — The glorious sight they now behold Inflames their hearts with joys untold : Enkindles hopes before unfelt, That God with them had kindly dealt. As thus their wond'ring eyes explore Strange creatures hurry to the shore ; Primal, as he whose footsteps trod The Eden of the Living God ! Unconscious they of harm or fear, In naked trustiness appear — As tho' the sin of malice ne'er "Within their breasts had found its lair ; As tho' of earth that moment born, As was their beauteous land that morn. Ah ! would the future years but bring Such heavenly trust as off'ring ; Ah ! would the future years but show The slaughter of the foreign foe ; Ah ! would the lesson of the main Forever in the heart remain ; OF AMERICA. 13 That confidence alone, and trust. Make, all men happy, pure and just ; Then, then, indeed, that naked band Would never seize the mur'drous brand ; "Would never use the scalping knife, Or poisoned arrow in the strife. And now the hands that would destroy Are raised to God, in thanks of joy ; A hymn of praise to Him is sung, As ever voiced the human tongue ; They crowd around their patient chief" In all the semblance of grief. They kiss his hands, embrace his knees And pledge their future lives to please ; If he would pardon them that day, His wish they ne'er would disobey. Columbus robed in scarlet dress, With royal banner for address, Struck foreign shore with firm foot And in its soil that banner root ; Then kneeling down in earnest prayer As ever wafted on the air ; With tears of joy and eyelids dim His fervid thanks arose to Him — The Mighty God of Seraphim. Erect of form his sword he drew, Whose virgin blade, no blood e'er knew — 14 THE DISCOVERY OF AMERICA. For lie of men sought other fame Than bloody deeds to wreathe his name — Then, as a god, who rules the main ; Who vanquished doubt, distrust, and pain, . His much sought prize bequeaths to Spain ; Unselfish heart, unselfish gave Dominion o'er the land and wave. But higher thoughts now upward soar He calls the land San Salvador, In .praise of Him whose mighty will Encouraged Hope to mould his skill ; In praise of Him whose blessings gave To man dominion o'er the wave. And thus the genius and the force Of dauntless will's resistless course, Inspired of God, directed, blessed, Had linked the Orient to the west ; Had lit the path till then unknown A highway for the Spanish throne — The Mecca of the weary soul Whose fainting steps would reach the goal ; Tired of oppression's goading rod Would fain commune with nature's God ; Would fain escape from tyranny That holds the will in slavery ; For such as these, for such as those Who'll vet confront their tyrant foes, AMERICA. 15 The rescuer of the mighty wave, A refuge and a freedom gave. And now, the ocean wide and deep, Whose giant billows wildly leap, Eternal, boundless, and sublime, Shall mark the steady strokes of Time ! Shall dart the fiery spark of Thought To furthest shore wherever sought ; Shall give to man resistless sway, Where'er God lio-hts the orb of day ! -:o:- AMERICA. As the condor of Andes, your sons are as brave, And free as Mississippi's dark rolling wave ! As your white crested mountains, majestic and bold, Your bright deeds of glory triumphant are rolled ! Thou fair shrine of Fredom, our song is of thee, Diapasoned, sublime, as the waves of the sea! How brightly the stars in your firmament shine, As the amethyst hid in the depths of the mine! How graceful the sweep of your wide, rolling plains, As the sweet harp of Nature emitting her strains ! 16 AMERICA. Around thee, fair land, the Beneficient Mind In his blessings, to nations, left nothing behind. Secure as the eyrie, your home is as free As the sea gull that dips her white wings in the sea ; From the Poles to the Tropics your song as sublime, As the anthems that roll thro' the arehesofTime ! From the faint flush of Morning, to Evening's deep glow, Your glories exultant, in harmony flow ! The one fairest jewel of nature is here, Extending its light thro' the poles of the year ! From the Gulf to the Lakes, from the east to the west, Its bounties, as Grace, are abundant and blest. Its baldric of stars, as the Orbs in the Sky, In purity gleam from their banner on high. As long as the Morning diffuses her beam; As long as the stars thro' the heavens shall gleam ; So long may thy glories unending and bright On the down-trodden nations enkindle their light ! Till the voice of the people transcendant shall rise In an anthem of praise to their God in the skies ! THE GRAVE OF DE SOTO. 17 THE GRAVE OF DE SOTO. Here, where the Father of Waters, Rolls his muddy wave along; Have they buried the brave De Soto, Forever renowned in song ; With no tomb to mark his glory, But the swift earessing tide ; With no scroll to breathe his story, Save its bosom, deep and wide. Away, 'neath that mighty river, His dirge is forever sung; As tho' the fair Guadal quiver Had murmured its wail among ; Away from that land of glory, Her chivalrous son finds rest, To mix with the slime of ages, That gathers above his breast. Sad, sad, is thine end, De Soto, Thou chief of the shining lance; The spirit and soul of danger, — Oh ! thou of the eagle glance ; As the waves of that turbid river y Thy comrades now must go ; To seek for a place of safety Wither its waves do flow. IS THE GRAVE OF DE SOTO, They felled a tree in the forest, From its bowels scooped a tomb, Where they laid the famed De Soto. With no torch to light the gloom : But the stars above are watchers Of that picture, drear and wild ; And their faint, fair light is gleaming; On Adventure's fallen child. And this is thy grave, De Soto ! Captain of Spain's noblesse, Companion of brave Pizzaro ; Prince of each fair address ; Thro 5 the swirl and rush of waters. As a bubble that crests its wave : To sink in its breast forever, To find on its tied a grave ! Unmarked is the spot that hides thee, As the ocean's glassy breast ; And the cpiest, and the strife are over. That bent thv footsteps west ; But the wave shall break in glory, O'er that river, majestic, wide. Bright as that hero's story, Reflected beneath its tide. THANKSGIVING. 10 THANKSGIVING. When the leaves are dead and the gound is bare, And the Autumn of Life is no longer fair; When the angry blasts unpityjng sweep, O'er the bare cold earth and the surging deep ; When the weary heart is oppressed and chilled, And the cup of care to its rim is filled ; When the playful flakes of the snow come down, In virgin wreaths, on each field and town ; When the crisp cold air, with its vengeful fang, Bites into the heart, with envenomed pang; When the threshold of Winter in gloom appears, And the days grow short, as the fading years; There comes a day, 'mid the hurrying throng, That breaks on the heart with its joy and song. There sits no gloom on this glorious day, For the feast is spread and the heart is gay ; For the joys of Life, with their blessings stored, Light up each cot and each smiling board. From the shores of Maine, with its icy eaves, To the Tropic Gulf, with its balmy waves; From the Land of Gold, with its sunny skies, To the glowing East, does the anthem rise; Of boundless thanks to the God whose Light And Mercy break, on our souls to-night. And yet there are hearts who would gladly bring Their burden of praise to this Mighty King; 20 THANKSGIVING. Would lengthen the day with their song and cheer, To welcome this guest of the changing year ; But cruel Oppression, begotten of Greed, Would dare the blessings of God impede ; Would snatch from the Toiler the joy and cheer, That brighten his path thro' each weary year ; Would gather his gloom o'er this fair, fair land, So bounteously blessed by the Master's hand ; Would sever the ties that have bound him here, The Thanksgiving Hymn of the dying year. On this festal day when a nation's voice On the wings of Prayer, our hearts rejoice ; We call on the Father, supreme above, The author of -Life, of Light and Love, To banish the strife and the feud that shroud, This beautiful land, as an inky cloud ; To roll the deep curtain of gloom away, On the nation's feast — Thanksgiving; Da v. ANDERSONVILLE. ^1 ANDERSONVILLE. LINES SUGGESTED AT SEEING o'DEA'S GREAT PICTURE. Here, 'mid the groupings of the artist's mind, My theme of horror and of woe I hud; Himself an actor in each fearful scene, From memory drawn, thro' sleepless years be- tween. Unutterable thought, how swift thy flight ! On memory's wing thro' shadows black as night ; How will it brood ? How feed the pencil's flow That would portray each shifting scene of woe ? But weak the pencil that would bind the thought Of demon hate ! on man thus foully wrought. Horror of horrors ! crowding thick and fast, As seething waves, by angry tempest lashed— Squalor supreme ! unutterable woe ! Revenge accursed ! — of man the direful foe- Grim death unpitied '.—Hunger's pangs a jeer !— Nature reversed in all her terrors here ; Despair and death ! in shapes to man unknown, Look grimly on and laugh at mortal groan ; Hope fled the scene of Havoc and of strife, Where Nature battles for each wretch's life ; Heaven appalled at man's unhallowed crime !— The darkest stain that blurs the face of Time ! 22 ANDERSONVILLE. What wretch is he falls prostrate on the brink. Of that foul stream,whose waters he would drink. Pierced with a bullet from yon rifle bore, Which sends his spirit to a brighter shore '( Y gallant soldier lie, as brave as true. As ever blade for injured country drew; lie dies uncrowned beside that fetid stream, The gaunt, pale hero of bright glory's dream. His only crime ! — -just heaven record the same. And brand the coward with eternal shame, — The strife of nature, — as a thing divine Would place the hand beneath historic line ! To till his ean from that foul, fetid stream, Whose putrid waters hid the morning beam ! The Dead Line of that hell ! Oh ! who ean tell I low many hearts beside its barrier fell ? From out the cloud, Oh ! Pity strain thine eye, What fearful cart is that now passing by? Borne along on rumbling wheels of gloom, To bear its burden to the monster tomb ; Onward it rolls its ghastly load of death, To lie forever 'neath the grass beneath, Oh ! sweet release from misery and gloom, To rest the body in the glutted tomb ; Far better death in all its ghastly throes, Than such a life, of sufferings and woes. Inhuman man, lias pity fled the earth, That reeks beneath the creatures of its birth ; ANDERSONVILLE. 23 Have honor, shame, the glory of your kind Left not a trace of soldier's heart behind? Thrice happy he to pain and sorrow dead Who sees the future thro 1 the past outspread. In one sweet vision, bright with joy and love That soon shall break in glory from above. Your suff'rings now will stand before you there. As tho' your life had been continued prayer; Yes, gaze your la3t on each familiar face Ere yon are called before the Throne of Grace : Thy name, thy deeds, unwept, unhonored, lie Beneath the glories of the Southern sky. The yawning gulf of misery and pain, Where Hunger revelled o'er the myriads slain: Where loathsome sores, and fevers ever gave, Unstinted victims to the charnal grave ! Where Freedom's dream brought terrors to the heart, And sinking Nature sped her lightning dart ! Where man called dewn a curse upon his kind As tierce and deadly as the Desert wind ! The scene is changed where Fifteen Thousand lives Passed through grim death, thro' tortures and thro' gyves ; The scene is changed, which saw their bodies strewn Tn festering heaps, as leaves in Autumn blown: 24 A1NTDERS0NVILLE. Where cruel hound, to instinct's laws accurst; Sunk his red fangs, in flesh of him that hurst From that foul hell, — remembered but in name, Of man the horror and of earth the shame ! A brighter dawn now breaks thro' Southern skies, And. deeds of mercy from her breast arise ; The Olive branch o'er her fair homes is spread, And sorrow's tear o'er Blue and Gray is shed. The graphic picture, fresh from artist mind, Will in her breast the deepest anguish find ; And such a picture, bold beyond compare, Whose range of thought, the heights of art would dare, Alike an honor to the coat he wore, As the Fair Land that sent him from her shore But the survivors of that fearful keep, Whose terrors haunt them in their hours of sleep ! How have they fared? Has grateful country shed Her fruitful laurels on each martyr's head ? Ah, no ! alas ! the sacrifice they made, For Freedom's cause, can never be repaid; The wasted form the broken spirit bore Thro' suff'rings dire, no country could restore, But grateful hearts shall yet inscribe to Fame, The yielding marble, rich with storied name, THE BARTIIOLDI STATUE. 25 Shall mark the spot where Freedom's hosts lie dead With Nature's carpet o'er their graves out- spread; Will raise the marble, dim with sorrow's tear, To those whose famished forms were buried here ; Shall seek some legend dear to Liberty, As tho 5 they fell at famed Thermopylae ! Shall rouse the nation to the soldier's claim, And heap distinction on each honored name ; Shall bend the heart to grateful praise and song, That thro' the years shall roll its praise along. Historic page shall yet, in words of fire, Glow where its lines now faintingly expire; Till this Great Land, as proudful as its name, Shall crown the soldier with the wreath of fame. THE BARTIIOLDI STATUE. Fair land of Freedom — beauteous France ! Plow prized the gift thy genius gave ; How bright its glorious outlines dance Across the glinting, sunny wave That bears our burdened hearts to thee, — Thou shrine of Love and Liberty ! 26 THE BARTHOLIN STATUE. Hail ! glorious land of Lafayette, Our greetings as of yore, are thine; Whose foot on Freedom's soil was set; Whose arm in Freedom's cause divine. Uplifted; smote the English host, Of countless wrongs, the pride and boast. Across the mighty ocean's span. Resplendent as the morning's beam : How swittlv speeds the thought of man, As wings of Hope, or Lightning's gleam,- Three thousand miles of flashing wire Convey our thoughts in words of fire. Here, where the surging waters roll Their tireless wave, forever free, Be thou the glory and the soul Of this great land of liberty ; Thro' cloud and sunshine, gloom and cheer. The Janus of the " changing year." Sublime Bartholdi — Genius ne'er Arose to grander, loftier height ; Art ne'er conceived a thought more fair — Marvel of beauty and delight. Land of the Starry Banner blue,' This glorious work was all for you. Long may the homeless exile find Beneath thy torch surcharge of pain ; Long may the hands that tyrants bind In slavery, cast off their chain. May thy fair light of Liberty Forever shine o'er hearts set free. CHARLESTON. "27 CHARLESTON. A few short hours ere the evening - sun Had sunk in glory o'er Charleston; Had bathed the Ashley and Cooper streams In the fading light of his glorious beams; Had lit the jasmine, magnolia trees, Whose odorous breath perfumed the breeze; Had gathered his glorious light away, From fort and river; from town and bay, Leaving behind a languid delight To soften the gloom of that August night, Historic Charleston, sunk to rest ! As calm as a babe on its mother's breast; The quiet of natue reigned around, A city of love and joy profound. But the Xight was there with her solemn train, Mother of Sorrow, of Sin and Pain; A night of horrors, whose voice shall roll, Its ghastly shriek o'er the troubled soul ; Shall blanch the cheek of the stout and brave, And whirl the heart on its surging wave ; A night of horrors whose voice shall ring- To farthest bounds of her ebon wing. A fearful tremor now shakes the earth, As tho' she gave to some monster birth ; Louder and louder its echoes roll ! Like the voice of God to the sinful soul ! 28 CHARLESTON". Onward, still onward, its surges sweep As the giant billows that lash the deep ! Alas, fair city of strife and death ! Thine enemy now lies far beneath ; And yet not thine, but that Nature's law That moulds the wish, which our senses draw: That reckless Nature, what cares she now For the pallid cheek or the fearful brow ! Havoc and Chaos are her's to bear ! From the depths of Earth's sulphureous lair ! Presage of doom, at some distant day, That this fair, fair Globe shall pass away. Alas, fair city beside the wave ! Ruin has dug thee another grave ; A ruin greater, mightier far Than the puny strife — the scourge of war — Driven thy children to cares allied, To seek the shelter their homes denied, Alas how fearful that night of gloom, When the home of love becomes its tomb ! When the shriek of terror, and wild despair, Mingle their tones with the poisoned air ! When death looks ghastly, and grim beneath, The trembling earth, where his terrors seethe. Yonder we see in the open air The White and the Black unite in pray'r, The fearful picture of death and woe, Of ruin around and dread below ; DECORATION DAY. 29 The stifled cry, the deep groan of pain ; The surging earth in her labored strain ; The toppling mansion, the home of pride, Now breaks as bubble upon the tide ; Nature convulsed in her fearful throes Like maddened monster, confronts her foes'! Awake, dread souls, to that aweful hour, When an angry God reveals His power; Awake to the promptings of conscience now, "With an earnest soul and a peaceful brow, IFor He who lashes its heaving wave Is a mighty God with a will to save ! Awake, dread souls, for the morning's sun .Shall break in glory o'er Charleston. Already her prayer, like Rachel's cry, Is heard bj T the Ruler of earth and sky.. DECORATION DAY. •Comrades of the bloody fray — ! Companions of the toilsome march, We come in love this bright May day, Beneath the weeping willow's arch, To strew your graves with Earth's fair gems, Your heroic deeds our songs and hymns J 30 DECORATION DAY. We care not what your creed or race; We care not how you fought or bled, Our loving hands your graves shall grace With spring's fair offerings o'er them spread;- The holiest task that duty craves, Is when we deck our brothers' graves. Companions of the Charge and Fire! Of Devastation and of Death ! We come to-day as Love's desire, To honor those who sleep beneath ; We come to them whose courage bore Our rented flag thro' fields of gore ; We come the remnant of that wave That swept rebellion from our land ; We come to deck each honored grave — To grasp in thought each sleeper's hand ; We come as tho' our own should be The next green grave of memory. Our monument to worth is here,— Within our breasts it brightly gleams, — A few sweet buds as memory's tear, Our promised hopes, our fancied dreams ; We fondly hoped to-day would see A column raised to fame and thee ; But no, the grasping, grinding few, Who hold this land in bondage dire Pay little heed to Gray or Blue, — 'Tis Mammon's worship feeds their tire ! DECORATION DAY. 31 Alas ! that Honor's trust should claim From such as these, the shaft of Fame. Ask him whose empty sleeve once bore, The trusted sword of of Liberty : Whose polished brow Hyperion wore The laurel wreath of victory ! For country then his blood was shed — To Freedom's cause his life was wed ; Ask him to-day with wasted frame — "With shattered nerves and broken health, Where lies the honor and the fame Among the pampered sons of wealth. The sunken eye and wan pale cheek Give back the answer we would seek. Ask yonder tattered, torn Hag, With pale dim stars and hided blue, Who bore it o'er each mountain crag Thro' blood and fire, with courage true. Thro' fields of dead, where carnage swept ! Where Glory's sons distorted slept ! Where death and havoc reigned supreme — Where war's red strife in terror tore ! Where shot and shell mid lurid gleam, Sped thro' the air as vultures soar, Ask this, and tell me why this spot Should by the living be forgot? 32 DEFEAT OF THE GALATEA. DEFEAT OF THE GALATEA. How trimly sailed the Galatea, Over the broad Atlantic Sea-ah, Her crew were Henglishmen ; Sturdy Britons, bold and brave As ever crossed the briny wave; — So thought Lieutenant Enn. And when she sighted Sandy Hook, Defiantly her banner shook, For Hengland's Jack, you know, Has not its peer upon the wave; Its triple cross defiant brave, Is terror to the foe. Already in their minds they see-ah, Their gallant craft, the Galatea, Outstrip the May-flower's speed. The fancied victory of their craft, So neatly trimmed both fore and aft, Shows Hengland in the lead. But fate decreed that Briton's boast, For once should drink an empty toast; — Should drown defeat in wine ; Should curse old Neptune and his shell, And send them both to Pluto's ell, Beneath the churning brine ! DEFEAT OF THE THISTLE. 33 Should find them on that fatal day, Plowing the foamy crested spray: That Mayflower left behind; Their manly breasts and gloomy brow, As sullen as their vessels prow, That sulks before the wind. But so it was, so will it be-ah, That any other Galatea, They bring to Yankee shore ; Shall meet the fate her consort met, Of England's skill, the pride and pet, Their honored trust no more. -:o:- DEFEAT OF THE THISTLE. Lightly, they're speeding over the wave, The Thistle and Volunteer. The crews of the twain are gallant and brave, The Thistle and Volunteer! The Red Cross of England claims one of the two, The other the Stars, in their baldric of blue, And both to their colors, no doubt, will prove true, The Thistle and Volunteer. 34 DEFEAT OF THE THISTLE. Deftly, their pinions are spread to the breeze. The Thistle and Volunteer, As albatros poising o'er southern seas, The Thistle and Volunteer. Hurrah ! for the start and the graceful careen : Hurrah ! for the glory and honor between ; Hurrah ! for the pennant to which our hearts lean, The Thistle and Volunteer. Sportive, they scatter the silvery spray ! The Thistle and Volunteer. Bright are its glints o'er the beautiful bay, The Thistle and Volunteer. Exultant they glide o'er the billowy crest, The pride of a nation is pinned to each breast : By the white feathered waves, are their bosoms earessed, The Thistle and Volunteer. Hurrah ! the proud Scotchman is left on the lee, The Thistle and Volunteer. While gaily our own bonnie craft breasts the sea, The Thistle and Volunteer. Blow ! breezes blow ! fill her sails with delight, A beaker of gold will be pledged her to-night ! As sparkling and clean as her pinions of light, Invincible Volunteer. A PICTURE OF LIFE. 35 A PICTURE OF LIFE. Ah ! ruthless blast of November, Why scatter my foliage so Whose ripened and mellow beauty Gave autumn his saffron glow ? Why darken the face of Nature, That yesterday looked so fair To whirl my golden treasure, Like chaff, on the pitiless air ? How fondly I clung to my darlings, Now pressed 'neatli unpitying tread '. How fair were the hopes I cherished, When their emerald sheen had fled ; And the orient blush of the morning Had spread its beautiful shades, Leaving its amber tintings To brighten the forest glades. 1 have seen the joy-laden flowers Now bloom, and then wither away ; Fair as the hues of the rainbow — The light of one fleeting day ; And I asked myself in the greenwood, If the beautiful tint I wore, Would die the death of the flowers, When the autumn of life was o'er. 36 ADDRESS TO THE SEA. Spring, with her glowing- summer, Brings brown-haired autumn along; When the green of the leaf has vanished, And the robin has ceased his song ; When the portals of death are Hearing, As the winter of life's decay, And the souls of the just speed upward, To the light of an endless day. From life to death what transitions — What changes doth come and go ! From the perfumed robe of the summer To the winter's mantle of snow ; From the Spring, with her tiny blossoms, To the autumn of russet sear, The changes of life roll onward, As the summons of death draws near. -:o:- ADDRESS TO THE SEA. Thou lone, sad, tireless sea, I'd fain commune with thee ; With thy vastness and thy might ; with thy blue waves crested white, With thy surge's echoing roar, with the peb- bles on thy shore ; Changed from Titan boulders through the years. ADDRESS TO THE SEA. 37 I fain would ask thy wave for the hero's briny grave ; Where his valor and his quest, beneath thy depths found rest ; Where beauty's brow is hid, 'neath thy coral beds amid; With pearly gems of ocean in her hair. Thou restless, sleepless sea, tell your wealth to me ; That 'neath thy waters rest, through ages long caressed ;*- The shining golden gem, the priceless diadem, That kings have fought for, buried there. Where lies the princely ship, who ventured to equip Her tall and gallant masts against the winter's blasts ; Down-hidden in thy breast, thro' years of gloom to rest; There to rot and crumble 'mid thy eaves ! Where are the hopes she bore, to reach some foreign shore ; The tender heart of love, that does our natures prove ; The zeal for God and kind, gone down before the wind, There to rest till Gabriel's blast is heard ! 38 THE PRESS. Thou false and treacherous sea, tho T ever true to me. There 's dread around thee cast when thy waves are fiercely lashed To maddening foam and spray, in Cyclopean play ! Or tempest cloud of heaven looming- o'er. The tumult and the roar that break upon thy shore, The thunder's crashing sound that shakes the earth around, The tempest's fearful sweep, whose terrors ridge the deep, Disturb the tranquil beauty of thy breast ! -:o:- THE PRESS. Thou messenger of good or ill, Omniscient as the Argive Jove; How great thy power to mould the will Of nations and their deeds control. There are no words that can express The mighty lever of the Press. THE PRESS. 30 There is no safety to be bought By him who once incurs thy hate, Thou lexicon of human thought, Unbending as the will of Fate. There is no force that can repress The lightning vengeance of the Press. The watchful Argus of the hour, The mint of thought, superb and bright. Earth's rulers quail beneath thy power As darkness does before the light, The tyrant may the weak oppress, But stern rebuke comes from the Press. The Mercury that bears the light, Of winged thought to myriad homes ; That brings the deeds of men to sight, Where'er their wandering footsteps roam. The power of man can ne'er suppress The teachings of an honest Press. The impure streams that often flow, From minds corrupt into thy wave ; The noisome winds that often blow, Both find in thee, oblivion's grave ; For purity and truth impress Themselves on freedom of the Press. The venal Press — The purchased scribe, That tyrants use to practice wrong, Are like some looting, wandering tribe That bring distrust where'er they throng; 40 MORNING. But their vile teachings but compress A narrow space in Freedom's Press. May honor crown, with sweetest bays, The brows of those who would impart. To man his meed of honest praise, For purity of mind and heart. May earnest effort ne'er depress The honest teachings of the Press. MORNING. The glitt'ring stars sank in the west — The east awoke a purple stream — The Zenith bent its fair blue crest To meet the rising crimson beam Of Moraine- ! The jeweled flowers kissed its rays; The stream reflected back its hue ; The song of bird broke forth in praise ! And earth's fair robe was wet with dew Of Morning; ! MORNING. 41 Empurpled bill, clear stretching lake, Poured out their smiles to greet the sun ! Whose golden beams, transcendant break O'er nature's woof, the glories spun Of Morning! Throughout the blue, where countless orbs In rhythmic measure circle bright ! "Where pulse of heaven, ecstatic throbs. At song of angel robed in light Of Morning ! From out this circling world of fire, Whose splendors shroud the sun's bright beam ! The soul of man, as angel choir, Descends to earth, a joy supreme Of Morning ! The hand of God directs the whole, Transcends the glories and the bliss Of nature's laws — their life and soul — Thro' myriad worlds more fair than this, The Morning ! 42 DECEMBER. DECEMBER. Thou gray-haired stepping-stone of Time ; Whose robe of crystal gleams, As pure as vestal of the sun. O'er rivers, brooks, and streams ; The Dog Star blazing o'er your path, "With fierce, yet steady glow ; jSTow climbs the brow of heaven's arch, In glory from below. Orion's glittering Club and Belt, Erst while lit up the dome ; Pursuing Taurus in his flight, Thro' God's mysterious home ; Far, far away, the Pleiades, — Fair Daughter's of the Blue, Celestial, as the Light of God, Their wondrous course pursue. Thou dear Old Father of the mouths, Thy night, as death, is long; Yet dost thou cheer its lengthened gloom. With mirth, and joy, and song ; Within thy breast a jewel 's hid, That breaks in beams of light, Refulgent as the orb of day: — The world's fair Chirstmas night. TO. A SEA SHELL. 43 Thou dear, old, kind, December month, 'No flatterer art thou ; For the wreath of dissolution, As jewels press your brow ; The death thy life foreshadows, Is ever round thee seen, — A glory o'er each field and hedge So lately robed in green. The fair, bright hues of Autumn, As beams of light are fled; And trees that bore their glories, Are cheerless, bare, and dead; The leaves that crimsoned in the glade Are hid beneath the snow, To rot and crumble into dust That feed fresh life below. -:o: TO A SEA SHELL. Who painted thy marvelous tints, fair shell, Away 'lieath the sleepless sea? Whose lingers penciled thy pink cheeks' swell ? tell us the mystery. Whence comes that croon, as a drowsy hush, Or labored song of the bee? Dost murmur the tumult, and roar, and rush Of the wild, impetuous sea? 44 TO A SEA SHELL. Dost sigh for thy home on those coral beds, That glow 'neath the swelling wave, Whose tin tings proclaim and whose beauty sheds A glory that earth ne'er gave V Dost mourn the anemone's blushing hue, That circled around your home, A fringe of glorv beneath the blue, — The glass of heaven's fair dome '( Who polished thy beautiful cheeks, 0, shell With wondrous tints so fair? Who fashioned thine armor beneath the swell Of the boundless ocean there ? Who, but the Artist whose mighty skill Is found in the vasty deep ; Whose Hand divine, and whose mighty will, Harmonious beauties keep. As well 'neath the turbulent, surging sea, As the worlds that gem the sky ; As well in the grasses that deck the lea, As the bird that soars on high ; As well in the myriad shapes that live On tho coral's floating spray: As in the flowers, whose colors give A joy to the summer's day. SHADOWS AND LIGHT. 45 For the hand of the Master — supremely blest — Is seen thro' the wondrous whole; From the depths beneath, to Empyrean's crest: The glory and the soul. -:o:- SIIADOWS AKD LIGHT. < )ver the river, once so fair, My wond'ring eyes are set, To see the trees look cold and bare Where erst earth's glories met ; The greenwood shade, where song of bird In joyous notes the bosom stirred, Alas ! by me no more is heard, — So runs the heart's regret. Where are the many beauties gone, That gleamed beneath the sun ? Where are the joys that thro' them shone, When summer's tints were spun ? They go to crown another year With leaf as green, and song as cheer; With thought as fair, and hope as dear, As rhvthm e'er begun. 46 SHADOWS AND LIGHT. Tlie leaves that grew on yonder trees, Oh ! whither are they tied, Whose glories kissed October's breeze In wanton sport o'erhead ? They lie beneath December's snow. Breathing new life to earth below; Whose green from Death doth ever flow — A wondrous joy outspread ! Whence comes the snow, so pure, so fair, So pulseless and so cold ? Whence comes the bitter, biting air That doth the crystals mould ? They come to vest the year in gloom ; They come as Death, to things that bloom : They come the heralds of the Tomb, When Autumn spills his gold. So fade the charms that Nature yields, So wither and decay ; To-day a joy that decks the fields With tints of beauteous May ; To-morrow, shadows, drear and lone, Which darken scenes where sunbeams shone, Until God's mercy rolls the stone Of gloom and death away. Thus youth brings age and winter's snows, Unerring as the years ; Thus fall of leaf brings summer's rose Thro' showers of April tears; GOD IS LIGHT. 47 Thus life must pass from death to life, Thro' beams of sunshine, cloud and strife, Till heaven is gained with glories rife. And God's fair light appears. -:o:- GOD IS LIGHT. God is light — all Nature cries ! From Ocean's depths, to farthest star ; From out His fair celestial skies, His beams of glory shoot afar. God is Light ! The spheres that roll Thro' boundless fields of space proclaim ! Their guidance, as the human soul, On Him, who robes their orbs in flame. God is Light ! The flashing thought Emerges from the quickened mind ! Thro' myriad worlds its source is sought ; Leaving time and space behind. God is Light ! The red, round sun Is but a taper in His hand, Whose fiery beams in heaven were spun Ere man received his first command. 48 TO A CAGED EAGLE. God is Light. The flowers that bloom, Await the opening beams of morn, Whose beauteous tints and sweet perfume, The dewy brow of earth adorn. The sable cloak of Night but hides This flood of glory from our gaze, That on the wing of morning glides Thro' heaven's blue arch, a living hi aze. God is Light, and Light is Love And Life and Hope and joy supreme, O'er earth beneath or sphere above, It's splendors from Empyrian beam ! TO A CAGED EAGLE. Bird of the dizzy steep, Where the swift chamois leap ! Cloud-capped thy home neath the avalanche's brow ; Fearless, and bold, and free ; Fierce bird of liberty ! Narrow the space for thine ample wing now ! TO A CAGED EAGLE. 4!) Bird of the blue expanse! Where the bright sunbeams dance ! Eager thy glance on the red rounded sun ; Scream thy wild grief and pain ! Over thy lost domain ! Scream for the freedom thy brave pinions won ! Lord of the mountain height, Glinting its crystals bright! Fallen thy flight, from God's clear sunny dome ! Down in this prison cage! Freedom and light the gauge ! Down from the splendors, that streamed o'er thy home ! ' Bird of the tireless wing! Where the wild waters fling ! Their mad rushing foam in the chasm beneath ! Down from thine eyrie high! Down from sublimity ! Down in this prison of madness and death ! Alan who would dare be free, Bars thee from liberty! Flings thy wild wing in this foul narrow cage ! Whilst the blue sky and air, Beckon thy pinions there ! Tantalus beckons thy tierce swelling; rage! 50 THE UNCERTAINTY OF LIFE. Many a heart as brave, Freedom and light would crave ; Flung: in the dungeon of serfdom and gloom ! Dies for the cause of Iiight ! Buried in gloom of night ! Dies for the glory, that ends in the tomb ! THE UNCERTAINTY OF LIFE. Where lurk your terrors ! Oh ! subtle Death ? Why fateful to life and bloom ? Whence comes the chill of your icy breath ? Where gather your shadowy gloom ? Amid the pleasures of life your dart Is sped with a thrill of woe ! And the rosy currents that wreathe the heart, 'Neath your glances cease to flow. You have no pity for infant smiles. For beauty's all classic grace ; For the brave stout heart, or angel wiles Of the maiden's radiant face. O'er bud, and blossom, and sear alike, Your chill, cold breath is blown ; Whilst the swiftest arrows you aim but strike. Where the seed is fairest sown ! THE SEASONS. 51 How many who build their hopes in life, When its sun soars brave and high ; E'er see the shadows that herald strife, Thro' its bright alluring sky ; The morning breaks with her rosy blush — Enrobing the blue immense ; The evening gathers its dying hush, To the throne of Omnipotence ! We count the years as the hopes they bring, Unmindful of Death's decree ; Their fairest glories our hearts would sing, Untrammeled, and pure and free ! But the doom that heaven has set for all, Its shadows fling o'er our way ! As the broken heart, or funeral pall, That shadows life's fleeting day ! -:o:- THE SEASON'S. Which take we first, when all are fair, Supernal and divine ? Which take we first, when heavenly care Proportioned thro' them shine? The dawn of life, its flush and bloom, Its glory and decay, " Quaternal spring from Nature's womb— Transcendant as her day ! R9 THE SEASONS. Symbolical of life is Spring, Sweet nursling of the year, Whose tiny buds to nature sing, Their balmy song* of cheer, The bare cold sod beneath her care ; Unrolls its robe of green ; Whilst song of bird, as soothing prayer, Entrancing thrills between. The clothed earth perfection takes, When summer pours her beam, And song of bird the grove awakes. In trills that joyous stream. Around, above, where'er we gaze, God's wondrous skill is found. Exultant as our song of praise For blessings so profound ! The tints that paint the daisy's rim, That flush the crimson rose. As morning's beam are sent bv Him, As fair as sunset's close ; The balmy moisture of the air, That bathes their sweet perfume, In tiny globules gathers there Thro' night's deep curtained gloom ! The smiling earth with treasures stored. Awaits the scythe and spade. Invites the toiler's hand to hoard, The cheer too long delayed ; THE SEASONS. 53 The ripened fields of yellow grain, As streams of sunshine flow ; Await the sickle's crescent strain, To lay their glories low. Her beauteous life awaits its close, With many a thrill divine ; That thro' the forest brightly glows. As onyx in the mine ; As life well spent her glories stream, — A marvel of delight ; But beauty fled, her fading beam, Eternal sinks in night ! The winter now, in gloom appears, With chaste, cold robe of white ; His icy car rolls thro' the years, On sable clouds of night; Before his pulseless chill embrace The tints of autumn die, And crystals, pure as angel's face, Above its beauty lie. The tomb of -Nature ! cold and gray, And pitiless and drear, Comes as the time that bears away Earth's sorrows and her tear, Embalms and purifies the sod, For glories yet unborn, Then upward speeding to his God, Is lost in beam of morn. TO A ROBIX. TO A IiOBIX. Where hast thou been, thou merry tramp? From whence thy visit now ? Where did'st thou thro' the winter cam}), Safe perched upon some bough ? We missed thy tuneful, cheery note, — Glad messenger of spring, That rippled from your russet throat, — A joyous offering. Thou art as saucy as of yore, As perky and as neat, As when you trolled your last year's store Of songs surpassing sweet ; Xo prima donna e'er arrived, With half such uppish airs ; As thou, whose summer hast survived The winter of our cares. What bird sung sweeter notes than thine, Within the green wood shade ? — You will not tell — then I '11 divine You lost your minstrel trade ; You seek the beauty of our dells, Our laughing brooks and rills ; And as of old in fits and spells Pour forth your lvrie trills. TO A ROBIN. bi) I love to watch your saucy stare, — Inquisitive and keen ; I love to watch your jaunty air When tripping o'er the green ; There is a summer in your heart, — A spring-time in your hound, That make me wish we shall not part When autumn comes around. Unerring wing, instinctive law, To Nature ever true ; Our cooler shades your pinions draw, To iiow'rs of fairer hue ; Untired of quest, thy flight has sought. The grove wherein thy nest, By artist bill last year was wrought, — By loving mate caressed. The primrose welcomes thee once more. With odor fresh and sweet ; The modest lily as of yore, Would fain your presence greet; The grass in greenest vesture clad, Shall hail thine advent here ; The violet shall make thee glad — Fair spectrum of the year. But you will leave us when the bloom Of summer's tints is fled, And autumn's shades of death and gloom Their dying colors spread; 56 music. Thy beauteous wing, as pleasure's dream, Shall bear thy song of cheer, To fairer rill and clearer stream, Than you have suns' to here ! -:o:- MUSIC. Breaking in symphony, Heaven's sweet harmony ; Chasing life's gloom and its shadows of care : Fair as the morning's blush ! Soft as the evening's hush ! Fair as the sunbeam that gleams thro 1 our prayer ! Rapture and joy supreme ! Nature's enchanting dream ! Unison blending in sweet notes of song; Proudly your trills and swells ! Break as magician's spells ! Leading the senses as captives along! Lavish your tenderness ! Joy of earth's wilderness ! Charming the wayward, and binding the free : Healer of broken hearts ! Speeder of magic darts ! Queen of the soul you are heaven to me ! THE RIVER SET FREE. 57 THE RIVER SET FREE. Hurrah ! for freedom ; I bear my chains, As slaves on my breast, to the welcome sea ; By my crystal edges their glint remains, To melt 'neath the sun, when I am tree. I 11 bear them along- in my mad career, Shattered and broken, in wild dismay; I'll bear them along with their chill and tear, To the wide, wide sea, or the sheltered bay. Too long have I lain supine and cold Beneath their shadows, thro' winter's gloom ; But nature aroused is brave and bold, And her smile is a tear for things that bloom ! Crunched and crushed in my wild, mad race, Tnpitying swept from their crystal home; As glass I shatter their beauteous face, Whither my waters in madness foam. The river, as man, would dare be free, As eagle soaring o'er dizzy steep; Would roll its waters where liberty Is found in the billows that lash the deep. 58 THE SHIPWRECK. On, where my banks are seared and bare, I fly past their ghastly cold embrace ; On, past the haunts and the homes of care, I gather fresh strength for the tireless race On, on, past the engine's labored strain, Dragging its weary load along; On free, swift pinions I seek the main, To join in the surges' unceasing song. THE SHIPWRECK. The ship went down in that lonely sea, Of helm and sails bereft : Thro' the frothing surge — tumultuously — Her stately masts were cleft; Borne along on the swirling waves That ridged the angry deep; To rest thro' the years 'mid ocean eaves : Where hippa and star-fish creep. In that yawning gulf what love went down, What hopes, what joys, what pain ; The maiden's dream — her heart's fair crown- Now swallowed beneath the main : The far off vision of home and bliss — The sailor's love and pride — Bunk in the whirl, and roar, and hiss. Of that dark, unpitying tide! THE SHIPWRECK. 59 Ambition's hopes — proud manhood's dreams — As a bubble that beads the wave — Gone where the sea-grass brightly gleams, Where earth once found a grave. The mother straining her wond'ring child To the breast its fate would hide, Pierces the storm with shriek as wild, As ever swept o'er the tide The demon shout of the hurrying winds, That revel amid despair; The soul thro' its horrors a solaee finds In the tranquil voice of prayer. Uplift the brow to that angry sky That hurls its dart of tire,' Your morn of light shall break on high, As its terrors here expire ! The waters close o'er that fated ship, And the seething waves are hushed ; Their rippling crests in calmness drip O'er the depths where strife is crushed; The quiv'ring beams of the morning leap In streams of purpling light. As tho' no storm e'er woke the deep, Ov shadowed its breast in night! 60 the soldier's grave. THE SOLDIER'S GRAVE. The dead and dying lay around, Upon the field of death and strife; The eannon's boom had ceased its sound. And streaming breasts spoke ebbing life. Beside a rill that rippled through, A soldier lay with colors torn ; A broken blade — impnrpled — drew The scenes thro' which its folds were borne. I gazed upon the marble face, That showed the calm of death was sweet : I marked its beauty and its grace ; Its polished brow, — of love the seat; — Unconsciously I raised the blade, And pressed the cold steel to my lips ; When lo ! the scenes around me fade, As blood-drop from its keen edge drips ! Instinctive love — some far-off dreams Of soldier brother, 'quipped for war, Across my distant vision beams, — With bullet wound, and sabre scar; As musing thus, I nearer draw To him 'mid glory's trophies sleeping, When heavens ! what love marks here I saw. In death's repose their beauty keeping. THE SOLDIER'S CRAVE. 61 1 raised his head upon my breast, And gazed into the glassy eves ; To those pale lips, my own I pressed, Now cold and still as winter's skies ; The rented nag, — a nation's trust — Across his still, cold heart I threw ; There to remain, till dust to dust, It bears no star, nor trace of blue. In genial earth his corse I laid ; His shroud the flag, for which he bled ; Beside his head the broken blade ; His tomb, the grassy mound o'erhead : The parting tear affection traced, Within my heart, more dear than when, His soldier garb Ins beauty graced, Among the serried ranks of men. Upon that groaning field of pain ; Beside that glinting, laughing stream; 'Neath shady tree, — there to remain — Till Gabriel's trumpet breaks his dream. I parted from that grassy mound With tender feelings unsurpassed ; Where I in death my brother found With glory's wreaths around him cast. Now song of bird and croon of rill Shall hymn his requiem thro' the years : The beam of sun the cloud shall fill, That shall descend in grateful tears: C)-2 THE SONG-BIRD. Whilst other names less famed than he Shall lie in marble cold and white : The scented sod of victory, Shall mark my brother's grave to-night! THE SONG-BIRD. The song bird's life, as air is free, As dusky son of Araby; As laugh of rill, or hum of bee; As beam of sun or wave of sea; Beneath the greenwood's canopy. He sings his song of liberty! Facing the east his liquid note Exultant pours from swelling throat; Salutes the morning's smiling face, That blushing speeds thro' Holds of space : Gives life and glory to the scene, And paints the sod a deeper green. Who has not heard' the sky-lark's song, — As beam of gold the sky among; Who has not heard the robin's lay Make resonant the summer's day; Would in his heart the shadows hide, That Malice brings to swell life's tide. THE SONG-BIRD. 63 Unceasing thro' Meridian's glow, Or when the evening's shadows now His joyful song unstinted trills ; His silver notes as water spills, To Him who gave his tongue its note ; Who poured the russet on his throat. The wand'ring orbs that climb the sky : That thro' the arch of heaven fly ; The lamp of night that doth pursue His god of light thro' fields of blue ; Would shed their soft reflected beam On him, as on man's fairest dream ! The silent throb of starry night Thrills, as the orb that gives her light : Beneath the shade of bending tree They whisper Nature's harmony ; On ravished ears its notes intrude. As song of bird in solitude. There would my soul communion find : There would my heart its treasures bind : Alone with nature and as free, As crystal star in ether sea. Beyond its orbit would I fly To Him who lit its flame on high. 04 nature's lessons. NATURE'S LESSONS. How well tlie truant robin knows The time when come the winter's snows ; How well his instincts lead him where The perfumed summer scents the air; Fair offspring of the leafy dell, Amid its glories would he dwell ! E'en, too, the toiling busy bee That hummed his song of industry To flower, and shrub, and clover bloom ; To rose and lily's sweet perfume : That gathered from their cups the store His patience brought to winter's door ! Laborious ant, while Summer sung Her song of joy the earth among, ]STo truant he while yet her beam O'er nature's mantle sheds her stream ; Her golden hours no pleasure gave Save where he would her treasures save, Retires within his mound of clay Secure "gainst winter's cheerless ray. Unthinking Man — in nature first — Where lie the joys for which you thirst ? Must you a lesson glean from them, The least of God's created hymn ? WINTEH. 65 Must you, as Prodigal of yore, No treasure hoard, no blessing store ? Must winter's chills, unsheltered, find The treasures of your heart and mind ? And dearer yet, a conscience pure, Must you not this great boon secure ? :o:- WLMTER, Silently, stealthily, treading his way, Leaving the sun in his course behind ; Casting his gloom on the antumn day, That now in fetters, his shadows bind. Higher the Dog star climbs the arch ; Brighter the belt of Orion gleams ; Thro' quiv'ring space, supernal march, Lighting the earth in their argent beams. Pulseless and cold, as the touch of death, The faded glories of nature lie ; Cheerless and withered before his breath, Their sullied beauties, unpitying die. Where Poverty's hearth is cold and bare, His shivering throbs are keenest felt : Where Hunger pinches the cheek of care ! His vengeful buffets are fiercest dealt ! 66 A DROP OF WATER. The grave of nature, in truth is he, That stores the treasures of Time's decay, Whose shroud of crystal is fair to see, • As promise of hope to his cheerless day. Our lives, as the years,- are growing short, — Steadily drifting to Winter's gloom ! As storm-tossed vessel that seeks some port, Earth's cares would end in the silent tomb ! Oh ! may that haven be one of bliss, Where winter's shadows are never known ; With joys surpassing our hopes in this To live in the liffht of God's heavenly throne. A DROP OF WATER. The crystal dew drops that repose, As sparkling gems on leaf or thorn, From ocean's breast in mist arose, To cool the brow of summer morn. The sun's bright beams their presence shroud, Absorbed in vapor upward ta'en, Invisible they shape the cloud That on the morrow breaks in rain. A DROP OF WATER. 07 Whether as dew that beads the rose, Or genial show'r that cools the earth, The little drop of water shows The Hand divine that gave it birth ! Supernal ! as the orb that rolls Its pond'rous bulk thro' fields of space ! The same eternal Law controls The glitt'ring dew-drop in its place ! Whether in show'r, or mist, or dew, In ice, or snow, or hail, or steam, Its mission is as fair and true, As tint of flow'r or morning beam. Inexorable law, whose force Conveys the rain-drop from the stream : Whose sparkling glints thro' nature course In tiny wreaths of cloud or steam. The mighty lesson here is shown, That death is but a change of form ; That pearly rain-drop hither blown, Must as our lives obey the storm. Transcendent Law to Nature true, Be change of ours as fair as this, On heaven's fair flowers to rest as dew, Thro' clouds of glory and of bliss! G8 moore's visit MOORE'S VISIT TO COHOES. Here stood the master of the Lyre, The sweetest bard that ever wrote ; Whose songs evoke the patriot's tire, Whose genius struck the tenderest note ; Time's crumbling touch has no decay, For Erin's Bard or Erin's lay. How gazed he on those primal Falls. — The giants of the crested flood ? Who penned the "Harp of Tara's Halls" To strains that soothe, yet lire the blood. In verse as rhythmic in its force As is the Mohawk's rapid course. The Sappho of the " Burning Lyre ;" — The Pindar of the " Melting Lay ;" The bard of Erin's proud desire, To wrest his land, from foreign sway ; Now sees the struggling waters flow. In mad'ning wreaths to depths below. Oh, what a type of Erin's wrongs, — What fervid mem'ries come and go ! The rush of waters, like her songs, Now wildly leap, now gently flow ; NTow swell their measure on the air ; Now die away in murm'ring prayer. TO COHOES. 69 The rush of waters, — like the fire That kindles in the Irish heart, Shall gather strength — a fun'ral pyre O'er which their wrongs shall fiercely dart : — O *-■ ' An avalanche of wrath and death To those who 've ground their hearts beneath. Thou mighty daughter of the flood ! Thou monument of earth's decay ! The hallowed spot on which he stood, Like thee in time shall pass away ; When not a solitary thread Of silver spray shall mark thy bed. And when Time's changes come and go, And thrones shall crumble into dust ; When sun and star shall cease to glow, And nature's laws eternal rust ; The wrongs that man to man have shown Shall stand before him at the Throne ! 70 THE TOILER. THE TOILER. What nobler heart than thine — what form Sell-conscious of thy strength and worth ? What braver soul to face the storm The heritage of man from birth ? — Then up and dare the sneers of those — The pets of Fortune and your foes. Look upward from thy toil and show What man can do, what man hath done ; Life would be worthless here below If thou the battle hadst not won ; The elements of earth and air Have in tin 7 toil an equal share ! Whom dost thou fear if true thou art To self and manhood's law sublime ? Whom dost thou fear — whose nobler part- Keeps steady pace with march of time ? Where is thy peer ? With whom compare, If thou thyself the laurels wear? Art thou less favored than the hind That doth abuse God's many gifts ? Can wealth enrich the heart or mind Or coward dare where danger drifts? Ah ! no, the greater of the two Art thou, if to thyself thou 'rt true. THE POET'S LAMENT. 71 Why rail at Fortune, when her dower, "With lavish hand to thee is given ? Within thyself is all the power, — When hand and heart have nobly striven To ameliorate your cause, When you, yourself doth make the Jaws. Then up and cease the puny cry ; You tight with dwarfs, and not with men, — The battle's yours, if you but try, — And if a failure, try again. The sturdy stroke of ax hath lain The mighty oak upon the plain .' THE POET'S LAMENT. Write something that will live in fame, — A friend once said to me ; Write something that will wreathe your name, Thro' ages yet to be. That something, 0, where can it be ? Where hidden in the earth ? What magic words can set it free ? What thought can give it birth ? 72 the poet's lament. The song of beauty lias been sung. Since Eve first saw the light ; The chimes of Love thro' time have rung Their strains of wild delight ! The marvels of the earth and sea, The glories of the sky, Have swept the chords of Poesy In language pure and high. The secret wish, — ambition's aim — Has found its theme of praise ; The hero's deeds, that sculpture fame, Come up from Homer's days. The power and glory, love and light, Of Him who rules the spheres, Have sped from pens as bold in flight, As sun that shapes the years ! The wish for freedom — man's desire — That burns within the soul ! From buried pens has caught the fire, Which tyrants would control. Man's inhumanity to man ; The Scottish Plowman sung, That clouds the years since life began ; That has our bosoms wrung ! the poet's lament. 7^> There is no thought howe'er sublime, Xo theme however low ; But daring- pen has set to rhyme. To strains that deftly now. The cunning pen, of brilliant mind, Exhausting Nature's store; Leaves nothing for the groping blind Of beauty to explore ! " Quaternion spring from Nature's womb," I penned the other day, When lo ! I found the rhythmic bloom, Adorning Milton's lay! 0, friend of mine, the search is vain, There gleams no crown for me, Contented must my muse remain, In dark obscurity ! But if a ray should thro' it stream To light some darkened heart, Acquiesced rests the poet's dream, That sped the magic dart ! 74 BOREAS. BOREAS. The north wind blows his bugle horn, Away from the Polar seas ! Thro' the woody dell, of beauty shorn, He sweeps thro' its naked trees ; He ruffles the river, that erst had sped In shimmer of autumn beam, Then howls his delight where the leaves lie dead. By margin of forest stream ! lie gathers the snow-flakes upon his breast, Or bears them upon his wing ; Their pure white crystals, as lily's crest, Thro' the air he madly flings ; O'er moor and mountain, o'er lake and fell, He speeds on his wild career ; As the shock of battle, or billows' yell, He breaks on the startled ear ! O'er the bare cold cabin, of fire bereft — To comfort and cheer unknown ; Thro' the broken pane or chimney cleft His trumpet is loudest blown ; Where Poverty gathers her scanty gown Around her shivering form, His loudest whistle and darkest frown TTnpitying round her storm ! HOME. 75 lie stills the prattle of rill and stream, With mantle as chaste as death ! The polished highway — the skater's dream — Is chiseled beneath his breath ! Over the river, his road is made Fairer than king ever trod ! Over the river, his floor is laid Meet for Olympian god ! ■:o:- HOME. Wherever through this world we roam We find no dearer place than home ; Its memories, how fair and bright, Beneath its roof there is no night ; Its fond affections, tender, pure, Our warmest impulses allure. The child by mother's arms caressed — To mother's bosom fondly pressed — By lather's precepts day by day, Taught in virtue's path to stray ; And when to man or woman grown, Is left to battle life alone ; Say, can he e'er that home forget, That brings such mem'ries of regret? 76 HOME. The wand'rer o'er the dreary wild, Who once was sweet affection's child; A prey to hunger and remorse ; A prey to disobedience' curse ; How do his thoughts in anguish now, When he recalls the long ago ; Would he, if now the power were given To breathe once more that peaceful heaven. Would lie in wayward fancy stray ? Would he his parents disobey ? Ah ! no, his heart's submission now. Beneath their will would gladly bow, Would enter in their joy or pain, Nor think he wore coercive chain. The sacred ties that wreathe the home, Are themes for many a precious tome ; Whose chastened influences throw, Their balm whereon their precepts flow : As beams of light they shed their rays. That thro' the soul awaken praise ! However poor the home may be, Its precincts bring security ! Homeless wanderer of the earth — •Proscribed by nature from your birth ; Has she no refuge found for thee, Thro' all your years of misery ? Has her great Author sent you here, Without a home, from year to vear ; THANKSGIVING REFLECTIONS. I I An outcast thro' the world to roam, Friendless, unloved, bereft of home ? Ah ! no, the Ruler of the spheres, Who numbers man's dark sea of tears, Has found for them a home above, Eternal as His light or Love. :o:- THAKKSGIVI^G REFLECTIONS. Once more our thankful hearts are raised ; Once more God's plenteous gifts are praised ; Once more the world beholds amazed, The strides that freemen make ; Once more the sumptuous feast is spread ; Once more our thanks to heaven are sped ; Once more we bow the grateful head, For joys that o'er us break ! But do we on this day of cheer — The fairest one of blissful year ; Do we forget the widow's tear, That speaks of grief and pain ? Do we forget the cheerless hearth, Where joy and comfort rudely part ? Do we forget the vengeful dart That tires the maddened brain ? 78 THANKSGIVING REFLECTIONS. Do we forget the debt we owe, To Him who crowns our. bliss below: To Him whose blessings on us flow From lavish Hand divine ? To some, alas, the wealth He gives Within their own cold bosoms lives , The bounty which His mercy sieves ! Is hid, as in a mine. Oh ! you who 'd praise the God of light, For blessings which your souls delight ; Should break the gloom that clouds the night Of poverty and woe ! Should from your bounty give a share, To cheer the hearts of want and care ; Should preach the universal prayer, Of mercy here below. Would you avert the Rich man's doom ! Would build of hearts enduring tomb ; Must seek the chill, cold, haunts of gloom ! And chase their clouds away ; Then, then indeed, would thanks untold To God arise, more prized than gold ! To Him, the Shepherd of the Fold— Whose promptings cheer our way ! The humid, sinewy hand of toil, That bands the earth and plows its soil ; Would you its potency entoil, Whose cunning is divine ? HAD I MY LIFE TO LIVE AGAIN. 70 Ah ! no, if you'd avert the fate, That Heaven decrees to high estate, You'd never sow the seeds of hate, Where Mercy's heam should shine. -:o:- IIAI) I MY LIFE TO LIVE AGAIN. How many a man is heard to say, " Had I my life to live again ; What faults would I not cast away ; How guarded 'gainst the wiles of men. The wasted hours, to pleasure lent, Would higher aims and hopes secure ; The noble thoughts by heaven sent, Should never flow thro' streams impure : The spendthrift life, of death the spring, Would seek the haunts of care and grief; Would counsel to the doubting bring, And to the weary, sweet relief: Within my home content should rest ; Arouud my hearth its comforts stream ; A father's love should fill my breast ; A husband's care my bliss and dream. 80 HAD I MY LIFE TO LIVE AGAIN. The ways of God to man should be, From day to day, my earnest theme ; My liar.l should give, where poverty Obscures the light of heaven's beam ! The drunkards' haunts, the gamblers' den Would I avoid as death or shame ; My life should tread the paths of men, Whose deeds have left an honored name.'' Illusive wish, were life once more, Yours to squander, yours to waste ; As fickle would you ply life's oar — Delighted, each allurement taste. Man grasps the shadows as they fly ; The substance hid, neglected lies ; Deceit and falsehood catch his eye, And, truth eternal, homeward flies ! The yawning gulf that opens wide, Is as our lives to pleasure bound ; Unerring, as returning tide, Beneath its waves such lives are found ! freedom's barriers. 81 FREED< >M'S BARRIERS. The swollen river bursts its banks, And sets its waters free ; As headlong charge of serial ranks, Imbued with liberty ! The threatening cloud will dart its lire — Sure presage of the storm, As seething earth, tumultuous, dire, It breaks in dread alarm ! The tranquil sea, beneath the lash — The angry tempest dares ; From furthest depths, as thunder's crash, Its crested grandeur rears ! Its frenzied billows onward roll — Tremendous in their wrath ! As manhood grasping freedom's soul ! Would clear its glutted path ! The river bears its tide away, As tribute to the sea ; The cloud that threatened dire dismay, Revives the grassy lea ; The tempest breaking ocean's calm, To nature lends its force ; That dying gathers perfumed balm, Of flowers in its course ! 82 COLUMBUS. But tyrant laws, that cloud the soul, That chain the spirit down, Abysmal thro' the ages roll — Of hell the scourge and crown ! But man aroused, collects his might, To crush the Hydra form ! Transcends the ocean in the fight ! And supersedes the storm ! COLUMBUS. Of men renowned, hy adventure crowned, They bore him in chains away ; O'er that foam ilecked main, he gave to Spain In the noon of a brighter day. For she is gone whose glory shone Thro' all the trials he bore, Whose jewels sold brought wealth untold To Spain — from a distant shore. Ungrateful king, to basely fling The hero of vanquished wave ; In dungeon keep, who swept the deep, With courage supremely brave ! But alas, his quest thro' ages blest, What boots its glory now ; When all its claims and lofty aims. As shadows, wreathe his brow ! COLUMBUS. 88 Three times lie bore from foreign shore. Glad tidings till then unknown ; Of sunny seas, whose Hebrides, He gave to Spanish throne ; Unpurchased gave, the land and wave, That God decreed should he, The fairest gem in the diadem, Of heaven crowned Liberty ! What grief and shame, now cloud the tame, Of him whom fortune blessed; Whose daring soul, 'neath heaven's control, The height of danger pressed ! Whose heart unawed at billows broad, Explored the works of God ; Whose fruitage gave to man the wave, That blossomed as Aaron's rod ! As unconfined, his daring mind, As land he would reclaim ; As bold and brave as mighty wave, Whose billows he would tame ! Prophetic theme — the scholar's dream — Is rudely swept aside ; And hirelings base, now take the place Of him who linked the Tide ! On scroll of Fame! be his the name, That gleams the brightest there ! Whose thirsting soul, gave man control Of lands beyond compare ! 84 TO THE MOOX. ITis uncrowned life, now ends the strife, Valladolid mourns Ins doom ! Whilst ages hymn the requiem Of love, above his tomb. TO THE MOOK Your crescent of light in the western sky, When the bright god of day is descending, I< fair as the Promise that beams from on high, — Thro' the portals of heaven, transcending! You stream on our path from your home in the blue, — Dispelling the glooms that surround us ; — Fair queen of the night, your course is as true. As the sunbeams that gather around us ! O'er the crime startled street, or the slums of Despair ! Where Depravity spreads his dark pinion ! Your soft, silver beam, is as bright, and as fair, As tho' godliness ruled its dominion ! As Charity breathing her whisper of love. To the grief laden heart of the lowly ; Your mild beam of glorv is streamed from above — A proof that your mission is holy ! JO THE MOON. 85 Lone watchers o'er night, what dark anguish and tears Are swept from their channels in sorrow, Beneath your cold ray, thro' the roll of the years, As your phases, they break on our morrow ! The light that you shed, on the black vault of night, Beneath which tired nature lies sleeping, You sweetly reflect from the great source of light- As Mercy o'er wickedness weeping ! Ere your circuit's completed thro' heaven's ex- panse, And your bright rounded beam is declining ; Ghost-like your tread, where the bright sun- beams glance, On the verge of the zenith reclining ! As true as the sunflower, you wheel in your course, Pursuing your god of devotion ! Obeying the laws that encircle your force — ! And swell the broad tides of the ocean. 86 DAMON AND PHYNTIAS. DAMON AND PHYNTIAS. Dionysius, the tyrant, sat on his throne, And his anger was sorely stirred, Against the traitor who would disown His power, or his fateful word; With cruel revenge his dark heart was stung And demoniac sought the cause, So he had Phyntias in prison flung, For daring to ignore his laws. And now his captive a favor craved, At the hands of this cruel king, Whose power and anger he boldly braved, As the doom they were sure to bring ; So he asked his leave for a short sojourn, To settle his affairs with men, Leaving Damon, the pledge of his return To the prison's dark cell again. The merciless king revengefully glared On the hostage, determined, brave, Whose dauntless spirit the tyrant dared, In the midst of his courtiers grave ; " The death Phyntias deserved at our hands, Shall be thine at the place and hour, If he does not return to loose the bands, That now leaves thee in our power." DAMON AND PHYNTIAS. 87 So spoke the dread king, and an angry frown His treacherous face overspread, Whilst Damon's courage but dimmed the crown That gleamed on the tyrant's head. The dark days sped by, the dread moment came, When the hostage to honor true, Was to die the death for that much loved name — A marvel of friendship to view ! Exultant the king derisively spoke, And his words were the words of scorn, When thro' the assemblage a form broke, ' T was Phyntias, bleeding and torn : " Forbear your anger," Phyntias said, As he reached the grim place of death ; guide the orbit of the Plough ? Whose pointers mark thy home in space Unerring as the sun-dial's face? -:o:- AMBITIOX. How varied are the forms you take : — How fast your fetters bind ; — The impulses our lives awake, — That rouse the active mind ; — In love, or war, or statesman's craft, — As beam of sun you fly; — And proud the soul of him whose hand Your standard rears on high ! The thirsting soul is slaked by thee, From Nature's rills and streams ! You come as Fortune to the brave : — Enchanting; as her dreams ! 96 AMBITION. You come the test of buoyant hope. — Excelsior ! and fair ! And daring is the heart that flings Your banner to the air ! The soldier on the tented field, Or 'mid the battle's shock : Beneath your spell is trebly brave, — Immovable as rock : Where danger looms, there are you found, Amid its crash and strife ! The headlong charge — disordered rout — Would give your promptings life ! The midnight lamp for thee is lit, — The lore of buried years ! From out the past is keenly sought, — Dark stained with sorrow's tears ! The gleaming thought by thee is sped In burning words that fly ! Thro' myriad hearts, as lightning's darts. That pierce the inky sky ! The bashful maiden finds in thee Incentive to her dream ! Her heart's fair hopes you would awake. As morning's crimson beam ! Around her life you'd weave the spell So often sung and told, That trusting love more potent is Than war, or shining gold ! THE MONTHS. 07 Iii classic halls you 'cl rear your crest, Majestic and sublime ! Would penetrate the ardent breast. That niche the walls of Time ! But spectres from the hoary past, In grim and gaunt array ! Around your vaunted glory troop, To speak your swift decay ! Imperishable fame that lives Beyond the crumbling stone ! The hope that in the bosom lives, — That breathes of God alone ! The soul beyond this world's conceits — A heavenly jewel set — Than hero of a thousand fights, Is more triumphant yet ! -:o:- TIIE MONTHS. Before the sun, the twelve appear — The sons and daughters of the year. The two faced Janus coming first, From storm and cloud and crystals burst ! Pursues his cold, unpitying flight, Beneath the Dog star's blazing light! 98 the months. Next, February, her hour glass drains. Thro' frost and snow and icy chains, Unmindful of our tears or woes, Her crystal mantle 'round us throws. March, in his turn, in swifter flight, Gives shorter hours to winter's night ; On equinoctial storms comes he, The sturdiest, bravest of the three. Succeeding, April next appears, Enriching nature with her tears ; The trembling bud she fain would bring, From out the gloom to clothe the spring : She sets the streams and rivers free, And rolls their treasures to the sea ; Then speeding thro' the arch of day Her offspring leaves to beauteous May. All pitying month, your tender trust, By sunny May is fondly nursed ; Beneath her sweet benignant smile Earth's glories bud and bloom the while ! Fair empress of the rolling green ! The twelve, as we, would crown thee queen- Solstitial June, with rosy cheeks, And red ripe lips our homage seeks ; Pours out her rich, luxurious feast, That flows exultant from the east : THE MONTHS. 99 Thro' crystal bead and beam of sun Perfected life by thee is spun ! Fair month of flower, and bird, and bee, Would that our life was fair as thee ! Triumphantly the sun now streams O'er thirsting- earth bis ardent beams ! July's hot breath thro' nature o-] ows , And blasts the tints that deck the rose ! Exhausted blooms attest his ire, And droop before his beams of Are ! Xext, August comes with ripened sheaf, And yellow tint for shining leaf; The grateful orchard sings his song ! On golden chords its notes prolong ! Beneath his care fair nature's store is brought triumphant to our door! September, now, with deeper tints, The leaf of elm and maple glints ; Collects the treasures August bore, And leaves them at October's door; Queen of the forest and the wold, Whose etchings charge the green to gold ! Your days growing shorter as our own, In downward course you tread the zone ! ( )ctober, next, with royal cheer Collects the vintage of the year; 100 THE MONTHS. Right royally invites us all, To feast with him in princely hall, For her favorite and her heir Has come to bind her golden hair ! In rich libations, quaffs her wines, • And at her sumptuous table dines ! But nut-brown king, you're speeding fast. To shiver in November's blast ! The undertaker of the year ! Comes next in cloud and storm and tear; Strips bare the trees, their glories fling Beneath his feet unpitying — But death betimes bears him away To add his gloom to winter's day ! We next behold the changing year, Withered and old, infirm and sear ! With tottering step and swift decay, Calling on Time to close his day ! The chill of death is on his brow, And ice and snow enrobe him now ; But pitying time assumes his care, And ends his anthem and his prayer! TO THE PLANET JUPITER. 101 TO THE PLAKET JUPITER. " The very law that molds a tear, And bids it trickle from its source, That law preserves the earth a sphere, And guides the planets in their course ! *' Celestial Orb ! how swift thy course Throughout the vast domains of God ; What wond'rous law propels thy force And bends thine orbit to its nod ? Thro' boundless fields of space you roam, — Thy bound'ries set ethereal there ; — The liquid depths of blue your home ; — Of God the glory, and the care ! IIoav nicely poised thy pond'rous mass, That rolls eternal 'mid the spheres ! What glorious orbs above thee pass ; ( )bcdient to their portioned years ! Aphelion here would set thee free ! To wander thro' the blue immense ; But of his depths, God gave to thee So much for thine inheritance ! The sun, as centre of the Orbs, Proscribes their course with heavenly skill : Whose burning ray their bosoms throbs, < )bedient to his Author's will ! 102 PURITY. Far, far away your path is fixed, As trackless as the boundless brine ! Far, far away your light is mixed With spheres more brilliant far than thine ! Who marks the wonders of the sky ; Who sees the mighty planets roll ! Would dare Omnipotence deny ! Would dare abiure His work — the soul ! PURITY. There is a flower that all unseen Within the bosom grows, More beautiful of fairer sheen Than hyacinth or rose ; Its fair white petals wreathe the heart, Around its pulses bloom ; As morning's beams, its glories dart. In streams of sweet perfume ! Seraphic smiles adorn the face On which its lights are shed ; Where'er it blooms there beams a grace By kindred virtues led ; Earth's fairest flowers fade and die, — Their life is as a dream, But Purity, thro' realms on high, In heaven shines supreme ! THE REJECTED POEM. 103 THE REJECTED POEM. Alas, sweet words of rhythm, What hopes went out with thee : What bright, fair flights of fancy, To weave thy melody ; What anxious thrills came o'er me, To link thy chain of thought ; To shape thy studied numbers, With the chords that fancy wrought. What dreams of future glory ; What thoughts of joy and fame ; The theme of song ami story ; The pride of honored name : The dawn of a mind ennobled, With lights that brightly gleamed, As echoing notes of music, That thro' its chambers streamed. The perfume of love in nature, — All glowing as the sun ; The tint of leaf and flower, Thro' his bright glories spun ; The surging thoughts of heaven, That crowded thro' my brain ! Harmoniously were given To forge the lyric chain. 104 SONG OF LIBERTY. Perchance I dressed my idol In garb beyond its sphere ; Perchance its rhythmic numbers In cadence were not clear ; Perchance my vain, fond thinking A glamour "round it threw, From which the eye of judgment, The robe of self-love drew ! AVhere self but sees perfection, Deceptive is its light, As the mirage, which thirst awakens Illusive to the sight ! As the hiring phantom beckons Our fainting steps its way, So the false conceit we nurture, Leads the pliant mind astray. :<>:- SONG OF LIBERTY. Sing! grateful hearts the song of praise, Exultant as the tongue can roll ; Sing ! Freedom's sons your wealth of days : — The pride that fills the conscious soul. Sing ! mighty rivers of the plains ; Sing ! snow-capped mountains of the West : Sing ! in Heaven's sublimest strains The cause that makes your land so blessed ! SONG OF LIBERTY. 105 Sing, sing fraternal love and light : Sing, sing the wealth that nature yields ; Sing thou the glory and delight That tint your skies and robe your fields ! Sing, peace and joy, sublime and pure- Excessive as the heart can feel ; Sing! Freedom's tendrils, firm, secure, With song as loud, as thunder's peal ! Thrice sing your nag of azure line! The ret! ex of the starry sea; Sing, sing the faithful hearts and true— The martyred hosts of liberty; That fell beneath its torn breast, Defiant as the angry wave ; Eternal freedom for their crest. Victorious field their hallowed grave ! Recurring years the blessings sing,— The ceaseless anthem dear to fame; Recurring years fresh laurels brine- lo wreathe the splendors of your name: From pine-clad Maine to Tropic sea; From Eastern shore to set of sun : Sing out your .song of jubilee, For all that might and valor won. Exult that England's reign of fire, ^ Within our land had found a grave ; Exult that patriot — son and sire, In battles van had died to save, tO(i HARSH WORDS. The land that now o'er earth supreme, Sends up its voice in song and praise. From mountain crest to glinting' stream Eternal, to the God of Days. Exult that fratricidal strife — As tyrant-rule has passed away, That honor, fame — a nation's life Is your's to celebrate to-day. As long as Hudson's crystal flood, Shall roll her treasures to the sea, The hymn as dear as patriot's blood Shall pour its trills to Liberty ! -:o:- IIARSH WORDS. The cruel lips that speak harsh words Are bloodless, cold, and thin ; As, is the heart from whence they flow Unpitying, all within ; The warmth which our nature feels, Around their portal dies ! As sunny beams that speed to earth. Are hid in clouded skies ! HAUSH WORDS. 1()7 Who sees sweet childhood's tearful eves. When harshly told of wrong- ; Who sees its little quiv'ring lip, That should he tuned to song ; Who sees kind nature's rosy blush, Around its dimples play, Would ever speak the unkind word To chase that charm away. Who would deny the wounded heart, The balm with which to heal; Whose poisoned tongue, as adder dart, Would all its venom deal ! Ah! dead indeed to pity's touch, Is he who would inflame, The sacred tire that in us burns, With unkind words of blame. How many lives are won from sin, By words of tender tone; How many hearts with joy are tilled, On which the light ne'er shone ! Ah! churlish tongue, if you but knew. The charm you east away; You'd be to Nature's laws as true, As sun that lights the day. Who would rebuke his child for wrong, Should speak in gentle tone; The brutal tongue no conquest gains, Where wilful seed is sown • 108 HALLOWEEN. But words of earnest, calm desire, Will pentrate the soul ; Around its shadows beam in light, This, this is Heaven's control ! HALLOWEEN. Once more the eve of Halloween, The dream of many a rustic queen ! The one fair night of all the year That maidens test if Love's sincere, Or if his arrows ere shall fly, Across their dim expectant sky ; Is come once more her tale to tell. And weave her weird, prospective spell The smaller fry are sent to duck, Or hazardous the apple pluck ; Alternate placed where candle glow, Or russet orbs their tintings show ; In whirling motion, tempting fly, And brave the one, the danger try ! The key, thro' which the melted lead In various shapes prophetic sped; Oft wakes the throbs of joy or pain, As fancy links the magic chain ! HALLOWEEN. 109 " This shapes an engine plainly here, Which shows I '11 wed an engineer; While you less lucky in the race, Do in this spade your fortune trace; As sure as fate here comes a pen Which binds Kate's life to classic men ; Whilst here an ax and hammer prove, Where lies the test of Mary's love. Now let us try the apple's core, And for awhile with Fortune soar: Here, I myself, — the other here — The one I love so very dear; If that I fly, he follows after, You must not make a cause for laughter; But, if he flies, and I remain, 'T is proof I'm hound in Cupid's chain ! Whilst it we both to cinder turn, 'T is sure Love's fires within us burn ; But if opposing courses take, Our love to other hearts must break. Xow let us write the A. B. C. — Another test of destiny ; In water set and downward faced, From interference safely placed; If that the Fates should turn one o'er, Or two, or three, or even more, Then, then do Hymen's laws proclaim, Your future husband's monogram! " 11(1 DEFEAT. The yarrow branch lias next its charm To keep the hearts of lovers warm : Or to estrange them at its will Despite of human art or skill : As Delphic Oracle its plot [s intricate as Gordian knot ! As cosmetic for beauty's cheek. The potency of love she'd seek; Yet as that agent would she find That art — when painting love is blind : That spell, and charm, and molten lead. Are impotent as silken thread ; That virtue, modesty and grace. Are first — triumphant in the race ! DEFEAT. Vain, boastful land, your haughty crest Once more is bowed before the West ; The golden trophy you would bear Across the sea is vet our care ; And shall remain from year to year. As long as we've a Volunteer, Or men to build a swifter shell, If you the Tbistle should excel. TO THE MUSE. Ill You've tried the Thames, and now the Clyde, To build a boat to stem our tide : But Briton's art, or Scotchman's skill Is impotent to do your will : As long as we can claim a Payne The shining bauble shall remain. Ah ! you are jealous of the West, Of her young Eagle's lofty crest ! You'd give your wealth, if not your crown, For strength to tear our fabric down ; But while our sons on land or sea .Are true to God and liberty ; Unmatched you'll rind them, and as brave, As ever rode the crested wave. :o:- TO THE MUSE. How quickly do the moments fade When thrilled beneath your spell, fair maid ! What varied thoughts ! What quenchless tire The mind awakes to feed your lyre — Harmonic sounds, in rhythmic flow, Are sped across your magic bow ! The soul with thee is ne'er alone — Companion of the vast unknown ; — 112 TO THE MUSE. Its fairest hope in tliee is found Thro' wond'rous paths sublime, profound ;- Thro' God's domains, exalted, pure, Its sweetest thoughts von would allure ! The siren song von sing to me Oft wakes the trills of ecsta'cy : And I, obedient to your will, In broken numbers try my skill ; Yet, tho' discordant be their tone, The fault is thine, and thine alone. From mercenary motive he, Who would attune his lyre to thee ; Accurst the strain, howe'er sublime Its currents flow thro" waves of Time; Accurst its purpose and its aim — The weeds that choke the path to fame. Thrice blest is he who moulds the thought Unfettered, fadeless and unbought ! To Him, whose inspirations draw Our souls to heaven's supernal law ! To Him, his first, best thought be given — The Mighty One of earth and heaven ; Next to the land that gave him birth. Wherever be that spot of earth ; Then to the morale of his race, Be his the task each ffood to trace — THE SON(J OF LABOR. 113 To God ! to race and country true What noble deeds might he not do ! The impure lyrics sung to thee, That flush the brow of Modesty ; Miasniie as foul odors' breath Are sped on wings of gloom and death ! From such as these, fair maid, my muse Shall never cheek of thine suffuse. THE SONG OF LABOR. Swiftly the canst.' of the Toiler is speeding, Onward, and upward, it shoots thro' the gloom ! On thro' the marts, where tired labor lies bleeding; On thro' the forge, and the swift clicking loom : On thro' the charnel mine, Over the iron-line : On thro' the city, the mountain, and glen ; Speeds the electric wave, On its wild course to save (rod's noblest hand-work, the toilers of men. 114 THE SONG OF LABOR. All honor to those, who have tunneled the mountain, And handed the earth with a girdle of steel : They are Life's heroes, their genius the foun- tain, From whence flows the comforts the pam- pered now feel. On to their rescue then, You that would dare he men, Stand by the toiler, with purse and with pen, Their's is the nation's tight : Your's is their cause to right, Freedom is staked on the toilers of men. Ye who have read the Transfigured of Thahor, Relax the fierce struggle, His presence is nigh, The wealth you've acquired, is the outcome of labor ; And wealth is but dross, at the soul's parting- sigh ; Cease the fierce conflict then, Stewards of God and men : Flaccid the muscle and aimless the life, Of the proud artisan, God's noblest type of man With gaunt hunger staring his children and wife. IT LOOKS LIKE SPRING. . 115 The lilies of toil, Columbia's fair daughters, Have buckled the armour of Strife on their breast; Fair as the maidens by Babylon's waters : Honor their safe-guard, and Virtue their crest ; True when the order came, Careless of love, or blame, Principle called — she ne'er wooed them again. Braved they each scoff and jeer, Braved they each threat and sneer, To link their just cause with the toilers ot men. -:o:- IT LOOKS LIKE SPRING. It looks like spring, pedestrians cry, As thro' the muddy streets they tread It looks like spring, the rills reply — Plethoric grown — by streamlets fed. It looks like spring. The children play "With top and marble, rope and swing The noisy sparrows o'er the way, Have noisier grown, for this is spring. Ill) IT LOOKS LIKE SPRING. ft looks like spring, the ice and snow Dissolve their crystals, 'neath the sun ; The reeking iieHs, set free, e'en show The tints that Nature there has spun. It looks like spring; the hare brown earth That yesterday was rolled in white, • In desolation, and in death ! As Hope, puts on her robe of light. It looks like spring, the violets hue Once more in leafless glade is seen : Whose faintest, fairest tint of blue Would tain adorn the infant green. It looks like spring, the song of bird, — The merry ring of children's play; Once more upon the green are heard, — A prelude to the joyous May. It looks like spring, the cheerless heart. As budding leaf awakes to light ! It looks like spring, when cares depart Upon the sable wings of night. It looks like spring, the naked trees Put forth new life to robe the wood : The springing grass the eye shall please, And sunbeams play where winter stood. TO A STAR. TO A STAR. 117 Thou sun of worlds unknown, whose light thro" heaven has shone ; How softly falls thy beam, on mountain, hill, and stream ; [Jnchar.ged thy place and true, in heaven's fair arching blue ; Brilliant as when earth first caught thy rays. Thy form is still the same as when God lit thy flame ; Thro" ages rolling on thy silvery light has shone ; Undimmed thro" myriad years thy glory still appears. Superbly set in heaven's fair dome. Thy home how far away, near God's eternal day ; Beautiful, sublime, resplendent as thy prime ; God's halos round thee glow in beams of light that show Thy wondrous beauties to our gaze. Incandescent star, thro' boundless space how far ? As infinite thy course as He who set thy force ; And vet thy rays combine where twenty mil- lions shine On heaven's broad, ample road sublime ! US TO A STAR. Art thou a place of rest for souls of heavenly quest ? Or art thou fairer still, the home which God doth will For happy creatures blest, to find eternal rest In view of His bright celestial throne ? How brilliant is thy race thro' boundless fields of space ; A sun more bright at birth than that which lights the earth ; Whose glories far away illume the Milky Way,- The "golden-sanded" centre of the spheres. Twenty million suns, thro' which God's mercy runs, In wondrous floods of light, as beautiful as bright, As marvelous and fair as He who fixed them there, For men and angels bright to gaze upon ! The faintest in the blue, whose light ne'er came to view, Not since creation's dawn its light to earth has drawn ; Mysterious star and lone, whose light is near the throne ! ! break in heavenly splendor on my soul. WASHINGTON. 119 WASHINGTON". Exalted son of Freedom's light — The theme of man's unstinted praise — As long as God shall roll his days, Or morning's glow succeed the night ! Familiar name on childhood's. tongue, How many a song to thee is sung — Of Freedom's host, the first among, Who fought to gain a people's right ! We speak in reverence of thee — Whose deeds of glory unsurpassed, A halo round your country cast — The brightest star of Liberty ! The flag you raised undimmed appears— The pride of manhood thro' the y§ars — Beneath its folds there lurk no fears, Of slavish chains, or tyranny ! Man's dearest hope — freedom at birth, By thee thro' blood and strife was won— You gave his life a brighter sun. And fructified a fairer earth ! Your work achieved, its blessing now, Is stamped in freedom on the brow — Before whose eminence we bow — That give our homes their joy and mirth! 120 DECORATION DAY. AN ODE. DECORATION DAY.— AX ODE. There is no death ! The graves you (leek Are beautified by flowers of spring- There is no death ! The. grass you tread Fresh beauties round them fling. There is no death ! Those silent graves Bring forth new life from day to day ; A fitting tribute to the dead Fast mould'ring to decay. There is no death ! The useless dust O'er which in life we daily tread, Evokes the tints of plant and flower — A glory 'round them spread. Yes, deck these graves with nurtured flower Fair as the hue ot rosy morn, Death and decay shall reach it ere Another bud is born. From out these honoured graves new life Shall spring, to deck the vernal May, While memory's wreaths — a transient bloom Shall wither and decay. Yes, deek these graves beneath whose mound* The heroes of your country lie, With rarest gilts from Nature's field, — The flowers that never die. THE DIVER. 121 Bring the rich treasures of the mind, Undying love, sweet poesy ; Bring prayerful thoughts to deck the graves Where death, is life set free. Oh ! bring the living fire of Truth ! The wish to die for cause as grand ; The deathless yearning of the soul To die for Fatherland. -:o: THE DIVER. Away, thro' the depths of the mighty wave,— Where the shark and dolphin glide ; — The daring Diver intrepid brave Is borne beneath the tide ! Away, where silence eternal reigns ; Where tentacled monsters creep, — Thro 1 groves of coral, — unplowecl domains — That blossom beneath the deep ! Where pink-dyed aster — anemone — In wondrous hue is found ! Away, where the brawling, surging sea Awakens the depths profound ! 122 THE DIVER. Away t)ii that floor till then untrod, He moves thro' its maze of bloom ; Thro' trellised arches — that speak a God — That startle its caves of gloom ! What strange adventure ? What daring quest, Uncanny beyond compare, Would tempt the Diver beneath the breast, Of the frothing surges there ? The story is old, as siren's song, A ship went down in the sea, Bearing her burden of life along, To its groves of mystery. The shining ingot — of man the dream — The treasures of mine and loom, Borne as bubble upon the stream, Thro' its noiseless halls of gloom ; These would he snatch from the ghastly wreck, Would bear them from out its grave ; Thro' the swirl of ocean — the prize a speck Of the wealth beneath its wave ! On the slippery deck of that reeling ship, Unsteady and slow his tread ; Beneath the ocean's dark, sullen drip He moves thro' its floating dead ! Thro' ghastly horrors his way he gropes. Past echoless cabin and stair ! Thro' fluttering sails, and tangled ropes. Sad relics of life's despair ! THE WONDERS OF GOD. 123 Away, past monsters' inquiring gaze, That heightens the awful gloom ; In quest of trinkets that mocking blaze On the broken heart of bloom ! One false step on that slippery deck, — One snap of those lines of life, Would end his quest — as that vessel's wreck— Now prone 'neath the surges' strife. -:o: THE WONDERS OF GOD. Absorbed in wonder and amaze I raise my soul to Thee, Whose fiery orbs thro' heaven blaze. — Superb in brilliancy : The penciled beam that lights the sky, That floods the fields of space ; From sun to sun electric fly, Transcendent as Thy Grace ! Around, above, where'er w r e gaze, God's wond'rous skill is found ; Unending as His song of praise ; Supernal and profound ; The blade of grass receives His care, His rain-drop and His sun ; As does the soul His sweetest prayer, When sanctified and won. 124 THE WONDERS OF GOD. Behold the mighty ocean roll, Stupendous and sublime ! Beholds its tides, 'neath heaven's control, Obey their ebb and prime ! Behold its vastness and its might : — Its never ceasing song ! Obey the God of Love and Light, Thro' all the years among ! Within its breast what creatures live, Beneath its wave what bloom ! What glorious functions does He give To life within its womb ! The tireless workers that unite To build the coral reef, Is dear to Him as orb of light. Or glory's proudest chief. The teeming ocean and the earth, Attest the pow r er of God ! Who gave to Nature's laws their birth, — Who clothes the vernal sod ! Whose odors scent the budding rose, — Accords the song of bird, That pours his trills to many a close, That have the bosom stirred ! Who sees the morning's smiling face, With amber tinting spread ; Who sees the bead of crystal grace The lily's drooping head ; THE WONDERS OF GOD. 125 Who sees the sun pursue his course, Incandescent, fair ; Would in his heart deny the Force, That wheels his glories there ! Who sees the mantle of the night, — As herald from the tomb ! Who sees the star's taint, distant light, That would her vault illume ! Who sees her changing orb of light, Pursue its rounded way ! Would not break forth in wild delight To praise the God of Day ! Around God's least created thing, His glories most appear ! The drowsy bee on painted wing, That sips the honeyed tear ; The thrifty ant, that toiling bears, His winter's store of cheer ! Awake our souls to heavenly care, And point a moral here ! 126 THE BATTLEFIELD. THE BATTLEFIELD. The red field of battle, deserted of life, Its wet robe of carnage exultingly spread ! Where the conflict and charge sped o'er havoc and strife, And the actors, as leaves in the autumn, lay dead ; Where the demon sped shell on its mission of death, Unrelentingly tore thro' the ranks of the brave ; Where the cannon's dull boom shook the fair earth beneath, And the pitiless shot gave to valor a grave ! Where the onslaught was fiercest, a soldier lay dead, With the star-sprinkled flag held in loving embrace, In the dark gulf of danger, where chivalry led, He lay with its folds partly shrouding his face ; THE BATTLEFIELD. 127 Around him were strewn the brave comrades that fell, 'Neath the tierce crash of battle, as madly it tore, Where victory wreathed her brow 'neath the spell, That Glory's red hand to her throbbing heart bore ! Here lies the war horse, discomfited, slain — Thro' his nostrils the tire of the battle has sped ; Beside him the rider still holding the rein, By which his wild course thro' the battle was led ; The hilt of a sword in the other hand lies, But where is the blade that adorned its sheen, Alas ! it avenges the red stream that dyes, The dew crystaled mound, and the flower- scented green. Where yonder rude bridge crosses over the stream — A relic of peace in the sweet long ago, Ere the red bolt of war — in swift lurid gleam — Sped over its arch from the guns of the foe ; 128 THE BATTLEFIELD. Where the sedge and the grasses bend light to the breeze, And the song bird awakens the gloom with his trill ; Where the sun faintly streams thro' the foliaged trees, And the cresses, as garlands, droop over the rill. Low, bending, a soldier stoops over that stream, All anxious to snatch from its ripples a drink ; — The rude bullet seizes his life and his dream, And he falls as the shadow that darkens its brink ! Ah ! merciless shot had von swerved from your course, The sword thrusts that pierced his brave heart would allay, Your mission of. death, its dread terror and force. But to add a few moments to life's closing- day. The clouds of that strife have long floated away, And the brave hearts that fell 'neath their shadows, so deep, In the sweet calm of death, lies their valor to- day, Until the last trumpet awakens their sleep ! THE BATTLEFIELD. 129 What reck they the glories their victories gave, To the bright cause of Freedom, of country oppressed Beneath the green sod, with the earth as a grave, They lie as the myrtle, that hallows their rest. They sleep unremembered, the (hiring, the brave, ~No' tributes of worth to their mem'ries arise ; They sleep as the sailor that rests neath the wave ; They sleep as the cold sod that over them lies. The trust and the pride of a nation should claim, The patriot's tribute for deeds of renown, In letters whose glory should trumpet their fame, Engraved on the heart thro' the centuries down ! 130 MEMORY, MEMORY. Electric spark from Nature's cherished womb ! How swift yqur flight, thro' Time's abysmal way How keen your glance amid its death and gloom, That hide Oblivion's long Cimmerian day ! They troop as shadows from the land of death, — The buried treasures of the sunny past ! That shone o'er life's entrancing, balmy breath, Ere sorrow's mantle o'er their bloom was cast ! Youth's happy hours, evanescent and bright, Bring from the past their mem'ries to the soul ! As morning breaking from the gloom of night. Their vanished glories thro' the bosom roll ! The level sward, where once the goal was set ; The glancing ball that o'er its mantle flew ! The forms of those, that in the contest met, On thy swift wing, our thoughts once more review. MEMORY. 131 The branching tree, that lent its cooling shade; ' The humid brow, with exercise aglow ; Where many a plot of youthful mind was laid ; Are, as the plotters, thro' the years laid low ! The fadeless grove of laurel and of palm, Where song of bird made resonant the day ! We stray in fancy thro' their shade and balm, Seeking the nest of linnet or of jay. Our school-days bring the sober thought oi care, — The master's frown,— the pliant rod of woe ! The truant heart that would its terrors dare,— Whose palm, unflinching, would receive the blow. The brave companions of the past arise ! Their love and friendship, insolence and pride : — Thro' far off vistas do we strain our eyes, To see, if they, as we have stemmed Life's tide. The dreams and hopes of life's maturer years, The shattered cause, the patriot's regret ; On glancing thought, in vividness appear, As tho' their light, in time had never set! 182 carriers' new year address. We bail thy shades, fair messenger of Thought,' For with thee comes the chord of many a song ! When buoyant life, thro' fleeting vistas sought The fancied joys, that would its days pro- long ! The broken strings, we hail their presence too ; — As clouded sunbeam, darkly hid from view; They speak of blighted hope, and promise true : — Ere inky Mght, her mantle o'er them threw. CARRIERS' NEW YEAR GREETING, For the world-wide information We've borne to your door ; For the News of far-off countries, As those of native shore ; For the shipwreck and disaster. That words hut ill express ; For these as faithful carriers We hand you an Address ! carriers' new year address. 133 For the gossip and the scandal. That set the world ajar ; For the dark intrigue of nations, That heralds strife and war ; For the wrong, and crime, and sorrow, That do the heart oppress, We ask your gracious bounty To handsel our Address. For pathetic song and story. That sparkle as the rill ; For the daring deeds of glory, The heart and bosom fill ; For the sparks that speed thro' ocean, — Whose light illumes the Press ; The bearers of whose light'ning thought, Present you their Address ! For the scaffold and the prison, The bridal and the tomb ! For the cruel laws that wither Creative thoughts of bloom ! For the noble aspiration, No tyrant can suppress ; We seek a place within your heart To place our bold Address ! Thro' the sunshine and the shadow. The storm and the shower ; Thro' the chill, cold blast of winter, Or snn's all glowing pow'r ; 134 NIGHT. To your trust have we been faithful Thro' scenes that brought distress ; For which assured of your reward We tender our Address ! For the clouds of Eighty-seven. — The sun of Eighty-eight ; We greet you with our dearest wish That God will bless your state ; For the joys that crowned your Christmas,- A Nation's fearless Press. — We offer you our compliments And our New Year's Address. NIGHT. Where gathers the Night her dark curtain of gloom ? Whence comes the stillness that steals thro' her womb ? Does fear make the tiowers distill their perfume To hallow the Night? Thro' the. shadows of Night does Hope wing her way, Unerring, as 'neath the bright beam of the day ? Does thought speed as swift thro' the crystals that spray The robe of the Night? NIGHT. 135 The message of danger, the mission of love, Are their glances as fair thro' her dark silent grove ? Is Heaven's bright promise that comes from above Less true in the Night ? The sunbeam that hides its fair light in her breast ; The zephyrs that blow from her groves in the west ; Are they less delightful because of thy crest, Dark, shadowy Night? The sentinels guarding the depths of her wave ; The shadows that flit thro' the gloom of her grave ; Do they not reflection as earnestly crave Tho' hidden in Night ? The pine trees that wave their tall heads in her stream Look weird, as the spectres that float thro' her dream, To nature are dear, as the Orient beam That burgeons in Night ? 136 NIGHT. O'er the crime-fettered city her mantle is spread, As deep as the silence that reigns o'er her dead ! Thro' its arches the stealthy, dark criminals tread To startle the Night ! The bright dream of glory that lights np her gloom ! The fire sparks that memory bears from her tomb ! The odors that float thro' her gardens of bloom Incense the Night ! Where her fringes hang deepest the weary find rest ; Beneath her dark frown are their sorrows ca- ressed ; To the tear-laden eyelash, in pity, is pressed The finger of Night ! Where the feint streak of morning, empurpled appears ; Where the sun glints the dewdrops, as joy's crystal tears, The gloom that surrounds her, as grief disap- pears, So vanish our Night ! THE SPARROW. 137 THE SPARROW. Hast memory for the past, Little Sparrow. .For the winter gone at last, Little Sparrow. For the days of gloom outspread, Unsheltered and unfed, But happily now sped, Little Sparrow. Tho' quarrelsome thou art, Little Sparrow. Thy hardships touch the heart, Little Sparrow. Our pity is aroused, When we note how 7 ill your 're housed, By eat as rodent moused, Little Sparrow. The cheerless home you find, Little Sparrow, But catch the biting wind. Little Sparrow. Your quiv'ring tiny wing Small shelter to you bring 'Gainst winter's 1 titter sting, Little Sparrow. 138 THE SPARROW. You are a type of man, Little Sparrow. On the same aggressive plan, Little Sparrow. In anger you're as blind, As selfish to your kind — But where perfection find Little Sparrow ? Forced emigrant of test. Little Sparrow ! They ill-repay your quest, Little Sparrow, Bred across the main. Where confiscations reign, Your mission is quite plain, Little Sparrow. They'd feed you here on hugs. Little Sparrow. On flies, or worms, or grubs, Little Sparrow. But being of English birth, Such things arouse your mirth, For Britian claims the earth, Little Sparrow. They say you'd rule alone, Little Sparrow. Our eaves and trees your throne, Little Sparrow, THE SPARROW. 139 The oriole aglow, The robin we long know. From us, thro* you, must go, Little Sparrow. Your toleration here. Little Sparrow, May end in aught but cheer, Little Sparrow. Fight yourselves among, But robins* thrilling song- Must float in joy along. Little Sparrow. Propensities for tight, Little Sparrow, But wicked hearts delight, Little Sparrow, So if you would be blest, Why, build your little nest And give us peace and rest. Little Sparrow. If not, why disappear, Little Sparrow, We "11 have no trouble here, Little Sparrow. ( )ur home is not for thee, Who 'd stifle Liberty ! We '11 have no anarchy. Little Sparrow. 140 LABOR DAY'S SONG LABOR DAY'S SONG. Tli rice welcome the day, whose fair morning is breaking, In roseate tints thro' the eastern sky ! Thrice blest be its beams, when tired labor awaking, Sinks all its cares in the moments that fly ! Long has its want been felt ; Long has the toiler knelt ; The wealthy have spurned the workingman's pray'r ; Bravely the light was fought ; Dearly the boon was sought ; Of sweet relaxation from labor and care ! Proudly they'll gaze on the fair sky above them ! Proudly their hearts on the morrow shall beat ! Proudly they'll smile on the dear ones that love them ! Proudly the voice of their brother shall greet ! Conscious of pride and worth ; Children of toil from birth ; Of Mammon the outcast, he's ever the same ; Brave where the engine reels ! Brave where the cannon peals ! Brave in each danger, that trumpets our name ! LABOR DAY'S SONG. 141 Shame on the hand that would wrest from the toiler, One sweet day of pleasure to lighten his load; Shame on the caitiff- — humanity's spoiler. — Who'd lengthen his year on the long, weary road : Faithful to God is he ; Nature's nobility ; The nations of earth owe their glories to him : Toiling for pittance small ; King over men withal ; Still at the mercy of task-master's whim ! Hail the bright day when the toiler is mas- ter ; — His destiny wreathing fair garlands to fame ! When those who'd oppress him will sink in disaster ; And honor redound to the workingman's name : True in that hour of pride ; True as returning tide ; Fair be thy mission, and true be thy creed : True to posterity ; Honor and liberty ! Then, then, shall the toiler be noble indeed ! 142 MEMORIAL DAY. MEMORIAL DAY The fairest flowers that crown the spring To your green graves, in love, we bring — The yielding earth's sweet off'ring, . To honor thee. Whether beneath mausoleum, Or lowly grave, with letters dim, Our hearts are filled with grateful hymn To memory. The treasured relics of the past Around your graves are fondly cast ; For deeds of glory unsurpassed. For country ! The torn flag that valor bore From Gettysburg, to South'rn shore ; Thro' which the shell and bullet tore Defiantly ! The broken blade, to honor true, Upon your graves as laurels strew ; When War's dread charge his clarion blew Uproariously ! The anguished tear, by sorrow shed, O'er gallant hearts that nobly bled ; For father, brother, husband dead For country ! FEBRUARY. 143 We bring the anthem and the song, That thro' the years shall roll along ! That place your heroic deeds among The Cimbri ! We bring the sculptured wish, ani thought, Within our hearts for deeds unbought ; That where you fell, and how you fought Will yet recorded be. That Fame will yet a tablet raise In glowing words of love and praiSe To you, whose glory, shed its rays, On Liberty. :<>:- FEBRUARY. Thon short lived daughter of the year, Thy days of gloom are fled, — Days when sorrow hid her tear, As cemet'ries their dead ; Days of cheer, and joy, and song, To Fortune's favored few ; Days of want, and grief, and wrong- To those she never knew. 144 FEBRUARY. Thy winter robe of ice and snow, From earth shall pass away, Beneath the sun's exultant glow. And Nature's lengthened day; The song of bird new r life shall give, Where all is pulseless now ; The tint of flower once more shall live To deck earth's changing brow. Thy predecessor left to thee A heritage of tears, That "have been shed where misery In squalid haunts appears ; Thy chill cold blast, as miser's dole, Unpitying has swept, O'er many a heart and weary soul That have in sorrow wept. But spring's fair morn, with rosy smile, Shall paint the earth anew, And flow'rs that have been hid the while To Nature shall be true : Not so the hearts sunk deep in grief, For these there is no cheer, The spring-time comes, but no relief Will ever robe their year. Ah !, yes, there is a spring for them, Whose flowers shall never die ; Where winter's storm shall never dim The brightness of the sky: APRIL. 145 Where never cloud of misery Shall break in tears of gloom. ; Where life is an eternity Of bliss beyond the tomb! -:o:- APRIL. Thou tearful daughter of the year, — The one-time nurse of bud and leaf, — You leave us with repentant tear For thy protracted days of grief; Faithless to thy trust thou'st been, Whose smiles were wont to robe the earth ; Capricious grown your woof of green, Unfinished lies — a theme for mirth, The turbulence of March you brought, Freakish, petulant, and severe ; Of sister May you never thought, Her genial smile, her sunny tear ; With thee the sigh of sorrow goes, — The stricken heart, the throb of pain ; The new made graves, wherein repose, The victims of your short-lived reio-n. 146 THE VIOLET. The bud and blossom watch your flight, — Scarce daring to disclose their birth, — Whose smile, was ever your delight, Now hide their glories 'neath the earth ; Who would have thought your gentle heart, Whose copious tears and smiles are shed, Would from the scene in sorrow part, And leave unhuried, winter's dead. The muddy stream, the naked bough, The bare, brown, landscape peering thro" The sod upturned beneath the plow, Too plainly show neglect in you : The robin trolls his broken lay, As if surprised at Nature's chill, — Displeased, he fain would fly away ! Where joy invites a warmer trill ! -:o:- THE VIOLET. Under the bare, brown earth long hid, Beneath the dead leaves of another year. Thou comest arrayed at Nature's bid, As joy's bright smile or affection's tear. JUNE. 147 A promise of hope, as fair, as true, O'er the dreary waste of our lives is sped, As thy opening leaves of deepest blue, That bloom thro' the mosses around them spread. Soon, soon shall the ghostly branches wear Their budding glories of life orce more. Soon, soon shall the fields, now cold and bare, Their faded mantle of green restore. The quick'ning joy that the spring-tide darts Thro' the breast of Nature shall stir our own, Till life shall breathe where the winter parts, From the pale grim shadows around him thrown. Thou beautiful emblem of Hope and Love, That opens thy tiny leaves to-day, Thy birth, as the soul, was planned above, And led thro' the gloom, where the sun- beams play. JUNE. Once more, fair month, your bloom and balm Are spread o'er earth, as Heaven's psalm ; Once more, fair month, your evenings close, As joy, around the pink and rose ; 148 JUNE. Once more the dew, as crystal, gleams, Where sleeping daisy coyly dreams! — The song bird trolls his sweetest tune To welcome thee — fair month of June ! Your morning breaks thro' eastern skies In quiv'ring beams of varied dyes ! Your fiery chariot upward rolls, Where God's supernal law controls Its wond'rous course thro' fields of space- Then guides it back with steadier pace ; We part with thee, alas, too soon ; — For Heaven's delights pervade the June. The joys of nature brightly show, Your.o-lorious mission here below ! Thro' tint of flower, or song of bird, Our hearts with joyous praise are stirred ! In laugh of rill, or hum of bee, Your days roll on in ecstacy ! The voice of God our hearts attune To sing thy song, fair month of June ! Yon climb the zenith to its crest, Fair month with heart of Jesus blest ! Your longest day in splendor rolls Its flood of glory on our souls ! Your night, as sweet as joyous tear, — Bright heart and centre of the year ! As Vesper hymn, or streamlet's croon. Your anthem floats, fair month of June. THE MEETING OF THE RIVERS. 149 THE MEETING OF THE RIVERS. Impetuous daughter of the flood — The rock-ribbed Mohawk— swift and brave In stern repentance, calmer mood, Now seeks the Hudson's placid wave ; As Passion's slave, by death set free, Drifts onward to eternity. Rest, angry wave, from storm and strife, Faith bears thee now upon her breast. Imparts new beauties to your life, The happy fruit of calm and rest ; Onward in sweet placidity Thou wayward offspring of the sea, Onward till Time— Saturnian break In myriad fragments this fair earth, Till Gabriel's trumpet shall awake The dead, — to an eternal birth ; Onward till Earth shall spend her force, A burning mass in Nature's course. Aye, leave behind the haunts of toil, The click of spindle, thud of loom ; The weary task, whose endless moil, Pales the fair cheek of maiden bloom ; Onward in laughter, bright and gay, Thou beauteous child of foam and spray! 150 WIGGINS. ~No enemy of man art thou, Until his laws divert thy course. Stamp slavery upon thy brow, And make thy wave a thing of force ; To whirl the wheels of Toil and Care, The pale, gaunt offspring of Despair ! Onward to join your sister fair, To float the wealth of held and loom ; Onward in thy course for e'er Past sunny slopes and fields of bloom ; Bearing upon thy crystal breast The treasures of the East and West, -:o:- WIGGINS. Now, Wiggins, where is your dread warning 'Bout the rents in the earth so alarming ? Sure if you had a rest, 'Neath her beautiful breast, We 'd then have an end to your storming. Oh ! 't is you that are great at prediction, Whose terrors won't brook contradiction ; When the planets and stars In ethereal wars, Are the hobbies vou ride on for fiction. WIGGINS. 151 The Earth,— the poor darling,— you'd smother. As tho' we could get such another ; Her quakings and fear, Would bring joy to your ear, As an ingrate that teases his mother. If the planets have all come together, Their courses ne'er bother each other ; They have done so before A thousand times o'er, The orbs of one beautiful mother. 'Twere better you conned your notation, About each fair planet's rotation ; 'T is then your dull mind, Would enlightenment find, Of their heavenly courses and station : You fixed on the time to a fraction, That drove all our minds to distraction ; That made us all feel, So bad for Mobile, You doomed to that thing called attraction. But the dear Earth's centripetal motion, That keeps her fair land and her ocean, Forever in place, In that circular race With the Sun as her god of devotion. 152 WIGGINS. I wish to the stars ! you old mentor, Some other old crank or inventor, Would rock you to rest, On some hurricane's breast : As near as my wish to its center, Where the Earth, in her seething commotion. Would trot you about with her motion ; Then grind you to dust, ]SPeath her terrible crust! As tine as the sands of the ocean, Or toss you about on the billow, With the wild surging wave for a pillow ! Or send you to crave, In Aeolus's cave, A place 'neath some sheltering willow. O'er your head-stone I'd write an inscription- What a humbug you were at prediction ; How your turbulent mind, Ran on storms and Avind, As fierce as some hag's malediction ! TRUTH. 153 TRUTH. Truth ! heavenly Truth, should guard our life ; Should guide our acts from day to day; Should arm our hearts against the strife, The world would roll across our way. Temptations come in divers ways ; As impure streams to crystal flood ; They come as clouds o'er summer's days. Or fiery fiend to mountain wood. They come as tares to choke the seed, That God implanted in the heart ; They come as waifs that onward speed, In pleasing shapes, with poisoned dart, Deceptive as the Dead Sea fruit, Deceit and Falsehood hand in hand, Approach the sacred shrine of Truth, With all the wiles at their command. But vain their efforts to allure This heavenly gift from paths of right ; As Hope and Faith are fair and pure, So is this beauteous thing of light ! All-trusting Truth, how fair art thou ; What friendships and what loves are thine ; There rests a glory on the brow Of him whose life would make thee shine. 154 THE TORN POEM. THE TORN" POEM. Unthinking child, you have torn, Those fair sweet lines of song ; Whose earnest words would have borne The anthem of joy along ! The mind that wove their measure, To thy rhythm -that sped her way, Enkindled the fire of pleasure, Within my cold heart to-day ! What hours of anxious thinking ; What hopes, what joys, what fears; What rosy chaplets linking With the tints of the future years ; What deft, bright thoughts arranging, — As sweet chords of music sped ; What thrills, what doubts, what changing. Thro' their echoing cadence shed ! Thus, are our dearest treasures, Fled ere their value is known ; Thus, are our sweetest pleasures, As beams of the morning flown ! Thus are the joys we nurture Borne from earth away. As those lines of ripened culture, Jhat shone thro' my heart to-day. SUNSHINE AND CLOUD. 155 SUNSHINE AND CLOUD. Chasing the sunshine over the lea, The shadows follow as waves ot gloom ; Over the mountain, the river, the sea, They follow as grief to the silent tomb ! The penciled beams of the morning show Their glinting arrows on lake and stream ; O'er field and woodland their glories flow, As hopes that break on tho lover's dream ! The shadows pursue the beams of light, As sorrow obscures the joys of life ; To-day when our path looks fair and bright, To-morrow brings clouds, and tears and strife ! ( )f sunshine and cloud are our lives made up, Chasing each other in mad career ! To-day when pleasure o'erflows our cup, To-morrow 't is drained 'mid sorrows' tear. 15(3 OLD GRIMES. OLD GRIMES. I 've read the news with much regret, But hope it is not true, That clear Old Grimes sent in his cheeks, And skipped his pants of blue. 'T is not his " old long coat " I mourn, "All buttoned down before ; " But that he 's gone, ne'er to return, To rest by Jordan's shore ! II His heart was open as the day," And tho' he oft had cramps, His charity as water flowed, For strolling bugs or tramps ! His pain was such for all mankind, He never felt his own ; The poor, the sick, the lame, the blind. Had pity for them shown. If e'er his words in anger broke, 'Twas when he tried to scratch, The last fusee he had in store, And found it would not catch. From sin his breast was ever clear, — For man no malice bore : The lusty tramp he loved to cheer While gulping down his store ! OLD GRIMES. . 157 But, if alas ! he's laid at rest, — For trials he never knew, — Whose heart would warm the turtle's nest, Tho' occupant bit thro' ! His boots, his pants, his striped vest. His frilled shirts, neat and clean ; His coat with pockets in the west He's left to Albert Green ! His epitaph I proudly write,— Whose earnest deeds and ways Shone like a taper in the night, — A theme for love and praise. EPITAPH. Here lies Old Grimes, at rest from care, Whose path in life was blest, Because the Picnic or the Fair, Ne'er entered in his breast. He never saw the great Parade That thronged the streets of Troy ! Nor made of Politics a trade, Which others so enjoy. His life's devotion was to give. What other hands secure ; The good of heart he taught to live, By lending to the poor. 158 COHOES Beneath the tables of the great He never erossecl his feet ; Xor never walked the streets when late, Or asked his friend to " treat." He was no " masher " in his daw As man}' can attest ; From River street he kept away When going east or west. I fear his funeral was small, Because no politician, In spring of year or in the fall, He never sought position. COHOES. Show me a word which you can choose, That plays with rhyme as does Cohoes ; The happy theme of bard or muse Has none to equal thee, Cohoes. The rosebud glistening with dews Reflects the morning's saffron hues, Whilst Nature's tints a joy diffuse, Around thy happy homes, Cohoes. COHOEJ 159 The girls walking out in two's Beside the Mohawk or the Meuse, Or perchance beside the Ouse Tread to the measure of Cohoes. Tie who is troubled with the blues, Who would his friends and foes amuse. Let him some pleasant tale perus Then stroll along thy streets. Cohoes. The man who pays his labor dues, Who trades with Christians and with Jew. Who always minds his P's and Q">. Is ever welcome in Cohoes. The many fair and pleasant views. Fairer, than are the London Mews: Will never tire the man who sue-. For recreation in Cohoes. From children's hats, to ladies" shoes. For everything that man can use. If you will not the folks abuse You'll get good value in Cohoes. Good reading in Dispatch or News, Will many wholesome thoughts infuse. And like some torch, or gentle fuze. Arouse the minds in thee. Cohoes. 160 conoES. He that search of wealth imbues, With steady stroke, the timber hews. Is never known to take a snooze In Mammon's Court, or in Cohoes. The ladies graceful, sweet adieus, Whose earnestness doth oft confuse The bashful, and their cheeks suffuse With rosy blushes in Cohoes. If you would pleasant thoughts diffuse, And with me take a lengthened cruise I'll introduce you to the Druse, Who never saw the famed Cohoes. How many men their tempers lose, Slip into danger's dangling noose, Whose early training often rues, The man who never saw Cohoes. Thro' shady walks of limes and yews, From sunny streets to somber pews, From whence each thought of good accrues To those who live .in thee, Cohoes. It softly blends its rhythmic coos, With what w r e have and what we quese, And still its loving note renews To link itself with thee, Cohoes. COHOES IN RHYME. 101 It sweetly rhymes with whose and woos ; And swiftly passes lurking ruse, Then turns its thoughts to sav'ry stews, The poetry of life Cohoes. The man with numberless ados And ills that oft his spirit bruise, If he stop chalking billiard cues, His friends, no doubt, will him excuse And make life happier in Cohoes. Xow slowly does my meter ooze, As tho' indulging in a booze, Its dribbling nonsense it eschews To sing the praises of Cohoes. Still dost thou rhyme with ileecy ewes, With North Carolina's river Neuse, And still the Muse another brews, And bids farewell to thee, Cohoes. -:o: COHOES IN RHYME. And now orthoephists oppose My effort to pronounce Cohoes, Yet, though the task be hard, who knows, The willing Muse may strike a pose, And ring another on Cohoes. 162 COHOES IN RHYME. Its rhythm blends with winter's snows, As thro' the air it fiercely blows, Whose beauteous features interpose Between rough nature and Cohoes. The glorious sun in summer glows, That decks the earth in emer'ld clothes ; He paints the lily and the rose That bloom within thy bowers, Cohoes. The dynasties of earth that rose And fell, thro' strife of mortal foes ; Do all their histories disclose Within the archives of Cohoes. It rhymes with the mikado hose. Or ballybriggan if you chose ; There is no task you can impose, Too strong to crush thy muse, Cohoes. To gossips that intrude their nose In men's affairs, as carrion crows, Will find their daughters without beaus, If they repent not in Cohoes. If we should take the ayes and noes On all the scandal they expose, The affirmative would find repose Upon the minutes of Cohoes. COHOES IN RHYME. 163 Who has not read of Ireland's woes, The licensed slaughter other Yoes; Her treasured song whose measure flows, As rhythmic as thy muse, Cohoes : When Freedom from her sleep arose, Arranged her troops in martial rows, And as the scythe in autumn mows, So fell her enemies, Cohoes. And now her blending notes propose To link themselves with sober prose, Whose flights with beauties often grows Sublime, within thy halls, Cohoes. Of tomahawk and Indian bows, Where deeds of horror often froze. Thy cooing letters now compose The poetry of thee, Cohoes. Who hath not read of Ruth and Boaz. From opening verse unto the close, The softening influence it throws Around the morals of Cohoes. When nature doth her gifts dispose With lavish hand to these and those, There is no halting as she goes, Her rosy feast is in Cohoes. 164 COHOES IX RHYME. But they who would your powers noze, ISTow find you rhyming with transpose : And so their doubtings you depose, And art thyself again, Cohoes. The cow that in the pasture lows ; The triumphs which our spirit owes, To Nature, and her law of Ohs ! Unmatched, are found in thee, Cohoes. Devouringly she doth enclose Within her rhyme the weedy woos, Until the Muse grows adipose — Plethoric, as thy wealth, Cohoes. Still dost thou rhyme with gentle does. With what the thirfty farmer sows, To what our life too often shows, The greed of wealth in thee, Cohoes. Downward reaching to the toes Thro' all its somersaults and throes. In passing takes along the O's, And tho' not rhythmic, the dodoes That never saw thy Falls, Cohoes. Another rhyme we find in drowse, Also in gloze, and in impose ; Then hounding on to predispose, Pull up the Muse and call a poze, For further rhyme for thee, Cohoes ! A LINGERING LOVER. 165 A LINGERING LOVER. Loving Winter in the lap of Spring, Don't know enough to say adieu ; Whilst she, the saucy, lazy thing, Leaves all her work undone — 't is true ; Has Time relaxed his stern control, To let this damsel have her way ? Why not dismiss her antique beau, And clear his mud and slush away. Her beauteous sister, glowing fair, With rosy chaplets in her hair, Is waiting for the hour when he Takes his departure, then will she Find her task no easy thing To finish up the work of Spring ! Poor May, your sloppy sister leaves, (As all such careless sisters do,) Her piles of mud, as garnered sheaves, For your bright beams to wriggle thro' ; The cold, bare earth beneath her care Looks dreary, dull, and void of cheer; I feel as though I'd tear her hair For causing 3 r ou such work, my dear. 166 SHATTERED HOPES CONTINUED. HOPE DEFERRED. Tell me not in glowir.g numbers Winter's robes are tied the ground, Whilst the mud and snow but slumber By the frost securely bound. Spring is coming, so is summer, If our patience stand the strain ; But our brows each day grow glummer For hope deferred will dull the brain. Mud to-day — wet snow to-morrow, — Frost at night, Oh ! endless woe, What a crop of tears and sorrow, Clouds our footsteps here below. :o:- SHATTERED HOPES CONTINUED. Trusting heart, your painted picture, Green with verdure, bright with sun ; Is as treasured relic shattered Ere its outlines were begun. the turkey's soliloquy. 167 Snow again, Oh ! bear me whither Orange blossoms bloom the while; Away from scenes that die and wither ; Where sunny beams no longer smile. Where are the hopes that poets painted, Resonant with song of bird ? Beside the way-side have they fainted, Bearing on their breasts — absurd. Come, balmy spring, next year, or never! Life's a burden while you stay ; The mud and slime our feet would cover. Grow more audacious every day ! :<>:- THE TURKEY'S SOLILOQUY. Away from her perch the Turkey saw, The shadows of night come down, Dark as the picture her fancy drew, Of the crime infested town ! " To-morrow," she cried, " my brood and 1 By caterer borne away, Will cheer some gourmand's groaning board To honor fair Christmas Day! " 1(38 the turkey's soliloquy. Inclining her head, where her offspring slept, She counted them o'er and o'er; '•My nine fair darlings," she mused, and wept " Shall we roam the fields no more ? Shall my yearning heart no more be filled With your eager quest for food ? Ah ! no, for palate of greedy man, Now claims my tender brood. Dyspeptic stomach, and dainty taste, Your succulence will enjoy ; With greedy relish, and lavish waste, Which the famished poor decry ! If only the fragments they'd give away From their bounteous store of cheer ; Then would I welcome this feast of love, The happiest one of the year. Thanksgiving over, I little thought, The morrow would be my last; But when I heard the farmer say The turkeys to-day must fast ; I knew death's shadows were drawing near, For I heard my mother say, Ere she was sold to the greed of man She fasted the previous day." The chill, cold morning's lingering light, Now crept, o'er the spectral floor ! Bearing the shadows and gloom of night Thro' the rickety barn door ! the turkey's soliloquy. 169 When lo ! dread voices are heard without, hi traffic, that terror brings ; — Another moment the latch is raised, And the door on its hinges swings. A faint low gobble aroused the rest, Unconscious of harm or fear ; They wondered their mother should feel op- pressed ; They noted the glist'ning tear ; The huckster that higgled with farmer Jones, — They wondered what brought him there, When their parent's sorrowful, drooping head ; Too plainly spoke — despair ! The buyer of turkey's measured their weight To the fraction of a grain ! When the farmer begged ere yet too late, That one should at least remain ; lie put the question, "now which of you ten Would survive the other nine," When out spoke the weeping mother hen, " Let the sad lone lot be mine " 170 LABOR'S REMONSTRANCE. LABOR'S REMONSTRANCE. Yes, close your mills ye merchants 'Gainst sturdy hands of toil; Ye who reap its plenteous harvest ; Who store its weary moil : Alas ! that you've the power, To cause such wide-spread fear, On the dark, cold brow of winter, When all look chill and drear. Yes, close your mills ye merchants, To please an angry whim ; The wrong is yours to righten : — The cause is vague and dim : Remember that oppression Shall meet its just reward, When friends of honest labor Shall yet be placed on guard. For shame brave land of freedom ! How fallen is your name ; If the willing hand of labor, Must be relaxed in shame ; Oh ! show to them around you That Freedom still survives ; That God bestows His blessings, On him who nobly strives ! labor's remonstrance. 171 Revoke the cruel order, — There's honor to he won ; For anxious hearts are waiting The dawn of Monday's sun ; Tho' fancied wrongs may move you, — One hungry orphan's cry, — For food, or tire, or raiment, Should all its stings decry ! You've wealth, and cheer, and power, — With every comfort stored. — The myriad hands that make it Are paupers at your board ; Would you obstruct the fountain From whence those blessings flow, To win an empty triumph, Over a fancied foe ? Ah! no, the pride of freemen Will guide your counsels now ; And the joys of home made happy Will light each honored brow ; For better than the triumph Is the conscious thought of right ; When the clouds are dark and drifting. And the heavens are hid from siffht ! 172 VENUS. VENUS. The hungry air is biting cold ; The robe of Nature, sear and old ; The venomed snow dust coming down, Would clothe the earth in vestal gown ! Would wreathe her ghastly face of gloom, In fairer shroud than decks the tomb ! The gray, cold morning's ling'ring light, Would fain repose on breast of night, Would fain prolong the gloom and chill That cloud the brow of yonder hill ! That tremble through the ghostly trees To chant November's obsequies ! Sends out her herald fair and bright, To glimmer on the verge of night ! Fair Lucifer — the morning star, Reflected streams her light afar : In tranquil glory rolls her beam, As Mercy clothing culprit's dream ! Fair blossom of the rising sun, Of circling orbs, the fairest one ; Do mortals live upon your breast, With purpose truer and more blest ? Do Winter's chill and summer's glow Alternate o'er your bosom flow ? THE TORNADO. 173 What is your purpose, beauteous orb — Whose glories make our bosoms throb ? Art thou the resting place of those, Who've conquered death — of sin the foes — The purgatorium of the blest, Where happy souls securely rest ? Whate'er thou art, a fairer beam, Ne'er pierced the air or lit the stream i -:o: THE TOKNADO. Down the Mississippi valley — Over the ice-bound lakes ; As a million rifles' volley; The fierce Tornado breaks ! Over the hill and the river — Over the mountain and plain ; Envenomed ! his lances shiver, As tempest ridging the main ! Dead to the voice of pity ! Hither his coursers speed ; Over the hamlet and city — Fiercer than miser's greed ! Unpitying onward he presses, Destruction strewing his path ! Waving his ebon tresses, As dark, grim, swaths of wrath! 174 THE TORNADO. Fiercely lie sweeps thro' the tower, Bearing its steeple along ! Over the river his power, As hungry furies throng ! Onward, still onward he presses, Bearing bridges away ! Fiendish, as demon's caresses ! His pinions shadow the day ! Over the calm stretching ocean, Howling ! he gathers his might ; Fearlul, his strife and commotion ! Hoarsely ! laughs his delight ! The mast he bends like a willow — Stoutly built though it be — Down in the trough of the billow He whirls the vessel in glee ! Groaning, and shattered, and riven, As foam-ileck bears her along ! Backward again is she driven, Where the swirling waters throng ; Down thro' the boiling commotion — Down thro' the calm and the gloom The bright winged bird of the ocean, Forever finds her a tomb. time's ledger. 175 TIME'S LEDGER. A NEW YEAR SERMON. I pored o'er the Ledger of Time to-day, And found the credits were few ! The debits were many and dated back, When reason first o'er me flew ; And I asked myself, with a throbbing heart, Are these the figures I show, For all the blessings which God has sent To hallow my life below T ? I reckoned the years and the gifts they brought, As miser counting his store ; I reckoned the pleasures false councils sought, — Abandoned forevermore : Remorse and sorrow and tears had dimmed The credits I fain would see ! And over the lines, the blur and stain, Where fadeless treasures should be ! Here was ambition, and love, and health, Friendship, honor, and pride ; Noble affections, of life the wealth, Outspreading their branches wide ! 176 time's ledger. Sobriety tempered with genial cheer, — Charity blending her song ! These were the Debits of youth's New Year,- Whose specters now round me throng ! Where are the credits for these fair gifts, That make our lives here divine ? Gone as the shadow that o'er us Hits ; The sunbeams that round us shine : The broken chalice of false conceits ; The pleasures that dulled the brain ! (lone as the glamour that Hope inscribed With the barbed pen of pain ! I drew from my closet a torn scroll, — 'Twas dim and yellow with age ; Item by item I conned it o'er, — 'Twas a sad and tearful page ! A record it bore of New Year's Days, Whose lights no longer appear ; Of broken promises, shattered hopes, The pledge of each bright New Year. The gay companion, the reckless hour ; The boisterous song and bout ! The promptings of Duty laid aside, To join in the merry rout! ADD HESS TO THE SUN. 177 The flowers that blossomed round boyhood's path, That made life doubly dear ! Plucked and flung to the greedy winds ! That folly should crown each year. Oh ! you, who squander the gifts of Life, — . As tho' an unending store ; Should ere too late its Ledger keep, — And over its debits pore ; Should credit the virtues that Heaven sends With kindred blessings as dear ; Then, then would life be happy indeed The joy of each bright New Year ! -:0: ADDRESS TO THE SUN. Unfailing font of light! Creation's first de- light ! I low rounded is your shield, thro" heaven's vast sapphire field ! Unclouded is your course ! of life and light the source ! God's agency divine, thro' which His mercies shines ! As brilliant now as at Earth's primal morn! 17? ADDRESS TO THE SUK. Behind yon snow-dad hill, thro' trembling m and chill, or ardent disc appears, the glory of the sphere - How radiant yoor flight, to reach the zenith's height ! As when your saffron bloom, sped thro" chaotic _ orn To clothe the virgin groves of Paradise ! Before your ray divine, the orbs refuse to shine ! The - .mead and bow'r, attest ur will and pow'r : The rolling earth and sea. lay bare their breasts to th T<- catch your kindly heat, of Xarure's Laws the seat. Unstinted o'er the hoary path of Ti 1 .. Thro" douds fcant there, yon weave your _ Aden hair ! In amaranthine dye. that blossoms in the sky ! At evening, n on, and morn, your ruddy blooms adorn. .Earth and Atmosphere — t A give our Wing here. The _" Creative Will designed ! CHI oparable fire ! when will your In heaven"? wide - laid! how will splendoi - thou the Orb - Stupendous mystery, known bat al The Innni- fall tilings - CHRISTMAS MEMORIES O, il. 38 ein'rieS uf t: How vividly you rie Th<»" crumbled yeans And clouded are your skies The drifting sands that mark your flight. O'er Tune's ad! Bear back my heart to Christmas Xight Within my native land. Within that laud the Christmas came. With yew aud holly crowned : Around its hearth the steady flame. r aith was found ; Around its genial hoard were sung. The songs of other da; A- th : Tyrant hand e'er wrung. Their treasured theme of praise. 180 CHRISTMAS MEMORIES. You, who, as I, have drifted here From that all beauteous Isle ; Who've drunk the rhythm of its cheer, And felt its kindly smile ! Have you forgotten days of yore, When warmed beneath their tire, You sung the song and drained the lore Of legendary pyre ? The trusted friends we parted there, Are they forgotten too. ? The tender glance of maiden fair, That would our own subdue ? Are they forgotten as the years, That speed o'er Time's decay. That as some fabled light appears, Then quickly fades away ? Have you forgotten New Year's Day, Its greeting and its song ? The trysting hall festooned and gay, Where met the merry throng? Have you forgotten daisied mead That knew no winter's chill ? Or dearer still brave manhood's creed, That dared the tyrant's will ? 0, laud of smile, and tear, and sun, Your mem'ries are as dear, As when in boyhood's days you won My throbbing heart, sincere ; THE MOTHER'S LAMENT. 181 If wish and pray'r would end the strife, That clouds your beauteous day, What glories would surround your life Now drifting to decay. -:o:- THE MOTHER'S LAMENT Here, where the slanting sunbeams, Brighten the scene around, Have they laid my heart's fond treasure. Under the grassy mound ; Here, where the sod grows greenest, My darling lies at rest ; Whose infant lips I nurtured. — Whose form I oft caressed ! Alas ! and alas ! my darling, How cold is thy pillow now ! Son of my heart's devotion, — Child of the polished brow ; No more shall I watch thy coming, — For death now fills thy chair ! And the heart that loved to greet thee Is filled with the mother's prayer ! 182 the mother's lament. Fair were the joy's you brought me. — Dim are their shadows now ! As the cloud that chases the sunbeam Over the mountain's brow ! Thou whose voice could brighten, The home with joy and mirth ; Lies in this narrow chamber. — Under the cold, cold earth! Thou staff of an aged father, — Hope of declining years ; Your strong brave arm has left him. To sorrow and to tears ! Who shall support his footsteps, Thro' the years that come and go ; When the joy of his life is blasted, And his heart is filled with woe ! Hail ! all hail ! my loved one, Time in his swift career, Shall bear me away on his bosom — Where sorrow sheds no tear ! There where the just are gathered, Shall I behold your face ; Bright as the joys of heaven ! Pure as the Font of Grace ! winter's specters. 183 WINTER'S SPECTERS. Over the river the trees appear, On the brink of the hill and stream; As watchers stricken, and pale with fear, — - Uncanny as Pharoah's dream ! The emerald sheen of their boughs is fled — The sunbeam that thro' them shone ; As the beautiful carpet, that nature spread, Or the song of bird, — all gone ! Grimly they stand, as sentinels lone, On the brow of the snow-clad hill ! Dark are the shadows around them thrown, The pulses that thro' them thrill ! The river that rolled its wave along, Beneath their spreading shade ; As broken harp-string, has ceased its song ; — Has crystaled the glints it made ! Ghastly the mar.tle beneath them spread, — Thro' the gloom and chill appears ! White as the garment that shrouds the dead ; The curtain that rolls the years ! Cold, as the ripple that stirs the wave, Of pity in miser's breast ! Cold, as the taper that lights the grave, Where our dearest ones find rest ! 1S4 FOURTH OF JULY. Watching the spring-time that brings them bloom, — That heralds a brighter ray ! Waiting the textile of Nature's loom, — The woof of a warmer day ! Waiting the trill of the robin's song, — That flitted amid their leaves ; Whose nest deserted,, their boughs among, As sorrow, the bosom grieves ! Waiting as they for a fairer life, — We stand on earth's dreary shore ! Amid the crumble, and ruin, and strife, That winter's grim shadows pour ! Watching as they for the bloom and bliss, That heaven transmits our way; When our life, thro' Time, shall fade in this, To the light of a brighter day ! FOURTH OF JULY. What bright wreaths of glory, exultant and high Entwine themselves round thee, dear Fourth of July! Of all the glad days, that this fair land has seen, Is the much treasured Fourth, its fair sun- clothed queen ! FOURTH OF JULY. 185 O, long may thy memories swell the pronrl heart, As sanctified Hope, may their bright arrows dart ! Inspiring the dormant, with thrills of delight, To cherish the promptings of freedom and risrht ! " Independence or death ! " was the motto we bore, Thro' the deep gulf of strife, and the cannon's loud roar ; " Independence or death ! " is our motto to- day When the red clouds of slaughter have drifted away ; And her future dawns bright, as the eastern sky, When the sun's crimson glories are rolling on high ! As we glance o'er the past, what wild tumults of joj, Come up from the heart for the Fourth of July,! For the heroes who battled, and died to give birth, To a nation of freemen the proudest of earth ; 186 FOURTH OF JULY. For a Flag whose fair stars — as the bright orbs on high — Would figure the glories that stream thro' our sky! For the Flag that has sheltered the exile and slave, "With the ^Egis of hope, and the strength of the wave ! O, beautiful fiag, may your stars ne'er grow dim, Of ocean the pride, and of Freedom the hymn ! May thy mantle of glory, protectingly fall On the brave hearts of those who would rush at your call ! Hail! fair land of freedom — the Mecca of Hope ! — How clear are your vistas, how boundless their scope ; How loathed the man, who from sordid desires, "Would wrest from your hands the bequest of our sires ; Would crush out the manhood — that treasure untold — Of a nation that shylocks may barter in gold ; But the morning of hope is drawing steadily nigh And we look for its dawn as the Fourth of July! THE lovers' quarrel. 187 THE LOVERS' QUARREL. X<> more I see the sun's bright beam, Since Dermot from my presence fled ; I see no more the glancing stream, By which our footsteps often led : Their light, as joy, is fled from me, And I am lonely with my care ; Oh ! cruel fate, no more to see, The form that mingled with my pray'r ! Alas! those bitter words of pride, What memories thro' their channels flow ; Of sorrow the ill-fated bride Thro' all the years that come and go : Could I recall their tenor now, Could I restore the broken chain ; The smiles of love would wreathe my brow, Where anguish now has penciled pain ! Where gone the heart that loved me so, That spoke in tenderest tones to me ? Ah ! love why did'st thou deal the blow, That plunged thine own in misery? Infectious, as the poisoned air, That breathes of death within the mine, My life must now its sorrows bear, Where beams of sun were wont to shine ! 188 THE lovers' quarrel. I'll seek the haunts wherein we trod ; The trysting tree with carved names ; The sweet cool shade, with velvet sod, Where we exchanged loves' hopes and aims ! Along the joyous, glist'ning stream, Whose laughing dimples chased the sun ; I '11 stray with love's enchanting dream And twine the thread its rapture spun ! The rustic seat beneath the oak, Where shone Selene's spectral beam ! Where cherished love all radiant woke, And nature slept her perfumed dream ! The wooden bridge, the brawling stream, Whose babbling waters laughing sped ; Conveying our all-absorbing theme, — As vanished joys too quickly fled. You who would love some trusting heart. Beware of haughtiness and pride; Ere he, your captive, should depart, And link his life with gentler bride ; Be true to womanhood and love ; — The mild of heart need no new charm. In firm, yet gentle tones, reprove ; Nor at Love's absence feel alarm. POEMS ON IRELAND. ON ROBERT EMMETS SPEECH. DEDICATED TO THE PATRIOTIC IRISHMEN OF AMERICA. The morning broke o'er Erin's Isle With ros}' blush and golden smile ! The glow of heaven its bosom stirred, In tint of leaf and song of bird ; In waving grain and laughing rill ; In sinewy stream and purple hill ; Whose shadows frowning o'er the wave, A boldness to the landscape gave. On such a morning, sweet and calm, The flowers awoke from sleep of balm ! Poured out their perfume o'er the mead, Or drank the dewy crystal bead ! In wealth of bloom, a fairer land, Ne'er shone beneath Creative Hand! 190 ON ROBERT EMMET'S SPEECH. On such a morning tyrant sway Thro' Dublin city took its way ; O'er marble bridge and ample street, Where loving hearts were wont to meet. To sit in judgment in its court, And toy with life in wanton sport ! ""Accoutred soldier, neighing steed The trembling judge, protecting, lead; Behind, the measured tramp oi those, — Unhappy Erin's sworn foes, — Would guard the monster on his path, Against the daring hand of wrath ! The culprit on this fatal morn Was e'en from birth a freeman born ; Intrepid, gifted, pure, and brave, As ever life to freedom gave : His youth, and grace, his noble mein ; • His eagle glance, intense and keen Make timid hearts look up with pride, To one, whom Freedom sanctified ! The caitiff judge his seat now takes, In muttered words the silence breaks ; Regards the jury with a smile, That tells how short their task the while ; Then rests his brutal eye of crime On him, the hero of all time ! ON ROBERT EMMET'S SPEECH. 191 And, now, the culprit's crimes are read O'er many a sheet of paper spread : His crimes ! just Heaven ! that this should be, His crime ! the love of liberty ! To wrest his land from foreign sway, For this his life must forfeit pay. Judicial farce, is next begun ! The judge and jury think as one : The bloody charge condemns him ere The " Twelve true men " his crimes compare. And now a stillness reigns around, As tho' within some vast profound ! The only noise the silence stirred Was when some beating heart was heard. The moistened eye, the pallid cheek; The thought that would the verdict seek; The quiv'ring lip, the earnest glance ; The ever present, dread advance Of that false jury pledged and sold To take his life that day for gold ; Would fain give liberty and life To him, who now, would dare the strife. Amidst that ghastly throng of fear, One face looks undisturbed and clear ; One manly form, erect, and brave, Defies the terrors of the grave : 192 ON ROBERT EMMET'S SPEECH. He looks the cynosure of love, As tho' beloved of God above ! In all the glow and pride of youth, — The reflex, and the soul of truth, Hark ! now a stir of feet is heard, And anxious hearts with fear are stirred : That now take in the awful scene Intensified in Emmet's mein ! At last, the " Twelve true men " appear, And GUILTY ! pales the heart with fear Unmoved, the culprit felt its force As thro' his brain its terrors course ; Unmoved he stood — a torch as bright As ever lit the cause of right ! Unmoved he stood, defiant, brave, As rock that dashes back the wave ! Unmoved he stood and fair to see, — The sacrifice of Liberty ! And now, the "Bloody Norbury," — The foe of God and Liberty, Asked Emmet what he had to say, Why death should not cut off his day. Proudly, he raised his head on high, Defiance flashing from his eye ! The black informer's perjured breath ; The blacker verdict breathing death ; ON ROBERT EMMETS SPEECH. 193 The pliant judge, to mercy dead, A horrid group before him spread ! In that momentous hour, his form, — As frowning cliff, beat back the storm ; Refused to share one pang of fear With aught that life e'er held most dear : As priceless gems together strung, The cultured thought sped from his tongue ; In strains, whose eloquence and fire, Outshone the senate and the lyre ; In words whose rhythm shall be read, As long as Freedom's light is shed ! lie spoke of Erin's martyred dead; Tier woes, her chains, the pit-falls spread ; He spoke of England's perfidy ; Of her dark crimes and tyranny! The widow's wail the orphan's tears, The cruel wrongs that blurred the years ! Of man upon his brother set, With strangling hand, and dagger's whet ! The woeful picture darker grew, Which o'er the judge its shadows threw ; Which paled the jury sitting there, As tho' confronted with despair ! Which gave an impetus and life To Erin's cause in future strife ! 194 ON ROBERT EMMET'S SPEECH. The judge, in sneering accents now. Reviled the cause lie dared avow ; Reviled the wild designs of those, Who would arise as England's foes, Sublime he rose in that dark hour, In words of wrath arraigned the power Of that repressive, cruel land, Against whose rule he took a stand ; Appealed to God, the martyred dead, The devastation widely spread : That not ambition, or renown Coerced his acts against its crown : That wide-spread misery and strife, — As love and justice, moved his life : That all his actions were as pure, As were the rights he would secure : That he who never told a lie, Whose pride it was for man to die : Whose epitaph he left to those, Who yet would triumph o'er his foes ; That to impugn his probity, Was consonant with tyranny, An interruption came once more, That in reproof a venom bore ; For scathing words fell on the ear Of him, who knew not pity's tear. ON ROBERT EMMET'S SPEECH. 195 Again the patriot's voice is heard, And rapture glows in every word ; Superb he rose, — sublime o'er all, That ever spoke in senate hall ! As tho" applause and glory hung On every word that passed his tongue! The judge's office he portrayed En words that seared the wounds they made ; He pitied him, as one accursed, The Caliban which England nursed ! Commiseration, in his soul, For one who feared not Heaven's control. Appealing! j r , he now began, And asked if any Irishman, Who loved his country, and her cans*.', Who hated England's cruel laws, To bear within his heart the glow. Of Liberty, thro' weal or woe. Again the judge in anger sore Refused to hear his treason more ; — Refused to sit in judgment there, Rebuked, reviled, beyond compare. Unawed, his words grow more intense, — Are poured in floods of eloquence ; Bright, sparkling streams whose pathos rolled Unstudied, keen, and uncontrolled ! 196 ON ROBERT EMMET'S SPEECH. He claimed the tonus the law allowed In burning words, with spirit proud ; Reviewed the mock'ry and the shame That would ere death the spirit tame ; That would the lips for ever seal ; That would the blood of life congeal ; That would deny the prisoner's right, To bear his acts before the light ; Where pure and stainless as the snow Their purport thro' the heart would now. The brilliant struggle of the mind ; — The wealth of words, pure, unconfined, Sped as a torrent, headlong, bold, Through glowing hearts, that erst were cold. Lie dared aspersion on his name, Whose life was Freedom's highest aim ; The legacy he left should be, As free from stain as Liberty ! From selfish motives, selfish ends, To his loved country, or her friends; The calumny he backward flung In burning words of fervid tongue ! Compared his actions and his life To him, who now, upheld the knife : Invoked the Ruler of the spheres For justice thro' the future years : ON ROBERT EMMET'S SPEECH. 191 That his fair name, from blot, or stain, In Ireland's heart should e'er remain ! Stung to madness, and to shame, The cruel judge would now proclaim, The sentence of the venal court, Of blood-stained rule the grim resort! Unawed before the monster there, Who would the god-like hero dare ; Tlis words How faster, bolder, still, Than mountain torrent boding ill ; Tumultuous passions swell his soul, Whose fervor speeds beyond control ; — Electric, as the lightning's course, The t y fly exultant from their source ! Oblivion, shame, obliquity, Betrayal of land and liberty; Ambition's mercenary curse, Betrayal of fellowman, and worse; Betrayal of God, who lit his soul, With tire that brooked not man's control ! The mockery of trial withal; The sentence passed in Castle hall ; Ere perjured judge, or jury tried, The life for which their master cried ; All these, and more, the craven heart Of Norbury pierced, as barbed dart! 198 OX ROBERT EMMET'S SPEECH. The coward charge was made that he, Of France, was an emissary ; That pelf and profit, self and greed, Composed the tenets of his creed ; That bartered glory, perfidy, Should twine around the Flew de lis. The ruthless charge ! how swiftly fled The words that thro' the chamber sped; His future, all, were in their fire, — The stainless name, the proud desire ; The wealth that death, to honor gave : The fadeless laurels of the grave ! Absorbing thought, the pride that he, Would live enshrined in Liberty! "• Emissary of France ! ah ! no, For France was never Ireland's foe ; Emissary of France ! how strange, If death should lurk amid the change. Ah ! no, my country's liberty Was wealth, and fame, and life to me; To change new masters for the old, How base the charge, untruthful, bold ! My idol was my country's life, In cloud or sunshine, death or strife ; Endearing wish, the heart's best thought, For thee my land, was pledged unsought; ON ROBERT EMMET'S SPEECH. 199 Exterior splendor, fair to sec- — The cloak that hides depravity, Was charged, that I in earth should rest Unwept, unhonored, and unblest ! " The conscious rectitude that gave, His life a bliss beyond the grave ; Exalted, pure, without compare, He stood superb in manhood there ! His Philippics of wrath were sped, As bolt that breaks the gloom o'erhead ! " 'Tis true, that France's aid was sought; 'T is true, t'was given and unbought ; As allies they would come and go, When they expelled the common foe ; Auxiliaries in war — and then — Undying friends of Irishmen." Denunciation fierce, that he, Would barter Erin's liberty ! To foreign land be who it mio-ht, Ah ! no, his arm would nerve the fight ! And if they as invaders came, He'd meet their march with sword and iiame ! Would immolate them where they stood, E'en tho' the land would run with blood ! And if the stronger they should prove, Each inch of earth, each home of love, Would be contested, fiercely, brave, The last entrenchment, freedom's grave! 200 OX ROBERT EMMET'S SPEECH. And what he failed, to dare, or do, His countrymen, he'd leave to you kt I wished to show the world that we, As Irishmen, loved liberty, And chafed 'neath England's tyranny. [ wished to gain, as Washington, A freedom e'en thro' carnage won ; I wished not for task-masters new, But to expel the English crew. You charge me with importance great, The chief that would emancipate, My country from the galling yoke Beneath whose weight, stout hearts are broke ! You do me honor, great indeed, But, Oh ! remember that the meed, Of praise belongs to men whose worth Would shame your own ignoble birth ; Before the splendor of whose light, Your own would sink, abashed, in night ! To men whose genius, high command, Would shrink to touch your blood stained hand ! " Once more the tyrant broke the chain Of eloquence that tired the brain, That probed the wounds the monster felt For sentences unpi tying dealt. ON ROBERT EMMET'S SPEECH. 201 Fresh impetus, his speech now takes, That, as the storm cloud, gath'ring breaks. Rebukes the tyrant, that he should Be answerable for all the blood, Of those who fell, or those who'd fall, In freeing their land from foreign thrall ; He feared not to approach anent The throne of the Omnipotent! How much less fearful should he be Before such foul mortality : AVho shed more blood, thro' savage whim, Than would his bloated carcass swim. " Let no man dare when life is past, Dishonor on my memory cast ; Let none attaint my lowly bed When death's dark shroud is o'er me spread ; Let no man charge that I should be Engaged in aught but liberty, And that unselfish, fearless, free. The dignity of freedom e'er, My aspiration and my prayer ; That foreign or domestic foe To Erin's cause from her should go ; E'en tho' my lifeless form should be The rampart of her liberty ! Am I who lived for Erin's cause ; Whose hand would strangle tyrant laws ; 202 ox ROBERT EMMET'S SPEECH. Whose independence was my dream; Whose glory was my cherished theme :• Am I to sink 'neath calumny, The foe of man and Liberty ? Ah ! no, my country, God forbid ! The light of Freedom's never hid; The lifeless clay, to earth consigned, iSFo theme for malice leaves behind, But oh ! thou fadeless memory, Be thou enshrined in Liberty ! " The stream that flowed, intense and clear; That thrilled the heart, and rolled the tear. Pathetic grew, and solemn now, As gathering clouds o'er beauty's brow ! The shades of those — his father first In solemn tones are now addressed ; His sinless life, his purpose pure; The blessings which he would secure : To these illustrious shades are poured, With all the dreams his youth adored To judge his strife for Liberty, Unselfish, in its purity! Undying words, transcendent, bright, What floods of glory and delight, Have you not shed on Freedom's cause. Her rights, her principles, and laws; ON ROBERT EMMET'S SPEECH. 20o As long; as Time unrolls his days, Their fervor shall enkindle praise ; Shall nerve the patriot's heart and hand, To battle for his native land ! As murmuring stream, thro' lonely dell, Mis last sweet words, in sorrow fell ; Devoid of anger now, they broke, As tho' from dream of bliss awoke! Not e'en the cruel Nero gave A brighter martyr to the grave ! The patience of the judge he craves, For he, no more, man's anger braves ;• The task he set, to free his name, From imputation's barb of shame lias been fought, and nobly won, — As fair as beam of rising sun ! His blood congealed ? ah! no it streams, As bright and clear as ruby's gleams ! Unruffled, as the morning's wing, It flows exultant from its spring ! The artificial terrors there Xo longer enter in his care ! For swifter, truer than the dart Its rosy currents wreathe the heart ! A last request he now would crave, Ere he would turn him to the grave ; 204 ON ROBERT EMMET'S SPEECH. That, as they dare not vindicate The cause for which he bows to fate ; That uninscribed his tomb should rest, Till other times, -with men more blest, Would dare do justice to his name, And bear it down on scroll of fame! " Till then my country not till then, My epitaph be writ by men ! " At last the mighty effort ends, Whose eloquence all else transcends; As brilliant as the morning star, It speeds its light o'er earth afar ! Since that dark day, thro' all the years, Its words are read to listening ears : Its maxims deep, and pure, and brave. Have lit the gloom of patriot's grave ! Than his exists no brighter name Within the storied niche of fame ! Than his exists no purer lite, — ~No braver heart in Freedom's strife. His epitaph! the burning thought! Has writ it on the heart unsought ; As long as Freedom's voice shall roll, Its fcrror shall Inspire the soul ! Effacing touch of Time's decay, Will wear the mighty rock away, ON ROBERT EMMET'S SPEECH. 205 But fervid words of Freedom, pure, Will thro'' the ages live secure ! Not Quintius Curtius, who of old, Obeyed the mandate fate foretold ; To save proud Rome from wrath and woe Plunged headlong in the gulf below ! Not e'en Agraulus, braver still, Obeyed the fates unchanging will ; To save her country's fair renown, From Acropolis Hung her down ! Than he to wealth and culture bred, With earth's fair glories round him spread; To give his life, its joys, its all, To free his land from foreign thrall. 200 LAST HOURS OF ROBERT EMMET. LAST HOURS OF ROBERT EMMET. The cold narrow dungeon, dark, dismal, and bare ; As tho' the last refuge of grief stricken care ; The dull clanking chain, rings its notes ©f despair, To heighten the gloom ! Within this dark prison a form appears, As fair as the glories that blossom our years ! A form as hallowed by Liberty's tears, As Freedom e'er mourned ! 'Tis his last night on earth, yet his pulses beat high ; And as star in the ether the gleam of his eye ! miands that a victim si To anchor her reign ! But England demands that a victim should die, Is it dread of the scaffold that startles him now ? Is it fear of the headsman that pales his fair brow ? Ah ! no, 'tis the love-dream — the fair maiden's vow — That thrills thro' his breast ! LAST HOURS OF ROBERT EMMET. "207 "Was it needy adventure, the false love of fame. That bore his young life to this prison of shame ? Ah ! no, 'twas a loftier, holier aim, The freedom of man ! Of woman beloved, by his country adored, His beautiful mind with each virtue was stored ; To the high crest of freedom his bright spirit soared, For country and race ! Does the dull fateful sound of the hammer bring fear ? Does memory recall from her treasures a tear ? Ah ! no, for the martyr to Liberty dear, S.eeks glory in death ! Did Tyranny's heel ever grind him to earth? Did lordling e'er toy with his sorrows in mirth ? Ah ! no, a bright future shone over his birth, If false to his kind ! The morning breaks drear o'er that dark dis- mal street ; The grim preparations for death are complete, But rectitude's promptings inspire him to meet, Its terrors with pride ! 208 IRELAND. The blood of the martyr to liberty cries ! The dark crimson stains on the morning; arise ! The bright earnest soul thro' the blue arching skies ; Speeds pure to its God ! Will grief stricken Erin build Emmet a tomb, As fair as the lily that brightens her bloom ? Ah ! no, until Freedom shall startle her gloom His name " uninscribed ! " IRELAKD. DEDICATED TO REV. J. F. LOWERY. This beautiful land how fair and bright, Are all its treasures of love and light, — The glistening tints of its verdure show How rich is the soil that lies below ; The beautiful wild flowers, sweet and fair, That gem the meadow or scent the air, Invite the bee with their perfumed breath, As the blossomed furze, or the purple heath The murmuring streams that wider grow, Are clear as crystal that gleams below, — IRELAND. 209 Are fair as vision of light and love That breaks on the soul from the Throne above \ The hills and the mountains, the eyes behold. Reflect the colors of green and gold, — Xow fling their shadows across the blue That glows in the flush of their purple hue ; The skirits of wild-wood, where lovers' words, Are hushed in the joyous song of birds ; The waving fields of golden grain, That mellow the tints of the verdant plain ; The glens that echo the cuckoo's song, Are sweet as the notes they would prolong ; The ruined castle and fane, that keep Their lonely watch o'er the craggy steep ; The Danish rath and Round Tower gray, That slowly crumble neath Time's decay ; The Bay and River, the Field and Wood Are marvels of beauty beside the flood! Delighted, the eye sees everywhere The beauties of nature sublime and fair. Are the beings happy that here reside ? Are their joys as full as their swelling tide ? Favored of God, they must needs be blest, As their lovely land, by the waves caressed; The theme of the poet's sweetest song, That flows as its stream, serene, along. Ah ! no, the beings whose homes are here, Tho' true to the instincts of love and cheer, — 210 IRELAND. Tho' fair as the morning that tints the sky, Or bold as the eagle that soars on high ; Are bondsmen and slaves to a tyrant band, That fatten as vultures on their fair land ; Greedy and cruel their lives have been, As the locusts that settle upon the green ; [Tnpitying monsters that claim the earth, And its myriad toilers, their right by birth ; Who squander the fruits, of the poor man's toil As tho' some geni had plowed the soil. The cruel Eviction ! Of woes the worst ; — The sport of demons, of God accurst, — The foulest blot on the face of earth ! Foul as the tyrant that gave it birth : A blot that smirches the laws of God, That scourges the soul, as an iron rod ; That drives the toiler, — stout hearted, brave, To desperate deeds or a pauper's grave ; That snaps the ties of the heart and home, As surge that breaks into ocean foam. And thus is this laud, supremely blest, The fairest gem on the ccean's breast, Ground 'neath the heel of Oppression's might. That sets his standard in gloom of night ; Thus is this laud whose teeming fields Bend 'neath the weight, that their culture yields ; Cursed with a blight, whose fetid breath Sweeps o'er their face, as a thing of death ! evelyn's hair. 211 Thus are its children, to woes allied, Driven to battle with fortune's tide ; Driven to battle with fortune's wave, For the toiler's crust, and a foreign grave. But Time, the healer of grief and woe, Is forging his bolts for her cruel foe. :o:- EYELYN'S HAIR, Long, long, years ago, when the sky-lark was singing, And nature responsive, awoke to his trill ; When the primrose, as joy, from the green sod was springing, % And the hawthorn bloomed at the foot of the hill ; T strayed with my Eva, to cull each fair blos- som, That bloomed in the meadow, or scented the air ; To twine a fair garland, to wear in her bosom, Or fflow in the bands of her dark raven hair. 212 evelyn's hair. The blue-bell was plucked, with its perfume delicious; The harebell aiid crocus, that grew in the dell ; The fox-glove's red plume, and the daisy, capri- cious, Fn sweet scented glories 'neath Love's fingers fell ; The violet fair, as the hue of the morning; The rose-tinted clover, inwoven with care ; The shamrock entwined, their gay beauties adorning The dark silken sheen of my Evelyn's hair. We clambered the rocks where the dust rooted mosses, In Friendship's embraces, shone golden and clear ; We sought the ravine, where the eglantine crosses The ivy-clad oak, and the larch ever dear : The glassy green leaves of the holly gave warn- ing, That their spiny clad fringe was protected with care, That tho' their bright glints, gave the wood its adorning, They'd never repose in my Evelyn's hair. Evelyn's hair. 213 The sweet scented knoll where the strawberry glistened, With the pearls of the morning surrounding its glow ; Where grief stricken Echo ! * in weariness lis- tened, And gave back our song, thro' her sad tale of woe ! Where the Cromlech's weird structure awoke our alarm ! Whilst the briar and the ivy encircled it there ; Where I plucked the white bloom — a sweet scented charm, — To gleam 'mid the coils of my Evelyn's hair. Thro' the gold-blossomed furze, and the purple dyed heather, Upward, still upward, we wended our way; To the rath of the fairies, we journeyed to- gether, Oblivious of toil, or the sun's scorching ray! * Echo (according to mythology) was a daughter of the Earth and the Air. She fell in love with the beautiful boy Narcissus, who, in turn, was so enamored of his own reflect- ed image in the water, that he cried himself to death because he saw no creature as beautiful as himself. Of Echo nothing remained but a mere sound. 214 evely'n's hair. Before us outstretching, the valley and river : The green skirited woodland, as beauteous and fair, As the beams of the morning, whose ecstasies quivered, Thro' the dark glossy bands of my Evelyn's hair ! Where the blue of the sky, kissed the blue of the ocean ; Where Nature reposed, as a glory supreme, And, I said to my fair one, with tears of emo- tion, " This, Eva, Olf ! this, is the Irishman's dream ! Tho' I love thee, my darling, with heart throbs as warm, As ever devo*tion awoke in the breast, Yet, from the loved prize would I fly in alarm, Ere traitorous heart against mine would be pressed. " Ah ! fair one who'd wed him — the slave fet- tered minion — Who sees his fair land in the grasp of the foe ; Thro' havoc and death, as the raven's dark pinion, Would his life and his acts sink forever in woe ! Evelyn's hair. 215 No, never, fair Eva, would mine be the token, That serfdom demands at the hands of Des- pair ! Oh rather the point of my sword should be broken , — To gleam 'mid the braids of my Evelyn's hair!" Tho' long years have sped since that morning elysian, Its mem'ries awakened, bring heart throbs and sighs ! Its fond dreams of freedom, of love, and ambi- tion, Gone, gone, as the pulses that bade them arise. ?sear the woody-crowned hill, where the laurel and willow, Fling their shadows of gloom o'er the cool balmy air, With the grave as a shroud and the earth as a pillow, Lie the fair face and glories, of Evelyn's hair ! 216 liberty's martyrs. LIBERTY'S MARTYRS. DEDICATED TO WM. BRIEN. Thro' the long gloomy years of oppression and wrong, That have SAvept over Erin in sorrow, Unbroken her pride, as her wild swelling song, That awaits the bright dawn of her morrow; Tho' the lights that have risen in darkness go down, In the noon of their splendor and glory : Their devotion to freedom shall wreathe them a crown, Unpurchased and bright as their story ! The trusted and tried who have gone to their rest, Amid the wild grief of a nation, Enkindle their light in the wavering breast, That in time becomes freedom's oblation ; From the slain of her cause, fresh victims arise, Inspired by the fervor that swayed them ; As brave as the eagle that pierces the skies, — Obeying the Spirit that made them ! liberty's martyrs. 217 Imprison and banish the patriot brave, Whose deeds have inspired man's devotion, Their' lives are as light, that illumines the wave, — That breaks o'er eternity's ocean ! Dishonor and shame to the guilty belong, The chain, and the gyve, and the prison ; To the lovers of freedom sweet Liberty's song, From hearts that to manhood have risen ! O, England, how blind to the future art thou ; The vile slave of hatred and malice ; Dost see the dark clouds that encircle your brow, That float o'er your gilt, brimful chalice ? Tear the garb of the man from the free limbs in shame, With every vile creature surround him ; The love of a nation will hallow his name, — " Its glories shall centre around him ! 218 TULLAMORE. TULLAMORE. Henceforth, historic Tullamore, How quick to fame you've risen ! 'T is strange we never knew before You had so strong a prison ; Within its damp, cold, fetid walls Brave Erin's sons are lying ; That erstwhile trod Westminster's lialls- The Saxon foe defying. We cry thee shame ! eternal shame ! If that thou know'st its meaning: Historic page records no name With darker edicts teeming ! The seeds of strife that you have sown Will grow Briareus round you : Will raze to earth your sinking throne, In gloom and death surround you ! The Avatar of crime and wrong- That heads your revolution, Will be the first to sink among Its chaos and confusion ; TULLAMORE. 219 The hated Balfour — godless, cold — To human instincts sleeping, Shall meet the tyrant's doom of old, In vengeance o'er him sweeping! Insensate fool ! your acts will ne'er Make Irish hearts less pliant; The more they're crushed, the more they dare — Unbending and defiant; You've tried the gibbet and the ax, The pitch-cap and the prison ; And yet as fair as blue-eyed flax Their flow'rmg deeds have risen ! Expatriation, famine, death — The wide-spread desolation, Miasmi-c, as foul odors' breath Have swept the Irish nation ; From age to age the alien foe, Unmerciful, unfeeling ; Has plunged in death and strife and woe The beauteous land of Erin ! In foreign courts, your name to day, Is theme for mirth and scorn ; Uncanny fears obscure your day, And cloud your fairest morn ; Uneasy rests your hoary head ( Upon the downy pillow, Whilst grinning phantoms round you tread, As startling; as the billow ! 220 TULLAMORE. Ave ! count your gains — collect your dead In ghastly mounds around you ; Collect the Irish blood you've shed, That as a sea surrounds you ! Upon the hoary page of Time — The record of the nations — A ghastlier one, than yours, of crime Ne'er blurred its swift mutations. Your deeds of wrong — what have they brought ? Have honor, fame, and glory, Sped o'er the horrors you have wrought, That time should breathe your story ? Are Erin's sons less true to-day — Less hopeful and defiant, Than when they met you in the fray — In Freedom's cause reliant? Too well you know the task is vain. The Irish brain ne'er slumbers; As Israelite 'neath Egypt's reign, They multiply in numbers ! The Fiery Pillar — Freedom's gauge — Shall yet in light surround them ; Shall drape in gloom the blood-writ page, With which your laws have bound them. THE FRIENDS OF BOYHOOD'S DAYS. 2^1 THE FRIENDS OF BOYHOOD'S DAYS. Where, where, are they departed, the friends of boyhood's days ? Where gone the song and merry jest that rang their rounds of praise ? Where gone the gathering on the hill, that dared the foeman's steel ? Where gone the secret and the hope, that death would ne'er reveal ? Alas, those rosy days of youth, as summer's joys, are tied, And faithful hearts that culled their bloom are numbered with the dead; Some in their native Erin sleep, the theme of poet's lays ; Some rest unmarked in foreign graves, the friends of boyhood's days. Unselfish dreams of boyhood's days, where lie the hopes you nursed ? Where lie the glory and the pride that thro' vour channels burst ? 222 THE FRIENDS OF BOYHOOD'S DAYS. Where lie the sacrifice and zeal, that marked their earnest flow ? Alas, they're gone, as are the years, or friends of long ago ! Oh ! fearless deeds of boyhood's days, how dar- ing and how bold ; How reckless of the future years, its honors and its gold ; Gone as the light of setting sun, with all his fiery rays, The true of heart, the brave of hand, — the friends of boyhood's days. The cause that fired your youthful hearts, Oh ! whither has it fled ? Has this, like thee, a refuge found, among the noble dead ? Has this like thee, in sorrow slept, uncrowned with Freedom's hays,, As aimless, as the exile's life, or hopes of boy- hood's da} T s ? You wise of head and cold of heart, frown not at boyhood's dreams, As is the boy, so is the man, thro' life's con- tending streams ; The follies that you see in him, but wiser make your ways, But, Oh ! give me the noble hearts, — the friends of bovhood's days. THE EXILE'S LAST GAZE. 223 Companions of the merry rout, brave comrades of the past ; What memories rush adown the years, where I beheld you last ; What broken hearts, what vanished joys, as burning ember's blaze, That glows the brighter as it dies, — as friends of boyhood's days. But tho' the past be dimmed with tears, it brings its pleasures too, For noble deeds that decked its life, the future brings to you, The sacrifice that freemen make will fructify and raise The noble thought, the burning wish, — as those of boyhood's days ! THE EXILE'S LAST GAZE. Air : — "My Lodging is on the Cold Ground." As I gazed from the deck of the fast speeding- ship, That bore me from Ireland away, And saw my fair land thro' the waves sullen drip, That flecks each dear inlet and bay: 224 the exile's last gaze. A feeling of sadness crept over my heart, As the orphan that bends o'er the grave, Who sees a loved mother forever depart On the breast of Eternity's wave. In that sad, lonely hour, what memories arise ; What yearnings well up from the heart ; The fond dreams of youth, their sweet pleasures and joys, That bade every sorrow depart ; Evanished forever on Time's fleeting wing, Deceitful, alluring, and bright, The mirage of Hope, — and of beauties that spring Into light, and then vanish in night. A faint* light is seen o'er the wave's foamy crest, As the twilight is deepening the gloom,* 'Tis the last ray of hope, and of Erin the blest, That nickers o'er Liberty's tomb : With a deep, choking sob, fraught with sorrow and pain, And a feeling of hopeless unrest ; I ask my lone heart, will it ever again Press the fond friends of youth to its breast. * The Fastnet light. ERIN GO BRAGII. 225 The dec}) surging wave, now hides from my gaze, • The last glimpse of Erin and home ; And the P^xile is parted thro' life's weary days From the scenes where his youth loved to roam ; From the haunts of his boyhood, his manhood, his all, To wander a stranger o'er earth, With never a hope for a distant recall To the beautiful land of his birth. ERIN GO BRAGH! Air : — "Exile of Erin." How many wild songs, breathing tearful emo- tion, Have swept o'er the harp-strings of Erin's sad lay ! How many brave lives have enkindled devotion, That freedom and glory should brighten her day ! 2->l) ERIN GO BRAG II. But Time's fateful years, have but deepened her sorrow; Have blighted the hopes that would dawn on her morrow ; But manhood aroused, retribution would bor- row, To cancel the deep debt of Erin go Bragh ! The dark, cruel reign of her ruthless oppressor; His red years of conquest, how far, far away ! 'Gainst heaven, and freedom, and man, the transgressor, Provokes God's dire anger at no distant day ! Homeless, oppressed, in the fair land that bore him ; Vengeance and wrath surging wildly before him ! The brave Celtic heart would to manhood re- store him ; Would wreathe Freedom's chaplet for Erin go Bragh ! I care not false land, how soon your extinction. Whose merciless sceptre, — unpitying gave, To Liberty's heroes, — of man the distinction — The dark felon's cell, and the patriot's grave ; A JUBILEE SCENE TN BANTRY BAY. 227 As long as the Tide rolls its swell thro' the ocean ; As long as this fair earth is true to her motion ; So long shall the Irishman's love and devotion, Entwine themselves round thee, dear Erin go Bragh ! Courage! brave hearts, sing the sad song no longer, — The whir*e and the love-note are heard from the slave ; The years in their flight, leave the tyrant less stronger, As Liberty speeding o'er Tyranny's wave ! Arise, for your hour of redemption is nearing ! Arise, for the sky over Erin is clearing! Arise, for your thraldom is fast disappearing ! When Liberty's mantle clothes Erin go Braffh ! :<>:- A JUBILEE SCENE IN BANTRY BAY. The dear old Flag of Erin, as sun-burst lit the air ; Its silken folds, as waves of green, shone out in glor\' there ; 228 A JUBILEE SCENE IN BANTRY BAY. The hearts that gave it freedom, a transient rapture feel, That, as sweet chords of music, across their bosom steal. Historic Bay of Bantry, how proudly swells your tide ; Whose deep blue wave caresses the land on either side ; From Castletown Berehaven, to Whiddy's fair green Isle, Your lordly tide is breaking, in many a sunny smile ! See yonder frowning man-of-war that darkly sits the wave, She floats false England's Triple Cross, that marks fair Freedom's grave ! Within the glories of that bay, her darkened shadow looms, From glen and crag re-echoing, her demon can- non booms ; As merciless as death is she, upon that glinting swell, From which the heart in dread recoils, as Purity from hell ! Her watchful captain, from the poop, the green old flag espies, Whose sunlit folds in battle waved, where many a Saxon lies. A JUBILEE SCENE IN BANTRY BAY. 229 " Man, man the boats, brave Britons ! tear down that flag; of green ! Let none but England's colors upon this bay be seen : The right of Conquest and of Might, for seven hundred years ! Is ours to-day, where none assails, our jubilee of tears ! " In fancy I am there once more upon that bound- ing swell, Where many a time thro' snowy foam our gal- lant boat sped well; In fancy I am there once more with hearts us brave and true, As ever rolled the crystal spray upon the Avaters blue. Tho' many years have passed since when, we dared that gallant tide; The brave young hearts that plowed its breast, are scattered far and wide ; The brave young hearts to Freedom pledged, resurgent, as its wave, Have drifted aimless from its shores to find a foreign grave ! Oh ! bitter memories of the past your shadows come and go ! An avalanche of hate and wrath that wreathes the heart in woe : 230 Ireland's devotion and destiny. All Patient Ruler of the Earth, how long must England's sway, Obscure the Freedom that would light, thy shores, sweet Bantry Bay. -:o: IRELAND'S DEVOTION AND DESTINY DEDICATED TO THE A. 0. H. AND READ AT THEIR BANQUET HELD AT COHOES, MARCH 17tH, 1888. Cead Milk Malta, — children of the Gael, United Brothers of Green Innisfail ; Our warmest greeting, genial as her light, Thro' toast and song, is gladly yours to-night : Proverbial welcome, fruitful as her fields, Our hearts to-night, with joyous pleasure yields ; As tho' assembled in her halls of pride, Ere foreign foe, had claimed her as his bride. On this great day, to Erin ever dear, — The fairest one that blossoms in her year ; Resurgent glories from the grave of Time, Her exiled sons, invoke in every clime ; As well beneath the Tropic's scorching ray, As near the Arctic's, long, Cimmerian day ; Ireland's devotion and destiny. 281 As warmly where, the Clyde and Mersey run, As where the Tiber greets a brighter sun ; As sweet and tender, where the Hudson twines. As where the Lee with Ocean wave combines ; As proud and hopeful, where St. Lawrence glides, As where the Shannon seeks Atlantic's tides ; As brave, defiant, where the Liffey rolls, As where the Thames its muddy wave controls ; Perfected union of a mighty whole, How sweet the chords that thrill the Irish soul ! In every land their joyous clangs are rung! In every clime their treasured notes are sung ! From far Australia, to the Polar Sea, — Wherever Man asserts his dignity ; There does the burning word of Ireland plead, For ruth and justice for his its land and creed ; In senate hall its earnest voice is raised, Thro' kindling hearts its Phillipics are blazed ! Swift, as the bolts, that pierce the inky sky, Its fervor rolls, as thunder from on high ! Fierce as the eagle speeding on his prey ; Bright as the beam that heralds in the day ! The ever present, all-absorbing theme Of race and land evokes the exile's dream ! Let's take the hand of Mem'ry for awhile, And journey back, in thought, to Erin's Isle; '2o-2 Ireland's devotion and destiny. Thro' haunts of pleasure, scenes of boyhood's days, Where love and friendship, kindled joy and praise ; Thro' wood and dell, o'er sunny glade and hill • By stream and river, — dear to Freedom's thrill— Amid the ruins of historic past, Ere tyrant shadows o'er their walls were cast ; Across the heath, where martyred heroes bled, Beside the graves which mark our kindred dead ; Along the shore which brightened to the swell, Whose silver spray upon its bosom fell ; Thro' all the haunts to youth's bright morning dear ; Among the friends that claimed affection's tear ■ Let us in thought, on this auspicious night Once more review the home of youth's delight; Repair at morning, where the dewy bead, In crystal glories sparkled o'er the mead ; 'Mid spring's sweet flowers, bright with song of day, To bear the Shamrock in our hearts away ! Symbol of Ireland's unity of soul, Thy trefoil leaves our wayward will control ; Bring back our purpose, to that God-like creed, That from one stem, Devotion's law should lead ! Ireland's devotion and destiny. 238 As pure and holy, sanctified and blest, As when our Saint the pagan host addressed ! As pure and holy, sanctified and fair, As when God's light their souls illumined there ! Deep in our hearts the Shamrock's leaves shall twine, With Freedom's purpose, earnest, and divine ! Shall crown our faith that Ireland's cause ere long. Shall beam resurgent, as her treasured song! Shall fill with joy, her children long oppressed, With woes un-numbered, and with hearts de- pressed ; Shall rive the bondage, other griefs, and pains ; And bind the tyrant with his own dark chains ! As Ishmael's sons our race has multiplied, — Mas nursed the hopes, for which our fathers died ; Has borne the woes of Ireland o ? er the wave, As kindling embers, fresh from Freedom's grave ! Has moulded thought within this mighty land ; And shown the blood-drops on the tyrant's hand ! Has sped the message, — fearful in its wrath — A frowning menace, in his crimson path ! 234 Ireland's devotion and destiny. Creative wish, that blossoms in the soul ! Coercive laws, thy ivill, can ne'er control ; Thy parent Freedom! gleaming from on high! As morning 's light, illumes her clouded sky ! To-night thy beam, within our hearts is lit; In burning words, thy earnestness, is writ ; Across the main, responsive to thy thrill, The voice of Erin would inspire us still ; Would nerve our hearts, to meet her dawn of light, That as God Ikes! shall 'penetrate her night. Within this land, historic, great, and free, ~No truer hearts, than thine for liberty ; jNo braver arm, no warmer bosom bled, When cloud and menace o'er its tace were spread. From Ramillies field, to Gettysburg — fair Fame, Records the glories of the Irish name ; From Linden's plain, where Sarsfield's life- blood flowed, To Fredericksburg, you've trod the hero's road ! Unstinted, as the Morning's stream of light, You've shed your blood, in Freedom's crimson fi>ht ! Ireland's devotion and destiny. 235 And yet, the brawling braggart would disown, Your tireless effort to set free your own, Whose faith undying, as the stars o'erhead, Would sink in glory, where her flag is spread ! Who stemmed the torrent of the German lines, Where Boyne's fair water to the Ocean twines ; Whose brave, stout arms, at Lim'riek and Benburb, Thro' blood and slaughter, did the Saxon curb ; Whose creed of freedom, bright, butyetunwon, From martyred sire, bequeaths to vengeful son ! All-trusting race, how faithful and how true, The noble instincts which we draw from you; From that fair land of suffering and woe, Whose tears unstinted thro' the ao-es flow ! What grace and manhood, energy and pride, Have sunk beneath the tyrant's bloody tide ! Whose crimes have stained the centimes that roll, As gouts of blood upon the guilty soul. But we to-night record a solemn vow, Before high Heaven to wreathe the tyrant's brow, With keener anguish than he ever dealt; With deeper wounds than Erin ever felt ! Until our land all beauteous as the morn Shall ocean's breast, a radiant gem adorn. 2S6 MY NATIVE LAND. MY NATIVE LAND. Where rolls the fair light of the morning, Away from the shadows of night ; Where glints the bright dew on the flow'r-cup, And the streamlet Hows on in delight ; Where the birds in their transports awaken The grove with their ecstatic thrill ; Where the pine-tops with zephyrs are shaken, And the purple heath waves on the hill ; Where the bee hums her song thro' the clover, A drowsy and murmuring refrain ; Where the fox-glove and hare-bell are blowing Their colors to brighten the plain ; Where the meadow's brown grasses are droop- ing* Awaiting the scythe, bright and keen ; Where the golden-haired barley is waving, And the children play loud on the green : Where the daisy and blue-bell are springing, From the shamrock close pressed to their stems ; Where Nature's bright glories are singing Her resonant echoes in hymns; MY NATIVE LAND. 237 Where the air is as pure as its maidens, Unladen by sickness or pain ; Where the sun loves to linger in summer Ere crossing the western main. And this was the home of my childhood, The fair land of mountain and stream — The beautiful gem of the ocean — Of minstrels the pride and the dream ; The land of brave men and fair women; The theme of the poets' sweet songs ; The " Holiest Island " of nations, Ere Freedom had treasured her wrongs. From this beautiful land was I banished Across the wide western wave, To a land whose brave sons raised their banner Triumphant o'er Tyranny's grave ; From this beautiful land was I parted, With heart deeply surging with hate, Rebellious, revengeful, defiant, Awaiting the vengeance of Fate Awaiting the hour of her franchise, Deferred through the centuries past ; Awaiting the joy of the nations, That Erin found freedom at last ; Awaiting the tyrant's debasement, When her tottering throne shall decay. And the Babylon crimes of her power, As that city, shall crumble away. 238 7-OVE OF LAND. LOVE OF LAND. Where would the Irish exile die ? Where do his aspirations lie ? To where his thoughts forever fly, To Ireland ! Where did his heart's hest hopes remain Ere crossing o'er the trackless main ? For whom does England forge her chain ? For Ireland ! Whose heart is ever in the cause Of manhood's rights and freedom's laws? Whose soul an inspiration draws For Ireland ? Tis he whose wrongs to heaven have cried ; Whose race for native land has died ; Whose faith and manhood have been tried For Ireland ! What land will yet to Freedom rise With golden harp, 'neath sunny skies ? 'T is she of earth the paradise, Fair Ireland ! LOVE OF LAND. 239 What land a warmer glow inspires ; Whose song of glory never tires ; Whose fingers touched the sweetest lyres ? 'T was Ireland ! What land is nerving for the blow, Whose might shall lay the tyrant low; 'T is thine, false England's sworn foe, Brave Ireland. What land is that, that would her save ; Whose protests speed across the wave ; Whose valor dug false England's grave For Freedom ? T is she, the Eagle of the West Who opes for Ireland's sons her breast; Who drove the Tyrant from her nest, A Free Land ! The Sunburst, with the Blue Flag streams, In glinting folds of starry beams — Protecting as the sun that gleams O'er Ireland ! ■ How soon their union shall delight The sons of Freedom and of right, When England's star shall sink in night 'Neath Ireland I 240 AN IRISH exile's jubilee ode. AN IRISH EXILE'S JUBILEE ODE. dedicated to queen victoria. Fifty years of British Rule, Shout the triumph to Cabul ! Fifty years of queenly reign ; — Shout the anthem o'er the main ! From Albion's coast to far Cathay, Kneel the nations ! kneel and pray ! Great is England's queen, and blest, Broad her shield, and fair her crest! Freedom 'neath her scepter lies, With shackled hands, and blood shot eyes Fifty years of land-lord strife ; Fifty years of wasted life ; Fifty years where Famine swept ; Fifty years where Justice slept ; Fifty years on Patience fed ; Fifty years where bullets sped ; Fifty years where patriots bled ; Fifty years of woe and dread ; Fifty years where prisons gaped ; Fifty years of Freedom draped ; AN IRISH EXILE'S JUBILEE ODE. 241 Fifty years of buckshot reign ; — Shout the anthem o'er again ! Liberty ! for what ? For whom ? We've dag her grave, with ample room, For Erin's sons, if they but dim The splendor of her diadem ; For fifty years her sceptre meek, Has helped the strong against the weak ! Ye crook'd-kneed slaves, down, down, and sing Your fulsome song, see what we bring, The dazzling pageant, bright of sheen, To shout the virtues of our queen ! Prolific mother, great and good, As ever reared a hungry brood ; For fifty years her care has been To strip your purses of their sheen ; For -fifty years her parent breast Has ached, to see her darlings blest, To tax, and grind, with threat and frown, That they should wear some beggar's crown ; That from your pockets should be rung Their golden chains, with diamonds strung ; Then shout the mother and the queen, Who dug the trench of Skibbereen ! ! ! Whose darling Albert ! dead, alas ! Would feed the Irishman on grass ! The wide, deep pit, that famine gave To Irish valor for a o;rave, 24iJ AN IRISH exile's jubilee ode. Was dug, that Albert's coward crest, Should in mausoleum proudly rest. For fifty years her laws have sent Three millions to this continent ! The least of whom, more prized than he, In God's superb economy ! Two millions more 'neath Ireland's sky, Thro' Famine's pangs, forever lie ! ! ! Shout! lusty throat of Ireland, shout! — Ring, ring your hymn of triumph out; Great indeed has been your boon, On this bright, fair day in June. Out upon the level green, Sing the glories of your queen ; Out upon the mountain's side ; Swell the anthem far and wide ; — Unhoused, unfed, unpitied cast, 'Neath summer Y sun or winter's blast, 'Neath hunger's pangs, and sorrow's tears. Ring out her Jubilee of years. Ye gaunt, pale peasants of the soil Ring out your Jubilee of toil ; — Your patient wife, your children's cry, For food and raiment, shout on high ! Shout Shout Shout Eviction's cry of pain; Coercion's cruel chain ; your wrongs far o'er the sea On this great day of Jubilee. AN IRISH EXILE'S JUBILEE ODE. 243 Shout the day when you will stand, As freemen in your native land ; When she, who now, to pity cold, Shall pass away beneath the mold ; When honor, fame, and liberty Shall sing- your song of Jubilee. A few short years, and they, who now Would press the thorns upon your brow ; Would pass coercive laws, to bind Each noble impulse of the mind; Will, as their acts, sink deep in gloom Without a ray to light their tomb ! "244 IN MEMORY OF THOMAS MOORE. EX MEMORY OF THOMAS MOORE. Thomas Moore, one of Ireland's most illustrious sons and sweetest poets, was born in Aungier street, Dublin, in 1780, of respectable Catholic parents. As a student of Trinity col- lege, his careor was a brilliant one, marked with success. In March 1811 he married Miss Dyke, an actress, a native of Kilkenny, with whom he lned very happily; and by whom he had five children, none of which survived him. The charm of his song won for him the admiration of all, so that his life, (if we except the close) was one of fete and pleasure. His " O Blame not the Bard" was as the apology of a spoiled child. Amid all the temptations, flatteries, and pleasures that surrounded him he never lost sight of the miseries of his native land. He died at Sloperton cottage February 26, 1852, aged 72 years and nine months. Leaving his worldly wealth (an unpublished MS) to his widow, and was buried in Bromham, Bedfordshire, England. Immortal bard of Erin's Isle, How sweet the Lyre ! You touched with many a trill the while And word of tire ! Your melodies with pathos flow, In every line their beauties glow ; In love, or joy, or grief, or woe, They never tire ! In budding bloom they ever blow, The heart's desire ! We hold thee first in bardie fame, Sweet child of Song ! Whose numbers struck the lurid flame Of deep set wrong ! IN MEMORY OF THOMAS MOORE. 245 And tho' your harp was oft' unstrung To notes that have the bosom wrung, Enough yet thrilled its chords among To wreathe your name ! For Freedom's fire around it clung, Too sweet for blame ! The Orpheus of the melting lay, Immortal sleeps ! Whose minstrelsy thro' Time's decay Distinction reaps ! In foreign land your body lies, Your soul triumphant in the skies ; Your harp's sweet trills transcendent rise Where glory weeps ! With you the song of Erin dies, Fond memory keeps ! We envy Bromham's church-yard fair, Beneath whose breast ; The Bard of Erin rests from care, And grief oppressed ! Our every glory England stole, That fired the heart or thrilled the soul ! That left our land the miser dole, Of years unblest ! The poisoned dregs, in Freedom's bowl, — Despair at best ! 246 st. patkick's day. ST. PATRICK'S DAY. Our natal day once more has come, With gladsome song and cheer; Once more we think of boyhood's home, Its mem'ries fond and dear, The Mecca of the Irish heart Is ever fair and bright, Tho' boundless waves of ocean part Its beauties from our sight. Ah ! would our song of joy to-day Was joyous as of yore, Ere we were forced by tyrant sway To wander from its shore ; Ah ! would the guileless days of youth, Come back with rosy smile, To sing the song of Love and Truth , Within that cherished Isle. The touch of friendship there was sweet,- As genial as the sun ; The glowing heart, with love replete, Affection's tribute won : st. Patrick's day. 247 Tho' cares oft bent the spirit proud, And dimmed the eye in tears, 'Twas but the threatening of the cloud, That comes, then disappears. Around thy name, fair day of days, Our fondest wishes twine ; For we have song and joy and praise, For mem'ries such as thine ; There is a legend in our heart Which time cannot efface, That Fate will yet her vengeance dart On England's savage race. When next thy song rolls o'er the sea, Thou blithe auspicious day, Bring in its train sweet Liberty To those who've nursed its lay ; Bring, bring the clash of sword and strife, Of death and gloom and tears, To those who've crushed the Irish life Thro' centuries of years ! 248 o'driscoll's daughter. O'DRISCOLL'S DAUGHTER. Where the ivy-crowned castle frowns dark o'er the water; Where once shone in beauty, O'DriscolPs fair daughter ; Where thy fane Innis-Sherkin,* grown gray thro' the ages, Looks gloomily down on the surf when it rages ; Where the Gas Kinane,f fierce, as Charybdis swirl, Awakens death's gloom in its rush and its whirl ; Where the Fastnet peers out o'er the wide seething ocean, As an eagle secure 'mid the tempest's commo- tion. * An island cne mile from the main land, contains the ruins of a monastery. f This sound is dangerous in stormy weather, and the un- fortunate mariner who cannot throw off a distich to appease the anger of Poseidon, is in danger of being ushered into his presence. The ability to do so, insures to the voyager, safety over its troubled waters. o'driscoll's daughter. 249 Where the famed " Hundred Islands " of Car- bery pillow, Their dark frowning heads on the breast of the billow, — Churning the waves in their lawless careering, — A maelstrom of wrath in their anger appearing ; Here the sea-gull's wild cry is oft heard in alarm, The herald that rides on the breast of the storm ; Now cleaving the air on her bright angel pinion, The wild crag her home, and the surge her dominion. Here, distant Cape Clear, the last beacon of Erin ; Here, Baltimore looms, as its sad tale appear- ing; Here, the old ruined castle, dismantled and hoary, Looks out on the tide darkly breathing its . story ! Within its gray walls, where the swallows have nested, And the ivy, as Friendship, its bartizans crested ; Have I gazed on the scene where the Algerine sought her, And bore her a captive, O'DriscolPs fair daugh- ter. 250 o'diuscoll's daughter. Where the light-hearted laugh, and the sweet harp resounded ; Where the jest and the song in swift rivalry bounded ; Where the fair face of beauty gleamed bright as a vision, And the dancer's light step spoke of grace and precision ; Where stood the O'Driseoll, in battle the bravest. [n honor the truest, in council the gravest; Where Carbery's maidens — a galaxy stream- ing — Shone bright thro' its halls, in their loveliness beaming. Here, where the portal lies crumbled and broken , The last cry was heard and the last wish was spoken, On the threshold of love, with dishonor before them, The Algerine * horde to their galleys they bore them ; Among the bruised hearts of the captives thus taken, The fairest of all thro' the strife is unshaken ; * In 1630 the Algerine's landed in Baltimore in the dead of night, burned the town and took several of the inhabitants into captivity, among them the daughter of O'Driseoll, whom they intended for their Dey. They seized one Hackett, a Dungarvan fisherman, at sea, and obliged him to steer into Baltimore. Two years later he was publicly executed. o'dmscoll's daughter. 251 The during resolve presses fiercely upon lier, To end her fair life, ere it sinks in dishonor. The fair youth and maiden o'er ocean are borne, From the fond ties of home, and of kindred are torn, To the land where the Simoom and fiercer Sirocco Sweep over its plains, e'en to distant Morocco ; Here thy children, dear Erin, with sad voice beseeching, Must list to the Koran — the Moslem's dread teaching — In sadness look back to that church near the mountain, Whose faith shone as pure, as some clear silver fountain. Your Dey is no more ! see his life blood is streaming ! From yonder fair hand with the red dagger gleaming ; In the midst of his Seraii, when wooing he sought her, His love notes were stilled by O'Drisscoll's fair daughter. Now bear her away where the faggots are raging, Their terrors bring joy her deep anguish as- suaging ; 252 o'driscoll's daughter. O'er the bright sunny tide, her ashes returning, To her home by the wave, thro' its carnage and burning. O'er the lone rocky street, where in boyhood I wandered ; Where youth's rosy hours were recklessly squandered ; Dreaming of Freedom by Ellen's'* blue water, Where once trod in beauty, O'Driseoll's fair daughter, What heart-throbs went out o'er that wild deso- lation, Where Liberty slept, neath the wrongs of a nation, Breathing a promise, as dark as her story, To add one more life to her chaplet of glory. * This river empties itself into Baltimore harbor. Balti- more is 60 miles south of Cork and is the last place seen by the emigrant bound for the United States. on tennyson's jubilee ode. 253 ON TENNYSON'S JUBILEE ODE. The last faint effort of expiring pen, Throws its grim shadows o'er the page again ; The pand'ring Laureate, great at fulsome song, Rolls his old cart of adjectives along; Plumes his tired wing thro" realms of phantasy. To pluck a wreath for England's Jubilee. No tawdry showman on the village green, E'er juggled words, as he, for Britain's queen ; No sycophant ere plied the supple pen With steadier zeal, than does this harlequin. Plethoric grown, the lexicon must roll Stupendous words, to swell his mighty soul : " Ever-broad'ning," " ever-wid'ning," "health- fuller" — ah me ! Webster dethroned for Vic's great Jubilee ! But words must broaden, widen — e'en the Earth Must dip her axes for imperial birth. " Thunders moaning ! ! " Oh ! metaphor sublime. The last grand effort of exhausted rhyme ; What pension's scribe will do, no pen can tell. When empty titles do the numbers swell. 254 on texnyson's jubilee ode. . Come, thou Canadian, to this feast of love ! Come from your jungle and your sacred grove. You dusky sons of Hinclostan repair To Albion's coast, why stand you dreaming there ? Know that your Empress, bending o'er your chain, Has reached her fiftieth year of glorious reign ! Come with the pearls of your Indian seas, Or Vishnu's eyes, if they her whim should please : Bring, bring the wealth of Delhi and Cawnpore ; For she already has your Kohinoor ; All that remains, if any, bring along To swell her coffers and her Laureate's song. Come Boer, come Zulu, Berber, Soudanee With thoughts subdued for England's jubilee ; Come with your scars, your fetters, and your hate ! Come, ere the call should reach your ears too late : Come Arab, Caffre, Zealander, and see St. Paul's illumined for our jubilee ; See myriads trooping o'er that "Broken Arch,'* In one continued, brilliant line of inarch ! Come Australian from Antipodes ; Come thou with Apples of ITesperides «• on tennyson's jubilee ode. 255 The Orpheus of song would bend your sails, O'er Tropic seas, to" where our pomp prevails ; His spell as potent, would your steps entice, As did his master that of Eurydice ; Your wrongs, your troubles, and your griefs expire, Before the charms of his thrilling lyre ! Alas ! poor Erin, once so brave and bold, Lord Alfred leaves you shiv'ring in the cold : His Orphean lyre has not one note for thee, Thou wayward daughter of dark destiny : Not e'en his tenderest, sweetest note could bring Your stubborn heart within his magic ring ! His Queen ! His mighty queen ! has forged for thee Her strongest chains, to ease your misery ! Has sent you Famine, Buckshot, Death and Gloom, And now you wish her rested in the tomb ! Ungrateful land ! for fifty years has she Been to your race, a song of Jubilee ! Her reign has sent more prayers to the grave, Than would the armies of the Romans save. Oh ! what a creature man can be for gold, — How dead to shame, to pity's throb how cold. How will the gift divine perverted be, At chink of gold, or nod of royalty ! 250 tyranny's curse. Yes, call your slaves from distant lands and bind, With heavier chains their nerveless hands and mind ; Splatter the virgin sheet with fulsome praise, Which only dims the glamour of your bays ; Your greedy soul, too thirstful and too base, As Fortune's bubble soon must meet disgrace, When she whose reign your hungry pen en- twines With deeds of mercy leaded twixt the lines ; Shall see the future thro' the gath'ring gloom, That bears her life and actions to the tomb ; There, there your song shall end, her joys begin. If, that her reign be free from crime or sin. TY r RAK^Y'S CURSE. I know a land as fair and grand, As ever sun shone o'er ; With sons as brave, on land or wave, As ever banner bore ; But the Norman came with sword and flame, And with blows both fierce and keen ; He quenched in tears our land for years, And dimmed its luster green. TYRANNY S CURSE. 'I'O i But the bloody sword of the robber horde, Oft fell from their pulseless grasp, As they met the blows of their stalwart foes, Or reeled in their iron clasp ! Thus, from age to age, the bloody page, Of slaughter dire was seen, Till the streams ran red, with the blood they shed In defence of their land of green. When Ninety-eight had sealed the fate, Of Emmet and of Tone : Men stood aghast, as their graves they passed Unlettered and unknown; There Erin sat like a death-clad bride, For the joy of her heart hath tied, And a nameless mound, was all that bound, Her faith in the mighty dead ! And the years rolled on, but the sun ne'er shone On " Erin of the streams," And laws accursed, o'er her bosom burst, As lightnings vivid gleams; And the stormy minds like the angry winds, That swept o'er her vales, serene, Were forced to fly, from her breast or die, Tn defence of their Hag of green. 258 JUBILEE REFLECTIONS. But the days of grace draw on apace, When time's unerring bow, Shall speed the dart, that shall pierce the heart, Of Erin's deadly foe ; In that hour of bliss, shall it be amiss To pray for the Saxon Queen ; And wish her race, in some other place, Than our beauteous Isle of green ? May Erin's Tell, the superb Par n ell, Hold the tyrant in the toils, Till Freedom's voice, shall the earth rejoice, And unloose the serpent's coils ; When that hour shall come, may Emmet's tomb, With treasured memories glow ; And an anthem raise, of song and praise. To the Hand that has laid her low. -:<>: JUBILEE REFLECTIONS. Bending beneath her crown of gold, Set with diamonds of price untold, She comes arrayed as the morning's beam- A thousand gems on her bosom gleam ; In cleft, rare colors, from climes afar, From Afric's shores, from Candahar ; JUBILEE REFLECTIONS. 259 In costliest fabrics, she comes arrayed, The glittering remnant of life decayed ! The marshalling hosts before her stream, As tho' she were Love's enchanting dream ; Onward, still onward, their ceaseless flow Press thro' the millions of pain and woe ! Onward, still onward, the pageant creeps, Where the surging heart in defiance leaps ; Her car of triumph, as Conquest, rolls Thro' burning hearts, and thro' thirsting souls! Behind, the glitter of pomp and pride, To wealth, and glory, and birth allied; Sneering, they greet the wild huzza That mocks the throbbings of Nature's Law ! Onward, their carriages proudly roll, As a vision of joy to the earnest soul ! What care they for the canaille throng, Their life, as the dawn, is sweet with song. En satin, and velvet, and rich brocade, The daughters of wealth are here arrayed : Onyx, and pearl, and topaz gleam, As glintings of sun on the laughing stream ; On, onward they come, as a flood of light That pierces the gloom of the ebon night! Onward they come with haughty mein, To swell the pageant of England's Queen. 260 JUBILEE REFLECTIONS. On the outmost verge of that throng what pain, What anxious throbbing of heart and brain ; What tears, what longings, what cares, what woes, What foodless stomachs, what ragged clothes ; What drooping spirits, what deep despair, As Banquo's ghost, are rising there ! The song of Hope from their heart is fled, And the cloud of want o'er their life is spread. The kingdoms of earth are here to grace, The pageant that humbles the human race : Are here the agents of despot sway, To awe the millions on this fair day ! On, on, they come, as the stars that gleam Thro' the depths of Thames, dark, muddy stream ; On, on, they come, as the lightning sped Thro' the ebon clouds that loom o'erhead. Ignorance, poverty, crime, and pain, Are here in numbers to swell the train — Shouting the glory of England's might, As tho' their life was a thing of light ; Shouting their toil, their care, their tears, That shadow their lives thro' the weary years ; Shouting the splendors that power brings To the haughty minions of queens and kings. JUBILEE REFLECTIONS. 261 On, to Westminster, old and gray— The lone, sad relic of Time's decay ! Where king and minister coldly sleep, Dark as the shadows that round them creep ! Here, here, will the guilty statesman find A theme to harrow the soul and mind ! Here do the pomp and the pride of earth Give other creatures a life and birth; Here will the graves around him breathe Their tale of anguish and woe beneath ; Here will his own dark life reveal The shadows that thro' its chambers steal ! Within these gray walls will Conscience dart Her arrows of doom on his guilty heart, Does England's Queen, in this hour of pride, Think of that Island across the tide ? Its wrongs, its griefs, its tears, its pain, Clouding its sky thro' her long, long reign. In this bright hour of her Jubilee ; Has she no tear for its misery ! 2f)2 THE MITCH ELSTOWN HORROR. THE MITCHELSTOWN HORROR, Oh ! Pity strain your tearful eye, Oh ! Vengeance speed your winged dart For cruel breast of man is dry, And demon hate pervades his heart. Beneath the Autumn's golden sun, That breaks o'er Galtees rugged height, The glitt'ring sword and polished gun, Of hireling soldier, glisten bright. They come, as tho' an armed foe, Was theirs to meet in conflict dire ; They come as Havoc, or as Woe ! With fell intent and tierce desire. They come the mercen'ries of death, Shielded by laws of hate untold ; The pitying pang, they tread beneath, For they in Slaughter's mart are sold. The peaceful gath'ring in the street, That would assert a nation's rights, This is the foe they come to meet ! This, this, the foe their valor fights ! THE MITCHELSTOWN HORROR. 263 Manhood's prime, — the silvered head — The daring heart, — the bloom of youth, Alike are numbered with the dead ; Alike are sacrificed to Truth ! Alas, poor Londregan, lying there, By ruffian soldier stricken down ; How specl your three score years of prayer, — Of blameless life in Mitehelstown. The bullet speeding thro' your heart, The guiltless life-blood oozing slow, Make tyrant slaves in horror start ! At crime so dark, so "full of woe. All patient Ruler of the spheres, Your awful judgment long delayed, Shall roll unerring as your years, To those whose laws 'gainst Thine are made. Oh ! hasten the avenging hour, Thou mighty God of Seraphim ; Stay, Oh ! stay ! the bloody power That toys with life in savage whim ! ■K'A FORSTER IN MEMORIAM. FORSTER— IN MEMORIAM. Buckshot Forster for ever is dead, As the clammy turf o'er his coffin spread, Or the marble dripping its slow decay, In the gloom of its vault till the Judgment Day Dead as the justice he oil earth denied, To those who for life or for mercy cried ; Dead as the victims he left bestrown, On the earth like trees, by the tempest blown. But where, Oh! where, is that spirit fled, With its heavy burden of woe and dread ? The roofless cabin, the dreary wild ; The wailing cry of the hungry child; The father's despair, the mother's grief; The anguished prayer, that sought relief; The gaping prison, the clanking chain ; The rifles pouring their iron rain ! The piercing shriek, the deep groan of pain ; The life blood oozing from heart and brain ; The havoc and slaughter of fiendly power, Looked ghastly and grim in that dying hour ! DEFIANCE. 265 These were the passports that Forster bore On the wings of Death, to that heavenly shore ; Where the pure of heart, and the just of earth, Forever rejoice in a glorious birth ! This was the record he bore on high, To Empyrean Throne beyond the sky ; To the God who died for the sins of man ; Who bounds the earth with a single span ; Whose power is bestowed, that its donor may Rejoice in the light of Eternal Day. This, this the burden, his soul now brings, To the Judgemnt seat, of the King of Kings ! DEFIANCE. From Erin's shore is heard once more, The old time song of love and cheer ; Whose treasured notes o'er ocean float, Inspiritingly sweet and clear ; Her griefs to-day are flung away, Tho' angry clouds obscure her sky : Whilst memories crowd on hearts as proud, As ever throbbed to Freedom's cry. 266 DEFIANCE. The genial earth that gave us birth, Tho' stained by blood, is ever bright ; The shamrock grows beside the rose, And nature wears her robe of light : Yet over all there hangs a pall, Of death and gloom, of tears and woe. For England draws coercive laws From out the gloom, to smite her low. Thrice hated name, we cry thee shame, On this fair day to Ireland dear ; Array your might to crush the right — Unconquered will our cause appear ; The iron heel or barbed steel, Of despot pow'r may do its worst, Yet wilt thou find the force you bind, Will on yourself in fury burst! Avert the strife that dooms your life, To devastation and to death ! Avert the crash, when armies clash, And Muscovites their swords unsheath ! In that grim hour of fading power, What wouldst thou give for Ireland's crest. To stay the speed of Cossack steed, Or bear his lance within her breast. Yes, forge your chains while power remains, Beleaguered, as thou art by foes ; Let shackles bind the hand and mind — Crowd all thy wrath, where none oppose : ON THE QUEEN'S SPEECH. 267 Thy reign of blood, thro' years has stood, — Unchecked its fury as of yore ; Unpitying — dread — its course as red, As when the Norman touched our shore. Dost fear the end, my Saxon friend ? The powers of earth have crumbled — fell ; The " Broken Arch " will show your march, Where Thames now rolls his turbid swell ; Then bow to fate, ere yet too late, The Irish heart you'll ne'er subdue ; Your strength shall fail, before the Gael, For lie to Freedom's cause is true. ON THE QUEEN'S SPEECH. The wrongs and the tears of a nation, Find no place in Victoria's oration ; Her multiplied cares are dead to the prayers, Of the Irishman's trust and oblation. Tis the powder and ball of the cannon, On the banks of the Nile or the Shannon ; Or rifle's dread whiz, that does all the biz, For such towns as Cawnpore or Dungannon. 268 ON the queen's speech. She coys with the old Bear of Russia, And smoothes down the Eagle of Prussia ; But Bnrmah remains, as Ireland, in chains, For she sends o'er a Wolsely to crush ye. To the Irish is Salisbury heeding, While Balfour attends to the bleeding ! What glory to reign, where manhood is slain, Tho' her path to the grave is fast speeding. She's learning to speak Hindoostanee, The Gaelic, the Russ and Slavanee ; For Salisbury's power is waning each hour, And Gladstone is loved by the many. Her blessing goes out for coercion, With grape shot and torch for diversion ; Her ministers all, are earnest, and call For the National league's subversion. There is Healy, and Davitt, and Dillon, O'Brien and Parnell, the villain ; How saintly she'd pray were they out of the way, Or safe in some strong-guarded prison ! She'll send Chamberlain over to Derry, To pilot the Orangeman's wherry ; Then straight to Belfast to blow up a blast, That things in the north may go merry. EXTERMINATION, NOT COERCION. 2< : >!) More near to her heart and her wishes, The " Bine Xoses' " claim to the fishes, Than Mitchelstown's woe, where the red tor- rents flow ! From the bullet's demoniac hisses ! Is it true ? And if so, what a pity, That Balfour arrived in your city; Is Dublin asleep, that this villain dare creep With his " star chamber " plots to commit ye ? EXTERMINATION, NOT COERCION. From Antrim Head to far Cape Clear; From Sline's dark wave, to Howth Head. The cry of blood appals the ear, For chains are forged and rifles fed ; Once more across the friendly sea, Beneath its waters dread and lone, The fettered arms of Liberty Cry thro' its waves for freedom gone. Thou godless tyrant — strength thou hast. And with it beats a demon's heart ; Thy bloody crimes have stained the past, From which e'en now thou wilt not part : 270 EXTERMINATION, NOT COERCION. Assyria, Persia, Greece, and Rome — The mighty nations of the past, Passed from the earth as ocean foam, As thou wilt go, — art going fast. It needs no prophet to divine, The words now written on the wall ; Then wreak your vengeance — tire the mine — As ISTero — slaughter, ere you fall ; Yes, strut and swagger, fume and. fret, There is no terror in your frown, The Irish arm will smite you yet — . Will tear your bloody laurels down. The reeking sword is in your hand, Its blade is red with Irish gore ; The rifle 's poised at dread command, And havoc reigns supreme once more ; Unarmed Ireland waits the shock, With darkened brow and broken blade, As fierce as wave that smites the rock, And swirls across the gulf it made. As well disturb the vulture's feast — Nature has marked thee out for blood ; Now e'en the pure annointed priest Is swallowed in the raging flood, Onward it sweeps from shore to shore, Nor prayer, nor tear, will check its course, O'er broken arms its terrors pour ! 'Gainst naked breasts it spends its force. EXTERMINATION, NOT COERCION. 271 Coercion, pshaw ! the name's absurd — Search thou the lexicon of thought ; Search Milton, Dante, for a word That would express the terrors sought ; *■ A serpent armed with mortal sting ! " Aye, that arranged in one dread word, Would all its force of horrors bring To those whose wrath you have incurred. Yes, count your wealth as sands of sea ; Pile up your hecatombs of slain ; Forge stronger chains for Liberty ; And steel-clad ships to sweep the main ! Secure at every point, then rest, — If rest there be, for such as thou, — Through sleepless nights with burdened breast. Wipe clammy sweat from guilty brow How many live a life of fear, Who, in the senate hall are brave ; How many dread from year to year, To rest their bones in bloody grave ; Conscience disturbed, what dreadful curse, The awful monitor of guilt; What fearful thought will it not nurse, When once the blood of man is spilt. 272 on tennyson's colonial ode. ON TENNYSON'S COLONIAL ODE. The poet Laureate — Tennyson — Gives England's queen his benison, In maudlin verse of fulsome song, In menial praise, of deeds of wrong : No minstrel of the olden times Extolled his chiefs unhallowed crimes. With keener zest than here is shown, Of, " Britons hold your own." Forever, be thy verse accursed, Of bards the meanest, and the worst ; Since first you penned " God save the Queen," You have been mercen'ry and mean ; You've sold the gift which nature gave For gold, — the fetters of the slave. Yes, " hold your own," if " own " it be. From Tropic clime to frozen sea ! Let earth revolve, her shining frame," In light and shade to curse your name ; Let Father Nile's dark muddy stream, With Berber's blood and Arab's gleam ; Let Boers and Zulus shout and sing The blessings which the Britons bring ; on tennyson's colonial ode. 273 Let Siam's king, supine Hindoo, Reveal the deeds that Britons do : From Arctic Sea to Torrid Zone, Shout out! let "Britons hold your own." Yes, trembling robber, "hold your own,*' Nor feign to see your sinking throne ; Bring weak-kneed slaves from o'er the sea To glimmer in your pageantry; Bring the wild beasts from Indian clime, ' To shout your driveling laureate rhyme ; Bring! Oh bring! a cabin o'er From Erin's gveen and lovely shore : Bring the evicted in your train, To shout the great Victoria's reign ! Bring the tierce Cossack of the Don, Or bring the much wronged Irishman ; Then shout your cry, " Let us alone, " Of, " Britons hold your own." Ah! wayward Eagle of the West, Who did'st forsake the parent nest ; Why didst thou in a fateful hour Plume thy bold wing, from Briton's power ? Hast thou no soul for song or praise, For the sweet Laureate's melting lays? Come back, thou bird with heart of stone, For sure the Britons love their own. 274 THE ARREST OF FATHER KELLER. " God over all " — poor Tennyson ! Smirches all the poet won ; Has not one word of song or praise, For him who crowned his brows with bays ISTo, for the great, the good Gladstone Tells Irishmen " To hold their own." THE ARREST OF FATHER KELLER AT YOUGHAL, COUNTY CORK Arrest the priest who dares espouse, The sacred cause of Truth and Right ; Arrest the priest, who'd dare arouse Man's sinking heart, thro' gloom of night. Imprison all who ask for life, All who would dare that life to give ; There is no honor in the strife, Then show them you've a right to live. Let ghost of Forster stalk once more, The troubled earth, in Balfour's form, For creatures of his ilk galore, Are there to quell the rising storm : THE ARREST OF FATHER KELLER. 275 But will they still the growing hate, That rages in the Irish heart ; As well avert the stroke of fate, — As well enslave the lightning's dart : Let broken statesmen tell the tale — Their sleepless nights, their days of dread, llowe'er they try they 're sure to fail, E'en tho' their pens with blood are red. The endless years forever roll, Across the page of Irish life ; Yet as they pass, the purer soul Emerges from the bloodv strife. The puny puppet of a day Will play his pranks before high heaven ; Will e'en o'er-reach coercion's sway, That he may show the Tory leaven. But years of peace are drawing near, The world grow's brighter day by day ; E'en bloody laws no more bring fear, To those who would their terror stay. The wrongs you heap on Ireland now, — The wounds you deal, the lives you take, Will bring dread fear to England's brow, When foreign wars o'er her shall break. 27:- ON THE DEATH OF A FRIEND. The tireless struo-o-le of a Christian soul, Fiuds rest at last from earthly cares and strife ; Eternity, her curtain does unroll, And shows the passage to a fairer dife ! ON THE DEATH OF A FRIEND. 349 Inexorable Death ! where falls thy dart, — Whether in youth, or riper years of prime, To us unknown — for counselor thou art, To thy grim work — thou ravager of time. Home do you find impatient at thy stay, — Prepared to journey to a brighter shore, — As the pure soul, that winged its night to-day, — Where all is love and joy forever more ! Others there are, who would prolong the day, Of their departure from Earth's gloomy prison ; Who see not heaven's illuminating ray, Shine o'er their path, as morning star arisen ! From far off land, — where Faith is fondly nursed, — She came as exile from her native shore ; Rich in the blessings, and the sacred trust, That from its sainted breast she proudly bore. Thro' years of gloom, of sunshine, and of tears, She bears her works before the throne of Him, Who reigns eternal thro' the changing years, — The mighty God of Saints and Seraphim ! 850 A LEUEND. The fond, true mother, now may find repose, From earthly cares, beneath the still cold sod ; Whilst heaven's fair light before that spirit goes. To meet the glories of the Living God ! We mourn the dead, who pass from earth away,- - A tribute dear to nature and to love ; But for the just, who seek, Eternal Day ! There is but joy, as angel's song above. Example fair, — be ours as hers the close, Of lifes sweet ending, — thro' its pitfalls rife; Be ours the joys that bring the soul repose, Amid the edories of the future life ! -:o:- A LEGEND. Written on the remarkable legend connected with one of St. Francis of Sales breviaries, which opened of its own ac- cord, after the saint's death, and emitted sweet odors. The precious volume often read, The sainted hand hath laid aside ; For he, who touched its leaves is dead, — His soul in Heaven beatified ! IN MEMORIAM. 351 But Heavenly wish and saintly prayer, E'en thro' its pages, are not hid; The sanctity of Sales is there, As odor sweet, its leaves amid ! The breviary neglected lies, — Companion of the pious dead ; — But odors from the leaves arise, And wide the open page is spread! Oh ! mystery of Love Divine ! Untouched by man, the page to ope; That his great love for God should shine, Thro' perfumed leaf, as flowers of Hope ! Would that our lives at evening's close, When earthly joys no longer bloom; In man's best thoughts would e'er repose,— Emitting prayerful sweet perfume. IN MEMORIAM. Away from the strife and the cares of life To the light that never grows dim ! There to sing the praise of the God of Days With the Saints and the Seraphim. 352 IN MEMORY OF A FRIEND. ■ Away from the moil, and the weary toil Of this world, with death at its core ! To breathe the pure air of an endless prayer, Where sorrow and pain are no more. Away 'mid the gleams of the morning's beams To the Throne of Empyrean bright, Thro' boundless space to the Seat of Grace, There to joy in its heavenly light. And that soul's last breath, ere freed by death; To a dear companion was given ; 'Ere it winged its flight, thro' realms of light " We shall meet again in heaven ! " May those words of cheer be forever near The hearts that have nobly striven, To reach the goal of that earnest soul, — The home of the Just in heaven. IN MEMORY OF A FRIEND. Rest, rest from the cares and the sorrows of life, Sweet spirit eternally blest ! Rest, rest from the conflict of death, and its strife, On your Saviour's all comforting; breast ! IN MEMORY OF A FRIEND. 353 On that day dear to souls, was yours borne away — • On the wings of the Angel of Light ! From the gloom of this earth to God's infinite day, Unending to breathe its delight ! Rest, rest, from the struggle — the victory 's won, And the soul from its shadows set free ; May its glories shine bright as the light of the sun, That streams o'er eternity's sea. From the [tain and the anguish that sin brings to all ; From the sickness, protracted and deep ; Your body enfranchised escapes from their thrall, Till the Angel awakens its sleep ! To the dear ones of earth may a comfort arise, As sweet as the bliss of your own ! That their spirits as pure may ascend thro' the skies ; — - Where the Infinite sits on His throne ! HELENA M. CAREY'S POEMS. ■:o:- TO THE MUSE. INTRODUCTION. The pleasing thoughts you bring to me Seraphic Queen of Song, Are clear as fount of Purity, With crystal streams among ; You steal upon my hours of rest, And beautify my care ; With throbs of joy you fill my breast, And shine an angel there. e> Whate'er thou art. whose magic trill, Awakes the golden chords ; To me as mystic as my will, Or thought that shapes my words : All beauteous as the morning's light, Your song is ever near : Which breaks in notes of strange delight Upon my startled ear. 356 the soldier's grave. Forsake me not, inspiring voice, When cloud and storm are near ; Let heavenly thoughts in thee rejoice, Thro' beam of sun or tear ; Tempt not my weak, untutored mind, To stray beyond its bound ; Ere thy pure strains are left behind For those of siren sound. THE SOLDIER'S GRAVE. Here lies the grave of a soldier, Festooned with the flowers of the spring: The anthem of peace is around it, And triumphs, its requiem sing. The red-throated robin is simmis; His silver note carol on high ; Whilst the lilies around it are springing, Diffusing their fragrance and joy. The foliaged branches are bending Their shadows to shelter its bloom ; O, the glories of earth are unending, For the hero that rests in the tomb. THE SOLDIER'S GRAVE. 357 We gaze on that grave with emotion, Its memories bring joy to the heart ; For honor, and truth, and devotion, From its silence can never depart. The pride of a life is around it, Its halo of glory is shed ; From the cloud-rifted sky and the sunbeam, That gleam o'er the home of the dead. Oh ! bring from the trophies of battle, The flag that he gallantly bore ; With the rents of the sword and the bullet, As thro' the red carnage he tore. Oh ! bring that unflinching devotion, The garland of honor and fame ; To deck the loved grave of the sleeper, That bears on that headstone his name. As long as the stars on our banner, Reflect their bright glints in the wave ; So long shall the soldier be honored, With memories outlivins; the grave. And the tears of the cloud and the dew drop Shall moisten the mounds where they rest, Till the earth, at her final upheaving, Shall send forth her heroes as blest. 858 MEMORY OF DEPARTED WORTH. MEMORY OF DEPARTED WORTH. Only a column of marble — Only a tablet to fame — A very few feet at the highest, Just space for each honored name. Only a column of marble — Beautiful, fair, and white, For youths and maidens to gaze on, With reverence and delight ! Only a Spartan's honor — Only a hero's reward ; Thro' the havoc of death and battle, When Liberty stood on guard ! A few little thousand dollars ! The cost of some worthless show ; Would build them a column of marble, Thro' the ages that come and go. How trivial the death of a hero, Who dies in defence of his land ; When the changers of dimes and dollars Hold his country's honor in hand. MEMORY OF DEPARTED WORTH. 350 A few little faded flowers — That die ere their perfume is shed, Is all the tribute you pay them, Whose blood for your cause w T as shed ! They gave you freedom and honor, Happiness, glory, and fame; And now you deny them a column, Whereon to inscribe their name. The great of your cause is remembered, In marble piercing the air ; But the lowly hero of battle May rest undistinguished there. Shame on such puny devotion ! When the pride of your country lies dead ; And your flag sheds its gleams of honor, Wherever its folds are spread. O, build them a column of marble, Beautiful, fair, and white, To glow in the gleam of the sunshine, And chasten the gloom of the night! Their life has forever departed — Their honor and glory are thine ; Then show to the children around you, That Liberty's cause is divine ! 360 OCTOBER. OCTOBER. Over the river the woods are aglow, — And the gorgeous feast is spread ! For royal October is speeding on, With a crown for each drooping head. For the garnered treasure of nature yields Her vintage of ripened cheer, To him, the kingliest of the months — The prince of the " Rolling Year.'' Over the river, the crimson and gold, Border the clear blue sky — Beautiful emblems of peace and love ; Of sweet contentment and joy. Over the river the mellow tints Of nature are brilliant and fair ; Lighting the soul with that joyous calm, That comes as the voice of pray'r. Down in the valley, away on the hill ; By river, and mountain, and spring : The beautiful robe of the year is spread, Bright as an angel's wing! OCTOBER. 361 Over the river, the feast is o'er — The revel 's a thing of the past ; For surly November comes sweeping on, On his fierce, unpitying blast. Over the river the trees are hare, The leaves are withered and strown ; Whilst Gloom, and Death, and grim Despair Now stalk where their glories shone. Over the river our lives are set, As the leaves that wither and die ; Over the river our souls shall drift To their beautiful home on high ! Oh! may their autumn he fair and bright, Over the river of love ; Winging their course thro' realms of light To the home of the just, above. Oli ! may they glow as October's tints, Before that throne on high, Where a feast of joy is forever spread, Whose beauties shall never die. 362 NEW YEARS DAY. NEW YEARS DAY. When the Christmas bells have ceased to ring; And the Christmas choirs have ceased to sins: ; There is another hopeful day, That comes to steal our hearts away ; That brings fresh mem'ries to the mind, As fair as those it left behind. In youth's bright day how sweet the song, That brings this beauteous day along ; The coming hopes, with roseate brow, Make each New Year a gladsome vow : Make each New Year, more prized, more blest, More beautiful than all the rest. Let me be one of those whose voice Shall ever in its birth rejoice; Let me be one of those whose vow, Shall never stain its angel brow ; Let me be one of those whose song, Its sweetest mem'ries 'twould prolong. This hopeful day, so full of cheer, Points sweetly to the opened year ; REGRET. N 363 Invites the giddy and the gay, To sober thoughts, and sober play ; Invites the drunkard to avoid The cup that does his manhood hide. Invites us all, with passions rife, To lead a better, purer life ; Invites each tender, noble thought To what in other years it sought; Invites us all to strive and pray, That God would bless this K"ew Years Day. This New Years Day may blessings rest Upon the hearts that would be blest ; This New Years Day may pardon crown The souls that would God's mercies frown ; This New Years Day with treasures stored, Be God's eternal name adored. -:o:- REGRET. There comes a void within the heart, At word unkindly spoken ; There comes a pang from out it depths, At promise made, then broken ; : )!)4 REGRET. Could we recall the bitter word We often speak unthinking ; What sunshine would our lives impart — What hearts would save from sinking. Unguarded words, thus lightly sped, As barbed steel will wound us ; Will east their gloom upon the joys That Xature flings around us ! The promise made — that broken is — Oft brings hot tears of sorrow ; That flow unceasing as the years. Which know no bright to-morrow. Regret will come when tis too late, — The heart's best thoughts revealing : But words of balm can ne'er restore . Our wounded love or feeling; If we a promise give, Oh ! let Our actions prove its keeping; If angry words our thoughts would speak, Let them ne'er end in weeping. joy. 365 JOY. Sweet little word, what spell hast thou To still the heart's emotion ? From whence the thrill that wreathes the brow, As rippling streams commotion ? The pulse of thought, as quickly Hies, As beam that lights the morning; Or as the rainbow tint that dies, Ere sky's fair arch adorning. Thou fliest on rosy wings of light To still the throbs of sorrow, — With thee, sweet word, there is no night, No yesterday, nor morrow ! Thou bringst balm to soothe the heart, — Bright sunshine to the weeping; Thy cheerful beams upon us dart In waking hours, or sleeping. In many shapes you come to bind The wounds that sorely try us ; And deeply crushed in heart and mind. Your angel smiles espy us ! Life would be dreary, sad and lone, If thy sweet face were hidden ; — Thou art as sun that brightly shone. At God's eternal bidding ! 360 pity. PITY These four little letters, as Mercy flow ! Alluring as desert spring ; When the burning sands unpitying blow, On the Simoon's fatal wing ! As the Alpine shelter from storm and death, Their sweet caresses fling ; Or the dewy morning's scented breath, That streams o'er the budding spring ! How grateful to God is the heart that feels, For the sorrows that droop the mind ; For the soothing word, that as sunshine steals, O'er the spirit that shadows bind ! They come as song of far off dream, That shone o'er Life's early morn ! Or as the shimmer of woodland stream, From its shady fringes borne ! Sweet word of comfort — the angel breast That utters your song of cheer ; To the wounded heart, as balm is pressed, Pathetic, and sweet and dear ! Who loves to nurture your beam of light, Diffusing its genial rays ; Dispels the gloom that enshrouds our night, And warms our hearts in praise. EASTER SONG. 367 EASTER SONG. The rosy morn of Easter-Tide From far Jerusalem speeds its way ; Fringed with golden streams of light To guild this bright transcendent day ! The clouds of gloom That draped the Tomb, Of Him who died for sins of Man : Are rolled away On this fair day, The brightest one since Time began. ! Celestial song of bliss untold ! Is heard from sphere to sphere to-day ! The choirs of Heaven, entrancing roll The mighty anthem far away ! From star to star, Is heard a far ; Alleluias ring — for God is ris'n ! This day is streamed O'er man redeemed, The light that gleams o'er earthly prison. 368 EASTER SONG. The chimes of earth in silver tones, Announce this joyous feast of love ; The tireless song of angels pour It's paeans of glory from above ! Thou light supreme, Pour down your beam, Upon our sinful souls to-day ; . As fair as when The Magdalene Bent loving steps to where You lay. 0, may our hearts, as Sepulcher Be lit by God's unfading light ; 0, may the angel shine within Their darkened chambers, robed in light ! O, may the soul Its treasure roll, Of purest thought, and love sublime ; Till doubt and fear Shall disappear,, Upon the fleeting wings of Time. TO SISTER NELLIE. 369 TO SISTER NELLIE. I once had a rose-cheeked sister, With tresses of golden hair; And eye as brown as the Autumn When Nature has heard his prayer : Unangered we played together, Innocent, loving, and kind ; But the angels bore her from me, And left me in grief behind. ( )ver that brow of opal, The seal of heaven was set ; Celestial, pure, and tender, Where heavenly graces met : Around those lips angelic, The budding prayer was found ; That child-like lisped its fervor Pathetic, and sweet of sound. Purer than spring's bright lily, That kind hands strewed on her breast Fairer that soul, and brighter, Than the crescent that lights the west : 870 death's souvenir. Tho' years and years have vanished, Since that dark and tearful day, Unforgetting*, I grieve and sorrow. For the glory they bore away. Ah ! would I may meet thee, Nellie, When the sorrows of earth are o'er : When borne away thro' the shadows, To the light of a brighter shore ! With thee forever and ever, To sing God's song of praise ! Where Death's dark pangs ne'er sever, The glories that bind our days. -:o:- DEATITS SOUVEMR. What marvelous charm this braid of gold — The strands of my sister's hair ; Has for me, who loved her, with love untold, - Unselfish beyond compare ! Sad are my thoughts thro' the welling tears, That moisten its burnished sheen ; When I think of childhood's rosy years. And their happy days between. death's souvenir. 371 The mem'ries that float on the waves of time, Are, as sad weird notes of song ; Which breathe their sorrows in measured rhyme, That ghost-like around us throng ! They come when recalled by some fond regret, As this golden tress of hair; That shines anew where its glints are wet, By the tearful eye of prayer ! Short lived our grief, as the tint ot flower, For the loved ones gone before ; As fleeting shadow that dims the hour, Then breaks into light once more ; Ephemeral all, are our lives' fond ties, As shadows around them set : And the anguished hearts — sad tearful eyes — Too soon, alas! forget! How many there are, avIio hoard away, The treasures that beauty wore ; In silken tresses of gold or gray, Whose life throbs are felt no more ! How many there are whose tears are shed, As mine, o'er some golden braid ; Whose wearer in life to God has fled — Where beauty shall never fade ! 372 devotion's hymn. DEVOTION'S HYMN. Here, where the cypress and willow Are bending their soft cooling shade ; Where the fair grassy mound, as a pillow, Is flowered, — where a hero is laid; With the sunbeams of heaven around it ; With the dewdrop to crystal its sheen : 0, the peace and the stillness, delicious ! That rest 'neath this fair wave of green. Beneath lie the bones of a soldier, — Sad relics of conflict and strife. — When the peace of our homes was endangered, And our country was struggling for life ; O'er that grave is the sad, quaint inscription, Begrudgingly lettered, and dim ; With no name, with no deed of distinction, To record the bright glories of him. Brave heart ! in thy coldness of slumber, You reck not indifference's frown, Those three iron letters but number Your Glory, Achievements, Henoivn ! * * G. A. R. devotion's hymn. 373 They speak, as the Spartan, whose glory, Has sped thro' the centuries down ; They speak of Devotion's bright story, Her honor, her fame, and her crown. See yonder fair obelisk * gleaming — Brightly piercing the clear, sunny dome ! 'Neath that white shaft, a soldier lies dreaming, Who as you fought for country and home ; But wealth has inscribed his achievements, In letters artistic and bright ; Whilst the equal loved grave that surrounds Is dark as the shadows of night ! Fair emblems of love and devotion — Sweet tributes of earth, dew, and sun— We strew o'er your grave with emotion, For all that your valor has won : Their perfume as love shall awaken The anthem that swells in our breast, That your odor, as theirs, may be taken To the home of the pure and the blest ! * Gen. Wool's monument. 374 THANKSGIVING MUSINGS. THANKSGIVING MUSINGS. How many unite on this day of praise, To thank the God of Light ? How many brave hearts their voices raise, For blessings which delight ? How many are counting the days of gloom, Of food and fire bereft ; Awaiting the sunny days of bloom, When winter's clouds are cleft. In fancy they see the plenteous board, With earth's fair dainties spread ! In fancy they see rich larders stored, With pastry, meat, and bread ; In fancy they see the genial fire Pour our its cheering rays ; Then turn their hearts where gloom and night Enshroud their own dark days. How many there are from plenteous store, Would from its surplus part ? How many who count their millions o'er Would light one clouded heart ? THANKSGIVING MUSINGS. 375 How many who see the shivering child, Intrude his hand for bread ; Forget that tho' Son of Man — reviled — Adorns his drooping head ? How many who revel, and feast to-day, Forget the burning tears ; That sorrow bears on her wings away, As shades of vanished years ? How many obey the prompting soul, That would God's gifts bestow ; On him whose bounty — A Miser's dole, Is given here below? Alas, that this day such thoughts would bring, When all around looks bright ; Alas, that hunger, on gloomy wing, Should brood around its night! Alas, that Bounty should lock her store, Of raiment food and tire, Against the victims, that crowd her door, — Whose pleadings the wealthy tire. Yes, shout the blessings the Master sends. With flippant tongue of praise ! Yes, hoard the treasures her bounty lends, This life's short fleeting days : But, Oh! remember, another day, With feast more glorious spread ! Will beam on our souls, o'er Time's decay, When heaven shall judo-e her dead ! 370 THE SHAMROCK. THE SHAMROCK. The summer's breeze ne'er stirs thy leaves In shady dell or glen ; For closely pressed to earth's fair breast. You shun the gaze of men ; Yet on this day when hearts are gay, Thy trefoil leaf is sought ; For spell thou hast, to speak the past, And spin the web of thought. Thy triple crest, o'er many a breast, Is fondly pressed to-day ; For mem'ries dear to song and cheer, Thy tiny leaves portray ; Thy hymn is sung by old and young, On each recurring year ; And tales of old again are told, That make thy mem'ry dear. With thee are twined the links that bind, Our hearts to Freedom's cause ; With thee belongs the tuneful songs, Which storied legend draws ; Ireland's evergreens. 877 Tho' far away our thoughts to-day, Our prayerful wishes rise That Freedom's beam o'er thee shall stream, 'Neath Erin's sunny skies. On one frail stem, this little gem, United grows, and fair! Emblem of Him, who reigns supreme, O'er sky, and earth, and air ; Thy modest sheen of fairest green, Engraven is, and true, Upon our hearts, whose joy imparts A srl or y to the view ! :o:- IRELAND'S EVERGREENS. The following; poem was written on receiving from Ire- land, sprigs of the Shamrock, and leaves of the Holly, Ivy and Laurel. Emblem of Erin's glorious past, Of Erin's strife thro' blood and gloom ; Ah ! little plant, what power thou hast, To soothe the exile's lonely doom ! Sweet visitant from o'er the sea, Renowned in story and in song ; O, speak thy troubled tale to me Of shattered hope, and treasured wrong. 378 Ireland's evergreens. Show where the blood marks stained thy face Thou emblem of the triune God ! Show where its beauty and its grace, By foreign foot, to earth were trod. And with thee comes, all cheer and song, The trusting holly's prickly leaf! A hymn of joy its green among ! With not a shade of care or grief. Sweet prudish leaf, what peace and joy Around thee cluster, 'round thee play ; The festive hours flew faster by, When shone thy boughs on Christmas Day. Here comes the friend of ruins gray — The dark green ivy's pointed leaf; Historian of the. world's decay, In friendship's van — he comes the chief. Oh ! what a tale couldst thou unfold Of death and havoc, strife and blood ; Of mould'ring fane, and castle old, That long the tyrant host withstood. As are thy roots in Ireland set — Defying Time's extinctive law — So will our dreams of Freedom yet, From out the gloom their glories draw. THE MAY-LTLY. 379 To crown the trios' song of praise, The laurel's lanceolate leaf appears, With sweet aroma for its bays — Tie comes the leaf that never sears. Tho' foot of mine hath never trod, The lovely land from whence ye came; Yet are ye dear as is the sod, That hides in death some treasured name. -:o: THE MAY-LILY. TO MY ESTEEMED FRIEND, MARY E. A. BOYLE. Thou tiny glory of the spring O, where hast thou been hid ? I've come once more to see the dell Where ope'd thy drooping lid ; I've come once more to see thy bells In elfin beauty grow ; I've come once more to seek the mound Whereon thy Avhite cups blow; I've come to pluck thy slender stem ; To wear thee next my heart ; Thou beautiful created thing, How fair and pure thou art ! 380 THE MAY-LILY. Dear link of childhood's happy days,— Sweet offspring of the earth : How gladly does my heart respond To thine angelic birth. Thou perfumed daughter of the sod, — Ephemeral and bright ; Thy beauteous life is spotless, brief, — A fragrance and delight. Thou soul of earth ! I see in thee A type of future bliss, — The resurrection and the hope Of home more fair than this. Where life is measured, not by years ; Where death has no control ; Where all is love, and light, and joy,— The lilies of the soul ! I see in thee a type of Him, Whose will created thee : The Burden of the angels hymn, — The Source of purity. I see in thee a type of her, Who gave the Saviour birth, — The purest lily of her sex That ever trod the earth. FAREWELL TO MAY. 381 FAREWELL TO MAY. Sweet servant of the year farewell, With grateful hearts we part with thee ; How fair thy life no pen can tell — Forever dear to memory ; Fair, sunny queen of bud and bloom — You left our earth a paradise ; From April's tear, and winter's gloom, You robed her in your em 'raid dyes. The tints of flower, the song of bird, Around your life a glory shed! The perfumed leaves the zephyrs stirred Are, as thy days, too fleeting sped ; As joy you came, as joy you leave — The sweetest month that crowns the year Then why should we in sorrow grieve V Why shed o'er thee the parting tear ? But vain regrets will ne'er recall The happy hours we spent with thee ; Where shone thy beams, the shadoAvs fall, For pleasure's dream departs with thee ! Your fair successor, June, is here, With riper cheek and brighter tress ; Thro' beam of sun does she appear, Adorned with your sun woven dress. 382 J.UNE. JUNE. TIail ! beauteous daughter of the sun, — The empress of the " rolling year," How swiftly does your chariot run, When Phoebus is the charioteer ; And glorying in your onward flight, Earth's forces reach Solstitial height. Sweet month of bird, of plant, and flower. — The paradise of God's fair earth; How sweet to rest within thy bower, And paint thy glorious life and birth : Of earth's bright Twelve thou art the gem— The ruby in that diadem. Mirror of Heaven's delights art thou, Queen of the earth — her life and bloom, God's halo rests upon your brow, As when creation lit your gloom ! The consecrated month of Him Who reigns above the Seraphim. Than is the Sun's meridian beam ; Than is thy bowers cooling shade : His love and mercy on us stream, Prom out the worlds which he has made, From star to star His rays Divine Do on our souls in splendor shine. THE LIGHT OF GOD. 383 THE LIGHT OF GOD. Grief and wrong will droop the heart, Will cloud the brow with care ; Will pierce fair Hope, as venomed dart, And hush the voice of Pray'r. But God who soothes the anguished mind. Will heal its wounds with balm ; Will still its troubles, as the wind, That, dies before the calm. Ah ! lost indeed are they who yield Their hearts to dark Despair ; Who take not up that saving shield, — The soul-protecting Pray'r. There is a light within our breast, The tempest cannot shroud ; It breaks in glory when oppressed, As lightning from the cloud. The voice of God, is this fair light, Which shines forever there : It sparkles in the gloom of night. And sanctifies our care. 384 WHAT THE STAR SAW. There is no heart however dark, That does not hear within ; This Fire of Love— this Heavenly Spar Whose darkened cloud is Sin. Man may oppress his fellow man ; May rule with stern decree ; But God revokes the cruel ban With light and liberty. For God who loves the stricken soul Will not withdraw His light ; But in His mercy make it whole, A marvel of delight ! -:<>: WHAT THE STAR SAW. Down from its home, in the blue dome, What did the little star see ? Rivers and streams glinting his beams, — Crooning their song to the lea ! Mountains, lakes, fells, beautiful dells ; Groves where the little birds nod ; Sweet shady bowers, hiding the flowers, — Breathing the perfume of God ! WHAT THE STAR SAW. S8i Down from its height hearing its light ; Down in the dew crystal ed earth ; Shedding its beam over the stream, Joining its song and its mirth ; Gladly would bear, joy through the air; Breaking the shadows of niffht: ' Gladly would roam, down from its home — Beaming its love and its light ! Down once again, over the main; What did the little star see ? Shipwreck and death, blood sprinkled heath ; Foot-prints of strife on the lea ! Sorrow and gloom, shrouding the tomb; Poverty, malice and pain ! Riches and dress, hunger's caress ! Bearing its sting to the brain ! Tempest and tear, verdure and sear ; Cabin, and mansion and hall ; Darkness and gloom, hiding earth's bloom, Bearing their shadows o'er all! Changeless and true, up in the blue ; There would the little star rest ; Fadeless and bright, bending its light, To soften the cares in our breast! 386 youth's memories. YOUTH'S MEMORIES. Air : — " Gramachree." I'm leaving thee, thou fair, bright land, In which my youth was nursed ; Thy rock-hound coast and golden strand, Where strayed my footsteps first ; The grassy fields, with daisies specked, That cheered the summer's day ; The crystal lake, with lilies decked, With me o'er earth shall stray. The fairy rath of Elfin Queen, With grassy rampart bound ; Where undismayed I trod the green, And mocked the echo's sound ; Where liquid song of lark was heard In rippling notes arise; Of Ireland's choir the sweetest bird That sings beneath her skies. The churchyard where my parents sleep Now fades before mines eyes ; Their tender memories, fond and deep, Shall mingle with my sighs ; youth's memories. 387 Alone upon the ocean's breast — Where'er my footsteps stray, My prayerful thoughts shall ever rest Beside their mounds of clay. I care not whence they bear me now — How fiercely breaks the storm — My heart's as cold as winter's brow, 1 That erst beat true and warm ; The parting from my native shore, Is as a beam of light, That shows some image 'twould adore, Then vanishes in night. How many hearts, as mine have strayed Across that boundless sea; How many hands in death are laid That struggled to be free ; Yet undeterred I fly the home To memory ever dear — Its bright green fields, and sapphire dome, For skies less bright and clear. 388 THOUGHTS. THOUGHTS. From bounteous shore of happy land, I gaze across the sea ; Where tyranny with blood-stained hand Is smiting Liberty ! And thoughts as surging as the wave, When tempests' lightning dart ; Or, as the shadows of the grave, Break o'er my swelling heart. Beyond the boundless field of foam, The spoiler's bolt is sped ; O'er many a poor, secluded home The cloud of grief is spread ; O'er many a heart the sun has set, In sorrow and in gloom ; That as the rose, with dew-drop wet. Was formed to bud and bloom ! Oh, God! how long since Erin's foe Commenced his work of death ! What broken hearts, what tears, what woe. Have gulped its life beneath ; Yet will the sun as brightly shine O'er mountain, stream, and flood, As if no hand incarnadine Had dyed its fields in blood. THOUGHTS. 889 Ob ! what a cruel wretch is he — How false unto his kind — Whose heart ne'er throbs for misery, — - "Whose hands its shackles bind. From Bodyke conies eviction's cry, As piteous as of yore ; Its smoking huts, its lurid sky, In horror reach our shore ! False Saxon land, to pity dead, ■Ring out your song of praise ! Your blood-writ laws o'er earth are spread Unhallowed as your days ; The surging grief, the tear of shame, The homeless orphan's cry, Will wreathe in blood your cruel name As warnings ere you die ! Oh ! jubilee of crimes unheard : Ring out your chimes of woe ! Oh, song! whose piteous strains have stirred The years that come and go ; There is no sadder song than thine — Famed children of the Gael — There gleams no diamond in you mine. No sunbeam in your wail. 390 AUTUMN LEAVES. AUTUMN LEAVES. The voice of Nature in tones sublime, Is touching the sweet, weird chords of Time : Is tinting the leaves with gold and red, As morning blushes, Hyperion spread ! The evening sunset is not more fair, Than the burning glories that ripen there ; The Bow of heaven, of varied hue, Is not to Nature, in tint more true ! Skirting the margin of stream and lake, As joy reflected their colors break ! As beauty's cheek, consumptive glows, Their life's sweet sunset more beauteous grows. The robin has fled the greenwood shade, Forsaking the nest which his skill had made ; Bearing his song and his cheer away, Ere the shadows fall on the autumn day. The Bee and the Ant have housed their store, Awaiting the winter's gloom once more ; Teaching a lesson to man the while, To garner God's love, while the heavens smile. A FOURTH OF JULY SONG. 301 OCTOBER GLORIES. The whispering leaves in crimson tints, And yellow gold outspread, Are fair as morning's safron glints, Or evening's sunset red ; Where'er I gaze their glories beam, As light of setting sun, Reflected in the glancing stream, Ere his bright course is run. A FOURTH OF JULY SONG. How gayly dressed are the people to-day; How tilled are their hearts with joy ; Cares are forgotten and cast away, For this is the Fourth of July. » Come let us follow the life and drum ; Let 's tread to the measure of Life ! Come beautiful girls, Oh come ! Oh come ! Come husband, and children, and wife. 392 GATHERING LILIES. For Liberty's day comes once in a year, With fair corona of joy ! Then proudly awaken its song of cheer — The beautiful Fourth of July ! Time's fleeting wings shall bear it away, Like some vain bauble or toy ! Leaving gloom in the path which it lit to-day ,- The beautiful Fourth of July. Oh ! come ! for the hour of toil draws nigh ; Come taste of each vanishing sweet — Oh ! come ! as love this Fourth of July, — Where Freedom's proud children meet ! :o:- GATHERING LLLIES. From yonder bough the robin trills His song of welcome to the May ; His crimson breast with rapture fills, For nature dons her holiday ; The air gives back the swelling notes That quiver thro' the breeze; O'er tranquil hearts their sweetness floats, A joy amid the budding trees ! THE RESURRECTION OF NATURE. 393 The lily drooping on its stem, Its fairy Lolls of white disclose, A fairer and a sweeter hymn Than robin's song, or tint of rose, The glory of the vernal sod, — Of earth, the fairest, sweetest flow'r, Whose tiny cups with perfume nod, Within her scented bower. I left my home this morning fair To seek the dell wherein they bloom: To wear their glories in my hair, And from their cups to catch perfume ; To read a lesson from their birth ; To ponder o'er their swift decay ; Which shows the teardrop in the mirth That marks our footsteps day by day. -:o:- THE RESURRECTION OF NATURE. The rustling leaves come scurrying down, From the hungry sapless trees; And Nature's beautiful tinted robe, Is sport for the wayward breeze ; Draggled and soiled in the muddy streets, Their beauty is thing of the past; And the glory that lit the soul with joy, Id the swirl of death is cast. 394 boyhood's freaks. Heedless our step o'er their faded bloom, Ne'er thinking of Time's decay ; How our life, as theirs, shall end in gloom. When its autumn is rolled away ; Heedless our thoughts as the wanton blast, That severs their glints of fire ; That we in our pride shall breathe at last When the joys of this Earth expire. But Nature's glories shall bloom once more. And the trees their green shall wear ; When winter's shadows have flitted o'er And the spring renews her pray'r : From the bare, cold sod, the tiny plant, Shall tremblingly raise its head ; As the soul released from its mortal eoil, Thro' heaven's fair arch is led ! -:o:- BOYHOOD'S FREAKS. The many freaks of boyhood, How reckless in their mirth ; Where nature spreads her treasures Over the gladsome earth ! When neither care nor sorrow- Clouded his summer's day : And his truant life was happy, As butterfly at play ! boyhood's freaks. 39' Braving the rosy orchard — Fair youth's Hesperides — Lost in fear and wonder Beneath its bending trees ; Plucking the mellow pippin That drooped from bending bough — Startled at throbs of conscience, That thrill his bosom now. Unheeding brier or thorn — The tangled glen derides — To pick the ripened berries That grew along its sides ; The wild rose and the blue-bell Would next receive his care — For youth has tender fancies, For some one's golden hair ! Chasing the tinted glory Over the grassy crest; Peering among the branches — Seeking the robin's nest ; Hiding away the school books, That would enslave the will ; W caving the mitcher's story To baffle father's skill ! Tempting the shining river, Clear as its crystal gleam ; Chasing his mocking shadow, — Reflected in its stream ; 391) boyhood's freaks. Unheeding mother's warning To pluck the lily white, That grew 'mid the tangled sedges, Tempting and fair and bright. Plucking the yellow blossom, 'Gainst blame — the talisman ; Securely hid in the bosom, Thro' which dire terrors ran ; Skulking away in the shadows ; Fearful of Fate's decree ; Wishing the past forgotten Ere reaching father's knee. The morning of life how valiant. As hero of tale or song ; Bright deeds would achieve in fancy Would move the world along ; Where beauty's charms are captive, A champion would find in youth ; Brave as the famed Orestes ; Pure as the heart of truth ! The tale of love and sorrow, That dimmed the eyes in tears ; The fate of the brave Leander, Remembered adown the years ; The castle of giant Ogre Where captive virgins wept ; Awaiting the direful summons. Delayed, while the monster slept ! ON THE DEATH OF A FRIEND. 397 Him would he face with truncheon, Would battel', pound, and kill ; Would steal the golden apples, That foiled enchanter's skill ; Him would he roast and simmer Before that glowing: fire : Or tear the Cyclops eve out, That lit his tierce desire. But time dispels the fancies, That wreathe the youthful mind, And sober thoughts less brilliant It's equinoctials hind ! But oh ! give me the morning-, With perfumed crystals wet. To life's meridian splendors That beam o'er youth's regrets ! ON THE DEATH OF A FRIEND. I knelt by thy peaceful bedside, Sweet spirit forever blest ; When death brought the awful message, That laid thy body at rest- 398 ON THE DEATH OF A FRIEND. Fair us the reed by the river, That spirit passed away ; To live with its God forever In the light of an endless day. My soul felt a thrill of emotion, As I saw that fair, fair face, Reflect the repose of heaven, In all its angelic grace. Thro' realms of light ascending, My heart's deep pray'r rose high, To the glorious Queen of Heaven, To welcome that soul with joy. I grieved for that Christian mother, — God's guardian on the earth ; Who gave her beautiful treasure To Him who shaped its birth. God's blessing on such mothers, Who give such treasures away ; When the light of the cloud is breaking, O'er the bright soul passing away. Sweet as the breath of the morning, Her beautiful spirit has fled ; And we gaze on that fair, fair sleeper, ]STow numbered among the dead. affection's memorials. 809 Her sinless death is a blessing, To those she has left behind ; Whilst her soul with the saints and angels. Companions shall ever find. :o:- AFFECTION'S MEMORIALS. Three little broken columns, Over so many graves; Three little slender beds of earth, — Three little motionless waves. Still as the forms they cover ; Still as the cold, cold earth ; Fair as the spirits that hover, Over the soul at birth. Three little columns of marble, White as the virgin snow ; Pure as the life of the sleepers — Hushed forever below. Tributes of love and affection, Beautiful emblems of death ; Where are the hopes that once nurtured, The forms now lying beneath ? 400 TN MEMORY. Joy, as the light of the morning. Brings shadows in her train, Chasing the beams of sunlight Over the heart and brain ; Leaving the broken coin inns Of ruin and death behind ; Symbols of grief and sorrow, Food for the anguished mind. -:o: IN MEMORY. The beauteous form now lying in death, So saintly and so fair ; Was once a mother's pride and hope, — Her treasure and her care. Her life was one of purest mold, Both dove-like and serene ; in all the actions of her life, God's hand was plainly seen. From early youth her soul was blessed ; For God had nurtured there The heavenly seeds of Faith and Love, Of Hope and earnest Prayer. IN MEMORY. 401 That cold, cold brow, so pure, so fair ; So calm in death's repose ; Once glowed in all the flush of life, As does the beauteous rose. But Death's dread summons came and bore That saintly soul away, To live with angels and be blest, Thro' God's eternal day ! Then be the tear of sorrow changed. To one of joy expressed ; That she whose form had brightened earth, Now lies among the blest. Then be the cup of sorrow blessed, For grief should And no place, Beside the soul released from sin By God's supernal Grace. Be ours the effort and the care, When Death's dread summons close Our life, and all the ties of earth, To live in heaven's .repose. To die as sinless and as pure, As Christian and as brave, With hope triumphant over Death, The hope beyond the grave. 402 FAREWELL TO EILLEEN. FAREWELL TO EILLEEK Farewell to the scenes of my love and my child hood, To Erin's green vales and her mountains so hoar ; Farewell to the glen, with its fringes of wild- wood, Where first 1 met Eilleen, sweet Eilleen asthore ; Beautiful Eilleen, ever loved Eilleen! 0, beautiful Eilleen, sweet Eilleen asthore ! I part from my love, as the sunset is bending, Its shadows o'er scenes, that I'll never see more ; I part from the mother, whose love was unend- ing, And I part from my heart, and sweet Eilleen asthore. Beautiful Eilleen, ever loved Eilleen ! beautiful Eilleen, sw^eet Eilleen asthore ! NOVEMBER. 403 My treasure of life I resign to jour keeping, The gift is but small, from this world's great store ; 0, give me instead, what my true love is seek- ing, Your fond trusting heart my own Eilleen asthore. Beautiful Eilleen, ever loved Eilleen ! 0, beautiful Eilleen, my Eilleen asthore! Adieu my fond love, and each tender emotion, That brought me a suitor to all I adore ; Thy image shall set me a life of devotion, As true as thy heart, my own Eilleen asthore. Beautiful Eilleen, ever loved Eilleen ! My heart's sweetest idol, my Eilleen asthore ! NOVEMBER. Dispite your fits and spells of gloom, We '11 -miss your beams of sun ; Whose rays, now hid in winter's breast, Are clouded one by one ; You've gathered in the autumn bloom, And hid its leaves away ; To beautiry the earth anew When Spring rolls out her day ! 404 THE SNOW. We thought you chill, and cold, and drear; We thought your night was long ; But now you 're gone we miss the cheer, That lingered in your song ! We never feel the loss of worth, Until its charm is tied ; We never miss the trusted friend Till numbered with the dead. The crystal sparks of winter came, Ere yet your life had fled ; His shroud of death was o'er you placed — A chaste, cold sheet out-spread — His all pervading, unseen sting. That thrills the throbbing air ; Aroused your tardy drooping wing- To fly beyond our prayer ! -:o: THE SNOW. Hurrying, scurrying, crystalized, fair, The snow flakes are sped thro' the chill pulse- less air ! Hither, and thither, on weird wing as light, As the moonbeams that steal thro' the shadows of night : THE SNOW. 405 On the breast of the river, the cheek of the stream, Their glance, is as thought, that is merged in a dream ; The brown tields they cover, with mantle as white, As childhood enrobes its fair angels of light ! Their tender caresses, as playfully sped; Their etchings o'er cabin, as mansion are spread ; On the soft face of beauty, as poverty's cheek, Unfavored their kiss, as the lesson they speak ! O'er the gay promenade, as grime draggled street, Their crystals as fair 'neath -the wanderer's feet; Tho' biting and painful, their venom and sting, Unbiased the chill which they bear on their wine; ! The snow-flakes, as death, come silently down ; As noiseless as Charity wreathing her crown ! O'er the once shining greenwood their fair robe is flung, O'er the crisp, shriveled leaves their anthem is sung ; 400 THE SNOW O'er the blue mountain crest as the valley below, The bleak face of nature is wreathed in snow ; As Hope brightly crowned do their glories ap- pear, Tho' strewed o'er our path thro' the cloud and the sear ! ;idified using the Bookkeeper process. Neutralizing agent: Magnesium Oxide Treatment Date: Sept 2009 PreservationTechnologies A WORLD LEADER IN COLLECTIONS PRESERVATION 111 Thomson Park Drive Cranberry Township, PA 16066 (724) 779-2111 Mm /v*/i^:i"'-.